[House Report 114-24]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]


   114th Congress      }                              {   Rept. 114-24
                       
                             HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES     
   1st Session         }                              {       Part 1
_______________________________________________________________________
 
                                     

                                                         
                            STUDENT SUCCESS ACT

                               ----------                              

                              R E P O R T

                                 of the

                     COMMITTEE ON EDUCATION AND THE
                               WORKFORCE

                              to accompany

                                 H.R. 5

                             together with

                             MINORITY VIEWS




 February 20, 2015.--Committed to the Committee of the Whole House on 
            the State of the Union and ordered to be printed



                         
 114th Congress        }                              {   Rept. 114-24
                       
                             HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES     
   1st Session         }                              {       Part 1
________________________________________________________________________

                                     

                                                                       


                          STUDENT SUCCESS ACT

                               __________

                              R E P O R T

                                 of the

                     COMMITTEE ON EDUCATION AND THE

                               WORKFORCE

                              to accompany

                                 H.R. 5

                             together with

                             MINORITY VIEWS




 February 20, 2015.--Committed to the Committee of the Whole House on 
            the State of the Union and ordered to be printed
                                
                                
                                _______
                                
                       U.S. GOVERNMENT PUBLISHING OFFICE
                               WASHINGTON : 2015
                               

   114th Congress      }                              {   Rept. 114-24
                       
                             HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES     
   1st Session         }                              {       Part 1

======================================================================




                          STUDENT SUCCESS ACT

                                _______
                                

 February 20, 2015.--Committed to the Committee of the Whole House on 
            the State of the Union and ordered to be printed

                                _______
                                

Mr. Kline, from the Committee on Education and the Workforce, submitted 
                             the following

                              R E P O R T

                             together with

                             MINORITY VIEWS

                         [To accompany H.R. 5]

      [Including cost estimate of the Congressional Budget Office]

    The Committee on Education and the Workforce, to whom was 
referred the bill (H.R. 5) to support State and local 
accountability for public education, protect State and local 
authority, inform parents of the performance of their 
children's schools, and for other purposes, having considered 
the same, report favorably thereon with an amendment and 
recommend that the bill as amended do pass.
    The amendment is as follows:
  Strike all after the enacting clause and insert the 
following:

SECTION 1. SHORT TITLE.

  This Act may be cited as the ``Student Success Act''.

SEC. 2. TABLE OF CONTENTS.

  The table of contents for this Act is as follows:

Sec. 1. Short title.
Sec. 2. Table of contents.
Sec. 3. References.
Sec. 4. Transition.
Sec. 5. Effective dates.
Sec. 6. Authorization of appropriations.
Sec. 7. Sense of the Congress.

               TITLE I--AID TO LOCAL EDUCATIONAL AGENCIES

                         Subtitle A--In General

Sec. 101. Title heading.
Sec. 102. Statement of purpose.
Sec. 103. Flexibility to use Federal funds.
Sec. 104. School improvement.
Sec. 105. Direct student services.
Sec. 106. State administration.

  Subtitle B--Improving the Academic Achievement of the Disadvantaged

Sec. 111. Part A headings.
Sec. 112. State plans.
Sec. 113. Local educational agency plans.
Sec. 114. Eligible school attendance areas.
Sec. 115. Schoolwide programs.
Sec. 116. Targeted assistance schools.
Sec. 117. Academic assessment and local educational agency and school 
improvement; school support and recognition.
Sec. 118. Parental involvement.
Sec. 119. Qualifications for teachers and paraprofessionals.
Sec. 120. Participation of children enrolled in private schools.
Sec. 121. Fiscal requirements.
Sec. 122. Coordination requirements.
Sec. 123. Grants for the outlying areas and the Secretary of the 
Interior.
Sec. 124. Allocations to States.
Sec. 125. Basic grants to local educational agencies.
Sec. 126. Targeted grants to local educational agencies.
Sec. 127. Adequacy of funding to local educational agencies in fiscal 
years after fiscal year 2001.
Sec. 128. Education finance incentive grant program.
Sec. 129. Carryover and waiver.
Sec. 130. Title I portability.

       Subtitle C--Additional Aid to States and School Districts

Sec. 131. Additional aid.

                    Subtitle D--National Assessment

Sec. 141. National assessment of title I.

                 Subtitle E--Title I General Provisions

Sec. 151. General provisions for title I.

            TITLE II--TEACHER PREPARATION AND EFFECTIVENESS

Sec. 201. Teacher preparation and effectiveness.
Sec. 202. Conforming repeals.

          TITLE III--PARENTAL ENGAGEMENT AND LOCAL FLEXIBILITY

Sec. 301. Parental engagement and local flexibility.

                          TITLE IV--IMPACT AID

Sec. 401. Purpose.
Sec. 402. Payments relating to Federal acquisition of real property.
Sec. 403. Payments for eligible federally connected children.
Sec. 404. Policies and procedures relating to children residing on 
Indian lands.
Sec. 405. Application for payments under sections 8002 and 8003.
Sec. 406. Construction.
Sec. 407. Facilities.
Sec. 408. State consideration of payments providing State aid.
Sec. 409. Federal administration.
Sec. 410. Administrative hearings and judicial review.
Sec. 411. Definitions.
Sec. 412. Authorization of appropriations.
Sec. 413. Conforming amendments.

  TITLE V--THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT'S TRUST RESPONSIBILITY TO AMERICAN 
          INDIAN, ALASKA NATIVE, AND NATIVE HAWAIIAN EDUCATION

Sec. 501. The Federal Government's Trust Responsibility to American 
Indian, Alaska Native, and Native Hawaiian Education.

                TITLE VI--GENERAL PROVISIONS FOR THE ACT

Sec. 601. General provisions for the Act.
Sec. 602. Repeal.
Sec. 603. Other laws.
Sec. 604. Amendment to IDEA.

                     TITLE VII--HOMELESS EDUCATION

Sec. 701. Statement of policy.
Sec. 702. Grants for State and local activities for the education of 
homeless children and youths.
Sec. 703. Local educational agency subgrants for the education of 
homeless children and youths.
Sec. 704. Secretarial responsibilities.
Sec. 705. Definitions.
Sec. 706. Authorization of appropriations.

                  TITLE VIII--MISCELLANEOUS PROVISIONS

Sec. 801. Findings; Sense of the Congress.

SEC. 3. REFERENCES.

  Except as otherwise expressly provided, whenever in this Act an 
amendment or repeal is expressed in terms of an amendment to, or repeal 
of, a section or other provision, the reference shall be considered to 
be made to a section or other provision of the Elementary and Secondary 
Education Act of 1965 (20 U.S.C. 6301 et seq.).

SEC. 4. TRANSITION.

  Unless otherwise provided in this Act, any person or agency that was 
awarded a grant under the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 
1965 (20 U.S.C. 6301 et seq.) prior to the date of the enactment of 
this Act shall continue to receive funds in accordance with the terms 
of such award, except that funds for such award may not continue more 
than one year after the date of the enactment of this Act.

SEC. 5. EFFECTIVE DATES.

  (a) In General.--Except as otherwise provided in this Act, this Act, 
and the amendments made by this Act, shall be effective upon the date 
of the enactment of this Act.
  (b) Noncompetitive Programs.--With respect to noncompetitive programs 
under which any funds are allotted by the Secretary of Education to 
recipients on the basis of a formula, this Act, and the amendments made 
by this Act, shall take effect on October 1, 2015.
  (c) Competitive Programs.--With respect to programs that are 
conducted by the Secretary on a competitive basis, this Act, and the 
amendments made by this Act, shall take effect with respect to 
appropriations for use under those programs for fiscal year 2016.
  (d) Impact Aid.--With respect to title IV of the Act (20 U.S.C. 7701 
et seq.) (Impact Aid), this Act, and the amendments made by this Act, 
shall take effect with respect to appropriations for use under that 
title for fiscal year 2016.

SEC. 6. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS.

  The Act (20 U.S.C. 6301 et seq.) is amended by inserting after 
section 2 the following:

``SEC. 3. AUTHORIZATIONS OF APPROPRIATIONS.

  ``(a) Title I.--
          ``(1) Part a.--There are authorized to be appropriated to 
        carry out part A of title I $16,245,163,000 for each of fiscal 
        years 2016 through 2021.
          ``(2) Part b.--There are authorized to be appropriated to 
        carry out part B of title I $710,000 for each of fiscal years 
        2016 through 2021.
  ``(b) Title II.--There are authorized to be appropriated to carry out 
title II $2,788,356,000 for each of fiscal years 2016 through 2021.
  ``(c) Title III.--
          ``(1) Part a.--
                  ``(A) Subpart 1.--There are authorized to be 
                appropriated to carry out subpart 1 of part A of title 
                III $300,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2016 through 
                2021.
                  ``(B) Subpart 2.--There are authorized to be 
                appropriated to carry out subpart 2 of part A of title 
                III $91,647,000 for each of fiscal years 2016 through 
                2021.
                  ``(C) Subpart 3.--There are authorized to be 
                appropriated to carry out subpart 3 of part A of title 
                III $25,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2016 through 
                2021.
          ``(2) Part b.--There are authorized to be appropriated to 
        carry out part B of title III $2,302,287,000 for each of fiscal 
        years 2016 through 2021.
  ``(d) Title IV.--
          ``(1) Payments for federal acquisition of real property.--For 
        the purpose of making payments under section 4002, there are 
        authorized to be appropriated $66,813,000 for each of fiscal 
        years 2016 through 2021.
          ``(2) Basic payments; payments for heavily impacted local 
        educational agencies.--For the purpose of making payments under 
        section 4003(b), there are authorized to be appropriated 
        $1,151,233,000 for each of fiscal years 2016 through 2021.
          ``(3) Payments for children with disabilities.--For the 
        purpose of making payments under section 4003(d), there are 
        authorized to be appropriated $48,316,000 for each of fiscal 
        years 2016 through 2021.
          ``(4) Construction.--For the purpose of carrying out section 
        4007, there are authorized to be appropriated $17,406,000 for 
        each of fiscal years 2016 through 2021.
          ``(5) Facilities maintenance.--For the purpose of carrying 
        out section 4008, there are authorized to be appropriated 
        $4,835,000 for each of fiscal years 2016 through 2021.''.

SEC. 7. SENSE OF THE CONGRESS.

  (a) Findings.--The Congress finds as follows:
          (1) The Elementary and Secondary Education Act prohibits the 
        Federal Government from mandating, directing, or controlling a 
        State, local educational agency, or school's curriculum, 
        program of instruction, or allocation of State and local 
        resources, and from mandating a State or any subdivision 
        thereof to spend any funds or incur any costs not paid for 
        under such Act.
          (2) The Elementary and Secondary Education Act prohibits the 
        Federal Government from funding the development, pilot testing, 
        field testing, implementation, administration, or distribution 
        of any federally sponsored national test in reading, 
        mathematics, or any other subject, unless specifically and 
        explicitly authorized by law.
          (3) The Secretary of Education, through 3 separate 
        initiatives, has created a system of waivers and grants that 
        influence, incentivize, and coerce State educational agencies 
        into implementing common national elementary and secondary 
        standards and assessments endorsed by the Secretary.
          (4) The Race to the Top Fund encouraged and incentivized 
        States to adopt Common Core State Standards developed by the 
        National Governor's Association Center for Best Practices and 
        the Council of Chief State School Officers.
          (5) The Race to the Top Assessment grants awarded to the 
        Partnership for the Assessment of Readiness for College and 
        Careers (PARCC) and SMARTER Balanced Assessment Consortium 
        (SMARTER Balance) initiated the development of Common Core 
        State Standards aligned assessments that will, in turn, inform 
        and ultimately influence kindergarten through 12th-grade 
        curriculum and instructional materials.
          (6) The conditional Elementary and Secondary Education Act 
        flexibility waiver authority employed by the Department of 
        Education coerced States into accepting Common Core State 
        Standards and aligned assessments.
  (b) Sense of the Congress.--It is the sense of the Congress that 
States and local educational agencies retain the rights and 
responsibilities of determining educational curriculum, programs of 
instruction, and assessments for elementary and secondary education.

               TITLE I--AID TO LOCAL EDUCATIONAL AGENCIES

                         Subtitle A--In General

SEC. 101. TITLE HEADING.

  The title heading for title I (20 U.S.C. 6301 et seq.) is amended to 
read as follows:

            ``TITLE I--AID TO LOCAL EDUCATIONAL AGENCIES''.

SEC. 102. STATEMENT OF PURPOSE.

  Section 1001 (20 U.S.C. 6301) is amended to read as follows:

``SEC. 1001. STATEMENT OF PURPOSE.

  ``The purpose of this title is to provide all children the 
opportunity to graduate high school prepared for postsecondary 
education or the workforce. This purpose can be accomplished by--
          ``(1) meeting the educational needs of low-achieving children 
        in our Nation's highest-poverty schools, English learners, 
        migratory children, children with disabilities, Indian 
        children, and neglected or delinquent children;
          ``(2) closing the achievement gap between high- and low-
        performing children, especially the achievement gaps between 
        minority and nonminority students, and between disadvantaged 
        children and their more advantaged peers;
          ``(3) affording parents substantial and meaningful 
        opportunities to participate in the education of their 
        children; and
          ``(4) challenging States and local educational agencies to 
        embrace meaningful, evidence-based education reform, while 
        encouraging state and local innovation.''.

SEC. 103. FLEXIBILITY TO USE FEDERAL FUNDS.

  Section 1002 (20 U.S.C. 6302) is amended to read as follows:

``SEC. 1002. FLEXIBILITY TO USE FEDERAL FUNDS.

  ``(a) Alternative Uses of Federal Funds for State Educational 
Agencies.--
          ``(1) In general.--Subject to subsections (c) and (d) and 
        notwithstanding any other provision of law, a State educational 
        agency may use the applicable funding that the agency receives 
        for a fiscal year to carry out any State activity authorized or 
        required under one or more of the following provisions:
                  ``(A) Section 1003.
                  ``(B) Section 1004.
                  ``(C) Subpart 2 of part A of title I.
                  ``(D) Subpart 3 of part A of title I.
                  ``(E) Subpart 4 of part A of title I.
          ``(2) Notification.--Not later than June 1 of each year, a 
        State educational agency shall notify the Secretary of the 
        State educational agency's intention to use the applicable 
        funding for any of the alternative uses under paragraph (1).
          ``(3) Applicable funding defined.--
                  ``(A) In general.--Except as provided in subparagraph 
                (B), in this subsection, the term `applicable funding' 
                means funds provided to carry out State activities 
                under one or more of the following provisions.
                          ``(i) Section 1003.
                          ``(ii) Section 1004.
                          ``(iii) Subpart 2 of part A of title I.
                          ``(iv) Subpart 3 of part A of title I.
                          ``(v) Subpart 4 of part A of title I.
                  ``(B) Limitation.--In this subsection, the term 
                `applicable funding' does not include funds provided 
                under any of the provisions listed in subparagraph (A) 
                that State educational agencies are required by this 
                Act--
                          ``(i) to reserve, allocate, or spend for 
                        required activities;
                          ``(ii) to allocate, allot, or award to local 
                        educational agencies or other entities eligible 
                        to receive such funds; or
                          ``(iii) to use for technical assistance or 
                        monitoring.
          ``(4) Disbursement.--The Secretary shall disburse the 
        applicable funding to State educational agencies for 
        alternative uses under paragraph (1) for a fiscal year at the 
        same time as the Secretary disburses the applicable funding to 
        State educational agencies that do not intend to use the 
        applicable funding for such alternative uses for the fiscal 
        year.
  ``(b) Alternative Uses of Federal Funds for Local Educational 
Agencies.--
          ``(1) In general.--Subject to subsections (c) and (d) and 
        notwithstanding any other provision of law, a local educational 
        agency may use the applicable funding that the agency receives 
        for a fiscal year to carry out any local activity authorized or 
        required under one or more of the following provisions:
                  ``(A) Section 1003.
                  ``(B) Subpart 1 of part A of title I.
                  ``(C) Subpart 2 of part A of title I.
                  ``(D) Subpart 3 of part A of title I.
                  ``(E) Subpart 4 of part A of title I.
          ``(2) Notification.--A local educational agency shall notify 
        the State educational agency of the local educational agency's 
        intention to use the applicable funding for any of the 
        alternative uses under paragraph (1) by a date that is 
        established by the State educational agency for the 
        notification.
          ``(3) Applicable funding defined.--
                  ``(A) In general.--Except as provided in subparagraph 
                (B), in this subsection, the term `applicable funding' 
                means funds provided to carry out local activities 
                under one or more of the following provisions:
                          ``(i) Subpart 2 of part A of title I.
                          ``(ii) Subpart 3 of part A of title I.
                          ``(iii) Subpart 4 of part A of title I.
                  ``(B) Limitation.--In this subsection, the term 
                `applicable funding' does not include funds provided 
                under any of the provisions listed in subparagraph (A) 
                that local educational agencies are required by this 
                Act--
                          ``(i) to reserve, allocate, or spend for 
                        required activities;
                          ``(ii) to allocate, allot, or award to 
                        entities eligible to receive such funds; or
                          ``(iii) to use for technical assistance or 
                        monitoring.
          ``(4) Disbursement.--Each State educational agency that 
        receives applicable funding for a fiscal year shall disburse 
        the applicable funding to local educational agencies for 
        alternative uses under paragraph (1) for the fiscal year at the 
        same time as the State educational agency disburses the 
        applicable funding to local educational agencies that do not 
        intend to use the applicable funding for such alternative uses 
        for the fiscal year.
  ``(c) Rule for Administrative Costs.--A State educational agency or a 
local educational agency shall only use applicable funding (as defined 
in subsection (a)(3) or (b)(3), respectively) for administrative costs 
incurred in carrying out a provision listed in subsection (a)(1) or 
(b)(1), respectively, to the extent that the agency, in the absence of 
this section, could have used funds for administrative costs with 
respect to a program listed in subsection (a)(3) or (b)(3), 
respectively.
  ``(d) Rule of Construction.--Nothing in this section shall be 
construed to relieve a State educational agency or local educational 
agency of any requirements relating to--
          ``(1) use of Federal funds to supplement, not supplant, non-
        Federal funds;
          ``(2) comparability of services;
          ``(3) equitable participation of private school students and 
        teachers;
          ``(4) applicable civil rights requirements;
          ``(5) section 1113; or
          ``(6) section 1111.''.

SEC. 104. SCHOOL IMPROVEMENT.

  Section 1003 (20 U.S.C. 6303) is amended--
          (1) in subsection (a)--
                  (A) by striking ``2 percent'' and inserting ``7 
                percent''; and
                  (B) by striking ``subpart 2 of part A'' and all that 
                follows through ``sections 1116 and 1117,'' and 
                inserting ``chapter B of subpart 1 of part A for each 
                fiscal year to carry out subsection (b),'';
          (2) in subsection (b)--
                  (A) in paragraph (1), by striking ``for schools 
                identified for school improvement, corrective action, 
                and restructuring, for activities under section 
                1116(b)'' and inserting ``to carry out the State's 
                system of school improvement under section 
                1111(b)(3)(B)(iii)''; and
                  (B) in paragraph (2), by striking ``or educational 
                service agencies'' and inserting ``, educational 
                service agencies, or non-profit or for-profit external 
                providers with expertise in using evidence-based or 
                other effective strategies to improve student 
                achievement'';
          (3) in subsection (c)--
                  (A) in paragraph (1), by inserting ``and'' at the 
                end;
                  (B) in paragraph (2), by striking ``need for such 
                funds; and'' and inserting ``commitment to using such 
                funds to improve such schools.''; and
                  (C) by striking paragraph (3);
          (4) in subsection (d)(1), by striking ``subpart 2 of part 
        A;'' and inserting ``chapter B of subpart 1 of part A;'';
          (5) in subsection (e)--
                  (A) by striking ``in any fiscal year'' and inserting 
                ``in fiscal year 2016 and each subsequent fiscal 
                year'';
                  (B) by striking ``subpart 2'' and inserting ``chapter 
                B of subpart 1 of part A''; and
                  (C) by striking ``such subpart'' and inserting ``such 
                chapter'';
          (6) in subsection (f), by striking ``and the percentage of 
        students from each school from families with incomes below the 
        poverty line''; and
          (7) by striking subsection (g).

SEC. 105. DIRECT STUDENT SERVICES.

  The Act (20 U.S.C. 6301 et seq.) is amended by inserting after 
section 1003 the following:

``SEC. 1003A. DIRECT STUDENT SERVICES.

  ``(a) State Reservation.--Each State shall reserve 3 percent of the 
amount the State receives under chapter B of subpart 1 of part A for 
each fiscal year to carry out this section. Of such reserved funds, the 
State educational agency may use up to 1 percent to administer direct 
student services.
  ``(b) Direct Student Services.--From the amount available after the 
application of subsection (a), each State shall award grants in 
accordance with this section to local educational agencies to support 
direct student services.
  ``(c) Awards.--The State educational agency shall award grants to 
geographically diverse local educational agencies including suburban, 
rural, and urban local educational agencies. If there are not enough 
funds to award all applicants in a sufficient size and scope to run an 
effective direct student services program, the State shall prioritize 
awards to local educational agencies with the greatest number of 
students with disabilities, neglected, delinquent, migrant students, 
English learners, at-risk students, and Native Americans, to increase 
academic achievement of such students.
  ``(d) Local Use of Funds.--A local educational agency receiving an 
award under this section--
          ``(1) shall use up to 1 percent of each award for outreach 
        and communication to parents about their options and to 
        register students for direct student services;
          ``(2) may use not more than 2 percent of each award for 
        administrative costs related to direct student services; and
          ``(3) shall use the remainder of the award to pay the 
        transportation required to provide public school choice or the 
        hourly rate for high-quality academic tutoring services, as 
        determined by a provider on the State-approved list required 
        under subsection (f)(2).
  ``(e) Application.--A local educational agency desiring to receive an 
award under subsection (b) shall submit an application describing how 
the local educational agency will--
          ``(1) provide adequate outreach to ensure parents can 
        exercise a meaningful choice of direct student services for 
        their child's education;
          ``(2) ensure parents have adequate time and information to 
        make a meaningful choice prior to enrolling their child in a 
        direct student service;
          ``(3) ensure sufficient availability of seats in the public 
        schools the local educational agency will make available for 
        public school choice options;
          ``(4) determine the requirements or criteria for student 
        eligibility for direct student services;
          ``(5) select a variety of providers of high-quality academic 
        tutoring from the State-approved list required under subsection 
        (f)(2) and ensure fair negotiations in selecting such providers 
        of high-quality academic tutoring, including online, on campus, 
        and other models of tutoring which provide meaningful choices 
        to parents to find the best service for their child; and
          ``(6) develop an estimated per pupil expenditure available 
        for eligible students to use toward high-quality academic 
        tutoring which shall allow for an adequate level of services to 
        increase academic achievement from a variety of high-quality 
        academic tutoring providers.
  ``(f) Providers and Schools.--The State--
          ``(1) shall ensure that each local educational agency 
        receiving an award to provide public school choice can provide 
        a sufficient number of options to provide a meaningful choice 
        for parents;
          ``(2) shall compile a list of State-approved high-quality 
        academic tutoring providers that includes online, on campus, 
        and other models of tutoring; and
          ``(3) shall ensure that each local educational agency 
        receiving an award will provide an adequate number of high-
        quality academic tutoring options to ensure parents have a 
        meaningful choice of services.''.

SEC. 106. STATE ADMINISTRATION.

  Section 1004 (20 U.S.C. 6304) is amended to read as follows:

``SEC. 1004. STATE ADMINISTRATION.

  ``(a) In General.--Except as provided in subsection (b), to carry out 
administrative duties assigned under subparts 1, 2, and 3 of part A of 
this title, each State may reserve the greater of--
          ``(1) 1 percent of the amounts received under such subparts; 
        or
          ``(2) $400,000 ($50,000 in the case of each outlying area).
  ``(b) Exception.--If the sum of the amounts reserved under subparts 
1, 2, and 3 of part A of this title is equal to or greater than 
$14,000,000,000, then the reservation described in subsection (a)(1) 
shall not exceed 1 percent of the amount the State would receive if 
$14,000,000,000 were allocated among the States for subparts 1, 2, and 
3 of part A of this title.''.

  Subtitle B--Improving the Academic Achievement of the Disadvantaged

SEC. 111. PART A HEADINGS.

  (a) Part Heading.--The part heading for part A of title I (20 U.S.C. 
6311 et seq.) is amended to read as follows:

  ``PART A--IMPROVING THE ACADEMIC ACHIEVEMENT OF THE DISADVANTAGED''.

  (b) Subpart 1 Heading.--The Act is amended by striking the subpart 
heading for subpart 1 of part A of title I (20 U.S.C. 6311 et seq.) and 
inserting the following:

  ``Subpart 1--Improving Basic Programs Operated by Local Educational 
                                Agencies

               ``CHAPTER A--BASIC PROGRAM REQUIREMENTS''.

  (c) Subpart 2 Heading.--The Act is amended by striking the subpart 
heading for subpart 2 of part A of title I (20 U.S.C. 6331 et seq.) and 
inserting the following:

                      ``CHAPTER B--ALLOCATIONS''.

SEC. 112. STATE PLANS.

  Section 1111 (20 U.S.C. 6311) is amended to read as follows:

``SEC. 1111. STATE PLANS.

  ``(a) Filing for Grants.--
          ``(1) In general.--For any State desiring to receive a grant 
        under this subpart, the State educational agency file with the 
        Secretary a plan, developed by the State educational agency, in 
        consultation with local educational agencies, teachers, school 
        leaders, public charter school representatives, specialized 
        instructional support personnel, other appropriate school 
        personnel, parents, private sector employers, entrepreneurs, 
        and representatives of Indian tribes located in the State, that 
        satisfies the requirements of this section and that is 
        coordinated with other programs under this Act, the Individuals 
        with Disabilities Education Act, the Carl D. Perkins Career and 
        Technical Education Act of 2006, the Head Start Act, the Adult 
        Education and Family Literacy Act, and the McKinney-Vento 
        Homeless Assistance Act.
          ``(2) Consolidated plan.--A State plan submitted under 
        paragraph (1) may be submitted as part of a consolidated plan 
        under section 6302.
  ``(b) Academic Standards, Academic Assessments, and State 
Accountability.--
          ``(1) Academic standards.--
                  ``(A) In general.--Each State plan shall demonstrate 
                that the State has adopted academic content standards 
                and academic achievement standards aligned with such 
                content standards that comply with the requirements of 
                this paragraph.
                  ``(B) Subjects.--The State shall have such academic 
                standards for mathematics, reading or language arts, 
                and science, and may have such standards for any other 
                subject determined by the State.
                  ``(C) Requirements.--The standards described in 
                subparagraph (A) shall--
                          ``(i) apply to all public schools and public 
                        school students in the State; and
                          ``(ii) with respect to academic achievement 
                        standards, include the same knowledge, skills, 
                        and levels of achievement expected of all 
                        public school students in the State.
                  ``(D) Alternate academic achievement standards.--
                Notwithstanding any other provision of this paragraph, 
                a State retains the right, through a documented and 
                validated standards-setting process, to adopt alternate 
                academic achievement standards for students with the 
                most significant cognitive disabilities, if--
                          ``(i) the determination about whether the 
                        achievement of an individual student should be 
                        measured against such standards is made 
                        separately for each student; and
                          ``(ii) such standards--
                                  ``(I) are aligned with the State 
                                academic standards required under 
                                subparagraph (A);
                                  ``(II) promote access to the general 
                                curriculum; and
                                  ``(III) reflect professional judgment 
                                as to the highest possible standards 
                                achievable by such students.
                  ``(E) English language proficiency standards.--Each 
                State plan shall describe how the State educational 
                agency will establish English language proficiency 
                standards that are--
                          ``(i) derived from the four recognized 
                        domains of speaking, listening, reading, and 
                        writing; and
                          ``(ii) aligned with the State's academic 
                        content standards in reading or language arts 
                        under subparagraph (A).
          ``(2) Academic assessments.--
                  ``(A) In general.--Each State plan shall demonstrate 
                that the State educational agency, in consultation with 
                local educational agencies, has implemented a set of 
                high-quality student academic assessments in 
                mathematics, reading or language arts, and science. The 
                State retains the right to implement such assessments 
                in any other subject chosen by the State.
                  ``(B) Requirements.--Such assessments shall--
                          ``(i) in the case of mathematics and reading 
                        or language arts, be used in determining the 
                        performance of each local educational agency 
                        and public school in the State in accordance 
                        with the State's accountability system under 
                        paragraph (3);
                          ``(ii) be the same academic assessments used 
                        to measure the academic achievement of all 
                        public school students in the State;
                          ``(iii) be aligned with the State's academic 
                        standards and provide coherent and timely 
                        information about student attainment of such 
                        standards;
                          ``(iv) be used for purposes for which such 
                        assessments are valid and reliable, be of 
                        adequate technical quality for each purpose 
                        required under this Act, and be consistent with 
                        relevant, nationally recognized professional 
                        and technical standards;
                          ``(v)(I) in the case of mathematics and 
                        reading or language arts, be administered in 
                        each of grades 3 through 8 and at least once in 
                        grades 9 through 12;
                          ``(II) in the case of science, be 
                        administered not less than one time during--
                                  ``(aa) grades 3 through 5;
                                  ``(bb) grades 6 through 9; and
                                  ``(cc) grades 10 through 12; and
                          ``(III) in the case of any other subject 
                        chosen by the State, be administered at the 
                        discretion of the State;
                          ``(vi) measure individual student academic 
                        proficiency and, at the State's discretion, 
                        growth;
                          ``(vii) at the State's discretion--
                                  ``(I) be administered through a 
                                single annual summative assessment; or
                                  ``(II) be administered through 
                                multiple assessments during the course 
                                of the academic year that result in a 
                                single summative score that provides 
                                valid, reliable, and transparent 
                                information on student achievement;
                          ``(viii) include measures that assess higher-
                        order thinking skills and understanding;
                          ``(ix) provide for--
                                  ``(I) the participation in such 
                                assessments of all students;
                                  ``(II) the reasonable adaptations and 
                                accommodations for students with 
                                disabilities necessary to measure the 
                                academic achievement of such students 
                                relative to the State's academic 
                                standards; and
                                  ``(III) the inclusion of English 
                                learners, who shall be assessed in a 
                                valid and reliable manner and provided 
                                reasonable accommodations, including, 
                                to the extent practicable, assessments 
                                in the language and form most likely to 
                                yield accurate and reliable information 
                                on what such students know and can do 
                                in academic content areas, until such 
                                students have achieved English language 
                                proficiency, as assessed by the State 
                                under subparagraph (D);
                          ``(x) notwithstanding clause (ix)(III), 
                        provide for the assessment of reading or 
                        language arts in English for English learners 
                        who have attended school in the United States 
                        (not including Puerto Rico) for 3 or more 
                        consecutive school years, except that a local 
                        educational agency may, on a case-by-case 
                        basis, provide for the assessment of reading or 
                        language arts for each such student in a 
                        language other than English for a period not to 
                        exceed 2 additional consecutive years if the 
                        assessment would be more likely to yield 
                        accurate and reliable information on what such 
                        student knows and can do, provided that such 
                        student has not yet reached a level of English 
                        language proficiency sufficient to yield valid 
                        and reliable information on what such student 
                        knows and can do on reading or language arts 
                        assessments written in English;
                          ``(xi) produce individual student 
                        interpretive, descriptive, and diagnostic 
                        reports regarding achievement on such 
                        assessments that allow parents, teachers, and 
                        school leaders to understand and address the 
                        specific academic needs of students, and that 
                        are provided to parents, teachers, and school 
                        leaders, as soon as is practicable after the 
                        assessment is given, in an understandable and 
                        uniform format, and to the extent practicable, 
                        in a language that parents can understand;
                          ``(xii) enable results to be disaggregated 
                        within each State, local educational agency, 
                        and school by gender, by each major racial and 
                        ethnic group, by English language proficiency 
                        status, by migrant status, by status as a 
                        student with a disability, by status as a 
                        student with a parent who is an active duty 
                        member of the Armed Forces (as defined in 
                        section 101(a)(4) of title 10, United States 
                        Code), and by economically disadvantaged 
                        status, except that, in the case of a local 
                        educational agency or a school, such 
                        disaggregation shall not be required in a case 
                        in which the number of students in a category 
                        is insufficient to yield statistically reliable 
                        information or the results would reveal 
                        personally identifiable information about an 
                        individual student;
                          ``(xiii) be administered to not less than 95 
                        percent of all students, and not less than 95 
                        percent of each subgroup of students described 
                        in paragraph (3)(B)(ii)(II); and
                          ``(xiv) where practicable, be developed using 
                        the principles of universal design for learning 
                        as defined in section 103(24) of the Higher 
                        Education Act of 1965 (20 U.S.C. 1003(24)).
                  ``(C) Alternate assessments.--A State may provide for 
                alternate assessments aligned with the alternate 
                academic standards adopted in accordance with paragraph 
                (1)(D), for students with the most significant 
                cognitive disabilities, if the State--
                          ``(i) establishes and monitors implementation 
                        of clear and appropriate guidelines for 
                        individualized education program teams (as 
                        defined in section 614(d)(1)(B) of the 
                        Individuals with Disabilities Education Act) to 
                        apply when determining when a child's 
                        significant cognitive disability justifies 
                        assessment based on alternate achievement 
                        standards;
                          ``(ii) ensures that the parents of such 
                        students are informed that--
                                  ``(I) their child's academic 
                                achievement will be measured against 
                                such alternate standards; and
                                  ``(II) whether participation in such 
                                assessments precludes the student from 
                                completing the requirements for a 
                                regular high school diploma;
                          ``(iii) demonstrates that such students are, 
                        to the extent practicable, included in the 
                        general curriculum and that such alternate 
                        assessments are aligned with such curriculum;
                          ``(iv) develops, disseminates information 
                        about, and promotes the use of appropriate 
                        accommodations to increase the number of 
                        students with disabilities who are tested 
                        against academic achievement standards for the 
                        grade in which a student is enrolled; and
                          ``(v) ensures that regular and special 
                        education teachers and other appropriate staff 
                        know how to administer the alternate 
                        assessments, including making appropriate use 
                        of accommodations for students with 
                        disabilities.
                  ``(D) Assessments of english language proficiency.--
                          ``(i) In general.--Each State plan shall 
                        demonstrate that local educational agencies in 
                        the State will provide for an annual assessment 
                        of English proficiency of all English learners 
                        in the schools served by the State educational 
                        agency.
                          ``(ii) Alignment.--The assessments described 
                        in clause (i) shall be aligned with the State's 
                        English language proficiency standards 
                        described in paragraph (1)(E).
                  ``(E) Language assessments.--Each State plan shall 
                identify the languages other than English that are 
                present in the participating student population and 
                indicate the languages for which yearly student 
                academic assessments are not available and are needed. 
                The State shall make every effort to develop such 
                assessments and may request assistance from the 
                Secretary if linguistically accessible academic 
                assessment measures are needed. Upon request, the 
                Secretary shall assist with the identification of 
                appropriate academic assessment measures in the needed 
                languages, but shall not mandate a specific academic 
                assessment or mode of instruction.
                  ``(F) Adaptive assessments.--A State retains the 
                right to develop and administer computer adaptive 
                assessments as the assessments required under 
                subparagraph (A). If a State develops and administers a 
                computer adaptive assessment for such purposes, the 
                assessment shall meet the requirements of this 
                paragraph, except as follows:
                          ``(i) Notwithstanding subparagraph (B)(iii), 
                        the assessment--
                                  ``(I) shall measure, at a minimum, 
                                each student's academic proficiency 
                                against the State's academic standards 
                                for the student's grade level and 
                                growth toward such standards; and
                                  ``(II) if the State chooses, may be 
                                used to measure the student's level of 
                                academic proficiency and growth using 
                                assessment items above or below the 
                                student's grade level, including for 
                                use as part of a State's accountability 
                                system under paragraph (3).
                          ``(ii) Subparagraph (B)(ii) shall not be 
                        interpreted to require that all students taking 
                        the computer adaptive assessment be 
                        administered the same assessment items.
          ``(3) State accountability systems.--
                  ``(A) In general.--Each State plan shall demonstrate 
                that the State has developed and is implementing a 
                single, statewide accountability system to ensure that 
                all public school students graduate from high school 
                prepared for postsecondary education or the workforce 
                without the need for remediation.
                  ``(B) Elements.--Each State accountability system 
                described in subparagraph (A) shall at a minimum--
                          ``(i) annually measure the academic 
                        achievement of all public school students in 
                        the State against the State's mathematics and 
                        reading or language arts academic standards 
                        adopted under paragraph (1), which may include 
                        measures of student growth toward such 
                        standards, using the mathematics and reading or 
                        language arts assessments described in 
                        paragraph (2)(B) and other valid and reliable 
                        academic indicators related to student 
                        achievement as identified by the State;
                          ``(ii) annually evaluate and identify the 
                        academic performance of each public school in 
                        the State based on--
                                  ``(I) student academic achievement as 
                                measured in accordance with clause (i);
                                  ``(II) the overall performance, and 
                                achievement gaps as compared to all 
                                students in the school, for 
                                economically disadvantaged students, 
                                students from major racial and ethnic 
                                groups, students with disabilities, and 
                                English learners, except that 
                                disaggregation of data under this 
                                subclause shall not be required in a 
                                case in which the number of students in 
                                a category is insufficient to yield 
                                statistically reliable information or 
                                the results would reveal personally 
                                identifiable information about an 
                                individual student; and
                                  ``(III) other measures of school 
                                success; and
                          ``(iii) include a system for school 
                        improvement for low-performing public schools 
                        receiving funds under this subpart that--
                                  ``(I) implements interventions in 
                                such schools that are designed to 
                                address such schools' weaknesses; and
                                  ``(II) is implemented by local 
                                educational agencies serving such 
                                schools.
                  ``(C) Prohibition.--Nothing in this section shall be 
                construed to permit the Secretary to establish any 
                criteria that specifies, defines, or prescribes any 
                aspect of a State's accountability system developed and 
                implemented in accordance with this paragraph.
                  ``(D) Accountability for charter schools.--The 
                accountability provisions under this Act shall be 
                overseen for charter schools in accordance with State 
                charter school law.
                  ``(E) Recently arrived english learners.--A State may 
                delay inclusion of the academic achievement of English 
                learners for purposes of the evaluation and 
                identification described in subparagraph (B)(ii) if 
                such students have attended schools in the 50 states or 
                the District of Columbia for less than two years (in 
                the case of mathematics) and less than three years (in 
                the case of reading or language arts), except that if 
                the State uses growth calculations as described in 
                clause (i) of such subparagraph in such evaluation and 
                identification, the State shall include such students 
                in such calculations.
          ``(4) Requirements.--Each State plan shall describe--
                  ``(A) how the State educational agency will assist 
                each local educational agency and each public school 
                affected by the State plan to comply with the 
                requirements of this subpart, including how the State 
                educational agency will work with local educational 
                agencies to provide technical assistance; and
                  ``(B) how the State educational agency will ensure 
                that the results of the State assessments described in 
                paragraph (2), the other indicators selected by the 
                State under paragraph (3)(B)(i), and the school 
                evaluations described in paragraph (3)(B)(ii), will be 
                promptly provided to local educational agencies, 
                schools, teachers, and parents in a manner that is 
                clear and easy to understand, but not later than before 
                the beginning of the school year following the school 
                year in which such assessments, other indicators, or 
                evaluations are taken or completed.
          ``(5) Timeline for implementation.--Each State plan shall 
        describe the process by which the State will adopt and 
        implement the State academic standards, assessments, and 
        accountability system required under this section within 2 
        years of enactment of the Student Success Act.
          ``(6) Existing standards.--Nothing in this subpart shall 
        prohibit a State from revising, consistent with this section, 
        any standard adopted under this section before or after the 
        date of the enactment of the Student Success Act.
          ``(7) Existing state law.--Nothing in this section shall be 
        construed to alter any State law or regulation granting parents 
        authority over schools that repeatedly failed to make adequate 
        yearly progress under this section, as in effect on the day 
        before the date of the enactment of the Student Success Act.
  ``(c) Other Provisions To Support Teaching and Learning.--Each State 
plan shall contain assurances that--
          ``(1) the State will notify local educational agencies, 
        schools, teachers, parents, and the public of the academic 
        standards, academic assessments, and State accountability 
        system developed and implemented under this section;
          ``(2) the State will participate in biennial State academic 
        assessments of 4th and 8th grade reading and mathematics under 
        the National Assessment of Educational Progress carried out 
        under section 303(b)(2) of the National Assessment of 
        Educational Progress Authorization Act if the Secretary pays 
        the costs of administering such assessments;
          ``(3) the State educational agency will notify local 
        educational agencies and the public of the authority to operate 
        schoolwide programs;
          ``(4) the State educational agency will provide the least 
        restrictive and burdensome regulations for local educational 
        agencies and individual schools participating in a program 
        assisted under this subpart;
          ``(5) the State educational agency will encourage schools to 
        consolidate funds from other Federal, State, and local sources 
        for schoolwide reform in schoolwide programs under section 
        1114;
          ``(6) the State educational agency will modify or eliminate 
        State fiscal and accounting barriers so that schools can easily 
        consolidate funds from other Federal, State, and local sources 
        for schoolwide programs under section 1114; and
          ``(7) the State educational agency will inform local 
        educational agencies in the State of the local educational 
        agency's authority to transfer funds under section 1002 and to 
        obtain waivers under section 6401.
  ``(d) Parental Involvement.--Each State plan shall describe how the 
State educational agency will support the collection and dissemination 
to local educational agencies and schools of effective parental 
involvement practices. Such practices shall--
          ``(1) be based on the most current research that meets the 
        highest professional and technical standards on effective 
        parental involvement that fosters achievement to high standards 
        for all children;
          ``(2) be geared toward lowering barriers to greater 
        participation by parents in school planning, review, and 
        improvement; and
          ``(3) be coordinated with programs funded under subpart 3 of 
        part A of title III.
  ``(e) Peer Review and Secretarial Approval.--
          ``(1) Establishment.--Notwithstanding section 6543, the 
        Secretary shall--
                  ``(A) establish a peer-review process to assist in 
                the review of State plans; and
                  ``(B) appoint individuals to the peer-review process 
                who are representative of parents, teachers, State 
                educational agencies, local educational agencies, and 
                private sector employers (including representatives of 
                entrepreneurial ventures), and who are familiar with 
                educational standards, assessments, accountability, the 
                needs of low-performing schools, and other educational 
                needs of students, and ensure that 65 percent of such 
                appointees are practitioners and 10 percent are 
                representatives of private sector employers.
          ``(2) Approval.--The Secretary shall--
                  ``(A) approve a State plan within 120 days of its 
                submission;
                  ``(B) disapprove of the State plan only if the 
                Secretary demonstrates how the State plan fails to meet 
                the requirements of this section and immediately 
                notifies the State of such determination and the 
                reasons for such determination;
                  ``(C) not decline to approve a State's plan before--
                          ``(i) offering the State an opportunity to 
                        revise its plan;
                          ``(ii) providing technical assistance in 
                        order to assist the State to meet the 
                        requirements of this section; and
                          ``(iii) providing a hearing; and
                  ``(D) have the authority to disapprove a State plan 
                for not meeting the requirements of this subpart, but 
                shall not have the authority to require a State, as a 
                condition of approval of the State plan, to include in, 
                or delete from, such plan one or more specific elements 
                of the State's academic standards or State 
                accountability system, or to use specific academic 
                assessments or other indicators.
          ``(3) State revisions.--A State plan shall be revised by the 
        State educational agency if it is necessary to satisfy the 
        requirements of this section.
          ``(4) Public review.--All communications, feedback, and 
        notifications under this subsection shall be conducted in a 
        manner that is immediately made available to the public through 
        the website of the Department, including--
                  ``(A) peer review guidance;
                  ``(B) the names of the peer reviewers;
                  ``(C) State plans submitted or resubmitted by a 
                State, including the current approved plans;
                  ``(D) peer review notes;
                  ``(E) State plan determinations by the Secretary, 
                including approvals or disapprovals, and any deviations 
                from the peer reviewers' recommendations with an 
                explanation of the deviation; and
                  ``(F) hearings.
          ``(5) Prohibition.--The Secretary, and the Secretary's staff, 
        may not attempt to participate in, or influence, the peer 
        review process. No Federal employee may participate in, or 
        attempt to influence the peer review process, except to respond 
        to questions of a technical nature, which shall be publicly 
        reported.
  ``(f) Duration of the Plan.--
          ``(1) In general.--Each State plan shall--
                  ``(A) remain in effect for the duration of the 
                State's participation under this subpart; and
                  ``(B) be periodically reviewed and revised as 
                necessary by the State educational agency to reflect 
                changes in the State's strategies and programs under 
                this subpart.
          ``(2) Additional information.--If a State makes significant 
        changes to its State plan, such as the adoption of new State 
        academic standards or new academic assessments, or adopts a new 
        State accountability system, such information shall be 
        submitted to the Secretary under subsection (e)(2) for 
        approval.
  ``(g) Failure To Meet Requirements.--If a State fails to meet any of 
the requirements of this section then the Secretary shall withhold 
funds for State administration under this subpart until the Secretary 
determines that the State has fulfilled those requirements.
  ``(h) Reports.--
          ``(1) Annual state report card.--
                  ``(A) In general.--A State that receives assistance 
                under this subpart shall prepare and disseminate an 
                annual State report card. Such dissemination shall 
                include, at a minimum, publicly posting the report card 
                on the home page of the State educational agency's 
                website.
                  ``(B) Implementation.--The State report card shall 
                be--
                          ``(i) concise; and
                          ``(ii) presented in an understandable and 
                        uniform format that is developed in 
                        consultation with parents and, to the extent 
                        practicable, provided in a language that 
                        parents can understand.
                  ``(C) Required information.--The State shall include 
                in its annual State report card information on--
                          ``(i) the performance of students, in the 
                        aggregate and disaggregated by the categories 
                        of students described in subsection 
                        (b)(2)(B)(xii) (except that such disaggregation 
                        shall not be required in a case in which the 
                        number of students in a category is 
                        insufficient to yield statistically reliable 
                        information or the results would reveal 
                        personally identifiable information about an 
                        individual student), on the State academic 
                        assessments described in subsection (b)(2);
                          ``(ii) the participation rate on such 
                        assessments, in the aggregate and disaggregated 
                        in accordance with clause (i);
                          ``(iii) the performance of students, in the 
                        aggregate and disaggregated in accordance with 
                        clause (i), on other academic indicators 
                        described in subsection (b)(3)(B)(i);
                          ``(iv) for each public high school in the 
                        State, in the aggregate and disaggregated in 
                        accordance with clause (i)--
                                  ``(I) the four-year adjusted cohort 
                                graduation rate, and
                                  ``(II) if applicable, the extended-
                                year adjusted cohort graduation rate, 
                                reported separately for students 
                                graduating in 5 years or less, students 
                                graduating in 6 years or less, and 
                                students graduating in 7 or more years;
                          ``(v) each public school's evaluation results 
                        as determined in accordance with subsection 
                        (b)(3)(B)(ii);
                          ``(vi) the acquisition of English proficiency 
                        by English learners;
                          ``(vii) if appropriate, as determined by the 
                        State, the number and percentage of teachers in 
                        each category established under section 
                        2123(1), except that such information shall not 
                        reveal personally identifiable information 
                        about an individual teacher; and
                          ``(viii) the results of the assessments 
                        described in subsection (c)(2).
                  ``(D) Optional information.--The State may include in 
                its annual State report card such other information as 
                the State believes will best provide parents, students, 
                and other members of the public with information 
                regarding the progress of each of the State's public 
                elementary schools and public secondary schools, such 
                as the number of students enrolled in each public 
                secondary school in the State attaining career and 
                technical proficiencies, as defined in section 
                113(b)(2)(A) of the Carl D. Perkins Career and 
                Technical Education Act of 2006, and reported by the 
                State in a manner consistent with section 113(c) of 
                such Act.
                  ``(E) Data.--All personal, private student data shall 
                be prohibited from use beyond assessing student 
                performance as provided for in subparagraph (C). The 
                State's annual report shall only use such data as 
                sufficient to yield statistically reliable information, 
                and does not reveal personally identifiable information 
                about individual students.
          ``(2) Annual local educational agency report cards.--
                  ``(A) In general.--A local educational agency that 
                receives assistance under this subpart shall prepare 
                and disseminate an annual local educational agency 
                report card.
                  ``(B) Minimum requirements.--The State educational 
                agency shall ensure that each local educational agency 
                collects appropriate data and includes in the local 
                educational agency's annual report the information 
                described in paragraph (1)(C) as applied to the local 
                educational agency and each school served by the local 
                educational agency, and--
                          ``(i) in the case of a local educational 
                        agency, information that shows how students 
                        served by the local educational agency achieved 
                        on the statewide academic assessment and other 
                        academic indicators adopted in accordance with 
                        subsection (b)(3)(B)(i) compared to students in 
                        the State as a whole; and
                          ``(ii) in the case of a school, the school's 
                        evaluation under subsection (b)(3)(B)(ii).
                  ``(C) Other information.--A local educational agency 
                may include in its annual local educational agency 
                report card any other appropriate information, whether 
                or not such information is included in the annual State 
                report card.
                  ``(D) Data.--A local educational agency or school 
                shall only include in its annual local educational 
                agency report card data that are sufficient to yield 
                statistically reliable information, as determined by 
                the State, and that do not reveal personally 
                identifiable information about an individual student.
                  ``(E) Public dissemination.--The local educational 
                agency shall publicly disseminate the information 
                described in this paragraph to all schools served by 
                the local educational agency and to all parents of 
                students attending those schools in an understandable 
                and uniform format, and, to the extent practicable, in 
                a language that parents can understand, and make the 
                information widely available through public means, such 
                as posting on the Internet, distribution to the media, 
                and distribution through public agencies, except that 
                if a local educational agency issues a report card for 
                all students, the local educational agency may include 
                the information under this section as part of such 
                report.
          ``(3) Preexisting report cards.--A State educational agency 
        or local educational agency may use public report cards on the 
        performance of students, schools, local educational agencies, 
        or the State, that were in effect prior to the enactment of the 
        Student Success Act for the purpose of this subsection, so long 
        as any such report card is modified, as may be needed, to 
        contain the information required by this subsection, and 
        protects the privacy of individual students.
          ``(4) Parents right-to-know.--
                  ``(A) Achievement information.--At the beginning of 
                each school year, a school that receives funds under 
                this subpart shall provide to each individual parent 
                information on the level of achievement of the parent's 
                child in each of the State academic assessments and 
                other academic indicators adopted in accordance with 
                this subpart.
                  ``(B) Format.--The notice and information provided to 
                parents under this paragraph shall be in an 
                understandable and uniform format and, to the extent 
                practicable, provided in a language that the parents 
                can understand.
  ``(i) Privacy.--Information collected under this section shall be 
collected and disseminated in a manner that protects the privacy of 
individuals consistent with section 444 of the General Education 
Provisions Act and this Act.
  ``(j) Voluntary Partnerships.--A State retains the right to enter 
into a voluntary partnership with another State to develop and 
implement the academic standards and assessments required under this 
section, except that the Secretary shall not, either directly or 
indirectly, attempt to influence, incentivize, or coerce State--
          ``(1) adoption of the Common Core State Standards developed 
        under the Common Core State Standards Initiative, any other 
        academic standards common to a significant number of States, or 
        assessments tied to such standards; or
          ``(2) participation in any such partnerships.
  ``(k) Construction.--Nothing in this part shall be construed to 
prescribe the use of the academic assessments described in this part 
for student promotion or graduation purposes.
  ``(l) Special Rule With Respect To Bureau-Funded Schools.--In 
determining the assessments to be used by each school operated or 
funded by the Bureau of Indian Education receiving funds under this 
subpart, the following shall apply:
          ``(1) Each such school that is accredited by the State in 
        which it is operating shall use the assessments and other 
        academic indicators the State has developed and implemented to 
        meet the requirements of this section, or such other 
        appropriate assessment and academic indicators as approved by 
        the Secretary of the Interior.
          ``(2) Each such school that is accredited by a regional 
        accrediting organization shall adopt an appropriate assessment 
        and other academic indicators, in consultation with and with 
        the approval of, the Secretary of the Interior and consistent 
        with assessments and academic indicators adopted by other 
        schools in the same State or region, that meet the requirements 
        of this section.
          ``(3) Each such school that is accredited by a tribal 
        accrediting agency or tribal division of education shall use an 
        assessment and other academic indicators developed by such 
        agency or division, except that the Secretary of the Interior 
        shall ensure that such assessment and academic indicators meet 
        the requirements of this section.''.

SEC. 113. LOCAL EDUCATIONAL AGENCY PLANS.

  Section 1112 (20 U.S.C. 6312) is amended to read as follows:

``SEC. 1112. LOCAL EDUCATIONAL AGENCY PLANS.

  ``(a) Plans Required.--
          ``(1) Subgrants.--A local educational agency may receive a 
        subgrant under this subpart for any fiscal year only if such 
        agency has on file with the State educational agency a plan, 
        approved by the State educational agency, that is coordinated 
        with other programs under this Act, the Individuals with 
        Disabilities Education Act, the Carl D. Perkins Career and 
        Technical Education Act of 2006, the McKinney-Vento Homeless 
        Assistance Act, and other Acts, as appropriate.
          ``(2) Consolidated application.--The plan may be submitted as 
        part of a consolidated application under section 6305.
  ``(b) Plan Provisions.--Each local educational agency plan shall 
describe--
          ``(1) how the local educational agency will monitor, in 
        addition to the State assessments described in section 
        1111(b)(2), students' progress in meeting the State's academic 
        standards;
          ``(2) how the local educational agency will identify quickly 
        and effectively those students who may be at risk of failing to 
        meet the State's academic standards;
          ``(3) how the local educational agency will provide 
        additional educational assistance to individual students in 
        need of additional help in meeting the State's academic 
        standards;
          ``(4) how the local educational agency will implement the 
        school improvement system described in section 
        1111(b)(3)(B)(iii) for any of the agency's schools identified 
        under such section;
          ``(5) how the local educational agency will coordinate 
        programs under this subpart with other programs under this Act 
        and other Acts, as appropriate;
          ``(6) the poverty criteria that will be used to select school 
        attendance areas under section 1113;
          ``(7) how teachers, in consultation with parents, 
        administrators, and specialized instructional support 
        personnel, in targeted assistance schools under section 1115, 
        will identify the eligible children most in need of services 
        under this subpart;
          ``(8) in general, the nature of the programs to be conducted 
        by the local educational agency's schools under sections 1114 
        and 1115, and, where appropriate, educational services outside 
        such schools for children living in local institutions for 
        neglected and delinquent children, and for neglected and 
        delinquent children in community day school programs;
          ``(9) how the local educational agency will ensure that 
        migratory children who are eligible to receive services under 
        this subpart are selected to receive such services on the same 
        basis as other children who are selected to receive services 
        under this subpart;
          ``(10) the services the local educational agency will provide 
        homeless children, including services provided with funds 
        reserved under section 1113(c)(3)(A);
          ``(11) the strategy the local educational agency will use to 
        implement effective parental involvement under section 1118;
          ``(12) if appropriate, how the local educational agency will 
        use funds under this subpart to support preschool programs for 
        children, particularly children participating in a Head Start 
        program, which services may be provided directly by the local 
        educational agency or through a subcontract with the local Head 
        Start agency designated by the Secretary of Health and Human 
        Services under section 641 of the Head Start Act, or another 
        comparable early childhood development program;
          ``(13) how the local educational agency, through incentives 
        for voluntary transfers, the provision of professional 
        development, recruitment programs, incentive pay, performance 
        pay, or other effective strategies, will address disparities in 
        the rates of low-income and minority students and other 
        students being taught by ineffective teachers;
          ``(14) if appropriate, how the local educational agency will 
        use funds under this subpart to support programs that 
        coordinate and integrate--
                  ``(A) career and technical education aligned with 
                State technical standards that promote skills 
                attainment important to in-demand occupations or 
                industries in the State and the State's academic 
                standards under section 1111(b)(1); and
                  ``(B) work-based learning opportunities that provide 
                students in-depth interaction with industry 
                professionals; and
          ``(15) if appropriate, how the local educational agency will 
        use funds under this subpart to support dual enrollment 
        programs, early college high schools, and Advanced Placement or 
        International Baccalaureate programs.
  ``(c) Assurances.--Each local educational agency plan shall provide 
assurances that the local educational agency will--
          ``(1) participate, if selected, in biennial State academic 
        assessments of 4th and 8th grade reading and mathematics under 
        the National Assessment of Educational Progress carried out 
        under section 303(b)(2) of the National Assessment of 
        Educational Progress Authorization Act;
          ``(2) inform schools of schoolwide program authority and the 
        ability to consolidate funds from Federal, State, and local 
        sources;
          ``(3) provide technical assistance to schoolwide programs;
          ``(4) provide services to eligible children attending private 
        elementary and secondary schools in accordance with section 
        1120, and timely and meaningful consultation with private 
        school officials or representatives regarding such services;
          ``(5) in the case of a local educational agency that chooses 
        to use funds under this subpart to provide early childhood 
        development services to low-income children below the age of 
        compulsory school attendance, ensure that such services comply 
        with the performance standards established under section 
        641A(a) of the Head Start Act;
          ``(6) inform eligible schools of the local educational 
        agency's authority to request waivers on the school's behalf 
        under title VI; and
          ``(7) ensure that the results of the academic assessments 
        required under section 1111(b)(2) will be provided to parents 
        and teachers as soon as is practicably possible after the test 
        is taken, in an understandable and uniform format and, to the 
        extent practicable, provided in a language that the parents can 
        understand.
  ``(d) Special Rule.--In carrying out subsection (c)(5), the Secretary 
shall--
          ``(1) consult with the Secretary of Health and Human Services 
        and shall establish procedures (taking into consideration 
        existing State and local laws, and local teacher contracts) to 
        assist local educational agencies to comply with such 
        subparagraph; and
          ``(2) disseminate to local educational agencies the education 
        performance standards in effect under section 641A(a) of the 
        Head Start Act, and such agencies affected by such subsection 
        shall plan for the implementation of such subsection (taking 
        into consideration existing State and local laws, and local 
        teacher contracts).
  ``(e) Plan Development and Duration.--
          ``(1) Consultation.--Each local educational agency plan shall 
        be developed in consultation with teachers, school leaders, 
        public charter school representatives, administrators, and 
        other appropriate school personnel, and with parents of 
        children in schools served under this subpart.
          ``(2) Duration.--Each such plan shall be submitted for the 
        first year for which this part is in effect following the date 
        of the enactment of this Act and shall remain in effect for the 
        duration of the agency's participation under this subpart.
          ``(3) Review.--Each local educational agency shall 
        periodically review and, as necessary, revise its plan.
  ``(f) State Approval.--
          ``(1) In general.--Each local educational agency plan shall 
        be filed according to a schedule established by the State 
        educational agency.
          ``(2) Approval.--The State educational agency shall approve a 
        local educational agency's plan only if the State educational 
        agency determines that the local educational agency's plan--
                  ``(A) enables schools served under this subpart to 
                substantially help children served under this subpart 
                to meet the State's academic standards described in 
                section 1111(b)(1); and
                  ``(B) meets the requirements of this section.
          ``(3) Review.--The State educational agency shall review the 
        local educational agency's plan to determine if such agency's 
        activities are in accordance with section 1118.
  ``(g) Parental Notification.--
          ``(1) In general.--Each local educational agency using funds 
        under this subpart and subpart 4 to provide a language 
        instruction educational program shall, not later than 30 days 
        after the beginning of the school year, inform parents of an 
        English learner identified for participation, or participating 
        in, such a program of--
                  ``(A) the reasons for the identification of their 
                child as an English learner and in need of placement in 
                a language instruction educational program;
                  ``(B) the child's level of English proficiency, how 
                such level was assessed, and the status of the child's 
                academic achievement;
                  ``(C) the methods of instruction used in the program 
                in which their child is, or will be participating, and 
                the methods of instruction used in other available 
                programs, including how such programs differ in 
                content, instructional goals, and the use of English 
                and a native language in instruction;
                  ``(D) how the program in which their child is, or 
                will be participating, will meet the educational 
                strengths and needs of their child;
                  ``(E) how such program will specifically help their 
                child learn English, and meet age-appropriate academic 
                achievement standards for grade promotion and 
                graduation;
                  ``(F) the specific exit requirements for the program, 
                including the expected rate of transition from such 
                program into classrooms that are not tailored for 
                English learners, and the expected rate of graduation 
                from high school for such program if funds under this 
                subpart are used for children in secondary schools;
                  ``(G) in the case of a child with a disability, how 
                such program meets the objectives of the individualized 
                education program of the child; and
                  ``(H) information pertaining to parental rights that 
                includes written guidance--
                          ``(i) detailing--
                                  ``(I) the right that parents have to 
                                have their child immediately removed 
                                from such program upon their request; 
                                and
                                  ``(II) the options that parents have 
                                to decline to enroll their child in 
                                such program or to choose another 
                                program or method of instruction, if 
                                available; and
                          ``(ii) assisting parents in selecting among 
                        various programs and methods of instruction, if 
                        more than one program or method is offered by 
                        the eligible entity.
          ``(2) Notice.--The notice and information provided in 
        paragraph (1) to parents of a child identified for 
        participation in a language instruction educational program for 
        English learners shall be in an understandable and uniform 
        format and, to the extent practicable, provided in a language 
        that the parents can understand.
          ``(3) Special rule applicable during the school year.--For 
        those children who have not been identified as English learners 
        prior to the beginning of the school year the local educational 
        agency shall notify parents within the first 2 weeks of the 
        child being placed in a language instruction educational 
        program consistent with paragraphs (1) and (2).
          ``(4) Parental participation.--Each local educational agency 
        receiving funds under this subpart shall implement an effective 
        means of outreach to parents of English learners to inform the 
        parents regarding how the parents can be involved in the 
        education of their children, and be active participants in 
        assisting their children to attain English proficiency, achieve 
        at high levels in core academic subjects, and meet the State's 
        academic standards expected of all students, including holding, 
        and sending notice of opportunities for, regular meetings for 
        the purpose of formulating and responding to recommendations 
        from parents of students assisted under this subpart.
          ``(5) Basis for admission or exclusion.--A student shall not 
        be admitted to, or excluded from, any federally assisted 
        education program on the basis of a surname or language-
        minority status.''.

SEC. 114. ELIGIBLE SCHOOL ATTENDANCE AREAS.

  Section 1113 (20 U.S.C. 6313) is amended--
          (1) by striking ``part'' each place it appears and inserting 
        ``subpart''; and
          (2) in subsection (c)(4)--
                  (A) by striking ``subpart 2'' and inserting ``chapter 
                B''; and
                  (B) by striking ``school improvement, corrective 
                action, and restructuring under section 1116(b)'' and 
                inserting ``school improvement under section 
                1111(b)(3)(B)(iii)''.

SEC. 115. SCHOOLWIDE PROGRAMS.

  Section 1114 (20 U.S.C. 6314) is amended--
          (1) in subsection (a)--
                  (A) in paragraph (1)--
                          (i) by striking ``part'' and inserting 
                        ``subpart''; and
                          (ii) by striking ``in which'' through ``such 
                        families'';
                  (B) in paragraph (2)--
                          (i) in subparagraph (A)(i), by striking 
                        ``part'' and inserting ``subpart''; and
                          (ii) in subparagraph (B)--
                                  (I) by striking ``children with 
                                limited English proficiency'' and 
                                inserting ``English learners''; and
                                  (II) by striking ``part'' and 
                                inserting ``subpart'';
                  (C) in paragraph (3)(B), by striking ``maintenance of 
                effort,'' after ``private school children,''; and
                  (D) by striking paragraph (4);
          (2) in subsection (b)--
                  (A) in paragraph (1)--
                          (i) in subparagraph (A)--
                                  (I) by striking ``(including'' and 
                                all that follows through ``1309(2))''; 
                                and
                                  (II) by striking ``content standards 
                                and the State student academic 
                                achievement standards'' and inserting 
                                ``standards'';
                          (ii) in subparagraph (B)--
                                  (I) in clause (i), by striking 
                                ``proficient'' and all that follows 
                                through ``section 1111(b)(1)(D)'' and 
                                inserting ``academic standards 
                                described in section 1111(b)(1)'';
                                  (II) in clause (ii), in the matter 
                                preceding subclause (I), by striking 
                                ``based on scientifically based 
                                research'' and inserting ``evidence-
                                based'';
                                  (III) in clause (iii)--
                                          (aa) in subclause (I)--
                                                  (AA) by striking 
                                                ``student academic 
                                                achievement standards'' 
                                                and inserting 
                                                ``academic standards''; 
                                                and
                                                  (BB) by striking 
                                                ``schoolwide program,'' 
                                                and all that follows 
                                                through ``technical 
                                                education programs; 
                                                and'' and inserting 
                                                ``schoolwide programs; 
                                                and''; and
                                          (bb) in subclause (II), by 
                                        striking ``and'';
                                  (IV) in clause (iv)--
                                          (aa) by striking ``the State 
                                        and local improvement plans'' 
                                        and inserting ``school 
                                        improvement strategies''; and
                                          (bb) by striking the period 
                                        and inserting ``; and''; and
                                  (V) by adding at the end the 
                                following new clause:
                          ``(v) may be delivered by nonprofit or for-
                        profit external providers with expertise in 
                        using evidence-based or other effective 
                        strategies to improve student achievement.'';
                          (iii) in subparagraph (C), by striking 
                        ``highly qualified'' and inserting 
                        ``effective'';
                          (iv) in subparagraph (D)--
                                  (I) by striking ``In accordance with 
                                section 1119 and subsection (a)(4), 
                                high-quality'' and inserting ``High-
                                quality'';
                                  (II) by striking ``pupil services'' 
                                and inserting ``specialized 
                                instructional support services''; and
                                  (III) by striking ``student academic 
                                achievement'' and inserting 
                                ``academic'';
                          (v) in subparagraph (E), by striking ``high-
                        quality highly qualified'' and inserting 
                        ``effective'';
                          (vi) in subparagraph (G), by striking ``, 
                        such as Head Start, Even Start, Early Reading 
                        First, or a State-run preschool program,'';
                          (vii) in subparagraph (H), by striking 
                        ``section 1111(b)(3)'' and inserting ``section 
                        1111(b)(2)'';
                          (viii) in subparagraph (I), by striking 
                        ``proficient or advanced levels of academic 
                        achievement standards'' and inserting ``State 
                        academic standards''; and
                          (ix) in subparagraph (J), by striking 
                        ``vocational'' and inserting ``career''; and
                  (B) in paragraph (2)--
                          (i) in subparagraph (A)--
                                  (I) in the matter preceding clause 
                                (i)--
                                          (aa) by striking ``first 
                                        develop'' and all that follows 
                                        through ``2001)'' and inserting 
                                        ``have in place''; and
                                          (bb) by striking ``and its 
                                        school support team or other 
                                        technical assistance provider 
                                        under section 1117'';
                                  (II) in clause (ii), by striking 
                                ``part'' and inserting ``subpart''; and
                                  (III) in clause (iv), by striking 
                                ``section 1111(b)(3)'' and inserting 
                                ``section 1111(b)(2)''; and
                          (ii) in subparagraph (B)--
                                  (I) in clause (i)--
                                          (aa) in subclause (I), by 
                                        striking ``, after considering 
                                        the recommendation of the 
                                        technical assistance providers 
                                        under section 1117,''; and
                                          (bb) in subclause (II), by 
                                        striking ``No Child Left Behind 
                                        Act of 2001'' and inserting 
                                        ``Student Success Act'';
                                  (II) in clause (ii)--
                                          (aa) by striking ``(including 
                                        administrators of programs 
                                        described in other parts of 
                                        this title)''; and
                                          (bb) by striking ``pupil 
                                        services'' and inserting 
                                        ``specialized instructional 
                                        support services'';
                                  (III) in clause (iii), by striking 
                                ``part'' and inserting ``subpart''; and
                                  (IV) in clause (v), by striking 
                                ``Reading First, Early Reading First, 
                                Even Start,''; and
          (3) in subsection (c)--
                  (A) by striking ``part'' and inserting ``subpart''; 
                and
                  (B) by striking ``6,'' and all that follows through 
                the period at the end and inserting ``6.''.

SEC. 116. TARGETED ASSISTANCE SCHOOLS.

  Section 1115 (20 U.S.C. 6315) is amended--
          (1) in subsection (a)--
                  (A) by striking ``are ineligible for a schoolwide 
                program under section 1114, or that'';
                  (B) by striking ``operate such'' and inserting 
                ``operate''; and
                  (C) by striking ``part'' and inserting ``subpart'';
          (2) in subsection (b)--
                  (A) in paragraph (1)(B), by striking ``challenging 
                student academic achievement'' and inserting 
                ``academic'';
                  (B) in paragraph (2)--
                          (i) in subparagraph (A)--
                                  (I) by striking ``limited English 
                                proficient children'' and inserting 
                                ``English learners''; and
                                  (II) by striking ``part'' each place 
                                it appears and inserting ``subpart'';
                          (ii) in subparagraph (B)--
                                  (I) in the heading, by striking ``, 
                                even start, or early reading first'';
                                  (II) by striking ``, Even Start, or 
                                Early Reading First''; and
                                  (III) by striking ``part'' and 
                                inserting ``subpart'';
                          (iii) in subparagraph (C)--
                                  (I) by amending the heading to read 
                                as follows: ``Subpart 3 children.--'';
                                  (II) by striking ``part C'' and 
                                inserting ``subpart 3''; and
                                  (III) by striking ``part'' and 
                                inserting ``subpart''; and
                          (iv) in subparagraphs (D) and (E), by 
                        striking ``part'' each place it appears and 
                        inserting ``subpart''; and
                  (C) in paragraph (3), by striking ``part'' and 
                inserting ``subpart'';
          (3) in subsection (c)--
                  (A) in paragraph (1)--
                          (i) in the matter preceding subparagraph 
                        (A)--
                                  (I) by striking ``part'' and 
                                inserting ``subpart''; and
                                  (II) by striking ``challenging 
                                student academic achievement'' and 
                                inserting ``academic'';
                          (ii) in subparagraph (A)--
                                  (I) by striking ``part'' and 
                                inserting ``subpart''; and
                                  (II) by striking ``challenging 
                                student academic achievement'' and 
                                inserting ``academic'';
                          (iii) in subparagraph (B), by striking 
                        ``part'' and inserting ``subpart'';
                          (iv) in subparagraph (C)--
                                  (I) in the matter preceding clause 
                                (i), by striking ``based on 
                                scientifically based research'' and 
                                inserting ``evidence-based''; and
                                  (II) in clause (iii), by striking 
                                ``part'' and inserting ``subpart'';
                          (v) in subparagraph (D), by striking ``such 
                        as Head Start, Even Start, Early Reading First 
                        or State-run preschool programs'';
                          (vi) in subparagraph (E), by striking 
                        ``highly qualified'' and inserting 
                        ``effective'';
                          (vii) in subparagraph (F)--
                                  (I) by striking ``in accordance with 
                                subsection (e)(3) and section 1119,'';
                                  (II) by striking ``part'' and 
                                inserting ``subpart''; and
                                  (III) by striking ``pupil services 
                                personnel'' and inserting ``specialized 
                                instructional support personnel''; and
                          (viii) in subparagraph (H), by striking 
                        ``vocational'' and inserting ``career''; and
                  (B) in paragraph (2)--
                          (i) in the matter preceding subparagraph (A), 
                        by striking ``proficient and advanced levels of 
                        achievement'' and inserting ``academic 
                        standards'';
                          (ii) in subparagraph (A), by striking 
                        ``part'' and inserting ``subpart''; and
                          (iii) in subparagraph (B), by striking 
                        ``challenging student academic achievement'' 
                        and inserting ``academic'';
          (4) in subsection (d), in the matter preceding paragraph (1), 
        by striking ``part'' each place it appears and inserting 
        ``subpart'';
          (5) in subsection (e)--
                  (A) in paragraph (2)(B)--
                          (i) in the matter preceding clause (i), by 
                        striking ``part'' and inserting ``subpart''; 
                        and
                          (ii) in clause (iii), by striking ``pupil 
                        services'' and inserting ``specialized 
                        instructional support services''; and
                  (B) by striking paragraph (3); and
          (6) by adding at the end the following new subsection:
  ``(f) Delivery of Services.--The elements of a targeted assistance 
program under this section may be delivered by nonprofit or for-profit 
external providers with expertise in using evidence-based or other 
effective strategies to improve student achievement.''.

SEC. 117. ACADEMIC ASSESSMENT AND LOCAL EDUCATIONAL AGENCY AND SCHOOL 
                    IMPROVEMENT; SCHOOL SUPPORT AND RECOGNITION.

  The Act is amended by repealing sections 1116 and 1117 (20 U.S.C. 
6316; 6317).

SEC. 118. PARENTAL INVOLVEMENT.

  Section 1118 (20 U.S.C. 6318) is amended--
          (1) by striking ``part'' each place such term appears and 
        inserting ``subpart'';
          (2) in subsection (a)--
                  (A) in paragraph (2)--
                          (i) in subparagraph (A), by striking ``, 
                        and'' and all that follows through ``1116''; 
                        and
                          (ii) in subparagraph (D), by striking ``, 
                        such as'' and all that follows through 
                        ``preschool programs''; and
                  (B) in paragraph (3)(A), by striking ``subpart 2 of 
                this part'' each place it appears and inserting 
                ``chapter B of this subpart'';
          (3) by amending subsection (c)(4)(B) to read as follows:
                  ``(B) a description and explanation of the curriculum 
                in use at the school and the forms of academic 
                assessment used to measure student progress; and'';
          (4) in subsection (d)(1), by striking ``student academic 
        achievement'' and inserting ``academic'';
          (5) in subsection (e)--
                  (A) in paragraph (1), by striking ``State's academic 
                content standards and State student academic 
                achievement standards'' and inserting ``State's 
                academic standards'';
                  (B) in paragraph (3)--
                          (i) by striking ``pupil services personnel,'' 
                        and inserting ``specialized instructional 
                        support personnel,''; and
                          (ii) by striking ``principals,'' and 
                        inserting ``school leaders,''; and
                  (C) in paragraph (4), by striking ``Head Start, 
                Reading First, Early Reading First, Even Start, the 
                Home Instruction Programs for Preschool Youngsters, the 
                Parents as Teachers Program, and public preschool and 
                other'' and inserting ``other Federal, State, and 
                local''; and
          (6) by amending subsection (g) to read as follows:
  ``(g) Family Engagement in Education Programs.--In a State operating 
a program under subpart 3 of part A of title III, each local 
educational agency or school that receives assistance under this 
subpart shall inform such parents and organizations of the existence of 
such programs.''.

SEC. 119. QUALIFICATIONS FOR TEACHERS AND PARAPROFESSIONALS.

  The Act is amended by repealing section 1119 (20 U.S.C. 6319).

SEC. 120. PARTICIPATION OF CHILDREN ENROLLED IN PRIVATE SCHOOLS.

  Section 1120 (20 U.S.C. 6320) is amended to read as follows:

``SEC. 1120. PARTICIPATION OF CHILDREN ENROLLED IN PRIVATE SCHOOLS.

  ``(a) General Requirement.--
          ``(1) In general.--To the extent consistent with the number 
        of eligible children identified under section 1115(b) in the 
        school district served by a local educational agency who are 
        enrolled in private elementary schools and secondary schools, a 
        local educational agency shall--
                  ``(A) after timely and meaningful consultation with 
                appropriate private school officials or 
                representatives, provide such service, on an equitable 
                basis and individually or in combination, as requested 
                by the officials or representatives to best meet the 
                needs of such children, special educational services, 
                instructional services (including evaluations to 
                determine students' progress in their academic needs), 
                counseling, mentoring, one-on-one tutoring, or other 
                benefits under this subpart (such as dual enrollment, 
                educational radio and television, computer equipment 
                and materials, other technology, and mobile educational 
                services and equipment) that address their needs; and
                  ``(B) ensure that teachers and families of the 
                children participate, on an equitable basis, in 
                services and activities developed pursuant to this 
                subpart.
          ``(2) Secular, neutral, nonideological.--Such educational 
        services or other benefits, including materials and equipment, 
        shall be secular, neutral, and nonideological.
          ``(3) Equity.--
                  ``(A) In general.--Educational services and other 
                benefits for such private school children shall be 
                equitable in comparison to services and other benefits 
                for public school children participating under this 
                subpart, and shall be provided in a timely manner.
                  ``(B) Ombudsman.--To help ensure such equity for such 
                private school children, teachers, and other 
                educational personnel, the State educational agency 
                involved shall designate an ombudsman to monitor and 
                enforce the requirements of this subpart.
          ``(4) Expenditures.--
                  ``(A) In general.--Expenditures for educational 
                services and other benefits to eligible private school 
                children shall be equal to the expenditures for 
                participating public school children, taking into 
                account the number, and educational needs, of the 
                children to be served. The share of funds shall be 
                determined based on the total allocation received by 
                the local educational agency prior to any allowable 
                expenditures authorized under this title.
                  ``(B) Obligation of funds.--Funds allocated to a 
                local educational agency for educational services and 
                other benefits to eligible private school children 
                shall--
                          ``(i) be obligated in the fiscal year for 
                        which the funds are received by the agency; and
                          ``(ii) with respect to any such funds that 
                        cannot be so obligated, be used to serve such 
                        children in the following fiscal year.
                  ``(C) Notice of allocation.--Each State educational 
                agency shall--
                          ``(i) determine, in a timely manner, the 
                        proportion of funds to be allocated to each 
                        local educational agency in the State for 
                        educational services and other benefits under 
                        this subpart to eligible private school 
                        children; and
                          ``(ii) provide notice, simultaneously, to 
                        each such local educational agency and the 
                        appropriate private school officials or their 
                        representatives in the State of such allocation 
                        of funds.
          ``(5) Provision of services.--The local educational agency 
        or, in a case described in subsection (b)(6)(C), the State 
        educational agency involved, may provide services under this 
        section directly or through contracts with public or private 
        agencies, organizations, and institutions.
  ``(b) Consultation.--
          ``(1) In general.--To ensure timely and meaningful 
        consultation, a local educational agency shall consult with 
        appropriate private school officials or representatives during 
        the design and development of such agency's programs under this 
        subpart in order to reach an agreement between the agency and 
        the officials or representatives about equitable and effective 
        programs for eligible private school children, the results of 
        which shall be transmitted to the designated ombudsmen under 
        section 1120(a)(3)(B). Such process shall include consultation 
        on issues such as--
                  ``(A) how the children's needs will be identified;
                  ``(B) what services will be offered;
                  ``(C) how, where, and by whom the services will be 
                provided;
                  ``(D) how the services will be academically assessed 
                and how the results of that assessment will be used to 
                improve those services;
                  ``(E) the size and scope of the equitable services to 
                be provided to the eligible private school children, 
                and the proportion of funds that is allocated under 
                subsection (a)(4)(A) for such services, how that 
                proportion of funds is determined under such 
                subsection, and an itemization of the costs of the 
                services to be provided;
                  ``(F) the method or sources of data that are used 
                under subsection (c) and section 1113(c)(1) to 
                determine the number of children from low-income 
                families in participating school attendance areas who 
                attend private schools;
                  ``(G) how and when the agency will make decisions 
                about the delivery of services to such children, 
                including a thorough consideration and analysis of the 
                views of the private school officials or 
                representatives on the provision of services through a 
                contract with potential third-party providers;
                  ``(H) how, if the agency disagrees with the views of 
                the private school officials or representatives on the 
                provision of services through a contract, the local 
                educational agency will provide in writing to such 
                private school officials an analysis of the reasons why 
                the local educational agency has chosen not to use a 
                contractor;
                  ``(I) whether the agency will provide services under 
                this section directly or through contracts with public 
                and private agencies, organizations, and institutions;
                  ``(J) whether to provide equitable services to 
                eligible private school children--
                          ``(i) by creating a pool or pools of funds 
                        with all of the funds allocated under 
                        subsection (a)(4) based on all the children 
                        from low-income families who attend private 
                        schools in a participating school attendance 
                        area of the agency from which the local 
                        educational agency will provide such services 
                        to all such children; or
                          ``(ii) by providing such services to eligible 
                        children in each private school in the agency's 
                        participating school attendance area with the 
                        proportion of funds allocated under subsection 
                        (a)(4) based on the number of children from 
                        low-income families who attend such school;
                  ``(K) at what time and where services will be 
                provided so such students can receive such services 
                without interrupting their other school or coursework; 
                and
                  ``(L) whether to consolidate and use funds under this 
                subpart to provide schoolwide programs for a private 
                school.
          ``(2) Disagreement.--If a local educational agency disagrees 
        with the views of private school officials or representatives 
        with respect to an issue described in paragraph (1), the local 
        educational agency shall provide in writing to such private 
        school officials an analysis of the reasons why the local 
        educational agency has chosen not to adopt the course of action 
        requested by such officials.
          ``(3) Timing.--Such consultation shall include meetings of 
        agency and private school officials or representatives and 
        shall occur before the local educational agency makes any 
        decision that affects the opportunities of eligible private 
        school children to participate in programs under this subpart. 
        Such meetings shall continue throughout implementation and 
        assessment of services provided under this section.
          ``(4) Discussion.--Such consultation shall include a 
        discussion of service delivery mechanisms a local educational 
        agency can use to provide equitable services to eligible 
        private school children.
          ``(5) Documentation.--Each local educational agency shall 
        maintain in the agency's records and provide to the State 
        educational agency involved a written affirmation signed by 
        officials or representatives of each participating private 
        school that the meaningful consultation required by this 
        section has occurred. The written affirmation shall provide the 
        option for private school officials or representatives to 
        indicate that timely and meaningful consultation has not 
        occurred or that the program design is not equitable with 
        respect to eligible private school children. If such officials 
        or representatives do not provide such affirmation within a 
        reasonable period of time, the local educational agency shall 
        forward the documentation that such consultation has, or 
        attempts at such consultation have, taken place to the State 
        educational agency.
          ``(6) Compliance.--
                  ``(A) In general.--A private school official shall 
                have the right to file a complaint with the State 
                educational agency that the local educational agency 
                did not engage in consultation that was meaningful and 
                timely, did not give due consideration to the views of 
                the private school official, or did not treat the 
                private school or its students equitably as required by 
                this section.
                  ``(B) Procedure.--If the private school official 
                wishes to file a complaint, the official shall provide 
                the basis of the noncompliance with this section by the 
                local educational agency to the State educational 
                agency, and the local educational agency shall forward 
                the appropriate documentation to the State educational 
                agency.
                  ``(C) State educational agencies.--A State 
                educational agency shall provide services under this 
                section directly or through contracts with public or 
                private agencies, organizations, and institutions, if--
                          ``(i) the appropriate private school 
                        officials or their representatives have--
                                  ``(I) requested that the State 
                                educational agency provide such 
                                services directly; and
                                  ``(II) demonstrated that the local 
                                educational agency involved has not met 
                                the requirements of this section; or
                          ``(ii) in a case in which--
                                  ``(I) a local educational agency has 
                                more than 10,000 children from low-
                                income families who attend private 
                                elementary schools or secondary schools 
                                in a participating school attendance 
                                area of the agency that are not being 
                                served by the agency's program under 
                                this section; or
                                  ``(II) 90 percent of the eligible 
                                private school students in a 
                                participating school attendance area of 
                                the agency are not being served by the 
                                agency's program under this section.
  ``(c) Allocation for Equitable Service to Private School Students.--
          ``(1) Calculation.--A local educational agency shall have the 
        final authority, consistent with this section, to calculate the 
        number of children, ages 5 through 17, who are from low-income 
        families and attend private schools by--
                  ``(A) using the same measure of low income used to 
                count public school children;
                  ``(B) using the results of a survey that, to the 
                extent possible, protects the identity of families of 
                private school students, and allowing such survey 
                results to be extrapolated if complete actual data are 
                unavailable;
                  ``(C) applying the low-income percentage of each 
                participating public school attendance area, determined 
                pursuant to this section, to the number of private 
                school children who reside in that school attendance 
                area; or
                  ``(D) using an equated measure of low income 
                correlated with the measure of low income used to count 
                public school children.
          ``(2) Complaint process.--Any dispute regarding low-income 
        data for private school students shall be subject to the 
        complaint process authorized in section 6503.
  ``(d) Public Control of Funds.--
          ``(1) In general.--The control of funds provided under this 
        subpart, and title to materials, equipment, and property 
        purchased with such funds, shall be in a public agency, and a 
        public agency shall administer such funds, materials, 
        equipment, and property.
          ``(2) Provision of services.--
                  ``(A) Provider.--The provision of services under this 
                section shall be provided--
                          ``(i) by employees of a public agency; or
                          ``(ii) through a contract by such public 
                        agency with an individual, association, agency, 
                        or organization.
                  ``(B) Requirement.--In the provision of such 
                services, such employee, individual, association, 
                agency, or organization shall be independent of such 
                private school and of any religious organization, and 
                such employment or contract shall be under the control 
                and supervision of such public agency.
  ``(e) Standards for a Bypass.--If a local educational agency is 
prohibited by law from providing for the participation in programs on 
an equitable basis of eligible children enrolled in private elementary 
schools and secondary schools, or if the Secretary determines that a 
local educational agency has substantially failed or is unwilling to 
provide for such participation, as required by this section, the 
Secretary shall--
          ``(1) waive the requirements of this section for such local 
        educational agency;
          ``(2) arrange for the provision of services to such children 
        through arrangements that shall be subject to the requirements 
        of this section and sections 6503 and 6504; and
          ``(3) in making the determination under this subsection, 
        consider one or more factors, including the quality, size, 
        scope, and location of the program and the opportunity of 
        eligible children to participate.''.

SEC. 121. FISCAL REQUIREMENTS.

  Section 1120A (20 U.S.C. 6321) is amended--
          (1) by striking ``part'' each place it appears and inserting 
        ``subpart''; and
          (2) by striking subsection (a) and redesignating subsections 
        (b), (c), and (d) as subsections (a), (b), and (c), 
        respectively.

SEC. 122. COORDINATION REQUIREMENTS.

  Section 1120B (20 U.S.C. 6322) is amended--
          (1) by striking ``part'' each place it appears and inserting 
        ``subpart'';
          (2) in subsection (a), by striking ``such as the Early 
        Reading First program''; and
          (3) in subsection (b)--
                  (A) in the matter preceding paragraph (1), by 
                striking ``, such as the Early Reading First 
                program,'';
                  (B) in paragraphs (1) through (3), by striking ``such 
                as the Early Reading First program'' each place it 
                appears;
                  (C) in paragraph (4), by striking ``Early Reading 
                First program staff,''; and
                  (D) in paragraph (5), by striking ``and entities 
                carrying out Early Reading First programs''.

SEC. 123. GRANTS FOR THE OUTLYING AREAS AND THE SECRETARY OF THE 
                    INTERIOR.

  Section 1121 (20 U.S.C. 6331) is amended--
          (1) in subsection (a), by striking ``appropriated for 
        payments to States for any fiscal year under section 1002(a) 
        and 1125A(f)'' and inserting ``reserved for this chapter under 
        section 1122(a)'';
          (2) in subsection (b)--
                  (A) in paragraph (2), by striking ``the No Child Left 
                Behind Act of 2001'' and inserting ``the Student 
                Success Act''; and
                  (B) in paragraph (3)--
                          (i) in subparagraph (B), by striking 
                        ``basis,'' and all that follows through the 
                        period at the end and inserting ``basis.'';
                          (ii) in subparagraph (C)(ii), by striking 
                        ``challenging State academic content 
                        standards'' and inserting ``State academic 
                        standards''; and
                          (iii) by striking subparagraph (D); and
          (3) in subsection (d)(2), by striking ``part'' and inserting 
        ``subpart''.

SEC. 124. ALLOCATIONS TO STATES.

  Section 1122 (20 U.S.C. 6332) is amended--
          (1) by amending subsection (a) to read as follows:
  ``(a) Reservation.--
          ``(1) In general.--From the amounts appropriated under 
        section 3(a)(1), the Secretary shall reserve 91.44 percent of 
        such amounts to carry out this chapter.
          ``(2) Allocation formula.--Of the amount reserved under 
        paragraph (1) for each of fiscal years 2016 to 2021 (referred 
        to in this subsection as the current fiscal year)--
                  ``(A) an amount equal to the amount made available to 
                carry out section 1124 for fiscal year 2001 shall be 
                used to carry out section 1124;
                  ``(B) an amount equal to the amount made available to 
                carry out section 1124A for fiscal year 2001 shall be 
                used to carry out section 1124A; and
                  ``(C) an amount equal to 100 percent of the amount, 
                if any, by which the total amount made available to 
                carry out this chapter for the fiscal year for which 
                the determination is made exceeds the total amount 
                available to carry out sections 1124 and 1124A for 
                fiscal year 2001 shall be used to carry out sections 
                1125 and 1125A and such amount shall be divided equally 
                between sections 1125 and 1125A.'';
          (2) in subsection (b)(1), by striking ``subpart'' and 
        inserting ``chapter'';
          (3) in subsection (c)(3), by striking ``part'' and inserting 
        ``subpart''; and
          (4) in subsection (d)(1), by striking ``subpart'' and 
        inserting ``chapter''.

SEC. 125. BASIC GRANTS TO LOCAL EDUCATIONAL AGENCIES.

  Section 1124 (20 U.S.C. 6333) is amended--
          (1) in subsection (a)--
                  (A) in paragraph (3)--
                          (i) in subparagraph (B), by striking 
                        ``subpart'' and inserting ``chapter''; and
                          (ii) in subparagraph (C)(i), by striking 
                        ``subpart'' and inserting ``chapter''; and
                  (B) in paragraph (4)(C), by striking ``subpart'' each 
                place it appears and inserting ``chapter''; and
          (2) in subsection (c)--
                  (A) in paragraph (1)(B), by striking ``subpart 1 of 
                part D'' and inserting ``chapter A of subpart 3''; and
                  (B) in paragraph (2), by striking ``part'' and 
                inserting ``subpart''.

SEC. 126. TARGETED GRANTS TO LOCAL EDUCATIONAL AGENCIES.

  Section 1125 (20 U.S.C. 6335) is amended--
          (1) in subsection (c)(2)--
                  (A) in subparagraph (B)--
                          (i) in clause (i), by striking ``15.58'' and 
                        inserting ``15.59'';
                          (ii) in clause (ii)--
                                  (I) by striking ``15.58'' and 
                                inserting ``15.59''; and
                                  (II) by striking ``22.11'' and 
                                inserting ``22.12'';
                          (iii) in clause (iii)--
                                  (I) by striking ``22.11'' and 
                                inserting ``22.12''; and
                                  (II) by striking ``30.16'' and 
                                inserting ``30.17'';
                          (iv) in clause (iv)--
                                  (I) by striking ``30.16'' and 
                                inserting ``30.17''; and
                                  (II) by striking ``38.24'' and 
                                inserting ``38.25''; and
                          (v) in clause (v), by striking ``38.24'' and 
                        inserting ``38.25'';
                  (B) in subparagraph (C)--
                          (i) in clause (i), by striking ``691'' and 
                        inserting ``692'';
                          (ii) in clause (ii)--
                                  (I) by striking ``692'' and inserting 
                                ``693''; and
                                  (II) by striking ``2,262'' and 
                                inserting ``2,263'';
                          (iii) in clause (iii)--
                                  (I) by striking ``2,263'' and 
                                inserting ``2,264''; and
                                  (II) by striking ``7,851'' and 
                                inserting ``7,852'';
                          (iv) in clause (iv)--
                                  (I) by striking ``7,852'' and 
                                inserting ``7,853''; and
                                  (II) by striking ``35,514'' and 
                                inserting ``35,515''; and
                          (v) in clause (v), by striking ``35,514'' and 
                        inserting ``35,515''; and
          (2) by adding at the end the following:
  ``(f) Application.--
          ``(1) In general.--The percentage and number ranges described 
        in subparagraphs (B) and (C) of subsection (c)(2) shall be 
        applied with respect to fiscal years 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 
        2020, and 2021 as such percentages and numbers were in effect 
        on the day before the date of the enactment of the Student 
        Success Act.
          ``(2) Secretary's certification.--For fiscal year 2022 and 
        each subsequent fiscal year, the percentage and number ranges 
        described in subparagraphs (B) and (C) of subsection (c)(2) 
        shall be applied as such percentages and numbers were in effect 
        on the day before the date of the enactment of the Student 
        Success Act unless the Secretary certifies that amendments made 
        to such percentages and numbers by the Student Success Act will 
        not result in harm to any school district.''.

SEC. 127. ADEQUACY OF FUNDING TO LOCAL EDUCATIONAL AGENCIES IN FISCAL 
                    YEARS AFTER FISCAL YEAR 2001.

  Section 1125AA (20 U.S.C. 6336) is amended to read as follows:

``SEC. 1125AA. ADEQUACY OF FUNDING TO LOCAL EDUCATIONAL AGENCIES IN 
                    FISCAL YEARS AFTER FISCAL YEAR 2001.

  ``(a) Limitation of Allocation.--Pursuant to section 1122, the total 
amount allocated in any fiscal year after fiscal year 2001 for programs 
and activities under this subpart shall not exceed the amount allocated 
in fiscal year 2001 for such programs and activities unless the amount 
available for targeted grants to local educational agencies under 
section 1125 in the applicable fiscal year meets the requirements of 
section 1122(a).
  ``(b) Findings.--Congress makes the following findings:
          ``(1) The formulas for distributing Targeted and Education 
        Finance Incentive grants use two weighting systems, one based 
        on the percentage of the aged 5-17 population in a local 
        educational agency that is eligible to receive funds under this 
        title (percentage weighting), and another based on the absolute 
        number of such students (number weighting). Whichever of these 
        weighting systems results in the highest total weighted formula 
        student count for a local educational agency is the weighting 
        system used for that agency in the final allocation of Targeted 
        and Education Finance Incentive Grant funds.
          ``(2) The Congressional Research Service has said the number 
        weighting alternative is generally more favorable to large 
        local educational agencies with much larger counts of eligible 
        children, but not necessarily higher concentrations, weighted 
        at the highest point in the scale than smaller local 
        educational agencies with smaller counts, but higher 
        concentrations, of eligible children.
          ``(3) The current percentage and number weighting scales are 
        based on the most current data available in 2001 on the 
        distribution of eligible children across local educational 
        agencies.
          ``(4) Prior to the date of the enactment of the Student 
        Success Act, Congress expects updated data to be available, 
        which will provide Congress an opportunity to update these 
        scales based on such data.
          ``(5) When these scales are updated, Congress has a further 
        obligation to evaluate the use of percentage and number 
        weighting to ensure the most equitable distribution of Targeted 
        and Education Finance Incentive Grant funds to local 
        educational agencies.''.

SEC. 128. EDUCATION FINANCE INCENTIVE GRANT PROGRAM.

  Section 1125A (20 U.S.C. 6337) is amended--
          (1) by striking ``part'' each place it appears and inserting 
        ``subpart'';
          (2) in subsection (b)(1)--
                  (A) in subparagraph (A), by striking ``appropriated 
                pursuant to subsection (f)'' and inserting ``made 
                available for any fiscal year to carry out this 
                section''; and
                  (B) in subparagraph (B)(i), by striking ``total 
                appropriations'' and inserting ``the total amount 
                reserved under section 1122(a) to carry out this 
                section'';
          (3) by striking subsections (a), (e), and (f) and 
        redesignating subsections (b), (c), (d), and (g) as subsections 
        (a), (b), (c), and (d), respectively;
          (4) in subsection (b), as so redesignated, by redesignating 
        subparagraphs (A) and (B) as paragraphs (1) and (2), 
        respectively;
          (5) in subsection (c), as so redesignated--
                  (A) in paragraph (1)(B)--
                          (i) in clause (ii)--
                                  (I) in subclause (I), by striking 
                                ``15.58'' and inserting ``15.59'';
                                  (II) in subclause (II)--
                                          (aa) by striking ``15.58'' 
                                        and inserting ``15.59''; and
                                          (bb) by striking ``22.11'' 
                                        and inserting ``22.12'';
                                  (III) in subclause (III)--
                                          (aa) by striking ``22.11'' 
                                        and inserting ``22.12''; and
                                          (bb) by striking ``30.16'' 
                                        and inserting ``30.17'';
                                  (IV) in subclause (IV)--
                                          (aa) by striking ``30.16'' 
                                        and inserting ``30.17''; and
                                          (bb) by striking ``38.24'' 
                                        and inserting ``38.25''; and
                                  (V) in subclause (V), by striking 
                                ``38.24'' and inserting ``38.25''; and
                          (ii) in clause (iii)--
                                  (I) in subclause (I), by striking 
                                ``691'' and inserting ``692'';
                                  (II) in subclause (II)--
                                          (aa) by striking ``692'' and 
                                        inserting ``693''; and
                                          (bb) by striking ``2,262'' 
                                        and inserting ``2,263'';
                                  (III) in subclause (III)--
                                          (aa) by striking ``2,263'' 
                                        and inserting ``2,264''; and
                                          (bb) by striking ``7,851'' 
                                        and inserting ``7,852'';
                                  (IV) in subclause (IV)--
                                          (aa) by striking ``7,852'' 
                                        and inserting ``7,853''; and
                                          (bb) by striking ``35,514'' 
                                        and inserting ``35,515''; and
                                  (V) in subclause (V), by striking 
                                ``35,514'' and inserting ``35,515'';
                  (B) in paragraph (2)(B)--
                          (i) in clause (ii)--
                                  (I) in subclause (I), by striking 
                                ``15.58'' and inserting ``15.59'';
                                  (II) in subclause (II)--
                                          (aa) by striking ``15.58'' 
                                        and inserting ``15.59''; and
                                          (bb) by striking ``22.11'' 
                                        and inserting ``22.12'';
                                  (III) in subclause (III)--
                                          (aa) by striking ``22.11'' 
                                        and inserting ``22.12''; and
                                          (bb) by striking ``30.16'' 
                                        and inserting ``30.17'';
                                  (IV) in subclause (IV)--
                                          (aa) by striking ``30.16'' 
                                        and inserting ``30.17''; and
                                          (bb) by striking ``38.24'' 
                                        and inserting ``38.25''; and
                                  (V) in subclause (V), by striking 
                                ``38.24'' and inserting ``38.25''; and
                          (ii) in clause (iii)--
                                  (I) in subclause (I), by striking 
                                ``691'' and inserting ``692'';
                                  (II) in subclause (II)--
                                          (aa) by striking ``692'' and 
                                        inserting ``693''; and
                                          (bb) by striking ``2,262'' 
                                        and inserting ``2,263'';
                                  (III) in subclause (III)--
                                          (aa) by striking ``2,263'' 
                                        and inserting ``2,264''; and
                                          (bb) by striking ``7,851'' 
                                        and inserting ``7,852'';
                                  (IV) in subclause (IV)--
                                          (aa) by striking ``7,852'' 
                                        and inserting ``7,853''; and
                                          (bb) by striking ``35,514'' 
                                        and inserting ``35,515''; and
                                  (V) in subclause (V), by striking 
                                ``35,514'' and inserting ``35,515''; 
                                and
                  (C) in paragraph (3)(B)--
                          (i) in clause (ii)--
                                  (I) in subclause (I), by striking 
                                ``15.58'' and inserting ``15.59'';
                                  (II) in subclause (II)--
                                          (aa) by striking ``15.58'' 
                                        and inserting ``15.59''; and
                                          (bb) by striking ``22.11'' 
                                        and inserting ``22.12'';
                                  (III) in subclause (III)--
                                          (aa) by striking ``22.11'' 
                                        and inserting ``22.12''; and
                                          (bb) by striking ``30.16'' 
                                        and inserting ``30.17'';
                                  (IV) in subclause (IV)--
                                          (aa) by striking ``30.16'' 
                                        and inserting ``30.17''; and
                                          (bb) by striking ``38.24'' 
                                        and inserting ``38.25''; and
                                  (V) in subclause (V), by striking 
                                ``38.24'' and inserting ``38.25''; and
                          (ii) in clause (iii)--
                                  (I) in subclause (I), by striking 
                                ``691'' and inserting ``692'';
                                  (II) in subclause (II)--
                                          (aa) by striking ``692'' and 
                                        inserting ``693''; and
                                          (bb) by striking ``2,262'' 
                                        and inserting ``2,263'';
                                  (III) in subclause (III)--
                                          (aa) by striking ``2,263'' 
                                        and inserting ``2,264''; and
                                          (bb) by striking ``7,851'' 
                                        and inserting ``7,852'';
                                  (IV) in subclause (IV)--
                                          (aa) by striking ``7,852'' 
                                        and inserting ``7,853''; and
                                          (bb) by striking ``35,514'' 
                                        and inserting ``35,515''; and
                                  (V) in subclause (V), by striking 
                                ``35,514'' and inserting ``35,515''; 
                                and
          (6) by adding at the end the following new subsection:
  ``(e) Application.--
          ``(1) In general.--The percentage and number ranges described 
        in clauses (ii) and (iii) of paragraph (1)(B), clauses (ii) and 
        (iii) of paragraph (2)(B), and clauses (ii) and (iii) of 
        paragraph (3)(B) shall be applied with respect to fiscal years 
        2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, and 2021 as such percentages and 
        numbers were in effect on the day before the date of the 
        enactment of the Student Success Act.
          ``(2) Secretary's certification.--For fiscal year 2022 and 
        each subsequent fiscal year, the percentage and number ranges 
        described in clauses (ii) and (iii) of paragraph (1)(B), 
        clauses (ii) and (iii) of paragraph (2)(B), and clauses (ii) 
        and (iii) of paragraph (3)(B) shall be applied as such 
        percentages and numbers were in effect on the day before the 
        date of the enactment of the Student Success Act unless the 
        Secretary certifies that amendments made to such percentages 
        and numbers by the Student Success Act will not result in harm 
        to any school district.''.

SEC. 129. CARRYOVER AND WAIVER.

  Section 1127 (20 U.S.C. 6339) is amended by striking ``subpart'' each 
place it appears and inserting ``chapter''.

SEC. 130. TITLE I PORTABILITY.

  Chapter B of subpart 1 of part A of title I (20 U.S.C. 6331 et seq.) 
is amended by adding at the end the following new section:

``SEC. 1128. TITLE I FUNDS FOLLOW THE LOW-INCOME CHILD STATE OPTION.

  ``(a) In General.--Notwithstanding any other provision of law and to 
the extent permitted under State law, a State educational agency may 
allocate grant funds under this chapter among the local educational 
agencies in the State based on the number of eligible children enrolled 
in the public schools served by each local educational agency.
  ``(b) Eligible Child.--
          ``(1) Definition.--In this section, the term `eligible child' 
        means a child aged 5 to 17, inclusive, from a family with an 
        income below the poverty level on the basis of the most recent 
        satisfactory data published by the Department of Commerce.
          ``(2) Criteria of poverty.--In determining the families with 
        incomes below the poverty level for the purposes of this 
        section, a State educational agency shall use the criteria of 
        poverty used by the Census Bureau in compiling the most recent 
        decennial census, as the criteria have been updated by 
        increases in the Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers, 
        published by the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
  ``(c) Student Enrollment in Public Schools.--
          ``(1) Identification of eligible children.--On an annual 
        basis, on a date to be determined by the State educational 
        agency, each local educational agency that receives grant 
        funding in accordance with subsection (a) shall inform the 
        State educational agency of the number of eligible children 
        enrolled in public schools served by the local educational 
        agency.
          ``(2) Allocation to local educational agencies.--Based on the 
        identification of eligible children in paragraph (1), the State 
        educational agency shall provide to a local educational agency 
        an amount equal to the sum of the amount available for each 
        eligible child in the State multiplied by the number of 
        eligible children identified by the local educational agency 
        under paragraph (1).
          ``(3) Distribution to schools.--Each local educational agency 
        that receives funds under paragraph (2) shall distribute such 
        funds to the public schools served by the local educational 
        agency--
                  ``(A) based on the number of eligible children 
                enrolled in such schools; and
                  ``(B) in a manner that would, in the absence of such 
                Federal funds, supplement the funds made available from 
                non-Federal resources for the education of pupils 
                participating in programs under this subpart, and not 
                to supplant such funds.''.

       Subtitle C--Additional Aid to States and School Districts

SEC. 131. ADDITIONAL AID.

  (a) In General.--Title I (20 U.S.C. 6301 et seq.), as amended by the 
preceding provisions of this Act, is further amended--
          (1) by striking parts B through D and F through H; and
          (2) by inserting after subpart 1 of part A the following:

              ``Subpart 2--Education of Migratory Children

``SEC. 1131. PROGRAM PURPOSES.

  ``The purposes of this subpart are as follows:
          ``(1) To assist States in supporting high-quality and 
        comprehensive educational programs and services during the 
        school year, and as applicable, during summer or intercession 
        periods, that address the unique educational needs of migratory 
        children.
          ``(2) To ensure that migratory children who move among the 
        States, not be penalized in any manner by disparities among the 
        States in curriculum, graduation requirements, and State 
        academic standards.
          ``(3) To help such children succeed in school, meet the State 
        academic standards that all children are expected to meet, and 
        graduate from high school prepared for postsecondary education 
        and the workforce without the need for remediation.
          ``(4) To help such children overcome educational disruption, 
        cultural and language barriers, social isolation, various 
        health-related problems, and other factors that inhibit the 
        ability of such children to succeed in school.
          ``(5) To help such children benefit from State and local 
        systemic reforms.

``SEC. 1132. PROGRAM AUTHORIZED.

  ``(a) In General.--From the amounts appropriated under section 
3(a)(1), the Secretary shall reserve 2.45 percent to carry out this 
subpart.
  ``(b) Grants Awarded.--From the amounts reserved under subsection (a) 
and not reserved under section 1138(c), the Secretary shall make 
allotments for the fiscal year to State educational agencies, or 
consortia of such agencies, to establish or improve, directly or 
through local operating agencies, programs of education for migratory 
children in accordance with this subpart.

``SEC. 1133. STATE ALLOCATIONS.

  ``(a) State Allocations.--Except as provided in subsection (c), each 
State (other than the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico) is entitled to 
receive under this subpart an amount equal to the product of--
          ``(1) the sum of--
                  ``(A) the average number of identified eligible full-
                time equivalent migratory children aged 3 through 21 
                residing in the State, based on data for the preceding 
                3 years; and
                  ``(B) the number of identified eligible migratory 
                children, aged 3 through 21, who received services 
                under this subpart in summer or intersession programs 
                provided by the State during the previous year; 
                multiplied by
          ``(2) 40 percent of the average per-pupil expenditure in the 
        State, except that the amount determined under this paragraph 
        shall not be less than 32 percent, nor more than 48 percent, of 
        the average per-pupil expenditure in the United States.
  ``(b) Hold Harmless.--Notwithstanding subsection (a), for each of 
fiscal years 2016 through 2018, no State shall receive less than 90 
percent of the State's allocation under this section for the previous 
year.
  ``(c) Allocation to Puerto Rico.--For each fiscal year, the grant 
which the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico shall be eligible to receive 
under this subpart shall be the amount determined by multiplying the 
number of children who would be counted under subsection (a)(1) if such 
subsection applied to the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico by the product 
of--
          ``(1) the percentage that the average per-pupil expenditure 
        in the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico is of the lowest average 
        per-pupil expenditure of any of the 50 States, except that the 
        percentage calculated under this subparagraph shall not be less 
        than 85 percent; and
          ``(2) 32 percent of the average per-pupil expenditure in the 
        United States.
  ``(d) Ratable Reductions; Reallocations.--
          ``(1) In general.--
                  ``(A) Ratable reductions.--If, after the Secretary 
                reserves funds under section 1138(c), the amount 
                appropriated to carry out this subpart for any fiscal 
                year is insufficient to pay in full the amounts for 
                which all States are eligible, the Secretary shall 
                ratably reduce each such amount.
                  ``(B) Reallocation.--If additional funds become 
                available for making such payments for any fiscal year, 
                the Secretary shall allocate such funds to States in 
                amounts that the Secretary determines will best carry 
                out the purpose of this subpart.
          ``(2) Special rule.--
                  ``(A) Further reductions.--The Secretary shall 
                further reduce the amount of any grant to a State under 
                this subpart for any fiscal year if the Secretary 
                determines, based on available information on the 
                numbers and needs of migratory children in the State 
                and the program proposed by the State to address such 
                needs, that such amount exceeds the amount required 
                under section 1134.
                  ``(B) Reallocation.--The Secretary shall reallocate 
                such excess funds to other States whose grants under 
                this subpart would otherwise be insufficient to provide 
                an appropriate level of services to migratory children, 
                in such amounts as the Secretary determines are 
                appropriate.
  ``(e) Consortium Arrangements.--
          ``(1) In general.--In the case of a State that receives a 
        grant of $1,000,000 or less under this section, the Secretary 
        shall consult with the State educational agency to determine 
        whether consortium arrangements with another State or other 
        appropriate entity would result in delivery of services in a 
        more effective and efficient manner.
          ``(2) Proposals.--Any State, regardless of the amount of such 
        State's allocation, may submit a consortium arrangement to the 
        Secretary for approval.
          ``(3) Approval.--The Secretary shall approve a consortium 
        arrangement under paragraph (1) or (2) if the proposal 
        demonstrates that the arrangement will--
                  ``(A) reduce administrative costs or program function 
                costs for State programs; and
                  ``(B) make more funds available for direct services 
                to add substantially to the educational achievement of 
                children to be served under this subpart.
  ``(f) Determining Numbers of Eligible Children.--In order to 
determine the identified number of migratory children residing in each 
State for purposes of this section, the Secretary shall--
          ``(1) use the most recent information that most accurately 
        reflects the actual number of migratory children;
          ``(2) develop and implement a procedure for monitoring the 
        accuracy of such information;
          ``(3) develop and implement a procedure for more accurately 
        reflecting cost factors for different types of summer and 
        intersession program designs;
          ``(4) adjust the full-time equivalent number of migratory 
        children who reside in each State to take into account--
                  ``(A) the unique needs of those children 
                participating in evidence-based or other effective 
                special programs provided under this subpart that 
                operate during the summer and intersession periods; and
                  ``(B) the additional costs of operating such 
                programs; and
          ``(5) conduct an analysis of the options for adjusting the 
        formula so as to better direct services to migratory children, 
        including the most at-risk migratory children.
  ``(g) Nonparticipating States.--In the case of a State desiring to 
receive an allocation under this subpart for a fiscal year that did not 
receive an allocation for the previous fiscal year or that has been 
participating for less than 3 consecutive years, the Secretary shall 
calculate the State's number of identified migratory children aged 3 
through 21 for purposes of subsection (a)(1)(A) by using the most 
recent data available that identifies the migratory children residing 
in the State until data is available to calculate the 3-year average 
number of such children in accordance with such subsection.

``SEC. 1134. STATE APPLICATIONS; SERVICES.

  ``(a) Application Required.--Any State desiring to receive a grant 
under this subpart for any fiscal year shall submit an application to 
the Secretary at such time and in such manner as the Secretary may 
require.
  ``(b) Program Information.--Each such application shall include--
          ``(1) a description of how, in planning, implementing, and 
        evaluating programs and projects assisted under this subpart, 
        the State and its local operating agencies will ensure that the 
        unique educational needs of migratory children, including 
        preschool migratory children, are identified and addressed 
        through--
                  ``(A) the full range of services that are available 
                for migratory children from appropriate local, State, 
                and Federal educational programs;
                  ``(B) joint planning among local, State, and Federal 
                educational programs serving migratory children, 
                including language instruction educational programs 
                under chapter A of subpart 4; and
                  ``(C) the integration of services available under 
                this subpart with services provided by those other 
                programs;
          ``(2) a description of the steps the State is taking to 
        provide all migratory students with the opportunity to meet the 
        same State academic standards that all children are expected to 
        meet;
          ``(3) a description of how the State will use funds received 
        under this subpart to promote interstate and intrastate 
        coordination of services for migratory children, including how 
        the State will provide for educational continuity through the 
        timely transfer of pertinent school records, including 
        information on health, when children move from one school to 
        another, whether or not such a move occurs during the regular 
        school year;
          ``(4) a description of the State's priorities for the use of 
        funds received under this subpart, and how such priorities 
        relate to the State's assessment of needs for services in the 
        State;
          ``(5) a description of how the State will determine the 
        amount of any subgrants the State will award to local operating 
        agencies, taking into account the numbers and needs of 
        migratory children, the requirements of subsection (d), and the 
        availability of funds from other Federal, State, and local 
        programs; and
          ``(6) a description of how the State will encourage programs 
        and projects assisted under this subpart to offer family 
        literacy services if the programs and projects serve a 
        substantial number of migratory children whose parents do not 
        have a regular high school diploma or its recognized equivalent 
        or who have low levels of literacy.
  ``(c) Assurances.--Each such application shall also include 
assurances that--
          ``(1) funds received under this subpart will be used only--
                  ``(A) for programs and projects, including the 
                acquisition of equipment, in accordance with section 
                1136; and
                  ``(B) to coordinate such programs and projects with 
                similar programs and projects within the State and in 
                other States, as well as with other Federal programs 
                that can benefit migratory children and their families;
          ``(2) such programs and projects will be carried out in a 
        manner consistent with the objectives of section 1114, 
        subsections (b) and (d) of section 1115, subsections (b) and 
        (c) of section 1120A, and part C;
          ``(3) in the planning and operation of programs and projects 
        at both the State and local agency operating level, there is 
        consultation with parents of migratory children for programs of 
        not less than one school year in duration, and that all such 
        programs and projects are carried out--
                  ``(A) in a manner that provides for the same parental 
                involvement as is required for programs and projects 
                under section 1118, unless extraordinary circumstances 
                make such provision impractical; and
                  ``(B) in a format and language understandable to the 
                parents;
          ``(4) in planning and carrying out such programs and 
        projects, there has been, and will be, adequate provision for 
        addressing the unmet education needs of preschool migratory 
        children;
          ``(5) the effectiveness of such programs and projects will be 
        determined, where feasible, using the same approaches and 
        standards that will be used to assess the performance of 
        students, schools, and local educational agencies under subpart 
        1;
          ``(6) to the extent feasible, such programs and projects will 
        provide for--
                  ``(A) advocacy and outreach activities for migratory 
                children and their families, including informing such 
                children and families of, or helping such children and 
                families gain access to, other education, health, 
                nutrition, and social services;
                  ``(B) professional development programs, including 
                mentoring, for teachers and other program personnel;
                  ``(C) high-quality, evidence-based family literacy 
                programs;
                  ``(D) the integration of information technology into 
                educational and related programs; and
                  ``(E) programs to facilitate the transition of 
                secondary school students to postsecondary education or 
                employment without the need for remediation; and
          ``(7) the State will assist the Secretary in determining the 
        number of migratory children under paragraph (1) of section 
        1133(a).
  ``(d) Priority for Services.--In providing services with funds 
received under this subpart, each recipient of such funds shall give 
priority to migratory children who are failing, or most at risk of 
failing, to meet the State's academic standards under section 
1111(b)(1).
  ``(e) Continuation of Services.--Notwithstanding any other provision 
of this subpart--
          ``(1) a child who ceases to be a migratory child during a 
        school term shall be eligible for services until the end of 
        such term;
          ``(2) a child who is no longer a migratory child may continue 
        to receive services for one additional school year, but only if 
        comparable services are not available through other programs; 
        and
          ``(3) secondary school students who were eligible for 
        services in secondary school may continue to be served through 
        credit accrual programs until graduation.

``SEC. 1135. SECRETARIAL APPROVAL; PEER REVIEW.

  ``The Secretary shall approve each State application that meets the 
requirements of this subpart, and may review any such application using 
a peer review process.

``SEC. 1136. COMPREHENSIVE NEEDS ASSESSMENT AND SERVICE-DELIVERY PLAN; 
                    AUTHORIZED ACTIVITIES.

  ``(a) Comprehensive Plan.--
          ``(1) In general.--Each State that receives assistance under 
        this subpart shall ensure that the State and its local 
        operating agencies identify and address the unique educational 
        needs of migratory children in accordance with a comprehensive 
        State plan that--
                  ``(A) is integrated with other programs under this 
                Act or other Acts, as appropriate;
                  ``(B) may be submitted as a part of a consolidated 
                application under section 6302, if--
                          ``(i) the unique needs of migratory children 
                        are specifically addressed in the comprehensive 
                        State plan;
                          ``(ii) the comprehensive State plan is 
                        developed in collaboration with parents of 
                        migratory children; and
                          ``(iii) the comprehensive State plan is not 
                        used to supplant State efforts regarding, or 
                        administrative funding for, this subpart;
                  ``(C) provides that migratory children will have an 
                opportunity to meet the same State academic standards 
                under section 1111(b)(1) that all children are expected 
                to meet;
                  ``(D) specifies measurable program goals and 
                outcomes;
                  ``(E) encompasses the full range of services that are 
                available for migratory children from appropriate 
                local, State, and Federal educational programs;
                  ``(F) is the product of joint planning among such 
                local, State, and Federal programs, including programs 
                under subpart 1, early childhood programs, and language 
                instruction educational programs under chapter A of 
                subpart 4; and
                  ``(G) provides for the integration of services 
                available under this subpart with services provided by 
                such other programs.
          ``(2) Duration of the plan.--Each such comprehensive State 
        plan shall--
                  ``(A) remain in effect for the duration of the 
                State's participation under this subpart; and
                  ``(B) be periodically reviewed and revised by the 
                State, as necessary, to reflect changes in the State's 
                strategies and programs under this subpart.
  ``(b) Authorized Activities.--
          ``(1) Flexibility.--In implementing the comprehensive plan 
        described in subsection (a), each State educational agency, 
        where applicable through its local educational agencies, 
        retains the flexibility to determine the activities to be 
        provided with funds made available under this subpart, except 
        that such funds first shall be used to meet the identified 
        needs of migratory children that result from their migratory 
        lifestyle, and to permit these children to participate 
        effectively in school.
          ``(2) Unaddressed needs.--Funds provided under this subpart 
        shall be used to address the needs of migratory children that 
        are not addressed by services available from other Federal or 
        non-Federal programs, except that migratory children who are 
        eligible to receive services under subpart 1 may receive those 
        services through funds provided under that subpart, or through 
        funds under this subpart that remain after the agency addresses 
        the needs described in paragraph (1).
          ``(3) Construction.--Nothing in this subpart shall be 
        construed to prohibit a local educational agency from serving 
        migratory children simultaneously with students with similar 
        educational needs in the same educational settings, where 
        appropriate.

``SEC. 1137. BYPASS.

  ``The Secretary may use all or part of any State's allocation under 
this subpart to make arrangements with any public or private agency to 
carry out the purpose of this subpart in such State if the Secretary 
determines that--
          ``(1) the State is unable or unwilling to conduct educational 
        programs for migratory children;
          ``(2) such arrangements would result in more efficient and 
        economic administration of such programs; or
          ``(3) such arrangements would add substantially to the 
        educational achievement of such children.

``SEC. 1138. COORDINATION OF MIGRATORY EDUCATION ACTIVITIES.

  ``(a) Improvement of Coordination.--
          ``(1) In general.--The Secretary, in consultation with the 
        States, may make grants to, or enter into contracts with, State 
        educational agencies, local educational agencies, institutions 
        of higher education, and other public and private entities to 
        improve the interstate and intrastate coordination among such 
        agencies' educational programs, including through the 
        establishment or improvement of programs for credit accrual and 
        exchange, available to migratory students.
          ``(2) Duration.--Grants or contracts under this subsection 
        may be awarded for not more than 5 years.
  ``(b) Student Records.--
          ``(1) Assistance.--The Secretary shall assist States in 
        developing and maintaining an effective system for the 
        electronic transfer of student records and in determining the 
        number of migratory children in each State.
          ``(2) Information system.--
                  ``(A) In general.--The Secretary, in consultation 
                with the States, shall ensure the linkage of migratory 
                student record systems for the purpose of 
                electronically exchanging, among the States, health and 
                educational information regarding all migratory 
                students. The Secretary shall ensure such linkage 
                occurs in a cost-effective manner, utilizing systems 
                used by the States prior to, or developed after, the 
                date of the enactment of this Act. The Secretary shall 
                determine the minimum data elements that each State 
                receiving funds under this subpart shall collect and 
                maintain. Such minimum data elements may include--
                          ``(i) immunization records and other health 
                        information;
                          ``(ii) elementary and secondary academic 
                        history (including partial credit), credit 
                        accrual, and results from State assessments 
                        required under section 1111(b)(2);
                          ``(iii) other academic information essential 
                        to ensuring that migratory children achieve to 
                        the States's academic standards; and
                          ``(iv) eligibility for services under the 
                        Individuals with Disabilities Education Act.
                  ``(B) The Secretary shall consult with States before 
                updating the data elements that each State receiving 
                funds under this subpart shall be required to collect 
                for purposes of electronic transfer of migratory 
                student information and the requirements that States 
                shall meet for immediate electronic access to such 
                information.
          ``(3) No cost for certain transfers.--A State educational 
        agency or local educational agency receiving assistance under 
        this subpart shall make student records available to another 
        State educational agency or local educational agency that 
        requests the records at no cost to the requesting agency, if 
        the request is made in order to meet the needs of a migratory 
        child.
          ``(4) Report to congress.--
                  ``(A) In general.--Not later than April 30, 2016, the 
                Secretary shall report to the Committee on Health, 
                Education, Labor, and Pensions of the Senate and the 
                Committee on Education and the Workforce of the House 
                of Representatives the Secretary's findings and 
                recommendations regarding the maintenance and transfer 
                of health and educational information for migratory 
                students by the States.
                  ``(B) Required contents.--The Secretary shall include 
                in such report--
                          ``(i) a review of the progress of States in 
                        developing and linking electronic records 
                        transfer systems;
                          ``(ii) recommendations for maintaining such 
                        systems; and
                          ``(iii) recommendations for improving the 
                        continuity of services provided for migratory 
                        students.
  ``(c) Availability of Funds.--The Secretary shall reserve not more 
than $10,000,000 of the amount reserved under section 1132 to carry out 
this section for each fiscal year.
  ``(d) Data Collection.--The Secretary shall direct the National 
Center for Education Statistics to collect data on migratory children.

``SEC. 1139. DEFINITIONS.

  ``As used in this subpart:
          ``(1) Local operating agency.--The term `local operating 
        agency' means--
                  ``(A) a local educational agency to which a State 
                educational agency makes a subgrant under this subpart;
                  ``(B) a public or private agency with which a State 
                educational agency or the Secretary makes an 
                arrangement to carry out a project under this subpart; 
                or
                  ``(C) a State educational agency, if the State 
                educational agency operates the State's migratory 
                education program or projects directly.
          ``(2) Migratory child.--The term `migratory child' means a 
        child who is, or whose parent or spouse is, a migratory 
        agricultural worker, including a migratory dairy worker, or a 
        migratory fisher, and who, in the preceding 36 months, in order 
        to obtain, or accompany such parent or spouse, in order to 
        obtain, temporary or seasonal employment in agricultural or 
        fishing work--
                  ``(A) has moved from one school district to another;
                  ``(B) in a State that is comprised of a single school 
                district, has moved from one administrative area to 
                another within such district; or
                  ``(C) resides in a school district of more than 
                15,000 square miles, and migrates a distance of 20 
                miles or more to a temporary residence to engage in a 
                fishing activity.

  ``Subpart 3--Prevention and Intervention Programs for Children and 
            Youth Who Are Neglected, Delinquent, or At-Risk

``SEC. 1141. PURPOSE AND PROGRAM AUTHORIZATION.

  ``(a) Purpose.--It is the purpose of this subpart--
          ``(1) to improve educational services for children and youth 
        in local and State institutions for neglected or delinquent 
        children and youth so that such children and youth have the 
        opportunity to meet the same State academic standards that all 
        children in the State are expected to meet;
          ``(2) to provide such children and youth with the services 
        needed to make a successful transition from 
        institutionalization to further schooling or employment; and
          ``(3) to prevent at-risk youth from dropping out of school, 
        and to provide dropouts, and children and youth returning from 
        correctional facilities or institutions for neglected or 
        delinquent children and youth, with a support system to ensure 
        their continued education.
  ``(b) Program Authorized.--From amounts appropriated under section 
3(a)(1), the Secretary shall reserve 0.31 of one percent to carry out 
this subpart.
  ``(c) Grants Awarded.--From the amounts reserved under subsection (b) 
and not reserved under section 1004 and section 1159, the Secretary 
shall make grants to State educational agencies that have plans 
submitted under section 1154 approved to enable such agencies to award 
subgrants to State agencies and local educational agencies to establish 
or improve programs of education for neglected, delinquent, or at-risk 
children and youth.

``SEC. 1142. PAYMENTS FOR PROGRAMS UNDER THIS SUBPART.

  ``(a) Agency Subgrants.--Based on the allocation amount computed 
under section 1152, the Secretary shall allocate to each State 
educational agency an amount necessary to make subgrants to State 
agencies under chapter A.
  ``(b) Local Subgrants.--Each State shall retain, for the purpose of 
carrying out chapter B, funds generated throughout the State under 
subpart 1 of this part based on children and youth residing in local 
correctional facilities, or attending community day programs for 
delinquent children and youth.

                   ``CHAPTER A--STATE AGENCY PROGRAMS

``SEC. 1151. ELIGIBILITY.

  ``A State agency is eligible for assistance under this chapter if 
such State agency is responsible for providing free public education 
for children and youth--
          ``(1) in institutions for neglected or delinquent children 
        and youth;
          ``(2) attending community day programs for neglected or 
        delinquent children and youth; or
          ``(3) in adult correctional institutions.

``SEC. 1152. ALLOCATION OF FUNDS.

  ``(a) Subgrants to State Agencies.--
          ``(1) In general.--Each State agency described in section 
        1151 (other than an agency in the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico) 
        is eligible to receive a subgrant under this chapter, for each 
        fiscal year, in an amount equal to the product of--
                  ``(A) the number of neglected or delinquent children 
                and youth described in section 1151 who--
                          ``(i) are enrolled for at least 15 hours per 
                        week in education programs in adult 
                        correctional institutions; and
                          ``(ii) are enrolled for at least 20 hours per 
                        week--
                                  ``(I) in education programs in 
                                institutions for neglected or 
                                delinquent children and youth; or
                                  ``(II) in community day programs for 
                                neglected or delinquent children and 
                                youth; and
                  ``(B) 40 percent of the average per-pupil expenditure 
                in the State, except that the amount determined under 
                this subparagraph shall not be less than 32 percent, 
                nor more than 48 percent, of the average per-pupil 
                expenditure in the United States.
          ``(2) Special rule.--The number of neglected or delinquent 
        children and youth determined under paragraph (1) shall--
                  ``(A) be determined by the State agency by a deadline 
                set by the Secretary, except that no State agency shall 
                be required to determine the number of such children 
                and youth on a specific date set by the Secretary; and
                  ``(B) be adjusted, as the Secretary determines is 
                appropriate, to reflect the relative length of such 
                agency's annual programs.
  ``(b) Subgrants to State Agencies in Puerto Rico.--
          ``(1) In general.--For each fiscal year, the amount of the 
        subgrant which a State agency in the Commonwealth of Puerto 
        Rico shall be eligible to receive under this chapter shall be 
        the amount determined by multiplying the number of children 
        counted under subsection (a)(1)(A) for the Commonwealth of 
        Puerto Rico by the product of--
                  ``(A) the percentage which the average per-pupil 
                expenditure in the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico is of 
                the lowest average per-pupil expenditure of any of the 
                50 States; and
                  ``(B) 32 percent of the average per-pupil expenditure 
                in the United States.
          ``(2) Minimum percentage.--The percentage in paragraph (1)(A) 
        shall not be less than 85 percent.
  ``(c) Ratable Reductions in Case of Insufficient Appropriations.--If 
the amount reserved for any fiscal year for subgrants under subsections 
(a) and (b) is insufficient to pay the full amount for which all State 
agencies are eligible under such subsections, the Secretary shall 
ratably reduce each such amount.

``SEC. 1153. STATE REALLOCATION OF FUNDS.

  ``If a State educational agency determines that a State agency does 
not need the full amount of the subgrant for which such State agency is 
eligible under this chapter for any fiscal year, the State educational 
agency may reallocate the amount that will not be needed to other 
eligible State agencies that need additional funds to carry out the 
purpose of this chapter, in such amounts as the State educational 
agency shall determine.

``SEC. 1154. STATE PLAN AND STATE AGENCY APPLICATIONS.

  ``(a) State Plan.--
          ``(1) In general.--Each State educational agency that desires 
        to receive a grant under this chapter shall submit, for 
        approval by the Secretary, a plan--
                  ``(A) for meeting the educational needs of neglected, 
                delinquent, and at-risk children and youth;
                  ``(B) for assisting in the transition of children and 
                youth from correctional facilities to locally operated 
                programs; and
                  ``(C) that is integrated with other programs under 
                this Act or other Acts, as appropriate.
          ``(2) Contents.--Each such State plan shall--
                  ``(A) describe how the State will assess the 
                effectiveness of the program in improving the academic, 
                career, and technical skills of children in the 
                program;
                  ``(B) provide that, to the extent feasible, such 
                children will have the same opportunities to achieve as 
                such children would have if such children were in the 
                schools of local educational agencies in the State;
                  ``(C) describe how the State will place a priority 
                for such children to obtain a regular high school 
                diploma, to the extent feasible; and
                  ``(D) contain an assurance that the State educational 
                agency will--
                          ``(i) ensure that programs assisted under 
                        this chapter will be carried out in accordance 
                        with the State plan described in this 
                        subsection;
                          ``(ii) carry out the evaluation requirements 
                        of section 1171; and
                          ``(iii) ensure that the State agencies 
                        receiving subgrants under this chapter comply 
                        with all applicable statutory and regulatory 
                        requirements.
          ``(3) Duration of the plan.--Each such State plan shall--
                  ``(A) remain in effect for the duration of the 
                State's participation under this chapter; and
                  ``(B) be periodically reviewed and revised by the 
                State, as necessary, to reflect changes in the State's 
                strategies and programs under this chapter.
  ``(b) Secretarial Approval and Peer Review.--
          ``(1) Secretarial approval.--The Secretary shall approve each 
        State plan that meets the requirements of this chapter.
          ``(2) Peer review.--The Secretary may review any State plan 
        with the assistance and advice of individuals with relevant 
        expertise.
  ``(c) State Agency Applications.--Any State agency that desires to 
receive funds to carry out a program under this chapter shall submit an 
application to the State educational agency that--
          ``(1) describes the procedures to be used, consistent with 
        the State plan under section 1111, to assess the educational 
        needs of the children to be served under this chapter;
          ``(2) provide an assurance that in making services available 
        to children and youth in adult correctional institutions, 
        priority will be given to such children and youth who are 
        likely to complete incarceration within a 2-year period;
          ``(3) describes the program, including a budget for the first 
        year of the program, with annual updates to be provided to the 
        State educational agency;
          ``(4) describes how the program will meet the goals and 
        objectives of the State plan;
          ``(5) describes how the State agency will consult with 
        experts and provide the necessary training for appropriate 
        staff, to ensure that the planning and operation of 
        institution-wide projects under section 1156 are of high 
        quality;
          ``(6) describes how the programs will be coordinated with 
        other appropriate State and Federal programs, such as programs 
        under title I of Public Law 105-220, career and technical 
        education programs, State and local dropout prevention 
        programs, and special education programs;
          ``(7) describes how the State agency will encourage 
        correctional facilities receiving funds under this chapter to 
        coordinate with local educational agencies or alternative 
        education programs attended by incarcerated children and youth 
        prior to and after their incarceration to ensure that student 
        assessments and appropriate academic records are shared jointly 
        between the correctional facility and the local educational 
        agency or alternative education program;
          ``(8) describes how appropriate professional development will 
        be provided to teachers and other staff;
          ``(9) designates an individual in each affected correctional 
        facility or institution for neglected or delinquent children 
        and youth to be responsible for issues relating to the 
        transition of such children and youth from such facility or 
        institution to locally operated programs;
          ``(10) describes how the State agency will endeavor to 
        coordinate with businesses for training and mentoring for 
        participating children and youth;
          ``(11) provides an assurance that the State agency will 
        assist in locating alternative programs through which students 
        can continue their education if the students are not returning 
        to school after leaving the correctional facility or 
        institution for neglected or delinquent children and youth;
          ``(12) provides assurances that the State agency will work 
        with parents to secure parents' assistance in improving the 
        educational achievement of their children and youth, and 
        preventing their children's and youth's further involvement in 
        delinquent activities;
          ``(13) provides an assurance that the State agency will work 
        with children and youth with disabilities in order to meet an 
        existing individualized education program and an assurance that 
        the agency will notify the child's or youth's local school if 
        the child or youth--
                  ``(A) is identified as in need of special education 
                services while the child or youth is in the 
                correctional facility or institution for neglected or 
                delinquent children and youth; and
                  ``(B) intends to return to the local school;
          ``(14) provides an assurance that the State agency will work 
        with children and youth who dropped out of school before 
        entering the correctional facility or institution for neglected 
        or delinquent children and youth to encourage the children and 
        youth to reenter school and obtain a regular high school 
        diploma once the term of the incarceration is completed, or 
        provide the child or youth with the skills necessary to gain 
        employment, continue the education of the child or youth, or 
        obtain a regular high school diploma or its recognized 
        equivalent if the child or youth does not intend to return to 
        school;
          ``(15) provides an assurance that effective teachers and 
        other qualified staff are trained to work with children and 
        youth with disabilities and other students with special needs 
        taking into consideration the unique needs of such students;
          ``(16) describes any additional services to be provided to 
        children and youth, such as career counseling, distance 
        education, and assistance in securing student loans and grants; 
        and
          ``(17) provides an assurance that the program under this 
        chapter will be coordinated with any programs operated under 
        the Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention Act of 1974 (42 
        U.S.C. 5601 et seq.) or other comparable programs, if 
        applicable.

``SEC. 1155. USE OF FUNDS.

  ``(a) Uses.--
          ``(1) In general.--A State agency shall use funds received 
        under this chapter only for programs and projects that--
                  ``(A) are consistent with the State plan under 
                section 1154(a); and
                  ``(B) concentrate on providing participants with the 
                knowledge and skills needed to make a successful 
                transition to secondary school completion, career and 
                technical education, further education, or employment 
                without the need for remediation.
          ``(2) Programs and projects.--Such programs and projects--
                  ``(A) may include the acquisition of equipment;
                  ``(B) shall be designed to support educational 
                services that--
                          ``(i) except for institution-wide projects 
                        under section 1156, are provided to children 
                        and youth identified by the State agency as 
                        failing, or most at-risk of failing, to meet 
                        the State's academic standards;
                          ``(ii) supplement and improve the quality of 
                        the educational services provided to such 
                        children and youth by the State agency; and
                          ``(iii) afford such children and youth an 
                        opportunity to meet State academic standards; 
                        and
                  ``(C) shall be carried out in a manner consistent 
                with section 1120A and part C (as applied to programs 
                and projects under this chapter).
  ``(b) Supplement, Not Supplant.--A program under this chapter that 
supplements the number of hours of instruction students receive from 
State and local sources shall be considered to comply with the 
supplement, not supplant requirement of section 1120A (as applied to 
this chapter) without regard to the subject areas in which instruction 
is given during those hours.

``SEC. 1156. INSTITUTION-WIDE PROJECTS.

  ``A State agency that provides free public education for children and 
youth in an institution for neglected or delinquent children and youth 
(other than an adult correctional institution) or attending a community 
day program for such children and youth may use funds received under 
this chapter to serve all children in, and upgrade the entire 
educational effort of, that institution or program if the State agency 
has developed, and the State educational agency has approved, a 
comprehensive plan for that institution or program that--
          ``(1) provides for a comprehensive assessment of the 
        educational needs of all children and youth in the institution 
        or program serving juveniles;
          ``(2) provides for a comprehensive assessment of the 
        educational needs of youth aged 20 and younger in adult 
        facilities who are expected to complete incarceration within a 
        2-year period;
          ``(3) describes the steps the State agency has taken, or will 
        take, to provide all children and youth under age 21 with the 
        opportunity to meet State academic standards in order to 
        improve the likelihood that the children and youth will 
        complete secondary school, obtain a regular high school diploma 
        or its recognized equivalent, or find employment after leaving 
        the institution;
          ``(4) describes the instructional program, specialized 
        instructional support services, and procedures that will be 
        used to meet the needs described in paragraph (1), including, 
        to the extent feasible, the provision of mentors for the 
        children and youth described in paragraph (1);
          ``(5) specifically describes how such funds will be used;
          ``(6) describes the measures and procedures that will be used 
        to assess and improve student achievement;
          ``(7) describes how the agency has planned, and will 
        implement and evaluate, the institution-wide or program-wide 
        project in consultation with personnel providing direct 
        instructional services and support services in institutions or 
        community day programs for neglected or delinquent children and 
        youth, and with personnel from the State educational agency; 
        and
          ``(8) includes an assurance that the State agency has 
        provided for appropriate training for teachers and other 
        instructional and administrative personnel to enable such 
        teachers and personnel to carry out the project effectively.

``SEC. 1157. THREE-YEAR PROGRAMS OR PROJECTS.

  ``If a State agency operates a program or project under this chapter 
in which individual children or youth are likely to participate for 
more than one year, the State educational agency may approve the State 
agency's application for a subgrant under this chapter for a period of 
not more than 3 years.

``SEC. 1158. TRANSITION SERVICES.

  ``(a) Transition Services.--Each State agency shall reserve not less 
than 15 percent and not more than 30 percent of the amount such agency 
receives under this chapter for any fiscal year to support--
          ``(1) projects that facilitate the transition of children and 
        youth from State-operated institutions to schools served by 
        local educational agencies; or
          ``(2) the successful re-entry of youth offenders, who are age 
        20 or younger and have received a regular high school diploma 
        or its recognized equivalent, into postsecondary education, or 
        career and technical training programs, through strategies 
        designed to expose the youth to, and prepare the youth for, 
        postsecondary education, or career and technical training 
        programs, such as--
                  ``(A) preplacement programs that allow adjudicated or 
                incarcerated youth to audit or attend courses on 
                college, university, or community college campuses, or 
                through programs provided in institutional settings;
                  ``(B) worksite schools, in which institutions of 
                higher education and private or public employers 
                partner to create programs to help students make a 
                successful transition to postsecondary education and 
                employment; and
                  ``(C) essential support services to ensure the 
                success of the youth, such as--
                          ``(i) personal, career and technical, and 
                        academic counseling;
                          ``(ii) placement services designed to place 
                        the youth in a university, college, or junior 
                        college program;
                          ``(iii) information concerning, and 
                        assistance in obtaining, available student 
                        financial aid;
                          ``(iv) counseling services; and
                          ``(v) job placement services.
  ``(b) Conduct of Projects.--A project supported under this section 
may be conducted directly by the State agency, or through a contract or 
other arrangement with one or more local educational agencies, other 
public agencies, or private organizations.
  ``(c) Rule of Construction.--Nothing in this section shall be 
construed to prohibit a school that receives funds under subsection (a) 
from serving neglected and delinquent children and youth simultaneously 
with students with similar educational needs, in the same educational 
settings where appropriate.

``SEC. 1159. TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE.

  ``The Secretary shall reserve not more than 1 percent of the amount 
reserved under section 1141 to provide technical assistance to and 
support State agency programs assisted under this chapter.

                   ``CHAPTER B--LOCAL AGENCY PROGRAMS

``SEC. 1161. PURPOSE.

  ``The purpose of this chapter is to support the operation of local 
educational agency programs that involve collaboration with locally 
operated correctional facilities--
          ``(1) to carry out high quality education programs to prepare 
        children and youth for secondary school completion, training, 
        employment, or further education;
          ``(2) to provide activities to facilitate the transition of 
        such children and youth from the correctional program to 
        further education or employment; and
          ``(3) to operate programs in local schools for children and 
        youth returning from correctional facilities, and programs 
        which may serve at-risk children and youth.

``SEC. 1162. PROGRAMS OPERATED BY LOCAL EDUCATIONAL AGENCIES.

  ``(a) Local Subgrants.--With funds made available under section 
1142(b), the State educational agency shall award subgrants to local 
educational agencies with high numbers or percentages of children and 
youth residing in locally operated (including county operated) 
correctional facilities for children and youth (including facilities 
involved in community day programs).
  ``(b) Special Rule.--A local educational agency that serves a school 
operated by a correctional facility is not required to operate a 
program of support for children and youth returning from such school to 
a school that is not operated by a correctional agency but served by 
such local educational agency, if more than 30 percent of the children 
and youth attending the school operated by the correctional facility 
will reside outside the boundaries served by the local educational 
agency after leaving such facility.
  ``(c) Notification.--A State educational agency shall notify local 
educational agencies within the State of the eligibility of such 
agencies to receive a subgrant under this chapter.
  ``(d) Transitional and Academic Services.--Transitional and 
supportive programs operated in local educational agencies under this 
chapter shall be designed primarily to meet the transitional and 
academic needs of students returning to local educational agencies or 
alternative education programs from correctional facilities. Services 
to students at-risk of dropping out of school shall not have a negative 
impact on meeting the transitional and academic needs of the students 
returning from correctional facilities.

``SEC. 1163. LOCAL EDUCATIONAL AGENCY APPLICATIONS.

  ``Each local educational agency desiring assistance under this 
chapter shall submit an application to the State educational agency 
that contains such information as the State educational agency may 
require. Each such application shall include--
          ``(1) a description of the program to be assisted;
          ``(2) a description of formal agreements, regarding the 
        program to be assisted, between--
                  ``(A) the local educational agency; and
                  ``(B) correctional facilities and alternative school 
                programs serving children and youth involved with the 
                juvenile justice system;
          ``(3) as appropriate, a description of how participating 
        schools will coordinate with facilities working with delinquent 
        children and youth to ensure that such children and youth are 
        participating in an education program comparable to one 
        operating in the local school such youth would attend;
          ``(4) a description of the program operated by participating 
        schools for children and youth returning from correctional 
        facilities and, as appropriate, the types of services that such 
        schools will provide such children and youth and other at-risk 
        children and youth;
          ``(5) a description of the characteristics (including 
        learning difficulties, substance abuse problems, and other 
        needs) of the children and youth who will be returning from 
        correctional facilities and, as appropriate, other at-risk 
        children and youth expected to be served by the program, and a 
        description of how the school will coordinate existing 
        educational programs to meet the unique educational needs of 
        such children and youth;
          ``(6) as appropriate, a description of how schools will 
        coordinate with existing social, health, and other services to 
        meet the needs of students returning from correctional 
        facilities and at-risk children or youth, including prenatal 
        health care and nutrition services related to the health of the 
        parent and the child or youth, parenting and child development 
        classes, child care, targeted reentry and outreach programs, 
        referrals to community resources, and scheduling flexibility;
          ``(7) as appropriate, a description of any partnerships with 
        local businesses to develop training, curriculum-based youth 
        entrepreneurship education, and mentoring services for 
        participating students;
          ``(8) as appropriate, a description of how the program will 
        involve parents in efforts to improve the educational 
        achievement of their children, assist in dropout prevention 
        activities, and prevent the involvement of their children in 
        delinquent activities;
          ``(9) a description of how the program under this chapter 
        will be coordinated with other Federal, State, and local 
        programs, such as programs under title I of Public Law 105-220 
        and career and technical education programs serving at-risk 
        children and youth;
          ``(10) a description of how the program will be coordinated 
        with programs operated under the Juvenile Justice and 
        Delinquency Prevention Act of 1974 and other comparable 
        programs, if applicable;
          ``(11) as appropriate, a description of how schools will work 
        with probation officers to assist in meeting the needs of 
        children and youth returning from correctional facilities;
          ``(12) a description of the efforts participating schools 
        will make to ensure correctional facilities working with 
        children and youth are aware of a child's or youth's existing 
        individualized education program; and
          ``(13) as appropriate, a description of the steps 
        participating schools will take to find alternative placements 
        for children and youth interested in continuing their education 
        but unable to participate in a traditional public school 
        program.

``SEC. 1164. USES OF FUNDS.

  ``(a) In General.--Funds provided to local educational agencies under 
this chapter may be used, as appropriate, for--
          ``(1) programs that serve children and youth returning to 
        local schools from correctional facilities, to assist in the 
        transition of such children and youth to the school environment 
        and help them remain in school in order to complete their 
        education;
          ``(2) dropout prevention programs which serve at-risk 
        children and youth;
          ``(3) the coordination of health and social services for such 
        individuals if there is a likelihood that the provision of such 
        services, including day care, drug and alcohol counseling, and 
        mental health services, will improve the likelihood such 
        individuals will complete their education;
          ``(4) special programs to meet the unique academic needs of 
        participating children and youth, including career and 
        technical education, special education, career counseling, 
        curriculum-based youth entrepreneurship education, and 
        assistance in securing student loans or grants for 
        postsecondary education; and
          ``(5) programs providing mentoring and peer mediation.
  ``(b) Contracts and Grants.--A local educational agency may use a 
grant received under this chapter to carry out the activities described 
under paragraphs (1) through (5) of subsection (a) directly or through 
grants, contracts, or cooperative agreements.

``SEC. 1165. PROGRAM REQUIREMENTS FOR CORRECTIONAL FACILITIES RECEIVING 
                    FUNDS UNDER THIS SECTION.

  ``Each correctional facility entering into an agreement with a local 
educational agency under section 1163(2) to provide services to 
children and youth under this chapter shall--
          ``(1) where feasible, ensure that educational programs in the 
        correctional facility are coordinated with the student's home 
        school, particularly with respect to a student with an 
        individualized education program under part B of the 
        Individuals with Disabilities Education Act;
          ``(2) if the child or youth is identified as in need of 
        special education services while in the correctional facility, 
        notify the local school of the child or youth of such need;
          ``(3) where feasible, provide transition assistance to help 
        the child or youth stay in school, including coordination of 
        services for the family, counseling, assistance in accessing 
        drug and alcohol abuse prevention programs, tutoring, and 
        family counseling;
          ``(4) provide support programs that encourage children and 
        youth who have dropped out of school to re-enter school and 
        obtain a regular high school diploma once their term at the 
        correctional facility has been completed, or provide such 
        children and youth with the skills necessary to gain employment 
        or seek a regular high school diploma or its recognized 
        equivalent;
          ``(5) work to ensure that the correctional facility is 
        staffed with effective teachers and other qualified staff who 
        are trained to work with children and youth with disabilities 
        taking into consideration the unique needs of such children and 
        youth;
          ``(6) ensure that educational programs in the correctional 
        facility are related to assisting students to meet the States's 
        academic standards;
          ``(7) to the extent possible, use technology to assist in 
        coordinating educational programs between the correctional 
        facility and the community school;
          ``(8) where feasible, involve parents in efforts to improve 
        the educational achievement of their children and prevent the 
        further involvement of such children in delinquent activities;
          ``(9) coordinate funds received under this chapter with other 
        local, State, and Federal funds available to provide services 
        to participating children and youth, such as funds made 
        available under title I of Public Law 105-220, and career and 
        technical education funds;
          ``(10) coordinate programs operated under this chapter with 
        activities funded under the Juvenile Justice and Delinquency 
        Prevention Act of 1974 and other comparable programs, if 
        applicable;
          ``(11) if appropriate, work with local businesses to develop 
        training, curriculum-based youth entrepreneurship education, 
        and mentoring programs for children and youth; and
          ``(12) consult with the local educational agency for a period 
        jointly determined necessary by the correctional facility and 
        local educational agency upon discharge from that facility to 
        coordinate educational services so as to minimize disruption to 
        the child's or youth's achievement.

``SEC. 1166. ACCOUNTABILITY.

  ``The State educational agency--
          ``(1) may require correctional facilities or institutions for 
        neglected or delinquent children and youth to demonstrate, 
        after receiving assistance under this chapter for 3 years, that 
        there has been an increase in the number of children and youth 
        returning to school, obtaining a regular high school diploma or 
        its recognized equivalent, or obtaining employment after such 
        children and youth are released; and
          ``(2) may reduce or terminate funding for projects under this 
        chapter if a local educational agency does not show progress in 
        the number of children and youth obtaining a regular high 
        school diploma or its recognized equivalent.

                    ``CHAPTER C--GENERAL PROVISIONS

``SEC. 1171. PROGRAM EVALUATIONS.

  ``(a) Scope of Evaluation.--Each State agency or local educational 
agency that conducts a program under chapter A or B shall evaluate the 
program, disaggregating data on participation by gender, race, 
ethnicity, and age, while protecting individual student privacy, not 
less than once every 3 years, to determine the program's impact on the 
ability of participants--
          ``(1) to maintain and improve educational achievement;
          ``(2) to accrue school credits that meet State requirements 
        for grade promotion and high school graduation;
          ``(3) to make the transition to a regular program or other 
        education program operated by a local educational agency;
          ``(4) to complete high school (or high school equivalency 
        requirements) and obtain employment after leaving the 
        correctional facility or institution for neglected or 
        delinquent children and youth; and
          ``(5) as appropriate, to participate in postsecondary 
        education and job training programs.
  ``(b) Exception.--The disaggregation required under subsection (a) 
shall not be required in a case in which the number of students in a 
category is insufficient to yield statistically reliable information or 
the results would reveal personally identifiable information about an 
individual student.
  ``(c) Evaluation Measures.--In conducting each evaluation under 
subsection (a), a State agency or local educational agency shall use 
multiple and appropriate measures of student progress.
  ``(d) Evaluation Results.--Each State agency and local educational 
agency shall--
          ``(1) submit evaluation results to the State educational 
        agency and the Secretary; and
          ``(2) use the results of evaluations under this section to 
        plan and improve subsequent programs for participating children 
        and youth.

``SEC. 1172. DEFINITIONS.

  ``In this subpart:
          ``(1) Adult correctional institution.--The term `adult 
        correctional institution' means a facility in which persons 
        (including persons under 21 years of age) are confined as a 
        result of a conviction for a criminal offense.
          ``(2) At-risk.--The term `at-risk', when used with respect to 
        a child, youth, or student, means a school-aged individual 
        who--
                  ``(A) is at-risk of academic failure; and
                  ``(B) has a drug or alcohol problem, is pregnant or 
                is a parent, has come into contact with the juvenile 
                justice system in the past, is at least 1 year behind 
                the expected grade level for the age of the individual, 
                is an English learner, is a gang member, has dropped 
                out of school in the past, or has a high absenteeism 
                rate at school.
          ``(3) Community day program.--The term `community day 
        program' means a regular program of instruction provided by a 
        State agency at a community day school operated specifically 
        for neglected or delinquent children and youth.
          ``(4) Institution for neglected or delinquent children and 
        youth.--The term `institution for neglected or delinquent 
        children and youth' means--
                  ``(A) a public or private residential facility, other 
                than a foster home, that is operated for the care of 
                children who have been committed to the institution or 
                voluntarily placed in the institution under applicable 
                State law, due to abandonment, neglect, or death of 
                their parents or guardians; or
                  ``(B) a public or private residential facility for 
                the care of children who have been adjudicated to be 
                delinquent or in need of supervision.

 ``Subpart 4--English Language Acquisition, Language Enhancement, and 
                          Academic Achievement

``SEC. 1181. PURPOSES.

  ``The purposes of this subpart are--
          ``(1) to help ensure that English learners, including 
        immigrant children and youth, attain English proficiency and 
        develop high levels of academic achievement in English;
          ``(2) to assist all English learners, including immigrant 
        children and youth, to achieve at high levels so that those 
        children can meet the same State academic standards that all 
        children are expected to meet, consistent with section 
        1111(b)(1);
          ``(3) to assist State educational agencies, local educational 
        agencies, and schools in establishing, implementing, and 
        sustaining high-quality, flexible, evidence-based language 
        instruction educational programs designed to assist in teaching 
        English learners, including immigrant children and youth;
          ``(4) to assist State educational agencies and local 
        educational agencies to develop and enhance their capacity to 
        provide high-quality, evidence-based instructional programs 
        designed to prepare English learners, including immigrant 
        children and youth, to enter all-English instruction settings; 
        and
          ``(5) to promote parental and community participation in 
        language instruction educational programs for the parents and 
        communities of English learners.

``CHAPTER A--GRANTS AND SUBGRANTS FOR ENGLISH LANGUAGE ACQUISITION AND 
                          LANGUAGE ENHANCEMENT

``SEC. 1191. FORMULA GRANTS TO STATES.

  ``(a) In General.--In the case of each State educational agency 
having a plan approved by the Secretary for a fiscal year under section 
1192, the Secretary shall reserve 4.6 percent of funds appropriated 
under section 3(a)(1) to make a grant for the year to the agency for 
the purposes specified in subsection (b). The grant shall consist of 
the allotment determined for the State educational agency under 
subsection (c).
  ``(b) Use of Funds.--
          ``(1) Subgrants to eligible entities.--The Secretary may make 
        a grant under subsection (a) only if the State educational 
        agency involved agrees to expend at least 95 percent of the 
        State educational agency's allotment under subsection (c) for a 
        fiscal year--
                  ``(A) to award subgrants, from allocations under 
                section 1193, to eligible entities to carry out the 
                activities described in section 1194 (other than 
                subsection (e)); and
                  ``(B) to award subgrants under section 1193(d)(1) to 
                eligible entities that are described in that section to 
                carry out the activities described in section 1194(e).
          ``(2) State activities.--Subject to paragraph (3), each State 
        educational agency receiving a grant under subsection (a) may 
        reserve not more than 5 percent of the agency's allotment under 
        subsection (c) to carry out the following activities:
                  ``(A) Professional development activities, and other 
                activities, which may include assisting personnel in--
                          ``(i) meeting State and local certification 
                        and licensing requirements for teaching English 
                        learners; and
                          ``(ii) improving teacher skills in meeting 
                        the diverse needs of English learners, 
                        including in how to implement evidence-based 
                        programs and curricula on teaching English 
                        learners.
                  ``(B) Planning, evaluation, administration, and 
                interagency coordination related to the subgrants 
                referred to in paragraph (1).
                  ``(C) Providing technical assistance and other forms 
                of assistance to eligible entities that are receiving 
                subgrants from a State educational agency under this 
                chapter, including assistance in--
                          ``(i) identifying and implementing evidence-
                        based language instruction educational programs 
                        and curricula for teaching English learners;
                          ``(ii) helping English learners meet the same 
                        State academic standards that all children are 
                        expected to meet;
                          ``(iii) identifying or developing, and 
                        implementing, measures of English proficiency; 
                        and
                          ``(iv) strengthening and increasing parent, 
                        family, and community engagement.
                  ``(D) Providing recognition, which may include 
                providing financial awards, to subgrantees that have 
                significantly improved the achievement and progress of 
                English learners in--
                          ``(i) reaching English language proficiency, 
                        based on the State's English language 
                        proficiency assessment under section 
                        1111(b)(2)(D); and
                          ``(ii) meeting the State academic standards 
                        under section 1111(b)(1).
          ``(3) Administrative expenses.--From the amount reserved 
        under paragraph (2), a State educational agency may use not 
        more than 40 percent of such amount or $175,000, whichever is 
        greater, for the planning and administrative costs of carrying 
        out paragraphs (1) and (2).
  ``(c) Reservations and Allotments.--
          ``(1) Reservations.--From the amount reserved under section 
        1191(a) for each fiscal year, the Secretary shall reserve--
                  ``(A) 0.5 percent of such amount for payments to 
                outlying areas, to be allotted in accordance with their 
                respective needs for assistance under this chapter, as 
                determined by the Secretary, for activities, approved 
                by the Secretary, consistent with this chapter; and
                  ``(B) 6.5 percent of such amount for national 
                activities under sections 1211 and 1222, except that 
                not more than $2,000,000 of such amount may be reserved 
                for the National Clearinghouse for English Language 
                Acquisition and Language Instruction Educational 
                Programs described in section 1222.
          ``(2) State allotments.--
                  ``(A) In general.--Except as provided in subparagraph 
                (B), from the amount reserved under section 1191(a) for 
                each fiscal year that remains after making the 
                reservations under paragraph (1), the Secretary shall 
                allot to each State educational agency having a plan 
                approved under section 1192(c)--
                          ``(i) an amount that bears the same 
                        relationship to 80 percent of the remainder as 
                        the number of English learners in the State 
                        bears to the number of such children in all 
                        States, as determined by data available from 
                        the American Community Survey conducted by the 
                        Department of Commerce or State-reported data; 
                        and
                          ``(ii) an amount that bears the same 
                        relationship to 20 percent of the remainder as 
                        the number of immigrant children and youth in 
                        the State bears to the number of such children 
                        and youth in all States, as determined based 
                        only on data available from the American 
                        Community Survey conducted by the Department of 
                        Commerce.
                  ``(B) Minimum allotments.--No State educational 
                agency shall receive an allotment under this paragraph 
                that is less than $500,000.
                  ``(C) Reallotment.--If any State educational agency 
                described in subparagraph (A) does not submit a plan to 
                the Secretary for a fiscal year, or submits a plan (or 
                any amendment to a plan) that the Secretary, after 
                reasonable notice and opportunity for a hearing, 
                determines does not satisfy the requirements of this 
                chapter, the Secretary shall reallot any portion of 
                such allotment to the remaining State educational 
                agencies in accordance with subparagraph (A).
                  ``(D) Special rule for puerto rico.--The total amount 
                allotted to Puerto Rico for any fiscal year under 
                subparagraph (A) shall not exceed 0.5 percent of the 
                total amount allotted to all States for that fiscal 
                year.
          ``(3) Use of data for determinations.--In making State 
        allotments under paragraph (2) for each fiscal year, the 
        Secretary shall determine the number of English learners in a 
        State and in all States, using the most accurate, up-to-date 
        data, which shall be--
                  ``(A) data from the American Community Survey 
                conducted by the Department of Commerce, which may be 
                multiyear estimates;
                  ``(B) the number of students being assessed for 
                English language proficiency, based on the State's 
                English language proficiency assessment under section 
                1111(b)(2)(D), which may be multiyear estimates; or
                  ``(C) a combination of data available under 
                subparagraphs (A) and (B).

``SEC. 1192. STATE EDUCATIONAL AGENCY PLANS.

  ``(a) Filing for Subgrants.--Each State educational agency desiring a 
grant under this chapter shall submit a plan to the Secretary at such 
time and in such manner as the Secretary may require.
  ``(b) Contents.--Each plan submitted under subsection (a) shall--
          ``(1) describe the process that the agency will use in 
        awarding subgrants to eligible entities under section 
        1193(d)(1);
          ``(2) provide an assurance that--
                  ``(A) the agency will ensure that eligible entities 
                receiving a subgrant under this chapter comply with the 
                requirement in section 1111(b)(2)(B)(x) to annually 
                assess in English learners who have been in the United 
                States for 3 or more consecutive years;
                  ``(B) the agency will ensure that eligible entities 
                receiving a subgrant under this chapter annually assess 
                the English proficiency of all English learners 
                participating in a program funded under this chapter, 
                consistent with section 1111(b)(2)(D);
                  ``(C) in awarding subgrants under section 1193, the 
                agency will address the needs of school systems of all 
                sizes and in all geographic areas, including school 
                systems with rural and urban schools;
                  ``(D) subgrants to eligible entities under section 
                1193(d)(1) will be of sufficient size and scope to 
                allow such entities to carry out high-quality, 
                evidence-based language instruction educational 
                programs for English learners;
                  ``(E) the agency will require an eligible entity 
                receiving a subgrant under this chapter to use the 
                subgrant in ways that will build such recipient's 
                capacity to continue to offer high-quality evidence-
                based language instruction educational programs that 
                assist English learners in meeting State academic 
                standards;
                  ``(F) the agency will monitor the eligible entity 
                receiving a subgrant under this chapter for compliance 
                with applicable Federal fiscal requirements; and
                  ``(G) the plan has been developed in consultation 
                with local educational agencies, teachers, 
                administrators of programs implemented under this 
                chapter, parents, and other relevant stakeholders;
          ``(3) describe how the agency will coordinate its programs 
        and activities under this chapter with other programs and 
        activities under this Act and other Acts, as appropriate;
          ``(4) describe how eligible entities in the State will be 
        given the flexibility to teach English learners--
                  ``(A) using a high-quality, evidence-based language 
                instruction curriculum for teaching English learners; 
                and
                  ``(B) in the manner the eligible entities determine 
                to be the most effective; and
          ``(5) describe how the agency will assist eligible entities 
        in increasing the number of English learners who acquire 
        English proficiency.
  ``(c) Approval.--The Secretary, after using a peer review process, 
shall approve a plan submitted under subsection (a) if the plan meets 
the requirements of this section.
  ``(d) Duration of Plan.--
          ``(1) In general.--Each plan submitted by a State educational 
        agency and approved under subsection (c) shall--
                  ``(A) remain in effect for the duration of the 
                agency's participation under this chapter; and
                  ``(B) be periodically reviewed and revised by the 
                agency, as necessary, to reflect changes to the 
                agency's strategies and programs carried out under this 
                subpart.
          ``(2) Additional information.--
                  ``(A) Amendments.--If the State educational agency 
                amends the plan, the agency shall submit such amendment 
                to the Secretary.
                  ``(B) Approval.--The Secretary shall approve such 
                amendment to an approved plan, unless the Secretary 
                determines that the amendment will result in the agency 
                not meeting the requirements, or fulfilling the 
                purposes, of this subpart.
  ``(e) Consolidated Plan.--A plan submitted under subsection (a) may 
be submitted as part of a consolidated plan under section 6302.
  ``(f) Secretary Assistance.--The Secretary shall provide technical 
assistance, if requested by the State, in the development of English 
proficiency standards and assessments.

``SEC. 1193. WITHIN-STATE ALLOCATIONS.

  ``(a) In General.--After making the reservation required under 
subsection (d)(1), each State educational agency receiving a grant 
under section 1191(c)(2) shall award subgrants for a fiscal year by 
allocating in a timely manner to each eligible entity in the State 
having a plan approved under section 1195 an amount that bears the same 
relationship to the amount received under the grant and remaining after 
making such reservation as the population of English learners in 
schools served by the eligible entity bears to the population of 
English learners in schools served by all eligible entities in the 
State.
  ``(b) Limitation.--A State educational agency shall not award a 
subgrant from an allocation made under subsection (a) if the amount of 
such subgrant would be less than $10,000.
  ``(c) Reallocation.--Whenever a State educational agency determines 
that an amount from an allocation made to an eligible entity under 
subsection (a) for a fiscal year will not be used by the entity for the 
purpose for which the allocation was made, the agency shall, in 
accordance with such rules as it determines to be appropriate, 
reallocate such amount, consistent with such subsection, to other 
eligible entities in the State that the agency determines will use the 
amount to carry out that purpose.
  ``(d) Required Reservation.--A State educational agency receiving a 
grant under this chapter for a fiscal year--
          ``(1) shall reserve not more than 15 percent of the agency's 
        allotment under section 1191(c)(2) to award subgrants to 
        eligible entities in the State that have experienced a 
        significant increase, as compared to the average of the 2 
        preceding fiscal years, in the percentage or number of 
        immigrant children and youth, who have enrolled, during the 
        fiscal year preceding the fiscal year for which the subgrant is 
        made, in public and nonpublic elementary schools and secondary 
        schools in the geographic areas under the jurisdiction of, or 
        served by, such entities; and
          ``(2) in awarding subgrants under paragraph (1)--
                  ``(A) shall equally consider eligible entities that 
                satisfy the requirement of such paragraph but have 
                limited or no experience in serving immigrant children 
                and youth; and
                  ``(B) shall consider the quality of each local plan 
                under section 1195 and ensure that each subgrant is of 
                sufficient size and scope to meet the purposes of this 
                subpart.

``SEC. 1194. SUBGRANTS TO ELIGIBLE ENTITIES.

  ``(a) Purposes of Subgrants.--A State educational agency may make a 
subgrant to an eligible entity from funds received by the agency under 
this chapter only if the entity agrees to expend the funds to improve 
the education of English learners, by assisting the children to learn 
English and meet State academic standards. In carrying out activities 
with such funds, the eligible entity shall use evidence-based 
approaches and methodologies for teaching English learners and 
immigrant children and youth for the following purposes:
          ``(1) Developing and implementing new language instruction 
        educational programs and academic content instruction programs 
        for English learners and immigrant children and youth, 
        including programs of early childhood education, elementary 
        school programs, and secondary school programs.
          ``(2) Carrying out highly focused, innovative, locally 
        designed, evidence-based activities to expand or enhance 
        existing language instruction educational programs and academic 
        content instruction programs for English learners and immigrant 
        children and youth.
          ``(3) Implementing, within an individual school, schoolwide 
        programs for restructuring, reforming, and upgrading all 
        relevant programs, activities, and operations relating to 
        language instruction educational programs and academic content 
        instruction for English learners and immigrant children and 
        youth.
          ``(4) Implementing, within the entire jurisdiction of a local 
        educational agency, agencywide programs for restructuring, 
        reforming, and upgrading all relevant programs, activities, and 
        operations relating to language instruction educational 
        programs and academic content instruction for English learners 
        and immigrant children and youth.
  ``(b) Administrative Expenses.--Each eligible entity receiving funds 
under section 1193(a) for a fiscal year shall use not more than 2 
percent of such funds for the cost of administering this chapter.
  ``(c) Required Subgrantee Activities.--An eligible entity receiving 
funds under section 1193(a) shall use the funds--
          ``(1) to increase the English language proficiency of English 
        learners by providing high-quality, evidence-based language 
        instruction educational programs that meet the needs of English 
        learners and have demonstrated success in increasing--
                  ``(A) English language proficiency; and
                  ``(B) student academic achievement;
          ``(2) to provide high-quality, evidence-based professional 
        development to classroom teachers (including teachers in 
        classroom settings that are not the settings of language 
        instruction educational programs), school leaders, 
        administrators, and other school or community-based 
        organization personnel, that is--
                  ``(A) designed to improve the instruction and 
                assessment of English learners;
                  ``(B) designed to enhance the ability of teachers and 
                school leaders to understand and implement curricula, 
                assessment practices and measures, and instruction 
                strategies for English learners;
                  ``(C) evidence-based in increasing children's English 
                language proficiency or substantially increasing the 
                subject matter knowledge, teaching knowledge, and 
                teaching skills of teachers; and
                  ``(D) of sufficient intensity and duration (which 
                shall not include activities such as one-day or short-
                term workshops and conferences) to have a positive and 
                lasting impact on the teachers' performance in the 
                classroom, except that this subparagraph shall not 
                apply to an activity that is one component of a long-
                term, comprehensive professional development plan 
                established by a teacher and the teacher's supervisor 
                based on an assessment of the needs of the teacher, the 
                supervisor, the students of the teacher, and any local 
                educational agency employing the teacher, as 
                appropriate; and
          ``(3) to provide and implement other evidence-based 
        activities and strategies that enhance or supplement language 
        instruction educational programs for English learners, 
        including parental and community engagement activities and 
        strategies that serve to coordinate and align related programs.
  ``(d) Authorized Subgrantee Activities.--Subject to subsection (c), 
an eligible entity receiving funds under section 1193(a) may use the 
funds to achieve one of the purposes described in subsection (a) by 
undertaking one or more of the following activities:
          ``(1) Upgrading program objectives and effective instruction 
        strategies.
          ``(2) Improving the instruction program for English learners 
        by identifying, acquiring, and upgrading curricula, instruction 
        materials, educational software, and assessment procedures.
          ``(3) Providing to English learners--
                  ``(A) tutorials and academic or career education for 
                English learners; and
                  ``(B) intensified instruction.
          ``(4) Developing and implementing elementary school or 
        secondary school language instruction educational programs that 
        are coordinated with other relevant programs and services.
          ``(5) Improving the English language proficiency and academic 
        achievement of English learners.
          ``(6) Providing community participation programs, family 
        literacy services, and parent outreach and training activities 
        to English learners and their families--
                  ``(A) to improve the English language skills of 
                English learners; and
                  ``(B) to assist parents in helping their children to 
                improve their academic achievement and becoming active 
                participants in the education of their children.
          ``(7) Improving the instruction of English learners by 
        providing for--
                  ``(A) the acquisition or development of educational 
                technology or instructional materials;
                  ``(B) access to, and participation in, electronic 
                networks for materials, training, and communication; 
                and
                  ``(C) incorporation of the resources described in 
                subparagraphs (A) and (B) into curricula and programs, 
                such as those funded under this chapter.
          ``(8) Carrying out other activities that are consistent with 
        the purposes of this section.
  ``(e) Activities by Agencies Experiencing Substantial Increases in 
Immigrant Children and Youth.--
          ``(1) In general.--An eligible entity receiving funds under 
        section 1193(d)(1) shall use the funds to pay for activities 
        that provide enhanced instructional opportunities for immigrant 
        children and youth, which may include--
                  ``(A) family literacy, parent outreach, and training 
                activities designed to assist parents to become active 
                participants in the education of their children;
                  ``(B) support for personnel, including 
                paraprofessionals who have been specifically trained, 
                or are being trained, to provide services to immigrant 
                children and youth;
                  ``(C) provision of tutorials, mentoring, and academic 
                or career counseling for immigrant children and youth;
                  ``(D) identification, development, and acquisition of 
                curricular materials, educational software, and 
                technologies to be used in the program carried out with 
                awarded funds;
                  ``(E) basic instruction services that are directly 
                attributable to the presence in the local educational 
                agency involved of immigrant children and youth, 
                including the payment of costs of providing additional 
                classroom supplies, costs of transportation, or such 
                other costs as are directly attributable to such 
                additional basic instruction services;
                  ``(F) other instruction services that are designed to 
                assist immigrant children and youth to achieve in 
                elementary schools and secondary schools in the United 
                States, such as programs of introduction to the 
                educational system and civics education; and
                  ``(G) activities, coordinated with community-based 
                organizations, institutions of higher education, 
                private sector entities, or other entities with 
                expertise in working with immigrants, to assist parents 
                of immigrant children and youth by offering 
                comprehensive community services.
          ``(2) Duration of subgrants.--The duration of a subgrant made 
        by a State educational agency under section 1193(d)(1) shall be 
        determined by the agency in its discretion.
  ``(f) Selection of Method of Instruction.--
          ``(1) In general.--To receive a subgrant from a State 
        educational agency under this chapter, an eligible entity shall 
        select one or more methods or forms of instruction to be used 
        in the programs and activities undertaken by the entity to 
        assist English learners to attain English language proficiency 
        and meet State academic standards.
          ``(2) Consistency.--Such selection shall be consistent with 
        sections 1204 through 1206.
  ``(g) Supplement, Not Supplant.--Federal funds made available under 
this chapter shall be used so as to supplement the level of Federal, 
State, and local public funds that, in the absence of such 
availability, would have been expended for programs for English 
learners and immigrant children and youth and in no case to supplant 
such Federal, State, and local public funds.

``SEC. 1195. LOCAL PLANS.

  ``(a) Filing for Subgrants.--Each eligible entity desiring a subgrant 
from the State educational agency under section 1193 shall submit a 
plan to the State educational agency at such time, in such manner, and 
containing such information as the State educational agency may 
require.
  ``(b) Contents.--Each plan submitted under subsection (a) shall--
          ``(1) describe the evidence-based programs and activities 
        proposed to be developed, implemented, and administered under 
        the subgrant that will help English learners increase their 
        English language proficiency and meet the State academic 
        standards;
          ``(2) describe how the eligible entity will hold elementary 
        schools and secondary schools receiving funds under this 
        chapter accountable for annually assessing the English language 
        proficiency of all children participating under this subpart, 
        consistent with section 1111(b);
          ``(3) describe how the eligible entity will promote parent 
        and community engagement in the education of English learners;
          ``(4) contain an assurance that the eligible entity consulted 
        with teachers, researchers, school administrators, parents and 
        community members, public or private organizations, and 
        institutions of higher education, in developing and 
        implementing such plan;
          ``(5) describe how language instruction educational programs 
        carried out under the subgrant will ensure that English 
        learners being served by the programs develop English language 
        proficiency; and
          ``(6) contain assurances that--
                  ``(A) each local educational agency that is included 
                in the eligible entity is complying with section 
                1112(g) prior to, and throughout, each school year; and
                  ``(B) the eligible entity is not in violation of any 
                State law, including State constitutional law, 
                regarding the education of English learners, consistent 
                with sections 1205 and 1206.
  ``(c) Teacher English Fluency.--Each eligible entity receiving a 
subgrant under section 1193 shall include in its plan a certification 
that all teachers in any language instruction educational program for 
English learners that is, or will be, funded under this subpart are 
fluent in English and any other language used for instruction, 
including having written and oral communications skills.

                      ``CHAPTER B--ADMINISTRATION

``SEC. 1201. REPORTING.

  ``(a) In General.--Each eligible entity that receives a subgrant from 
a State educational agency under chapter A shall provide such agency, 
at the conclusion of every second fiscal year during which the subgrant 
is received, with a report, in a form prescribed by the agency, on the 
activities conducted and students served under this subpart that 
includes--
          ``(1) a description of the programs and activities conducted 
        by the entity with funds received under chapter A during the 
        two immediately preceding fiscal years, including how such 
        programs and activities supplemented programs funded primarily 
        with State or local funds;
          ``(2) a description of the progress made by English learners 
        in learning the English language and in meeting State academic 
        standards;
          ``(3) the number and percentage of English learners in the 
        programs and activities attaining English language proficiency 
        based on the State English language proficiency standards 
        established under section 1111(b)(1)(E) by the end of each 
        school year, as determined by the State's English language 
        proficiency assessment under section 1111(b)(2)(D);
          ``(4) the number of English learners who exit the language 
        instruction educational programs based on their attainment of 
        English language proficiency and transitioned to classrooms not 
        tailored for English learners;
          ``(5) a description of the progress made by English learners 
        in meeting the State academic standards for each of the 2 years 
        after such children are no longer receiving services under this 
        subpart;
          ``(6) the number and percentage of English learners who have 
        not attained English language proficiency within five years of 
        initial classification as an English learner and first 
        enrollment in the local educational agency; and
          ``(7) any such other information as the State educational 
        agency may require.
  ``(b) Use of Report.--A report provided by an eligible entity under 
subsection (a) shall be used by the entity and the State educational 
agency--
          ``(1) to determine the effectiveness of programs and 
        activities in assisting children who are English learners--
                  ``(A) to attain English language proficiency; and
                  ``(B) to make progress in meeting State academic 
                standards under section 1111(b)(1); and
          ``(2) upon determining the effectiveness of programs and 
        activities based on the criteria in paragraph (1), to decide 
        how to improve programs.

``SEC. 1202. ANNUAL REPORT.

  ``(a) States.--Based upon the reports provided to a State educational 
agency under section 1201, each such agency that receives a grant under 
this subpart shall prepare and submit annually to the Secretary a 
report on programs and activities carried out by the State educational 
agency under this subpart and the effectiveness of such programs and 
activities in improving the education provided to English learners.
  ``(b) Secretary.--Annually, the Secretary shall prepare and submit to 
the Committee on Education and the Workforce of the House of 
Representatives and the Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and 
Pensions of the Senate a report--
          ``(1) on programs and activities carried out to serve English 
        learners under this subpart, and the effectiveness of such 
        programs and activities in improving the academic achievement 
        and English language proficiency of English learners;
          ``(2) on the types of language instruction educational 
        programs used by local educational agencies or eligible 
        entities receiving funding under this subpart to teach English 
        learners;
          ``(3) containing a critical synthesis of data reported by 
        eligible entities to States under section 1201(a);
          ``(4) containing a description of technical assistance and 
        other assistance provided by State educational agencies under 
        section 1191(b)(2)(C);
          ``(5) containing an estimate of the number of effective 
        teachers working in language instruction educational programs 
        and educating English learners, and an estimate of the number 
        of such teachers that will be needed for the succeeding 5 
        fiscal years;
          ``(6) containing the number of programs or activities, if 
        any, that were terminated because the entities carrying out the 
        programs or activities were not able to reach program goals;
          ``(7) containing the number of English learners served by 
        eligible entities receiving funding under this subpart who were 
        transitioned out of language instruction educational programs 
        funded under this subpart into classrooms where instruction is 
        not tailored for English learners; and
          ``(8) containing other information gathered from other 
        reports submitted to the Secretary under this subpart when 
        applicable.

``SEC. 1203. COORDINATION WITH RELATED PROGRAMS.

  ``In order to maximize Federal efforts aimed at serving the 
educational needs of English learners, the Secretary shall coordinate 
and ensure close cooperation with other entities carrying out programs 
serving language-minority and English learners that are administered by 
the Department and other agencies. The Secretary shall report to the 
Congress on parallel Federal programs in other agencies and 
departments.

``SEC. 1204. RULES OF CONSTRUCTION.

  ``Nothing in this subpart shall be construed--
          ``(1) to prohibit a local educational agency from serving 
        English learners simultaneously with children with similar 
        educational needs, in the same educational settings where 
        appropriate;
          ``(2) to require a State or a local educational agency to 
        establish, continue, or eliminate any particular type of 
        instructional program for English learners; or
          ``(3) to limit the preservation or use of Native American 
        languages.

``SEC. 1205. LEGAL AUTHORITY UNDER STATE LAW.

  ``Nothing in this subpart shall be construed to negate or supersede 
State law, or the legal authority under State law of any State agency, 
State entity, or State public official, over programs that are under 
the jurisdiction of the State agency, entity, or official.

``SEC. 1206. CIVIL RIGHTS.

  ``Nothing in this subpart shall be construed in a manner inconsistent 
with any Federal law guaranteeing a civil right.

``SEC. 1207. PROHIBITION.

  ``In carrying out this subpart, the Secretary shall neither mandate 
nor preclude the use of a particular curricular or pedagogical approach 
to educating English learners.

``SEC. 1208. PROGRAMS FOR NATIVE AMERICANS AND PUERTO RICO.

  ``Notwithstanding any other provision of this subpart, programs 
authorized under this subpart that serve Native American (including 
Native American Pacific Islander) children and children in the 
Commonwealth of Puerto Rico may include programs of instruction, 
teacher training, curriculum development, evaluation, and assessment 
designed for Native American children learning and studying Native 
American languages and children of limited Spanish proficiency, except 
that an outcome of programs serving such children shall be increased 
English proficiency among such children.

                    ``CHAPTER C--NATIONAL ACTIVITIES

``SEC. 1211. NATIONAL PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT PROJECT.

  ``The Secretary shall use funds made available under section 
1191(c)(1)(B) to award grants on a competitive basis, for a period of 
not more than 5 years, to institutions of higher education or public or 
private organizations with relevant experience and capacity (in 
consortia with State educational agencies or local educational 
agencies) to provide for professional development activities that will 
improve classroom instruction for English learners and assist 
educational personnel working with such children to meet high 
professional standards, including standards for certification and 
licensure as teachers who work in language instruction educational 
programs or serve English learners. Grants awarded under this 
subsection may be used--
          ``(1) for preservice, evidence-based professional development 
        programs that will assist local schools and institutions of 
        higher education to upgrade the qualifications and skills of 
        educational personnel who are not certified or licensed, 
        especially educational paraprofessionals;
          ``(2) for the development of curricula or other instructional 
        strategies appropriate to the needs of the consortia 
        participants involved;
          ``(3) to support strategies that strengthen and increase 
        parent and community member engagement in the education of 
        English learners; and
          ``(4) to share and disseminate evidence-based practices in 
        the instruction of English learners and in increasing their 
        student achievement.

                    ``CHAPTER D--GENERAL PROVISIONS

``SEC. 1221. DEFINITIONS.

  ``Except as otherwise provided, in this subpart:
          ``(1) Child.--The term `child' means any individual aged 3 
        through 21.
          ``(2) Community-based organization.--The term `community-
        based organization' means a private nonprofit organization of 
        demonstrated effectiveness, Indian tribe, or tribally 
        sanctioned educational authority, that is representative of a 
        community or significant segments of a community and that 
        provides educational or related services to individuals in the 
        community. Such term includes a Native Hawaiian or Native 
        American Pacific Islander native language educational 
        organization.
          ``(3) Eligible entity.--The term `eligible entity' means--
                  ``(A) one or more local educational agencies; or
                  ``(B) one or more local educational agencies, in 
                consortia (or collaboration) with an institution of 
                higher education, community-based organization, or 
                State educational agency.
          ``(4) Immigrant children and youth.--The term `immigrant 
        children and youth' means individuals who--
                  ``(A) are age 3 through 21;
                  ``(B) were not born in any State; and
                  ``(C) have not been attending one or more schools in 
                any one or more States for more than 3 full academic 
                years.
          ``(5) Indian tribe.--The term `Indian tribe' means any Indian 
        tribe, band, nation, or other organized group or community, 
        including any Native village or Regional Corporation or Village 
        Corporation as defined in or established pursuant to the Alaska 
        Native Claims Settlement Act, that is recognized as eligible 
        for the special programs and services provided by the United 
        States to Indians because of their status as Indians.
          ``(6) Language instruction educational program.--The term 
        `language instruction educational program' means an instruction 
        course--
                  ``(A) in which an English learner is placed for the 
                purpose of developing and attaining English language 
                proficiency, while meeting State academic standards, as 
                required by section 1111(b)(1); and
                  ``(B) that may make instructional use of both English 
                and a child's native language to enable the child to 
                develop and attain English language proficiency, and 
                may include the participation of English language 
                proficient children if such course is designed to 
                enable all participating children to become proficient 
                in English and a second language.
          ``(7) Native language.--The term `native language', when used 
        with reference to English learner, means--
                  ``(A) the language normally used by such individual; 
                or
                  ``(B) in the case of a child or youth, the language 
                normally used by the parents of the child or youth.
          ``(8) Paraprofessional.--The term `paraprofessional' means an 
        individual who is employed in a preschool, elementary school, 
        or secondary school under the supervision of a certified or 
        licensed teacher, including individuals employed in language 
        instruction educational programs, special education, and 
        migratory education.
          ``(9) State.--The term `State' means each of the 50 States, 
        the District of Columbia, and the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico.

``SEC. 1222. NATIONAL CLEARINGHOUSE.

  ``(a) In General.--The Secretary shall establish and support the 
operation of a National Clearinghouse for English Language Acquisition 
and Language Instruction Educational Programs, which shall collect, 
analyze, synthesize, and disseminate information about language 
instruction educational programs for English learners, and related 
programs. The National Clearinghouse shall--
          ``(1) be administered as an adjunct clearinghouse of the 
        Educational Resources Information Center Clearinghouses system 
        supported by the Institute of Education Sciences;
          ``(2) coordinate activities with Federal data and information 
        clearinghouses and entities operating Federal dissemination 
        networks and systems;
          ``(3) develop a system for improving the operation and 
        effectiveness of federally funded language instruction 
        educational programs;
          ``(4) collect and disseminate information on--
                  ``(A) educational research and processes related to 
                the education of English learners; and
                  ``(B) accountability systems that monitor the 
                academic progress of English learners in language 
                instruction educational programs, including information 
                on academic content and English language proficiency 
                assessments for language instruction educational 
                programs; and
          ``(5) publish, on an annual basis, a list of grant recipients 
        under this subpart.
  ``(b) Construction.--Nothing in this section shall authorize the 
Secretary to hire new personnel to execute subsection (a).

``SEC. 1223. REGULATIONS.

  ``In developing regulations under this subpart, the Secretary shall 
consult with State educational agencies and local educational agencies, 
organizations representing English learners, and organizations 
representing teachers and other personnel involved in the education of 
English learners.

            ``Subpart 5--Rural Education Achievement Program

``SEC. 1230. PURPOSE.

  ``It is the purpose of this subpart to address the unique needs of 
rural school districts that frequently--
          ``(1) lack the personnel and resources needed to compete 
        effectively for Federal competitive grants; and
          ``(2) receive formula grant allocations in amounts too small 
        to be effective in meeting their intended purposes.

          ``CHAPTER A--SMALL, RURAL SCHOOL ACHIEVEMENT PROGRAM

``SEC. 1231. GRANT PROGRAM AUTHORIZED.

  ``(a) In General.--From amounts appropriated under section 3(a)(1) 
for a fiscal year, the Secretary shall reserve 0.6 of one percent to 
award grants to eligible local educational agencies to enable the local 
educational agencies to carry out activities authorized under any of 
the following provisions:
          ``(1) Part A of title I.
          ``(2) Title II.
          ``(3) Title III.
  ``(b) Allocation.--
          ``(1) In general.--Except as provided in paragraph (3), the 
        Secretary shall award a grant under subsection (a) to a local 
        educational agency eligible under subsection (d) for a fiscal 
        year in an amount equal to the initial amount determined under 
        paragraph (2) for the fiscal year minus the total amount 
        received by the agency in subpart 2 of part A of title II for 
        the preceding fiscal year.
          ``(2) Determination of initial amount.--The initial amount 
        referred to in paragraph (1) is equal to $100 multiplied by the 
        total number of students in excess of 50 students, in average 
        daily attendance at the schools served by the local educational 
        agency, plus $20,000, except that the initial amount may not 
        exceed $60,000.
          ``(3) Ratable adjustment.--
                  ``(A) In general.--If the amount made available to 
                carry out this section for any fiscal year is not 
                sufficient to pay in full the amounts that local 
                educational agencies are eligible to receive under 
                paragraph (1) for such year, the Secretary shall 
                ratably reduce such amounts for such year.
                  ``(B) Additional amounts.--If additional funds become 
                available for making payments under paragraph (1) for 
                such fiscal year, payments that were reduced under 
                subparagraph (A) shall be increased on the same basis 
                as such payments were reduced.
  ``(c) Disbursement.--The Secretary shall disburse the funds awarded 
to a local educational agency under this section for a fiscal year not 
later than July 1 of that fiscal year.
  ``(d) Eligibility.--
          ``(1) In general.--A local educational agency shall be 
        eligible to use the applicable funding in accordance with 
        subsection (a) if--
                  ``(A)(i)(I) the total number of students in average 
                daily attendance at all of the schools served by the 
                local educational agency is fewer than 600; or
                  ``(II) each county in which a school served by the 
                local educational agency is located has a total 
                population density of fewer than 10 persons per square 
                mile; and
                  ``(ii) all of the schools served by the local 
                educational agency are designated with a school locale 
                code of 41, 42, or 43, as determined by the Secretary; 
                or
                  ``(B) the agency meets the criteria established in 
                subparagraph (A)(i) and the Secretary, in accordance 
                with paragraph (2), grants the local educational 
                agency's request to waive the criteria described in 
                subparagraph (A)(ii).
          ``(2) Certification.--The Secretary shall determine whether 
        to waive the criteria described in paragraph (1)(A)(ii) based 
        on a demonstration by the local educational agency, and 
        concurrence by the State educational agency, that the local 
        educational agency is located in an area defined as rural by a 
        governmental agency of the State.
          ``(3) Hold harmless.--For a local educational agency that is 
        not eligible under this chapter but met the eligibility 
        requirements under this subsection as it was in effect prior to 
        the date of the enactment of the Student Success Act, the 
        agency shall receive--
                  ``(A) for fiscal year 2016, 75 percent of the amount 
                such agency received for fiscal year 2013;
                  ``(B) for fiscal year 2017, 50 percent of the amount 
                such agency received for fiscal year 2013; and
                  ``(C) for fiscal year 2018, 25 percent of the amount 
                such agency received for fiscal year 2013.
  ``(e) Special Eligibility Rule.--A local educational agency that 
receives a grant under this chapter for a fiscal year is not eligible 
to receive funds for such fiscal year under chapter B.

            ``CHAPTER B--RURAL AND LOW-INCOME SCHOOL PROGRAM

``SEC. 1235. PROGRAM AUTHORIZED.

  ``(a) Grants to States.--
          ``(1) In general.--From amounts appropriated under section 
        3(a)(1) for a fiscal year, the Secretary shall reserve 0.6 of 
        one percent for this chapter for a fiscal year that are not 
        reserved under subsection (c) to award grants (from allotments 
        made under paragraph (2)) for the fiscal year to State 
        educational agencies that have applications submitted under 
        section 1237 approved to enable the State educational agencies 
        to award grants to eligible local educational agencies for 
        local authorized activities described in section 1236(a).
          ``(2) Allotment.--From amounts described in paragraph (1) for 
        a fiscal year, the Secretary shall allot to each State 
        educational agency for that fiscal year an amount that bears 
        the same ratio to those amounts as the number of students in 
        average daily attendance served by eligible local educational 
        agencies in the State for that fiscal year bears to the number 
        of all such students served by eligible local educational 
        agencies in all States for that fiscal year.
          ``(3) Specially qualified agencies.--
                  ``(A) Eligibility and application.--If a State 
                educational agency elects not to participate in the 
                program under this subpart or does not have an 
                application submitted under section 1237 approved, a 
                specially qualified agency in such State desiring a 
                grant under this subpart may submit an application 
                under such section directly to the Secretary to receive 
                an award under this subpart.
                  ``(B) Direct awards.--The Secretary may award, on a 
                competitive basis or by formula, the amount the State 
                educational agency is eligible to receive under 
                paragraph (2) directly to a specially qualified agency 
                in the State that has submitted an application in 
                accordance with subparagraph (A) and obtained approval 
                of the application.
                  ``(C) Specially qualified agency defined.--In this 
                subpart, the term `specially qualified agency' means an 
                eligible local educational agency served by a State 
                educational agency that does not participate in a 
                program under this subpart in a fiscal year, that may 
                apply directly to the Secretary for a grant in such 
                year under this subsection.
  ``(b) Local Awards.--
          ``(1) Eligibility.--A local educational agency shall be 
        eligible to receive a grant under this subpart if--
                  ``(A) 20 percent or more of the children ages 5 
                through 17 years served by the local educational agency 
                are from families with incomes below the poverty line; 
                and
                  ``(B) all of the schools served by the agency are 
                designated with a school locale code of 32, 33, 41, 42, 
                43, as determined by the Secretary.
          ``(2) Award basis.--A State educational agency shall award 
        grants to eligible local educational agencies--
                  ``(A) on a competitive basis;
                  ``(B) according to a formula based on the number of 
                students in average daily attendance served by the 
                eligible local educational agencies or schools in the 
                State; or
                  ``(C) according to an alternative formula, if, prior 
                to awarding the grants, the State educational agency 
                demonstrates, to the satisfaction of the Secretary, 
                that the alternative formula enables the State 
                educational agency to allot the grant funds in a manner 
                that serves equal or greater concentrations of children 
                from families with incomes below the poverty line, 
                relative to the concentrations that would be served if 
                the State educational agency used the formula described 
                in subparagraph (B).
  ``(c) Reservations.--From amounts reserved under section 1235(a)(1) 
for this chapter for a fiscal year, the Secretary shall reserve--
          ``(1) one-half of 1 percent to make awards to elementary 
        schools or secondary schools operated or supported by the 
        Bureau of Indian Education, to carry out the activities 
        authorized under this chapter; and
          ``(2) one-half of 1 percent to make awards to the outlying 
        areas in accordance with their respective needs, to carry out 
        the activities authorized under this chapter.

``SEC. 1236. USES OF FUNDS.

  ``(a) Local Awards.--Grant funds awarded to local educational 
agencies under this chapter shall be used for activities authorized 
under any of the following:
          ``(1) Part A of title I.
          ``(2) Title II.
          ``(3) Title III.
  ``(b) Administrative Costs.--A State educational agency receiving a 
grant under this chapter may not use more than 5 percent of the amount 
of the grant for State administrative costs and to provide technical 
assistance to eligible local educational agencies.

``SEC. 1237. APPLICATIONS.

  ``(a) In General.--Each State educational agency or specially 
qualified agency desiring to receive a grant under this chapter shall 
submit an application to the Secretary at such time and in such manner 
as the Secretary may require.
  ``(b) Contents.--Each application submitted under subsection (a) 
shall include--
          ``(1) a description of how the State educational agency or 
        specially qualified agency will ensure eligible local 
        educational agencies receiving a grant under this chapter will 
        use such funds to help students meet the State academic 
        standards under section 1111(b)(1);
          ``(2) if the State educational agency or specially qualified 
        agency will competitively award grants to eligible local 
        educational agencies, as described in section 1235(b)(2)(A), 
        the application under the section shall include--
                  ``(A) the methods and criteria the State educational 
                agency or specially qualified agency will use for 
                reviewing applications and awarding funds to local 
                educational agencies on a competitive basis; and
                  ``(B) how the State educational agency or specially 
                qualified agency will notify eligible local educational 
                agencies of the grant competition; and
          ``(3) a description of how the State educational agency or 
        specially qualified agency will provide technical assistance to 
        eligible local educational agencies to help such agencies 
        implement the activities described in section 1236(a).

``SEC. 1238. ACCOUNTABILITY.

  ``Each State educational agency or specially qualified agency that 
receives a grant under this chapter shall prepare and submit an annual 
report to the Secretary. The report shall describe--
          ``(1) the methods and criteria the State educational agency 
        or specially qualified agency used to award grants to eligible 
        local educational agencies, and to provide assistance to 
        schools, under this chapter;
          ``(2) how local educational agencies and schools used funds 
        provided under this chapter; and
          ``(3) the degree to which progress has been made toward 
        having all students meet the State academic standards under 
        section 1111(b)(1).

``SEC. 1239. CHOICE OF PARTICIPATION.

  ``(a) In General.--If a local educational agency is eligible for 
funding under chapters A and B of this subpart, such local educational 
agency may receive funds under either chapter A or chapter B for a 
fiscal year, but may not receive funds under both chapters.
  ``(b) Notification.--A local educational agency eligible for both 
chapters A and B of this subpart shall notify the Secretary and the 
State educational agency under which of such chapters such local 
educational agency intends to receive funds for a fiscal year by a date 
that is established by the Secretary for the notification.

                    ``CHAPTER C--GENERAL PROVISIONS

``SEC. 1241. ANNUAL AVERAGE DAILY ATTENDANCE DETERMINATION.

  ``(a) Census Determination.--Each local educational agency desiring a 
grant under section 1231 and each local educational agency or specially 
qualified agency desiring a grant under chapter B shall--
          ``(1) not later than December 1 of each year, conduct a 
        census to determine the number of students in average daily 
        attendance in kindergarten through grade 12 at the schools 
        served by the agency; and
          ``(2) not later than March 1 of each year, submit the number 
        described in paragraph (1) to the Secretary (and to the State 
        educational agency, in the case of a local educational agency 
        seeking a grant under subpart 2).
  ``(b) Penalty.--If the Secretary determines that a local educational 
agency or specially qualified agency has knowingly submitted false 
information under subsection (a) for the purpose of gaining additional 
funds under section 1231 or chapter B, then the agency shall be fined 
an amount equal to twice the difference between the amount the agency 
received under this section and the correct amount the agency would 
have received under section 1231 or chapter B if the agency had 
submitted accurate information under subsection (a).

``SEC. 1242. SUPPLEMENT, NOT SUPPLANT.

  ``Funds made available under chapter A or chapter B shall be used to 
supplement, and not supplant, any other Federal, State, or local 
education funds.

``SEC. 1243. RULE OF CONSTRUCTION.

  ``Nothing in this subpart shall be construed to prohibit a local 
educational agency that enters into cooperative arrangements with other 
local educational agencies for the provision of special, compensatory, 
or other education services, pursuant to State law or a written 
agreement, from entering into similar arrangements for the use, or the 
coordination of the use, of the funds made available under this 
subpart.''.
  (b) Strike.--The Act is amended by striking title VII (20 U.S.C. 7401 
et seq.).

                    Subtitle D--National Assessment

SEC. 141. NATIONAL ASSESSMENT OF TITLE I.

  (a) In General.--Part E of title I (20 U.S.C. 6491 et seq.) is 
redesignated as part B of title I.
  (b) Repeals.--Sections 1502 and 1504 (20 U.S.C. 6492; 6494) are 
repealed.
  (c) Redesignations.--Sections 1501 and 1503 (20 U.S.C. 6491; 6493) 
are redesignated as sections 1301 and 1302, respectively.
  (d) Amendments to Section 1301.--Section 1301 (20 U.S.C. 6491), as so 
redesignated, is amended--
          (1) in subsection (a)--
                  (A) in paragraph (1), by inserting ``, acting through 
                the Director of the Institute of Education Sciences (in 
                this section and section 1302 referred to as the 
                `Director'),'' after ``The Secretary'';
                  (B) in paragraph (2)--
                          (i) by striking ``Secretary'' and inserting 
                        ``Director'';
                          (ii) in subparagraph (A), by striking 
                        ``reaching the proficient level'' and all that 
                        follows and inserting ``graduating high school 
                        prepared for postsecondary education or the 
                        workforce.'';
                          (iii) in subparagraph (B), by striking 
                        ``reach the proficient'' and all that follows 
                        and inserting ``meet State academic 
                        standards.'';
                          (iv) by striking subparagraphs (D) and (G) 
                        and redesignating subparagraphs (E), (F), and 
                        (H) through (O) as subparagraphs (D) through 
                        (M), respectively;
                          (v) in subparagraph (D)(v) (as so 
                        redesignated), by striking ``help schools in 
                        which'' and all that follows and inserting 
                        ``address disparities in the percentages of 
                        effective teachers teaching in low-income 
                        schools.'';
                          (vi) in subparagraph (G) (as so 
                        redesignated)--
                                  (I) by striking ``section 1116'' and 
                                inserting ``section 
                                1111(b)(3)(B)(iii)''; and
                                  (II) by striking ``, including the 
                                following'' and all that follows and 
                                inserting a period;
                          (vii) in subparagraph (I) (as so 
                        redesignated), by striking ``qualifications'' 
                        and inserting ``effectiveness'';
                          (viii) in subparagraph (J) (as so 
                        redesignated), by striking ``, including funds 
                        under section 1002,'';
                          (ix) in subparagraph (L) (as so 
                        redesignated), by striking ``section 
                        1111(b)(2)(C)(v)(II)'' and inserting ``section 
                        1111(b)(3)(B)(ii)(II)''; and
                          (x) in subparagraph (M) (as so redesignated), 
                        by striking ``Secretary'' and inserting 
                        ``Director'';
                  (C) in paragraph (3), by striking ``Secretary'' and 
                inserting ``Director'';
                  (D) in paragraph (4), by striking ``Secretary'' and 
                inserting ``Director'';
                  (E) in paragraph (5), by striking ``Secretary'' and 
                inserting ``Director''; and
                  (F) in paragraph (6)--
                          (i) by striking ``No Child Left Behind Act of 
                        2001'' each place it appears and inserting 
                        ``Student Success Act''; and
                          (ii) by striking ``Secretary'' each place it 
                        appears and inserting ``Director'';
          (2) in subsection (b), by striking ``Secretary'' each place 
        it appears and inserting ``Director'';
          (3) in subsection (c)--
                  (A) in paragraph (1)--
                          (i) by striking ``Secretary'' and inserting 
                        ``Director''; and
                          (ii) by striking ``part A'' and inserting 
                        ``subpart 1 of part A'';
                  (B) in paragraph (2)--
                          (i) by striking ``Secretary'' and inserting 
                        ``Director'';
                          (ii) in subparagraph (B), by striking 
                        ``challenging academic achievement standards'' 
                        and inserting ``State academic standards'';
                          (iii) in subparagraph (E), by striking 
                        ``effects of the availability'' and all that 
                        follows and inserting ``extent to which actions 
                        authorized under section 1111(b)(3)(B)(iii) 
                        improve the academic achievement of 
                        disadvantaged students and low-performing 
                        schools.''; and
                          (iv) in subparagraph (F), by striking 
                        ``Secretary'' and inserting ``Director''; and
                  (C) in paragraph (3)--
                          (i) by striking ``Secretary'' and inserting 
                        ``Director''; and
                          (ii) by striking subparagraph (C) and 
                        inserting the following:
                  ``(C) analyzes varying models or strategies for 
                delivering school services, including schoolwide and 
                targeted services.''; and
          (4) in subsection (d), by striking ``Secretary'' each place 
        it appears and inserting ``Director''.
  (e) Amendments to Section 1302.--Section 1302 (20 U.S.C. 6493), as so 
redesignated, is amended--
          (1) in subsection (a)--
                  (A) by striking ``Secretary'' and inserting 
                ``Director''; and
                  (B) by striking ``and for making decisions about the 
                promotion and graduation of students'';
          (2) in subsection (b)--
                  (A) by striking ``Secretary'' the first place it 
                appears and inserting ``Director'';
                  (B) by striking ``process,'' and inserting ``process 
                consistent with section 1111(e)(1),''; and
                  (C) by striking ``Assistant Secretary of Educational 
                Research and Improvement'' and inserting ``Director'';
          (3) in subsection (d)--
                  (A) in paragraph (1)--
                          (i) in subparagraph (A), by striking ``to the 
                        State-defined level of proficiency'' and 
                        inserting ``toward meeting the State academic 
                        standards''; and
                          (ii) in subparagraph (C), by striking 
                        ``pupil-services'' and inserting ``specialized 
                        instructional support services'';
                  (B) in paragraph (3), by striking ``limited and 
                nonlimited English proficient students'' and inserting 
                ``English learners and non-English learners''; and
                  (C) in paragraph (6), by striking ``Secretary'' and 
                inserting ``Director''; and
          (4) in subsection (f)--
                  (A) by striking ``Secretary'' and inserting 
                ``Director''; and
                  (B) by striking ``authorized to be appropriated for 
                this part'' and inserting ``appropriated under section 
                3(a)(2)''.

                 Subtitle E--Title I General Provisions

SEC. 151. GENERAL PROVISIONS FOR TITLE I.

  Part I of title I (20 U.S.C. 6571 et seq.)--
          (1) is transferred to appear after part B (as redesignated); 
        and
          (2) is amended to read as follows:

                      ``PART C--GENERAL PROVISIONS

``SEC. 1401. FEDERAL REGULATIONS.

  ``(a) In General.--The Secretary may, in accordance with subsections 
(b) through (d), issue such regulations as are necessary to reasonably 
ensure there is compliance with this title.
  ``(b) Negotiated Rulemaking Process.--
          ``(1) In general.--Before publishing in the Federal Register 
        proposed regulations to carry out this title, the Secretary 
        shall obtain the advice and recommendations of representatives 
        of Federal, State, and local administrators, parents, teachers, 
        and members of local school boards and other organizations 
        involved with the implementation and operation of programs 
        under this title, including those representatives and members 
        nominated by local and national stakeholder representatives.
          ``(2) Meetings and electronic exchange.--Such advice and 
        recommendations may be obtained through such mechanisms as 
        regional meetings and electronic exchanges of information. Such 
        regional meetings and electronic exchanges of information shall 
        be public and notice of such meetings and exchanges shall be 
        provided to interested stakeholders.
          ``(3) Proposed regulations.--After obtaining such advice and 
        recommendations, and before publishing proposed regulations, 
        the Secretary shall--
                  ``(A) establish a negotiated rulemaking process;
                  ``(B) select individuals to participate in such 
                process from among individuals or groups that provided 
                advice and recommendations, including representation 
                from all geographic regions of the United States, in 
                such numbers as will provide an equitable balance 
                between representatives of parents and students and 
                representatives of educators and education officials; 
                and
                  ``(C) prepare a draft of proposed policy options that 
                shall be provided to the individuals selected by the 
                Secretary under subparagraph (B) not less than 15 days 
                before the first meeting under such process.
  ``(c) Proposed Rulemaking.--If the Secretary determines that a 
negotiated rulemaking process is unnecessary or the individuals 
selected to participate in the process under paragraph (3)(B) fail to 
reach unanimous agreement, the Secretary may propose regulations under 
the following procedure:
          ``(1) Not less than 30 days prior to beginning a rulemaking 
        process, the Secretary shall provide to Congress, including the 
        Committee on Education and the Workforce of the House of 
        Representatives and the Committee on Health, Education, Labor, 
        and Pensions of the Senate, notice that shall include--
                  ``(A) a copy of the proposed regulations;
                  ``(B) the need to issue regulations;
                  ``(C) the anticipated burden, including the time, 
                cost, and paperwork burden, the regulations will have 
                on State educational agencies, local educational 
                agencies, schools, and other entities that may be 
                impacted by the regulations; and
                  ``(D) any regulations that will be repealed when the 
                new regulations are issued.
          ``(2) 30 days after giving notice of the proposed rule to 
        Congress, the Secretary may proceed with the rulemaking process 
        after all comments received from the Congress have been 
        addressed and publishing how such comments are addressed with 
        the proposed rule.
          ``(3) The comment and review period for any proposed 
        regulation shall be 90 days unless an emergency requires a 
        shorter period, in which case such period shall be not less 
        than 45 days and the Secretary shall--
                  ``(A) designate the proposed regulation as an 
                emergency with an explanation of the emergency in the 
                notice and report to Congress under paragraph (1); and
                  ``(B) publish the length of the comment and review 
                period in such notice and in the Federal Register.
          ``(4) No regulation shall be made final after the comment and 
        review period until the Secretary has published in the Federal 
        Register an independent assessment (which shall include a 
        representative sampling of local educational agencies based on 
        local educational agency enrollment, urban, suburban, or rural 
        character, and other factors impacted by the proposed 
        regulation) of--
                  ``(A) the burden, including the time, cost, and 
                paperwork burden, the regulation will impose on State 
                educational agencies, local educational agencies, 
                schools and other entities that may be impacted by the 
                regulation;
                  ``(B) an explanation of how the entities described in 
                subparagraph (A) may cover the cost of the burden 
                assessed under subparagraph (A); and
                  ``(C) the proposed regulation, which thoroughly 
                addresses, based on the comments received during the 
                comment and review period under paragraph (3), whether 
                the rule is financially, operationally, and 
                educationally viable at the local level.
  ``(d) Limitation.--Regulations to carry out this title may not 
require local programs to follow a particular instructional model, such 
as the provision of services outside the regular classroom or school 
program.

``SEC. 1402. AGREEMENTS AND RECORDS.

  ``(a) Agreements.--In the case in which a negotiated rule making 
process is established under subsection (b) of section 1401, all 
published proposed regulations shall conform to agreements that result 
from the rulemaking described in section 1401 unless the Secretary 
reopens the negotiated rulemaking process.
  ``(b) Records.--The Secretary shall ensure that an accurate and 
reliable record of agreements reached during the negotiations process 
is maintained.

``SEC. 1403. STATE ADMINISTRATION.

  ``(a) Rulemaking.--
          ``(1) In general.--Each State that receives funds under this 
        title shall--
                  ``(A) ensure that any State rules, regulations, and 
                policies relating to this title conform to the purposes 
                of this title and provide any such proposed rules, 
                regulations, and policies to the committee of 
                practitioners created under subsection (b) for review 
                and comment;
                  ``(B) minimize such rules, regulations, and policies 
                to which the State's local educational agencies and 
                schools are subject;
                  ``(C) eliminate or modify State and local fiscal 
                accounting requirements in order to facilitate the 
                ability of schools to consolidate funds under 
                schoolwide programs;
                  ``(D) identify any such rule, regulation, or policy 
                as a State-imposed requirement; and
                  ``(E)(i) identify any duplicative or contrasting 
                requirements between the State and Federal rules or 
                regulations;
                  ``(ii) eliminate the rules and regulations that are 
                duplicative of Federal requirements; and
                  ``(iii) report any conflicting requirements to the 
                Secretary and determine which Federal or State rule or 
                regulation shall be followed.
          ``(2) Support and facilitation.--State rules, regulations, 
        and policies under this title shall support and facilitate 
        local educational agency and school-level systemic reform 
        designed to enable all children to meet the State academic 
        standards.
  ``(b) Committee of Practitioners.--
          ``(1) In general.--Each State educational agency that 
        receives funds under this title shall create a State committee 
        of practitioners to advise the State in carrying out its 
        responsibilities under this title.
          ``(2) Membership.--Each such committee shall include--
                  ``(A) as a majority of its members, representatives 
                from local educational agencies;
                  ``(B) administrators, including the administrators of 
                programs described in other parts of this title;
                  ``(C) teachers from public charter schools, 
                traditional public schools, and career and technical 
                educators;
                  ``(D) parents;
                  ``(E) members of local school boards;
                  ``(F) representatives of public charter school 
                authorizers;
                  ``(G) public charter school leaders;
                  ``(H) representatives of private school children; and
                  ``(I) specialized instructional support personnel.
          ``(3) Duties.--The duties of such committee shall include a 
        review, before publication, of any proposed or final State rule 
        or regulation pursuant to this title. In an emergency situation 
        where such rule or regulation must be issued within a very 
        limited time to assist local educational agencies with the 
        operation of the program under this title, the State 
        educational agency may issue a regulation without prior 
        consultation, but shall immediately thereafter convene the 
        State committee of practitioners to review the emergency 
        regulation before issuance in final form.

``SEC. 1404. RULE OF CONSTRUCTION ON EQUALIZED SPENDING.

  ``Nothing in this title shall be construed to mandate or prohibit 
equalized spending per pupil for a State, local educational agency, or 
school.''.

            TITLE II--TEACHER PREPARATION AND EFFECTIVENESS

SEC. 201. TEACHER PREPARATION AND EFFECTIVENESS.

  (a) Heading.--The title heading for title II (20 U.S.C. 6601 et seq.) 
is amended to read as follows:

          ``TITLE II--TEACHER PREPARATION AND EFFECTIVENESS''.

  (b) Part A.--Part A of title II (20 U.S.C. 6601 et seq.) is amended 
to read as follows:

               ``PART A--SUPPORTING EFFECTIVE INSTRUCTION

``SEC. 2101. PURPOSE.

  ``The purpose of this part is to provide grants to State educational 
agencies and subgrants to local educational agencies to--
          ``(1) increase student achievement consistent with State 
        academic standards under section 1111(b)(1);
          ``(2) improve teacher and school leader effectiveness in 
        classrooms and schools, respectively;
          ``(3) provide evidence-based, job-embedded, continuous 
        professional development; and
          ``(4) if a State educational agency or local educational 
        agency so chooses, develop and implement teacher evaluation 
        systems that use, in part, student achievement data to 
        determine teacher effectiveness.

                     ``Subpart 1--Grants to States

``SEC. 2111. ALLOTMENTS TO STATES.

  ``(a) In General.--Of the amounts appropriated under section 3(b), 
the Secretary shall reserve 75 percent to make grants to States with 
applications approved under section 2112 to pay for the Federal share 
of the cost of carrying out the activities specified in section 2113. 
Each grant shall consist of the allotment determined for a State under 
subsection (b).
  ``(b) Determination of Allotments.--
          ``(1) Reservation of funds.--Of the amount reserved under 
        subsection (a) for a fiscal year, the Secretary shall reserve--
                  ``(A) not more than 1 percent to carry out national 
                activities under section 2132;
                  ``(B) one-half of 1 percent for allotments to 
                outlying areas on the basis of their relative need, as 
                determined by the Secretary, in accordance with the 
                purpose of this part; and
                  ``(C) one-half of 1 percent for the Secretary of the 
                Interior for programs under this part in schools 
                operated or funded by the Bureau of Indian Education.
          ``(2) State allotments.--
                  ``(A) In general.--Subject to subparagraph (B), from 
                the funds reserved under subsection (a) for any fiscal 
                year and not reserved under paragraph (1), the 
                Secretary shall allot to each State the sum of--
                          ``(i) an amount that bears the same 
                        relationship to 50 percent of the funds as the 
                        number of individuals age 5 through 17 in the 
                        State, as determined by the Secretary on the 
                        basis of the most recent satisfactory data, 
                        bears to the number of those individuals in all 
                        such States, as so determined; and
                          ``(ii) an amount that bears the same 
                        relationship to 50 percent of the funds as the 
                        number of individuals age 5 through 17 from 
                        families with incomes below the poverty line in 
                        the State, as determined by the Secretary on 
                        the basis of the most recent satisfactory data, 
                        bears to the number of those individuals in all 
                        such States, as so determined.
                  ``(B) Small state minimum.--No State receiving an 
                allotment under subparagraph (A) may receive less than 
                one-half of 1 percent of the total amount of funds 
                allotted under such subparagraph for a fiscal year.
                  ``(C) Applicability.--
                          ``(i) In general.--Subparagraph (A) shall not 
                        apply with respect to a fiscal year unless the 
                        Secretary certifies in writing to Congress for 
                        that fiscal year that the amount of funds 
                        allotted under subparagraph (A) to local 
                        educational agencies that serve a high 
                        percentage of students from families with 
                        incomes below the poverty line is not less than 
                        the amount allotted to such local educational 
                        agencies for fiscal year 2015.
                          ``(ii) Special rule.--For a fiscal year for 
                        which subparagraph (A) does not apply, the 
                        Secretary shall allocate to each State the 
                        funds described in subparagraph (A) according 
                        to the formula set forth in subsection 
                        (b)(2)(B)(i) of this section as in effect on 
                        the day before the date of the enactment of the 
                        Student Success Act.
  ``(c) Reallotment.--If a State does not apply for an allotment under 
this section for any fiscal year or only a portion of the State's 
allotment is allotted under subsection (b)(2), the Secretary shall 
reallot the State's entire allotment or the remaining portion of its 
allotment, as the case may be, to the remaining States in accordance 
with subsection (b).

``SEC. 2112. STATE APPLICATION.

  ``(a) In General.--For a State to be eligible to receive a grant 
under this subpart, the State educational agency shall submit an 
application to the Secretary at such time and in such a manner as the 
Secretary may reasonably require, which shall include the following:
          ``(1) A description of how the State educational agency will 
        meet the requirements of this subpart.
          ``(2) A description of how the State educational agency will 
        use a grant received under section 2111, including the grant 
        funds the State will reserve for State-level activities under 
        section 2113(a)(2).
          ``(3) A description of how the State educational agency will 
        facilitate the sharing of evidence-based and other effective 
        strategies among local educational agencies.
          ``(4) A description of how, and under what timeline, the 
        State educational agency will allocate subgrants under subpart 
        2 to local educational agencies.
          ``(5) If applicable, a description of how the State 
        educational agency will work with local educational agencies in 
        the State to develop or implement a teacher or school leader 
        evaluation system.
          ``(6) An assurance that the State educational agency will 
        comply with section 6501 (regarding participation by private 
        school children and teachers).
  ``(b) Deemed Approval.--An application submitted by a State 
educational agency under subsection (a) shall be deemed to be approved 
by the Secretary unless the Secretary makes a written determination, 
prior to the expiration of the 120-day period beginning on the date on 
which the Secretary received the application, that the application is 
not in compliance with this subpart.
  ``(c) Disapproval.--The Secretary shall not finally disapprove an 
application, except after giving the State educational agency notice 
and an opportunity for a hearing.
  ``(d) Notification.--If the Secretary finds that an application is 
not in compliance, in whole or in part, with this subpart, the 
Secretary shall--
          ``(1) give the State educational agency notice and an 
        opportunity for a hearing; and
          ``(2) notify the State educational agency of the finding of 
        noncompliance and, in such notification, shall--
                  ``(A) cite the specific provisions in the application 
                that are not in compliance; and
                  ``(B) request additional information, only as to the 
                noncompliant provisions, needed to make the application 
                compliant.
  ``(e) Response.--If a State educational agency responds to a 
notification from the Secretary under subsection (d)(2) during the 45-
day period beginning on the date on which the agency received the 
notification, and resubmits the application with the requested 
information described in subsection (d)(2)(B), the Secretary shall 
approve or disapprove such application prior to the later of--
          ``(1) the expiration of the 45-day period beginning on the 
        date on which the application is resubmitted; or
          ``(2) the expiration of the 120-day period described in 
        subsection (b).
  ``(f) Failure To Respond.--If a State educational agency does not 
respond to a notification from the Secretary under subsection (d)(2) 
during the 45-day period beginning on the date on which the agency 
received the notification, such application shall be deemed to be 
disapproved.

``SEC. 2113. STATE USE OF FUNDS.

  ``(a) In General.--A State educational agency that receives a grant 
under section 2111 shall--
          ``(1) reserve 95 percent of the grant funds to make subgrants 
        to local educational agencies under subpart 2; and
          ``(2) use the remainder of the funds, after reserving funds 
        under paragraph (1), for the State activities described in 
        subsection (b), except that the State may reserve not more than 
        1 percent of the grant funds for planning and administration 
        related to carrying out activities described in subsection (b).
  ``(b) State-Level Activities.--A State educational agency that 
receives a grant under section 2111--
          ``(1) shall use the amount described in subsection (a)(2) to 
        fulfill the State educational agency's responsibilities with 
        respect to the proper and efficient administration of the 
        subgrant program carried out under this part; and
          ``(2) may use the amount described in subsection (a)(2) to--
                  ``(A) provide training and technical assistance to 
                local educational agencies on--
                          ``(i) in the case of a State educational 
                        agency not implementing a statewide teacher 
                        evaluation system--
                                  ``(I) the development and 
                                implementation of a teacher evaluation 
                                system; and
                                  ``(II) training school leaders in 
                                using such evaluation system; or
                          ``(ii) in the case of a State educational 
                        agency implementing a statewide teacher 
                        evaluation system, implementing such evaluation 
                        system;
                  ``(B) disseminate and share evidence-based and other 
                effective practices, including practices consistent 
                with the principles of effectiveness described in 
                section 2222(b), related to teacher and school leader 
                effectiveness and professional development;
                  ``(C) provide professional development for teachers 
                and school leaders in the State consistent with section 
                2123(6);
                  ``(D) provide training and technical assistance to 
                local educational agencies on--
                          ``(i) in the case of a State educational 
                        agency not implementing a statewide school 
                        leader evaluation system, the development and 
                        implementation of a school leader evaluation 
                        system; and
                          ``(ii) in the case of a State educational 
                        agency implementing a statewide school leader 
                        evaluation system, implementing such evaluation 
                        system; and
                  ``(E) develop and implement policies in the State to 
                address any teacher workforce shortages in high-need 
                subjects, including in science, technology, 
                engineering, math, computer science, and foreign 
                languages.

          ``Subpart 2--Subgrants to Local Educational Agencies

``SEC. 2121. ALLOCATIONS TO LOCAL EDUCATIONAL AGENCIES.

  ``(a) In General.--Each State receiving a grant under section 2111 
shall use the funds reserved under section 2113(a)(1) to award 
subgrants to local educational agencies under this section.
  ``(b) Allocation of Funds.--From the funds reserved by a State under 
section 2113(a)(1), the State educational agency shall allocate to each 
local educational agency in the State the sum of--
          ``(1) an amount that bears the same relationship to 50 
        percent of the funds as the number of individuals age 5 through 
        17 in the geographic area served by the local educational 
        agency, as determined by the State on the basis of the most 
        recent satisfactory data, bears to the number of those 
        individuals in the geographic areas served by all the local 
        educational agencies in the State, as so determined; and
          ``(2) an amount that bears the same relationship to 50 
        percent of the funds as the number of individuals age 5 through 
        17 from families with incomes below the poverty line in the 
        geographic area served by the local educational agency, as 
        determined by the State on the basis of the most recent 
        satisfactory data, bears to the number of those individuals in 
        the geographic areas served by all the local educational 
        agencies in the State, as so determined.

``SEC. 2122. LOCAL APPLICATIONS.

  ``To be eligible to receive a subgrant under this subpart, a local 
educational agency shall submit an application to the State educational 
agency involved at such time, in such a manner, and containing such 
information as the State educational agency may reasonably require 
that, at a minimum, shall include the following:
          ``(1) A description of--
                  ``(A) how the local educational agency will meet the 
                requirements of this subpart;
                  ``(B) how the activities to be carried out by the 
                local educational agency under this subpart will be 
                evidence-based, improve student academic achievement, 
                and improve teacher and school leader effectiveness; 
                and
                  ``(C) if applicable, how, the local educational 
                agency will work with parents, teachers, school 
                leaders, and other staff of the schools served by the 
                local educational agency in developing and implementing 
                a teacher evaluation system.
          ``(2) If applicable, a description of how the local 
        educational agency will develop and implement a teacher or 
        school leader evaluation system.
          ``(3) An assurance that the local educational agency will 
        comply with section 6501 (regarding participation by private 
        school children and teachers).

``SEC. 2123. LOCAL USE OF FUNDS.

  ``A local educational agency receiving a subgrant under this subpart 
may use such funds for--
          ``(1) the development and implementation of a teacher 
        evaluation system, administered through school leaders based on 
        input from stakeholders listed in subparagraph (E), that may--
                  ``(A) use student achievement data derived from a 
                variety of sources as a significant factor in 
                determining a teacher's evaluation, with the weight 
                given to such data defined by the local educational 
                agency;
                  ``(B) use multiple measures of evaluation for 
                evaluating teachers;
                  ``(C) have more than 2 categories for rating the 
                performance of teachers;
                  ``(D) be used to make personnel decisions, as 
                determined by the local educational agency; and
                  ``(E) be based on input from parents, school leaders, 
                teachers, and other staff of schools served by the 
                local educational agency;
          ``(2) in the case of a local educational agency located in a 
        State implementing a statewide teacher evaluation system, 
        implementing such evaluation system;
          ``(3) the training of school leaders or other individuals for 
        the purpose of evaluating teachers or school leaders under a 
        teacher or school leader evaluation system, as appropriate;
          ``(4) in the case of a local educational agency located in a 
        State implementing a statewide school leader evaluation system, 
        to implement such evaluation system;
          ``(5) in the case of a local educational agency located in a 
        State not implementing a statewide school leader evaluation 
        system, the development and implementation of a school leader 
        evaluation system;
          ``(6) professional development for teachers and school 
        leaders that is evidence-based, job-embedded, and continuous, 
        such as--
                  ``(A) subject-based professional development for 
                teachers, including for teachers of civic education, 
                arts education, and computer science and other science, 
                technology, engineering, and mathematics subjects;
                  ``(B) professional development aligned with the 
                State's academic standards;
                  ``(C) professional development to assist teachers in 
                meeting the needs of students with different learning 
                styles, particularly students with disabilities, 
                English learners, and gifted and talented students;
                  ``(D) professional development for teachers or school 
                leaders identified as in need of additional support 
                through data provided by a teacher or school leader 
                evaluation system, as appropriate;
                  ``(E) professional development based on the current 
                science of learning, which includes research on 
                positive brain change and cognitive skill development;
                  ``(F) professional development for school leaders, 
                including evidence-based mentorship programs for such 
                leaders;
                  ``(G) professional development on integrated, 
                interdisciplinary, and project-based teaching 
                strategies, including for career and technical 
                education teachers and teachers of computer science and 
                other science, technology, engineering, and mathematics 
                subjects; or
                  ``(H) professional development on teaching dual 
                credit, dual enrollment, Advanced Placement, or 
                International Baccalaureate postsecondary-level courses 
                to secondary school students;
          ``(7) partnering with a public or private organization or a 
        consortium of such organizations to develop and implement a 
        teacher evaluation system described in subparagraph (A) or (B) 
        of paragraph (1), or to administer professional development, as 
        appropriate;
          ``(8) any activities authorized under section 2222(a); or
          ``(9) class size reduction, except that the local educational 
        agency may use not more than 10 percent of such funds for this 
        purpose.

                    ``Subpart 3--General Provisions

``SEC. 2131. REPORTING REQUIREMENTS.

  ``(a) Local Educational Agencies.--Each local educational agency 
receiving a subgrant under subpart 2 shall submit to the State 
educational agency involved, on an annual basis until the last year in 
which the local educational agency receives such subgrant funds, a 
report on--
          ``(1) how the local educational agency is meeting the 
        purposes of this part described in section 2101;
          ``(2) how the local educational agency is using such subgrant 
        funds;
          ``(3) in the case of a local educational agency implementing 
        a teacher or school leader evaluation system, the results of 
        such evaluation system, except that such report shall not 
        reveal personally identifiable information about an individual 
        teacher or school leader; and
          ``(4) any such other information as the State educational 
        agency may require, as long as student and teacher privacy is 
        maintained.
  ``(b) State Educational Agencies.--Each State educational agency 
receiving a grant under subpart 1 shall submit to the Secretary a 
report, on an annual basis until the last year in which the State 
educational agency receives such grant funds, on--
          ``(1) how the State educational agency is meeting the 
        purposes of this part described in section 2101; and
          ``(2) how the State educational agency is using such grant 
        funds.

``SEC. 2132. NATIONAL ACTIVITIES.

  ``From the funds reserved by the Secretary under section 
2111(b)(1)(A), the Secretary shall, directly or through grants and 
contracts--
          ``(1) provide technical assistance to States and local 
        educational agencies in carrying out activities under this 
        part; and
          ``(2) acting through the Institute of Education Sciences, 
        conduct national evaluations of activities carried out by State 
        educational agencies and local educational agencies under this 
        part.

``SEC. 2133. STATE DEFINED.

  ``In this part, the term `State' means each of the 50 States, the 
District of Columbia, and the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico.''.
  (c) Part B.--Part B of title II (20 U.S.C. 6661 et seq.) is amended 
to read as follows:

           ``PART B--TEACHER AND SCHOOL LEADER FLEXIBLE GRANT

``SEC. 2201. PURPOSE.

  ``The purpose of this part is to improve student academic achievement 
by--
          ``(1) supporting all State educational agencies, local 
        educational agencies, schools, teachers, and school leaders to 
        pursue innovative and evidence-based practices to help all 
        students meet the State's academic standards; and
          ``(2) increasing the number of teachers and school leaders 
        who are effective in increasing student academic achievement.

                 ``Subpart 1--Formula Grants to States

``SEC. 2211. STATE ALLOTMENTS.

  ``(a) Reservations.--From the amount appropriated under section 3(b) 
for any fiscal year, the Secretary--
          ``(1) shall reserve 25 percent to award grants to States 
        under this subpart; and
          ``(2) of the amount reserved under paragraph (1), shall 
        reserve--
                  ``(A) not more than 1 percent for national activities 
                described in section 2233;
                  ``(B) one-half of 1 percent for allotments to 
                outlying areas on the basis of their relative need, as 
                determined by the Secretary, in accordance with the 
                purpose of this part; and
                  ``(C) one-half of 1 percent for the Secretary of the 
                Interior for programs under this part in schools 
                operated or funded by the Bureau of Indian Education.
  ``(b) State Allotments.--
          ``(1) In general.--From the total amount reserved under 
        subsection (a)(1) for each fiscal year and not reserved under 
        subparagraphs (A) through (C) of subsection (a)(2), the 
        Secretary shall allot, and make available in accordance with 
        this section, to each State an amount that bears the same ratio 
        to such sums as the school-age population of the State bears to 
        the school-age population of all States.
          ``(2) Small state minimum.--No State receiving an allotment 
        under paragraph (1) may receive less than one-half of 1 percent 
        of the total amount allotted under such paragraph.
          ``(3) Reallotment.--If a State does not receive an allotment 
        under this subpart for a fiscal year, the Secretary shall 
        reallot the amount of the State's allotment to the remaining 
        States in accordance with this section.
  ``(c) State Application.--In order to receive an allotment under this 
section for any fiscal year, a State shall submit an application to the 
Secretary, at such time and in such manner as the Secretary may 
reasonably require. Such application shall--
          ``(1) designate the State educational agency as the agency 
        responsible for the administration and supervision of programs 
        assisted under this part;
          ``(2) describe how the State educational agency will use 
        funds received under this section for State level activities 
        described in subsection (d)(3);
          ``(3) describe the procedures and criteria the State 
        educational agency will use for reviewing applications and 
        awarding subgrants in a timely manner to eligible entities 
        under section 2221 on a competitive basis;
          ``(4) describe how the State educational agency will ensure 
        that subgrants made under section 2221 are of sufficient size 
        and scope to support effective programs that will help increase 
        academic achievement in the classroom and are consistent with 
        the purposes of this part;
          ``(5) describe the steps the State educational agency will 
        take to ensure that eligible entities use subgrants received 
        under section 2221 to carry out programs that implement 
        effective strategies, including by providing ongoing technical 
        assistance and training, and disseminating evidence-based and 
        other effective strategies to such eligible entities;
          ``(6) describe how programs under this part will be 
        coordinated with other programs under this Act; and
          ``(7) include an assurance that, other than providing 
        technical and advisory assistance and monitoring compliance 
        with this part, the State educational agency has not exercised, 
        and will not exercise, any influence in the decisionmaking 
        processes of eligible entities as to the expenditure of funds 
        made pursuant to an application submitted under section 
        2221(b).
  ``(d) State Use of Funds.--
          ``(1) In general.--Each State that receives an allotment 
        under this section shall reserve not less than 92 percent of 
        the amount allotted to such State under subsection (b), for 
        each fiscal year, for subgrants to eligible entities under 
        subpart 2.
          ``(2) State administration.--A State educational agency may 
        reserve not more than 1 percent of the amount made available to 
        the State under subsection (b) for the administrative costs of 
        carrying out such State educational agency's responsibilities 
        under this subpart.
          ``(3) State-level activities.--
                  ``(A) Innovative teacher and school leader 
                activities.--A State educational agency shall reserve 
                not more than 4 percent of the amount made available to 
                the State under subsection (b) to carry out, solely, or 
                in partnership with State agencies of higher education, 
                1 or more of the following activities:
                          ``(i) Reforming teacher and school leader 
                        certification, recertification, licensing, and 
                        tenure systems to ensure that such systems are 
                        rigorous and that--
                                  ``(I) each teacher has the subject 
                                matter knowledge and teaching skills 
                                necessary to help students meet the 
                                State's academic standards; and
                                  ``(II) school leaders have the 
                                instructional leadership skills to help 
                                teachers instruct and students learn.
                          ``(ii) Improving the quality of teacher 
                        preparation programs within the State, 
                        including through the use of appropriate 
                        student achievement data and other factors to 
                        evaluate the quality of teacher preparation 
                        programs within the State.
                          ``(iii) Carrying out programs that establish, 
                        expand, or improve alternative routes for State 
                        certification or licensure of teachers and 
                        school leaders, including such programs for--
                                  ``(I) mid-career professionals from 
                                other occupations, including computer 
                                science and other science, technology, 
                                engineering, and math fields;
                                  ``(II) former military personnel; and
                                  ``(III) recent graduates of an 
                                institution of higher education, with a 
                                record of academic distinction, who 
                                demonstrate the potential to become 
                                effective teachers or school leaders.
                          ``(iv) Developing, or assisting eligible 
                        entities in developing--
                                  ``(I) performance-based pay systems 
                                for teachers and school leaders;
                                  ``(II) strategies that provide 
                                differential, incentive, or bonus pay 
                                for teachers and school leaders; or
                                  ``(III) teacher and school leader 
                                advancement initiatives that promote 
                                professional growth and emphasize 
                                multiple career paths and pay 
                                differentiation.
                          ``(v) Developing, or assisting eligible 
                        entities in developing, new, evidence-based 
                        teacher and school leader induction and 
                        mentoring programs that are designed to--
                                  ``(I) improve instruction and student 
                                academic achievement; and
                                  ``(II) increase the retention of 
                                effective teachers and school leaders.
                          ``(vi) Providing professional development for 
                        teachers and school leaders that is focused on 
                        improving teaching and student academic 
                        achievement, including for students with 
                        different learning styles, particularly 
                        students with disabilities, English learners, 
                        gifted and talented students, and other special 
                        populations.
                          ``(vii) Providing training and technical 
                        assistance to eligible entities that receive a 
                        subgrant under section 2221.
                          ``(viii) Other activities identified by the 
                        State educational agency that meet the purposes 
                        of this part, including those activities 
                        authorized under subparagraph (B).
                  ``(B) Teacher or school leader preparation 
                academies.--
                          ``(i) In general.--In the case of a State in 
                        which teacher or school leader preparation 
                        academies are allowable under State law, a 
                        State educational agency may reserve not more 
                        than 3 percent of the amount made available to 
                        the State under subsection (b) to support the 
                        establishment or expansion of one or more 
                        teacher or school leader preparation academies 
                        and, subject to the limitation under clause 
                        (iii), to support State authorizers for such 
                        academies.
                          ``(ii) Matching requirement.--A State 
                        educational agency shall not provide funds 
                        under this subparagraph to support the 
                        establishment or expansion of a teacher or 
                        school leader preparation academy unless the 
                        academy agrees to provide, either directly or 
                        through private contributions, non-Federal 
                        matching funds equal to not less than 10 
                        percent of the amount of the funds the academy 
                        will receive under this subparagraph.
                          ``(iii) Funding for state authorizers.--Not 
                        more than 5 percent of funds provided to a 
                        teacher or school leader preparation academy 
                        under this subparagraph may be used to support 
                        activities of State authorizers for such 
                        academy.

``SEC. 2212. APPROVAL AND DISAPPROVAL OF STATE APPLICATIONS.

  ``(a) Deemed Approval.--An application submitted by a State pursuant 
to section 2211(c) shall be deemed to be approved by the Secretary 
unless the Secretary makes a written determination, prior to the 
expiration of the 120-day period beginning on the date on which the 
Secretary received the application, that the application is not in 
compliance with section 2211(c).
  ``(b) Disapproval Process.--
          ``(1) In general.--The Secretary shall not finally disapprove 
        an application submitted under section 2211(c), except after 
        giving the State educational agency notice and an opportunity 
        for a hearing.
          ``(2) Notification.--If the Secretary finds that an 
        application is not in compliance, in whole or in part, with 
        section 2211(c) the Secretary shall--
                  ``(A) give the State educational agency notice and an 
                opportunity for a hearing; and
                  ``(B) notify the State educational agency of the 
                finding of noncompliance and, in such notification, 
                shall--
                          ``(i) cite the specific provisions in the 
                        application that are not in compliance; and
                          ``(ii) request additional information, only 
                        as to the noncompliant provisions, needed to 
                        make the application compliant.
          ``(3) Response.--If a State educational agency responds to a 
        notification from the Secretary under paragraph (2)(B) during 
        the 45-day period beginning on the date on which the State 
        educational agency received the notification, and resubmits the 
        application with the requested information described in 
        paragraph (2)(B)(ii), the Secretary shall approve or disapprove 
        such application prior to the later of--
                  ``(A) the expiration of the 45-day period beginning 
                on the date on which the application is resubmitted; or
                  ``(B) the expiration of the 120-day period described 
                in subsection (a).
          ``(4) Failure to respond.--If the State educational agency 
        does not respond to a notification from the Secretary under 
        paragraph (2)(B) during the 45-day period beginning on the date 
        on which the State educational agency received the 
        notification, such application shall be deemed to be 
        disapproved.

              ``Subpart 2--Local Competitive Grant Program

``SEC. 2221. LOCAL COMPETITIVE GRANT PROGRAM.

  ``(a) In General.--A State that receives an allotment under section 
2211(b) for a fiscal year shall use the amount reserved under section 
2211(d)(1) to award subgrants, on a competitive basis, to eligible 
entities in accordance with this section to enable such entities to 
carry out the programs and activities described in section 2222.
  ``(b) Application.--
          ``(1) In general.--To be eligible to receive a subgrant under 
        this section, an eligible entity shall submit an application to 
        the State educational agency at such time, in such manner, and 
        including such information as the State educational agency may 
        reasonably require.
          ``(2) Contents.--Each application submitted under paragraph 
        (1) shall include--
                  ``(A) a description of the programs and activities to 
                be funded and how they are consistent with the purposes 
                of this part; and
                  ``(B) an assurance that the eligible entity will 
                comply with section 6501 (regarding participation by 
                private school children and teachers).
  ``(c) Peer Review.--In reviewing applications under this section, a 
State educational agency shall use a peer review process or other 
methods of assuring the quality of such applications but the review 
shall only judge the likelihood of the activity to increase student 
academic achievement. The reviewers shall not make a determination 
based on the policy of the proposed activity.
  ``(d) Geographic Diversity.--A State educational agency shall 
distribute funds under this section equitably among geographic areas 
within the State, including rural, suburban, and urban communities.
  ``(e) Duration of Awards.--A State educational agency may award 
subgrants under this section for a period of not more than 5 years.
  ``(f) Matching.--An eligible entity receiving a subgrant under this 
section shall provide, either directly or through private 
contributions, non-Federal matching funds equal to not less than 10 
percent of the amount of the subgrant.

``SEC. 2222. LOCAL AUTHORIZED ACTIVITIES.

  ``(a) In General.--Each eligible entity receiving a subgrant under 
section 2221 shall use such subgrant funds to develop, implement, and 
evaluate comprehensive programs and activities, that are in accordance 
with the purpose of this part and--
          ``(1) are consistent with the principles of effectiveness 
        described in subsection (b); and
          ``(2) may include, among other programs and activities--
                  ``(A) developing and implementing initiatives to 
                assist in recruiting, hiring, and retaining highly 
                effective teachers and school leaders, including 
                initiatives that provide--
                          ``(i) differential, incentive, or bonus pay 
                        for teachers and school leaders;
                          ``(ii) performance-based pay systems for 
                        teachers and school leaders;
                          ``(iii) teacher and school leader advancement 
                        initiatives that promote professional growth 
                        and emphasize multiple career paths and pay 
                        differentiation;
                          ``(iv) new teacher and school leader 
                        induction and mentoring programs that are 
                        designed to improve instruction, student 
                        academic achievement, and to increase teacher 
                        and school leader retention; and
                          ``(v) teacher residency programs, and school 
                        leader residency programs, designed to develop 
                        and support new teachers or new school leaders, 
                        respectively;
                  ``(B) supporting the establishment or expansion of 
                teacher or school leader preparation academies under 
                section 2211(d)(3)(B);
                  ``(C) recruiting qualified individuals from other 
                fields, including individuals from computer science and 
                other science, technology, engineering, and math 
                fields, mid-career professionals from other 
                occupations, and former military personnel;
                  ``(D) establishing, improving, or expanding model 
                instructional programs to ensure that all children meet 
                the State's academic standards;
                  ``(E) providing evidence-based, job embedded, 
                continuous professional development for teachers and 
                school leaders focused on improving teaching and 
                student academic achievement;
                  ``(F) implementing programs based on the current 
                science of learning, which includes research on 
                positive brain change and cognitive skill development;
                  ``(G) recruiting and training teachers to teach dual 
                credit, dual enrollment, Advanced Placement, or 
                International Baccalaureate postsecondary-level courses 
                to secondary school students; and
                  ``(H) other activities and programs identified as 
                necessary by the local educational agency that meet the 
                purpose of this part.
  ``(b) Principles of Effectiveness.--For a program or activity 
developed pursuant to this section to meet the principles of 
effectiveness, such program or activity shall--
          ``(1) be based upon an assessment of objective data regarding 
        the need for programs and activities in the elementary schools 
        and secondary schools served to increase the number of teachers 
        and school leaders who are effective in improving student 
        academic achievement;
          ``(2) reflect evidence-based research, or in the absence of a 
        strong research base, reflect effective strategies in the 
        field, that provide evidence that the program or activity will 
        improve student academic achievement; and
          ``(3) include meaningful and ongoing consultation with, and 
        input from, teachers, school leaders, and parents, in the 
        development of the application and administration of the 
        program or activity.

                    ``Subpart 3--General Provisions

``SEC. 2231. PERIODIC EVALUATION.

  ``(a) In General.--Each eligible entity and each teacher or school 
leader preparation academy that receives funds under this part shall 
undergo a periodic evaluation by the State educational agency involved 
to assess such entity's or such academy's progress toward achieving the 
purposes of this part.
  ``(b) Use of Results.--The results of an evaluation described in 
subsection (a) of an eligible entity or academy shall be--
          ``(1) used to refine, improve, and strengthen such eligible 
        entity or such academy, respectively; and
          ``(2) made available to the public upon request, with public 
        notice of such availability provided.

``SEC. 2232. REPORTING REQUIREMENTS.

  ``(a) Eligible Entities and Academies.--Each eligible entity and each 
teacher or school leader preparation academy that receives funds from a 
State educational agency under this part shall prepare and submit 
annually to such State educational agency a report that includes--
          ``(1) a description of the progress of the eligible entity or 
        teacher or school leader preparation academy, respectively, in 
        meeting the purposes of this part;
          ``(2) a description of the programs and activities conducted 
        by the eligible entity or teacher or school leader preparation 
        academy, respectively, with funds received under this part;
          ``(3) how the eligible entity or teacher or school leader 
        preparation academy, respectively, is using such funds; and
          ``(4) any such other information as the State educational 
        agency may reasonably require.
  ``(b) State Educational Agencies.--Each State educational agency that 
receives a grant under this part shall prepare and submit, annually, to 
the Secretary a report that includes--
          ``(1) a description of the programs and activities conducted 
        by the State educational agency with grant funds received under 
        this part;
          ``(2) a description of the progress of the State educational 
        agency in meeting the purposes of this part described in 
        section 2201;
          ``(3) how the State educational agency is using grant funds 
        received under this part;
          ``(4) the methods and criteria the State educational agency 
        used to award subgrants in a timely manner to eligible entities 
        under section 2221 and, if applicable, funds in a timely manner 
        to teacher or school leader academies under section 
        2211(d)(3)(B); and
          ``(5) the results of the periodic evaluations conducted under 
        section 2231.

``SEC. 2233. NATIONAL ACTIVITIES.

  ``From the funds reserved by the Secretary under section 
2211(a)(2)(A), the Secretary shall, directly or through grants and 
contracts--
          ``(1) provide technical assistance to States and eligible 
        entities in carrying out activities under this part; and
          ``(2) acting through the Institute of Education Sciences, 
        conduct national evaluations of activities carried out by 
        States and eligible entities under this part.

``SEC. 2234. DEFINITIONS.

  ``In this part:
          ``(1) Eligible entity.--The term `eligible entity' means--
                  ``(A) a local educational agency or consortium of 
                local educational agencies;
                  ``(B) an institution of higher education or 
                consortium of such institutions in partnership with a 
                local educational agency or consortium of local 
                educational agencies;
                  ``(C) a for-profit organization, a nonprofit 
                organization, or a consortium of for-profit or 
                nonprofit organizations in partnership with a local 
                educational agency or consortium of local educational 
                agencies; or
                  ``(D) a consortium of the entities described in 
                subparagraphs (B) and (C).
          ``(2) State.--The term `State' means each of the 50 States, 
        the District of Columbia, and the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico.
          ``(3) State authorizer.--The term `State authorizer' means an 
        entity designated by the Governor of a State to authorize 
        teacher or school leader preparation academies within the State 
        that--
                  ``(A) enters into an agreement with a teacher or 
                school leader preparation academy that--
                          ``(i) specifies the goals expected of the 
                        academy, which, at a minimum, include the goals 
                        described in paragraph (4); and
                          ``(ii) does not reauthorize the academy if 
                        such goals are not met; and
                  ``(B) may be a nonprofit organization, a State 
                educational agency, or other public entity, or 
                consortium of such entities (including a consortium of 
                State educational agencies).
          ``(4) Teacher or school leader preparation academy.--The term 
        `teacher or school leader preparation academy' means a public 
        or private entity, or a nonprofit or for-profit organization, 
        which may be an institution of higher education or an 
        organization affiliated with an institution of higher 
        education, that will prepare teachers or school leaders to 
        serve in schools, and that--
                  ``(A) enters into an agreement with a State 
                authorizer that specifies the goals expected of the 
                academy, including--
                          ``(i) a requirement that prospective teachers 
                        or school leaders who are enrolled in a teacher 
                        or school leader preparation academy receive a 
                        significant part of their training through 
                        clinical preparation that partners the 
                        prospective candidate with an effective teacher 
                        or school leader, respectively, with a 
                        demonstrated record of increasing or producing 
                        high student achievement, while also receiving 
                        concurrent instruction from the academy in the 
                        content area (or areas) in which the 
                        prospective teacher or school leader will 
                        become certified or licensed;
                          ``(ii) the number of effective teachers or 
                        school leaders, respectively, who will 
                        demonstrate success in increasing or producing 
                        high student achievement that the academy will 
                        produce; and
                          ``(iii) a requirement that a teacher or 
                        school leader preparation academy will only 
                        award a certificate of completion after the 
                        graduate demonstrates that the graduate is an 
                        effective teacher or school leader, 
                        respectively, with a demonstrated record of 
                        increasing or producing high student 
                        achievement, except that an academy may award a 
                        provisional certificate for the period 
                        necessary to allow the graduate to demonstrate 
                        such effectiveness;
                  ``(B) does not have restrictions on the methods the 
                academy will use to train prospective teacher or school 
                leader candidates, including--
                          ``(i) obligating (or prohibiting) the 
                        academy's faculty to hold advanced degrees or 
                        conduct academic research;
                          ``(ii) restrictions related to the academy's 
                        physical infrastructure;
                          ``(iii) restrictions related to the number of 
                        course credits required as part of the program 
                        of study;
                          ``(iv) restrictions related to the 
                        undergraduate coursework completed by teachers 
                        teaching or working on alternative 
                        certificates, licenses, or credentials, as long 
                        as such teachers have successfully passed all 
                        relevant State-approved content area 
                        examinations; or
                          ``(v) restrictions related to obtaining 
                        accreditation from an accrediting body for 
                        purposes of becoming an academy;
                  ``(C) limits admission to its program to prospective 
                teacher or school leader candidates who demonstrate 
                strong potential to improve student achievement, based 
                on a rigorous selection process that reviews a 
                candidate's prior academic achievement or record of 
                professional accomplishment; and
                  ``(D) results in a certificate of completion that the 
                State may recognize as at least the equivalent of a 
                master's degree in education for the purposes of 
                hiring, retention, compensation, and promotion in the 
                State.
          ``(5) Teacher residency program.--The term `teacher residency 
        program' means a school-based teacher preparation program in 
        which a prospective teacher--
                  ``(A) for one academic year, teaches alongside an 
                effective teacher, as determined by a teacher 
                evaluation system implemented under part A, who is the 
                teacher of record;
                  ``(B) receives concurrent instruction during the year 
                described in subparagraph (A) from the partner 
                institution (as defined in section 200 of the Higher 
                Education Act of 1965 (20 U.S.C. 1021)), which courses 
                may be taught by local educational agency personnel or 
                residency program faculty, in the teaching of the 
                content area in which the teacher will become certified 
                or licensed; and
                  ``(C) acquires effective teaching skills.''.
  (d) Part C.--Part C of title II (20 U.S.C. 6671 et seq.) is amended--
          (1) by striking subparts 1 through 4;
          (2) by striking the heading relating to subpart 5;
          (3) by striking sections 2361 and 2368;
          (4) in section 2362, by striking ``principals'' and inserting 
        ``school leaders'';
          (5) in section 2363(6)(A), by striking ``principal'' and 
        inserting ``school leader'';
          (6) in section 2366(b), by striking ``ate law'' and inserting 
        ``(3) A State law'';
          (7) by redesignating section 2362 as section 2361;
          (8) by redesignating sections 2364 through 2367 as sections 
        2362 through 2365, respectively; and
          (9) by redesignating section 2363 as section 2366 and 
        transferring such section to appear after section 2365 (as so 
        redesignated).
  (e) Part D.--Part D of title II (20 U.S.C. 6751 et seq.) is amended 
to read as follows:

                      ``PART D--GENERAL PROVISIONS

``SEC. 2401. INCLUSION OF CHARTER SCHOOLS.

  ``In this title, the term `local educational agency' includes a 
charter school (as defined in section 6101) that, in the absence of 
this section, would not have received funds under this title.

``SEC. 2402. PARENTS' RIGHT TO KNOW.

  ``At the beginning of each school year, a local educational agency 
that receives funds under this title shall notify the parents of each 
student attending any school receiving funds under this title that the 
parents may request, and the agency will provide the parents on request 
(and in a timely manner), information regarding the professional 
qualifications of the student's classroom teachers.

``SEC. 2403. SUPPLEMENT, NOT SUPPLANT.

  ``Funds received under this title shall be used to supplement, and 
not supplant, non-Federal funds that would otherwise be used for 
activities authorized under this title.''.

SEC. 202. CONFORMING REPEALS.

  (a) Conforming Repeals.--Title II of the Higher Education Act of 1965 
(20 U.S.C. 1021 et seq.) is amended by repealing sections 201 through 
204.
  (b) Effective Date.--The repeals made by subsection (a) shall take 
effect October 1, 2015.

          TITLE III--PARENTAL ENGAGEMENT AND LOCAL FLEXIBILITY

SEC. 301. PARENTAL ENGAGEMENT AND LOCAL FLEXIBILITY.

  Title III (20 U.S.C. 6801 et seq.) is amended to read as follows:

         ``TITLE III--PARENTAL ENGAGEMENT AND LOCAL FLEXIBILITY

                     ``PART A--PARENTAL ENGAGEMENT

                  ``Subpart 1--Charter School Program

``SEC. 3101. PURPOSE.

  ``It is the purpose of this subpart to--
          ``(1) improve the United States education system and 
        education opportunities for all Americans by supporting 
        innovation in public education in public school settings that 
        prepare students to compete and contribute to the global 
        economy and a stronger America;
          ``(2) provide financial assistance for the planning, program 
        design, and initial implementation of charter schools;
          ``(3) expand the number of high-quality charter schools 
        available to students across the Nation;
          ``(4) evaluate the impact of such schools on student 
        achievement, families, and communities, and share best 
        practices between charter schools and other public schools;
          ``(5) encourage States to provide support to charter schools 
        for facilities financing in an amount more nearly commensurate 
        to the amount the States have typically provided for 
        traditional public schools;
          ``(6) improve student services to increase opportunities for 
        students with disabilities, English learners, and other 
        traditionally underserved students to attend charter schools 
        and meet challenging State academic achievement standards;
          ``(7) support efforts to strengthen the charter school 
        authorizing process to improve performance management, 
        including transparency, oversight, monitoring, and evaluation 
        of such schools; and
          ``(8) support quality accountability and transparency in the 
        operational performance of all authorized public chartering 
        agencies, which include State educational agencies, local 
        educational agencies, and other authorizing entities.

``SEC. 3102. PROGRAM AUTHORIZED.

  ``(a) In General.--This subpart authorizes the Secretary to carry out 
a charter school program that supports charter schools that serve 
elementary school and secondary school students by--
          ``(1) supporting the startup of charter schools, and the 
        replication and expansion of high-quality charter schools;
          ``(2) assisting charter schools in accessing credit to 
        acquire and renovate facilities for school use; and
          ``(3) carrying out national activities to support--
                  ``(A) charter school development;
                  ``(B) the dissemination of best practices of charter 
                schools for all schools;
                  ``(C) the evaluation of the impact of the program on 
                schools participating in the program; and
                  ``(D) stronger charter school authorizing.
  ``(b) Funding Allotment.--From the amount made available under 
section 3(c)(1)(A) for a fiscal year, the Secretary shall--
          ``(1) reserve 12.5 percent to support charter school 
        facilities assistance under section 3104;
          ``(2) reserve not more than 10 percent to carry out national 
        activities under section 3105; and
          ``(3) use the remaining amount after the Secretary reserves 
        funds under paragraphs (1) and (2) to carry out section 3103.
  ``(c) Prior Grants and Subgrants.--The recipient of a grant or 
subgrant under this subpart or subpart 2, as such subpart was in effect 
on the day before the date of the enactment of the Student Success Act, 
shall continue to receive funds in accordance with the terms and 
conditions of such grant or subgrant.
  ``(d) GAO Report.--Not later than 3 years after the date of the 
enactment of the Student Success Act, the Comptroller General of the 
United States shall submit a report to the Secretary and Congress 
that--
          ``(1) examines whether the funds authorized to be reserved by 
        State entities for administrative costs under section 
        3103(b)(1)(C) is appropriate; and
          ``(2) if such reservation of funds is determined not to be 
        appropriate, makes recommendations on the appropriate 
        reservation of funding for such administrative costs.

``SEC. 3103. GRANTS TO SUPPORT HIGH-QUALITY CHARTER SCHOOLS.

  ``(a) In General.--From the amount reserved under section 3102(b)(3), 
the Secretary shall award grants to State entities having applications 
approved pursuant to subsection (f) to enable such entities to--
          ``(1) award subgrants to eligible applicants for opening and 
        preparing to operate--
                  ``(A) new charter schools;
                  ``(B) replicated, high-quality charter school models; 
                or
                  ``(C) expanded, high-quality charter schools; and
          ``(2) provide technical assistance to eligible applicants and 
        authorized public chartering agencies in carrying out the 
        activities described in paragraph (1) and work with authorized 
        public chartering agencies in the State to improve authorizing 
        quality.
  ``(b) State Uses of Funds.--
          ``(1) In general.--A State entity receiving a grant under 
        this section shall--
                  ``(A) use not less than 90 percent of the grant funds 
                to award subgrants to eligible applicants, in 
                accordance with the quality charter school program 
                described in the State entity's application approved 
                pursuant to subsection (f), for the purposes described 
                in subparagraphs (A) through (C) of subsection (a)(1);
                  ``(B) reserve not less than 7 percent of such funds 
                to carry out the activities described in subsection 
                (a)(2); and
                  ``(C) reserve not more than 3 percent of such funds 
                for administrative costs which may include technical 
                assistance.
          ``(2) Contracts and grants.--A State entity may use a grant 
        received under this section to carry out the activities 
        described in subparagraphs (A) and (B) of paragraph (1) 
        directly or through grants, contracts, or cooperative 
        agreements.
          ``(3) Rule of construction.--Nothing in this Act shall 
        prohibit the Secretary from awarding grants to States that use 
        a weighted lottery to give slightly better chances for 
        admission to all, or a subset of, educationally disadvantaged 
        students if--
                  ``(A) the use of weighted lotteries in favor of such 
                students is not prohibited by State law, and such State 
                law is consistent with laws described in section 
                6101(3)(G); and
                  ``(B) such weighted lotteries are not used for the 
                purpose of creating schools exclusively to serve a 
                particular subset of students.
  ``(c) Program Periods; Peer Review; Grant Number and Amount; 
Diversity of Projects; Waivers.--
          ``(1) Program periods.--
                  ``(A) Grants.--A grant awarded by the Secretary to a 
                State entity under this section shall be for a period 
                of not more than 5 years.
                  ``(B) Subgrants.--A subgrant awarded by a State 
                entity under this section shall be for a period of not 
                more than 5 years, of which an eligible applicant may 
                use not more than 18 months for planning and program 
                design.
          ``(2) Peer review.--The Secretary, and each State entity 
        receiving a grant under this section, shall use a peer review 
        process to review applications for assistance under this 
        section.
          ``(3) Grant awards.--The Secretary shall--
                  ``(A) for each fiscal year for which funds are 
                appropriated under section 3(c)(1)(A)--
                          ``(i) award not less than 3 grants under this 
                        section;
                          ``(ii) wholly fund each grant awarded under 
                        this section, without making continuation 
                        awards; and
                          ``(iii) fully obligate the funds appropriated 
                        for the purpose of awarding grants under this 
                        section in the fiscal year for which such 
                        grants are awarded; and
                  ``(B) prior to the start of the final year of the 
                grant period of each grant awarded under this section 
                to a State entity, review whether the State entity is 
                using the grant funds for the agreed upon uses of funds 
                and whether the full amount of the grant will be needed 
                for the remainder of the grant period and may, as 
                determined necessary based on that review, terminate or 
                reduce the amount of the grant and reallocate the 
                remaining grant funds to other State entities during 
                the succeeding grant competition under this section.
          ``(4) Diversity of projects.--Each State entity receiving a 
        grant under this section shall award subgrants under this 
        section in a manner that, to the extent possible, ensures that 
        such subgrants--
                  ``(A) are distributed throughout different areas, 
                including urban, suburban, and rural areas; and
                  ``(B) will assist charter schools representing a 
                variety of educational approaches.
          ``(5) Waivers.--The Secretary may waive any statutory or 
        regulatory requirement over which the Secretary exercises 
        administrative authority, except for any such requirement 
        relating to the elements of a charter school described in 
        section 6101(3), if--
                  ``(A) the waiver is requested in an approved 
                application under this section; and
                  ``(B) the Secretary determines that granting such a 
                waiver will promote the purposes of this subpart.
  ``(d) Limitations.--
          ``(1) Grants.--The Secretary shall not award a grant to a 
        State entity under this section in a case in which such award 
        would result in more than 1 grant awarded under this section 
        being carried out in a State at the same time.
          ``(2) Subgrants.--An eligible applicant may not receive more 
        than 1 subgrant under this section per individual charter 
        school for a 5-year period, unless the eligible applicant 
        demonstrates to the State entity not less than 3 years of 
        improved educational results in the areas described in 
        subparagraphs (A) and (D) of section 3110(7) for students 
        enrolled in such charter school.
  ``(e) Applications.--A State entity desiring to receive a grant under 
this section shall submit an application to the Secretary at such time 
and in such manner as the Secretary may require. The application shall 
include the following:
          ``(1) Description of program.--A description of the State 
        entity's objectives under this section and how the objectives 
        of the State entity's quality charter school program will be 
        carried out, including a description--
                  ``(A) of how the State entity--
                          ``(i) will support the opening of new charter 
                        schools, replicated, high-quality charter 
                        school models, or expanded, high-quality 
                        charter schools, and a description of the 
                        proposed number of each type of charter school 
                        or model, if applicable, to be opened under the 
                        State entity's program;
                          ``(ii) will inform eligible charter schools, 
                        developers, and authorized public chartering 
                        agencies of the availability of funds under the 
                        program;
                          ``(iii) will work with eligible applicants to 
                        ensure that the eligible applicants access all 
                        Federal funds that they are eligible to 
                        receive, and help the charter schools supported 
                        by the applicants and the students attending 
                        the charter schools--
                                  ``(I) participate in the Federal 
                                programs in which the schools and 
                                students are eligible to participate;
                                  ``(II) receive the commensurate share 
                                of Federal funds the schools and 
                                students are eligible to receive under 
                                such programs; and
                                  ``(III) meet the needs of students 
                                served under such programs, including 
                                students with disabilities and English 
                                learners;
                          ``(iv) will have clear plans and procedures 
                        to assist students enrolled in a charter school 
                        that closes or loses its charter to attend 
                        other high-quality schools;
                          ``(v) in the case in which the State entity 
                        is not a State educational agency--
                                  ``(I) will work with the State 
                                educational agency and the charter 
                                schools in the State to maximize 
                                charter school participation in Federal 
                                and State programs for charter schools; 
                                and
                                  ``(II) will work with the State 
                                educational agency to adequately 
                                operate the State entity's program 
                                under this section, where applicable;
                          ``(vi) will ensure each eligible applicant 
                        that receives a subgrant under the State 
                        entity's program to open and prepare to operate 
                        a new charter school, a replicated, high-
                        quality charter school model, or an expanded, 
                        high-quality charter school--
                                  ``(I) will ensure such school or 
                                model meets the requirements under 
                                section 6101(3); and
                                  ``(II) is prepared to continue to 
                                operate such school or model, in a 
                                manner consistent with the eligible 
                                applicant's application, after the 
                                subgrant funds have expired;
                          ``(vii) will support charter schools in local 
                        educational agencies with large numbers of 
                        schools identified by the State for 
                        improvement, including supporting the use of 
                        charter schools to improve, or in turning 
                        around, struggling schools;
                          ``(viii) will work with charter schools to 
                        promote inclusion of all students, including 
                        eliminating any barriers to enrollment for 
                        foster youth or unaccompanied homeless youth, 
                        and support all students once they are enrolled 
                        to promote retention including through the use 
                        of fair disciplinary practice;
                          ``(ix) will work with charter schools on 
                        recruitment practices, including efforts to 
                        engage groups that may otherwise have limited 
                        opportunities to participate in charter 
                        schools, and to ensure such schools do not have 
                        in effect policies or procedures that may 
                        create barriers to enrollment of students, 
                        including educationally disadvantaged students, 
                        and are in compliance with all Federal and 
                        State laws on enrollment practices;
                          ``(x) will share best and promising practices 
                        between charter schools and other public 
                        schools, including, where appropriate, 
                        instruction and professional development in 
                        science, technology, engineering, and math 
                        education, including computer science, and 
                        other subjects;
                          ``(xi) will ensure the charter schools 
                        receiving funds under the State entity's 
                        program meet the educational needs of their 
                        students, including students with disabilities 
                        and English learners;
                          ``(xii) will support efforts to increase 
                        quality initiatives, including meeting the 
                        quality authorizing elements described in 
                        paragraph (2)(E);
                          ``(xiii) in the case of a State entity not 
                        described in clause (xiv), will provide 
                        oversight of authorizing activity, including 
                        how the State will help ensure better 
                        authorizing, such as by establishing 
                        authorizing standards that may include 
                        approving, actively monitoring, and re-
                        approving or revoking the authority of an 
                        authorized public chartering agency based on 
                        the performance of the charter schools 
                        authorized by such agency in the areas of 
                        student achievement, student safety, financial 
                        and operational management, and compliance with 
                        all applicable statutes and regulations;
                          ``(xiv) in the case of a State entity defined 
                        in subsection (i)(4), will work with the State 
                        to support the State's system of assistance and 
                        oversight of authorized public chartering 
                        agencies for authorizing activity described in 
                        clause (xiii); and
                          ``(xv) will work with eligible applicants 
                        receiving a subgrant under the State entity's 
                        program to support the opening of charter 
                        schools or charter school models described in 
                        clause (i) that are secondary schools;
                  ``(B) of the extent to which the State entity--
                          ``(i) is able to meet and carry out the 
                        priorities listed in subsection (f)(2); and
                          ``(ii) is working to develop or strengthen a 
                        cohesive statewide system to support the 
                        opening of new charter schools, replicated, 
                        high-quality charter school models, or 
                        expanded, high-quality charter schools;
                  ``(C) of how the State entity will carry out the 
                subgrant competition, including--
                          ``(i) a description of the application each 
                        eligible applicant desiring to receive a 
                        subgrant will submit, including--
                                  ``(I) a description of the roles and 
                                responsibilities of the eligible 
                                applicant, partner organizations, and 
                                management organizations, including the 
                                administrative and contractual roles 
                                and responsibilities;
                                  ``(II) a description of the quality 
                                controls agreed to between the eligible 
                                applicant and the authorized public 
                                chartering agency involved, such as a 
                                contract or performance agreement, how 
                                a school's performance in the State's 
                                academic accountability system will be 
                                one of the most important factors for 
                                renewal or revocation of the school's 
                                charter, and how the State entity and 
                                the authorized public chartering agency 
                                involved will reserve the right to 
                                revoke or not renew a school's charter 
                                based on financial, structural, or 
                                operational factors involving the 
                                management of the school;
                                  ``(III) a description of how the 
                                eligible applicant will solicit and 
                                consider input from parents and other 
                                members of the community on the 
                                implementation and operation of each 
                                charter school that will receive funds 
                                under the State entity's program; and
                                  ``(IV) a description of the planned 
                                activities and expenditures for the 
                                subgrant funds for purposes of opening 
                                and preparing to operate a new charter 
                                school, a replicated, high-quality 
                                charter school model, or an expanded, 
                                high-quality charter school, and how 
                                the school or model will maintain 
                                financial sustainability after the end 
                                of the subgrant period; and
                          ``(ii) a description of how the State entity 
                        will review applications;
                  ``(D) in the case of a State entity that partners 
                with an outside organization to carry out the State 
                entity's quality charter school program, in whole or in 
                part, of the roles and responsibilities of this 
                partner;
                  ``(E) of how the State entity will help the charter 
                schools receiving funds under the State entity's 
                program consider the transportation needs of the 
                schools' students; and
                  ``(F) of how the State entity will support diverse 
                charter school models, including models that serve 
                rural communities.
          ``(2) Assurances.--Assurances, including a description of how 
        the assurances will be met, that--
                  ``(A) each charter school receiving funds under the 
                State entity's program will have a high degree of 
                autonomy over budget and operations;
                  ``(B) the State entity will support charter schools 
                in meeting the educational needs of their students as 
                described in paragraph (1)(A)(xi);
                  ``(C) the State entity will ensure that the 
                authorized public chartering agency of any charter 
                school that receives funds under the State entity's 
                program--
                          ``(i) adequately monitors each such charter 
                        school in recruiting, enrolling, and meeting 
                        the needs of all students, including students 
                        with disabilities and English learners; and
                          ``(ii) ensures that each such charter school 
                        solicits and considers input from parents and 
                        other members of the community on the 
                        implementation and operation of the school;
                  ``(D) the State entity will provide adequate 
                technical assistance to eligible applicants to--
                          ``(i) meet the objectives described in 
                        clauses (viii) and (ix) of paragraph (1)(A) and 
                        subparagraph (B) of this paragraph; and
                          ``(ii) recruit, enroll, and retain 
                        traditionally underserved students, including 
                        students with disabilities and English 
                        learners, at rates similar to traditional 
                        public schools;
                  ``(E) the State entity will promote quality 
                authorizing, such as through providing technical 
                assistance and supporting all authorized public 
                chartering agencies in the State to improve the 
                oversight of their charter schools, including by--
                          ``(i) assessing annual performance data of 
                        the schools, including, as appropriate, 
                        graduation rates, student academic growth, and 
                        rates of student attrition;
                          ``(ii) reviewing the schools' independent, 
                        annual audits of financial statements conducted 
                        in accordance with generally accepted 
                        accounting principles, and ensuring any such 
                        audits are publically reported; and
                          ``(iii) holding charter schools accountable 
                        to the academic, financial, and operational 
                        quality controls agreed to between the charter 
                        school and the authorized public chartering 
                        agency involved, such as through renewal, non-
                        renewal, or revocation of the school's charter;
                  ``(F) the State entity will work to ensure that 
                charter schools are included with the traditional 
                public schools in decisionmaking about the public 
                school system in the State; and
                  ``(G) The State entity will ensure that each charter 
                school receiving funds under the State entity's program 
                makes publicly available, consistent with the 
                dissemination requirements of the annual State report 
                card, information to help parents make informed 
                decisions about the education options available to 
                their children, including information for each school 
                on--
                          ``(i) the educational program;
                          ``(ii) student support services;
                          ``(iii) annual performance and enrollment 
                        data, disaggregated by the groups of students 
                        described in section 1111(b)(3)(B)(ii)(II), 
                        except that such disaggregation shall not be 
                        required in a case in which the number of 
                        students in a group is insufficient to yield 
                        statistically reliable information or the 
                        results would reveal personally identifiable 
                        information about an individual student; and
                          ``(iv) any other information the State 
                        requires all other public schools to report for 
                        purposes of section 1111(h)(1)(D).
          ``(3) Requests for waivers.--A request and justification for 
        waivers of any Federal statutory or regulatory provisions that 
        the State entity believes are necessary for the successful 
        operation of the charter schools that will receive funds under 
        the State entity's program under this section or, in the case 
        of a State entity defined in subsection (i)(4), a description 
        of how the State entity will work with the State to request 
        such necessary waivers, where applicable, and a description of 
        any State or local rules, generally applicable to public 
        schools, that will be waived, or otherwise not apply to such 
        schools.
  ``(f) Selection Criteria; Priority.--
          ``(1) Selection criteria.--The Secretary shall award grants 
        to State entities under this section on the basis of the 
        quality of the applications submitted under subsection (e), 
        after taking into consideration--
                  ``(A) the degree of flexibility afforded by the 
                State's public charter school law and how the State 
                entity will work to maximize the flexibility provided 
                to charter schools under the law;
                  ``(B) the ambitiousness of the State entity's 
                objectives for the quality charter school program 
                carried out under this section;
                  ``(C) the quality of the strategy for assessing 
                achievement of those objectives;
                  ``(D) the likelihood that the eligible applicants 
                receiving subgrants under the program will meet those 
                objectives and improve educational results for 
                students;
                  ``(E) the State entity's plan to--
                          ``(i) adequately monitor the eligible 
                        applicants receiving subgrants under the State 
                        entity's program;
                          ``(ii) work with the authorized public 
                        chartering agencies involved to avoid 
                        duplication of work for the charter schools and 
                        authorized public chartering agencies; and
                          ``(iii) provide adequate technical assistance 
                        and support for--
                                  ``(I) the charter schools receiving 
                                funds under the State entity's program; 
                                and
                                  ``(II) quality authorizing efforts in 
                                the State; and
                  ``(F) the State entity's plan to solicit and consider 
                input from parents and other members of the community 
                on the implementation and operation of the charter 
                schools in the State.
          ``(2) Priority.--In awarding grants under this section, the 
        Secretary shall give priority to State entities to the extent 
        that they meet the following criteria:
                  ``(A) The State entity is located in a State--
                          ``(i) that allows at least one entity that is 
                        not a local educational agency to be an 
                        authorized public chartering agency for 
                        developers seeking to open a charter school in 
                        the State; or
                          ``(ii) in which local educational agencies 
                        are the only authorized public chartering 
                        agencies and that has an appeals process for 
                        the denial of an application for a charter 
                        school;
                  ``(B) The State entity is located in a State that 
                does not impose any limitation on the number or 
                percentage of charter schools that may exist or the 
                number or percentage of students that may attend 
                charter schools in the State.
                  ``(C) The State entity is located in a State that 
                ensures equitable financing, as compared to traditional 
                public schools, for charter schools and students in a 
                prompt manner.
                  ``(D) The State entity is located in a State that 
                uses best practices from charter schools to help 
                improve struggling schools and local educational 
                agencies.
                  ``(E) The State entity partners with an organization 
                that has a demonstrated record of success in developing 
                management organizations to support the development of 
                charter schools in the State.
                  ``(F) The State entity supports charter schools that 
                support at-risk students through activities such as 
                dropout prevention, dropout recovery, or comprehensive 
                career counseling practices.
                  ``(G) The State entity authorizes all charter schools 
                in the State to serve as school food authorities.
                  ``(H) The State entity has taken steps to ensure that 
                all authorizing public chartering agencies implement 
                best practices for charter school authorizing.
                  ``(I) The State entity is able to demonstrate that 
                its State provides charter schools one or more of the 
                following:
                          ``(i) Funding for facilities.
                          ``(ii) Assistance with the acquisition of 
                        facilities.
                          ``(iii) Access to public facilities.
                          ``(iv) The right of first refusal to purchase 
                        public school buildings.
                          ``(v) Low or no cost leasing privileges.
  ``(g) Local Uses of Funds.--An eligible applicant receiving a 
subgrant under this section shall use such funds to carry out 
activities related to opening and preparing to operate a new charter 
school, a replicated, high-quality charter school model, or an 
expanded, high-quality charter school, such as--
          ``(1) preparing teachers and school leaders, including 
        through professional development;
          ``(2) acquiring equipment, educational materials, and 
        supplies; and
          ``(3) carrying out necessary renovations and minor facilities 
        repairs (excluding construction).
  ``(h) Reporting Requirements.--Each State entity receiving a grant 
under this section shall submit to the Secretary, at the end of the 
third year of the 5-year grant period and at the end of such grant 
period, a report on--
          ``(1) the number of students served by each subgrant awarded 
        under this section and, if applicable, how many new students 
        were served during each year of the subgrant period;
          ``(2) the progress the State entity made toward meeting the 
        priorities described in subsection (f)(2), as applicable;
          ``(3) how the State entity met the objectives of the quality 
        charter school program described in the State entity's 
        application under subsection (e), including how the State 
        entity met the objective of sharing best and promising 
        practices described in subsection (e)(1)(A)(x) in areas such as 
        instruction, professional development, curricula development, 
        and operations between charter schools and other public 
        schools, and the extent to which, if known, such practices were 
        adopted and implemented by such other public schools;
          ``(4) how the State entity complied with, and ensured that 
        eligible applicants complied with, the assurances described in 
        the State entity's application;
          ``(5) how the State entity worked with authorized public 
        chartering agencies, including how the agencies worked with the 
        management company or leadership of the schools that received 
        subgrants under this section;
          ``(6) the number of subgrants awarded under this section to 
        carry out each of the following:
                  ``(A) the opening of new charter schools;
                  ``(B) the opening of replicated, high-quality charter 
                school models; and
                  ``(C) the opening of expanded, high-quality charter 
                schools; and
          ``(7) how the State entity has worked with charter schools 
        receiving funds under the State entity's program to foster 
        community involvement in the planning for and opening of such 
        schools.
  ``(i) State Entity Defined.--For purposes of this section, the term 
`State entity' means--
          ``(1) a State educational agency;
          ``(2) a State charter school board;
          ``(3) a Governor of a State; or
          ``(4) a charter school support organization.

``SEC. 3104. FACILITIES FINANCING ASSISTANCE.

  ``(a) Grants to Eligible Entities.--
          ``(1) In general.--From the amount reserved under section 
        3102(b)(1), the Secretary shall not use less than 50 percent to 
        award grants to eligible entities that have the highest-quality 
        applications approved under subsection (d), after considering 
        the diversity of such applications, to demonstrate innovative 
        methods of assisting charter schools to address the cost of 
        acquiring, constructing, and renovating facilities by enhancing 
        the availability of loans or bond financing.
          ``(2) Eligible entity defined.--For purposes of this section, 
        the term `eligible entity' means--
                  ``(A) a public entity, such as a State or local 
                governmental entity;
                  ``(B) a private nonprofit entity; or
                  ``(C) a consortium of entities described in 
                subparagraphs (A) and (B).
  ``(b) Grantee Selection.--The Secretary shall evaluate each 
application submitted under subsection (d), and shall determine whether 
the application is sufficient to merit approval.
  ``(c) Grant Characteristics.--Grants under subsection (a) shall be of 
a sufficient size, scope, and quality so as to ensure an effective 
demonstration of an innovative means of enhancing credit for the 
financing of charter school acquisition, construction, or renovation.
  ``(d) Applications.--
          ``(1) In general.--To receive a grant under subsection (a), 
        an eligible entity shall submit to the Secretary an application 
        in such form as the Secretary may reasonably require.
          ``(2) Contents.--An application submitted under paragraph (1) 
        shall contain--
                  ``(A) a statement identifying the activities proposed 
                to be undertaken with funds received under subsection 
                (a), including how the eligible entity will determine 
                which charter schools will receive assistance, and how 
                much and what types of assistance charter schools will 
                receive;
                  ``(B) a description of the involvement of charter 
                schools in the application's development and the design 
                of the proposed activities;
                  ``(C) a description of the eligible entity's 
                expertise in capital market financing;
                  ``(D) a description of how the proposed activities 
                will leverage the maximum amount of private-sector 
                financing capital relative to the amount of public 
                funding used and otherwise enhance credit available to 
                charter schools, including how the eligible entity will 
                offer a combination of rates and terms more favorable 
                than the rates and terms that a charter school could 
                receive without assistance from the eligible entity 
                under subsection (a);
                  ``(E) a description of how the eligible entity 
                possesses sufficient expertise in education to evaluate 
                the likelihood of success of a charter school program 
                for which facilities financing is sought; and
                  ``(F) in the case of an application submitted by a 
                State governmental entity, a description of the actions 
                that the entity has taken, or will take, to ensure that 
                charter schools within the State receive the funding 
                the charter schools need to have adequate facilities.
  ``(e) Charter School Objectives.--An eligible entity receiving a 
grant under subsection (a) shall use the funds deposited in the reserve 
account established under subsection (f) to assist one or more charter 
schools to access private sector capital to accomplish one or more of 
the following objectives:
          ``(1) The acquisition (by purchase, lease, donation, or 
        otherwise) of an interest (including an interest held by a 
        third party for the benefit of a charter school) in improved or 
        unimproved real property that is necessary to commence or 
        continue the operation of a charter school.
          ``(2) The construction of new facilities, or the renovation, 
        repair, or alteration of existing facilities, necessary to 
        commence or continue the operation of a charter school.
          ``(3) The predevelopment costs required to assess sites for 
        purposes of paragraph (1) or (2) and which are necessary to 
        commence or continue the operation of a charter school.
  ``(f) Reserve Account.--
          ``(1) Use of funds.--To assist charter schools to accomplish 
        the objectives described in subsection (e), an eligible entity 
        receiving a grant under subsection (a) shall, in accordance 
        with State and local law, directly or indirectly, alone or in 
        collaboration with others, deposit the funds received under 
        subsection (a) (other than funds used for administrative costs 
        in accordance with subsection (g)) in a reserve account 
        established and maintained by the eligible entity for this 
        purpose. Amounts deposited in such account shall be used by the 
        eligible entity for one or more of the following purposes:
                  ``(A) Guaranteeing, insuring, and reinsuring bonds, 
                notes, evidences of debt, loans, and interests therein, 
                the proceeds of which are used for an objective 
                described in subsection (e).
                  ``(B) Guaranteeing and insuring leases of personal 
                and real property for an objective described in 
                subsection (e).
                  ``(C) Facilitating financing by identifying potential 
                lending sources, encouraging private lending, and other 
                similar activities that directly promote lending to, or 
                for the benefit of, charter schools.
                  ``(D) Facilitating the issuance of bonds by charter 
                schools, or by other public entities for the benefit of 
                charter schools, by providing technical, 
                administrative, and other appropriate assistance 
                (including the recruitment of bond counsel, 
                underwriters, and potential investors and the 
                consolidation of multiple charter school projects 
                within a single bond issue).
          ``(2) Investment.--Funds received under subsection (a) and 
        deposited in the reserve account established under paragraph 
        (1) shall be invested in obligations issued or guaranteed by 
        the United States or a State, or in other similarly low-risk 
        securities.
          ``(3) Reinvestment of earnings.--Any earnings on funds 
        received under subsection (a) shall be deposited in the reserve 
        account established under paragraph (1) and used in accordance 
        with such paragraph.
  ``(g) Limitation on Administrative Costs.--An eligible entity may use 
not more than 2.5 percent of the funds received under subsection (a) 
for the administrative costs of carrying out its responsibilities under 
this section (excluding subsection (k)).
  ``(h) Audits and Reports.--
          ``(1) Financial record maintenance and audit.--The financial 
        records of each eligible entity receiving a grant under 
        subsection (a) shall be maintained in accordance with generally 
        accepted accounting principles and shall be subject to an 
        annual audit by an independent public accountant.
          ``(2) Reports.--
                  ``(A) Grantee annual reports.--Each eligible entity 
                receiving a grant under subsection (a) annually shall 
                submit to the Secretary a report of its operations and 
                activities under this section (excluding subsection 
                (k)).
                  ``(B) Contents.--Each annual report submitted under 
                subparagraph (A) shall include--
                          ``(i) a copy of the most recent financial 
                        statements, and any accompanying opinion on 
                        such statements, prepared by the independent 
                        public accountant reviewing the financial 
                        records of the eligible entity;
                          ``(ii) a copy of any report made on an audit 
                        of the financial records of the eligible entity 
                        that was conducted under paragraph (1) during 
                        the reporting period;
                          ``(iii) an evaluation by the eligible entity 
                        of the effectiveness of its use of the Federal 
                        funds provided under subsection (a) in 
                        leveraging private funds;
                          ``(iv) a listing and description of the 
                        charter schools served during the reporting 
                        period, including the amount of funds used by 
                        each school, the type of project facilitated by 
                        the grant, and the type of assistance provided 
                        to the charter schools;
                          ``(v) a description of the activities carried 
                        out by the eligible entity to assist charter 
                        schools in meeting the objectives set forth in 
                        subsection (e); and
                          ``(vi) a description of the characteristics 
                        of lenders and other financial institutions 
                        participating in the activities undertaken by 
                        the eligible entity under this section 
                        (excluding subsection (k)) during the reporting 
                        period.
                  ``(C) Secretarial report.--The Secretary shall review 
                the reports submitted under subparagraph (A) and shall 
                provide a comprehensive annual report to Congress on 
                the activities conducted under this section (excluding 
                subsection (k)).
  ``(i) No Full Faith and Credit for Grantee Obligation.--No financial 
obligation of an eligible entity entered into pursuant to this section 
(such as an obligation under a guarantee, bond, note, evidence of debt, 
or loan) shall be an obligation of, or guaranteed in any respect by, 
the United States. The full faith and credit of the United States is 
not pledged to the payment of funds which may be required to be paid 
under any obligation made by an eligible entity pursuant to any 
provision of this section.
  ``(j) Recovery of Funds.--
          ``(1) In general.--The Secretary, in accordance with chapter 
        37 of title 31, United States Code, shall collect--
                  ``(A) all of the funds in a reserve account 
                established by an eligible entity under subsection 
                (f)(1) if the Secretary determines, not earlier than 2 
                years after the date on which the eligible entity first 
                received funds under subsection (a), that the eligible 
                entity has failed to make substantial progress in 
                carrying out the purposes described in subsection 
                (f)(1); or
                  ``(B) all or a portion of the funds in a reserve 
                account established by an eligible entity under 
                subsection (f)(1) if the Secretary determines that the 
                eligible entity has permanently ceased to use all or a 
                portion of the funds in such account to accomplish any 
                purpose described in subsection (f)(1).
          ``(2) Exercise of authority.--The Secretary shall not 
        exercise the authority provided in paragraph (1) to collect 
        from any eligible entity any funds that are being properly used 
        to achieve one or more of the purposes described in subsection 
        (f)(1).
          ``(3)  Procedures.--The provisions of sections 451, 452, and 
        458 of the General Education Provisions Act (20 U.S.C. 124, 
        1234a, 1234g) shall apply to the recovery of funds under 
        paragraph (1).
          ``(4) Construction.--This subsection shall not be construed 
        to impair or affect the authority of the Secretary to recover 
        funds under part D of the General Education Provisions Act (20 
        U.S.C. 1234 et seq.).
  ``(k) Per-Pupil Facilities Aid Program.--
          ``(1) Definition of per-pupil facilities aid program.--In 
        this subsection, the term `per-pupil facilities aid program' 
        means a program in which a State makes payments, on a per-pupil 
        basis, to charter schools to provide the schools with 
        financing--
                  ``(A) that is dedicated solely for funding charter 
                school facilities; or
                  ``(B) a portion of which is dedicated for funding 
                charter school facilities.
          ``(2) Grants.--
                  ``(A) In general.--From the amount under section 
                3102(b)(1) remaining after the Secretary makes grants 
                under subsection (a), the Secretary shall make grants, 
                on a competitive basis, to States to pay for the 
                Federal share of the cost of establishing or enhancing, 
                and administering per-pupil facilities aid programs.
                  ``(B) Period.--The Secretary shall award grants under 
                this subsection for periods of not more than 5 years.
                  ``(C) Federal share.--The Federal share of the cost 
                described in subparagraph (A) for a per-pupil 
                facilities aid program shall be not more than--
                          ``(i) 90 percent of the cost, for the first 
                        fiscal year for which the program receives 
                        assistance under this subsection;
                          ``(ii) 80 percent in the second such year;
                          ``(iii) 60 percent in the third such year;
                          ``(iv) 40 percent in the fourth such year; 
                        and
                          ``(v) 20 percent in the fifth such year.
                  ``(D) State share.--A State receiving a grant under 
                this subsection may partner with 1 or more 
                organizations to provide up to 50 percent of the State 
                share of the cost of establishing or enhancing, and 
                administering the per-pupil facilities aid program.
                  ``(E) Multiple grants.--A State may receive more than 
                1 grant under this subsection, so long as the amount of 
                such funds provided to charter schools increases with 
                each successive grant.
          ``(3) Use of funds.--
                  ``(A) In general.--A State that receives a grant 
                under this subsection shall use the funds made 
                available through the grant to establish or enhance, 
                and administer, a per-pupil facilities aid program for 
                charter schools in the State of the applicant.
                  ``(B) Evaluations; technical assistance; 
                dissemination.--From the amount made available to a 
                State through a grant under this subsection for a 
                fiscal year, the State may reserve not more than 5 
                percent to carry out evaluations, to provide technical 
                assistance, and to disseminate information.
                  ``(C) Supplement, not supplant.--Funds made available 
                under this subsection shall be used to supplement, and 
                not supplant, State and local public funds expended to 
                provide per pupil facilities aid programs, operations 
                financing programs, or other programs, for charter 
                schools.
          ``(4) Requirements.--
                  ``(A) Voluntary participation.--No State may be 
                required to participate in a program carried out under 
                this subsection.
                  ``(B) State law.--
                          ``(i) In general.--Except as provided in 
                        clause (ii), to be eligible to receive a grant 
                        under this subsection, a State shall establish 
                        or enhance, and administer, a per-pupil 
                        facilities aid program for charter schools in 
                        the State, that--
                                  ``(I) is specified in State law; and
                                  ``(II) provides annual financing, on 
                                a per-pupil basis, for charter school 
                                facilities.
                          ``(ii) Special rule.--Notwithstanding clause 
                        (i), a State that is required under State law 
                        to provide its charter schools with access to 
                        adequate facility space, but which does not 
                        have a per-pupil facilities aid program for 
                        charter schools specified in State law, may be 
                        eligible to receive a grant under this 
                        subsection if the State agrees to use the funds 
                        to develop a per-pupil facilities aid program 
                        consistent with the requirements of this 
                        subsection.
          ``(5) Applications.--To be eligible to receive a grant under 
        this subsection, a State shall submit an application to the 
        Secretary at such time, in such manner, and containing such 
        information as the Secretary may require.

``SEC. 3105. NATIONAL ACTIVITIES.

  ``(a) In General.--Of the amount reserved under section 3102(b)(2), 
the Secretary shall--
          ``(1) use not less than 75 percent of such amount to award 
        grants in accordance with subsection (b); and
          ``(2) use not more than 25 percent of such amount to--
                  ``(A) provide technical assistance to State entities 
                in awarding subgrants under section 3103, and eligible 
                entities and States receiving grants under section 
                3104;
                  ``(B) disseminate best practices; and
                  ``(C) evaluate the impact of the charter school 
                program, including the impact on student achievement, 
                carried out under this subpart.
  ``(b)  Grants.--
          ``(1) In general.--The Secretary shall make grants, on a 
        competitive basis, to eligible applicants for the purpose of 
        carrying out the activities described in section 3102(a)(1), 
        subparagraphs (A) through (C) of section 3103(a)(1), and 
        section 3103(g).
          ``(2) Terms and conditions.--Except as otherwise provided in 
        this subsection, grants awarded under this subsection shall 
        have the same terms and conditions as grants awarded to State 
        entities under section 3103.
          ``(3) Charter management organizations.--The Secretary 
        shall--
                  ``(A) of the amount described in subsection (a)(1), 
                use not less than 75 percent to make grants, on a 
                competitive basis, to eligible applicants described in 
                paragraph (4)(B); and
                  ``(B) notwithstanding paragraphs (1)(A) and (2) of 
                section 3103(f)--
                          ``(i) award grants to eligible applicants on 
                        the basis of the quality of the applications 
                        submitted under this subsection; and
                          ``(ii) in awarding grants to eligible 
                        applicants described in paragraph (4)(B) of 
                        this subsection, take into consideration 
                        whether such an eligible applicant--
                                  ``(I) demonstrates a high proportion 
                                of high-quality charter schools within 
                                the network of the eligible applicant;
                                  ``(II) demonstrates success in 
                                serving students who are educationally 
                                disadvantaged;
                                  ``(III) does not have a significant 
                                proportion of charter schools that have 
                                been closed, had their charter revoked 
                                for compliance issues, or had their 
                                affiliation with such eligible 
                                applicant revoked;
                                  ``(IV) has sufficient procedures in 
                                effect to ensure timely closure of low-
                                performing or financially mismanaged 
                                charter schools and clear plans and 
                                procedures in effect for the students 
                                in such schools to attend other high-
                                quality schools; and
                                  ``(V) demonstrates success in working 
                                with schools identified for improvement 
                                by the State.
          ``(4) Eligible applicant defined.--For purposes of this 
        subsection, the term `eligible applicant' means an eligible 
        applicant (as defined in section 3110) that--
                  ``(A) desires to open a charter school in--
                          ``(i) a State that did not apply for a grant 
                        under section 3103; or
                          ``(ii) a State that did not receive a grant 
                        under section 3103; or
                  ``(B) is a charter management organization.
  ``(c) Contracts and Grants.--The Secretary may carry out any of the 
activities described in this section directly or through grants, 
contracts, or cooperative agreements.

``SEC. 3106. FEDERAL FORMULA ALLOCATION DURING FIRST YEAR AND FOR 
                    SUCCESSIVE ENROLLMENT EXPANSIONS.

  ``(a) In General.--For purposes of the allocation to schools by the 
States or their agencies of funds under part A of title I, and any 
other Federal funds which the Secretary allocates to States on a 
formula basis, the Secretary and each State educational agency shall 
take such measures as are necessary to ensure that every charter school 
receives the Federal funding for which the charter school is eligible 
not later than 5 months after the charter school first opens, 
notwithstanding the fact that the identity and characteristics of the 
students enrolling in that charter school are not fully and completely 
determined until that charter school actually opens. The measures 
similarly shall ensure that every charter school expanding its 
enrollment in any subsequent year of operation receives the Federal 
funding for which the charter school is eligible not later than 5 
months after such expansion.
  ``(b) Adjustment and Late Openings.--
          ``(1) In general.--The measures described in subsection (a) 
        shall include provision for appropriate adjustments, through 
        recovery of funds or reduction of payments for the succeeding 
        year, in cases where payments made to a charter school on the 
        basis of estimated or projected enrollment data exceed the 
        amounts that the school is eligible to receive on the basis of 
        actual or final enrollment data.
          ``(2) Rule.--For charter schools that first open after 
        November 1 of any academic year, the State, in accordance with 
        guidance provided by the Secretary and applicable Federal 
        statutes and regulations, shall ensure that such charter 
        schools that are eligible for the funds described in subsection 
        (a) for such academic year have a full and fair opportunity to 
        receive those funds during the charter schools' first year of 
        operation.

``SEC. 3107. SOLICITATION OF INPUT FROM CHARTER SCHOOL OPERATORS.

  ``To the extent practicable, the Secretary shall ensure that 
administrators, teachers, and other individuals directly involved in 
the operation of charter schools are consulted in the development of 
any rules or regulations required to implement this subpart, as well as 
in the development of any rules or regulations relevant to charter 
schools that are required to implement part A of title I, the 
Individuals with Disabilities Education Act, or any other program 
administered by the Secretary that provides education funds to charter 
schools or regulates the activities of charter schools.

``SEC. 3108. RECORDS TRANSFER.

  ``State educational agencies and local educational agencies, as 
quickly as possible and to the extent practicable, shall ensure that a 
student's records and, if applicable, a student's individualized 
education program as defined in section 602(14) of the Individuals with 
Disabilities Education Act, are transferred to a charter school upon 
the transfer of the student to the charter school, and to another 
public school upon the transfer of the student from a charter school to 
another public school, in accordance with applicable State law.

``SEC. 3109. PAPERWORK REDUCTION.

  ``To the extent practicable, the Secretary and each authorized public 
chartering agency shall ensure that implementation of this subpart 
results in a minimum of paperwork for any eligible applicant or charter 
school.

``SEC. 3110. DEFINITIONS.

  ``In this subpart:
          ``(1) Charter management organization.--The term `charter 
        management organization' means a nonprofit organization that 
        manages a network of charter schools linked by centralized 
        support, operations, and oversight.
          ``(2) Charter school support organization.--The term `charter 
        school support organization' means a nonprofit, nongovernmental 
        entity that is not an authorized public chartering agency, 
        which provides on a statewide basis--
                  ``(A) assistance to developers during the planning, 
                program design, and initial implementation of a charter 
                school; and
                  ``(B) technical assistance to charter schools to 
                operate such schools.
          ``(3) Developer.--The term `developer' means an individual or 
        group of individuals (including a public or private nonprofit 
        organization), which may include teachers, administrators and 
        other school staff, parents, or other members of the local 
        community in which a charter school project will be carried 
        out.
          ``(4) Eligible applicant.--The term `eligible applicant' 
        means a developer that has--
                  ``(A) applied to an authorized public chartering 
                authority to operate a charter school; and
                  ``(B) provided adequate and timely notice to that 
                authority.
          ``(5) Authorized public chartering agency.--The term 
        `authorized public chartering agency' means a State educational 
        agency, local educational agency, or other public entity that 
        has the authority pursuant to State law and approved by the 
        Secretary to authorize or approve a charter school.
          ``(6) Expanded, high-quality charter school.--The term 
        `expanded, high-quality charter school' means a high-quality 
        charter school that has either significantly increased its 
        enrollment or added one or more grades to its school.
          ``(7) High-quality charter school.--The term `high-quality 
        charter school' means a charter school that--
                  ``(A) shows evidence of strong academic results, 
                which may include strong academic growth as determined 
                by a State;
                  ``(B) has no significant issues in the areas of 
                student safety, operational and financial management, 
                or statutory or regulatory compliance;
                  ``(C) has demonstrated success in significantly 
                increasing student academic achievement, including 
                graduation rates where applicable, consistent with the 
                requirements under title I, for all students served by 
                the charter school; and
                  ``(D) has demonstrated success in increasing student 
                academic achievement, including graduation rates where 
                applicable, for the groups of students described in 
                section 1111(b)(3)(B)(ii)(II), except that such 
                demonstration is not required in a case in which the 
                number of students in a group is insufficient to yield 
                statistically reliable information or the results would 
                reveal personally identifiable information about an 
                individual student.
          ``(8) Replicated, high-quality charter school model.--The 
        term `replicated, high-quality charter school model' means a 
        high-quality charter school that has opened a new campus under 
        an existing charter or an additional charter if required or 
        permitted by State law.

                 ``Subpart 2--Magnet School Assistance

``SEC. 3121. PURPOSE.

  ``The purpose of this subpart is to assist in the desegregation of 
schools served by local educational agencies by providing financial 
assistance to eligible local educational agencies for--
          ``(1) the elimination, reduction, or prevention of minority 
        group isolation in elementary schools and secondary schools 
        with substantial proportions of minority students, which shall 
        include assisting in the efforts of the United States to 
        achieve voluntary desegregation in public schools;
          ``(2) the development and implementation of magnet school 
        programs that will assist local educational agencies in 
        achieving systemic reforms and providing all students the 
        opportunity to meet State academic standards;
          ``(3) the development and design of innovative educational 
        methods and practices that promote diversity and increase 
        choices in public elementary schools and public secondary 
        schools and public educational programs;
          ``(4) courses of instruction within magnet schools that will 
        substantially strengthen the knowledge of academic subjects and 
        the attainment of tangible and marketable career, technical, 
        and professional skills of students attending such schools;
          ``(5) improving the ability of local educational agencies, 
        including through professional development, to continue 
        operating magnet schools at a high performance level after 
        Federal funding for the magnet schools is terminated; and
          ``(6) ensuring that students enrolled in the magnet school 
        programs have equitable access to a quality education that will 
        enable the students to succeed academically and continue with 
        postsecondary education or employment.

``SEC. 3122. DEFINITION.

  ``For the purpose of this subpart, the term `magnet school' means a 
public elementary school, public secondary school, public elementary 
education center, or public secondary education center that offers a 
special curriculum capable of attracting substantial numbers of 
students of different racial backgrounds.

``SEC. 3123. PROGRAM AUTHORIZED.

  ``From the amount appropriated under section 3(c)(1)(B), the 
Secretary, in accordance with this subpart, is authorized to award 
grants to eligible local educational agencies, and consortia of such 
agencies where appropriate, to carry out the purpose of this subpart 
for magnet schools that are--
          ``(1) part of an approved desegregation plan; and
          ``(2) designed to bring students from different social, 
        economic, ethnic, and racial backgrounds together.

``SEC. 3124. ELIGIBILITY.

  ``A local educational agency, or consortium of such agencies where 
appropriate, is eligible to receive a grant under this subpart to carry 
out the purpose of this subpart if such agency or consortium--
          ``(1) is implementing a plan undertaken pursuant to a final 
        order issued by a court of the United States, or a court of any 
        State, or any other State agency or official of competent 
        jurisdiction, that requires the desegregation of minority-
        group-segregated children or faculty in the elementary schools 
        and secondary schools of such agency; or
          ``(2) without having been required to do so, has adopted and 
        is implementing, or will, if a grant is awarded to such local 
        educational agency, or consortium of such agencies, under this 
        subpart, adopt and implement a plan that has been approved by 
        the Secretary as adequate under title VI of the Civil Rights 
        Act of 1964 for the desegregation of minority-group-segregated 
        children or faculty in such schools.

``SEC. 3125. APPLICATIONS AND REQUIREMENTS.

  ``(a) Applications.--An eligible local educational agency, or 
consortium of such agencies, desiring to receive a grant under this 
subpart shall submit an application to the Secretary at such time and 
in such manner as the Secretary may reasonably require.
  ``(b) Information and Assurances.--Each application submitted under 
subsection (a) shall include--
          ``(1) a description of--
                  ``(A) how a grant awarded under this subpart will be 
                used to promote desegregation, including how the 
                proposed magnet school programs will increase 
                interaction among students of different social, 
                economic, ethnic, and racial backgrounds;
                  ``(B) the manner and extent to which the magnet 
                school program will increase student academic 
                achievement in the instructional area or areas offered 
                by the school;
                  ``(C) how the applicant will continue the magnet 
                school program after assistance under this subpart is 
                no longer available, and, if applicable, an explanation 
                of why magnet schools established or supported by the 
                applicant with grant funds under this subpart cannot be 
                continued without the use of grant funds under this 
                subpart;
                  ``(D) how grant funds under this subpart will be 
                used--
                          ``(i) to improve student academic achievement 
                        for all students attending the magnet school 
                        programs; and
                          ``(ii) to implement services and activities 
                        that are consistent with other programs under 
                        this Act, and other Acts, as appropriate; and
                  ``(E) the criteria to be used in selecting students 
                to attend the proposed magnet school program; and
          ``(2) assurances that the applicant will--
                  ``(A) use grant funds under this subpart for the 
                purposes specified in section 3121;
                  ``(B) employ effective teachers in the courses of 
                instruction assisted under this subpart;
                  ``(C) not engage in discrimination based on race, 
                religion, color, national origin, sex, or disability 
                in--
                          ``(i) the hiring, promotion, or assignment of 
                        employees of the applicant or other personnel 
                        for whom the applicant has any administrative 
                        responsibility;
                          ``(ii) the assignment of students to schools, 
                        or to courses of instruction within the 
                        schools, of such applicant, except to carry out 
                        the approved plan; and
                          ``(iii) designing or operating 
                        extracurricular activities for students;
                  ``(D) carry out a quality education program that will 
                encourage greater parental decisionmaking and 
                involvement; and
                  ``(E) give students residing in the local attendance 
                area of the proposed magnet school program equitable 
                consideration for placement in the program, consistent 
                with desegregation guidelines and the capacity of the 
                applicant to accommodate the students.
  ``(c) Special Rule.--No grant shall be awarded under this subpart 
unless the Assistant Secretary of Education for Civil Rights determines 
that the assurances described in subsection (b)(2)(C) will be met.

``SEC. 3126. PRIORITY.

  ``In awarding grants under this subpart, the Secretary shall give 
priority to applicants that--
          ``(1) demonstrate the greatest need for assistance, based on 
        the expense or difficulty of effectively carrying out approved 
        desegregation plans and the magnet school program for which the 
        grant is sought;
          ``(2) propose to carry out new magnet school programs, or 
        significantly revise existing magnet school programs;
          ``(3) propose to select students to attend magnet school 
        programs by methods such as lottery, rather than through 
        academic examination; and
          ``(4) propose to serve the entire student population of a 
        school.

``SEC. 3127. USE OF FUNDS.

  ``(a) In General.--Grant funds made available under this subpart may 
be used by an eligible local educational agency, or consortium of such 
agencies--
          ``(1) for planning and promotional activities directly 
        related to the development, expansion, continuation, or 
        enhancement of academic programs and services offered at magnet 
        schools;
          ``(2) for the acquisition of books, materials, and equipment, 
        including computers and the maintenance and operation of 
        materials, equipment, and computers, necessary to conduct 
        programs in magnet schools;
          ``(3) for the compensation, or subsidization of the 
        compensation, of elementary school and secondary school 
        teachers, and instructional staff where applicable, who are 
        necessary to conduct programs in magnet schools;
          ``(4) with respect to a magnet school program offered to less 
        than the entire student population of a school, for 
        instructional activities that--
                  ``(A) are designed to make available the special 
                curriculum that is offered by the magnet school program 
                to students who are enrolled in the school but who are 
                not enrolled in the magnet school program; and
                  ``(B) further the purpose of this subpart;
          ``(5) for activities, which may include professional 
        development, that will build the recipient's capacity to 
        operate magnet school programs once the grant period has ended;
          ``(6) to enable the local educational agency, or consortium 
        of such agencies, to have more flexibility in the 
        administration of a magnet school program in order to serve 
        students attending a school who are not enrolled in a magnet 
        school program; and
          ``(7) to enable the local educational agency, or consortium 
        of such agencies, to have flexibility in designing magnet 
        schools for students in all grades.
  ``(b) Special Rule.--Grant funds under this subpart may be used for 
activities described in paragraphs (2) and (3) of subsection (a) only 
if the activities are directly related to improving student academic 
achievement based on the State's academic standards or directly related 
to improving student reading skills or knowledge of mathematics, 
science, history, geography, English, foreign languages, art, or music, 
or to improving career, technical, and professional skills.

``SEC. 3128. LIMITATIONS.

  ``(a) Duration of Awards.--A grant under this subpart shall be 
awarded for a period that shall not exceed 3 fiscal years.
  ``(b) Limitation on Planning Funds.--A local educational agency, or 
consortium of such agencies, may expend for planning (professional 
development shall not be considered to be planning for purposes of this 
subsection) not more than 50 percent of the grant funds received under 
this subpart for the first year of the program and not more than 15 
percent of such funds for each of the second and third such years.
  ``(c) Amount.--No local educational agency, or consortium of such 
agencies, awarded a grant under this subpart shall receive more than 
$4,000,000 under this subpart for any 1 fiscal year.
  ``(d) Timing.--To the extent practicable, the Secretary shall award 
grants for any fiscal year under this subpart not later than July 1 of 
the applicable fiscal year.

``SEC. 3129. EVALUATIONS.

  ``(a) Reservation.--The Secretary may reserve not more than 2 percent 
of the funds appropriated under section 3(c)(1)(B) for any fiscal year 
to carry out evaluations, provide technical assistance, and carry out 
dissemination projects with respect to magnet school programs assisted 
under this subpart.
  ``(b) Contents.--Each evaluation described in subsection (a), at a 
minimum, shall address--
          ``(1) how and the extent to which magnet school programs lead 
        to educational quality and academic improvement;
          ``(2) the extent to which magnet school programs enhance 
        student access to a quality education;
          ``(3) the extent to which magnet school programs lead to the 
        elimination, reduction, or prevention of minority group 
        isolation in elementary schools and secondary schools with 
        substantial proportions of minority students; and
          ``(4) the extent to which magnet school programs differ from 
        other school programs in terms of the organizational 
        characteristics and resource allocations of such magnet school 
        programs.
  ``(c) Dissemination.--The Secretary shall collect and disseminate to 
the general public information on successful magnet school programs.

``SEC. 3130. RESERVATION.

  ``In any fiscal year for which the amount appropriated under section 
3(c)(1)(B) exceeds $75,000,000, the Secretary shall give priority in 
using such amounts in excess of $75,000,000 to awarding grants to local 
educational agencies or consortia of such agencies that did not receive 
a grant under this subpart in the preceding fiscal year.

          ``Subpart 3--Family Engagement in Education Programs

``SEC. 3141. PURPOSES.

  ``The purposes of this subpart are the following:
          ``(1) To provide financial support to organizations to 
        provide technical assistance and training to State and local 
        educational agencies in the implementation and enhancement of 
        systemic and effective family engagement policies, programs, 
        and activities that lead to improvements in student development 
        and academic achievement.
          ``(2) To assist State educational agencies, local educational 
        agencies, community-based organizations, schools, and educators 
        in strengthening partnerships among parents, teachers, school 
        leaders, administrators, and other school personnel in meeting 
        the educational needs of children and fostering greater 
        parental engagement.
          ``(3) To support State educational agencies, local 
        educational agencies, schools, educators, and parents in 
        developing and strengthening the relationship between parents 
        and their children's school in order to further the 
        developmental progress of children.
          ``(4) To coordinate activities funded under this subpart with 
        parent involvement initiatives funded under section 1118 and 
        other provisions of this Act.
          ``(5) To assist the Secretary, State educational agencies, 
        and local educational agencies in the coordination and 
        integration of Federal, State, and local services and programs 
        to engage families in education.

``SEC. 3142. GRANTS AUTHORIZED.

  ``(a) Statewide Family Engagement Centers.--From the amount 
appropriated under section 3(c)(1)(C), the Secretary is authorized to 
award grants for each fiscal year to statewide organizations (or 
consortia of such organizations), to establish Statewide Family 
Engagement Centers that provide comprehensive training and technical 
assistance to State educational agencies, local educational agencies, 
schools identified by State educational agencies and local educational 
agencies, organizations that support family-school partnerships, and 
other organizations that carry out, or carry out directly, parent 
education and family engagement in education programs.
  ``(b) Minimum Award.--In awarding grants under this section, the 
Secretary shall, to the extent practicable, ensure that a grant is 
awarded for a Statewide Family Engagement Center in an amount not less 
than $500,000.

``SEC. 3143. APPLICATIONS.

  ``(a) Submissions.--Each statewide organization, or a consortium of 
such organizations, that desires a grant under this subpart shall 
submit an application to the Secretary at such time, in such manner, 
and including the information described in subsection (b).
  ``(b) Contents.--Each application submitted under subsection (a) 
shall include, at a minimum, the following:
          ``(1) A description of the applicant's approach to family 
        engagement in education.
          ``(2) A description of the support that the Statewide Family 
        Engagement Center that will be operated by the applicant will 
        have from the State educational agency and any partner 
        organization outlining the commitment to work with the center.
          ``(3) A description of the applicant's plan for building a 
        statewide infrastructure for family engagement in education, 
        that includes--
                  ``(A) management and governance;
                  ``(B) statewide leadership; or
                  ``(C) systemic services for family engagement in 
                education.
          ``(4) A description of the applicant's demonstrated 
        experience in providing training, information, and support to 
        State educational agencies, local educational agencies, 
        schools, educators, parents, and organizations on family 
        engagement in education policies and practices that are 
        effective for parents (including low-income parents) and 
        families, English learners, minorities, parents of students 
        with disabilities, parents of homeless students, foster parents 
        and students, and parents of migratory students, including 
        evaluation results, reporting, or other data exhibiting such 
        demonstrated experience.
          ``(5) A description of the steps the applicant will take to 
        target services to low-income students and parents.
          ``(6) An assurance that the applicant will--
                  ``(A) establish a special advisory committee, the 
                membership of which includes--
                          ``(i) parents, who shall constitute a 
                        majority of the members of the special advisory 
                        committee;
                          ``(ii) representatives of education 
                        professionals with expertise in improving 
                        services for disadvantaged children;
                          ``(iii) representatives of local elementary 
                        schools and secondary schools, including 
                        students;
                          ``(iv) representatives of the business 
                        community; and
                          ``(v) representatives of State educational 
                        agencies and local educational agencies;
                  ``(B) use not less than 65 percent of the funds 
                received under this subpart in each fiscal year to 
                serve local educational agencies, schools, and 
                community-based organizations that serve high 
                concentrations of disadvantaged students, including 
                English learners, minorities, parents of students with 
                disabilities, parents of homeless students, foster 
                parents and students, and parents of migratory 
                students;
                  ``(C) operate a Statewide Family Engagement Center of 
                sufficient size, scope, and quality to ensure that the 
                Center is adequate to serve the State educational 
                agency, local educational agencies, and community-based 
                organizations;
                  ``(D) ensure that the Center will retain staff with 
                the requisite training and experience to serve parents 
                in the State;
                  ``(E) serve urban, suburban, and rural local 
                educational agencies and schools;
                  ``(F) work with--
                          ``(i) other Statewide Family Engagement 
                        Centers assisted under this subpart; and
                          ``(ii) parent training and information 
                        centers and community parent resource centers 
                        assisted under sections 671 and 672 of the 
                        Individuals with Disabilities Education Act;
                  ``(G) use not less than 30 percent of the funds 
                received under this subpart for each fiscal year to 
                establish or expand technical assistance for evidence-
                based parent education programs;
                  ``(H) provide assistance to State educational 
                agencies and local educational agencies and community-
                based organizations that support family members in 
                supporting student academic achievement;
                  ``(I) work with State educational agencies, local 
                educational agencies, schools, educators, and parents 
                to determine parental needs and the best means for 
                delivery of services to address such needs;
                  ``(J) conduct sufficient outreach to assist parents, 
                including parents who the applicant may have a 
                difficult time engaging with a school or local 
                educational agency; and
                  ``(K) conduct outreach to low-income students and 
                parents, including low-income students and parents who 
                are not proficient in English.

``SEC. 3144. USES OF FUNDS.

  ``(a) In General.--Grantees shall use grant funds received under this 
subpart, based on the needs determined under section 3143(b)(6)(I), to 
provide training and technical assistance to State educational 
agencies, local educational agencies, and organizations that support 
family-school partnerships, and activities, services, and training for 
local educational agencies, school leaders, educators, and parents--
          ``(1) to assist parents in participating effectively in their 
        children's education and to help their children meet State 
        standards, such as assisting parents--
                  ``(A) to engage in activities that will improve 
                student academic achievement, including understanding 
                how they can support learning in the classroom with 
                activities at home and in afterschool and 
                extracurricular programs;
                  ``(B) to communicate effectively with their children, 
                teachers, school leaders, counselors, administrators, 
                and other school personnel;
                  ``(C) to become active participants in the 
                development, implementation, and review of school-
                parent compacts, family engagement in education 
                policies, and school planning and improvement;
                  ``(D) to participate in the design and provision of 
                assistance to students who are not making academic 
                progress;
                  ``(E) to participate in State and local 
                decisionmaking;
                  ``(F) to train other parents; and
                  ``(G) to help the parents learn and use technology 
                applied in their children's education;
          ``(2) to develop and implement, in partnership with the State 
        educational agency, statewide family engagement in education 
        policy and systemic initiatives that will provide for a 
        continuum of services to remove barriers for family engagement 
        in education and support school reform efforts; and
          ``(3) to develop and implement parental involvement policies 
        under this Act.
  ``(b) Matching Funds for Grant Renewal.--For each fiscal year after 
the first fiscal year for which an organization or consortium receives 
assistance under this section, the organization or consortium shall 
demonstrate in the application that a portion of the services provided 
by the organization or consortium is supported through non-Federal 
contributions, which may be in cash or in-kind.
  ``(c) Technical Assistance.--The Secretary shall reserve not more 
than 2 percent of the funds appropriated under section 3(c)(1)(C) to 
carry out this subpart to provide technical assistance, by competitive 
grant or contract, for the establishment, development, and coordination 
of Statewide Family Engagement Centers.
  ``(d) Rule of Construction.--Nothing in this section shall be 
construed to prohibit a Statewide Family Engagement Center from--
          ``(1) having its employees or agents meet with a parent at a 
        site that is not on school grounds; or
          ``(2) working with another agency that serves children.
  ``(e) Parental Rights.--Notwithstanding any other provision of this 
section--
          ``(1) no person (including a parent who educates a child at 
        home, a public school parent, or a private school parent) shall 
        be required to participate in any program of parent education 
        or developmental screening under this section; and
          ``(2) no program or center assisted under this section shall 
        take any action that infringes in any manner on the right of a 
        parent to direct the education of their children.

``SEC. 3145. FAMILY ENGAGEMENT IN INDIAN SCHOOLS.

  ``The Secretary of the Interior, in consultation with the Secretary 
of Education, shall establish, or enter into contracts and cooperative 
agreements with local Indian nonprofit parent organizations to 
establish and operate Family Engagement Centers.

                ``PART B--LOCAL ACADEMIC FLEXIBLE GRANT

``SEC. 3201. PURPOSE.

  ``The purpose of this part is to--
          ``(1) provide local educational agencies with the opportunity 
        to access funds to support the initiatives important to their 
        schools and students to improve academic achievement and 
        student engagement, including protecting student safety; and
          ``(2) provide nonprofit and for-profit entities the 
        opportunity to work with students to improve academic 
        achievement and student engagement, including student safety.

``SEC. 3202. ALLOTMENTS TO STATES.

  ``(a) Reservations.--From the funds appropriated under section 
3(c)(2) for any fiscal year, the Secretary shall reserve--
          ``(1) not more than one-half of 1 percent for national 
        activities to provide technical assistance to eligible entities 
        in carrying out programs under this part; and
          ``(2) not more than one-half of 1 percent for payments to the 
        outlying areas and the Bureau of Indian Education, to be 
        allotted in accordance with their respective needs for 
        assistance under this part, as determined by the Secretary, to 
        enable the outlying areas and the Bureau to carry out the 
        purpose of this part.
  ``(b) State Allotments.--
          ``(1) Determination.--From the funds appropriated under 
        section 3(c)(2) for any fiscal year and remaining after the 
        Secretary makes reservations under subsection (a), the 
        Secretary shall allot to each State for the fiscal year an 
        amount that bears the same relationship to the remainder as the 
        amount the State received under chapter B of subpart 1 of part 
        A of title I for the preceding fiscal year bears to the amount 
        all States received under that chapter for the preceding fiscal 
        year, except that no State shall receive less than an amount 
        equal to one-half of 1 percent of the total amount made 
        available to all States under this subsection.
          ``(2) Reallotment of unused funds.--If a State does not 
        receive an allotment under this part for a fiscal year, the 
        Secretary shall reallot the amount of the State's allotment to 
        the remaining States in accordance with this section.
  ``(c) State Use of Funds.--
          ``(1) In general.--Each State that receives an allotment 
        under this part shall reserve not less than 75 percent of the 
        amount allotted to the State under subsection (b) for each 
        fiscal year for awards to eligible entities under section 3204.
          ``(2) Awards to nongovernmental entities to improve student 
        academic achievement.--Each State that receives an allotment 
        under subsection (b) for each fiscal year shall reserve not 
        less than 8 percent of the amount allotted to the State for 
        awards to nongovernmental entities under section 3205.
          ``(3) State activities and state administration.--A State 
        educational agency may reserve not more than 17 percent of the 
        amount allotted to the State under subsection (b) for each 
        fiscal year for one or more of the following:
                  ``(A) Enabling the State educational agency--
                          ``(i) to pay the costs of developing the 
                        State assessments and standards required under 
                        section 1111(b), which may include the costs of 
                        working, at the sole discretion of the State, 
                        in voluntary partnerships with other States to 
                        develop such assessments and standards; or
                          ``(ii) if the State has developed the 
                        assessments and standards required under 
                        section 1111(b), to administer those 
                        assessments or carry out other activities 
                        related to ensuring that the State's schools 
                        and local educational agencies are helping 
                        students meet the State's academic standards 
                        under such section.
                  ``(B) The administrative costs of carrying out its 
                responsibilities under this part, except that not more 
                than 5 percent of the reserved amount may be used for 
                this purpose.
                  ``(C) Monitoring and evaluation of programs and 
                activities assisted under this part.
                  ``(D) Providing training and technical assistance 
                under this part.
                  ``(E) Statewide academic focused programs.
                  ``(F) Sharing evidence-based and other effective 
                strategies with eligible entities.
                  ``(G) Awarding grants for blended learning projects 
                under paragraph (4).
          ``(4) Blended learning projects.--
                  ``(A) In general.--From the amount of funds a State 
                educational agency reserves under subsection (c)(3) for 
                each fiscal year to carry out this paragraph, the State 
                educational agency shall award grants on a competitive 
                basis to eligible entities in the State to carry out 
                blended learning projects described in this paragraph.
                  ``(B) Geographic diversity.-- In awarding grants 
                under this paragraph, a State educational agency shall 
                distribute funds equitably among geographic areas of 
                the State, including rural and urban communities.
                  ``(C) Application.--An eligible entity desiring to 
                receive a grant under this paragraph shall submit an 
                application to the State educational agency at such 
                time and in such manner as the agency may require, and 
                which describes--
                          ``(i) the blended learning project to be 
                        carried out by the eligible entity, including 
                        the design of the instructional model to be 
                        carried out by the eligible entity and how such 
                        eligible entity will use funds provided under 
                        this paragraph to carry out the project;
                          ``(ii) in the case of an eligible entity 
                        described in subclause (I) or (III) of 
                        subparagraph (F)(ii), the schools that will 
                        participate in the project;
                          ``(iii) the expected impact on student 
                        academic achievement;
                          ``(iv) how the eligible entity will ensure 
                        sufficient information technology is available 
                        to carry out the project;
                          ``(v) how the eligible entity will ensure 
                        sufficient digital instructional resources are 
                        available to students participating in the 
                        project;
                          ``(vi) the ongoing professional development 
                        to be provided for teachers, school leaders, 
                        and other personnel carrying out the project;
                          ``(vii) the State policies and procedures for 
                        which the eligible entity requests waivers from 
                        the State to carry out the project, which may 
                        include requests for the waivers described in 
                        section 3203(a)(11)(B);
                          ``(viii) as appropriate, how the eligible 
                        entity will use the blended learning project to 
                        improve instruction and access to the 
                        curriculum for diverse groups of students, 
                        including students with disabilities and 
                        students who are limited English proficient;
                          ``(ix) how the eligible entity will evaluate 
                        the project in terms of student academic 
                        achievement and publicly report the results of 
                        such evaluation; and
                          ``(x) how the eligible entity will sustain 
                        the project beyond the grant period.
                  ``(D) Uses of funds.--An eligible entity receiving a 
                grant under this paragraph shall use such grant to 
                carry out a blended learning project, which shall 
                include at least 1 of the following activities:
                          ``(i) Planning activities, which may include 
                        development of new instructional models 
                        (including blended learning technology software 
                        and platforms), the purchase of digital 
                        instructional resources, initial professional 
                        development activities, and one-time 
                        information technology purchases, except that 
                        such expenditures may not include expenditures 
                        related to significant construction or 
                        renovation of facilities.
                          ``(ii) Ongoing professional development for 
                        teachers, school leaders, or other personnel 
                        involved in the project that is designed to 
                        support the implementation and academic success 
                        of the project.
                  ``(E) Non-federal match.--A State educational agency 
                that carries out a grant program under this paragraph 
                shall provide non-Federal matching funds equal to not 
                less than 10 percent of the grant funds awarded by the 
                State educational agency to eligible entities under 
                this paragraph.
                  ``(F) Definitions.--In this paragraph:
                          ``(i) Blended learning project.--The term 
                        `blended learning project' means a formal 
                        education program--
                                  ``(I) that includes an element of 
                                online learning, and instructional time 
                                in a supervised location away from 
                                home;
                                  ``(II) that includes an element of 
                                student control over time, path, or 
                                pace; and
                                  ``(III) in which the elements are 
                                connected to provide an integrated 
                                learning experience.
                          ``(ii) Eligible entity.--The term `eligible 
                        entity' means a--
                                  ``(I) local educational agency;
                                  ``(II) charter school; or
                                  ``(III) consortium of the entities 
                                described in subclause (I) or (II), 
                                which may be in partnership with a for-
                                profit or nonprofit entity.

``SEC. 3203. STATE APPLICATION.

  ``(a) In General.--In order to receive an allotment under section 
3202 for any fiscal year, a State educational agency shall submit to 
the Secretary, at such time as the Secretary may require, an 
application that--
          ``(1) describes how the State educational agency will use 
        funds reserved for State-level activities, including how, if 
        any, of the funds will be used to support student safety;
          ``(2) describes the procedures and criteria the State 
        educational agency will use for reviewing applications and 
        awarding funds to eligible entities on a competitive basis, 
        which shall include reviewing how the proposed project will 
        help increase student academic achievement and student 
        engagement;
          ``(3) describes how the State educational agency will ensure 
        that awards made under this part are--
                  ``(A) of sufficient size and scope to support high-
                quality, effective programs that are consistent with 
                the purpose of this part; and
                  ``(B) in amounts that are consistent with section 
                3204(f);
          ``(4) describes the steps the State educational agency will 
        take to ensure that programs implement effective strategies, 
        including providing ongoing technical assistance and training, 
        and dissemination of evidence-based and other effective 
        strategies;
          ``(5) describes how the State educational agency will 
        consider students across all grades when making these awards;
          ``(6) an assurance that, other than providing technical and 
        advisory assistance and monitoring compliance with this part, 
        the State educational agency has not exercised and will not 
        exercise any influence in the decisionmaking process of 
        eligible entities as to the expenditure of funds received by 
        the eligible entities under this part;
          ``(7) describes how programs under this part will be 
        coordinated with programs under this Act, and other programs as 
        appropriate;
          ``(8) contains an assurance that the State educational 
        agency--
                  ``(A) will make awards for programs for a period of 
                not more than 5 years; and
                  ``(B) will require each eligible entity seeking such 
                an award to submit a plan describing how the project to 
                be funded through the award will continue after funding 
                under this part ends, if applicable;
          ``(9) contains an assurance that funds appropriated to carry 
        out this part will be used to supplement, and not supplant, 
        State and local public funds expended to provide programs and 
        activities authorized under this part and other similar 
        programs;
          ``(10) an assurance that the State will support projects from 
        each of the categories listed in section 3204(b)(1)(D) in 
        awarding subgrants to local educational agencies; and
          ``(11) in the case of a State that will carry out a program 
        to award grants under section 3202(c)(4), a description of the 
        program, which shall include--
                  ``(A) the criteria the State will use to award grants 
                under such section to eligible entities to carry out 
                blended learning projects;
                  ``(B) the State policies and procedures to be waived 
                by the State, consistent with Federal law, for such 
                eligible entities to carry out such projects, which may 
                include waivers with respect to--
                          ``(i) restrictions on class sizes;
                          ``(ii) restrictions on licensing or 
                        credentialing of personnel supervising student 
                        work in such projects;
                          ``(iii) restrictions on the use of State 
                        funding for instructional materials for the 
                        purchase of digital instructional resources;
                          ``(iv) restrictions on advancing students 
                        based on demonstrated mastery of learning 
                        outcomes, rather than seat-time requirements; 
                        and
                          ``(v) restrictions on secondary school 
                        students in the State enrolling in online 
                        coursework;
                  ``(C) how the State will inform eligible entities of 
                the availability of the waivers described in 
                subparagraph (B); and
                  ``(D) how the State will provide the non-Federal 
                match required under section 3202(c)(4)(E).
  ``(b) Deemed Approval.--An application submitted by a State 
educational agency pursuant to subsection (a) shall be deemed to be 
approved by the Secretary unless the Secretary makes a written 
determination, prior to the expiration of the 120-day period beginning 
on the date on which the Secretary received the application, that the 
application is not in compliance with this part.
  ``(c) Disapproval.--The Secretary shall not finally disapprove the 
application, except after giving the State educational agency notice 
and an opportunity for a hearing.
  ``(d) Notification.--If the Secretary finds that the application is 
not in compliance, in whole or in part, with this part, the Secretary 
shall--
          ``(1) give the State educational agency notice and an 
        opportunity for a hearing; and
          ``(2) notify the State educational agency of the finding of 
        noncompliance, and, in such notification, shall--
                  ``(A) cite the specific provisions in the application 
                that are not in compliance; and
                  ``(B) request additional information, only as to the 
                noncompliant provisions, needed to make the application 
                compliant.
  ``(e) Response.--If the State educational agency responds to the 
Secretary's notification described in subsection (d)(2) during the 45-
day period beginning on the date on which the agency received the 
notification, and resubmits the application with the requested 
information described in subsection (d)(2)(B), the Secretary shall 
approve or disapprove such application prior to the later of--
          ``(1) the expiration of the 45-day period beginning on the 
        date on which the application is resubmitted; or
          ``(2) the expiration of the 120-day period described in 
        subsection (b).
  ``(f) Failure To Respond.--If the State educational agency does not 
respond to the Secretary's notification described in subsection (d)(2) 
during the 45-day period beginning on the date on which the agency 
received the notification, such application shall be deemed to be 
disapproved.
  ``(g) Rule of Construction.--An application submitted by a State 
educational agency pursuant to subsection (a) shall not be approved or 
disapproved based upon the activities for which the agency may make 
funds available to eligible entities under section 3204 if the agency's 
use of funds is consistent with section 3204(b).

``SEC. 3204. LOCAL COMPETITIVE GRANT PROGRAM.

  ``(a) In General.--A State that receives funds under this part for a 
fiscal year shall provide the amount made available under section 
3202(c)(1) to eligible entities in accordance with this section.
  ``(b) Use of Funds.--
          ``(1) In general.--An eligible entity that receives an award 
        under this part shall use the funds for activities that--
                  ``(A) are evidence-based;
                  ``(B) will improve student academic achievement and 
                student engagement;
                  ``(C) are allowable under State law; and
                  ``(D) focus on one or more projects from the 
                following two categories:
                          ``(i) Supplemental student support activities 
                        such as before, after, or summer school 
                        activities, tutoring, and expanded learning 
                        time, but not including athletics or in-school 
                        learning activities.
                          ``(ii) Activities designed to support 
                        students, such as academic subject specific 
                        programs including computer science and other 
                        science, technology, engineering, and 
                        mathematics programs, arts education, civic 
                        education, and adjunct teacher, extended-
                        learning-time, and dual enrollment programs, 
                        and parent engagement, but not including 
                        activities to--
                                  ``(I) support smaller class sizes or 
                                construction; or
                                  ``(II) provide compensation or 
                                benefits to teachers, school leaders, 
                                other school officials, or local 
                                educational agency staff.
          ``(2) Participation of children enrolled in private 
        schools.--An eligible entity that receives an award under this 
        part shall ensure compliance with section 6501 (relating to 
        participation of children enrolled in private schools).
  ``(c) Application.--
          ``(1) In general.--To be eligible to receive an award under 
        this part, an eligible entity shall submit an application to 
        the State educational agency at such time, in such manner, and 
        including such information as the State educational agency may 
        reasonably require, including the contents required by 
        paragraph (2).
          ``(2) Contents.--Each application submitted under paragraph 
        (1) shall include--
                  ``(A) a description of the activities to be funded 
                and how they are consistent with subsection (b), 
                including any activities that will increase student 
                safety;
                  ``(B) an assurance that funds under this part will be 
                used to increase the level of State, local, and other 
                non-Federal funds that would, in the absence of funds 
                under this part, be made available for programs and 
                activities authorized under this part, and in no case 
                supplant State, local, or non-Federal funds;
                  ``(C) an assurance that the community will be given 
                notice of an intent to submit an application with an 
                opportunity for comment, and that the application will 
                be available for public review after submission of the 
                application; and
                  ``(D) an assurance that students who benefit from any 
                activity funded under this part shall continue to 
                maintain enrollment in a public elementary or secondary 
                school.
  ``(d) Review.--In reviewing local applications under this section, a 
State educational agency shall use a peer review process or other 
methods of assuring the quality of such applications but the review 
shall be limited to the likelihood that the project will increase 
student academic achievement and student engagement.
  ``(e) Geographic Diversity.--A State educational agency shall 
distribute funds under this part equitably among geographic areas 
within the State, including rural, suburban, and urban communities.
  ``(f) Award.--A grant shall be awarded to all eligible entities that 
submit an application that meets the requirements of this section in an 
amount that is not less than $10,000, but there shall be only one 
annual award granted to any one local educational agency, but such 
award may be for multiple projects or programs with the local 
educational agency.
  ``(g) Duration of Awards.--Grants under this part may be awarded for 
a period of not more than 5 years.
  ``(h) Eligible Entity Defined.--In this section, the term `eligible 
entity' means--
          ``(1) a local educational agency in partnership with a 
        community-based organization, institution of higher education, 
        business entity, or nongovernmental entity;
          ``(2) a consortium of local educational agencies working in 
        partnership with a community-based organization, institution of 
        higher education, business entity, or nongovernmental entity;
          ``(3) a community-based organization or institution of higher 
        education in partnership with a local educational agency and, 
        if applicable, a business entity or nongovernmental entity; or
          ``(4) a business entity in partnership with a local 
        educational agency and, if applicable, a community-based 
        organization, institution of higher education, or 
        nongovernmental entity.

``SEC. 3205. AWARDS TO NONGOVERNMENTAL ENTITIES TO IMPROVE ACADEMIC 
                    ACHIEVEMENT.

  ``(a) In General.--From the amount reserved under section 3202(c)(2), 
a State educational agency shall award grants to nongovernmental 
entities, including public or private organizations, community-based or 
faith-based organizations, institutions of higher education, and 
business entities for a program or project to increase the academic 
achievement and student engagement of public school students attending 
public elementary or secondary schools (or both) in compliance with the 
requirements in this section. Subject to the availability of funds, the 
State educational agency shall award a grant to each eligible applicant 
that meets the requirements in a sufficient size and scope to support 
the program.
  ``(b) Application.--The State educational agency shall require an 
application that includes the following information:
          ``(1) A description of the program or project the applicant 
        will use the funds to support.
          ``(2) A description of how the applicant is using or will use 
        other State, local, or private funding to support the program 
        or project.
          ``(3) A description of how the program or project will help 
        increase student academic achievement and student engagement, 
        including the evidence to support this claim.
          ``(4) A description of the student population the program or 
        project is targeting to impact, and if the program will 
        prioritize students in high-need local educational agencies.
          ``(5) A description of how the applicant will conduct 
        sufficient outreach to ensure students can participate in the 
        program or project.
          ``(6) A description of any partnerships the applicant has 
        entered into with local educational agencies or other entities 
        the applicant will work with, if applicable.
          ``(7) A description of how the applicant will work to share 
        evidence-based and other effective strategies from the program 
        or project with local educational agencies and other entities 
        working with students to increase academic achievement.
          ``(8) An assurance that students who benefit from any program 
        or project funded under this section shall continue to maintain 
        enrollment in a public elementary or secondary school.
  ``(c) Matching Contribution.--An eligible applicant receiving a grant 
under this section shall provide, either directly or through private 
contributions, non-Federal matching funds equal to not less than 50 
percent of the amount of the grant.
  ``(d) Review.--The State educational agency shall review the 
application to ensure that--
          ``(1) the applicant is an eligible applicant;
          ``(2) the application clearly describes the required elements 
        in subsection (b);
          ``(3) the entity meets the matching requirement described in 
        subsection (c); and
          ``(4) the program is allowable and complies with Federal, 
        State, and local laws.
  ``(e) Distribution of Funds.--If the application requests exceed the 
funds available, the State educational agency shall prioritize projects 
that support students in high-need local educational agencies and 
ensure geographic diversity, including serving rural, suburban, and 
urban areas.
  ``(f) Administrative Costs.--Not more than 1 percent of a grant 
awarded under this section may be used for administrative costs.

``SEC. 3206. REPORT.

  ``Each recipient of a grant under section 3204 or 3205 shall report 
to the State educational agency on--
          ``(1) the success of the program in reaching the goals of the 
        program;
          ``(2) a description of the students served by the program and 
        how the students' academic achievement improved; and
          ``(3) the results of any evaluation conducted on the success 
        of the program.''.

                          TITLE IV--IMPACT AID

SEC. 401. PURPOSE.

  Section 8001 (20 U.S.C. 7701) is amended by striking ``challenging 
State standards'' and inserting ``State academic standards''.

SEC. 402. PAYMENTS RELATING TO FEDERAL ACQUISITION OF REAL PROPERTY.

  Section 8002 (20 U.S.C. 7702) is amended--
          (1) in subsection (a)(1)(C), by amending the matter preceding 
        clause (i) to read as follows:
                  ``(C) had an assessed value according to original 
                records (including facsimiles or other reproductions of 
                those records) documenting the assessed value of such 
                property (determined as of the time or times when so 
                acquired) prepared by the local officials referred to 
                in subsection (b)(3) or, when such original records are 
                not available due to unintentional destruction (such as 
                natural disaster, fire, flooding, pest infestation, or 
                deterioration due to age), other records, including 
                Federal agency records, local historical records, or 
                other records that the Secretary determines to be 
                appropriate and reliable, aggregating 10 percent or 
                more of the assessed value of--'';
          (2) in subsection (b)(1)(B), by striking ``section 8014(a)'' 
        and inserting ``section 3(d)(1)'';
          (3) by amending subsection (f) to read as follows:
  ``(f) Special Rule.--Beginning with fiscal year 2014, a local 
educational agency shall be deemed to meet the requirements of 
subsection (a)(1)(C) if records to determine eligibility under such 
subsection were destroyed prior to fiscal year 2000 and the agency 
received funds under subsection (b) in the previous year.'';
          (4) by amending subsection (g) to read as follows:
  ``(g) Former Districts.--
          ``(1) Consolidations.--For fiscal year 2006 and each 
        succeeding fiscal year, if a local educational agency described 
        in subsection (b) is formed at any time after 1938 by the 
        consolidation of 2 or more former school districts, the local 
        educational agency may elect to have the Secretary determine 
        its eligibility for any fiscal year on the basis of 1 or more 
        of those former districts, as designated by the local 
        educational agency.
          ``(2) Eligible local educational agencies.--A local 
        educational agency referred to in subsection (a) is--
                  ``(A) any local educational agency that, for fiscal 
                year 1994 or any preceding fiscal year, applied, and 
                was determined to be eligible under, section 2(c) of 
                the Act of September 30, 1950 (Public Law 874, 81st 
                Congress) as that section was in effect for that fiscal 
                year; or
                  ``(B) a local educational agency formed by the 
                consolidation of 2 or more districts, at least 1 of 
                which was eligible for assistance under this section 
                for the fiscal year preceding the year of the 
                consolidation, if--
                          ``(i) for fiscal years 2006 through 2015 the 
                        local educational agency notified the Secretary 
                        not later than 30 days after the date of the 
                        enactment of this Act; and
                          ``(ii) for fiscal year 2016 the local 
                        educational agency includes the designation in 
                        its application under section 8005 or any 
                        timely amendment to such application.
          ``(3) Amount.--A local educational agency eligible under 
        subsection (b) shall receive a foundation payment as provided 
        for under subparagraphs (A) and (B) of subsection (h)(1), 
        except that the foundation payment shall be calculated based on 
        the most recent payment received by the local educational based 
        on its former common status.'';
          (5) in subsection (h)--
                  (A) in paragraph (2)--
                          (i) in subparagraph (C)(ii), by striking 
                        ``section 8014(a)'' and inserting ``section 
                        3(d)(1)''; and
                          (ii) in subparagraph (D), by striking 
                        ``section 8014(a)'' and inserting ``section 
                        3(d)(1)''; and
                  (B) in paragraph (4), by striking ``Impact Aid 
                Improvement Act of 2012'' and inserting ``Student 
                Success Act'';
          (6) by repealing subsections (k) and (m);
          (7) by redesignating subsection (l) as subsection (j);
          (8) by amending subsection (j) (as so redesignated) by 
        striking ``(h)(4)(B)'' and inserting ``(h)(2)''; and
          (9) by redesignating subsection (n) as subsection (k).

SEC. 403. PAYMENTS FOR ELIGIBLE FEDERALLY CONNECTED CHILDREN.

  (a) Computation of Payment.--Section 8003(a) (20 U.S.C. 7703(a)) is 
amended--
          (1) in the matter preceding subparagraph (A) of paragraph 
        (1), by inserting after ``schools of such agency'' the 
        following: ``(including those children enrolled in such agency 
        as a result of the open enrollment policy of the State in which 
        the agency is located, but not including children who are 
        enrolled in a distance education program at such agency and who 
        are not residing within the geographic boundaries of such 
        agency)''; and
          (2) in paragraph (5)(A), by striking ``1984'' and all that 
        follows through ``situated'' and inserting ``1984, or under 
        lease of off-base property under subchapter IV of chapter 169 
        of title 10, United States Code, to be children described under 
        paragraph (1)(B) if the property described is within the fenced 
        security perimeter of the military facility or attached to and 
        under any type of force protection agreement with the military 
        installation upon which such housing is situated''.
  (b) Basic Support Payments for Heavily Impacted Local Educational 
Agencies.--Section 8003(b) (20 U.S.C. 7703(b)) is amended--
          (1) by striking ``section 8014(b)'' each place it appears and 
        inserting ``section 3(d)(2)'';
          (2) in paragraph (1), by repealing subparagraph (E);
          (3) in paragraph (2)--
                  (A) in subparagraph (B)--
                          (i) by striking ``continuing'' in the 
                        heading;
                          (ii) by amending clause (i) to read as 
                        follows:
                          ``(i) In general.--A heavily impacted local 
                        educational agency is eligible to receive a 
                        basic support payment under subparagraph (A) 
                        with respect to a number of children determined 
                        under subsection (a)(1) if the agency--
                                  ``(I) is a local educational agency--
                                          ``(aa) whose boundaries are 
                                        the same as a Federal military 
                                        installation or an island 
                                        property designated by the 
                                        Secretary of the Interior to be 
                                        property that is held in trust 
                                        by the Federal Government; and
                                          ``(bb) that has no taxing 
                                        authority;
                                  ``(II) is a local educational agency 
                                that--
                                          ``(aa) has an enrollment of 
                                        children described in 
                                        subsection (a)(1) that 
                                        constitutes a percentage of the 
                                        total student enrollment of the 
                                        agency that is not less than 45 
                                        percent;
                                          ``(bb) has a per-pupil 
                                        expenditure that is less than--
                                                  ``(AA) for an agency 
                                                that has a total 
                                                student enrollment of 
                                                500 or more students, 
                                                125 percent of the 
                                                average per-pupil 
                                                expenditure of the 
                                                State in which the 
                                                agency is located; or
                                                  ``(BB) for any agency 
                                                that has a total 
                                                student enrollment less 
                                                than 500, 150 percent 
                                                of the average per-
                                                pupil expenditure of 
                                                the State in which the 
                                                agency is located or 
                                                the average per-pupil 
                                                expenditure of 3 or 
                                                more comparable local 
                                                educational agencies in 
                                                the State in which the 
                                                agency is located; and
                                          ``(cc) is an agency that has 
                                        a tax rate for general fund 
                                        purposes that is not less than 
                                        95 percent of the average tax 
                                        rate for general fund purposes 
                                        of comparable local educational 
                                        agencies in the State;
                                  ``(III) is a local educational agency 
                                that--
                                          ``(aa) has an enrollment of 
                                        children described in 
                                        subsection (a)(1) that 
                                        constitutes a percentage of the 
                                        total student enrollment of the 
                                        agency that is not less than 20 
                                        percent;
                                          ``(bb) for the 3 fiscal years 
                                        preceding the fiscal year for 
                                        which the determination is 
                                        made, the average enrollment of 
                                        children who are not described 
                                        in subsection (a)(1) and who 
                                        are eligible for a free or 
                                        reduced price lunch under the 
                                        Richard B. Russell National 
                                        School Lunch Act constitutes a 
                                        percentage of the total student 
                                        enrollment of the agency that 
                                        is not less than 65 percent; 
                                        and
                                          ``(cc) has a tax rate for 
                                        general fund purposes which is 
                                        not less than 125 percent of 
                                        the average tax rate for 
                                        general fund purposes for 
                                        comparable local educational 
                                        agencies in the State;
                                  ``(IV) is a local educational agency 
                                that has a total student enrollment of 
                                not less than 25,000 students, of 
                                which--
                                          ``(aa) not less than 50 
                                        percent are children described 
                                        in subsection (a)(1); and
                                          ``(bb) not less than 5,500 of 
                                        such children are children 
                                        described in subparagraphs (A) 
                                        and (B) of subsection (a)(1); 
                                        or
                                  ``(V) is a local educational agency 
                                that--
                                          ``(aa) has an enrollment of 
                                        children described in 
                                        subsection (a)(1) including, 
                                        for purposes of determining 
                                        eligibility, those children 
                                        described in subparagraphs (F) 
                                        and (G) of such subsection, 
                                        that is not less than 35 
                                        percent of the total student 
                                        enrollment of the agency; and
                                          ``(bb) was eligible to 
                                        receive assistance under 
                                        subparagraph (A) for fiscal 
                                        year 2001.''; and
                          (iii) in clause (ii)--
                                  (I) by striking ``A heavily'' and 
                                inserting the following:
                                  ``(I) In general.--Subject to 
                                subclause (II), a heavily''; and
                                  (II) by adding at the end the 
                                following:
                                  ``(II) Loss of eligibility due to 
                                falling below 95 percent of the average 
                                tax rate for general fund purposes.--In 
                                a case of a heavily impacted local 
                                educational agency that is eligible to 
                                receive a basic support payment under 
                                subparagraph (A), but that has had, for 
                                2 consecutive fiscal years, a tax rate 
                                for general fund purposes that falls 
                                below 95 percent of the average tax 
                                rate for general fund purposes of 
                                comparable local educational agencies 
                                in the State, such agency shall be 
                                determined to be ineligible under 
                                clause (i) and ineligible to receive a 
                                basic support payment under 
                                subparagraph (A) for each fiscal year 
                                succeeding such 2 consecutive fiscal 
                                years for which the agency has such a 
                                tax rate for general fund purposes, and 
                                until the fiscal year for which the 
                                agency resumes such eligibility in 
                                accordance with clause (iii).'';
                  (B) by striking subparagraph (C);
                  (C) by redesignating subparagraphs (D) through (H) as 
                subparagraphs (C) through (G), respectively;
                  (D) in subparagraph (C) (as so redesignated)--
                          (i) in the heading, by striking ``regular'';
                          (ii) by striking ``Except as provided in 
                        subparagraph (E)'' and inserting ``Except as 
                        provided in subparagraph (D)'';
                          (iii) by amending subclause (I) of clause 
                        (ii) to read as follows: `` (I)(aa) For a local 
                        educational agency with respect to which 35 
                        percent or more of the total student enrollment 
                        of the schools of the agency are children 
                        described in subparagraph (D) or (E) (or a 
                        combination thereof) of subsection (a)(1), and 
                        that has an enrollment of children described in 
                        subparagraph (A), (B), or (C) of such 
                        subsection equal to at least 10 percent of the 
                        agency's total enrollment, the Secretary shall 
                        calculate the weighted student units of those 
                        children described in subparagraph (D) or (E) 
                        of such subsection by multiplying the number of 
                        such children by a factor of 0.55.
                          ``(bb) Notwithstanding subitem (aa), a local 
                        educational agency that received a payment 
                        under this paragraph for fiscal year 2013 shall 
                        not be required to have an enrollment of 
                        children described in subparagraph (A), (B), or 
                        (C) of subsection (a)(1) equal to at least 10 
                        percent of the agency's total enrollment.''; 
                        and
                          (iv) by amending subclause (III) of clause 
                        (ii) by striking ``(B)(i)(II)(aa)'' and 
                        inserting ``subparagraph (B)(i)(I)'';
                  (E) in subparagraph (D)(i)(II) (as so redesignated), 
                by striking ``6,000'' and inserting ``5,500'';
                  (F) in subparagraph (E) (as so redesignated)--
                          (i) by striking ``Secretary'' and all that 
                        follows through ``shall use'' and inserting 
                        ``Secretary shall use'';
                          (ii) by striking ``; and'' and inserting a 
                        period; and
                          (iii) by striking clause (ii);
                  (G) in subparagraph (F) (as so redesignated), by 
                striking ``subparagraph (C)(i)(II)(bb)'' and inserting 
                ``subparagraph (B)(i)(II)(bb)(BB)''; and
                  (H) in subparagraph (G) (as so redesignated)--
                          (i) in clause (i)--
                                  (I) by striking ``subparagraph (B), 
                                (C), (D), or (E)'' and inserting 
                                ``subparagraph (B), (C), or (D)'';
                                  (II) by striking ``by reason of'' and 
                                inserting ``due to'';
                                  (III) by inserting after ``clause 
                                (iii)'' the following ``, or as the 
                                direct result of base realignment and 
                                closure or modularization as determined 
                                by the Secretary of Defense and force 
                                structure change or force relocation''; 
                                and
                                  (IV) by inserting before the period, 
                                the following: ``or during such time as 
                                activities associated with base closure 
                                and realignment, modularization, force 
                                structure change, or force relocation 
                                are ongoing''; and
                          (ii) in clause (ii), by striking ``(D) or 
                        (E)'' each place it appears and inserting ``(C) 
                        or (D)'';
          (4) in paragraph (3)--
                  (A) in subparagraph (B)--
                          (i) by amending clause (iii) to read as 
                        follows:
                  ``(iii) In the case of a local educational agency 
                providing a free public education to students enrolled 
                in kindergarten through grade 12, but which enrolls 
                students described in subparagraphs (A), (B), and (D) 
                of subsection (a)(1) only in grades 9 through 12, and 
                which received a final payment in fiscal year 2009 
                calculated under this paragraph (as this paragraph was 
                in effect on the day before the date of the enactment 
                of the Student Success Act) for students in grades 9 
                through 12, the Secretary shall, in calculating the 
                agency's payment, consider only that portion of such 
                agency's total enrollment of students in grades 9 
                through 12 when calculating the percentage under clause 
                (i)(I) and only that portion of the total current 
                expenditures attributed to the operation of grades 9 
                through 12 in such agency when calculating the 
                percentage under clause (i)(II).''; and
                          (ii) by adding at the end the following:
                  ``(v) In the case of a local educational agency that 
                is providing a program of distance education to 
                children not residing within the geographic boundaries 
                of the agency, the Secretary shall--
                          ``(I) for purposes of the calculation under 
                        clause (i)(I), disregard such children from the 
                        total number of children in average daily 
                        attendance at the schools served by such 
                        agency; and
                          ``(II) for purposes of the calculation under 
                        clause (i)(II), disregard any funds received 
                        for such children from the total current 
                        expenditures for such agency.'';
                  (B) in subparagraph (C), by striking ``subparagraph 
                (D) or (E) of paragraph (2), as the case may be'' and 
                inserting ``paragraph (2)(D)'';
                  (C) by amending subparagraph (D) to read as follows:
                  ``(D) Ratable distribution.--For any fiscal year 
                described in subparagraph (A) for which the sums 
                available exceed the amount required to pay each local 
                educational agency 100 percent of its threshold 
                payment, the Secretary shall distribute the excess sums 
                to each eligible local educational agency that has not 
                received its full amount computed under paragraph (1) 
                or (2) (as the case may be) by multiplying--
                          ``(i) a percentage, the denominator of which 
                        is the difference between the full amount 
                        computed under paragraph (1) or (2) (as the 
                        case may be) for all local educational agencies 
                        and the amount of the threshold payment (as 
                        calculated under subparagraphs (B) and (C)) of 
                        all local educational agencies, and the 
                        numerator of which is the aggregate of the 
                        excess sums, by
                          ``(ii) the difference between the full amount 
                        computed under paragraph (1) or (2) (as the 
                        case may be) for the agency and the amount of 
                        the threshold payment as calculated under 
                        subparagraphs (B) and (C) of the agency.''; and
                  (D) by inserting at the end the following new 
                subparagraphs:
                  ``(E) Insufficient payments.--For each fiscal year 
                described in subparagraph (A) for which the sums 
                appropriated under section 3(d)(2) are insufficient to 
                pay each local educational agency all of the local 
                educational agency's threshold payment described in 
                subparagraph (D), the Secretary shall ratably reduce 
                the payment to each local educational agency under this 
                paragraph.
                  ``(F) Increases.--If the sums appropriated under 
                section 3(d)(2) are sufficient to increase the 
                threshold payment above the 100 percent threshold 
                payment described in subparagraph (D), then the 
                Secretary shall increase payments on the same basis as 
                such payments were reduced, except no local educational 
                agency may receive a payment amount greater than 100 
                percent of the maximum payment calculated under this 
                subsection.''; and
          (5) in paragraph (4)--
                  (A) in subparagraph (A), by striking ``through (D)'' 
                and inserting ``and (C)''; and
                  (B) in subparagraph (B), by striking ``subparagraph 
                (D) or (E)'' and inserting ``subparagraph (C) or (D)''.
  (c) Prior Year Data.--Paragraph (2) of section 8003(c) (20 U.S.C. 
7703(c)) is amended to read as follows:
          ``(2) Exception.--Calculation of payments for a local 
        educational agency shall be based on data from the fiscal year 
        for which the agency is making an application for payment if 
        such agency--
                  ``(A) is newly established by a State, for the first 
                year of operation of such agency only;
                  ``(B) was eligible to receive a payment under this 
                section for the previous fiscal year and has had an 
                overall increase in enrollment (as determined by the 
                Secretary in consultation with the Secretary of 
                Defense, the Secretary of the Interior, or the heads of 
                other Federal agencies)--
                          ``(i) of not less than 10 percent, or 100 
                        students, of children described in--
                                  ``(I) subparagraph (A), (B), (C), or 
                                (D) of subsection (a)(1); or
                                  ``(II) subparagraphs (F) and (G) of 
                                subsection (a)(1), but only to the 
                                extent such children are civilian 
                                dependents of employees of the 
                                Department of Defense or the Department 
                                of the Interior; and
                          ``(ii) that is the direct result of closure 
                        or realignment of military installations under 
                        the base closure process or the relocation of 
                        members of the Armed Forces and civilian 
                        employees of the Department of Defense as part 
                        of the force structure changes or movements of 
                        units or personnel between military 
                        installations or because of actions initiated 
                        by the Secretary of the Interior or the head of 
                        another Federal agency; or
                  ``(C) was eligible to receive a payment under this 
                section for the previous fiscal year and has had an 
                increase in enrollment (as determined by the 
                Secretary)--
                          ``(i) of not less than 10 percent of children 
                        described in subsection (a)(1) or not less than 
                        100 of such children; and
                          ``(ii) that is the direct result of the 
                        closure of a local educational agency that 
                        received a payment under subsection (b)(1) or 
                        (b)(2) in the previous fiscal year.''.
  (d) Children With Disabilities.--Section 8003(d)(1) (20 U.S.C. 
7703(d)) is amended by striking ``section 8014(c)'' and inserting 
``section 3(d)(3)''.
  (e) Hold-Harmless.--Section 8003(e) (20 U.S.C. 7703(e)) is amended--
          (1) by amending paragraph (1) to read as follows:
          ``(1) In general.--Subject to paragraph (2), the total amount 
        the Secretary shall pay a local educational agency under 
        subsection (b)--
                  ``(A) for fiscal year 2016, shall not be less than 90 
                percent of the total amount that the local educational 
                agency received under subsection (b)(1), (b)(2), or 
                (b)(2)(B)(ii) for fiscal year 2013;
                  ``(B) for fiscal year 2017, shall not be less than 85 
                percent of the total amount that the local educational 
                agency received under subsection (b)(1), (b)(2), or 
                (b)(2)(B)(ii) for fiscal year 2013; and
                  ``(C) for fiscal year 2018, shall not be less than 80 
                percent of the total amount that the local educational 
                agency received under subsection (b)(1), (b)(2), or 
                (b)(2)(B)(ii) for fiscal year 2013.''; and
          (2) by amending paragraph (2) to read as follows:
          ``(2) Maximum amount.--The total amount provided to a local 
        educational agency under subparagraph (A), (B), or (C) of 
        paragraph (1) for a fiscal year shall not exceed the maximum 
        basic support payment amount for such agency determined under 
        paragraph (1) or (2) of subsection (b), as the case may be, for 
        such fiscal year.''.
  (f) Maintenance of Effort.--Section 8003 (20 U.S.C. 7703) is amended 
by striking subsection (g).

SEC. 404. POLICIES AND PROCEDURES RELATING TO CHILDREN RESIDING ON 
                    INDIAN LANDS.

  Section 8004(e)(9) is amended by striking ``Bureau of Indian 
Affairs'' both places such term appears and inserting ``Bureau of 
Indian Education''.

SEC. 405. APPLICATION FOR PAYMENTS UNDER SECTIONS 8002 AND 8003.

  Section 8005(b) (20 U.S.C. 7705(b)) is amended in the matter 
preceding paragraph (1) by striking ``and shall contain such 
information,''.

SEC. 406. CONSTRUCTION.

  Section 8007 (20 U.S.C. 7707) is amended--
          (1) in subsection (a)--
                  (A) in paragraph (1), by striking ``section 8014(e)'' 
                and inserting ``section 3(d)(4)'';
                  (B) in paragraph (2), by adding at the end the 
                following:
                  ``(C) The agency is eligible under section 4003(b)(2) 
                or is receiving basic support payments under 
                circumstances described in section 
                4003(b)(2)(B)(ii).''; and
                  (C) in paragraph (3), by striking ``section 8014(e)'' 
                each place it appears and inserting ``section 
                3(d)(4)''; and
          (2) in subsection (b)--
                  (A) in paragraph (1), by striking ``section 8014(e)'' 
                and inserting ``section 3(d)(4)'';
                  (B) in paragraph (3)--
                          (i) in subparagraph (C)(i)(I), by adding at 
                        the end the following:
                                  ``(cc) At least 10 percent of the 
                                property in the agency is exempt from 
                                State and local taxation under Federal 
                                law.''; and
                          (ii) by adding at the end the following:
                  ``(F) Limitations on eligibility requirements.--The 
                Secretary shall not limit eligibility--
                          ``(i) under subparagraph (C)(i)(I)(aa), to 
                        those local educational agencies in which the 
                        number of children determined under section 
                        4003(a)(1)(C) for each such agency for the 
                        preceding school year constituted more than 40 
                        percent of the total student enrollment in the 
                        schools of each such agency during the 
                        preceding school year; and
                          ``(ii) under subparagraph (C)(i)(I)(cc), to 
                        those local educational agencies in which more 
                        than 10 percent of the property in each such 
                        agency is exempt from State and local taxation 
                        under Federal law.''; and
                  (C) in paragraph (6)--
                          (i) in the matter preceding subparagraph (A), 
                        by striking ``in such manner, and accompanied 
                        by such information'' and inserting ``and in 
                        such manner''; and
                          (ii) by striking subparagraph (F).

SEC. 407. FACILITIES.

  Section 8008 (20 U.S.C. 7708) is amended in subsection (a), by 
striking ``section 8014(f)'' and inserting ``section 3(d)(5)''.

SEC. 408. STATE CONSIDERATION OF PAYMENTS PROVIDING STATE AID.

  Section 8009(c)(1)(B) (20 U.S.C. 7709(c)(1)(B)) is amended by 
striking ``and contain the information''.

SEC. 409. FEDERAL ADMINISTRATION.

  Section 8010(d)(2) (20 U.S.C. 7710(d)(2)) is amended, by striking 
``section 8014'' and inserting ``section 3(d)''.

SEC. 410. ADMINISTRATIVE HEARINGS AND JUDICIAL REVIEW.

  Section 8011(a) (20 U.S.C. 7711(a)) is amended by striking ``or under 
the Act'' and all that follows through ``1994)''.

SEC. 411. DEFINITIONS.

  Section 8013 (20 U.S.C. 7713) is amended--
          (1) in paragraph (1), by striking ``and Marine Corps'' and 
        inserting ``Marine Corps, and Coast Guard'';
          (2) in paragraph (4), by striking ``and title VI'';
          (3) in paragraph (5)(A)(iii)--
                  (A) in subclause (II), by striking ``Stewart B. 
                McKinney Homeless Assistance Act'' and inserting 
                ``McKinney-Vento Homeless Assistance Act (42 U.S.C. 
                11411)''; and
                  (B) in subclause (III), by inserting before the 
                semicolon ``(25 U.S.C. 4101 et seq.)''; and
          (4) in paragraph (8)(A), by striking ``and verified by'' and 
        inserting ``, and verified by,''.

SEC. 412. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS.

  Section 8014 (20 U.S.C. 7801) is repealed.

SEC. 413. CONFORMING AMENDMENTS.

  (a) Impact Aid Improvement Act of 2012.--Section 563(c) of National 
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2013 (Public Law 112-239; 126 
Stat. 1748; 20 U.S.C. 6301 note) (also known as the ``Impact Aid 
Improvement Act of 2012''), as amended by section 563 of division A of 
Public Law 113-291, is amended--
          (1) by striking paragraphs (1) and (4); and
          (2) by redesignating paragraphs (2) and (3), as paragraphs 
        (1) and (2), respectively.
  (b) Repeals.--
          (1) Title iv.--Title IV (20 U.S.C. 7101 et seq.), as amended 
        by section 601(b)(2) of this Act, is repealed.
          (2) PL 113-76.--Section 309 of division H of the Consolidated 
        Appropriations Act, 2014 (Public Law 113-76; 20 U.S.C. 7702 
        note) is repealed.
  (c) Transfer and Redesignation.--Title VIII (20 U.S.C. 7701 et seq.), 
as amended by this title, is redesignated as title IV (20 U.S.C. 7101 
et seq.), and transferred and inserted after title III (as amended by 
this Act).
  (d) Title VIII References.--The Act (20 U.S.C. 6301 et seq.), as 
amended by this Act, is amended--
          (1) by redesignating sections 8001 through 8005 as sections 
        4001 through 4005, respectively;
          (2) by redesignating sections 8007 through 8013 as sections 
        4007 through 4013, respectively;
          (3) by striking ``section 8002'' each place it appears and 
        inserting ``section 4002'';
          (4) by striking ``section 8002(b)'' each place it appears and 
        inserting ``section 4002(b)'';
          (5) by striking ``section 8003'' each place it appears and 
        inserting ``section 4003'', respectively;
          (6) by striking ``section 8003(a)'' each place it appears and 
        inserting ``section 4003(a)'';
          (7) by striking ``section 8003(a)(1)'' each place it appears 
        and inserting ``section 4003(a)(1)'';
          (8) by striking ``section 8003(a)(1)(C)'' each place it 
        appears and inserting ``section 4003(a)(1)(C)'';
          (9) by striking ``section 8002(a)(2)'' each place it appears 
        and inserting ``section 4002(a)(2)'';
          (10) by striking ``section 8003(b)'' each place it appears 
        and inserting ``section 4003(b)'';
          (11) by striking ``section 8003(b)(1)'' each place it appears 
        and inserting ``section 4003(b)(1)'';
          (12) in section 4002(b)(1)(C) (as so redesignated), by 
        striking ``section 8003(b)(1)(C)'' and inserting ``section 
        4003(b)(1)(C)'';
          (13) in section 4002(k)(1) (as so redesignated), by striking 
        ``section 8013(5)(C)(iii)'' and inserting ``section 
        4013(5)(C)(iii)'';
          (14) in section 4005 (as so redesignated)--
                  (A) in the section heading, by striking ``8002 and 
                8003'' and inserting ``4002 and 4003'';
                  (B) by striking ``or 8003'' each place it appears and 
                inserting ``or 4003'';
                  (C) in subsection (b)(2), by striking ``section 
                8004'' and inserting ``section 4004''; and
                  (D) in subsection (d)(2), by striking ``section 
                8003(e)'' and inserting ``section 4003(e)'';
          (15) in the second subclause (II) of section 4007(a)(3)(A)(i) 
        (as so redesignated), by striking ``section 8008(a)'' and 
        inserting ``section 4008(a)'';
          (16) in section 4007(a)(4) (as so redesignated), by striking 
        ``section 8013(3)'' and inserting ``section 4013(3)'';
          (17) in section 4009 (as so redesignated)--
                  (A) in subsection (b)(1)--
                          (i) by striking ``or 8003(b)'' and inserting 
                        ``or 4003(b)'';
                          (ii) by striking ``section 8003(a)(2)(B)'' 
                        and inserting ``section 4003(a)(2)(B)''; and
                          (iii) by striking ``section 8003(b)(2)'' each 
                        place it appears and inserting ``section 
                        4003(b)(2)''; and
                  (B) by striking ``section 8011(a)'' each place it 
                appears and inserting ``section 4011(a)''; and
          (18) in section 4010(c)(2)(D) (as so redesignated) by 
        striking ``section 8009(b)'' and inserting ``section 4009(b)''.

  TITLE V--THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT'S TRUST RESPONSIBILITY TO AMERICAN 
          INDIAN, ALASKA NATIVE, AND NATIVE HAWAIIAN EDUCATION

SEC. 501. THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT'S TRUST RESPONSIBILITY TO AMERICAN 
                    INDIAN, ALASKA NATIVE, AND NATIVE HAWAIIAN 
                    EDUCATION.

  Title V of the Act (20 U.S.C. 7201 et seq.) is amended to read as 
follows:

 ``TITLE V--THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT'S TRUST RESPONSIBILITY TO AMERICAN 
          INDIAN, ALASKA NATIVE, AND NATIVE HAWAIIAN EDUCATION

                       ``PART A--INDIAN EDUCATION

``SEC. 5101. STATEMENT OF POLICY.

  ``It is the policy of the United States to fulfill the Federal 
Government's unique and continuing trust relationship with, and 
responsibility to, the Indian people for the education of Indian 
children. The Federal Government will continue to work with local 
educational agencies, Indian tribes and organizations, postsecondary 
institutions, and other entities toward the goal of ensuring that 
programs that serve Indian children are of the highest quality and 
provide for not only the basic elementary and secondary educational 
needs, but also the unique educational and culturally related academic 
needs of these children.

``SEC. 5102. PURPOSE.

  ``It is the purpose of this part to support the efforts of local 
educational agencies, Indian tribes and organizations, postsecondary 
institutions, and other entities--
          ``(1) to meet the unique educational and culturally related 
        academic needs of American Indian and Alaska Native students, 
        so that such students can meet State student academic 
        achievement standards;
          ``(2) to ensure that Indian and Alaskan Native students gain 
        knowledge and understanding of Native communities, languages, 
        tribal histories, traditions, and cultures; and
          ``(3) to ensure that school leaders, teachers, and other 
        staff who serve Indian and Alaska Native students have the 
        ability to provide culturally appropriate and effective 
        instruction to such students.

       ``Subpart 1--Formula Grants to Local Educational Agencies

``SEC. 5111. PURPOSE.

  ``It is the purpose of this subpart to support the efforts of local 
educational agencies, Indian tribes and organizations, and other 
entities to improve the academic achievement of American Indian and 
Alaska Native students by providing for their unique cultural, 
language, and educational needs and ensuring that they are prepared to 
meet State academic standards.

``SEC. 5112. GRANTS TO LOCAL EDUCATIONAL AGENCIES AND TRIBES.

  ``(a) In General.--In accordance with this section and section 5113, 
the Secretary may make grants from allocations made under section 5113, 
to--
          ``(1) local educational agencies;
          ``(2) Indian tribes;
          ``(3) Indian organizations; and
          ``(4) Alaska Native Organizations.
  ``(b) Local Educational Agencies.--
          ``(1) Enrollment requirements.--A local educational agency 
        shall be eligible for a grant under this subpart for any fiscal 
        year if the number of Indian children eligible under section 
        5117 who were enrolled in the schools of the agency, and to 
        whom the agency provided free public education, during the 
        preceding fiscal year--
                  ``(A) was at least 10; or
                  ``(B) constituted not less than 25 percent of the 
                total number of individuals enrolled in the schools of 
                such agency.
          ``(2) Exclusion.--The requirement of paragraph (1) shall not 
        apply in Alaska, California, or Oklahoma, or with respect to 
        any local educational agency located on, or in proximity to, an 
        Indian reservation.
  ``(c) Indian Tribes, Indian Organizations, Alaska Native 
Organizations, and Consortia.--
          ``(1) In general.--If a local educational agency that is 
        otherwise eligible for a grant under this subpart does not 
        establish a committee under section 5114(c)(5) for such grant, 
        an Indian tribe, Indian organization, Alaska Native 
        Organization, or consortium of such entities that represents 
        not less than one-third of the eligible Indian or Alaska Native 
        children who are served by such local educational agency may 
        apply for such grant.
          ``(2) Special rule.--
                  ``(A) In general.--The Secretary shall treat each 
                Indian tribe, Indian organization, Alaska Native 
                Organization, or consortium of such entities applying 
                for a grant pursuant to paragraph (1) as if such 
                applicant were a local educational agency for purposes 
                of this subpart.
                  ``(B) Exceptions.--Notwithstanding subparagraph (A), 
                such Indian tribe, Indian organization, Alaska Native 
                Organization, or consortium of such entities shall not 
                be subject to the requirements of section 5114(c)(5) or 
                5119.
          ``(3) Eligibility.--If more than 1 applicant qualifies to 
        apply for a grant under paragraph (1), the entity that 
        represents the most eligible Indian and Alaska Native children 
        who are served by the local educational agency shall be 
        eligible to receive the grant or the applicants may apply in 
        consortium and jointly operate a program.
  ``(d) Indian and Alaska Native Community-Based Organizations.--
          ``(1) In general.--If no local educational agency pursuant to 
        subsection (b), and no Indian tribe, tribal organization, 
        Alaska Native Organization, or consortium pursuant to 
        subsection (c), applies for a grant under this subpart, Indian 
        and Alaska Native community-based organizations serving the 
        community of the local educational agency may apply for the 
        grant.
          ``(2) Applicability of special rule.--The Secretary shall 
        apply the special rule in subsection (c)(2) to a community-
        based organization applying or receiving a grant under 
        paragraph (1) in the same manner as such rule applies to an 
        Indian tribe, Indian organization, Alaska Native Organization, 
        or consortium.
          ``(3) Definition of indian and alaska native community-based 
        organizations.--In this subsection, the term `Indian and Alaska 
        Native community-based organizations' means any organizations 
        that--
                  ``(A) are composed primarily of the family members of 
                Indian or Alaska Native students, Indian or Alaska 
                Native community members, tribal government education 
                officials, and tribal members from a specific 
                community;
                  ``(B) assist in the social, cultural, and educational 
                development of Indians or Alaska Natives in such 
                community;
                  ``(C) meet the unique cultural, language, and 
                academic needs of Indian or Alaska Native students; and
                  ``(D) demonstrate organizational and administrative 
                capacity to effectively manage the grant.

``SEC. 5113. AMOUNT OF GRANTS.

  ``(a) Amount of Grant Awards.--
          ``(1) In general.--Except as provided in subsection (b) and 
        paragraph (2), the Secretary shall allocate to each local 
        educational agency that has an approved application under this 
        subpart an amount equal to the product of--
                  ``(A) the number of Indian children who are eligible 
                under section 5117 and served by such agency; and
                  ``(B) the greater of--
                          ``(i) the average per pupil expenditure of 
                        the State in which such agency is located; or
                          ``(ii) 80 percent of the average per pupil 
                        expenditure of all the States.
          ``(2) Reduction.--The Secretary shall reduce the amount of 
        each allocation otherwise determined under this section in 
        accordance with subsection (e).
  ``(b) Minimum Grant.--
          ``(1) In general.--Notwithstanding subsection (e), an entity 
        that is eligible for a grant under section 5112, and a school 
        that is operated or supported by the Bureau of Indian Education 
        that is eligible for a grant under subsection (d), that submits 
        an application that is approved by the Secretary, shall, 
        subject to appropriations, receive a grant under this subpart 
        in an amount that is not less than $3,000.
          ``(2) Consortia.--Local educational agencies may form a 
        consortium for the purpose of obtaining grants under this 
        subpart.
          ``(3) Increase.--The Secretary may increase the minimum grant 
        under paragraph (1) to not more than $4,000 for all grantees if 
        the Secretary determines such increase is necessary to ensure 
        the quality of the programs provided.
  ``(c) Definition.--For the purpose of this section, the term `average 
per pupil expenditure', used with respect to a State, means an amount 
equal to--
          ``(1) the sum of the aggregate current expenditures of all 
        the local educational agencies in the State, plus any direct 
        current expenditures by the State for the operation of such 
        agencies, without regard to the sources of funds from which 
        such local or State expenditures were made, during the second 
        fiscal year preceding the fiscal year for which the computation 
        is made; divided by
          ``(2) the aggregate number of children who were included in 
        average daily attendance for whom such agencies provided free 
        public education during such preceding fiscal year.
  ``(d) Schools Operated or Supported by the Bureau of Indian 
Education.--
          ``(1) In general.--Subject to subsection (e), in addition to 
        the grants awarded under subsection (a), the Secretary shall 
        allocate to the Secretary of the Interior an amount equal to 
        the product of--
                  ``(A) the total number of Indian children enrolled in 
                schools that are operated by--
                          ``(i) the Bureau of Indian Education; or
                          ``(ii) an Indian tribe, or an organization 
                        controlled or sanctioned by an Indian tribal 
                        government, for the children of that tribe 
                        under a contract with, or grant from, the 
                        Department of the Interior under the Indian 
                        Self-Determination Act or the Tribally 
                        Controlled Schools Act of 1988; and
                  ``(B) the greater of--
                          ``(i) the average per pupil expenditure of 
                        the State in which the school is located; or
                          ``(ii) 80 percent of the average per pupil 
                        expenditure of all the States.
          ``(2) Special rule.--Any school described in paragraph (1)(A) 
        that wishes to receive an allocation under this subpart shall 
        submit an application in accordance with section 5114, and 
        shall otherwise be treated as a local educational agency for 
        the purpose of this subpart, except that such school shall not 
        be subject to section 5114(c)(5) or section 5119.
  ``(e) Ratable Reductions.--If the sums appropriated for any fiscal 
year to carry out this subpart are insufficient to pay in full the 
amounts determined for local educational agencies under subsection 
(a)(1) and for the Secretary of the Interior under subsection (d), each 
of those amounts shall be ratably reduced.

``SEC. 5114. APPLICATIONS.

  ``(a) Application Required.--Each local educational agency that 
desires to receive a grant under this subpart shall submit an 
application to the Secretary at such time, in such manner, and 
containing such information as the Secretary may reasonably require.
  ``(b) Comprehensive Program Required.--Each application submitted 
under subsection (a) shall include a description of a comprehensive 
program for meeting the needs of Indian and Alaska Native children 
served by the local educational agency, including the language and 
cultural needs of the children, that--
          ``(1) describes how the comprehensive program will offer 
        programs and activities to meet the culturally related academic 
        needs of American Indian and Alaska Native students;
          ``(2)(A) is consistent with the State, tribal, and local 
        plans submitted under other provisions of this Act; and
          ``(B) includes academic content and student academic 
        achievement goals for such children, and benchmarks for 
        attaining such goals, that are based on State academic content 
        and student academic achievement standards adopted under title 
        I for all children;
          ``(3) explains how the local educational agency will use the 
        funds made available under this subpart to supplement other 
        Federal, State, and local programs that serve such students;
          ``(4) demonstrates how funds made available under this 
        subpart will be used for activities described in section 5115;
          ``(5) describes the professional development opportunities 
        that will be provided, as needed, to ensure that--
                  ``(A) teachers and other school professionals who are 
                new to the Indian or Alaska Native community are 
                prepared to work with Indian and Alaska Native 
                children;
                  ``(B) all teachers who will be involved in programs 
                assisted under this subpart have been properly trained 
                to carry out such programs; and
                  ``(C) those family members of Indian and Alaska 
                Native children and representatives of tribes who are 
                on the committee described in (c)(5) will participate 
                in the planning of professional development materials;
          ``(6) describes how the local educational agency--
                  ``(A) will periodically assess the progress of all 
                Indian children enrolled in the schools of the local 
                educational agency, including Indian children who do 
                not participate in programs assisted under this 
                subpart, in meeting the goals described in paragraph 
                (2);
                  ``(B) will provide the results of each assessment 
                referred to in subparagraph (A) to--
                          ``(i) the committee described in subsection 
                        (c)(5);
                          ``(ii) the community served by the local 
                        educational agency; and
                          ``(iii) the tribes whose children are served 
                        by the local educational agency; and
                  ``(C) is responding to findings of any previous 
                assessments that are similar to the assessments 
                described in subparagraph (A); and
          ``(7) explicitly delineates--
                  ``(A) a formal, collaborative process that the local 
                educational agency used to directly involve tribes, 
                Indian organizations, or Alaska Native Organizations in 
                the development of the comprehensive programs and the 
                results of such process; and
                  ``(B) how the local educational agency plans to 
                ensure that tribes, Indian organizations, or Alaska 
                Native Organizations will play an active, meaningful, 
                and ongoing role in the functioning of the 
                comprehensive programs.
  ``(c) Assurances.--Each application submitted under subsection (a) 
shall include assurances that--
          ``(1) the local educational agency will use funds received 
        under this subpart only to supplement the funds that, in the 
        absence of the Federal funds made available under this subpart, 
        such agency would make available for services described in this 
        subsection, and not to supplant such funds;
          ``(2) the local educational agency will use funds received 
        under this subpart only for activities described and authorized 
        under this subpart;
          ``(3) the local educational agency will prepare and submit to 
        the Secretary such reports, in such form and containing such 
        information, as the Secretary may require to--
                  ``(A) carry out the functions of the Secretary under 
                this subpart;
                  ``(B) determine the extent to which activities 
                carried out with funds provided to the local 
                educational agency under this subpart are effective in 
                improving the educational achievement of Indian and 
                Alaska Native students served by such agency; and
                  ``(C) determine the extent to which such activities 
                address the unique cultural, language, and educational 
                needs of Indian students;
          ``(4) the program for which assistance is sought--
                  ``(A) is based on a comprehensive local assessment 
                and prioritization of the unique educational and 
                culturally related academic needs of the American 
                Indian and Alaska Native students for whom the local 
                educational agency is providing an education;
                  ``(B) will use the best available talents and 
                resources, including individuals from the Indian or 
                Alaska Native community; and
                  ``(C) was developed by such agency in open 
                consultation with the families of Indian or Alaska 
                Native children, Indian or Alaska Native teachers, 
                Indian or Alaska Native students from secondary 
                schools, and representatives of tribes, Indian 
                organizations, or Alaska Native Organizations in the 
                community including through public hearings held by 
                such agency to provide to the individuals described in 
                this subparagraph a full opportunity to understand the 
                program and to offer recommendations regarding the 
                program;
          ``(5) the local educational agency developed the program with 
        the participation and written approval of a committee--
                  ``(A) that is composed of, and selected by--
                          ``(i) family members of Indian and Alaska 
                        Native children that are attending the local 
                        educational agency's schools;
                          ``(ii) teachers in the schools; and
                          ``(iii) Indian and Alaska Native students 
                        attending secondary schools of the agency;
                  ``(B) a majority of whose members are family members 
                of Indian and Alaska Native children that are attending 
                the local educational agency's schools;
                  ``(C) that has set forth such policies and 
                procedures, including policies and procedures relating 
                to the hiring of personnel, as will ensure that the 
                program for which assistance is sought will be operated 
                and evaluated in consultation with, and with the 
                involvement of, parents of the children, and 
                representatives of the area, to be served;
                  ``(D) with respect to an application describing a 
                schoolwide program in accordance with section 5115(c), 
                that has--
                          ``(i) reviewed in a timely fashion the 
                        program;
                          ``(ii) determined that the program will not 
                        diminish the availability of culturally related 
                        activities for American Indian and Alaska 
                        Native students; and
                          ``(iii) will directly enhance the educational 
                        experience of American Indian and Alaska Native 
                        students; and
                  ``(E) that has adopted reasonable bylaws for the 
                conduct of the activities of the committee and abides 
                by such bylaws; and
          ``(6) the local educational agency conducted adequate 
        outreach to family members to meet the requirements under 
        subsection (c)(5).

``SEC. 5115. AUTHORIZED SERVICES AND ACTIVITIES.

  ``(a) General Requirements.--Each local educational agency that 
receives a grant under this subpart shall use the grant funds, in a 
manner consistent with the purpose specified in section 5111, for 
services and activities that--
          ``(1) are designed to carry out the comprehensive program of 
        the local educational agency for Indian students, and described 
        in the application of the local educational agency submitted to 
        the Secretary under section 5114(a) solely for the services and 
        activities described in such application;
          ``(2) are designed with special regard for the language and 
        cultural needs of the Indian students; and
          ``(3) supplement and enrich the regular school program of 
        such agency.
  ``(b) Particular Activities.--The services and activities referred to 
in subsection (a) may include--
          ``(1) activities that support Native American language 
        immersion programs and Native American language restoration 
        programs, which may be taught by traditional leaders;
          ``(2) culturally related activities that support the program 
        described in the application submitted by the local educational 
        agency;
          ``(3) early childhood and family programs that emphasize 
        school readiness;
          ``(4) enrichment programs that focus on problem solving and 
        cognitive skills development and directly support the 
        attainment of challenging State academic content and student 
        academic achievement standards;
          ``(5) integrated educational services in combination with 
        other programs including programs that enhance student 
        achievement by promoting increased involvement of parents and 
        families in school activities;
          ``(6) career preparation activities to enable Indian students 
        to participate in programs such as the programs supported by 
        the Carl D. Perkins Career and Technical Education Improvement 
        Act of 2006, including programs for tech-prep education, 
        mentoring, and apprenticeship;
          ``(7) activities to educate individuals so as to prevent 
        violence, suicide, and substance abuse;
          ``(8) the acquisition of equipment, but only if the 
        acquisition of the equipment is essential to achieve the 
        purpose described in section 5111;
          ``(9) activities that promote the incorporation of culturally 
        responsive teaching and learning strategies into the 
        educational program of the local educational agency;
          ``(10) activities that incorporate culturally and 
        linguistically relevant curriculum content into classroom 
        instruction that is responsive to the unique learning styles of 
        Indian and Alaska Native children and ensures that children are 
        better able to meet State standards;
          ``(11) family literacy services;
          ``(12) activities that recognize and support the unique 
        cultural and educational needs of Indian children, and 
        incorporate appropriately qualified tribal elders and seniors;
          ``(13) dropout prevention strategies for Indian and Alaska 
        Native students; and
          ``(14) strategies to meet the educational needs of at-risk 
        Indian students in correctional facilities, including such 
        strategies that support Indian and Alaska Native students who 
        are transitioning from such facilities to schools served by 
        local educational agencies.
  ``(c) Schoolwide Programs.--Notwithstanding any other provision of 
law, a local educational agency may use funds made available to such 
agency under this subpart to support a schoolwide program under section 
1114 if--
          ``(1) the committee established pursuant to section 
        5114(c)(5) approves the use of the funds for the schoolwide 
        program;
          ``(2) the schoolwide program is consistent with the purpose 
        described in section 5111; and
          ``(3) the local educational agency identifies in its 
        application how the use of such funds in a schoolwide program 
        will produce benefits to the American Indian and Alaska Native 
        students that would not be achieved if the funds were not used 
        in a schoolwide program.
  ``(d) Limitation on Administrative Costs.--Not more than 5 percent of 
the funds provided to a grantee under this subpart for any fiscal year 
may be used for administrative purposes.
  ``(e) Limitation on the Use of Funds.--Funds provided to a grantee 
under this subpart may not be used for long-distance travel expenses 
for training activities available locally or regionally.

``SEC. 5116. INTEGRATION OF SERVICES AUTHORIZED.

  ``(a) Plan.--An entity receiving funds under this subpart may submit 
a plan to the Secretary for the integration of education and related 
services provided to Indian students.
  ``(b) Consolidation of Programs.--Upon the receipt of an acceptable 
plan under subsection (a), the Secretary, in cooperation with each 
Federal agency providing grants for the provision of education and 
related services to the entity, shall authorize the entity to 
consolidate, in accordance with such plan, the federally funded 
education and related services programs of the entity and the Federal 
programs, or portions of the programs, serving Indian students in a 
manner that integrates the program services involved into a single, 
coordinated, comprehensive program and reduces administrative costs by 
consolidating administrative functions.
  ``(c) Programs Affected.--The funds that may be consolidated in a 
demonstration project under any such plan referred to in subsection (a) 
shall include funds for any Federal program exclusively serving Indian 
children, or the funds reserved under any Federal program to 
exclusively serve Indian children, under which the entity is eligible 
for receipt of funds under a statutory or administrative formula for 
the purposes of providing education and related services that would be 
used to serve Indian students.
  ``(d) Plan Requirements.--For a plan to be acceptable pursuant to 
subsection (b), the plan shall--
          ``(1) identify the programs or funding sources to be 
        consolidated;
          ``(2) be consistent with the objectives of this section 
        concerning authorizing the services to be integrated in a 
        demonstration project;
          ``(3) describe a comprehensive strategy that identifies the 
        full range of potential educational opportunities and related 
        services to be provided to assist Indian students to achieve 
        the objectives set forth in this subpart;
          ``(4) describe the way in which services are to be integrated 
        and delivered and the results expected from the plan;
          ``(5) identify the projected expenditures under the plan in a 
        single budget;
          ``(6) identify the State, tribal, or local agency or agencies 
        to be involved in the delivery of the services integrated under 
        the plan;
          ``(7) identify any statutory provisions, regulations, 
        policies, or procedures that the entity believes need to be 
        waived in order to implement the plan;
          ``(8) set forth measures for academic content and student 
        academic achievement goals designed to be met within a specific 
        period of time; and
          ``(9) be approved by a committee formed in accordance with 
        section 5114(c)(5), if such a committee exists.
  ``(e) Plan Review.--Upon receipt of the plan from an eligible entity, 
the Secretary shall consult with the Secretary of each Federal 
department providing funds to be used to implement the plan, and with 
the entity submitting the plan. The parties so consulting shall 
identify any waivers of statutory requirements or of Federal 
departmental regulations, policies, or procedures necessary to enable 
the entity to implement the plan. Notwithstanding any other provision 
of law, the Secretary of the affected department shall have the 
authority to waive any regulation, policy, or procedure promulgated by 
that department that has been so identified by the entity or 
department, unless the Secretary of the affected department determines 
that such a waiver is inconsistent with the objectives of this subpart 
or those provisions of the statute from which the program involved 
derives authority that are specifically applicable to Indian students.
  ``(f) Plan Approval.--Within 90 days after the receipt of an entity's 
plan by the Secretary, the Secretary shall inform the entity, in 
writing, of the Secretary's approval or disapproval of the plan. If the 
plan is disapproved, the entity shall be informed, in writing, of the 
reasons for the disapproval and shall be given an opportunity to amend 
the plan or to petition the Secretary to reconsider such disapproval.
  ``(g) Responsibilities of Department of Education.--Not later than 
180 days after the date of the enactment of the Student Success Act, 
the Secretary of Education, the Secretary of the Interior, the 
Secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services, and the head 
of any other Federal department or agency identified by the Secretary 
of Education, shall enter into an interdepartmental memorandum of 
agreement providing for the implementation and coordination of the 
demonstration projects authorized under this section. The lead agency 
head for a demonstration project under this section shall be--
          ``(1) the Secretary of the Interior, in the case of an entity 
        meeting the definition of a contract or grant school under 
        title XI of the Education Amendments of 1978; or
          ``(2) the Secretary of Education, in the case of any other 
        entity.
  ``(h) Responsibilities of Lead Agency.--The responsibilities of the 
lead agency shall include--
          ``(1) the use of a single report format related to the plan 
        for the individual project, which shall be used by an eligible 
        entity to report on the activities undertaken under the 
        project;
          ``(2) the use of a single report format related to the 
        projected expenditures for the individual project which shall 
        be used by an eligible entity to report on all project 
        expenditures;
          ``(3) the development of a single system of Federal oversight 
        for the project, which shall be implemented by the lead agency; 
        and
          ``(4) the provision of technical assistance to an eligible 
        entity appropriate to the project, except that an eligible 
        entity shall have the authority to accept or reject the plan 
        for providing such technical assistance and the technical 
        assistance provider.
  ``(i) Report Requirements.--A single report format shall be developed 
by the Secretary, consistent with the requirements of this section. 
Such report format shall require that reports described in subsection 
(h), together with records maintained on the consolidated program at 
the local level, shall contain such information as will allow a 
determination that the eligible entity has complied with the 
requirements incorporated in its approved plan, including making a 
demonstration of student academic achievement, and will provide 
assurances to each Secretary that the eligible entity has complied with 
all directly applicable statutory requirements and with those directly 
applicable regulatory requirements that have not been waived.
  ``(j) No Reduction in Amounts.--In no case shall the amount of 
Federal funds available to an eligible entity involved in any 
demonstration project be reduced as a result of the enactment of this 
section.
  ``(k) Interagency Fund Transfers Authorized.--The Secretary is 
authorized to take such action as may be necessary to provide for an 
interagency transfer of funds otherwise available to an eligible entity 
in order to further the objectives of this section.
  ``(l) Administration of Funds.--
          ``(1) In general.--Program funds for the consolidated 
        programs shall be administered in such a manner as to allow for 
        a determination that funds from a specific program are spent on 
        allowable activities authorized under such program, except that 
        the eligible entity shall determine the proportion of the funds 
        granted that shall be allocated to such program.
          ``(2) Separate records not required.--Nothing in this section 
        shall be construed as requiring the eligible entity to maintain 
        separate records tracing any services or activities conducted 
        under the approved plan to the individual programs under which 
        funds were authorized for the services or activities, nor shall 
        the eligible entity be required to allocate expenditures among 
        such individual programs.
  ``(m) Overage.--The eligible entity may commingle all administrative 
funds from the consolidated programs and shall be entitled to the full 
amount of such funds (under each program's or agency's regulations). 
The overage (defined as the difference between the amount of the 
commingled funds and the actual administrative cost of the programs) 
shall be considered to be properly spent for Federal audit purposes, if 
the overage is used for the purposes provided for under this section.
  ``(n) Fiscal Accountability.--Nothing in this part shall be construed 
so as to interfere with the ability of the Secretary or the lead agency 
to fulfill the responsibilities for the safeguarding of Federal funds 
pursuant to chapter 75 of title 31, United States Code.
  ``(o) Report on Statutory Obstacles to Program Integration.--
          ``(1) Preliminary report.--Not later than 2 years after the 
        date of the enactment of the Student Success Act, the Secretary 
        of Education shall submit a preliminary report to the Committee 
        on Education and the Workforce and the Committee on Natural 
        Resources of the House of Representatives and the Committee on 
        Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions and the Committee on 
        Indian Affairs of the Senate on the status of the 
        implementation of the demonstration projects authorized under 
        this section.
          ``(2) Final report.--Not later than 5 years after the date of 
        the enactment of the Student Success Act, the Secretary of 
        Education shall submit a report to the Committee on Education 
        and the Workforce and the Committee on Natural Resources of the 
        House of Representatives and the Committee on Health, 
        Education, Labor, and Pensions and the Committee on Indian 
        Affairs of the Senate on the results of the implementation of 
        the demonstration projects authorized under this section. Such 
        report shall identify statutory barriers to the ability of 
        participants to integrate more effectively their education and 
        related services to Indian students in a manner consistent with 
        the objectives of this section.
  ``(p) Definitions.--For the purposes of this section, the term 
`Secretary' means--
          ``(1) the Secretary of the Interior, in the case of an entity 
        meeting the definition of a contract or grant school under 
        title XI of the Education Amendments of 1978; or
          ``(2) the Secretary of Education, in the case of any other 
        entity.

``SEC. 5117. STUDENT ELIGIBILITY FORMS.

  ``(a) In General.--The Secretary shall require that, as part of an 
application for a grant under this subpart, each applicant shall 
maintain a file, with respect to each Indian child for whom the local 
educational agency provides a free public education, that contains a 
form that sets forth information establishing the status of the child 
as an Indian child eligible for assistance under this subpart, and that 
otherwise meets the requirements of subsection (b).
  ``(b) Forms.--The form described in subsection (a) shall include--
          ``(1) either--
                  ``(A)(i) the name of the tribe or band of Indians (as 
                defined in section 5151) with respect to which the 
                child claims membership;
                  ``(ii) the enrollment or membership number 
                establishing the membership of the child (if readily 
                available); and
                  ``(iii) the name and address of the organization that 
                maintains updated and accurate membership data for such 
                tribe or band of Indians; or
                  ``(B) the name, the enrollment or membership number 
                (if readily available), and the name and address of the 
                organization responsible for maintaining updated and 
                accurate membership data, of any parent or grandparent 
                of the child from whom the child claims eligibility 
                under this subpart, if the child is not a member of the 
                tribe or band of Indians (as so defined);
          ``(2) a statement of whether the tribe or band of Indians (as 
        so defined), with respect to which the child, or parent or 
        grandparent of the child, claims membership, is federally 
        recognized;
          ``(3) the name and address of the parent or legal guardian of 
        the child;
          ``(4) a signature of the parent or legal guardian of the 
        child that verifies the accuracy of the information supplied;
          ``(5) any other information that the Secretary considers 
        necessary to provide an accurate program profile; and
          ``(6) all individual data collected will be protected by the 
        local educational agencies and only aggregated data will be 
        reported to the Secretary.
  ``(c) Statutory Construction.--Nothing in this section shall be 
construed to affect a definition contained in section 5151.
  ``(d) Documentation and Types of Proof.--
          ``(1) Types of proof.--For purposes of determining whether a 
        child is eligible to be counted for the purpose of computing 
        the amount of a grant award under section 5113, the membership 
        of the child, or any parent or grandparent of the child, in a 
        tribe or band of Indians (as so defined) may be established by 
        proof other than an enrollment number, notwithstanding the 
        availability of an enrollment number for a member of such tribe 
        or band. Nothing in subsection (b) shall be construed to 
        require the furnishing of an enrollment number.
          ``(2) No new or duplicative determinations.--Once a child is 
        determined to be an Indian eligible to be counted for such 
        grant award, the local education agency shall maintain a record 
        of such determination and shall not require a new or duplicate 
        determination to be made for such child for a subsequent 
        application for a grant under this subpart.
          ``(3) Previously filed forms.--An Indian student eligibility 
        form that was on file as required by this section on the day 
        before the date of the enactment of the Student Success Act and 
        that met the requirements of this section, as this section was 
        in effect on the day before the date of the enactment of such 
        Act, shall remain valid for such Indian student.
  ``(e) Monitoring and Evaluation Review.--
          ``(1) In general.--
                  ``(A) Review.--For each fiscal year, in order to 
                provide such information as is necessary to carry out 
                the responsibility of the Secretary to provide 
                technical assistance under this subpart, the Secretary 
                shall conduct a monitoring and evaluation review of a 
                sampling of the recipients of grants under this 
                subpart. The sampling conducted under this subparagraph 
                shall take into account the size of and the geographic 
                location of each local educational agency.
                  ``(B) Exception.--A local educational agency may not 
                be held liable to the United States or be subject to 
                any penalty, by reason of the findings of an audit that 
                relates to the date of completion, or the date of 
                submission, of any forms used to establish, before 
                April 28, 1988, the eligibility of a child for an 
                entitlement under the Indian Elementary and Secondary 
                School Assistance Act.
          ``(2) False information.--Any local educational agency that 
        provides false information in an application for a grant under 
        this subpart shall--
                  ``(A) be ineligible to apply for any other grant 
                under this subpart; and
                  ``(B) be liable to the United States for any funds 
                from the grant that have not been expended.
          ``(3) Excluded children.--A student who provides false 
        information for the form required under subsection (a) shall 
        not be counted for the purpose of computing the amount of a 
        grant under section 5113.
  ``(f) Tribal Grant and Contract Schools.--Notwithstanding any other 
provision of this section, in calculating the amount of a grant under 
this subpart to a tribal school that receives a grant or contract from 
the Bureau of Indian Education, the Secretary shall use only one of the 
following, as selected by the school:
          ``(1) A count of the number of students in the schools 
        certified by the Bureau.
          ``(2) A count of the number of students for whom the school 
        has eligibility forms that comply with this section.
  ``(g) Timing of Child Counts.--For purposes of determining the number 
of children to be counted in calculating the amount of a local 
educational agency's grant under this subpart (other than in the case 
described in subsection (f)(1)), the local educational agency shall--
          ``(1) establish a date on, or a period not longer than 31 
        consecutive days during, which the agency counts those 
        children, if that date or period occurs before the deadline 
        established by the Secretary for submitting an application 
        under section 5114; and
          ``(2) determine that each such child was enrolled, and 
        receiving a free public education, in a school of the agency on 
        that date or during that period, as the case may be.

``SEC. 5118. PAYMENTS.

  ``(a) In General.--Subject to subsection (b), the Secretary shall pay 
to each local educational agency that submits an application that is 
approved by the Secretary under this subpart the amount determined 
under section 5113. The Secretary shall notify the local educational 
agency of the amount of the payment not later than June 1 of the year 
for which the Secretary makes the payment.
  ``(b) Payments Taken Into Account by the State.--The Secretary may 
not make a grant under this subpart to a local educational agency for a 
fiscal year if, for such fiscal year, the State in which the local 
educational agency is located takes into consideration payments made 
under this chapter in determining the eligibility of the local 
educational agency for State aid, or the amount of the State aid, with 
respect to the free public education of children during such fiscal 
year or the preceding fiscal year.
  ``(c) Reallocations.--The Secretary may reallocate, in a manner that 
the Secretary determines will best carry out the purpose of this 
subpart, any amounts that--
          ``(1) based on estimates made by local educational agencies 
        or other information, the Secretary determines will not be 
        needed by such agencies to carry out approved programs under 
        this subpart; or
          ``(2) otherwise become available for reallocation under this 
        subpart.

``SEC. 5119. STATE EDUCATIONAL AGENCY REVIEW.

  ``Before submitting an application to the Secretary under section 
5114, a local educational agency shall submit the application to the 
State educational agency, which may comment on such application. If the 
State educational agency comments on the application, the agency shall 
comment on all applications submitted by local educational agencies in 
the State and shall provide those comments to the respective local 
educational agencies, with an opportunity to respond.

   ``Subpart 2--Special Programs and Projects To Improve Educational 
              Opportunities for Indian Children and Youth

``SEC. 5121. SPECIAL PROGRAMS AND PROJECTS TO IMPROVE EDUCATIONAL 
                    OPPORTUNITIES FOR INDIAN CHILDREN AND YOUTH.

  ``(a) Purpose.--
          ``(1) In general.--It is the purpose of this section to 
        support projects to develop, test, and demonstrate the 
        effectiveness of services and programs to improve educational 
        opportunities and achievement of Indian children and youth.
          ``(2) Coordination.--The Secretary shall take the necessary 
        actions to achieve the coordination of activities assisted 
        under this subpart with--
                  ``(A) other programs funded under this Act; and
                  ``(B) other Federal programs operated for the benefit 
                of American Indian and Alaska Native children and 
                youth.
  ``(b) Eligible Entities.--In this section, the term `eligible entity' 
means a State educational agency, local educational agency, Indian 
tribe, Indian organization, federally supported elementary school or 
secondary school for Indian students, Indian institution (including an 
Indian institution of higher education), Alaska Native Organization, or 
a consortium of such entities.
  ``(c) Grants Authorized.--
          ``(1) In general.--The Secretary shall award grants to 
        eligible entities to enable such entities to carry out 
        activities that meet the purpose of this section, including--
                  ``(A) innovative programs related to the educational 
                needs of educationally disadvantaged children and 
                youth;
                  ``(B) educational services that are not available to 
                such children and youth in sufficient quantity or 
                quality, including remedial instruction, to raise the 
                achievement of Indian and Alaska Native children in one 
                or more of the subjects of English, mathematics, 
                science, foreign languages, art, history, and 
                geography;
                  ``(C) bilingual and bicultural programs and projects;
                  ``(D) special health and nutrition services, and 
                other related activities, that address the special 
                health, social, emotional, and psychological problems 
                of Indian children;
                  ``(E) special compensatory and other programs and 
                projects designed to assist and encourage Indian 
                children to enter, remain in, or reenter school, and to 
                increase the rate of high school graduation for Indian 
                children;
                  ``(F) comprehensive guidance, counseling, and testing 
                services;
                  ``(G) high quality early childhood education programs 
                that are effective in preparing young children to make 
                sufficient academic growth by the end of grade 3, 
                including kindergarten and pre-kindergarten programs, 
                family-based preschool programs that emphasize school 
                readiness, screening and referral, and the provision of 
                services to Indian children and youth with 
                disabilities;
                  ``(H) partnership projects between local educational 
                agencies and institutions of higher education that 
                allow secondary school students to enroll in courses at 
                the postsecondary level to aid such students in the 
                transition from secondary to postsecondary education;
                  ``(I) partnership projects between schools and local 
                businesses for career preparation programs designed to 
                provide Indian youth with the knowledge and skills such 
                youth need to make an effective transition from school 
                to a high-skill, high-wage career;
                  ``(J) programs designed to encourage and assist 
                Indian students to work toward, and gain entrance into, 
                an institution of higher education;
                  ``(K) family literacy services;
                  ``(L) activities that recognize and support the 
                unique cultural and educational needs of Indian 
                children, and incorporate appropriately qualified 
                tribal elders and seniors;
                  ``(M) high quality professional development of 
                teaching professionals and paraprofessionals; or
                  ``(N) other services that meet the purpose described 
                in this section.
  ``(d) Grant Requirements and Applications.--
          ``(1) Grant requirements.--
                  ``(A) In general.--The Secretary may make multiyear 
                grants under subsection (c) for the planning, 
                development, pilot operation, or demonstration of any 
                activity described in subsection (c) for a period not 
                to exceed 5 years.
                  ``(B) Priority.--In making multiyear grants described 
                in this paragraph, the Secretary shall give priority to 
                entities submitting applications that present a plan 
                for combining two or more of the activities described 
                in subsection (c) over a period of more than 1 year.
                  ``(C) Progress.--The Secretary shall make a grant 
                payment for a grant described in this paragraph to an 
                eligible entity after the initial year of the multiyear 
                grant only if the Secretary determines that the 
                eligible entity has made substantial progress in 
                carrying out the activities assisted under the grant in 
                accordance with the application submitted under 
                paragraph (3) and any subsequent modifications to such 
                application.
          ``(2) Dissemination grants.--
                  ``(A) In general.--In addition to awarding the 
                multiyear grants described in paragraph (1), the 
                Secretary may award grants under subsection (c) to 
                eligible entities for the dissemination of exemplary 
                materials or programs assisted under this section.
                  ``(B) Determination.--The Secretary may award a 
                dissemination grant described in this paragraph if, 
                prior to awarding the grant, the Secretary determines 
                that the material or program to be disseminated--
                          ``(i) has been adequately reviewed;
                          ``(ii) has demonstrated educational merit; 
                        and
                          ``(iii) can be replicated.
          ``(3) Application.--
                  ``(A) In general.--Any eligible entity that desires 
                to receive a grant under this section shall submit an 
                application to the Secretary at such time and in such 
                manner as the Secretary may reasonably require.
                  ``(B) Contents.--Each application submitted to the 
                Secretary under subparagraph (A), other than an 
                application for a dissemination grant under paragraph 
                (2), shall contain--
                          ``(i) a description of how parents of Indian 
                        children and representatives of Indian tribes 
                        have been, and will be, involved in developing 
                        and implementing the activities for which 
                        assistance is sought;
                          ``(ii) assurances that the applicant will 
                        participate, at the request of the Secretary, 
                        in any national evaluation of activities 
                        assisted under this section;
                          ``(iii) information demonstrating that the 
                        proposed program for the activities is a 
                        scientifically based research program, where 
                        applicable, which may include a program that 
                        has been modified to be culturally appropriate 
                        for students who will be served;
                          ``(iv) a description of how the applicant 
                        will incorporate the proposed activities into 
                        the ongoing school program involved once the 
                        grant period is over; and
                          ``(v) such other assurances and information 
                        as the Secretary may reasonably require.
  ``(e) Administrative Costs.--Not more than 5 percent of the funds 
provided to a grantee under this subpart for any fiscal year may be 
used for administrative purposes.

``SEC. 5122. PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT FOR TEACHERS AND EDUCATION 
                    PROFESSIONALS.

  ``(a) Purposes.--The purposes of this section are--
          ``(1) to increase the number of qualified Indian and Alaska 
        Native teachers and administrators serving Indian and Alaska 
        Native students;
          ``(2) to provide training to qualified Indian and Alaska 
        Native individuals to become educators and education support 
        service professionals; and
          ``(3) to improve the skills of qualified Indian individuals 
        who serve in the capacities described in paragraph (2).
  ``(b) Eligible Entities.--For the purpose of this section, the term 
`eligible entity' means--
          ``(1) an institution of higher education, including an Indian 
        institution of higher education;
          ``(2) a State educational agency or local educational agency, 
        in consortium with an institution of higher education;
          ``(3) an Indian tribe or organization, in consortium with an 
        institution of higher education; and
          ``(4) a Bureau-funded school (as defined in section 1146 of 
        the Education Amendments of 1978).
  ``(c) Program Authorized.--The Secretary is authorized to award 
grants to eligible entities having applications approved under this 
section to enable those entities to carry out the activities described 
in subsection (d).
  ``(d) Authorized Activities.--
          ``(1) In general.--Grant funds under this section shall be 
        used for activities to provide support and training for Indian 
        individuals in a manner consistent with the purposes of this 
        section. Such activities may include continuing programs, 
        symposia, workshops, conferences, and direct financial support, 
        and may include programs designed to train tribal elders and 
        seniors.
          ``(2) Special rules.--
                  ``(A) Type of training.--For education personnel, the 
                training received pursuant to a grant under this 
                section may be inservice or preservice training.
                  ``(B) Program.--For individuals who are being trained 
                to enter any field other than teaching, the training 
                received pursuant to a grant under this section shall 
                be in a program that results in a graduate degree.
  ``(e) Application.--Each eligible entity desiring a grant under this 
section shall submit an application to the Secretary at such time, in 
such manner, and accompanied by such information, as the Secretary may 
reasonably require.
  ``(f) Special Rule.--In awarding grants under this section, the 
Secretary--
          ``(1) shall consider the prior performance of the eligible 
        entity; and
          ``(2) may not limit eligibility to receive a grant under this 
        section on the basis of--
                  ``(A) the number of previous grants the Secretary has 
                awarded such entity; or
                  ``(B) the length of any period during which such 
                entity received such grants.
  ``(g) Grant Period.--Each grant under this section shall be awarded 
for a period of not more than 5 years.
  ``(h) Service Obligation.--
          ``(1) In general.--The Secretary shall require, by 
        regulation, that an individual who receives training pursuant 
        to a grant made under this section--
                  ``(A) perform work--
                          ``(i) related to the training received under 
                        this section; and
                          ``(ii) that benefits Indian people; or
                  ``(B) repay all or a prorated part of the assistance 
                received.
          ``(2) Reporting.--The Secretary shall establish, by 
        regulation, a reporting procedure under which a grant recipient 
        under this section shall, not later than 12 months after the 
        date of completion of the training, and periodically 
        thereafter, provide information concerning compliance with the 
        work requirement under paragraph (1).

``SEC. 5123. TRIBAL EDUCATION AGENCIES COOPERATIVE AGREEMENTS.

  ``(a) Purpose.--Tribes may enter into written cooperative agreements 
with the State educational agency and the local educational agencies 
operating a school or schools within Indian lands. For purposes of this 
section, the term `Indian land' has the meaning given that term in 
section 8013.
  ``(b) Cooperative Agreement.--If requested by the Indian tribe, the 
State educational agency or the local educational agency may enter into 
a cooperative agreement with the Indian tribe. Such cooperative 
agreement--
          ``(1) may authorize the tribe or such tribe's respective 
        tribal education agency to plan, conduct, consolidate, and 
        administer programs, services, functions, and activities, or 
        portions thereof, administered by the State educational agency 
        or the local educational agency;
          ``(2) may authorize the tribe or such tribe's respective 
        tribal education agency to reallocate funds for such programs, 
        services, functions, and activities, or portions thereof as 
        necessary; and
          ``(3) shall--
                  ``(A) only confer the tribe or such tribe's 
                respective tribal education agency with 
                responsibilities to conduct activities described in 
                paragraph (1) such that the burden assumed by the tribe 
                or the tribal education agency for conducting such is 
                commensurate with the benefit that doing so conveys to 
                all parties of the agreement; and
                  ``(B) be based solely on terms of the written 
                agreement decided upon by the Indian tribe and the 
                State educational agency or local education agency.
  ``(c) Disagreement.--Agreements shall only be valid if the Indian 
tribe and State educational agency or local educational agency agree 
fully in writing to all of the terms of the written cooperative 
agreement.
  ``(d) Compliance With Applicable Law.--Nothing in this section shall 
be construed to relieve any party to a cooperative agreement from 
complying with all applicable Federal, State, local laws. State and 
local educational agencies are still the ultimate responsible, liable 
parties for complying with all laws and funding requirements for any 
functions that are conveyed to tribes and tribal education agencies 
through the cooperative agreements.
  ``(e) Definition.--For the purposes of this subpart, the term `Indian 
Tribe' means any tribe or band that is officially recognized by the 
Secretary of the Interior.

                    ``Subpart 3--National Activities

``SEC. 5131. NATIONAL RESEARCH ACTIVITIES.

  ``(a) Authorized Activities.--The Secretary may use funds made 
available to carry out this subpart for each fiscal year to--
          ``(1) conduct research related to effective approaches for 
        improving the academic achievement and development of Indian 
        and Alaska Native children and adults;
          ``(2) collect and analyze data on the educational status and 
        needs of Indian and Alaska Native students; and
          ``(3) carry out other activities that are consistent with the 
        purpose of this part.
  ``(b) Eligibility.--The Secretary may carry out any of the activities 
described in subsection (a) directly or through grants to, or contracts 
or cooperative agreements with, Indian tribes, Indian organizations, 
State educational agencies, local educational agencies, institutions of 
higher education, including Indian institutions of higher education, 
and other public and private agencies and institutions.
  ``(c) Coordination.--Research activities supported under this 
section--
          ``(1) shall be coordinated with appropriate offices within 
        the Department; and
          ``(2) may include collaborative research activities that are 
        jointly funded and carried out by the Office of Indian 
        Education Programs, the Office of Educational Research and 
        Improvement, the Bureau of Indian Education, and the Institute 
        of Education Sciences.

``SEC. 5132. IMPROVEMENT OF ACADEMIC SUCCESS FOR STUDENTS THROUGH 
                    NATIVE AMERICAN LANGUAGE.

  ``(a) Purpose.--It is the purpose of this section to improve 
educational opportunities and academic achievement of Indian and Alaska 
Native students through Native American language programs and to foster 
the acquisition of Native American language.
  ``(b) Definition of Eligible Entity.--In this section, the term 
`eligible entity' means a State educational agency, local educational 
agency, Indian tribe, Indian organization, federally supported 
elementary school or secondary school for Indian students, Indian 
institution (including an Indian institution of higher education), or a 
consortium of such entities.
  ``(c) Grants Authorized.--The Secretary shall award grants to 
eligible entities to enable such entities to carry out the following 
activities:
          ``(1) Native American language programs that--
                  ``(A) provide instruction through the use of a Native 
                American language for not less than 10 children for an 
                average of not less than 500 hours per year per 
                student;
                  ``(B) provide for the involvement of parents, 
                caregivers, and families of students enrolled in the 
                program;
                  ``(C) utilize, and may include the development of, 
                instructional courses and materials for learning Native 
                American languages and for instruction through the use 
                of Native American languages;
                  ``(D) provide support for professional development 
                activities; and
                  ``(E) include a goal of all students achieving--
                          ``(i) fluency in a Native American language; 
                        and
                          ``(ii) academic proficiency in mathematics, 
                        English, reading or language arts, and science.
          ``(2) Native American language restoration programs that--
                  ``(A) provide instruction in not less than 1 Native 
                American language;
                  ``(B) provide support for professional development 
                activities for teachers of Native American languages;
                  ``(C) develop instructional materials for the 
                programs; and
                  ``(D) include the goal of increasing proficiency and 
                fluency in not less than 1 Native American language.
  ``(d) Application.--
          ``(1) In general.--An eligible entity that desires to receive 
        a grant under this section shall submit an application to the 
        Secretary at such time, in such manner, and accompanied by such 
        information as the Secretary may require.
          ``(2) Certification.--An eligible entity that submits an 
        application for a grant to carry out the activity specified in 
        subsection (c)(1), shall include in such application a 
        certification that assures that such entity has experience and 
        a demonstrated record of effectiveness in operating and 
        administering a Native American language program or any other 
        educational program in which instruction is conducted in a 
        Native American language.
  ``(e) Grant Duration.--The Secretary shall make grants under this 
section only on a multi-year basis. Each such grant shall be for a 
period not to exceed 5 years.
  ``(f) Definition.--In this section, the term `average' means the 
aggregate number of hours of instruction through the use of a Native 
American language to all students enrolled in a Native American 
language program during a school year divided by the total number of 
students enrolled in the program.
  ``(g) Administrative Costs.--
          ``(1) In general.--Except as provided in paragraph (2), not 
        more than 5 percent of the funds provided to a grantee under 
        this section for any fiscal year may be used for administrative 
        purposes.
          ``(2) Exception.--An elementary school or secondary school 
        for Indian students that receives funds from a recipient of a 
        grant under subsection (c) for any fiscal year may use not more 
        than 10 percent of the funds for administrative purposes.

``SEC. 5133. GRANTS TO TRIBES FOR EDUCATION ADMINISTRATIVE PLANNING AND 
                    DEVELOPMENT.

  ``(a) In General.--The Secretary may make grants to Indian tribes, 
and tribal organizations approved by Indian tribes, to plan and develop 
a centralized tribal administrative entity to--
          ``(1) coordinate all education programs operated by the tribe 
        or within the territorial jurisdiction of the tribe;
          ``(2) develop education codes for schools within the 
        territorial jurisdiction of the tribe;
          ``(3) provide support services and technical assistance to 
        schools serving children of the tribe; and
          ``(4) perform child-find screening services for the 
        preschool-aged children of the tribe to--
                  ``(A) ensure placement in appropriate educational 
                facilities; and
                  ``(B) coordinate the provision of any needed special 
                services for conditions such as disabilities and 
                English language skill deficiencies.
  ``(b) Period of Grant.--Each grant awarded under this section may be 
awarded for a period of not more than 3 years. Such grant may be 
renewed upon the termination of the initial period of the grant if the 
grant recipient demonstrates to the satisfaction of the Secretary that 
renewing the grant for an additional 3-year period is necessary to 
carry out the objectives of the grant described in subsection 
(c)(2)(A).
  ``(c) Application for Grant.--
          ``(1) In general.--Each Indian tribe and tribal organization 
        desiring a grant under this section shall submit an application 
        to the Secretary at such time, in such manner, containing such 
        information, and consistent with such criteria, as the 
        Secretary may prescribe in regulations.
          ``(2) Contents.--Each application described in paragraph (1) 
        shall contain--
                  ``(A) a statement describing the activities to be 
                conducted, and the objectives to be achieved, under the 
                grant; and
                  ``(B) a description of the method to be used for 
                evaluating the effectiveness of the activities for 
                which assistance is sought and for determining whether 
                such objectives are achieved.
          ``(3) Approval.--The Secretary may approve an application 
        submitted by a tribe or tribal organization pursuant to this 
        section only if the Secretary is satisfied that such 
        application, including any documentation submitted with the 
        application--
                  ``(A) demonstrates that the applicant has consulted 
                with other education entities, if any, within the 
                territorial jurisdiction of the applicant who will be 
                affected by the activities to be conducted under the 
                grant;
                  ``(B) provides for consultation with such other 
                education entities in the operation and evaluation of 
                the activities conducted under the grant; and
                  ``(C) demonstrates that there will be adequate 
                resources provided under this section or from other 
                sources to complete the activities for which assistance 
                is sought, except that the availability of such other 
                resources shall not be a basis for disapproval of such 
                application.
  ``(d) Restriction.--A tribe may not receive funds under this section 
if such tribe receives funds under section 1144 of the Education 
Amendments of 1978.

                  ``Subpart 4--Federal Administration

``SEC. 5141. NATIONAL ADVISORY COUNCIL ON INDIAN EDUCATION.

  ``(a) Membership.--There is established a National Advisory Council 
on Indian Education (hereafter in this section referred to as the 
`Council'), which shall--
          ``(1) consist of 15 Indian members, who shall be appointed by 
        the President from lists of nominees furnished, from time to 
        time, by Indian tribes and organizations; and
          ``(2) represent different geographic areas of the United 
        States.
  ``(b) Duties.--The Council shall--
          ``(1) advise the Secretary concerning the funding and 
        administration (including the development of regulations and 
        administrative policies and practices) of any program, 
        including any program established under this part--
                  ``(A) with respect to which the Secretary has 
                jurisdiction; and
                  ``(B)(i) that includes Indian children or adults as 
                participants; or
                  ``(ii) that may benefit Indian children or adults;
          ``(2) make recommendations to the Secretary for filling the 
        position of Director of Indian Education whenever a vacancy 
        occurs; and
          ``(3) submit to Congress, not later than June 30 of each 
        year, a report on the activities of the Council, including--
                  ``(A) any recommendations that the Council considers 
                appropriate for the improvement of Federal education 
                programs that include Indian children or adults as 
                participants, or that may benefit Indian children or 
                adults; and
                  ``(B) recommendations concerning the funding of any 
                program described in subparagraph (A).

``SEC. 5142. PEER REVIEW.

  ``The Secretary may use a peer review process to review applications 
submitted to the Secretary under subpart 2 or subpart 3.

``SEC. 5143. PREFERENCE FOR INDIAN APPLICANTS.

  ``In making grants and entering into contracts or cooperative 
agreements under subpart 2 or subpart 3, the Secretary shall give a 
preference to Indian tribes, organizations, and institutions of higher 
education under any program with respect to which Indian tribes, 
organizations, and institutions are eligible to apply for grants, 
contracts, or cooperative agreements.

``SEC. 5144. MINIMUM GRANT CRITERIA.

  ``The Secretary may not approve an application for a grant, contract, 
or cooperative agreement under subpart 2 or subpart 3 unless the 
application is for a grant, contract, or cooperative agreement that 
is--
          ``(1) of sufficient size, scope, and quality to achieve the 
        purpose or objectives of such grant, contract, or cooperative 
        agreement; and
          ``(2) based on relevant research findings.

       ``Subpart 5--Definitions; Authorizations of Appropriations

``SEC. 5151. DEFINITIONS.

  ``For the purposes of this part:
          ``(1) Adult.--The term `adult' means an individual who--
                  ``(A) has attained the age of 16 years; or
                  ``(B) has attained an age that is greater than the 
                age of compulsory school attendance under an applicable 
                State law.
          ``(2) Free public education.--The term `free public 
        education' means education that is--
                  ``(A) provided at public expense, under public 
                supervision and direction, and without tuition charge; 
                and
                  ``(B) provided as elementary or secondary education 
                in the applicable State or to preschool children.
          ``(3) Indian.--The term `Indian' means an individual who is--
                  ``(A) a member of an Indian tribe or band, as 
                membership is defined by the tribe or band, including--
                          ``(i) any tribe or band terminated since 
                        1940; and
                          ``(ii) any tribe or band recognized by the 
                        State in which the tribe or band resides;
                  ``(B) a descendant, in the first or second degree, of 
                an individual described in subparagraph (A);
                  ``(C) considered by the Secretary of the Interior to 
                be an Indian for any purpose;
                  ``(D) an Alaska Native, as defined in section 
                5206(1); or
                  ``(E) a member of an organized Indian group that 
                received a grant under the Indian Education Act of 1988 
                as in effect the day preceding the date of the 
                enactment of the Improving America's Schools Act of 
                1994.
          ``(4) Alaska native organization.--The term `Alaska Native 
        Organization' has the same meaning as defined in section 
        5206(2).

``SEC. 5152. AUTHORIZATIONS OF APPROPRIATIONS.

  ``(a) Subpart 1.--For the purpose of carrying out subpart 1, there 
are authorized to be appropriated $105,921,000 for each of fiscal years 
2016 through 2021.
  ``(b) Subparts 2 and 3.--For the purpose of carrying out subparts 2 
and 3, there are authorized to be appropriated $24,858,000 for each of 
fiscal years 2016 through 2021.

                   ``PART B--ALASKA NATIVE EDUCATION

``SEC. 5201. SHORT TITLE.

  ``This part may be cited as the `Alaska Native Educational Equity, 
Support, and Assistance Act'.

``SEC. 5202. FINDINGS.

  ``Congress finds and declares the following:
          ``(1) It is the policy of the Federal Government to maximize 
        the leadership of and participation by Alaska Natives in the 
        planning and the management of Alaska Native education programs 
        and to support efforts developed by and undertaken within the 
        Alaska Native community to improve educational opportunity for 
        all students.
          ``(2) Many Alaska Native children enter and exit school with 
        serious educational disadvantages.
          ``(3) Overcoming the magnitude of the geographic challenges, 
        historical inequities, and other barriers to successfully 
        improving educational outcomes for Alaska Native students in 
        rural, village, and urban settings is challenging. Significant 
        disparities between academic achievement of Alaska Native 
        students and non-Native students continues, including lower 
        graduation rates, increased school dropout rates, and lower 
        achievement scores on standardized tests.
          ``(4) The preservation of Alaska Native cultures and 
        languages and the integration of Alaska Native cultures and 
        languages into education, positive identity development for 
        Alaska Native students, and local, place-based, and culture-
        based programming are critical to the attainment of educational 
        success and the long-term well-being of Alaska Native students.
          ``(5) Improving educational outcomes for Alaska Native 
        students increases access to employment opportunities.
          ``(6) The programs and activities authorized under this part 
        give priority to Alaska Native organizations as a means of 
        increasing Alaska Native parents' and community involvement in 
        the promotion of academic success of Alaska Native students.
          ``(7) The Federal Government should lend support to efforts 
        developed by and undertaken within the Alaska Native community 
        to improve educational opportunity for Alaska Native students. 
        In 1983, pursuant to Public Law 98-63, Alaska ceased to receive 
        educational funding from the Bureau of Indian Affairs. The 
        Bureau of Indian Education does not operate any schools in 
        Alaska, nor operate or fund Alaska Native education programs. 
        The program under this part supports the Federal trust 
        responsibility of the United States to Alaska Natives.

``SEC. 5203. PURPOSES.

  ``The purposes of this part are as follows:
          ``(1) To recognize and address the unique educational needs 
        of Alaska Natives.
          ``(2) To recognize the role of Alaska Native languages and 
        cultures in the educational success and long-term well-being of 
        Alaska Native students.
          ``(3) To integrate Alaska Native cultures and languages into 
        education, develop Alaska Native students' positive identity, 
        and support local place-based and culture-based curriculum and 
        programming.
          ``(4) To authorize the development, management, and expansion 
        of effective supplemental educational programs to benefit 
        Alaska Natives.
          ``(5) To provide direction and guidance to appropriate 
        Federal, State, and local agencies to focus resources, 
        including resources made available under this part, on meeting 
        the educational needs of Alaska Natives.
          ``(6) To ensure the maximum participation by Alaska Native 
        educators and leaders in the planning, development, management, 
        and evaluation of programs designed to serve Alaska Natives 
        students, and to ensure Alaska Native organizations play a 
        meaningful role in supplemental educational services provided 
        to Alaska Native students.

``SEC. 5204. PROGRAM AUTHORIZED.

  ``(a) General Authority.--
          ``(1) Grants and contracts.--The Secretary is authorized to 
        make grants to, or enter into contracts with, Alaska Native 
        organizations, State educational agencies, local educational 
        agencies, educational entities with experience in developing or 
        operating Alaska Native educational programs or programs of 
        instruction conducted in Alaska Native languages, cultural and 
        community-based organizations with experience in developing or 
        operating programs to benefit the educational needs of Alaska 
        Natives, and consortia of organizations and entities described 
        in this paragraph, to carry out programs that meet the purposes 
        of this part.
          ``(2) Additional requirement.--A State educational agency, 
        local educational agency, educational entity with experience in 
        developing or operating Alaska Native educational programs or 
        programs of instruction conducted in Alaska Native languages, 
        cultural and community-based organization with experience in 
        developing or operating programs to benefit the educational 
        needs of Alaska Natives, or consortium of such organizations 
        and entities is eligible for an award under this part only as 
        part of a partnership involving an Alaska Native organization.
          ``(3) Mandatory activities.--Activities provided through the 
        programs carried out under this part shall include the 
        following which shall only be provided specifically in the 
        context of elementary and secondary education:
                  ``(A) The development and implementation of plans, 
                methods, and strategies to improve the educational 
                outcomes of Alaska Native people.
                  ``(B) The collection of data to assist in the 
                evaluation of the programs carried out under this part.
          ``(4) Permissible activities.--Activities provided through 
        programs carried out under this part may include the following 
        which shall only be provided specifically in the context of 
        elementary and secondary education:
                  ``(A) The development of curricula and programs that 
                address the educational needs of Alaska Native 
                students, including the following:
                          ``(i) Curriculum materials that reflect the 
                        cultural diversity, languages, history, or the 
                        contributions of Alaska Native people.
                          ``(ii) Instructional programs that make use 
                        of Alaska Native languages and cultures.
                          ``(iii) Networks that develop, test, and 
                        disseminate best practices and introduce 
                        successful programs, materials, and techniques 
                        to meet the educational needs of Alaska Native 
                        students in urban and rural schools.
                  ``(B) Training and professional development 
                activities for educators, including the following:
                          ``(i) Pre-service and in-service training and 
                        professional development programs to prepare 
                        teachers to develop appreciation for, and 
                        understanding of, Alaska Native history, 
                        cultures, values, ways of knowing and learning 
                        in order to effectively address the cultural 
                        diversity and unique needs of Alaska Native 
                        students.
                          ``(ii) Recruitment and preparation of 
                        teachers who are Alaska Native.
                          ``(iii) Programs that will lead to the 
                        certification and licensing of Alaska Native 
                        teachers, principals, and superintendents.
                  ``(C) The development and operation of student 
                enrichment programs, including those in science, 
                technology, engineering, and mathematics that--
                          ``(i) are designed to prepare Alaska Native 
                        students to excel in such subjects;
                          ``(ii) provide appropriate support services 
                        to enable such students to benefit from the 
                        programs; and
                          ``(iii) include activities that recognize and 
                        support the unique cultural and educational 
                        needs of Alaska Native children, and 
                        incorporate appropriately qualified Alaska 
                        Native elders and other tradition bearers.
                  ``(D) Research and data collection activities to 
                determine the educational status and needs of Alaska 
                Native children and other research and evaluation 
                activities related to programs carried out under this 
                part.
                  ``(E) Activities designed to increase the graduation 
                rates of Alaska Native students and prepare Alaska 
                Native students to be college and career ready upon 
                graduation from secondary school, such as--
                          ``(i) remedial and enrichment programs; and
                          ``(ii) culturally based education programs, 
                        such as--
                                  ``(I) programs of study and other 
                                instruction in Alaska Native history 
                                and way of living, to share the rich 
                                and diverse cultures of Alaska Native 
                                peoples among Alaska Native youth and 
                                elders, non-Native students, teachers, 
                                and the larger community;
                                  ``(II) instruction in leadership, 
                                communication, Native culture, arts, 
                                and languages to Alaska Native youth;
                                  ``(III) instruction in Alaska Native 
                                history and ways of living to students 
                                and teachers in the local school 
                                district;
                                  ``(IV) intergenerational learning and 
                                internship opportunities to Alaska 
                                Native youth and young adults; and
                                  ``(V) providing cultural immersion 
                                activities aimed at Alaska Native 
                                cultural preservation.
                  ``(F) Statewide on-site exchange programs, for both 
                students and teachers, that work to facilitate cultural 
                relationships between urban and rural Alaskans to build 
                mutual respect and understanding, and foster a 
                statewide sense of common identity through host family, 
                school, and community cross-cultural immersion.
                  ``(G) Education programs for at-risk urban Alaska 
                Native students in kindergarten through grade 12 that 
                are designed to improve academic proficiency and 
                graduation rates, utilize strategies otherwise 
                permissible under this part, and incorporate a strong 
                data collection and continuous evaluation component.
                  ``(H) Statewide programs that provide technical 
                assistance and support to schools and communities to 
                engage adults in promoting the academic progress and 
                overall well-being of Alaska Native people through 
                child and youth development, positive youth-adult 
                relationships, improved conditions for learning (school 
                climate, student connection to school and community), 
                and increased connections between schools and families.
                  ``(I) Career preparation activities to enable Alaska 
                Native children and adults to prepare for meaningful 
                employment, including programs providing tech-prep, 
                mentoring, training, and apprenticeship activities.
                  ``(J) Support for the development and operational 
                activities of regional vocational schools in rural 
                areas of Alaska to provide students with necessary 
                resources to prepare for skilled employment 
                opportunities.
                  ``(K) Regional leadership academies that demonstrate 
                effectiveness in building respect, understanding, and 
                fostering a sense of Alaska Native identity to promote 
                their pursuit of and success in completing higher 
                education or career training.
                  ``(L) Strategies designed to increase the involvement 
                of parents in their children's education.
  ``(b) Limitation on Administrative Costs.--Not more than 5 percent of 
funds provided to an award recipient under this part for any fiscal 
year may be used for administrative purposes.
  ``(c) Priorities.--In awarding grants or contracts to carry out 
activities described in this subpart, the Secretary shall give priority 
to applications from Alaska Native Organizations. Such priority shall 
be explicitly delineated in the Secretary's process for evaluating 
applications and applied consistently and transparently to all 
applications from Alaska Native Organizations.
  ``(d) Authorization of Appropriations.--There are authorized to be 
appropriated to carry out this part $33,185,000 for each of fiscal 
years 2016 through 2021.

``SEC. 5205. ADMINISTRATIVE PROVISIONS.

  ``(a) Application Required.--
          ``(1) In general.--No grant may be made under this part, and 
        no contract may be entered into under this part, unless the 
        Alaska Native organization or entity seeking the grant or 
        contract submits an application to the Secretary in such form, 
        in such manner, and containing such information as the 
        Secretary may determine necessary to carry out the provisions 
        of this part.
          ``(2) Requirement for certain applicants.--An applicant 
        described in section 5204(a)(2) shall, in the application 
        submitted under this paragraph--
                  ``(A) demonstrate that an Alaska Native organization 
                was directly involved in the development of the program 
                for which the application seeks funds and explicitly 
                delineate the meaningful role that the Alaska Native 
                organization will play in the implementation and 
                evaluation of the program for which funding is sought; 
                and
                  ``(B) provide a copy of the Alaska Native 
                organization's governing document.
  ``(b) Consultation Required.--Each applicant for an award under this 
part shall provide for ongoing advice from and consultation with 
representatives of the Alaska Native community.
  ``(c) Local Educational Agency Coordination.--Each applicant for an 
award under this part shall inform each local educational agency 
serving students who would participate in the program to be carried out 
under the grant or contract about the application.
  ``(d) Continuation Awards.--An applicant described in section 
5204(a)(2) that receives funding under this part shall periodically 
demonstrate to the Secretary, during the term of the award, that the 
applicant is continuing to meet the requirements of subsection 
(a)(2)(A).

``SEC. 5206. DEFINITIONS.

  ``In this part:
          ``(1) Alaska native.--The term `Alaska Native' has the same 
        meaning as the term `Native' has in section 3(b) of the Alaska 
        Native Claims Settlement Act and their descendants.
          ``(2) Alaska native organization.--The term `Alaska Native 
        organization' means a federally recognized tribe, consortium of 
        tribes, regional nonprofit Native association, and an 
        organization, that--
                  ``(A) has or commits to acquire expertise in the 
                education of Alaska Natives; and
                  ``(B) has Alaska Native people in substantive and 
                policymaking positions within the organization.

                  ``PART C--NATIVE HAWAIIAN EDUCATION

``SEC. 5301. FINDINGS.

  ``Congress finds the following:
          ``(1) Native Hawaiians are a distinct and unique indigenous 
        people with a historical continuity to the original inhabitants 
        of the Hawaiian archipelago, whose society was organized as a 
        nation and internationally recognized as a nation by the United 
        States, and many other countries.
          ``(2) Native Hawaiians have a cultural, historic, and land-
        based link to the indigenous people who exercised sovereignty 
        over the Hawaiian Islands.
          ``(3) The political status of Native Hawaiians is comparable 
        to that of American Indians and Alaska Natives.
          ``(4) The political relationship between the United States 
        and the Native Hawaiian people has been recognized and 
        reaffirmed by the United States, as evidenced by the inclusion 
        of Native Hawaiians in many Federal statutes, including--
                  ``(A) the Native American Programs Act of 1974 (42 
                U.S.C. 2991 et seq.);
                  ``(B) Public Law 95-341 (commonly known as the 
                `American Indian Religious Freedom Act' (42 U.S.C. 
                1996));
                  ``(C) the National Museum of the American Indian Act 
                (20 U.S.C. 80q et seq.);
                  ``(D) the Native American Graves Protection and 
                Repatriation Act (25 U.S.C. 3001 et seq.);
                  ``(E) the National Historic Preservation Act (16 
                U.S.C. 470 et seq.);
                  ``(F) the Native American Languages Act (25 U.S.C. 
                2901 et seq.);
                  ``(G) the American Indian, Alaska Native, and Native 
                Hawaiian Culture and Art Development Act (20 U.S.C. 
                4401 et seq.);
                  ``(H) the Workforce Investment Act of 1998 (29 U.S.C. 
                2801 et seq.); and
                  ``(I) the Older Americans Act of 1965 (42 U.S.C. 3001 
                et seq.).
          ``(5) Many Native Hawaiian students lag behind other students 
        in terms of--
                  ``(A) school readiness factors;
                  ``(B) scoring below national norms on education 
                achievement tests at all grade levels;
                  ``(C) underrepresentation in the uppermost 
                achievement levels and in gifted and talented programs;
                  ``(D) overrepresentation among students qualifying 
                for special education programs;
                  ``(E) underrepresentation in institutions of higher 
                education and among adults who have completed 4 or more 
                years of college.
          ``(6) The percentage of Native Hawaiian students served by 
        the State of Hawaii Department of Education rose 30 percent 
        from 1980 to 2008, and there are and will continue to be 
        geographically rural, isolated areas with a high Native 
        Hawaiian population density.
          ``(7) The Native Hawaiian people are determined to preserve, 
        develop, and transmit to future generations their ancestral 
        territory and their cultural identity in accordance with their 
        own spiritual and traditional beliefs, customs, practices, 
        language, and social institutions.

``SEC. 5302. PURPOSES.

  ``The purposes of this part are--
          ``(1) to authorize, develop, implement, assess, and evaluate 
        innovative educational programs, Native Hawaiian language 
        medium programs, Native Hawaiian culture-based education 
        programs, and other education programs to improve the academic 
        achievement of Native Hawaiian students by meeting their unique 
        cultural and language needs in order to help such students meet 
        challenging State student academic achievement standards;
          ``(2) to provide guidance to appropriate Federal, State, and 
        local agencies to more effectively and efficiently focus 
        resources, including resources made available under this part, 
        on the development and implementation of--
                  ``(A) innovative educational programs for Native 
                Hawaiians;
                  ``(B) rigorous and substantive Native Hawaiian 
                language programs; and
                  ``(C) Native Hawaiian culture-based educational 
                programs; and
          ``(3) to create a system by which information from programs 
        funded under this part will be collected, analyzed, evaluated, 
        reported, and used in decisionmaking activities regarding the 
        types of grants awarded under this part.

``SEC. 5303. NATIVE HAWAIIAN EDUCATION COUNCIL GRANT.

  ``(a) Grant Authorized.--In order to better effectuate the purposes 
of this part through the coordination of educational and related 
services and programs available to Native Hawaiians, including those 
programs that receive funding under this part, the Secretary shall 
award a grant to an education council, as described under subsection 
(b).
  ``(b) Education Council.--
          ``(1) Eligibility.--To be eligible to receive the grant under 
        subsection (a), the council shall be an education council 
        (referred to in this section as the `Education Council') that 
        meets the requirements of this subsection.
          ``(2) Composition.--The Education Council shall consist of 15 
        members of whom--
                  ``(A) one shall be the President of the University of 
                Hawaii (or a designee);
                  ``(B) one shall be the Governor of the State of 
                Hawaii (or a designee);
                  ``(C) one shall be the Superintendent of the State of 
                Hawaii Department of Education (or a designee);
                  ``(D) one shall be the chairperson of the Office of 
                Hawaiian Affairs (or a designee);
                  ``(E) one shall be the executive director of Hawaii's 
                Charter School Network (or a designee);
                  ``(F) one shall be the chief executive officer of the 
                Kamehameha Schools (or a designee);
                  ``(G) one shall be the Chief Executive Officer of the 
                Queen Liliuokalani Trust (or a designee);
                  ``(H) one shall be a member, selected by the other 
                members of the Education Council, who represents a 
                private grant-making entity;
                  ``(I) one shall be the Mayor of the County of Hawaii 
                (or a designee);
                  ``(J) one shall be the Mayor of Maui County (or a 
                designee from the Island of Maui);
                  ``(K) one shall be the Mayor of the County of Kauai 
                (or a designee);
                  ``(L) one shall be appointed by the Mayor of Maui 
                County from the Island of either Molokai or Lanai;
                  ``(M) one shall be the Mayor of the City and County 
                of Honolulu (or a designee);
                  ``(N) one shall be the chairperson of the Hawaiian 
                Homes Commission (or a designee); and
                  ``(O) one shall be the chairperson of the Hawaii 
                Workforce Development Council (or a designee 
                representing the private sector).
          ``(3) Requirements.--Any designee serving on the Education 
        Council shall demonstrate, as determined by the individual who 
        appointed such designee with input from the Native Hawaiian 
        community, not less than 5 years of experience as a consumer or 
        provider of Native Hawaiian education or cultural activities, 
        with traditional cultural experience given due consideration.
          ``(4) Limitation.--A member (including a designee), while 
        serving on the Education Council, shall not be a recipient of 
        grant funds that are awarded under this part.
          ``(5) Term of members.--A member who is a designee shall 
        serve for a term of not more than 4 years.
          ``(6) Chair, vice chair.--
                  ``(A) Selection.--The Education Council shall select 
                a Chair and a Vice Chair from among the members of the 
                Education Council.
                  ``(B) Term limits.--The Chair and Vice Chair shall 
                each serve for a 2-year term.
          ``(7) Administrative provisions relating to education 
        council.--The Education Council shall meet at the call of the 
        Chair of the Council, or upon request by a majority of the 
        members of the Education Council, but in any event not less 
        often than every 120 days.
          ``(8) No compensation.--None of the funds made available 
        through the grant may be used to provide compensation to any 
        member of the Education Council or member of a working group 
        established by the Education Council, for functions described 
        in this section.
  ``(c) Use of Funds for Coordination Activities.--The Education 
Council shall use funds made available through the grant to carry out 
each of the following activities:
          ``(1) Providing advice about the coordination, and serving as 
        a clearinghouse for, the educational and related services and 
        programs available to Native Hawaiians, including the programs 
        assisted under this part.
          ``(2) Assessing the extent to which such services and 
        programs meet the needs of Native Hawaiians, and collecting 
        data on the status of Native Hawaiian education.
          ``(3) Providing direction and guidance, through the issuance 
        of reports and recommendations, to appropriate Federal, State, 
        and local agencies in order to focus and improve the use of 
        resources, including resources made available under this part, 
        relating to Native Hawaiian education, and serving, where 
        appropriate, in an advisory capacity.
          ``(4) Awarding grants, if such grants enable the Education 
        Council to carry out the activities described in paragraphs (1) 
        through (3).
          ``(5) Hiring an executive director who shall assist in 
        executing the duties and powers of the Education Council, as 
        described in subsection (d).
  ``(d) Use of Funds for Technical Assistance.--The Education Council 
shall use funds made available through the grant to--
          ``(1) provide technical assistance to Native Hawaiian 
        organizations that are grantees or potential grantees under 
        this part;
          ``(2) obtain from such grantees information and data 
        regarding grants awarded under this part, including information 
        and data about--
                  ``(A) the effectiveness of such grantees in meeting 
                the educational priorities established by the Education 
                Council, as described in paragraph (6)(D), using 
                metrics related to these priorities; and
                  ``(B) the effectiveness of such grantees in carrying 
                out any of the activities described in section 5304(c) 
                that are related to the specific goals and purposes of 
                each grantee's grant project, using metrics related to 
                these priorities;
          ``(3) assess and define the educational needs of Native 
        Hawaiians;
          ``(4) assess the programs and services available to address 
        the educational needs of Native Hawaiians;
          ``(5) assess and evaluate the individual and aggregate impact 
        achieved by grantees under this part in improving Native 
        Hawaiian educational performance and meeting the goals of this 
        part, using metrics related to these goals; and
          ``(6) prepare and submit to the Secretary, at the end of each 
        calendar year, an annual report that contains--
                  ``(A) a description of the activities of the 
                Education Council during the calendar year;
                  ``(B) a description of significant barriers to 
                achieving the goals of this part;
                  ``(C) a summary of each community consultation 
                session described in subsection (e); and
                  ``(D) recommendations to establish priorities for 
                funding under this part, based on an assessment of--
                          ``(i) the educational needs of Native 
                        Hawaiians;
                          ``(ii) programs and services available to 
                        address such needs;
                          ``(iii) the effectiveness of programs in 
                        improving the educational performance of Native 
                        Hawaiian students to help such students meet 
                        challenging State student academic achievement 
                        standards; and
                          ``(iv) priorities for funding in specific 
                        geographic communities.
  ``(e) Use of Funds for Community Consultations.--The Education 
Council shall use funds made available through the grant under 
subsection (a) to hold not less than one community consultation each 
year on each of the islands of Hawaii, Maui, Molokai, Lanai, Oahu, and 
Kauai, at which--
          ``(1) not less than three members of the Education Council 
        shall be in attendance;
          ``(2) the Education Council shall gather community input 
        regarding--
                  ``(A) current grantees under this part, as of the 
                date of the consultation;
                  ``(B) priorities and needs of Native Hawaiians; and
                  ``(C) other Native Hawaiian education issues; and
          ``(3) the Education Council shall report to the community on 
        the outcomes of the activities supported by grants awarded 
        under this part.
  ``(f) Funding.--For each fiscal year, the Secretary shall use the 
amount described in section 5305(d)(2), to make a payment under the 
grant. Funds made available through the grant shall remain available 
until expended.
  ``(g) Report.--Beginning not later than 2 years after the date of the 
enactment of the Student Success Act, and for each subsequent year, the 
Secretary shall prepare and submit to the Committee on Education and 
the Workforce of the House of Representatives, and the Committee on 
Indian Affairs and the Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and 
Pensions of the Senate, a report that--
          ``(1) summarizes the annual reports of the Education Council;
          ``(2) describes the allocation and use of funds under this 
        part and the information gathered since the first annual report 
        submitted by the Education Council to the Secretary under this 
        section; and
          ``(3) contains recommendations for changes in Federal, State, 
        and local policy to advance the purposes of this part.

``SEC. 5304. GRANT PROGRAM AUTHORIZED.

  ``(a) Grants and Contracts.--In order to carry out programs that meet 
the purposes of this part, the Secretary is authorized to award grants 
to, or enter into contracts with--
          ``(1) Native Hawaiian educational organizations;
          ``(2) Native Hawaiian community-based organizations;
          ``(3) public and private nonprofit organizations, agencies, 
        and institutions with experience in developing or operating 
        Native Hawaiian education and workforce development programs or 
        programs of instruction in the Native Hawaiian language;
          ``(4) charter schools; and
          ``(5) consortia of the organizations, agencies, and 
        institutions described in paragraphs (1) through (4).
  ``(b) Priority.--In awarding grants and entering into contracts under 
this part, the Secretary shall give priority to--
          ``(1) programs that meet the educational priority 
        recommendations of the Education Council, as described under 
        section 5303(d)(6)(D);
          ``(2) the repair and renovation of public schools that serve 
        high concentrations of Native Hawaiian students;
          ``(3) programs designed to improve the academic achievement 
        of Native Hawaiian students by meeting their unique cultural 
        and language needs in order to help such students meet 
        challenging State student academic achievement standards, 
        including activities relating to--
                  ``(A) achieving competence in reading, literacy, 
                mathematics, and science for students in preschool 
                through grade 3;
                  ``(B) the educational needs of at-risk children and 
                youth;
                  ``(C) professional development for teachers and 
                administrators;
                  ``(D) the use of Native Hawaiian language and 
                preservation or reclamation of Native Hawaiian culture-
                based educational practices; and
                  ``(E) other programs relating to the activities 
                described in this part; and
          ``(4) programs in which a local educational agency, 
        institution of higher education, or a State educational agency 
        in partnership with a nonprofit entity serving underserved 
        communities within the Native Hawaiian population apply for a 
        grant or contract under this part as part of a partnership or 
        consortium.
  ``(c) Authorized Activities.--Activities provided through programs 
carried out under this part may include--
          ``(1) the development and maintenance of a statewide Native 
        Hawaiian early education and care system to provide a continuum 
        of high-quality early learning services for Native Hawaiian 
        children from the prenatal period through the age of 
        kindergarten entry;
          ``(2) the operation of family-based education centers that 
        provide such services as--
                  ``(A) early care and education programs for Native 
                Hawaiians; and
                  ``(B) research on, and development and assessment of, 
                family-based, early childhood, and preschool programs 
                for Native Hawaiians;
          ``(3) activities that enhance beginning reading and literacy 
        in either the Hawaiian or the English language among Native 
        Hawaiian students in kindergarten through grade 3 and 
        assistance in addressing the distinct features of combined 
        English and Hawaiian literacy for Hawaiian speakers in grades 5 
        and 6;
          ``(4) activities to meet the special needs of Native Hawaiian 
        students with disabilities, including--
                  ``(A) the identification of such students and their 
                needs;
                  ``(B) the provision of support services to the 
                families of such students; and
                  ``(C) other activities consistent with the 
                requirements of the Individuals with Disabilities 
                Education Act;
          ``(5) activities that address the special needs of Native 
        Hawaiian students who are gifted and talented, including--
                  ``(A) educational, psychological, and developmental 
                activities designed to assist in the educational 
                progress of such students; and
                  ``(B) activities that involve the parents of such 
                students in a manner designed to assist in the 
                educational progress of such students;
          ``(6) the development of academic and vocational curricula to 
        address the needs of Native Hawaiian students, including 
        curricula materials in the Hawaiian language and mathematics 
        and science curricula that incorporate Native Hawaiian 
        tradition and culture;
          ``(7) professional development activities for educators, 
        including--
                  ``(A) the development of programs to prepare 
                prospective teachers to address the unique needs of 
                Native Hawaiian students within the context of Native 
                Hawaiian culture, language, and traditions;
                  ``(B) in-service programs to improve the ability of 
                teachers who teach in schools with high concentrations 
                of Native Hawaiian students to meet the unique needs of 
                such students; and
                  ``(C) the recruitment and preparation of Native 
                Hawaiians, and other individuals who live in 
                communities with a high concentration of Native 
                Hawaiians, to become teachers;
          ``(8) the operation of community-based learning centers that 
        address the needs of Native Hawaiian students, parents, 
        families, and communities through the coordination of public 
        and private programs and services, including--
                  ``(A) early education programs;
                  ``(B) before, after, and Summer school programs, 
                expanded learning time, or weekend academies;
                  ``(C) career and technical education programs; and
                  ``(D) programs that recognize and support the unique 
                cultural and educational needs of Native Hawaiian 
                children, and incorporate appropriately qualified 
                Native Hawaiian elders and seniors;
          ``(9) activities, including program co-location, that ensure 
        Native Hawaiian students graduate college and career ready 
        including--
                  ``(A) family literacy services;
                  ``(B) counseling, guidance, and support services for 
                students; and
                  ``(C) professional development activities designed to 
                help educators improve the college and career readiness 
                of Native Hawaiian students;
          ``(10) research and data collection activities to determine 
        the educational status and needs of Native Hawaiian children 
        and adults;
          ``(11) other research and evaluation activities related to 
        programs carried out under this part; and
          ``(12) other activities, consistent with the purposes of this 
        part, to meet the educational needs of Native Hawaiian children 
        and adults.
  ``(d) Additional Activities.--Notwithstanding any other provision of 
this part, funds made available to carry out this section as of the day 
before the date of the enactment of the Student Success Act shall 
remain available until expended. The Secretary shall use such funds to 
support the following:
          ``(1) The repair and renovation of public schools that serve 
        high concentrations of Native Hawaiian students.
          ``(2) The perpetuation of, and expansion of access to, 
        Hawaiian culture and history through digital archives.
          ``(3) Informal education programs that connect traditional 
        Hawaiian knowledge, science, astronomy, and the environment 
        through State museums or learning centers.
          ``(4) Public charter schools serving high concentrations of 
        Native Hawaiian students.
  ``(e) Administrative Costs.--
          ``(1) In general.--Except as provided in paragraph (2), not 
        more than 5 percent of funds provided to a recipient of a grant 
        or contract under this section for any fiscal year may be used 
        for administrative purposes.
          ``(2) Exception.--The Secretary may waive the requirement of 
        paragraph (1) for a nonprofit entity that receives funding 
        under this section and allow not more than 10 percent of funds 
        provided to such nonprofit entity under this section for any 
        fiscal year to be used for administrative purposes.

``SEC. 5305. ADMINISTRATIVE PROVISIONS.

  ``(a) Application Required.--No grant may be made under this part, 
and no contract may be entered into under this part, unless the entity 
seeking the grant or contract submits an application to the Secretary 
at such time, in such manner, and containing such information as the 
Secretary may determine to be necessary to carry out the provisions of 
this part.
  ``(b) Direct Grant Applications.--The Secretary shall provide a copy 
of all direct grant applications to the Education Council.
  ``(c) Supplement Not Supplant.--
          ``(1) In general.--Except as provided in paragraph (2), funds 
        made available under this part shall be used to supplement, and 
        not supplant, any State or local funds used to achieve the 
        purposes of this part.
          ``(2) Exception.--Paragraph (1) shall not apply to any 
        nonprofit entity or Native Hawaiian community-based 
        organization that receives a grant or other funds under this 
        part.
  ``(d) Authorization of Appropriations.--
          ``(1) In general.--There are authorized to be appropriated to 
        carry out this part $34,181,000 for each of fiscal years 2016 
        through 2021.
          ``(2) Reservation.--Of the funds appropriated under this 
        subsection, the Secretary shall reserve, for each fiscal year 
        after the date of the enactment of the Student Success Act not 
        less than $500,000 for the grant to the Education Council under 
        section 5303.
          ``(3) Availability.--Funds appropriated under this subsection 
        shall remain available until expended.''.

                TITLE VI--GENERAL PROVISIONS FOR THE ACT

SEC. 601. GENERAL PROVISIONS FOR THE ACT.

  (a) Amending Title VI.--Title VI (20 U.S.C. 7301 et seq.) is amended 
to read as follows:

                     ``TITLE VI--GENERAL PROVISIONS

                         ``PART A--DEFINITIONS

``SEC. 6101. DEFINITIONS.

  ``Except as otherwise provided, in this Act:
          ``(1) Average daily attendance.--
                  ``(A) In general.--Except as provided otherwise by 
                State law or this paragraph, the term `average daily 
                attendance' means--
                          ``(i) the aggregate number of days of 
                        attendance of all students during a school 
                        year; divided by
                          ``(ii) the number of days school is in 
                        session during that year.
                  ``(B) Conversion.--The Secretary shall permit the 
                conversion of average daily membership (or other 
                similar data) to average daily attendance for local 
                educational agencies in States that provide State aid 
                to local educational agencies on the basis of average 
                daily membership (or other similar data).
                  ``(C) Special rule.--If the local educational agency 
                in which a child resides makes a tuition or other 
                payment for the free public education of the child in a 
                school located in another school district, the 
                Secretary shall, for the purpose of this Act--
                          ``(i) consider the child to be in attendance 
                        at a school of the agency making the payment; 
                        and
                          ``(ii) not consider the child to be in 
                        attendance at a school of the agency receiving 
                        the payment.
                  ``(D) Children with disabilities.--If a local 
                educational agency makes a tuition payment to a private 
                school or to a public school of another local 
                educational agency for a child with a disability, as 
                defined in section 602 of the Individuals with 
                Disabilities Education Act, the Secretary shall, for 
                the purpose of this Act, consider the child to be in 
                attendance at a school of the agency making the 
                payment.
          ``(2) Average per-pupil expenditure.--The term `average per-
        pupil expenditure' means, in the case of a State or of the 
        United States--
                  ``(A) without regard to the source of funds--
                          ``(i) the aggregate current expenditures, 
                        during the third fiscal year preceding the 
                        fiscal year for which the determination is made 
                        (or, if satisfactory data for that year are not 
                        available, during the most recent preceding 
                        fiscal year for which satisfactory data are 
                        available) of all local educational agencies in 
                        the State or, in the case of the United States, 
                        for all States (which, for the purpose of this 
                        paragraph, means the 50 States and the District 
                        of Columbia); plus
                          ``(ii) any direct current expenditures by the 
                        State for the operation of those agencies; 
                        divided by
                  ``(B) the aggregate number of children in average 
                daily attendance to whom those agencies provided free 
                public education during that preceding year.
          ``(3) Charter school.--The term `charter school' means a 
        public school that--
                  ``(A) in accordance with a specific State statute 
                authorizing the granting of charters to schools, is 
                exempt from significant State or local rules that 
                inhibit the flexible operation and management of public 
                schools, but not from any rules relating to the other 
                requirements of this paragraph;
                  ``(B) is created by a developer as a public school, 
                or is adapted by a developer from an existing public 
                school, and is operated under public supervision and 
                direction;
                  ``(C) operates in pursuit of a specific set of 
                educational objectives determined by the school's 
                developer and agreed to by the authorized public 
                chartering agency;
                  ``(D) provides a program of elementary or secondary 
                education, or both;
                  ``(E) is nonsectarian in its programs, admissions 
                policies, employment practices, and all other 
                operations, and is not affiliated with a sectarian 
                school or religious institution;
                  ``(F) does not charge tuition;
                  ``(G) complies with the Age Discrimination Act of 
                1975, title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, title 
                IX of the Education Amendments of 1972, section 504 of 
                the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, part B of the 
                Individuals with Disabilities Education Act, the 
                Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 (42 U.S.C. 
                12101 et seq.), and section 444 of the General 
                Education Provisions Act (20 U.S.C. 1232(g)) (commonly 
                known as the `Family Education Rights and Privacy Act 
                of 1974');
                  ``(H) is a school to which parents choose to send 
                their children, and admits students on the basis of a 
                lottery if more students apply for admission than can 
                be accommodated, except that in cases in which students 
                who are enrolled in a charter school affiliated (such 
                as by sharing a network) with another charter school, 
                those students may be automatically enrolled in the 
                next grade level at such other charter school, so long 
                as a lottery is used to fill seats created through 
                regular attrition in student enrollment;
                  ``(I) agrees to comply with the same Federal and 
                State audit requirements as do other elementary schools 
                and secondary schools in the State, unless such State 
                audit requirements are waived by the State;
                  ``(J) meets all applicable Federal, State, and local 
                health and safety requirements;
                  ``(K) operates in accordance with State law;
                  ``(L) has a written performance contract with the 
                authorized public chartering agency in the State that 
                includes a description of how student performance will 
                be measured in charter schools pursuant to State 
                assessments that are required of other schools and 
                pursuant to any other assessments mutually agreeable to 
                the authorized public chartering agency and the charter 
                school; and
                  ``(M) may serve prekindergarten or postsecondary 
                students.
          ``(4) Child.--The term `child' means any person within the 
        age limits for which the State provides free public education.
          ``(5) Child with a disability.--The term `child with a 
        disability' has the same meaning given that term in section 602 
        of the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act.
          ``(6) Community-based organization.--The term `community-
        based organization' means a public or private nonprofit 
        organization of demonstrated effectiveness that--
                  ``(A) is representative of a community or significant 
                segments of a community; and
                  ``(B) provides educational or related services to 
                individuals in the community.
          ``(7) Consolidated local application.--The term `consolidated 
        local application' means an application submitted by a local 
        educational agency pursuant to section 6305.
          ``(8) Consolidated local plan.--The term `consolidated local 
        plan' means a plan submitted by a local educational agency 
        pursuant to section 6305.
          ``(9) Consolidated state application.--The term `consolidated 
        State application' means an application submitted by a State 
        educational agency pursuant to section 6302.
          ``(10) Consolidated state plan.--The term `consolidated State 
        plan' means a plan submitted by a State educational agency 
        pursuant to section 6302.
          ``(11) County.--The term `county' means one of the divisions 
        of a State used by the Secretary of Commerce in compiling and 
        reporting data regarding counties.
          ``(12) Covered program.--The term `covered program' means 
        each of the programs authorized by--
                  ``(A) part A of title I;
                  ``(B) title II; and
                  ``(C) part B of title III.
          ``(13) Current expenditures.--The term `current expenditures' 
        means expenditures for free public education--
                  ``(A) including expenditures for administration, 
                instruction, attendance and health services, pupil 
                transportation services, operation and maintenance of 
                plant, fixed charges, and net expenditures to cover 
                deficits for food services and student body activities; 
                but
                  ``(B) not including expenditures for community 
                services, capital outlay, and debt service, or any 
                expenditures made from funds received under title I.
          ``(14) Department.--The term `Department' means the 
        Department of Education.
          ``(15) Direct student services.--The term `direct student 
        services' means public school choice or high-quality academic 
        tutoring that are designed to help increase academic 
        achievement for students.
          ``(16) Distance education.--The term `distance education' 
        means the use of one or more technologies to deliver 
        instruction to students who are separated from the instructor 
        and to support regular and substantive interaction between the 
        students and the instructor synchronously or nonsynchronously.
          ``(17) Educational service agency.--The term `educational 
        service agency' means a regional public multiservice agency 
        authorized by State statute to develop, manage, and provide 
        services or programs to local educational agencies.
          ``(18) Elementary school.--The term `elementary school' means 
        a nonprofit institutional day or residential school, including 
        a public elementary charter school, that provides elementary 
        education, as determined under State law.
          ``(19) English learner.--The term `English learner', when 
        used with respect to an individual, means an individual--
                  ``(A) who is aged 3 through 21;
                  ``(B) who is enrolled or preparing to enroll in an 
                elementary school or secondary school;
                  ``(C)(i) who was not born in the United States or 
                whose native language is a language other than English;
                  ``(ii)(I) who is a Native American or Alaska Native, 
                or a native resident of the outlying areas; and
                  ``(II) who comes from an environment where a language 
                other than English has had a significant impact on the 
                individual's level of English language proficiency; or
                  ``(iii) who is migratory, whose native language is a 
                language other than English, and who comes from an 
                environment where a language other than English is 
                dominant; and
                  ``(D) whose difficulties in speaking, reading, 
                writing, or understanding the English language may be 
                sufficient to deny the individual--
                          ``(i) the ability to meet the State's 
                        academic standards described in section 1111;
                          ``(ii) the ability to successfully achieve in 
                        classrooms where the language of instruction is 
                        English; or
                          ``(iii) the opportunity to participate fully 
                        in society.
          ``(20) Extended-year adjusted cohort graduation rate.--
                  ``(A) In general.--The term `extended-year adjusted 
                cohort graduation rate' means the ratio where--
                          ``(i) the denominator consists of the number 
                        of students who form the original cohort of 
                        entering first-time 9th grade students enrolled 
                        in the high school no later than the effective 
                        date for student membership data submitted 
                        annually by State educational agencies to the 
                        National Center for Education Statistics under 
                        section 153 of the Education Sciences Reform 
                        Act, adjusted by--
                                  ``(I) adding the students who joined 
                                that cohort, after the time of the 
                                determination of the original cohort; 
                                and
                                  ``(II) subtracting only those 
                                students who left that cohort, after 
                                the time of the determination of the 
                                original cohort, as described in 
                                subparagraph (B); and
                          ``(ii) the numerator consists of the number 
                        of students in the cohort, as adjusted under 
                        clause (i), who earned a regular high school 
                        diploma before, during, or at the conclusion 
                        of--
                                  ``(I) one or more additional years 
                                beyond the fourth year of high school; 
                                or
                                  ``(II) a summer session immediately 
                                following the additional year of high 
                                school.
                  ``(B) Cohort removal.--To remove a student from a 
                cohort, a school or local educational agency shall 
                require documentation to confirm that the student has 
                transferred out, emigrated to another country, 
                transferred to a prison or juvenile facility, or is 
                deceased.
                  ``(C) Transferred out.--
                          ``(i) In general.--For purposes of this 
                        paragraph, the term `transferred out' means a 
                        student who the high school or local 
                        educational agency has confirmed, according to 
                        clause (ii), has transferred--
                                  ``(I) to another school from which 
                                the student is expected to receive a 
                                regular high school diploma; or
                                  ``(II) to another educational program 
                                from which the student is expected to 
                                receive a regular high school diploma.
                          ``(ii) Confirmation requirements.--
                                  ``(I) Documentation required.--The 
                                confirmation of a student's transfer to 
                                another school or educational program 
                                described in clause (i) requires 
                                documentation from the receiving school 
                                or program that the student enrolled in 
                                the receiving school or program.
                                  ``(II) Lack of confirmation.--A 
                                student who was enrolled, but for whom 
                                there is no confirmation of the student 
                                having transferred out, shall remain in 
                                the denominator of the extended-year 
                                adjusted cohort.
                          ``(iii) Programs not providing credit.--A 
                        student who is retained in grade or who is 
                        enrolled in a GED or other alternative 
                        educational program that does not issue or 
                        provide credit toward the issuance of a regular 
                        high school diploma shall not be considered 
                        transferred out and shall remain in the 
                        extended-year adjusted cohort.
                  ``(D) Special rule.--For those high schools that 
                start after grade 9, the original cohort shall be 
                calculated for the earliest high school grade students 
                attend no later than the effective date for student 
                membership data submitted annually by State educational 
                agencies to the National Center for Education 
                Statistics pursuant to section 153 of the Education 
                Sciences Reform Act.
          ``(21) Family literacy services.--The term `family literacy 
        services' means services provided to participants on a 
        voluntary basis that are of sufficient intensity in terms of 
        hours, and of sufficient duration, to make sustainable changes 
        in a family, and that integrate all of the following 
        activities:
                  ``(A) Interactive literacy activities between parents 
                and their children.
                  ``(B) Training for parents regarding how to be the 
                primary teacher for their children and full partners in 
                the education of their children.
                  ``(C) Parent literacy training that leads to economic 
                self-sufficiency.
                  ``(D) An age-appropriate education to prepare 
                children for success in school and life experiences.
          ``(22) Four-year adjusted cohort graduation rate.--
                  ``(A) In general.--The term `four-year adjusted 
                cohort graduation rate' means the ratio where--
                          ``(i) the denominator consists of the number 
                        of students who form the original cohort of 
                        entering first-time 9th grade students enrolled 
                        in the high school no later than the effective 
                        date for student membership data submitted 
                        annually by State educational agencies to the 
                        National Center for Education Statistics 
                        pursuant to section 153 of the Education 
                        Sciences Reform Act, adjusted by--
                                  ``(I) adding the students who joined 
                                that cohort, after the time of the 
                                determination of the original cohort; 
                                and
                                  ``(II) subtracting only those 
                                students who left that cohort, after 
                                the time of the determination of the 
                                original cohort, as described in 
                                subparagraph (B); and
                          ``(ii) the numerator consists of the number 
                        of students in the cohort, as adjusted under 
                        clause (i), who earned a regular high school 
                        diploma before, during, or at the conclusion 
                        of--
                                  ``(I) the fourth year of high school; 
                                or
                                  ``(II) a summer session immediately 
                                following the fourth year of high 
                                school.
                  ``(B) Cohort removal.--To remove a student from a 
                cohort, a school or local educational agency shall 
                require documentation to confirm that the student has 
                transferred out, emigrated to another country, 
                transferred to a prison or juvenile facility, or is 
                deceased.
                  ``(C) Transferred out.--
                          ``(i) In general.--For purposes of this 
                        paragraph, the term `transferred out' means a 
                        student who the high school or local 
                        educational agency has confirmed, according to 
                        clause (ii), has transferred--
                                  ``(I) to another school from which 
                                the student is expected to receive a 
                                regular high school diploma; or
                                  ``(II) to another educational program 
                                from which the student is expected to 
                                receive a regular high school diploma.
                          ``(ii) Confirmation requirements.--
                                  ``(I) Documentation required.--The 
                                confirmation of a student's transfer to 
                                another school or educational program 
                                described in clause (i) requires 
                                documentation from the receiving school 
                                or program that the student enrolled in 
                                the receiving school or program.
                                  ``(II) Lack of confirmation.--A 
                                student who was enrolled, but for whom 
                                there is no confirmation of the student 
                                having transferred out, shall remain in 
                                the adjusted cohort.
                          ``(iii) Programs not providing credit.--A 
                        student who is retained in grade or who is 
                        enrolled in a GED or other alternative 
                        educational program that does not issue or 
                        provide credit toward the issuance of a regular 
                        high school diploma shall not be considered 
                        transferred out and shall remain in the 
                        adjusted cohort.
                  ``(D) Special rule.--For those high schools that 
                start after grade 9, the original cohort shall be 
                calculated for the earliest high school grade students 
                attend no later than the effective date for student 
                membership data submitted annually by State educational 
                agencies to the National Center for Education 
                Statistics pursuant to section 153 of the Education 
                Sciences Reform Act.
          ``(23) Free public education.--The term `free public 
        education' means education that is provided--
                  ``(A) at public expense, under public supervision and 
                direction, and without tuition charge; and
                  ``(B) as elementary school or secondary school 
                education as determined under applicable State law, 
                except that the term does not include any education 
                provided beyond grade 12.
          ``(24) Gifted and talented.--The term `gifted and talented', 
        when used with respect to students, children, or youth, means 
        students, children, or youth who give evidence of high 
        achievement capability in areas such as intellectual, creative, 
        artistic, or leadership capacity, or in specific academic 
        fields, and who need services or activities not ordinarily 
        provided by the school in order to fully develop those 
        capabilities.
          ``(25) High-quality academic tutoring.--The term `high-
        quality academic tutoring' means supplemental academic services 
        that--
                  ``(A) are in addition to instruction provided during 
                the school day;
                  ``(B) are provided by a non-governmental entity or 
                local educational agency that--
                          ``(i) is included on a State educational 
                        agency approved provider list after 
                        demonstrating to the State educational agency 
                        that its program consistently improves the 
                        academic achievement of students; and
                          ``(ii) agrees to provide parents of children 
                        receiving high-quality academic tutoring, the 
                        appropriate local educational agency, and 
                        school with information on participating 
                        students increases in academic achievement, in 
                        a format, and to the extent practicable, a 
                        language that such parent can understand, and 
                        in a manner that protects the privacy of 
                        individuals consistent with section 444 of the 
                        General Education Provisions Act (20 U.S.C. 
                        1232g);
                  ``(C) are selected by the parents of students who are 
                identified by the local educational agency as being 
                eligible for such services from among providers on the 
                approved provider list described in subparagraph 
                (B)(i);
                  ``(D) meet all applicable Federal, State, and local 
                health, safety, and civil rights laws; and
                  ``(E) ensure that all instruction and content are 
                secular, neutral, and non-ideological.
          ``(26) High school.--The term `high school' means a secondary 
        school that--
                  ``(A) grants a diploma, as defined by the State; and
                  ``(B) includes, at least, grade 12.
          ``(27) Institution of higher education.--The term 
        `institution of higher education' has the meaning given that 
        term in section 101(a) of the Higher Education Act of 1965.
          ``(28) Local educational agency.--
                  ``(A) In general.--The term `local educational 
                agency' means a public board of education or other 
                public authority legally constituted within a State for 
                either administrative control or direction of, or to 
                perform a service function for, public elementary 
                schools or secondary schools in a city, county, 
                township, school district, or other political 
                subdivision of a State, or of or for a combination of 
                school districts or counties that is recognized in a 
                State as an administrative agency for its public 
                elementary schools or secondary schools.
                  ``(B) Administrative control and direction.--The term 
                includes any other public institution or agency having 
                administrative control and direction of a public 
                elementary school or secondary school.
                  ``(C) BIE schools.--The term includes an elementary 
                school or secondary school funded by the Bureau of 
                Indian Education but only to the extent that including 
                the school makes the school eligible for programs for 
                which specific eligibility is not provided to the 
                school in another provision of law and the school does 
                not have a student population that is smaller than the 
                student population of the local educational agency 
                receiving assistance under this Act with the smallest 
                student population, except that the school shall not be 
                subject to the jurisdiction of any State educational 
                agency other than the Bureau of Indian Education.
                  ``(D) Educational service agencies.--The term 
                includes educational service agencies and consortia of 
                those agencies.
                  ``(E) State educational agency.--The term includes 
                the State educational agency in a State in which the 
                State educational agency is the sole educational agency 
                for all public schools.
          ``(29) Native american and native american language.--The 
        terms `Native American' and `Native American language' have the 
        same meaning given those terms in section 103 of the Native 
        American Languages Act of 1990.
          ``(30) Other staff.--The term `other staff' means specialized 
        instructional support personnel, librarians, career guidance 
        and counseling personnel, education aides, and other 
        instructional and administrative personnel.
          ``(31) Outlying area.--The term `outlying area'--
                  ``(A) means American Samoa, the Commonwealth of the 
                Northern Mariana Islands, Guam, and the United States 
                Virgin Islands;
                  ``(B) means the Republic of Palau, to the extent 
                permitted under section 105(f)(1)(B)(ix) of the Compact 
                of Free Association Amendments Act of 2003 (Public Law 
                99-658; 117 Stat. 2751) and until an agreement for the 
                extension of United States education assistance under 
                the Compact of Free Association becomes effective for 
                the Republic of Palau; and
                  ``(C) for the purpose of any discretionary grant 
                program under this Act, includes the Republic of the 
                Marshall Islands and the Federated States of 
                Micronesia, to the extent permitted under section 
                105(f)(1)(B)(viii) of the Compact of Free Association 
                Amendments Act of 2003 (Public Law 108-188; 117 Stat. 
                2751).
          ``(32) Parent.--The term `parent' includes a legal guardian 
        or other person standing in loco parentis (such as a 
        grandparent, stepparent, or foster parent with whom the child 
        lives, or a person who is legally responsible for the child's 
        welfare).
          ``(33) Parental involvement.--The term `parental involvement' 
        means the participation of parents in regular, two-way, and 
        meaningful communication involving student academic learning 
        and other school activities, including ensuring--
                  ``(A) that parents play an integral role in assisting 
                in their child's learning;
                  ``(B) that parents are encouraged to be actively 
                involved in their child's education at school;
                  ``(C) that parents are full partners in their child's 
                education and are included, as appropriate, in 
                decisionmaking and on advisory committees to assist in 
                the education of their child; and
                  ``(D) the carrying out of other activities, such as 
                those described in section 1118.
          ``(34) Poverty line.--The term `poverty line' means the 
        poverty line (as defined by the Office of Management and Budget 
        and revised annually in accordance with section 673(2) of the 
        Community Services Block Grant Act) applicable to a family of 
        the size involved.
          ``(35) Professional development.--The term `professional 
        development'--
                  ``(A) includes evidence-based, job-embedded, 
                continuous activities that--
                          ``(i) improve and increase teachers' 
                        knowledge of the academic subjects the teachers 
                        teach, and enable teachers to become effective 
                        educators;
                          ``(ii) are an integral part of broad 
                        schoolwide and districtwide educational 
                        improvement plans;
                          ``(iii) give teachers, school leaders, other 
                        staff, and administrators the knowledge and 
                        skills to provide students with the opportunity 
                        to meet State academic standards;
                          ``(iv) improve classroom management skills;
                          ``(v)(I) have a positive and lasting impact 
                        on classroom instruction and the teacher's 
                        performance in the classroom; and
                          ``(II) are not 1-day or short-term workshops 
                        or conferences;
                          ``(vi) support the recruiting, hiring, and 
                        training of effective teachers, including 
                        teachers who became certified or licensed 
                        through State and local alternative routes to 
                        certification;
                          ``(vii) advance teacher understanding of 
                        effective instructional strategies that are 
                        strategies for improving student academic 
                        achievement or substantially increasing the 
                        knowledge and teaching skills of teachers, 
                        including through addressing the social and 
                        emotional development needs of students;
                          ``(viii) are aligned with and directly 
                        related to--
                                  ``(I) State academic standards and 
                                assessments; and
                                  ``(II) the curricula and programs 
                                tied to the standards described in 
                                subclause (I);
                          ``(ix) are developed with extensive 
                        participation of teachers, school leaders, 
                        parents, and administrators of schools to be 
                        served under this Act;
                          ``(x) are designed to give teachers of 
                        English learners and other teachers and 
                        instructional staff, the knowledge and skills 
                        to provide instruction and appropriate language 
                        and academic support services to those 
                        children, including the appropriate use of 
                        curricula and assessments;
                          ``(xi) to the extent appropriate, provide 
                        training for teachers, other staff, and school 
                        leaders in the use of technology so that 
                        technology and technology applications are 
                        effectively used to improve teaching and 
                        learning in the curricula and core academic 
                        subjects in which the students receive 
                        instruction;
                          ``(xii) as a whole, are regularly evaluated 
                        for their impact on increased teacher 
                        effectiveness and improved student academic 
                        achievement, with the findings of the 
                        evaluations used to improve the quality of the 
                        professional development;
                          ``(xiii) provide instruction in methods of 
                        teaching children with special needs;
                          ``(xiv) include instruction in the use of 
                        data and assessments to inform and instruct 
                        classroom practice; and
                          ``(xv) include instruction in ways that 
                        teachers, school leaders, specialized 
                        instructional support personnel, other staff, 
                        and school administrators may work more 
                        effectively with parents; and
                  ``(B) may include evidence-based, job-embedded, 
                continuous activities that--
                          ``(i) involve the forming of partnerships 
                        with institutions of higher education to 
                        establish school-based teacher training 
                        programs that provide prospective teachers and 
                        new teachers with an opportunity to work under 
                        the guidance of experienced teachers and 
                        college faculty;
                          ``(ii) create programs to enable 
                        paraprofessionals (assisting teachers employed 
                        by a local educational agency receiving 
                        assistance under subpart 1 of part A of title 
                        I) to obtain the education necessary for those 
                        paraprofessionals to become certified and 
                        licensed teachers; and
                          ``(iii) provide follow-up training to 
                        individuals who have participated in activities 
                        described in subparagraph (A) or another clause 
                        of this subparagraph that are designed to 
                        ensure that the knowledge and skills learned by 
                        the teachers are implemented in the classroom.
          ``(36) Regular high school diploma.--
                  ``(A) In general.--The term `regular high school 
                diploma' means the standard high school diploma awarded 
                to the preponderance of students in the State that is 
                fully aligned with State standards, or a higher 
                diploma. Such term shall not include a GED or other 
                recognized equivalent of a diploma, a certificate of 
                attendance, or any lesser diploma award.
                  ``(B) Exception for students with significant 
                cognitive disabilities.--For a student who is assessed 
                using an alternate assessment aligned to alternate 
                academic standards under section 1111(b)(1)(D), receipt 
                of a regular high school diploma as defined under 
                subparagraph (A) or a State-defined alternate diploma 
                obtained within the time period for which the State 
                ensures the availability of a free appropriate public 
                education and in accordance with section 612(a)(1) of 
                the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act shall 
                be counted as graduating with a regular high school 
                diploma for the purposes of this Act.
          ``(37) School leader.--The term `school leader' means a 
        principal, assistant principal, or other individual who is--
                  ``(A) an employee or officer of a school, local 
                educational agency, or other entity operating the 
                school; and
                  ``(B) responsible for--
                          ``(i) the daily instructional leadership and 
                        managerial operations of the school; and
                          ``(ii) creating the optimum conditions for 
                        student learning.
          ``(38) Secondary school.--The term `secondary school' means a 
        nonprofit institutional day or residential school, including a 
        public secondary charter school, that provides secondary 
        education, as determined under State law, except that the term 
        does not include any education beyond grade 12.
          ``(39) Secretary.--The term `Secretary' means the Secretary 
        of Education.
          ``(40) Specialized instructional support personnel; 
        specialized instructional support services.--
                  ``(A) Specialized instructional support personnel.--
                The term `specialized instructional support personnel' 
                means school counselors, school social workers, school 
                psychologists, and other qualified professional 
                personnel involved in providing assessment, diagnosis, 
                counseling, educational, therapeutic, and other 
                necessary services (including related services as that 
                term is defined in section 602 of the Individuals with 
                Disabilities Education Act) as part of a comprehensive 
                program to meet student needs.
                  ``(B) Specialized instructional support services.--
                The term `specialized instructional support services' 
                means the services provided by specialized 
                instructional support personnel.
          ``(41) State.--The term `State' means each of the 50 States, 
        the District of Columbia, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, and 
        each of the outlying areas.
          ``(42) State educational agency.--The term `State educational 
        agency' means the agency primarily responsible for the State 
        supervision of public elementary schools and secondary schools.
          ``(43) Technology.--The term `technology' means modern 
        information, computer and communication technology products, 
        services, or tools, including, but not limited to, the Internet 
        and other communications networks, computer devices and other 
        computer and communications hardware, software applications, 
        data systems, and other electronic content and data storage.

``SEC. 6102. APPLICABILITY OF TITLE.

  ``Parts B, C, D, and E of this title do not apply to title IV of this 
Act.

``SEC. 6103. APPLICABILITY TO BUREAU OF INDIAN EDUCATION OPERATED 
                    SCHOOLS.

  ``For the purpose of any competitive program under this Act--
          ``(1) a consortium of schools operated by the Bureau of 
        Indian Education;
          ``(2) a school operated under a contract or grant with the 
        Bureau of Indian Education in consortium with another contract 
        or grant school or a tribal or community organization; or
          ``(3) a Bureau of Indian Education school in consortium with 
        an institution of higher education, a contract or grant school, 
        or a tribal or community organization,
shall be given the same consideration as a local educational agency.

   ``PART B--FLEXIBILITY IN THE USE OF ADMINISTRATIVE AND OTHER FUNDS

``SEC. 6201. CONSOLIDATION OF STATE ADMINISTRATIVE FUNDS FOR ELEMENTARY 
                    AND SECONDARY EDUCATION PROGRAMS.

  ``(a) Consolidation of Administrative Funds.--
          ``(1) In general.--A State educational agency may consolidate 
        the amounts specifically made available to it for State 
        administration under one or more of the programs under 
        paragraph (2).
          ``(2) Applicability.--This section applies to any program 
        under this Act under which funds are authorized to be used for 
        administration, and such other programs as the Secretary may 
        designate.
  ``(b) Use of Funds.--
          ``(1) In general.--A State educational agency shall use the 
        amount available under this section for the administration of 
        the programs included in the consolidation under subsection 
        (a).
          ``(2) Additional uses.--A State educational agency may also 
        use funds available under this section for administrative 
        activities designed to enhance the effective and coordinated 
        use of funds under programs included in the consolidation under 
        subsection (a), such as--
                  ``(A) the coordination of those programs with other 
                Federal and non-Federal programs;
                  ``(B) the establishment and operation of peer-review 
                mechanisms under this Act;
                  ``(C) the administration of this title;
                  ``(D) the dissemination of information regarding 
                model programs and practices;
                  ``(E) technical assistance under any program under 
                this Act;
                  ``(F) State-level activities designed to carry out 
                this title;
                  ``(G) training personnel engaged in audit and other 
                monitoring activities; and
                  ``(H) implementation of the Cooperative Audit 
                Resolution and Oversight Initiative of the Department.
  ``(c) Records.--A State educational agency that consolidates 
administrative funds under this section shall not be required to keep 
separate records, by individual program, to account for costs relating 
to the administration of programs included in the consolidation under 
subsection (a).
  ``(d) Review.--To determine the effectiveness of State administration 
under this section, the Secretary may periodically review the 
performance of State educational agencies in using consolidated 
administrative funds under this section and take such steps as the 
Secretary finds appropriate to ensure the effectiveness of that 
administration.
  ``(e) Unused Administrative Funds.--If a State educational agency 
does not use all of the funds available to the agency under this 
section for administration, the agency may use those funds during the 
applicable period of availability as funds available under one or more 
programs included in the consolidation under subsection (a).
  ``(f) Consolidation of Funds for Standards and Assessment 
Development.--In order to develop State academic standards and 
assessments, a State educational agency may consolidate the amounts 
described in subsection (a) for those purposes under title I.

``SEC. 6202. SINGLE LOCAL EDUCATIONAL AGENCY STATES.

  ``A State educational agency that also serves as a local educational 
agency shall, in its applications or plans under this Act, describe how 
the agency will eliminate duplication in conducting administrative 
functions.

``SEC. 6203. CONSOLIDATION OF FUNDS FOR LOCAL ADMINISTRATION.

  ``(a) General Authority.--In accordance with regulations of the 
Secretary and for any fiscal year, a local educational agency, with the 
approval of its State educational agency, may consolidate and use for 
the administration of one or more programs under this Act (or such 
other programs as the Secretary shall designate) not more than the 
percentage, established in each program, of the total available for the 
local educational agency under those programs.
  ``(b) State Procedures.--A State educational agency shall, in 
collaboration with local educational agencies in the State, establish 
procedures for responding to requests from local educational agencies 
to consolidate administrative funds under subsection (a) and for 
establishing limitations on the amount of funds under those programs 
that may be used for administration on a consolidated basis.
  ``(c) Conditions.--A local educational agency that consolidates 
administrative funds under this section for any fiscal year shall not 
use any other funds under the programs included in the consolidation 
for administration for that fiscal year.
  ``(d) Uses of Administrative Funds.--A local educational agency that 
consolidates administrative funds under this section may use the 
consolidated funds for the administration of the programs and for uses, 
at the school district and school levels, comparable to those described 
in section 6201(b)(2).
  ``(e) Records.--A local educational agency that consolidates 
administrative funds under this section shall not be required to keep 
separate records, by individual program, to account for costs relating 
to the administration of the programs included in the consolidation.

``SEC. 6204. CONSOLIDATED SET-ASIDE FOR DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR 
                    FUNDS.

  ``(a) General Authority.--
          ``(1) Transfer.--The Secretary shall transfer to the 
        Department of the Interior, as a consolidated amount for 
        covered programs, the Indian education programs under part A of 
        title V, and the education for homeless children and youth 
        program under subtitle B of title VII of the McKinney-Vento 
        Homeless Assistance Act, the amounts allotted to the Department 
        of the Interior under those programs.
          ``(2) Agreement.--
                  ``(A) In general.--The Secretary and the Secretary of 
                the Interior shall enter into an agreement, consistent 
                with the requirements of the programs specified in 
                paragraph (1), for the distribution and use of those 
                program funds under terms that the Secretary determines 
                best meet the purposes of those programs.
                  ``(B) Contents.--The agreement shall--
                          ``(i) set forth the plans of the Secretary of 
                        the Interior for the use of the amount 
                        transferred and the achievement measures to 
                        assess program effectiveness; and
                          ``(ii) be developed in consultation with 
                        Indian tribes.
  ``(b) Administration.--The Department of the Interior may use not 
more than 1.5 percent of the funds consolidated under this section for 
its costs related to the administration of the funds transferred under 
this section.

``PART C--COORDINATION OF PROGRAMS; CONSOLIDATED STATE AND LOCAL PLANS 
                            AND APPLICATIONS

``SEC. 6301. PURPOSES.

  ``The purposes of this part are--
          ``(1) to improve teaching and learning by encouraging greater 
        cross-program coordination, planning, and service delivery;
          ``(2) to provide greater flexibility to State and local 
        authorities through consolidated plans, applications, and 
        reporting; and
          ``(3) to enhance the integration of programs under this Act 
        with State and local programs.

``SEC. 6302. OPTIONAL CONSOLIDATED STATE PLANS OR APPLICATIONS.

  ``(a) General Authority.--
          ``(1) Simplification.--In order to simplify application 
        requirements and reduce the burden for State educational 
        agencies under this Act, the Secretary, in accordance with 
        subsection (b), shall establish procedures and criteria under 
        which, after consultation with the Governor, a State 
        educational agency may submit a consolidated State plan or a 
        consolidated State application meeting the requirements of this 
        section for--
                  ``(A) each of the covered programs in which the State 
                participates; and
                  ``(B) such other programs as the Secretary may 
                designate.
          ``(2) Consolidated applications and plans.--After 
        consultation with the Governor, a State educational agency that 
        submits a consolidated State plan or a consolidated State 
        application under this section shall not be required to submit 
        separate State plans or applications under any of the programs 
        to which the consolidated State plan or consolidated State 
        application under this section applies.
  ``(b) Collaboration.--
          ``(1) In general.--In establishing criteria and procedures 
        under this section, the Secretary shall collaborate with State 
        educational agencies and, as appropriate, with other State 
        agencies, local educational agencies, public and private 
        agencies, organizations, and institutions, private schools, and 
        parents, students, and teachers.
          ``(2) Contents.--Through the collaborative process described 
        in paragraph (1), the Secretary shall establish, for each 
        program under this Act to which this section applies, the 
        descriptions, information, assurances, and other material 
        required to be included in a consolidated State plan or 
        consolidated State application.
          ``(3) Necessary materials.--The Secretary shall require only 
        descriptions, information, assurances (including assurances of 
        compliance with applicable provisions regarding participation 
        by private school children and teachers), and other materials 
        that are absolutely necessary for the consideration of the 
        consolidated State plan or consolidated State application.

``SEC. 6303. CONSOLIDATED REPORTING.

  ``(a) In General.--In order to simplify reporting requirements and 
reduce reporting burdens, the Secretary shall establish procedures and 
criteria under which a State educational agency, in consultation with 
the Governor of the State, may submit a consolidated State annual 
report.
  ``(b) Contents.--The report shall contain information about the 
programs included in the report, including the performance of the State 
under those programs, and other matters as the Secretary determines are 
necessary, such as monitoring activities.
  ``(c) Replacement.--The report shall replace separate individual 
annual reports for the programs included in the consolidated State 
annual report.

``SEC. 6304. GENERAL APPLICABILITY OF STATE EDUCATIONAL AGENCY 
                    ASSURANCES.

  ``(a) Assurances.--A State educational agency, in consultation with 
the Governor of the State, that submits a consolidated State plan or 
consolidated State application under this Act, whether separately or 
under section 6302, shall have on file with the Secretary a single set 
of assurances, applicable to each program for which the plan or 
application is submitted, that provides that--
          ``(1) each such program will be administered in accordance 
        with all applicable statutes, regulations, program plans, and 
        applications;
          ``(2)(A) the control of funds provided under each such 
        program and title to property acquired with program funds will 
        be in a public agency, an eligible private agency, institution, 
        or organization, or an Indian tribe, if the law authorizing the 
        program provides for assistance to those entities; and
          ``(B) the public agency, eligible private agency, 
        institution, or organization, or Indian tribe will administer 
        those funds and property to the extent required by the 
        authorizing law;
          ``(3) the State will adopt and use proper methods of 
        administering each such program, including--
                  ``(A) the enforcement of any obligations imposed by 
                law on agencies, institutions, organizations, and other 
                recipients responsible for carrying out each program;
                  ``(B) the correction of deficiencies in program 
                operations that are identified through audits, 
                monitoring, or evaluation; and
                  ``(C) the adoption of written procedures for the 
                receipt and resolution of complaints alleging 
                violations of law in the administration of the 
                programs;
          ``(4) the State will cooperate in carrying out any evaluation 
        of each such program conducted by or for the Secretary or other 
        Federal officials;
          ``(5) the State will use such fiscal control and fund 
        accounting procedures that will ensure proper disbursement of, 
        and accounting for, Federal funds paid to the State under each 
        such program;
          ``(6) the State will--
                  ``(A) make reports to the Secretary as may be 
                necessary to enable the Secretary to perform the 
                Secretary's duties under each such program; and
                  ``(B) maintain such records, provide such information 
                to the Secretary, and afford such access to the records 
                as the Secretary may find necessary to carry out the 
                Secretary's duties; and
          ``(7) before the plan or application was submitted to the 
        Secretary, the State afforded a reasonable opportunity for 
        public comment on the plan or application and considered such 
        comment.
  ``(b) GEPA Provision.--Section 441 of the General Education 
Provisions Act shall not apply to programs under this Act.

``SEC. 6305. CONSOLIDATED LOCAL PLANS OR APPLICATIONS.

  ``(a) General Authority.--
          ``(1) Consolidated plan.--A local educational agency 
        receiving funds under more than one covered program may submit 
        plans or applications to the State educational agency under 
        those programs on a consolidated basis.
          ``(2) Availability to governor.--The State educational agency 
        shall make any consolidated local plans and applications 
        available to the Governor.
  ``(b) Required Consolidated Plans or Applications.--A State 
educational agency that has an approved consolidated State plan or 
application under section 6302 may require local educational agencies 
in the State receiving funds under more than one program included in 
the consolidated State plan or consolidated State application to submit 
consolidated local plans or applications under those programs, but may 
not require those agencies to submit separate plans.
  ``(c) Collaboration.--A State educational agency, in consultation 
with the Governor, shall collaborate with local educational agencies in 
the State in establishing procedures for the submission of the 
consolidated State plans or consolidated State applications under this 
section.
  ``(d) Necessary Materials.--The State educational agency shall 
require only descriptions, information, assurances, and other material 
that are absolutely necessary for the consideration of the local 
educational agency plan or application.

``SEC. 6306. OTHER GENERAL ASSURANCES.

  ``(a) Assurances.--Any applicant, other than a State educational 
agency that submits a plan or application under this Act, shall have on 
file with the State educational agency a single set of assurances, 
applicable to each program for which a plan or application is 
submitted, that provides that--
          ``(1) each such program will be administered in accordance 
        with all applicable statutes, regulations, program plans, and 
        applications;
          ``(2)(A) the control of funds provided under each such 
        program and title to property acquired with program funds will 
        be in a public agency or in an eligible private agency, 
        institution, organization, or Indian tribe, if the law 
        authorizing the program provides for assistance to those 
        entities; and
          ``(B) the public agency, eligible private agency, 
        institution, or organization, or Indian tribe will administer 
        the funds and property to the extent required by the 
        authorizing statutes;
          ``(3) the applicant will adopt and use proper methods of 
        administering each such program, including--
                  ``(A) the enforcement of any obligations imposed by 
                law on agencies, institutions, organizations, and other 
                recipients responsible for carrying out each program; 
                and
                  ``(B) the correction of deficiencies in program 
                operations that are identified through audits, 
                monitoring, or evaluation;
          ``(4) the applicant will cooperate in carrying out any 
        evaluation of each such program conducted by or for the State 
        educational agency, the Secretary, or other Federal officials;
          ``(5) the applicant will use such fiscal control and fund 
        accounting procedures as will ensure proper disbursement of, 
        and accounting for, Federal funds paid to the applicant under 
        each such program;
          ``(6) the applicant will--
                  ``(A) submit such reports to the State educational 
                agency (which shall make the reports available to the 
                Governor) and the Secretary as the State educational 
                agency and Secretary may require to enable the State 
                educational agency and the Secretary to perform their 
                duties under each such program; and
                  ``(B) maintain such records, provide such 
                information, and afford such access to the records as 
                the State educational agency (after consultation with 
                the Governor) or the Secretary may reasonably require 
                to carry out the State educational agency's or the 
                Secretary's duties; and
          ``(7) before the application was submitted, the applicant 
        afforded a reasonable opportunity for public comment on the 
        application and considered such comment.
  ``(b) GEPA Provision.--Section 442 of the General Education 
Provisions Act shall not apply to programs under this Act.

                           ``PART D--WAIVERS

``SEC. 6401. WAIVERS OF STATUTORY AND REGULATORY REQUIREMENTS.

  ``(a) In General.--
          ``(1) Request for waiver.--A State educational agency, local 
        educational agency, or Indian tribe that receives funds under a 
        program authorized under this Act may submit a request to the 
        Secretary to waive any statutory or regulatory requirement of 
        this Act.
          ``(2) Receipt of waiver.--Except as provided in subsection 
        (c) and subject to the limits in subsection (b)(5)(A), the 
        Secretary shall waive any statutory or regulatory requirement 
        of this Act for a State educational agency, local educational 
        agency, Indian tribe, or school (through a local educational 
        agency), that submits a waiver request pursuant to this 
        subsection.
  ``(b) Plan.--
          ``(1) In general.--A State educational agency, local 
        educational agency, or Indian tribe that desires a waiver under 
        this section shall submit a waiver request to the Secretary, 
        which shall include a plan that--
                  ``(A) identifies the Federal programs affected by the 
                requested waiver;
                  ``(B) describes which Federal statutory or regulatory 
                requirements are to be waived;
                  ``(C) reasonably demonstrates that the waiver will 
                improve instruction for students and advance student 
                academic achievement;
                  ``(D) describes the methods the State educational 
                agency, local educational agency, or Indian tribe will 
                use to monitor the effectiveness of the implementation 
                of the plan; and
                  ``(E) describes how schools will continue to provide 
                assistance to the same populations served by programs 
                for which the waiver is requested.
          ``(2) Additional information.--A waiver request under this 
        section--
                  ``(A) may provide for waivers of requirements 
                applicable to State educational agencies, local 
                educational agencies, Indian tribes, and schools; and
                  ``(B) shall be developed and submitted--
                          ``(i)(I) by local educational agencies (on 
                        behalf of those agencies and schools) to State 
                        educational agencies; and
                          ``(II) by State educational agencies (on 
                        their own behalf, or on behalf of, and based on 
                        the requests of, local educational agencies in 
                        the State) to the Secretary; or
                          ``(ii) by Indian tribes (on behalf of schools 
                        operated by the tribes) to the Secretary.
          ``(3) General requirements.--
                  ``(A) State educational agencies.--In the case of a 
                waiver request submitted by a State educational agency 
                acting on its own behalf, or on behalf of local 
                educational agencies in the State, the State 
                educational agency shall--
                          ``(i) provide the public and local 
                        educational agencies in the State with notice 
                        and a reasonable opportunity to comment and 
                        provide input on the request;
                          ``(ii) submit the comments and input to the 
                        Secretary, with a description of how the State 
                        addressed the comments and input; and
                          ``(iii) provide notice and a reasonable time 
                        to comment to the public and local educational 
                        agencies in the manner in which the applying 
                        agency customarily provides similar notice and 
                        opportunity to comment to the public.
                  ``(B) Local educational agencies.--In the case of a 
                waiver request submitted by a local educational agency 
                that receives funds under this Act--
                          ``(i) the request shall be reviewed by the 
                        State educational agency and be accompanied by 
                        the comments, if any, of the State educational 
                        agency and the public; and
                          ``(ii) notice and a reasonable opportunity to 
                        comment regarding the waiver request shall be 
                        provided to the State educational agency and 
                        the public by the agency requesting the waiver 
                        in the manner in which that agency customarily 
                        provides similar notice and opportunity to 
                        comment to the public.
          ``(4) Peer review.--
                  ``(A) Establishment.--The Secretary shall establish a 
                multi-disciplinary peer review team, which shall meet 
                the requirements of section 6543, to review waiver 
                requests under this section.
                  ``(B) Applicability.--The Secretary may approve a 
                waiver request under this section without conducting a 
                peer review of the request, but shall use the peer 
                review process under this paragraph before disapproving 
                such a request.
                  ``(C) Standard and nature of review.--Peer reviewers 
                shall conduct a good faith review of waiver requests 
                submitted to them under this section. Peer reviewers 
                shall review such waiver requests--
                          ``(i) in their totality;
                          ``(ii) in deference to State and local 
                        judgment; and
                          ``(iii) with the goal of promoting State- and 
                        local-led innovation.
          ``(5) Waiver determination, demonstration, and revision.--
                  ``(A) In general.--The Secretary shall approve a 
                waiver request not more than 60 days after the date on 
                which such request is submitted, unless the Secretary 
                determines and demonstrates that--
                          ``(i) the waiver request does not meet the 
                        requirements of this section;
                          ``(ii) the waiver is not permitted under 
                        subsection (c);
                          ``(iii) the plan that is required under 
                        paragraph (1)(C), and reviewed with deference 
                        to State and local judgment, provides no 
                        reasonable evidence to determine that a waiver 
                        will enhance student academic achievement; or
                          ``(iv) the waiver request does not provide 
                        for adequate evaluation to ensure review and 
                        continuous improvement of the plan.
                  ``(B) Waiver determination and revision.--If the 
                Secretary determines and demonstrates that the waiver 
                request does not meet the requirements of this section, 
                the Secretary shall--
                          ``(i) immediately--
                                  ``(I) notify the State educational 
                                agency, local educational agency, or 
                                Indian tribe of such determination; and
                                  ``(II) at the request of the State 
                                educational agency, local educational 
                                agency, or Indian tribe, provide 
                                detailed reasons for such determination 
                                in writing;
                          ``(ii) offer the State educational agency, 
                        local educational agency, or Indian tribe an 
                        opportunity to revise and resubmit the waiver 
                        request not more than 60 days after the date of 
                        such determination; and
                          ``(iii) if the Secretary determines that the 
                        resubmission does not meet the requirements of 
                        this section, at the request of the State 
                        educational agency, local educational agency, 
                        or Indian tribe, conduct a public hearing not 
                        more than 30 days after the date of such 
                        resubmission.
                  ``(C) Waiver disapproval.--The Secretary may 
                disapprove a waiver request if--
                          ``(i) the State educational agency, local 
                        educational agency, or Indian tribe has been 
                        notified and offered an opportunity to revise 
                        and resubmit the waiver request, as described 
                        under clauses (i) and (ii) of subparagraph (B); 
                        and
                          ``(ii) the State educational agency, local 
                        educational agency, or Indian tribe--
                                  ``(I) does not revise and resubmit 
                                the waiver request; or
                                  ``(II) revises and resubmits the 
                                waiver request, and the Secretary 
                                determines that such waiver request 
                                does not meet the requirements of this 
                                section after a hearing conducted under 
                                subparagraph (B)(iii), if requested.
                  ``(D) External conditions.--The Secretary shall not, 
                directly or indirectly, require or impose new or 
                additional requirements in exchange for receipt of a 
                waiver if such requirements are not specified in this 
                Act.
  ``(c) Restrictions.--The Secretary shall not waive under this section 
any statutory or regulatory requirements relating to--
          ``(1) the allocation or distribution of funds to States, 
        local educational agencies, Indian tribes, or other recipients 
        of funds under this Act;
          ``(2) comparability of services;
          ``(3) use of Federal funds to supplement, not supplant, non-
        Federal funds;
          ``(4) equitable participation of private school students and 
        teachers;
          ``(5) parental participation and involvement;
          ``(6) applicable civil rights requirements;
          ``(7) the prohibitions--
                  ``(A) in subpart 2 of part E;
                  ``(B) regarding use of funds for religious worship or 
                instruction in section 6505; and
                  ``(C) regarding activities in section 6524; or
          ``(8) the selection of a school attendance area or school 
        under subsections (a) and (b) of section 1113, except that the 
        Secretary may grant a waiver to allow a school attendance area 
        or school to participate in activities under subpart 1 of part 
        A of title I if the percentage of children from low-income 
        families in the school attendance area or who attend the school 
        is not more than 10 percentage points below the lowest 
        percentage of those children for any school attendance area or 
        school of the local educational agency that meets the 
        requirements of subsections (a) and (b) of section 1113.
  ``(d) Duration and Extension of Waiver; Limitations.--
          ``(1) In general.--Except as provided in paragraph (2), a 
        waiver approved by the Secretary under this section may be for 
        a period not to exceed 3 years.
          ``(2) Extension.--The Secretary may extend the period 
        described in paragraph (1) if the State demonstrates that--
                  ``(A) the waiver has been effective in enabling the 
                State or affected recipient to carry out the activities 
                for which the waiver was requested and the waiver has 
                contributed to improved student achievement; and
                  ``(B) the extension is in the public interest.
          ``(3) Specific limitations.--The Secretary shall not require 
        a State educational agency, local educational agency, or Indian 
        tribe, as a condition of approval of a waiver request, to--
                  ``(A) include in, or delete from, such request, 
                specific academic standards, such as the Common Core 
                State Standards developed under the Common Core State 
                Standards Initiative or any other standards common to a 
                significant number of States;
                  ``(B) use specific academic assessment instruments or 
                items, including assessments aligned to the standards 
                described in subparagraph (A); or
                  ``(C) include in, or delete from, such waiver request 
                any criterion that specifies, defines, describes, or 
                prescribes the standards or measures that a State or 
                local educational agency or Indian tribe uses to 
                establish, implement, or improve--
                          ``(i) State academic standards;
                          ``(ii) academic assessments;
                          ``(iii) State accountability systems; or
                          ``(iv) teacher and school leader evaluation 
                        systems.
  ``(e) Reports.--
          ``(1) Waiver reports.--A State educational agency, local 
        educational agency, or Indian tribe that receives a waiver 
        under this section shall, at the end of the second year for 
        which a waiver is received under this section and each 
        subsequent year, submit a report to the Secretary that--
                  ``(A) describes the uses of the waiver by the agency 
                or by schools;
                  ``(B) describes how schools continued to provide 
                assistance to the same populations served by the 
                programs for which waivers were granted; and
                  ``(C) evaluates the progress of the agency and 
                schools, or Indian tribe, in improving the quality of 
                instruction or the academic achievement of students.
          ``(2) Report to congress.--The Secretary shall annually 
        submit to the Committee on Education and the Workforce of the 
        House of Representatives and the Committee on Health, 
        Education, Labor, and Pensions of the Senate a report--
                  ``(A) summarizing the uses of waivers by State 
                educational agencies, local educational agencies, 
                Indian tribes, and schools; and
                  ``(B) describing the status of the waivers in 
                improving academic achievement.
  ``(f) Termination of Waivers.--The Secretary shall terminate a waiver 
under this section if the Secretary determines, after notice and an 
opportunity for a hearing, that the performance of the State or other 
recipient affected by the waiver has been inadequate to justify a 
continuation of the waiver and the recipient of the waiver has failed 
to make revisions needed to carry out the purpose of the waiver, or if 
the waiver is no longer necessary to achieve its original purpose.
  ``(g) Publication.--A notice of the Secretary's decision to grant 
each waiver under subsection (a) shall be published in the Federal 
Register and the Secretary shall provide for the dissemination of the 
notice to State educational agencies, interested parties, including 
educators, parents, students, advocacy and civil rights organizations, 
and the public.

                      ``PART E--UNIFORM PROVISIONS

                      ``Subpart 1--Private Schools

``SEC. 6501. PARTICIPATION BY PRIVATE SCHOOL CHILDREN AND TEACHERS.

  ``(a) Private School Participation.--
          ``(1) In general.--Except as otherwise provided in this Act, 
        to the extent consistent with the number of eligible children 
        in areas served by a State educational agency, local 
        educational agency, educational service agency, consortium of 
        those agencies, or another entity receiving financial 
        assistance under a program specified in subsection (b), who are 
        enrolled in private elementary schools and secondary schools in 
        areas served by such agency, consortium, or entity, the agency, 
        consortium, or entity shall, after timely and meaningful 
        consultation with appropriate private school officials or their 
        representatives, provide to those children and their teachers 
        or other educational personnel, on an equitable basis, special 
        educational services or other benefits that address their needs 
        under the program.
          ``(2) Secular, neutral, and nonideological services or 
        benefits.--Educational services or other benefits, including 
        materials and equipment, provided under this section, shall be 
        secular, neutral, and nonideological.
          ``(3) Special rule.--
                  ``(A) In general.--Educational services and other 
                benefits provided under this section for private school 
                children, teachers, and other educational personnel 
                shall be equitable in comparison to services and other 
                benefits for public school children, teachers, and 
                other educational personnel participating in the 
                program and shall be provided in a timely manner.
                  ``(B) Ombudsman.--To help ensure equitable services 
                are provided to private school children, teachers, and 
                other educational personnel under this section, the 
                State educational agency involved shall designate the 
                ombudsman designated by the agency under section 
                1120(a)(3)(B) to monitor and enforce requirements of 
                this section.
          ``(4) Expenditures.--
                  ``(A) In general.--Expenditures for educational 
                services and other benefits to eligible private school 
                children, teachers, and other service personnel shall 
                be equal to the expenditures for participating public 
                school children, taking into account the number and 
                educational needs, of the children to be served.
                  ``(B) Obligation of funds.--Funds allocated to a 
                local educational agency for educational services and 
                other benefits to eligible private school children 
                shall--
                          ``(i) be obligated in the fiscal year for 
                        which the funds are received by the agency; and
                          ``(ii) with respect to any such funds that 
                        cannot be so obligated, be used to serve such 
                        children in the following fiscal year.
                  ``(C) Notice of allocation.--Each State educational 
                agency shall--
                          ``(i) determine, in a timely manner, the 
                        proportion of funds to be allocated to each 
                        local educational agency in the State for 
                        educational services and other benefits under 
                        this subpart to eligible private school 
                        children; and
                          ``(ii) provide notice, simultaneously, to 
                        each such local educational agency and the 
                        appropriate private school officials or their 
                        representatives in the State of such allocation 
                        of funds.
          ``(5) Provision of services.--An agency, consortium, or 
        entity described in subsection (a)(1) of this section may 
        provide those services directly or through contracts with 
        public and private agencies, organizations, and institutions.
  ``(b) Applicability.--
          ``(1) In general.--This section applies to programs under--
                  ``(A) subpart 2 of part A of title I;
                  ``(B) subpart 4 of part A of title I;
                  ``(C) part A of title II;
                  ``(D) part B of title II; and
                  ``(E) part B of title III.
          ``(2) Definition.--For the purpose of this section, the term 
        `eligible children' means children eligible for services under 
        a program described in paragraph (1).
  ``(c) Consultation.--
          ``(1) In general.--To ensure timely and meaningful 
        consultation, a State educational agency, local educational 
        agency, educational service agency, consortium of those 
        agencies, or entity shall consult, in order to reach an 
        agreement, with appropriate private school officials or their 
        representatives during the design and development of the 
        programs under this Act, on issues such as--
                  ``(A) how the children's needs will be identified;
                  ``(B) what services will be offered;
                  ``(C) how, where, and by whom the services will be 
                provided;
                  ``(D) how the services will be assessed and how the 
                results of the assessment will be used to improve those 
                services;
                  ``(E) the size and scope of the equitable services to 
                be provided to the eligible private school children, 
                teachers, and other educational personnel, the 
                proportion of funds that are allocated for such 
                services, how that proportion of funds is determined, 
                and an itemization of the costs of the services to be 
                provided;
                  ``(F) how and when the agency, consortium, or entity 
                will make decisions about the delivery of services, 
                including a thorough consideration and analysis of the 
                views of the private school officials or their 
                representatives on the provision of services through 
                potential third-party providers or contractors;
                  ``(G) how, if the agency disagrees with the views of 
                the private school officials or their representatives 
                on the provision of services through a contract, the 
                local educational agency will provide in writing to 
                such private school officials or their representatives 
                an analysis of the reasons why the local educational 
                agency has chosen not to use a contractor;
                  ``(H) whether the agency will provide services under 
                this section directly or through contracts with public 
                or private agencies, organizations, or institutions; 
                and
                  ``(I) whether to provide equitable services to 
                eligible private school children--
                          ``(i) by creating a pool or pools of funds 
                        with all of the funds allocated under 
                        subsection (a)(4) based on all the children 
                        from low-income families who attend private 
                        schools in a participating school attendance 
                        area from which the local educational agency 
                        will provide such services to all such 
                        children; or
                          ``(ii) by providing such services to eligible 
                        children in each private school in the local 
                        educational agency's participating school 
                        attendance area with the proportion of funds 
                        allocated under subsection (a)(4) based on the 
                        number of children from low-income families who 
                        attend such school.
          ``(2) Disagreement.--If the agency, consortium, or entity 
        disagrees with the views of the private school officials or 
        their representatives with respect to an issue described in 
        paragraph (1), the agency, consortium, or entity shall provide 
        to the private school officials or their representatives a 
        written explanation of the reasons why the local educational 
        agency has chosen not to adopt the course of action requested 
        by such officials or their representatives.
          ``(3) Timing.--The consultation required by paragraph (1) 
        shall occur before the agency, consortium, or entity makes any 
        decision that affects the opportunities of eligible private 
        school children, teachers, and other educational personnel to 
        participate in programs under this Act, and shall continue 
        throughout the implementation and assessment of activities 
        under this section.
          ``(4) Discussion required.--The consultation required by 
        paragraph (1) shall include a discussion of service delivery 
        mechanisms that the agency, consortium, or entity could use to 
        provide equitable services to eligible private school children, 
        teachers, administrators, and other staff.
          ``(5) Documentation.--Each local educational agency shall 
        maintain in the agency's records and provide to the State 
        educational agency involved a written affirmation signed by 
        officials or their representatives of each participating 
        private school that the meaningful consultation required by 
        this section has occurred. The written affirmation shall 
        provide the option for private school officials or their 
        representatives to indicate that timely and meaningful 
        consultation has not occurred or that the program design is not 
        equitable with respect to eligible private school children. If 
        such officials or their representatives do not provide such 
        affirmation within a reasonable period of time, the local 
        educational agency shall forward the documentation that such 
        consultation has, or attempts at such consultation have, taken 
        place to the State educational agency.
          ``(6) Compliance.--
                  ``(A) In general.--If the consultation required under 
                this section is with a local educational agency or 
                educational service agency, a private school official 
                or representative shall have the right to file a 
                complaint with the State educational agency that the 
                consultation required under this section was not 
                meaningful and timely, did not give due consideration 
                to the views of the private school official or 
                representative, or did not treat the private school or 
                its students equitably as required by this section.
                  ``(B) Procedure.--If the private school official or 
                representative wishes to file a complaint, the private 
                school official or representative shall provide the 
                basis of the noncompliance with this section and all 
                parties shall provide the appropriate documentation to 
                the appropriate officials or representatives.
                  ``(C) Services.--A State educational agency shall 
                provide services under this section directly or through 
                contracts with public and private agencies, 
                organizations, and institutions, if--
                          ``(i) the appropriate private school 
                        officials or their representatives have--
                                  ``(I) requested that the State 
                                educational agency provide such 
                                services directly; and
                                  ``(II) demonstrated that the local 
                                educational agency or Education Service 
                                Agency involved has not met the 
                                requirements of this section; or
                          ``(ii) in a case in which--
                                  ``(I) a local educational agency has 
                                more than 10,000 children from low-
                                income families who attend private 
                                elementary schools or secondary schools 
                                in such agency's school attendance 
                                areas, as defined in section 
                                1113(a)(2)(A), that are not being 
                                served by the agency's program under 
                                this section; or
                                  ``(II) 90 percent of the eligible 
                                private school students in a school 
                                attendance area, as defined in section 
                                1113(a)(2)(A), are not being served by 
                                the agency's program under this 
                                section.
  ``(d) Public Control of Funds.--
          ``(1) In general.--The control of funds used to provide 
        services under this section, and title to materials, equipment, 
        and property purchased with those funds, shall be in a public 
        agency for the uses and purposes provided in this Act, and a 
        public agency shall administer the funds and property.
          ``(2) Provision of services.--
                  ``(A) In general.--The provision of services under 
                this section shall be provided--
                          ``(i) by employees of a public agency; or
                          ``(ii) through contract by the public agency 
                        with an individual, association, agency, 
                        organization, or other entity.
                  ``(B) Independence; public agency.--In the provision 
                of those services, the employee, person, association, 
                agency, organization, or other entity shall be 
                independent of the private school and of any religious 
                organization, and the employment or contract shall be 
                under the control and supervision of the public agency.
                  ``(C) Commingling of funds prohibited.--Funds used to 
                provide services under this section shall not be 
                commingled with non-Federal funds.

``SEC. 6502. STANDARDS FOR BY-PASS.

  ``(a) In General.--If, by reason of any provision of law, a State 
educational agency, local educational agency, educational service 
agency, consortium of those agencies, or other entity is prohibited 
from providing for the participation in programs of children enrolled 
in, or teachers or other educational personnel from, private elementary 
schools and secondary schools, on an equitable basis, or if the 
Secretary determines that the agency, consortium, or entity has 
substantially failed or is unwilling to provide for that participation, 
as required by section 6501, the Secretary shall--
          ``(1) waive the requirements of that section for the agency, 
        consortium, or entity; and
          ``(2) arrange for the provision of equitable services to 
        those children, teachers, or other educational personnel 
        through arrangements that shall be subject to the requirements 
        of this section and of sections 6501, 6503, and 6504.
  ``(b) Determination.--In making the determination under subsection 
(a), the Secretary shall consider one or more factors, including the 
quality, size, scope, and location of the program, and the opportunity 
of private school children, teachers, and other educational personnel 
to participate in the program.

``SEC. 6503. COMPLAINT PROCESS FOR PARTICIPATION OF PRIVATE SCHOOL 
                    CHILDREN.

  ``(a) Procedures for Complaints.--The Secretary shall develop and 
implement written procedures for receiving, investigating, and 
resolving complaints from parents, teachers, or other individuals and 
organizations concerning violations of section 6501 by a State 
educational agency, local educational agency, educational service 
agency, consortium of those agencies, or entity. The individual or 
organization shall submit the complaint to the State educational agency 
for a written resolution by the State educational agency within 45 
days.
  ``(b) Appeals to Secretary.--The resolution may be appealed by an 
interested party to the Secretary not later than 30 days after the 
State educational agency resolves the complaint or fails to resolve the 
complaint within the 45-day time limit. The appeal shall be accompanied 
by a copy of the State educational agency's resolution, and, if there 
is one, a complete statement of the reasons supporting the appeal. The 
Secretary shall investigate and resolve the appeal not later than 90 
days after receipt of the appeal.

                       ``Subpart 2--Prohibitions

``SEC. 6521. PROHIBITION AGAINST FEDERAL MANDATES, DIRECTION, OR 
                    CONTROL.

  ``(a) In General.--No officer or employee of the Federal Government 
shall, directly or indirectly, through grants, contracts, or other 
cooperative agreements, mandate, direct, incentivize, or control a 
State, local educational agency, or school's specific instructional 
content, academic standards and assessments, curricula, or program of 
instruction, (including any requirement, direction, incentive, or 
mandate to adopt the Common Core State Standards developed under the 
Common Core State Standards Initiative or any other academic standards 
common to a significant number of States), nor shall anything in this 
Act be construed to authorize such officer or employee to do so.
  ``(b) Financial Support.--No officer or employee of the Federal 
Government shall, directly or indirectly, through grants, contracts, or 
other cooperative agreements, make financial support available in a 
manner that is conditioned upon a State, local educational agency, or 
school's adoption of specific instructional content, academic standards 
and assessments, curriculum, or program of instruction, (including any 
requirement, direction, or mandate to adopt the Common Core State 
Standards developed under the Common Core State Standards Initiative, 
any other academic standards common to a significant number of States, 
or any assessment, instructional content, or curriculum aligned to such 
standards), even if such requirements are specified in an Act other 
than this Act, nor shall anything in this Act be construed to authorize 
such officer or employee to do so.

``SEC. 6522. PROHIBITIONS ON FEDERAL GOVERNMENT AND USE OF FEDERAL 
                    FUNDS.

  ``(a) General Prohibition.--Nothing in this Act shall be construed to 
authorize an officer or employee of the Federal Government directly or 
indirectly, whether through a grant, contract, or cooperative 
agreement, to mandate, direct, or control a State, local educational 
agency, or school's curriculum, program of instruction, or allocation 
of State or local resources, or mandate a State or any subdivision 
thereof to spend any funds or incur any costs not paid for under this 
Act.
  ``(b) Prohibition on Endorsement of Curriculum.--Notwithstanding any 
other prohibition of Federal law, no funds provided to the Department 
under this Act may be used by the Department directly or indirectly--
whether through a grant, contract, or cooperative agreement--to 
endorse, approve, develop, require, or sanction any curriculum, 
including any curriculum aligned to the Common Core State Standards 
developed under the Common Core State Standards Initiative or any other 
academic standards common to a significant number of States, designed 
to be used in an elementary school or secondary school.
  ``(c) Local Control.--Nothing in this Act shall be construed to--
          ``(1) authorize an officer or employee of the Federal 
        Government directly or indirectly--whether through a grant, 
        contract, or cooperative agreement--to mandate, direct, review, 
        or control a State, local educational agency, or school's 
        instructional content, curriculum, and related activities;
          ``(2) limit the application of the General Education 
        Provisions Act;
          ``(3) require the distribution of scientifically or medically 
        false or inaccurate materials or to prohibit the distribution 
        of scientifically or medically true or accurate materials; or
          ``(4) create any legally enforceable right.
  ``(d) Prohibition on Requiring Federal Approval or Certification of 
Standards.--Notwithstanding any other provision of Federal law, no 
State shall be required to have academic standards approved or 
certified by the Federal Government, in order to receive assistance 
under this Act.
  ``(e) Rule of Construction on Building Standards.--Nothing in this 
Act shall be construed to mandate national school building standards 
for a State, local educational agency, or school.

``SEC. 6523. PROHIBITION ON FEDERALLY SPONSORED TESTING.

  ``(a) General Prohibition.--Notwithstanding any other provision of 
Federal law and except as provided in subsection (b), no funds provided 
under this Act to the Secretary or to the recipient of any award may be 
used to develop, pilot test, field test, implement, administer, or 
distribute any federally sponsored national test or testing materials 
in reading, mathematics, or any other subject, unless specifically and 
explicitly authorized by law.
  ``(b) Exceptions.--Subsection (a) shall not apply to international 
comparative assessments developed under the authority of section 
153(a)(5) of the Education Sciences Reform Act of 2002 and administered 
to only a representative sample of pupils in the United States and in 
foreign nations.

``SEC. 6524. LIMITATIONS ON NATIONAL TESTING OR CERTIFICATION FOR 
                    TEACHERS.

  ``(a) Mandatory National Testing or Certification of Teachers.--
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Act or any other provision 
of law, no funds available to the Department or otherwise available 
under this Act may be used for any purpose relating to a mandatory 
nationwide test or certification of teachers or education 
paraprofessionals, including any planning, development, implementation, 
or administration of such test or certification.
  ``(b) Prohibition on Withholding Funds.--The Secretary is prohibited 
from withholding funds from any State educational agency or local 
educational agency if the State educational agency or local educational 
agency fails to adopt a specific method of teacher or paraprofessional 
certification.

``SEC. 6525. PROHIBITED USES OF FUNDS.

  ``No funds under this Act may be used--
          ``(1) for construction, renovation, or repair of any school 
        facility, except as authorized under title IV or otherwise 
        authorized under this Act;
          ``(2) for medical services, drug treatment or rehabilitation, 
        except for specialized instructional support services or 
        referral to treatment for students who are victims of, or 
        witnesses to, crime or who illegally use drugs;
          ``(3) for transportation unless otherwise authorized under 
        this Act;
          ``(4) to develop or distribute materials, or operate programs 
        or courses of instruction directed at youth, that are designed 
        to promote or encourage sexual activity, or normalize teen 
        sexual activity as an expected behavior, implicitly or 
        explicitly, whether homosexual or heterosexual;
          ``(5) to distribute or to aid in the distribution on school 
        grounds by any organization of legally obscene materials to 
        minors or any instruction or materials that normalize teen 
        sexual activity as an expected behavior;
          ``(6) to provide sex education or HIV-prevention education in 
        schools unless that instruction is age appropriate and includes 
        the health benefits of abstinence; or
          ``(7) to operate a program of contraceptive distribution in 
        schools.

``SEC. 6529. PROHIBITION REGARDING STATE AID.

  ``A State shall not take into consideration payments under this Act 
(other than under title IV) in determining the eligibility of any local 
educational agency in that State for State aid, or the amount of State 
aid, with respect to free public education of children.

``SEC. 6530. PROHIBITION ON REQUIRING STATE PARTICIPATION.

  ``Any State that opts out of receiving funds, or that has not been 
awarded funds, under one or more programs under this Act shall not be 
required to carry out any of the requirements of such program or 
programs, and nothing in this Act shall be construed to require a State 
to participate in any program under this Act.

``SEC. 6531. LOCAL CONTROL.

  ``The Secretary shall not--
          ``(1) impose any requirements or exercise any governance or 
        authority over school administration, including the development 
        and expenditure of school budgets, unless explicitly authorized 
        under this Act;
          ``(2) issue any regulations or non-regulatory guidance 
        without first consulting with local stakeholders and fairly 
        addressing their concerns; or
          ``(3) deny any local educational agency the right to object 
        to any administrative requirement, including actions that place 
        additional burdens or cost on the local educational agency.

                     ``Subpart 3--Other Provisions

``SEC. 6541. ARMED FORCES RECRUITER ACCESS TO STUDENTS AND STUDENT 
                    RECRUITING INFORMATION.

  ``(a) Policy.--
          ``(1) Access to student recruiting information.--
        Notwithstanding section 444(a)(5)(B) of the General Education 
        Provisions Act, each local educational agency receiving 
        assistance under this Act shall provide, upon a request made by 
        a military recruiter or an institution of higher education, 
        access to the name, address, and telephone listing of each 
        secondary school student served by the local educational 
        agency, unless the parent of such student has submitted the 
        prior consent request under paragraph (2).
          ``(2) Consent.--
                  ``(A) Opt-out process.--A parent of a secondary 
                school student may submit a written request, to the 
                local educational agency, that the student's name, 
                address, and telephone listing not be released for 
                purposes of paragraph (1) without prior written consent 
                of the parent. Upon receiving such request, the local 
                educational agency may not release the student's name, 
                address, and telephone listing for such purposes 
                without the prior written consent of the parent.
                  ``(B) Notification of opt-out process.--Each local 
                educational agency shall notify the parents of the 
                students served by the agency of the option to make a 
                request described in subparagraph (A).
          ``(3) Same access to students.--Each local educational agency 
        receiving assistance under this Act shall provide military 
        recruiters the same access to secondary school students as is 
        provided generally to institutions of higher education or to 
        prospective employers of those students.
          ``(4) Rule of construction prohibiting opt-in processes.--
        Nothing in this subsection shall be construed to allow a local 
        educational agency to withhold access to a student's name, 
        address, and telephone listing from a military recruiter or 
        institution of higher education by implementing an opt-in 
        process or any other process other than the written consent 
        request process under paragraph (2)(A).
          ``(5) Parental consent.--For purposes of this subsection, 
        whenever a student has attained 18 years of age, the permission 
        or consent required of and the rights accorded to the parents 
        of the student shall only be required of and accorded to the 
        student.
  ``(b) Notification.--The Secretary, in consultation with the 
Secretary of Defense, shall, not later than 120 days after the date of 
the enactment of the Student Success Act, notify school leaders, school 
administrators, and other educators about the requirements of this 
section.
  ``(c) Exception.--The requirements of this section do not apply to a 
private secondary school that maintains a religious objection to 
service in the Armed Forces if the objection is verifiable through the 
corporate or other organizational documents or materials of that 
school.

``SEC. 6542. RULEMAKING.

  ``The Secretary shall issue regulations under this Act as prescribed 
under section 1401 only to the extent that such regulations are 
necessary to ensure that there is compliance with the specific 
requirements and assurances required by this Act.

``SEC. 6543. PEER REVIEW.

  ``(a) In General.--If the Secretary uses a peer review panel to 
evaluate an application for any program required under this Act, the 
Secretary shall conduct the panel in accordance with this section.
  ``(b) Makeup.--The Secretary shall--
          ``(1) solicit nominations for peers to serve on the panel 
        from States that are--
                  ``(A) practitioners in the subject matter; or
                  ``(B) experts in the subject matter; and
          ``(2) select the peers from such nominees, except that there 
        shall be at least 75 percent practitioners on each panel and in 
        each group formed from the panel.
  ``(c) Guidance.--The Secretary shall issue the peer review guidance 
concurrently with the notice of the grant.
  ``(d) Reporting.--The Secretary shall--
          ``(1) make the names of the peer reviewers available to the 
        public before the final deadline for the application of the 
        grant;
          ``(2) make the peer review notes publically available once 
        the review has concluded; and
          ``(3) make any deviations from the peer reviewers' 
        recommendations available to the public with an explanation of 
        the deviation.
  ``(e) Applicant Reviews.--An applicant shall have an opportunity 
within 30 days to review the peer review notes and appeal the score to 
the Secretary prior to the Secretary making any final determination.
  ``(f) Prohibition.--The Secretary, and the Secretary's staff, may not 
attempt to participate in, or influence, the peer review process. No 
Federal employee may participate in, or attempt to influence the peer 
review process, except to respond to questions of a technical nature, 
which shall be publicly reported.

``SEC. 6544. PARENTAL CONSENT.

  ``Upon receipt of written notification from the parents or legal 
guardians of a student, the local educational agency shall withdraw 
such student from any program funded under part B of title III. The 
local educational agency shall make reasonable efforts to inform 
parents or legal guardians of the content of such programs or 
activities funded under this Act, other than classroom instruction.

``SEC. 6548. SEVERABILITY.

  ``If any provision of this Act is held invalid, the remainder of this 
Act shall be unaffected thereby.

``SEC. 6549. DEPARTMENT STAFF.

  ``The Secretary shall--
          ``(1) not later than 60 days after the date of the enactment 
        of the Student Success Act, identify the number of Department 
        employees who worked on or administered each education program 
        and project authorized under this Act, as such program or 
        project was in effect on the day before such enactment date, 
        and publish such information on the Department's website;
          ``(2) not later than 60 days after such enactment date, 
        identify the number of full-time equivalent employees who work 
        on or administer programs or projects authorized under this 
        Act, as in effect on the day before such enactment date, that 
        have been eliminated or consolidated since such date;
          ``(3) not later than 1 year after such enactment date, reduce 
        the workforce of the Department by the number of full-time 
        equivalent employees the Department calculated under paragraph 
        (2); and
          ``(4) not later than 1 year after such enactment date, report 
        to the Congress on--
                  ``(A) the number of employees associated with each 
                program or project authorized under this Act 
                administered by the Department;
                  ``(B) the number of full-time equivalent employees 
                who were determined to be associated with eliminated or 
                consolidated programs or projects under paragraph (2);
                  ``(C) how the Secretary reduced the number of 
                employees at the Department under paragraph (3);
                  ``(D) the average salary of the employees described 
                in subparagraph (B) whose positions were eliminated; 
                and
                  ``(E) the average salary of the full-time equivalent 
                employees who work on or administer a program or 
                project authorized under this Act by the Department, 
                disaggregated by employee function with each such 
                program or project.

``SEC. 6550. CRIMINAL BACKGROUND CHECKS.

  ``(a) Condition of Receipt of Funds.--A local educational agency or 
State educational agency shall be ineligible for funds under this Act 
if such agency--
          ``(1) employs an individual who--
                  ``(A) refuses to consent to a criminal background 
                check that includes--
                          ``(i) a search of the State criminal registry 
                        or repository in the State where the individual 
                        resides;
                          ``(ii) a search of State-based child abuse 
                        and neglect registries and databases in the 
                        State where the individual resides;
                          ``(iii) a search of the National Crime 
                        Information Center;
                          ``(iv) a Federal Bureau of Investigation 
                        fingerprint check using the Integrated 
                        Automated Fingerprint Identification System; 
                        and
                          ``(v) a search of the National Sex Offender 
                        Registry established under the Adam Walsh Child 
                        Protection and Safety Act of 2006 (42 U.S.C. 
                        16901 et seq.);
                  ``(B) makes a false statement in connection with such 
                criminal background check;
                  ``(C) is registered or is required to be registered 
                on a State sex offender registry or the National Sex 
                Offender Registry established under the Adam Walsh 
                Child Protection and Safety Act of 2006 (42 U.S.C. 
                16901 et seq.); or
                  ``(D) has been convicted of a felony consisting of--
                          ``(i) homicide;
                          ``(ii) child abuse or neglect;
                          ``(iii) a crime against children, including 
                        child pornography;
                          ``(iv) domestic violence;
                          ``(v) a crime involving rape or sexual 
                        assault;
                          ``(vi) kidnapping;
                          ``(vii) arson; or
                          ``(viii) physical assault, battery, or a 
                        drug-related offense, committed on or after the 
                        date that is 5 years before the date of the 
                        individual's criminal background check under 
                        this section; or
          ``(2) knowingly facilitates the transfer of an employee if 
        the agency knows, or has probable cause to believe, that the 
        employee engaged in sexual misconduct with a student.
  ``(b) Fees for Background Checks.--The Attorney General or a State 
may charge any applicable fees for conducting a criminal background 
check under this section.
  ``(c) Definition.--In this section, the term `employee' means--
          ``(1) an employee of, or person seeking employment with, a 
        local educational agency or State educational agency, and who, 
        as a result of such employment has (or will have) a job duty 
        that results in unsupervised access to elementary school or 
        secondary school students; or
          ``(2) any person, or an employee of any person who--
                  ``(A) has a contract or agreement to provide services 
                to an elementary school or secondary school, local 
                educational agency, or State educational agency; and
                  ``(B) as a result of such contract or agreement has a 
                job duty that results in unsupervised access to 
                elementary school or secondary school students.

``SEC. 6551. REDUCTION IN FEDERAL SPENDING.

  ``To ensure the reduced Federal role established under this Act is 
recognized when allocating spending amounts and appropriations for the 
programs under this Act, the Secretary, through the director of the 
Institute for Education Sciences, shall--
          ``(1) not later than 60 days after the date of the enactment 
        of the Student Success Act, contract with an economist with an 
        expertise in workforce and government efficiency;
          ``(2) not later than 1 year after the date of the enactment 
        of the Student Success Act and before the Administration's 
        annual budget request for a fiscal year is submitted to 
        Congress annually thereafter, require the economist to issue a 
        report that--
                  ``(A) examines the annual cost savings from the 
                reduced Federal requirements under this Act, as amended 
                by the Student Success Act, as compared to the 
                requirements under this Act as in effect after fiscal 
                year 2002 and prior to the date of the enactment of the 
                Student Success Act and each year thereafter;
                  ``(B) determines the reduced need for Federal funds 
                to meet the Federal requirements under this Act, as 
                amended by the Student Success Act, as compared to the 
                requirements under this Act as in effect after fiscal 
                year 2002 and prior to the date of the enactment of the 
                Student Success Act; and
                  ``(C) includes the specific reduced Federal funding 
                amounts and reduced number of employees at the 
                Department necessary for compliance with the provisions 
                of this Act, as amended by the Student Success Act; and
          ``(3) not later than one week after Administration's budget 
        request is submitted to Congress for each fiscal year, submit 
        the report to the Committees on Budget and the Committees on 
        Appropriations of the House of Representatives and the Senate, 
        and the Committee on Education and the Workforce of the House 
        of Representatives and the Committee on Health, Education, 
        Labor, and Pensions of the Senate.

``Subpart 4--Restoration of State Sovereignty Over Public Education and 
          Parental Rights Over the Education of Their Children

``SEC. 6561. STATES TO RETAIN RIGHTS AND AUTHORITIES THEY DO NOT 
                    EXPRESSLY WAIVE.

  ``(a) Retention of Rights and Authorities.--No officer, employee, or 
other authority of the Secretary shall enforce against an authority of 
a State, nor shall any authority of a State have any obligation to 
obey, any requirement imposed as a condition of receiving assistance 
under a grant program established under this Act, nor shall such 
program operate within a State, unless the legislature of that State 
shall have by law expressly approved that program and, in doing so, 
have waived the State's rights and authorities to act inconsistently 
with any requirement that might be imposed by the Secretary as a 
condition of receiving that assistance.
  ``(b) Amendment of Terms of Receipt of Federal Financial 
Assistance.--An officer, employee, or other authority of the Secretary 
may release assistance under a grant program established under this Act 
to a State only after the legislature of the State has by law expressly 
approved the program (as described in subsection (a)). This approval 
may be accomplished by a vote to affirm a State budget that includes 
the use of such Federal funds and any such State budget must expressly 
include any requirement imposed as a condition of receiving assistance 
under a grant program established under this Act so that by approving 
the budget, the State legislature is expressly approving the grant 
program and, in doing so, waiving the State's rights and authorities to 
act inconsistently with any requirement that might be imposed by the 
Secretary as a condition of receiving that assistance.
  ``(c) Special Rule for States With Biennial Legislatures.--In the 
case of a State with a biennial legislature--
          ``(1) during a year in which the State legislature does not 
        meet, subsections (a) and (b) shall not apply; and
          ``(2) during a year in which the State legislature meets, 
        subsections (a) and (b) shall apply, and, with respect to any 
        grant program established under this Act during the most recent 
        year in which the State legislature did not meet, the State may 
        by law expressly disapprove the grant program, and, if such 
        disapproval occurs, an officer, employee, or other authority of 
        the Secretary may not release any additional assistance to the 
        State under that grant program.
  ``(d) Definition of State Authority.--As used in this section, the 
term `authority of a State' includes any administering agency of the 
State, any officer or employee of the State, and any local government 
authority of the State.
  ``(e) Effective Date.--This section applies in each State beginning 
on the 90th day after the end of the first regular session of the 
legislature of that State that begins 5 years after the date of the 
enactment of the Student Success Act and shall continue to apply in 
subsequent years until otherwise provided by law.

``SEC. 6562. DEDICATION OF SAVINGS TO DEFICIT REDUCTION.

  ``Notwithstanding any formula reallocations stipulated under the 
Student Success Act, any funds under such Act not allocated to a State 
because a State did not affirmatively agree to the receipt of such 
funds shall not be reallocated among the States.

``SEC. 6563. DEFINITION OF STATE WITH BIENNIAL LEGISLATURE.

  ``In this Act, the term `State with a biennial legislature' means a 
State the legislature of which meets every other year.

``SEC. 6564. INTENT OF CONGRESS.

  ``It is the intent of Congress that other than the terms and 
conditions expressly approved by State law under the terms of this 
subpart, control over public education and parental rights to control 
the education of their children are vested exclusively within the 
autonomous zone of independent authority reserved to the States and 
individual Americans by the United States Constitution, other than the 
Federal Government's undiminishable obligation to enforce minimum 
Federal standards of equal protection and due process.

                         ``PART F--EVALUATIONS

``SEC. 6601. EVALUATIONS.

  ``(a) Reservation of Funds.--Except as provided in subsections (c) 
and (d), the Secretary may reserve not more than 0.5 percent of the 
amount appropriated to carry out each categorical program authorized 
under this Act. The reserved amounts shall be used by the Secretary, 
acting through the Director of the Institute of Education Sciences--
          ``(1) to conduct--
                  ``(A) comprehensive evaluations of the program or 
                project;
                  ``(B) studies of the effectiveness of the program or 
                project and its administrative impact on schools and 
                local educational agencies; and
                  ``(C) the wide dissemination of evaluation findings 
                under this section with respect to programs authorized 
                under this Act--
                          ``(i) in a timely fashion;
                          ``(ii) in forms that are understandable, 
                        easily accessible, and usable or adaptable for 
                        use in the improvement of educational practice;
                          ``(iii) through electronic transfer, and 
                        other means, such as posting, as available, to 
                        the websites of State educational agencies, 
                        local educational agencies, the Institute of 
                        Education Sciences, the Department, and other 
                        relevant places; and
                          ``(iv) in a manner that promotes the 
                        utilization of such findings.
          ``(2) to evaluate the aggregate short- and long-term effects 
        and cost efficiencies across Federal programs assisted or 
        authorized under this Act and related Federal preschool, 
        elementary, and secondary programs under any other Federal law; 
        and
          ``(3) to increase the usefulness of evaluations of grant 
        recipients in order to ensure the continuous progress of the 
        program or project by improving the quality, timeliness, 
        efficiency, and use of information relating to performance 
        under the program or project.
  ``(b) Required Plan.--The Secretary, acting through the Director of 
the Institute of Education Sciences, may use the reserved amount under 
subsection (a) only after completion of a comprehensive, multi-year 
plan--
          ``(1) for the periodic evaluation of each of the major 
        categorical programs authorized under this Act, and as 
        resources permit, the smaller categorical programs authorized 
        under this Act;
          ``(2) that shall be developed and implemented with the 
        involvement of other officials at the Department, as 
        appropriate; and
          ``(3) that shall not be finalized until--
                  ``(A) the publication of a notice in the Federal 
                Register seeking public comment on such plan and after 
                review by the Secretary of such comments; and
                  ``(B) the plan is submitted for comment to the 
                Committee on Education and the Workforce of the House 
                of Representatives and the Committee on Health, 
                Education, Labor, and Pensions of the Senate and after 
                review by the Secretary of such comments.
  ``(c) Title I Excluded.--The Secretary may not reserve under 
subsection (a) funds appropriated to carry out any program authorized 
under title I.
  ``(d) Evaluation Activities Authorized Elsewhere.--If, under any 
other provision of this Act (other than title I), funds are authorized 
to be reserved or used for evaluation activities with respect to a 
program or project, the Secretary may not reserve additional funds 
under this section for the evaluation of that program or project.''.
  (b) Technical Amendments.--
          (1) Title ix.--
                  (A) Subpart 1 of part e of title vi.--
                          (i) Transfer and redesignation.--Sections 
                        9504 through 9506 (20 U.S.C. 7884, 7885, and 
                        7886) are--
                                  (I) transferred to title VI, as 
                                amended by subsection (a) of this 
                                section;
                                  (II) inserted after section 6503 of 
                                such title; and
                                  (III) redesignated as sections 6504 
                                through 6506, respectively.
                          (ii) Amendments.--Section 6504 (as so 
                        redesignated) is amended--
                                  (I) in subsection (a)(1)(A), by 
                                striking ``section 9502'' and inserting 
                                ``section 6502'';
                                  (II) in subsection (b), by striking 
                                ``section 9501'' and inserting 
                                ``section 6501''; and
                                  (III) in subsection (d), by striking 
                                ``No Child Left Behind Act of 2001'' 
                                and inserting ``Student Success Act''.
                  (B) Subpart 2 of part e of title vi.--
                          (i) Transfer and redesignation.--Sections 
                        9531, 9533, and 9534 (20 U.S.C. 7911, 7913, and 
                        7914) are--
                                  (I) transferred to title VI, as 
                                amended by subparagraph (A) of this 
                                paragraph;
                                  (II) inserted after section 6525 of 
                                such title; and
                                  (III) redesignated as sections 6526 
                                through 6528, respectively.
                          (ii) Amendments.--Section 6528 (as so 
                        redesignated) is amended--
                                  (I) by striking ``(a) In General.--
                                Nothing'' and inserting ``Nothing''; 
                                and
                                  (II) by striking subsection (b).
                  (C) Subpart 3 of part e of title vi.--Sections 9523, 
                9524, and 9525 (20 U.S.C. 7903, 7904, and 7905) are--
                          (i) transferred to title VI, as amended by 
                        subparagraph (B) of this paragraph;
                          (ii) inserted after section 6544 of such 
                        title; and
                          (iii) redesignated as sections 6545 through 
                        6547, respectively.
          (2) Title iv.--Sections 4141 and 4155 (20 U.S.C. 7151 and 
        7161) are--
                  (A) transferred to title VI, as amended by this Act;
                  (B) inserted after section 6551; and
                  (C) redesignated as sections 6552 and 6553, 
                respectively.

SEC. 602. REPEAL.

  Title IX (20 U.S.C. 7801 et seq.), as amended by section 601(b)(1) of 
this title, is repealed.

SEC. 603. OTHER LAWS.

  Beginning on the date of the enactment of this Act, any reference in 
law to the term ``highly qualified'' as defined in section 9101 of the 
Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 shall be treated as a 
reference to such term under section 9101 of the Elementary and 
Secondary Education Act of 1965 as in effect on the day before the date 
of the enactment of this Act.

SEC. 604. AMENDMENT TO IDEA.

  Section 602 of the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (20 
U.S.C. 1401) is amended by striking paragraph (10).

                     TITLE VII--HOMELESS EDUCATION

SEC. 701. STATEMENT OF POLICY.

  Section 721 of the McKinney-Vento Homeless Assistance Act (42 U.S.C. 
11431) is amended--
          (1) by amending paragraph (2) to read as follows:
          ``(2) In any State where compulsory residency requirements or 
        other requirements, laws, regulations, practices, or policies 
        may act as a barrier to the identification, enrollment, 
        attendance, or success in school of homeless children and 
        youths, the State and local educational agencies will review 
        and undertake steps to revise such laws, regulations, 
        practices, or policies to ensure that homeless children and 
        youths are afforded the same free, appropriate public education 
        as is provided to other children and youths.'';
          (2) in paragraph (3), by striking ``alone''; and
          (3) in paragraph (4), by striking ``challenging State student 
        academic achievement'' and inserting ``State academic''.

SEC. 702. GRANTS FOR STATE AND LOCAL ACTIVITIES FOR THE EDUCATION OF 
                    HOMELESS CHILDREN AND YOUTHS.

  Section 722 of such Act (42 U.S.C. 11432) is amended--
          (1) in subsection (a), by striking ``(g).'' and inserting 
        ``(h).'';
          (2) by striking subsection (b);
          (3) in subsection (c)--
                  (A) in paragraph (1)(A)--
                          (i) in clause (i), by adding ``or'' at the 
                        end;
                          (ii) in clause (ii), by striking ``; or'' at 
                        the end and inserting a period; and
                          (iii) by striking clause (iii); and
                  (B) by striking paragraph (3);
          (4) in subsection (d)--
                  (A) in the matter preceding paragraph (1), by 
                striking ``Grants'' and inserting ``Grant funds from a 
                grant made to a State'';
                  (B) by amending paragraph (2) to read as follows:
          ``(2) To provide services and activities to improve the 
        identification of homeless children (including preschool-aged 
        homeless children and youths) that enable such children and 
        youths to enroll in, attend, and succeed in school, or, if 
        appropriate, in preschool programs.'';
                  (C) in paragraph (3), by inserting before the period 
                at the end the following: ``that can sufficiently carry 
                out the duties described in this subtitle''; and
                  (D) by amending paragraph (5) to read as follows:
          ``(5) To develop and implement professional development 
        programs for liaisons designated under subsection (g)(1)(J)(ii) 
        and other local educational agency personnel--
                  ``(A) to improve their identification of homeless 
                children and youths; and
                  ``(B) to heighten their awareness of, and capacity to 
                respond to, specific needs in the education of homeless 
                children and youths.'';
          (5) in subsection (e)--
                  (A) in paragraph (1)--
                          (i) by striking ``sums'' and inserting 
                        ``grant funds''; and
                          (ii) by inserting ``a State under subsection 
                        (a) to'' after ``each year to'';
                  (B) in paragraph (2), by striking ``funds made 
                available for State use under this subtitle'' and 
                inserting ``the grant funds remaining after the State 
                educational agency distributes subgrants under 
                paragraph (1)''; and
                  (C) in paragraph (3)--
                          (i) in subparagraph (C)(iv)(II), by striking 
                        ``sections 1111 and 1116'' and inserting 
                        ``section 1111''; and
                          (ii) in subparagraph (F)--
                                  (I) in clause (i)--
                                          (aa) in the matter preceding 
                                        subclause (I), by striking ``a 
                                        report'' and inserting ``an 
                                        annual report'';
                                          (bb) by striking ``and'' at 
                                        the end of subclause (II);
                                          (cc) by striking the period 
                                        at the end of subclause (III) 
                                        and inserting ``; and''; and
                                          (dd) by adding at the end the 
                                        following:
                                  ``(IV) the progress the separate 
                                schools are making in helping all 
                                students meet the State academic 
                                standards.''; and
                                  (II) in clause (iii), by striking 
                                ``Not later than 2 years after the date 
                                of enactment of the McKinney-Vento 
                                Homeless Education Assistance 
                                Improvements Act of 2001, the'' and 
                                inserting ``The'';
          (6) by amending subsection (f) to read as follows:
  ``(f) Functions of the Office of Coordinator.--The Coordinator for 
Education of Homeless Children and Youths established in each State 
shall--
          ``(1) gather and make publically available reliable, valid, 
        and comprehensive information on--
                  ``(A) the number of homeless children and youths 
                identified in the State, posted annually on the State 
                educational agency's website;
                  ``(B) the nature and extent of the problems homeless 
                children and youths have in gaining access to public 
                preschool programs and to public elementary schools and 
                secondary schools;
                  ``(C) the difficulties in identifying the special 
                needs and barriers to the participation and achievement 
                of such children and youths;
                  ``(D) any progress made by the State educational 
                agency and local educational agencies in the State in 
                addressing such problems and difficulties; and
                  ``(E) the success of the programs under this subtitle 
                in identifying homeless children and youths and 
                allowing such children and youths to enroll in, attend, 
                and succeed in, school;
          ``(2) develop and carry out the State plan described in 
        subsection (g);
          ``(3) collect data for and transmit to the Secretary, at such 
        time and in such manner as the Secretary may require, a report 
        containing information necessary to assess the educational 
        needs of homeless children and youths within the State, 
        including data necessary for the Secretary to fulfill the 
        responsibilities under section 724(h);
          ``(4) in order to improve the provision of comprehensive 
        education and related support services to homeless children and 
        youths and their families, coordinate and collaborate with--
                  ``(A) educators, including teachers, special 
                education personnel, administrators, and child 
                development and preschool program personnel;
                  ``(B) providers of services to homeless children and 
                youths and their families, including services of public 
                and private child welfare and social services agencies, 
                law enforcement agencies, juvenile and family courts, 
                agencies providing mental health services, domestic 
                violence agencies, child care providers, runaway and 
                homeless youth centers, and providers of services and 
                programs funded under the Runaway and Homeless Youth 
                Act (42 U.S.C. 5701 et seq.);
                  ``(C) providers of emergency, transitional, and 
                permanent housing to homeless children and youths, and 
                their families, including public housing agencies, 
                shelter operators, operators of transitional housing 
                facilities, and providers of transitional living 
                programs for homeless youths;
                  ``(D) local educational agency liaisons designated 
                under subsection (g)(1)(J)(ii) for homeless children 
                and youths; and
                  ``(E) community organizations and groups representing 
                homeless children and youths and their families;
          ``(5) provide technical assistance to local educational 
        agencies, in coordination with local educational agency 
        liaisons designated under subsection (g)(1)(J)(ii), to ensure 
        that local educational agencies comply with the requirements of 
        subsection (e)(3), paragraphs (3) through (7) of subsection 
        (g), and subsection (h);
          ``(6) provide professional development opportunities for 
        local educational agency personnel and the homeless liaison 
        designated under subsection (g)(1)(J)(ii) to assist such 
        personnel in meeting the needs of homeless children and youths; 
        and
          ``(7) respond to inquiries from parents and guardians of 
        homeless children and youths and unaccompanied youths to ensure 
        that each child or youth who is the subject of such an inquiry 
        receives the full protections and services provided by this 
        subtitle.'';
          (7) by amending subsection (g) to read as follows:
  ``(g) State Plan.--
          ``(1) In general.--In order to be eligible to receive a grant 
        under this section, each State educational agency shall submit 
        to the Secretary a plan to provide for the education of 
        homeless children and youths within the State that includes the 
        following:
                  ``(A) A description of how such children and youths 
                are (or will be) given the opportunity to meet the same 
                State academic standards that all students are expected 
                to meet.
                  ``(B) A description of the procedures the State 
                educational agency will use to identify such children 
                and youths in the State and to assess their needs.
                  ``(C) A description of procedures for the prompt 
                resolution of disputes regarding the educational 
                placement of homeless children and youths.
                  ``(D) A description of programs for school personnel 
                (including liaisons, school leaders, attendance 
                officers, teachers, enrollment personnel, and 
                specialized instructional support personnel) to 
                heighten the awareness of such personnel of the 
                specific needs of homeless adolescents, including 
                runaway and homeless youths.
                  ``(E) A description of procedures that ensure that 
                homeless children and youths who meet the relevant 
                eligibility criteria are able to participate in 
                Federal, State, or local nutrition programs.
                  ``(F) A description of procedures that ensure that--
                          ``(i) homeless children have equal access to 
                        public preschool programs, administered by the 
                        State educational agency or local educational 
                        agency, as provided to other children in the 
                        State;
                          ``(ii) homeless youths and youths separated 
                        from public schools are identified and accorded 
                        equal access to appropriate secondary education 
                        and support services; and
                          ``(iii) homeless children and youths who meet 
                        the relevant eligibility criteria are able to 
                        participate in Federal, State, or local 
                        education programs.
                  ``(G) Strategies to address problems identified in 
                the report provided to the Secretary under subsection 
                (f)(3).
                  ``(H) Strategies to address other problems with 
                respect to the education of homeless children and 
                youths, including problems resulting from enrollment 
                delays that are caused by--
                          ``(i) immunization and other health records 
                        requirements;
                          ``(ii) residency requirements;
                          ``(iii) lack of birth certificates, school 
                        records, or other documentation;
                          ``(iv) guardianship issues; or
                          ``(v) uniform or dress code requirements.
                  ``(I) A demonstration that the State educational 
                agency and local educational agencies in the State have 
                developed, and shall review and revise, policies to 
                remove barriers to the identification, enrollment, and 
                retention of homeless children and youths in schools in 
                the State.
                  ``(J) Assurances that the following will be carried 
                out:
                          ``(i) The State educational agency and local 
                        educational agencies in the State will adopt 
                        policies and practices to ensure that homeless 
                        children and youths are not stigmatized or 
                        segregated on the basis of their status as 
                        homeless.
                          ``(ii) Local educational agencies will 
                        designate an appropriate staff person, who may 
                        also be a coordinator for other Federal 
                        programs, as a local educational agency liaison 
                        for homeless children and youths, to carry out 
                        the duties described in paragraph (6)(A).
                          ``(iii) The State and its local educational 
                        agencies will adopt policies and practices to 
                        ensure that transportation is provided, at the 
                        request of the parent or guardian (or in the 
                        case of an unaccompanied youth, the liaison), 
                        to and from the school of origin, as determined 
                        in paragraph (3)(A), in accordance with the 
                        following, as applicable:
                                  ``(I) If the child or youth continues 
                                to live in the area served by the local 
                                educational agency in which the school 
                                of origin is located, the child's or 
                                youth's transportation to and from the 
                                school of origin shall be provided or 
                                arranged by the local educational 
                                agency in which the school of origin is 
                                located.
                                  ``(II) If the child's or youth's 
                                living arrangements in the area served 
                                by the local educational agency of 
                                origin terminate and the child or 
                                youth, though continuing his or her 
                                education in the school of origin, 
                                begins living in an area served by 
                                another local educational agency, the 
                                local educational agency of origin and 
                                the local educational agency in which 
                                the child or youth is living shall 
                                agree upon a method to apportion the 
                                responsibility and costs for providing 
                                the child with transportation to and 
                                from the school of origin. If the local 
                                educational agencies are unable to 
                                agree upon such method, the 
                                responsibility and costs for 
                                transportation shall be shared equally.
          ``(2) Compliance.--
                  ``(A) In general.--Each plan adopted under this 
                subsection shall also describe how the State will 
                ensure that local educational agencies in the State 
                will comply with the requirements of paragraphs (3) 
                through (7).
                  ``(B) Coordination.--Such plan shall indicate what 
                technical assistance the State will furnish to local 
                educational agencies and how compliance efforts will be 
                coordinated with the local educational agency liaisons 
                designated under paragraph (1)(J)(ii).
          ``(3) Local educational agency requirements.--
                  ``(A) In general.--The local educational agency 
                serving each child or youth to be assisted under this 
                subtitle shall, according to the child's or youth's 
                best interest--
                          ``(i) continue the child's or youth's 
                        education in the school of origin for the 
                        duration of homelessness--
                                  ``(I) in any case in which a family 
                                becomes homeless between academic years 
                                or during an academic year; or
                                  ``(II) for the remainder of the 
                                academic year, if the child or youth 
                                becomes permanently housed during an 
                                academic year; or
                          ``(ii) enroll the child or youth in any 
                        public school that nonhomeless students who 
                        live in the attendance area in which the child 
                        or youth is actually living are eligible to 
                        attend.
                  ``(B) School stability.--In determining the best 
                interest of the child or youth under subparagraph (A), 
                the local educational agency shall--
                          ``(i) presume that keeping the child or youth 
                        in the school of origin is in the child or 
                        youth's best interest, except when doing so is 
                        contrary to the wishes of the child's or 
                        youth's parent or guardian, or the 
                        unaccompanied youth;
                          ``(ii) consider student-centered factors 
                        related to the child's or youth's best 
                        interest, including factors related to the 
                        impact of mobility on achievement, education, 
                        health, and safety of homeless children and 
                        youth, giving priority to the wishes of the 
                        homeless child's or youth's parent of guardian 
                        or the unaccompanied youth involved;
                          ``(iii) if, after conducting the best 
                        interest determination based on consideration 
                        of the presumption in clause (i) and the 
                        student-centered factors in clause (ii), the 
                        local educational agency determines that it is 
                        not in the child's or youth's best interest to 
                        attend the school of origin or the school 
                        requested by the parent, guardian, or 
                        unaccompanied youth, provide the child's or 
                        youth's parent or guardian or the unaccompanied 
                        youth with a written explanation of the reasons 
                        for its determination, in a manner and form 
                        understandable to such parent, guardian, or 
                        unaccompanied youth, including information 
                        regarding the right to appeal under 
                        subparagraph (E); and
                          ``(iv) in the case of an unaccompanied youth, 
                        ensure that the homeless liaison designated 
                        under paragraph (1)(J)(ii) assists in placement 
                        or enrollment decisions under this 
                        subparagraph, gives priority to the views of 
                        such unaccompanied youth, and provides notice 
                        to such youth of the right to appeal under 
                        subparagraph (E).
                  ``(C) Enrollment.--
                          ``(i) In general.--The school selected in 
                        accordance with this paragraph shall 
                        immediately enroll the homeless child or youth, 
                        even if the child or youth--
                                  ``(I) is unable to produce records 
                                normally required for enrollment, such 
                                as previous academic records, records 
                                of immunization and other required 
                                health records, proof of residency, or 
                                other documentation; or
                                  ``(II) has missed application or 
                                enrollment deadlines during any period 
                                of homelessness.
                          ``(ii) Relevant academic records.--The 
                        enrolling school shall immediately contact the 
                        school last attended by the child or youth to 
                        obtain relevant academic and other records.
                          ``(iii) Relevant health records.--If the 
                        child or youth needs to obtain immunizations or 
                        other required health records, the enrolling 
                        school shall immediately refer the parent or 
                        guardian of the child or youth, or the 
                        unaccompanied child or youth, to the local 
                        educational agency liaison designated under 
                        paragraph (1)(J)(ii), who shall assist in 
                        obtaining necessary immunizations or 
                        screenings, or immunization or other required 
                        health records, in accordance with subparagraph 
                        (D).
                  ``(D) Records.--Any record ordinarily kept by the 
                school, including immunization or other required health 
                records, academic records, birth certificates, 
                guardianship records, and evaluations for special 
                services or programs, regarding each homeless child or 
                youth shall be maintained--
                          ``(i) so that the records involved are 
                        available, in a timely fashion, when a child or 
                        youth enters a new school or school district; 
                        and
                          ``(ii) in a manner consistent with section 
                        444 of the General Education Provisions Act (20 
                        U.S.C. 1232g).
                  ``(E) Enrollment disputes.--If a dispute arises over 
                school selection or enrollment in a school--
                          ``(i) the child or youth shall be immediately 
                        enrolled in the school in which enrollment is 
                        sought, pending final resolution of the 
                        dispute, including all available appeals;
                          ``(ii) the parent, guardian, or unaccompanied 
                        youth shall be provided with a written 
                        explanation of any decisions made by the 
                        school, the local educational agency, or the 
                        State educational agency involved, including 
                        the rights of the parent, guardian, or youth to 
                        appeal such decisions;
                          ``(iii) the parent, guardian, or 
                        unaccompanied youth shall be referred to the 
                        local educational agency liaison designated 
                        under paragraph (1)(J)(ii), who shall carry out 
                        the dispute resolution process as described in 
                        paragraph (1)(C) as expeditiously as possible 
                        after receiving notice of the dispute; and
                          ``(iv) in the case of an unaccompanied youth, 
                        the liaison shall ensure that the youth is 
                        immediately enrolled in school in which the 
                        youth seeks enrollment pending resolution of 
                        such dispute.
                  ``(F) Placement choice.--The choice regarding 
                placement shall be made regardless of whether the child 
                or youth lives with the homeless parents or has been 
                temporarily placed elsewhere.
                  ``(G) School of origin defined.--
                          ``(i) In general.--In this paragraph, the 
                        term `school of origin' means the school that a 
                        child or youth attended when permanently housed 
                        or the school in which the child or youth was 
                        last enrolled.
                          ``(ii) Receiving school.--When the child or 
                        youth completes the final grade level served by 
                        the school of origin, as described in clause 
                        (i), the term ``school of origin'' shall 
                        include the designated receiving school at the 
                        next grade level for all feeder schools.
                  ``(H) Contact information.--Nothing in this subtitle 
                shall prohibit a local educational agency from 
                requiring a parent or guardian of a homeless child to 
                submit contact information.
                  ``(I) Privacy.--Information about a homeless child's 
                or youth's living situation shall be treated as a 
                student education record under section 444 of the 
                General Education Provisions Act (20 U.S.C. 1232g) and 
                shall not be released to housing providers, employers, 
                law enforcement personnel, or other persons or agencies 
                not authorized to have such information under section 
                99.31 of title 34, Code of Federal Regulations.
                  ``(J) Academic achievement.--The school selected in 
                accordance with this paragraph shall ensure that 
                homeless children and youths have opportunities to meet 
                the same State academic standards to which other 
                students are held.
          ``(4) Comparable services.--Each homeless child or youth to 
        be assisted under this subtitle shall be provided services 
        comparable to services offered to other students in the school 
        selected under paragraph (3), including the following:
                  ``(A) Transportation services.
                  ``(B) Educational services for which the child or 
                youth meets the eligibility criteria, such as services 
                provided under title I of the Elementary and Secondary 
                Education Act of 1965 (20 U.S.C. 6301 et seq.) or 
                similar State or local programs, educational programs 
                for children with disabilities, and educational 
                programs for English learners.
                  ``(C) Programs in career and technical education.
                  ``(D) Programs for gifted and talented students.
                  ``(E) School nutrition programs.
          ``(5) Coordination.--
                  ``(A) In general.--Each local educational agency 
                serving homeless children and youths that receives 
                assistance under this subtitle shall coordinate--
                          ``(i) the provision of services under this 
                        subtitle with local social services agencies 
                        and other agencies or entities providing 
                        services to homeless children and youths and 
                        their families, including services and programs 
                        funded under the Runaway and Homeless Youth Act 
                        (42 U.S.C. 5701 et seq.); and
                          ``(ii) transportation, transfer of school 
                        records, and other interdistrict activities, 
                        with other local educational agencies.
                  ``(B) Housing assistance.--If applicable, each State 
                educational agency and local educational agency that 
                receives assistance under this subtitle shall 
                coordinate with State and local housing agencies 
                responsible for developing the comprehensive housing 
                affordability strategy described in section 105 of the 
                Cranston-Gonzalez National Affordable Housing Act (42 
                U.S.C. 12705) to minimize educational disruption for 
                children and youths who become homeless.
                  ``(C) Coordination purpose.--The coordination 
                required under subparagraphs (A) and (B) shall be 
                designed to--
                          ``(i) ensure that all homeless children and 
                        youths are promptly identified;
                          ``(ii) ensure that homeless children and 
                        youths have access to, and are in reasonable 
                        proximity to, available education and related 
                        support services; and
                          ``(iii) raise the awareness of school 
                        personnel and service providers of the effects 
                        of short-term stays in a shelter and other 
                        challenges associated with homelessness.
                  ``(D) Homeless children and youths with 
                disabilities.--For children and youths who are to be 
                assisted both under this subtitle, and under the 
                Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (20 U.S.C. 
                1400 et seq.) or section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act 
                of 1973 (29 U.S.C. 794), each local educational agency 
                shall coordinate the provision of services under this 
                subtitle with the provision of programs for children 
                with disabilities served by that local educational 
                agency and other involved local educational agencies.
          ``(6) Local educational agency liaison.--
                  ``(A) Duties.--Each local educational agency liaison 
                for homeless children and youths, designated under 
                paragraph (1)(J)(ii), shall ensure that--
                          ``(i) homeless children and youths are 
                        identified by school personnel through outreach 
                        and coordination activities with other entities 
                        and agencies;
                          ``(ii) homeless children and youths are 
                        enrolled in, and have a full and equal 
                        opportunity to succeed in, schools of that 
                        local educational agency;
                          ``(iii) homeless families, children, and 
                        youths have access to and receive educational 
                        services for which such families, children, and 
                        youths are eligible, including services through 
                        Head Start, Early Head Start, early 
                        intervention, and preschool programs 
                        administered by the local educational agency;
                          ``(iv) homeless families, children, and 
                        youths receive referrals to health care 
                        services, dental services, mental health and 
                        substances abuse services, housing services, 
                        and other appropriate services;
                          ``(v) the parents or guardians of homeless 
                        children and youths are informed of the 
                        educational and related opportunities available 
                        to their children and are provided with 
                        meaningful opportunities to participate in the 
                        education of their children;
                          ``(vi) public notice of the educational 
                        rights of homeless children and youths is 
                        disseminated in locations frequented by parents 
                        or guardians of such children and youths, and 
                        unaccompanied youths, including schools, 
                        shelters, public libraries, and soup kitchens 
                        in a manner and form understandable to the 
                        parents and guardians of homeless children and 
                        youths, and unaccompanied youths;
                          ``(vii) enrollment disputes are mediated in 
                        accordance with paragraph (3)(E);
                          ``(viii) the parent or guardian of a homeless 
                        child or youth, and any unaccompanied youth, is 
                        fully informed of all transportation services, 
                        including transportation to the school of 
                        origin, as described in paragraph (1)(J)(iii), 
                        and is assisted in accessing transportation to 
                        the school that is selected under paragraph 
                        (3)(A);
                          ``(ix) school personnel providing services 
                        under this subtitle receive professional 
                        development and other support; and
                          ``(x) unaccompanied youths--
                                  ``(I) are enrolled in school;
                                  ``(II) have opportunities to meet the 
                                same State academic standards to which 
                                other students are held, including 
                                through implementation of the policies 
                                and practices required by paragraph 
                                (1)(F)(ii); and
                                  ``(III) are informed of their status 
                                as independent students under section 
                                480 of the Higher Education Act of 1965 
                                (20 U.S.C. 1087vv) and receive 
                                verification of such status for 
                                purposes of the Free Application for 
                                Federal Student Aid described in 
                                section 483 of such Act (20 U.S.C. 
                                1090).
                  ``(B) Notice.--State coordinators established under 
                subsection (d)(3) and local educational agencies shall 
                inform school personnel, service providers, advocates 
                working with homeless families, parents and guardians 
                of homeless children and youths, and homeless children 
                and youths of the duties of the local educational 
                agency liaisons, including publishing an annually 
                updated list of the liaisons on the State educational 
                agency's website.
                  ``(C) Local and state coordination.--Local 
                educational agency liaisons for homeless children and 
                youths shall, as a part of their duties, coordinate and 
                collaborate with State coordinators and community and 
                school personnel responsible for the provision of 
                education and related services to homeless children and 
                youths. Such coordination shall include collecting and 
                providing to the State Coordinator the reliable, valid, 
                and comprehensive data needed to meet the requirements 
                of paragraphs (1) and (3) of subsection (f).
          ``(7) Review and revisions.--
                  ``(A) In general.--Each State educational agency and 
                local educational agency that receives assistance under 
                this subtitle shall review and revise any policies that 
                may act as barriers to the enrollment of homeless 
                children and youths in schools that are selected under 
                paragraph (3).
                  ``(B) Consideration.--In reviewing and revising such 
                policies, consideration shall be given to issues 
                concerning transportation, immunization, residency, 
                birth certificates, school records and other 
                documentation, and guardianship.
                  ``(C) Special attention.--Special attention shall be 
                given to ensuring the enrollment and attendance of 
                homeless children and youths who are not currently 
                attending school.'';
          (8) in subsection (h)(1)(A), by striking ``fiscal year 
        2009,'' and inserting ``fiscal years 2014 through 2019,''; and
          (9) in subsection (h)(4), by striking ``fiscal year 2009'' 
        and inserting ``fiscal years 2014 through 2019''.

SEC. 703. LOCAL EDUCATIONAL AGENCY SUBGRANTS FOR THE EDUCATION OF 
                    HOMELESS CHILDREN AND YOUTHS.

  Section 723 of such Act (42 U.S.C. 11433) is amended--
          (1) in subsection (a)--
                  (A) in paragraph (1), by striking ``facilitating the 
                enrollment,'' and inserting ``facilitating the 
                identification, enrollment,'';
                  (B) in paragraph (2)(A)--
                          (i) by adding ``and'' at the end of clause 
                        (i);
                          (ii) by striking ``; and'' and inserting a 
                        period at the end of clause (ii); and
                          (iii) by striking clause (iii); and
                  (C) by adding at the end the following:
          ``(4) Duration of grants.--Subgrants awarded under this 
        section shall be for terms of not to exceed 3 years.'';
          (2) in subsection (b)--
                  (A) by striking paragraph (3) and redesignating 
                paragraphs (4) and (5) as paragraphs (3) and (4), 
                respectively; and
                  (B) by adding at the end the following:
          ``(5) An assurance that the local educational agency will 
        collect and promptly provide data requested by the State 
        Coordinator pursuant to paragraphs (1) and (3) of section 
        722(f).
          ``(6) An assurance that the local educational agency has 
        removed barriers to complying with the requirements of section 
        722(g)(1)(I).'';
          (3) in subsection (c)--
                  (A) in paragraph (1), by striking ``726'' and 
                inserting ``722(a)'';
                  (B) in paragraph (2)--
                          (i) in subparagraph (A), by inserting 
                        ``identification,'' before ``enrollment'';
                          (ii) by amending subparagraph (B) to read as 
                        follows:
                  ``(B) The extent to which the application reflects 
                coordination with other local and State agencies that 
                serve homeless children and youths.''; and
                          (iii) in subparagraph (C), by inserting ``(as 
                        of the date of submission of the application)'' 
                        after ``current practice'';
                  (C) in paragraph (3)--
                          (i) by amending subparagraph (C) to read as 
                        follows:
                  ``(C) The extent to which the applicant will promote 
                meaningful involvement of parents or guardians of 
                homeless children or youths in the education of their 
                children.'';
                          (ii) in subparagraph (D), by striking 
                        ``within'' and inserting ``into'';
                          (iii) in subparagraph (G)--
                                  (I) by striking ``Such'' and 
                                inserting ``The extent to which the 
                                applicant's program meets such''; and
                                  (II) by striking ``case management or 
                                related'';
                          (iv) by redesignating subparagraph (G) as 
                        subparagraph (I) and inserting after 
                        subparagraph (F) the following:
                  ``(G) The extent to which the local educational 
                agency will use the subgrant to leverage resources, 
                including by maximizing nonsubgrant funding for the 
                position of the liaison described in section 
                722(g)(1)(J)(ii) and the provision of transportation.
                  ``(H) How the local educational agency uses funds to 
                serve homeless children and youths under section 
                1113(c)(3) of the Elementary and Secondary Education 
                Act of 1965 (20 U.S.C. 6313(c)(3)).''; and
                          (v) by adding at the end the following:
                  ``(J) An assurance that the applicant will meet the 
                requirements of section 722(g)(3).''; and
                  (D) by striking paragraph (4); and
          (4) in subsection (d)--
                  (A) in paragraph (1)--
                          (i) by striking ``challenging State academic 
                        content standards'' and inserting ``State 
                        academic standards''; and
                          (ii) by striking ``and challenging State 
                        student academic achievement standards'';
                  (B) in paragraph (2)--
                          (i) by striking ``students with limited 
                        English proficiency,'' and inserting ``English 
                        learners,''; and
                          (ii) by striking ``vocational'' and inserting 
                        ``career'';
                  (C) in paragraph (3), by striking ``pupil services'' 
                and inserting ``specialized instructional support'';
                  (D) in paragraph (7), by striking ``, and 
                unaccompanied youths,'' and inserting ``, particularly 
                homeless children and youths who are not enrolled in 
                school,'';
                  (E) in paragraph (9) by striking ``medical'' and 
                inserting ``other required health'';
                  (F) in paragraph (10), by inserting before the period 
                at the end ``, and other activities designed to 
                increase the meaningful involvement of parents or 
                guardians of homeless children or youths in the 
                education of their children'';
                  (G) in paragraph (12), by striking ``pupil'' and 
                inserting ``specialized instructional support''; and
                  (H) in paragraph (13), by inserting before the period 
                at the end ``and parental mental health or substance 
                abuse problems''.

SEC. 704. SECRETARIAL RESPONSIBILITIES.

  Section 724 of such Act (42 U.S.C. 11434) is amended--
          (1) by amending subsection (c) to read as follows:
  ``(c) Notice.--
          ``(1) In general.--The Secretary shall, before the next 
        school year that begins after the date of the enactment of the 
        Student Success Act, update and disseminate nationwide the 
        public notice described in this subsection (as in effect prior 
        to such date) of the educational rights of homeless children 
        and youths.
          ``(2) Dissemination.--The Secretary shall disseminate the 
        notice nationally to all Federal agencies, program grantees, 
        and grant recipients serving homeless families, children, and 
        youths.'';
          (2) in subsection (d), by striking ``and dissemination'' and 
        inserting ``, dissemination, and technical assistance'';
          (3) in subsection (e)--
                  (A) by striking ``applications for grants under this 
                subtitle'' and inserting ``plans for the use of grant 
                funds under section 722'';
                  (B) by striking ``60-day'' and inserting ``120-day''; 
                and
                  (C) by striking ``120-day'' and inserting ``180-
                day'';
          (4) in subsection (f), by adding at the end the following: 
        ``The Secretary shall provide support and technical assistance 
        to State educational agencies in areas in which barriers to a 
        free appropriate public education persist.'';
          (5) by amending subsection (g) to read as follows:
  ``(g) Guidelines.--The Secretary shall develop, issue, and publish in 
the Federal Register, not later than 60 days after the date of the 
enactment of the Student Success Act, strategies by which a State--
          ``(1) may assist local educational agencies to implement the 
        provisions amended by the Act; and
          ``(2) can review and revise State policies and procedures 
        that may present barriers to the identification, enrollment, 
        attendance, and success of homeless children and youths in 
        school.'';
          (6) in subsection (h)(1)(A), by inserting ``in all areas 
        served by local educational agencies'' before the semicolon at 
        the end; and
          (7) in subsection (i), by striking ``McKinney-Vento Homeless 
        Education Assistance Improvements Act of 2001'' and inserting 
        ``Student Success Act''.

SEC. 705. DEFINITIONS.

  Section 725 of such Act (42 U.S.C. 11434a) is amended--
          (1) in paragraph (2)(B)(iv), by striking ``1309'' and 
        inserting ``1139''; and
          (2) in paragraph (3), by striking ``9101'' and inserting 
        ``6101''.

SEC. 706. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS.

  Section 726 of such Act (42 U.S.C. 11435) is amended to read as 
follows:

``SEC. 726. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS.

  ``For the purpose of carrying out this subtitle, there are authorized 
to be appropriated $65,042,000 for each of fiscal years 2016 through 
2021.''.

                  TITLE VIII--MISCELLANEOUS PROVISIONS

SEC. 801. FINDINGS; SENSE OF THE CONGRESS.

  (a) Findings.--The Congress finds as follows:
          (1) To avoid negative attention and litigation, some local 
        educational agencies have entered into agreements with 
        employees who are suspected of abusing or are known to have 
        abused students.
          (2) Instead of reporting sexual misconduct with minors to the 
        proper authorities such as the police or child welfare 
        services, under such agreements the local educational agencies, 
        schools, and employees keep the information private and 
        facilitate the employee's transfer to another local educational 
        agency.
  (b) Sense of the Congress.--It is the sense of the Congress that--
          (1) confidentiality agreements between local educational 
        agencies or schools and suspected child sex abusers should be 
        prohibited;
          (2) the practice of employee transfers after suspected or 
        proven sexual misconduct should be stopped, and States should 
        require local educational agencies and schools to provide law 
        enforcement with all information regarding sexual conduct 
        between an employee and a minor; and
          (3) Congress should help protect children and help stop this 
        unacceptable practice in our schools.

                                Purpose

    H.R. 5, the Student Success Act, amends the Elementary and 
Secondary Education Act of 1965 (ESEA) to support state and 
local accountability for public education; provide important 
information to parents on their schools' and students' 
performance; enhance local flexibility; protect taxpayers' 
investments in education; strengthen state and local autonomy; 
support more effective teachers in the classroom; and provide 
state and local leaders with the freedom to direct federal 
resources to the programs that best serve their student 
populations. The Student Success Act reflects the principles of 
reducing the federal footprint and restoring local control, 
while empowering parents and education leaders to hold schools 
accountable for effectively teaching students.

                            Committee Action

    H.R. 5 reflects work by the Committee on Education and the 
Workforce in the 113th Congress to reauthorize the ESEA. The 
bill builds upon the Committee's ongoing efforts to examine 
federal investments and reduce the federal role in elementary 
and secondary education programs.

                             108TH CONGRESS

Hearings--First Session

    On September 29, 2003, the Committee on Education and the 
Workforce Subcommittee on Education Reform held a field hearing 
in Denver, Colorado, on ``Keeping Schools Safe--the 
Implementation of No Child Left Behind's Persistently Dangerous 
Schools Provision.'' The purpose of the hearing was to learn 
how the implementation of the ``persistently dangerous 
schools'' provision, which allows parents to transfer their 
children out of dangerous schools, affected schools, and 
communities. Testifying before the subcommittee were Mr. 
William J. Moloney, Commissioner of Education, Colorado 
Department of Education, Denver, Colorado; Mr. David B. Smith, 
Director of Prevention Initiatives, Colorado Department of 
Education, Denver, Colorado; The Honorable Bob Schaffer, 
President, Colorado Alliance for Reform in Education, Denver, 
Colorado; Ms. Gloria Zradicka, Policy Analyst, Education 
Commission of the States, Denver, Colorado; The Honorable John 
K. Andrews Jr., President of the Senate, Colorado State Senate, 
Denver, Colorado; and Ms. Vicki Ware, parent, Denver, Colorado.
    On October 20, 2003, the Committee on Education and the 
Workforce Subcommittee on Education Reform held a field hearing 
in Taylors, South Carolina, on ``No Child Left Behind's 
Education Choice Provisions: Are States and School Districts 
Giving Parents the Information They Need?'' The purpose of the 
hearing was to discuss how the public school choice and 
supplemental education services provisions in the No Child Left 
Behind Act were being implemented at the state and local level. 
Testifying before the subcommittee were Ms. Nina S. Rees, 
Deputy Under Secretary, Office of Innovation and Improvement, 
U.S. Department of Education, Washington, D.C.; Mrs. Wanda 
Rushing-Jones, Coordinator, Federal Programs Unit, South 
Carolina Department of Education, Columbia, South Carolina; Dr. 
William E. Harner, Superintendent, Greenville County School 
District, Greenville, South Carolina; Mr. George Waggoner, 
parent and Tech. Sergeant (E6), Retired, U.S. Air Force, 
Greenville, South Carolina; and Dr. Dana Jeffrey, Vice 
President of Strategic Sales, Lightspan, Denver, Colorado.

Hearings--Second Session

    On March 3, 2004, the Committee on Education and the 
Workforce held a hearing in Washington, D.C., on ``No Child 
Left Behind: Improving Results for Children with 
Disabilities.'' The purpose of the hearing was to gain insight 
into the importance of including students with disabilities in 
state accountability systems under No Child Left Behind. 
Testifying before the Committee were Ms. Ricki Sabia, Parent 
and Associate Director of Public Policy, National Down Syndrome 
Society, Silver Spring, Maryland; Dr. Jane Rhyne, Assistant 
Superintendent for Exceptional Children, Charlotte-Mecklenburg 
Schools, Charlotte, North Carolina; Dr. Pia Durkin, 
Superintendent of Schools, Narragansett School System, 
Narragansett, Rhode Island; and Dr. Martha Thurlow, Director, 
National Center on Education Outcomes, University of Minnesota, 
Minneapolis, Minnesota.
    On March 8, 2004, the Committee on Education and the 
Workforce held a field hearing in Columbus, Ohio, on ``The 
Status of No Child Left Behind Implementation in Ohio.'' The 
purpose of the hearing was to gain local insights into the 
implementation and consequences of No Child Left Behind. 
Testifying before the Committee were Mr. Ron Tomalis, Counselor 
to the Secretary, U.S. Department of Education, Washington, 
D.C.; Dr. Richard A. Ross, Superintendent, Reynoldsburg City 
Schools, Reynoldsburg, Ohio; Dr. Howard Fleeter, Partner, 
Levin, Driscoll & Fleeter, Columbus, Ohio; and Mr. Ted 
Rebarber, President, Accountability Works, Washington, D.C.
    On April 15, 2004, the Committee on Education and the 
Workforce held a field hearing in Augusta, Georgia, on ``No 
Child Left Behind: Improving Academic Achievement through 
Flexibility & Accountability for Schools.'' The purpose of the 
hearing was to gain local perspectives on the implementation 
and consequences of No Child Left Behind. Testifying before the 
Committee were The Honorable Gene Hickok, Under Secretary of 
Education, U.S. Department of Education, Washington, D.C.; Ms. 
Kathy Cox, Superintendent of Schools, State of Georgia, 
Atlanta, Georgia; and Dr. Jeff McDaniel, Director of School 
Improvement & Federal Programs, Floyd County Board of 
Education, Rome, Georgia.
    On April 21, 2004, the Committee on Education and the 
Workforce held a hearing in Washington, D.C., on ``The 
Importance of Highly Qualified Teachers in Raising Academic 
Achievement.'' The purpose of the hearing was to discuss the 
importance of highly qualified teachers in improving academic 
achievement for all students regardless of race, income, 
geography, English fluency, or disability. Testifying before 
the Committee were Ms. Gaynor McCown, Executive Director, The 
Teaching Commission, New York, New York.; Mr. Kurt Landgraf, 
President and CEO, Educational Testing Service, Princeton, New 
Jersey; Mr. Ross Wiener, Policy Director, The Education Trust, 
Washington, D.C.; Ms. Eileen Mitchell, Elementary School 
Teacher, P.S. 31--the William T. Davis School, Staten Island, 
New York; and Mr. Tracey Bailey, 1993 National Teacher of the 
Year, Director of National Projects, Association of American 
Educators, Fredericksburg, Virginia.
    On May 24, 2004, the Committee on Education and the 
Workforce Subcommittee on 21st Century Competitiveness held a 
field hearing in Las Vegas, Nevada, on ``H.R. 2649, the Schools 
Safely Acquiring Faculty Excellence Act of 2003.'' The purpose 
of this legislative hearing was to gain local perspectives on 
the Schools Safely Acquiring Faculty Excellence Act of 2003. 
Testifying before the subcommittee were Dr. George Ann Rice, 
Associate Superintendent, Human Resources Division, Clark 
County Schools, Las Vegas, Nevada; Ms. Carol Lark, Principal, 
C.P. Squires Elementary School, North Las Vegas, Nevada; and 
Mrs. D.J. Stutz, President, Nevada State PTA, and Member, Board 
of the National PTA, Las Vegas, Nevada.
    On May 27, 2004, the Committee on Education and the 
Workforce Subcommittee on 21st Century Competitiveness held a 
field hearing in Phoenix, Arizona, on ``Highly Qualified 
Teachers and Raising Student Achievement.'' The purpose of the 
hearing was to discuss the importance of highly qualified 
teachers in improving academic achievement for all students 
regardless of race, income, geography, English-fluency, or 
disability. Testifying before the subcommittee were The 
Honorable Raymond Simon, Assistant Secretary, Office of 
Elementary and Secondary Education, U.S. Department of 
Education, Washington, D.C.; Dr. Karen Butterfield, Deputy 
Associate Superintendent, Innovative and Exemplary Programs, 
Arizona Department of Education, Phoenix, Arizona; Dr. Laura 
Palmer Noone, President, University of Phoenix, Phoenix, 
Arizona; and Dr. Lewis C. Solmon, Executive Vice President and 
Director, Teacher Advancement Programs, Milken Family 
Foundation, Santa Monica, California.
    On June 23, 2004, the Committee on Education and the 
Workforce held a hearing in Washington, D.C., on ``No Child 
Left Behind: Raising Student Achievement in America's Big City 
Schools.'' The purpose of the hearing was to examine how No 
Child Left Behind was helping improve student academic 
achievement in the nation's urban schools. Testifying before 
the Committee were Dr. Michael D. Casserly, Executive Director, 
Council of Great City Schools, Washington, D.C.; Dr. Margaret 
Raymond, Director, Center for Research on Education Outcomes, 
Hoover Institution, Stanford University, Stanford, California; 
Mr. Paul Vallas, Chief Executive Officer, School District of 
Philadelphia, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; and Dr. Marcus 
Newsome, Superintendent, Newport News County Public Schools, 
Newport News, Virginia.
    On September 28, 2004, the Committee on Education and the 
Workforce Subcommittee on 21st Century Competitiveness held a 
hearing in Washington, D.C., on ``H.R. 2649, the Schools Safely 
Acquiring Faculty Excellence Act.'' The purpose of this 
legislative hearing was to hear testimony on H.R. 2649, the 
Schools Safely Acquiring Faculty Excellence Act of 2003. 
Testifying before the subcommittee were Ms. Barbara Belak, 
Assistant to the Associate Superintendent for Human Resources, 
Clark County Schools, Las Vegas, Nevada; Ms. Donna Uzzell, 
Director, Criminal Justice Information Services, Florida 
Department of Law Enforcement, Tallahassee, Florida; Dr. 
William Dean, Superintendent, Frederick County Public Schools, 
Winchester, Virginia; and Chief Butch Asselin, Member, Fight 
Crime: Invest in Kids, Washington, D.C.

                             109TH CONGRESS

Hearings--First Session

    On April 26, 2005, the Committee on Education and the 
Workforce held a hearing in Washington, D.C., on ``No Child 
Left Behind: Supplemental Tutoring for Children in 
Underachieving Schools.'' The purpose of the hearing was to 
examine strategies for maintaining high expectations of 
tutoring providers offering federally funded supplemental 
educational services, while also ensuring federal tutoring 
funds are spent responsibly. Testifying before the Committee 
were Ms. Donna Nola-Ganey, Assistant Superintendent, Office of 
School and Community Support, Louisiana Department of 
Education, Baton Rouge, Louisiana; Mr. Kevin Teasley, Founder 
and President, GEO Foundation, Indianapolis, Indiana; Mr. 
Jeffrey Cohen, President, Catapult Learning, Inc., Baltimore, 
Maryland; and Ms. Beth Swanson, Director, Office of After 
School and Community Programs, Chicago Public Schools, Chicago, 
Illinois.
    On May 17, 2005, the Committee on Education and the 
Workforce held a hearing in Washington, D.C., on ``High School 
Reform: Examining State and Local Efforts.'' The purpose of the 
hearing was to examine state and local strategies for reforming 
high schools. Testifying before the Committee were The 
Honorable W. Mitt Romney, Governor, Commonwealth of 
Massachusetts, Boston, Massachusetts; and The Honorable Thomas 
Vilsack, Governor, State of Iowa, Des Moines, Iowa.
    On May 19, 2005, the Committee on Education and the 
Workforce Subcommittee on 21st Century Competitiveness held a 
hearing in Washington, D.C., on ``Challenges to American 
Competitiveness in Math and Science.'' The purpose of the 
hearing was to learn about the challenges to American 
competitiveness in math and science. Testifying before the 
subcommittee were Mr. Norm Augustine, retired Chairman and 
Chief Executive Officer, Lockheed Martin Corporation, Bethesda, 
Maryland; Dr. Thomas Magnanti, Dean, School of Engineering, 
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, 
Massachusetts; Ms. June Streckfus, Executive Director, Maryland 
Business Roundtable for Education, Baltimore, Maryland; and Dr. 
Nancy Songer, Professor of Science Education and Learning 
Technologies, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan.
    On June 9, 2005, the Committee on Education and the 
Workforce Subcommittee on Education Reform held a hearing in 
Washington, D.C., on ``The Role of Non-Profit Organizations in 
State and Local High School Reform Efforts.'' The purpose of 
the hearing was to gain perspectives on the role of non-profit 
organizations in state and local high school reform efforts. 
Testifying before the subcommittee were Mr. Tom Vander Ark, 
Executive Director, Education, Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, 
Seattle, Washington; Ms. Deborah Howard, Program Director, 
School Improvement, KnowledgeWorks Foundation, Cincinnati, 
Ohio; and Mr. Andres Henriquez, Program Officer, Education 
Division, Carnegie Corporation of New York, New York, New York.
    On June 28, 2005, the Committee on Education and the 
Workforce Subcommittee on Education Reform held a hearing in 
Washington, D.C., on ``How the Private Sector is Helping States 
and Communities Improve High School Education.'' The purpose of 
the hearing was to examine how the private sector is helping 
states and communities improve high school education. 
Testifying before the subcommittee were Mr. Bill A. Shore, 
Director of U.S. Community Partnerships, GlaxoSmithKline, 
Research Triangle Park, North Carolina; Ms. Sarah Revi 
Sterling, Program Manager, University Relations, Microsoft 
Corporation, Redmond, Washington; Mr. Mike Watson, Vice 
Chairman, BellSouth Foundation, Atlanta, Georgia; and Dr. 
Phyllis Hudecki, Executive Director, Oklahoma Business and 
Education Coalition, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma.
    On September 29, 2005, the Committee on Education and the 
Workforce held a hearing in Washington, D.C., on ``Closing the 
Achievement Gap in America's Schools: the No Child Left Behind 
Act.'' The purpose of the hearing was to examine strategies for 
closing the achievement gap in America's schools. Testifying 
before the Committee were The Honorable Margaret Spellings, 
Secretary of Education, U.S. Department of Education, 
Washington, D.C.; Dr. Deborah Jewell-Sherman, Superintendent, 
Richmond Public Schools, Richmond, Virginia; and Ms. Kati 
Haycock, Director, The Education Trust, Washington, D.C.
    On November 17, 2005, the Committee on Education and the 
Workforce Subcommittee on Education Reform held a hearing in 
Washington, D.C., on ``Combating Methamphetamines through 
Prevention and Education.'' The purpose of the hearing was to 
examine the federal role in reducing the use of 
methamphetamines among school aged youth through the Safe and 
Drug Free Schools and Communities Act and other federal 
programs. Testifying before the subcommittee were The Honorable 
Mark Souder, U.S. House of Representatives, Third District, 
Indiana; The Honorable Darlene Hooley, U.S. House of 
Representatives, Fifth District, Oregon; The Honorable Mary Ann 
Solberg, Deputy Director, Office of National Drug Control 
Policy, Executive Office of the President, Washington, D.C.; 
Dr. Richard Spoth, Director, Partnerships in Prevention Science 
Institute, Iowa State University, Ames, Iowa; The Honorable 
John Icenogle, District Judge, District 9, Buffalo County, 
Nebraska; and Ms. Cristi Cain, State Coordinator, Kansas 
Methamphetamine Prevention Project, Topeka, Kansas.

Hearings--Second Session

    On May 3, 2006, the Committee on Education and the 
Workforce held a hearing in Washington, D.C., on ``Building 
American Competitiveness: Examining the Scope and Success of 
Existing Federal Math and Science Programs.'' The purpose of 
the hearing was to examine federal math and science programs 
and learn about their effectiveness. Testifying before the 
Committee were The Honorable Tom Luce, Assistant Secretary, 
Office of Planning, Evaluation, and Policy Development, U.S. 
Department of Education, Washington, D.C.; Ms. Cornelia Ashby, 
Director of Education, Workforce, and Income Security Issues, 
U.S. Government Accountability Office, Washington, D.C.; and 
Mr. Bill Archey, President and Chief Executive Officer, 
American Electronics Association, Washington, D.C.
    On May 18, 2006, the Committee on Education and the 
Workforce held a hearing in Washington, D.C., on ``No Child 
Left Behind: How Innovative Educators Are Integrating Subject 
Matter to Improve Student Achievement.'' The purpose of the 
hearing was to examine what methods are being employed to 
integrate math and reading instruction into the general 
education curriculum with the intent of improving student 
achievement. Testifying before the Committee were Mr. Garrett 
W. Lydic, 2006 State Teacher of the Year, North Laurel 
Elementary School, Laurel, Delaware; Mr. Rick Holt, Principal, 
Lewiston K-8 School, Lewiston, Michigan; Dr. Mickey Garrison, 
Principal, Fullerton IV Elementary School, Roseburg, Oregon; 
Ms. Betsy Ablott, Teacher, Science Focus School, Arlington, 
Virginia; and Mr. Ray Zeigler, Co-Director, Maryland Artist/
Teacher Institute, Maryland State Department of Education, 
Baltimore, Maryland.
    On June 13, 2006, the Committee on Education and the 
Workforce held a hearing in Washington, D.C., on ``No Child 
Left Behind: Disaggregating Student Achievement by Subgroups to 
Ensure All Students Are Learning.'' The purpose of the hearing 
was to examine the consequences of disaggregating student 
achievement data by subgroups. Testifying before the Committee 
were The Honorable Raymond Simon, Deputy Secretary of 
Education, U.S. Department of Education, Washington, D.C.; Dr. 
Cynthia Kuhlman, Principal, Centennial Place Elementary School, 
Atlanta, Georgia; Dr. Ronald A. Peiffer, Deputy State 
Superintendent, Maryland State Department of Education, 
Baltimore, Maryland; and Mr. John C. Brittain, Chief Counsel 
and Deputy Director, Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights Under 
Law, Washington, D.C.
    On July 12, 2006, the Committee on Education and the 
Workforce held a hearing in Washington, D.C., on ``No Child 
Left Behind: Ensuring High Academic Achievement for Limited 
English Proficient Students and Students with Disabilities.'' 
The purpose of the hearing was to examine how students with 
disabilities and limited English proficient students are 
evaluated, how effective those evaluation measures are, and 
whether there is enough flexibility granted to states and 
school districts by the U.S. Department of Education with 
regard to these student subgroups. Testifying before the 
Committee were Ms. Rachel Quenemoen, Senior Research Fellow, 
National Center on Educational Outcomes, University of 
Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota; Mr. Don Soifer, Executive 
Vice President, Lexington Institute, Arlington, Virginia; Ms. 
Margaret McLeod, Executive Director, Office of Bilingual 
Education, District of Columbia Public Schools, Washington, 
D.C.; Ms. Kristine Neuber, Doctoral Student, Graduate School of 
Education, George Mason University, Fairfax, Virginia; and Mr. 
Keith Buchanan, Office Coordinator, English for Speakers of 
Other Languages, Fairfax County Public Schools, Falls Church, 
Virginia.
    On July 27, 2006, the Committee on Education and the 
Workforce held a hearing in Washington, D.C., on ``No Child 
Left Behind: Can Growth Models Ensure Improved Education for 
All Students.'' The purpose of the hearing was to evaluate the 
implications of using growth models to determine if schools are 
making adequate yearly progress under No Child Left Behind. 
Testifying before the Committee were Ms. Marlene S. Shaul, 
Director, Education, Workforce, and Income Security Issues, 
U.S. Government Accountability Office, Washington, D.C.; Mr. 
Joel I. Klein, Chancellor, New York City Department of 
Education, New York, New York; Mr. Reg Weaver, President, 
National Education Association, Washington, D.C.; Ms. Katie 
Haycock, Director, The Education Trust, Washington, D.C.; and 
Dr. William L. Sanders, Senior Manager, Value-Added Assessment 
and Research, SAS Institute Inc., Cary, North Carolina.
    On August 28, 2006, the Committee on Education and the 
Workforce Subcommittee on Education Reform held a field hearing 
in Chicago, Illinois, on ``No Child Left Behind: Successes and 
Challenges of Implementation in Urban and Suburban Schools.'' 
The purpose of the hearing was to discuss what improvements 
could be made to assist the implementation of No Child Left 
Behind in urban and suburban schools. Testifying before the 
subcommittee were The Honorable Henry Johnson, Assistant 
Secretary, U.S. Department of Education, Washington, D.C.; Mr. 
Arne Duncan, Chief Executive Officer, Chicago Public Schools, 
Chicago, Illinois; Dr. Darlene J. Ruscitti, Regional 
Superintendent, DuPage Regional Office of Education, Wheaton, 
Illinois; Dr. Paul Kimmelman, Senior Advisor, Office of the 
Chief Executive Officer, Learning Point Associates, Naperville, 
Illinois; and Ms. Dianne Piche, Executive Director, Citizens' 
Commission on Civil Rights, Washington, D.C.
    On September 21, 2006, the Committee on Education and the 
Workforce held a hearing in Washington, D.C., on ``No Child 
Left Behind: How Can We Increase Parental Awareness of 
Supplemental Education Services?'' The purpose of the hearing 
was to examine the challenges and successes of implementation 
of the supplemental educational services provisions under the 
No Child Left Behind Act. Testifying before the Committee were 
Mr. Morgan Brown, Assistant Deputy Secretary, Office of 
Innovation and Improvement, U.S. Department of Education, 
Washington, D.C.; Ms. Cornelia Ashby, Director, Education, 
Workforce, and Income Security Issues, U.S. Government 
Accountability Office, Washington, D.C.; Dr. Stephen Barr, 
Associate Superintendent, Center for School Improvement, Ohio 
Department of Education, Columbus, Ohio; Ms. Erica Harris, 
Manager, Academic After School Programs, Chicago Public 
Schools, Chicago, Illinois; Dr. Barbara Anderson, Vice 
President of Education, Knowledge Learning Corporation, School 
Partnerships, Washington, D.C.; and Ms. Monique Dollonne, 
parent of a supplemental educational services student, Ventura, 
California.

Legislative Action--First Session

    On October 7, 2005, Rep. John Boehner (R-OH), Rep. Tom 
DeLay (R-TX), Rep. Roy Blunt (R-MO), Rep. Sam Johnson (R-TX), 
Rep. John Kline (R-MN), Rep. Kenny Marchant (R-TX), Rep. 
Virginia Foxx (R-NC), Rep. Chris Chocola (R-IN), Rep. John 
Doolittle (R-CA), Rep. Jeff Flake (R-AZ), Rep. Trent Franks (R-
AZ), Rep. Patrick McHenry (R-NC), Rep. Mike Pence (R-IN), Rep. 
Pete Sessions (R-TX), Rep. John Shadegg (R-AZ), and Rep. Todd 
Tiahrt (R-KS) introduced H.R. 4018, the Setting Priorities in 
Spending Act of 2005. The bill repealed 14 ineffective 
elementary and secondary education programs, including Ready to 
Learn Television; Star Schools Act; Ready to Teach; Foreign 
Language Assistance Act of 2001; Community Technology Centers; 
Educational, Cultural, Apprenticeship, and Exchange Programs 
for Alaska Natives, Native Hawaiians, and their Historical 
Whaling and Trading Partners in Massachusetts; Arts in 
Education; and Women's Educational Equity.

                             110TH CONGRESS

Hearings--First Session

    On March 13, 2007, the Committee on Education and Labor 
held a joint hearing with the Senate Committee on Health, 
Education, Labor and Pensions in Washington, D.C., on 
``Elementary and Secondary Education Act Reauthorization: 
Improving NCLB to Close the Achievement Gap.'' The purpose of 
the hearing was to examine methods for closing the achievement 
gap and consider the approaching reauthorization of the 
Elementary and Secondary Education Act. Testifying before the 
Committees were Mr. Roy Barnes, Co-Chair, Aspen Institute 
Commission on No Child Left Behind and former Governor of 
Georgia, Washington, D.C.; Ms. Elizabeth Burmaster, President, 
Council of Chief State School Officers, Madison, Wisconsin; Mr. 
Michael Casserly, Executive Director, Council of Great City 
Schools, Washington, D.C.; Mr. Wade J. Henderson, President and 
Chief Executive Officer, Leadership Conference on Civil Rights, 
Washington, D.C.; Mr. Edward J. McElroy, President, American 
Federation of Teachers, Washington, D.C.; Mr. Arthur J. 
Rothkopf, Senior Vice President, Business Coalition for Student 
Achievement, Washington, D.C.; and Mr. Reg Weaver, President, 
National Education Association, Washington, D.C.
    On March 21, 2007, the Committee on Education and Labor 
held a hearing in Washington, D.C., on ``ESEA Reauthorization: 
Options for Improving NCLB's Measures of Progress.'' The 
purpose of the hearing was to discuss options for reforming the 
current definition of adequate yearly progress. Testifying 
before the Committee were Dr. Harold C. Doran, Senior Research 
Scientist, American Institutes for Research, Washington, D.C.; 
Dr. Chrys Dougherty, Director of Research, National Center for 
Educational Accountability, Austin, Texas; Mr. Peter McWalters, 
Commissioner, Rhode Island Department of Education, Providence, 
Rhode Island; Mr. Allan Olson, Co-Founder and Chief Academic 
Officer, Northwest Evaluation Association, Lake Oswego, Oregon; 
and The Honorable Valerie Woodruff, Secretary, Delaware 
Department of Education, Dover, Delaware.
    On March 23, 2007, the Committee on Education and Labor 
Subcommittee on Early Childhood, Elementary, and Secondary 
Education held a hearing in Washington, D.C., on ``Impact of 
NCLB on English Language Learners.'' The purpose of the hearing 
was to learn how No Child Left Behind is working for English 
Language Learner students and what needs to be done to improve 
student achievement. Testifying before the subcommittee were 
Ms. Cornelia M. Ashby, Director, Education, Workforce, and 
Income Security Issues, U.S. Government Accountability Office, 
Washington, D.C.; Dr. Beverly L. Young, Assistant Vice 
Chancellor, Teacher Education and Public School Program, 
California State University, Long Beach, California; Mr. Peter 
Zamora, Regional Counsel, Mexican American Legal Defense and 
Educational Fund, Washington, D.C.; Ms. Francisca Saanchez, 
Assistant Superintendent for Curriculum and Instruction, San 
Bernardino County Superintendent of Schools, San Bernardino, 
California; and Ms. Marta Guzmaan, Principal, Oyster Bilingual 
Elementary School, Washington, D.C.
    On March 29, 2007, the Committee on Education and Labor 
Subcommittee on Early Childhood, Elementary, and Secondary 
Education held a hearing in Washington, D.C., on ``How NCLB 
Affects Students with Disabilities.'' The purpose of the 
hearing was to determine how students with disabilities are 
affected by certain provisions under No Child Left Behind. 
Testifying before the subcommittee were Dr. Rebecca H. Cort, 
Deputy Commissioner, Office of Vocational and Educational 
Services for Individuals with Disabilities, New York State 
Department of Education, Albany, New York; Dr. Michael L. 
Hardman, Professor and Chair, Department of Special Education 
and Department of Teaching and Learning, University of Utah, 
Salt Lake City, Utah; Dr. William Henderson, Principal, O'Hearn 
Elementary School, Boston, Massachusetts; Ms. Rachel Quenemoen, 
Technical Assistance Team Leader, National Center on Education 
Outcomes, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota; and 
Dr. Jane Rhyne, Assistant Superintendent, Programs for 
Exceptional Children, Charlotte-Mecklenburg School System, 
Charlotte, North Carolina.
    On April 12, 2007, the Committee on Education and Labor 
Subcommittee on Early Childhood, Elementary, and Secondary 
Education held a field hearing in Flint, Michigan, on ``Local 
Perspectives on the No Child Left Behind Act.'' The purpose of 
the hearing was to gain local perspectives on the No Child Left 
Behind Act. Testifying before the subcommittee were Mr. Steve 
Burroughs, President, United Teachers of Flint, on behalf of 
the National Education Association, Flint, Michigan; Ms. Andrea 
Debardelaben, parent, Flint, Michigan; Mr. Jan D. Russell, 
Assistant Superintendent, Genesee Intermediate School District, 
Flint, Michigan; Mr. David Solis, Director of State, Federal, 
and Local Programs, on behalf of Dr. Walter Milton Jr., 
Superintendent, Flint Community Schools, Flint, Michigan; and 
Mr. Donald Tilley, Social Studies Department Chair, Central 
High School, Flint, Michigan.
    On April 18, 2007, the Committee on Education and Labor 
Subcommittee on Early Childhood, Elementary, and Secondary 
Education held a hearing in Washington, D.C., on ``Supplemental 
Education Services Under the No Child Left Behind Act: How to 
Improve Quality and Access.'' The purpose of the hearing was to 
understand how supplemental education services are working and 
whether they can be better implemented or improved. Testifying 
before the subcommittee were Ms. Cornelia M. Ashby, Director, 
Education, Workforce, and Income Security Issues, U.S. 
Government Accountability Office, Washington, D.C.; Ms. Ann E. 
Chafin, Assistant State Superintendent for Student, Family, and 
School Support, Maryland State Department of Education, 
Baltimore, Maryland; Ms. Ruth D. Murray, Director, Federal 
Grants, Newport News Public Schools, Newport News, Virginia; 
Ms. Dianne M. Pichee, Executive Director, Citizens' Commission 
on Civil Rights, Washington, D.C.; and Ms. Monica M. Roberts, 
Director, Office of Federal and State Programs, Boston Public 
Schools, Boston, Massachusetts.
    On April 20, 2007, the Committee on Education and Labor 
held a hearing in Washington, D.C., on ``Mismanagement and 
Conflicts of Interest in the Reading First Program.'' The 
purpose of the hearing was to investigate mismanagement and 
uncover conflicts of interest in the Reading First Program. 
Testifying before the Committee were Mr. Christopher J. 
Doherty, former Program Director, Reading First, U.S. 
Department of Education, Washington, D.C.; Dr. Roland Good, 
Associate Professor, University of Oregon, Eugene, Oregon; The 
Honorable John P. Higgins, Inspector General, U.S. Department 
of Education, Washington, D.C.; Dr. Edward Kame'enui, 
Commissioner of the National Center for Special Education 
Research, U.S. Department of Education, Washington, D.C.; Ms. 
Starr Lewis, Associate Commissioner, Kentucky Department of 
Education, Frankfort, Kentucky; and Dr. Deborah C. Simmons, 
Professor of Special Education, Texas A&M University, College 
Station, Texas.
    On April 23, 2007, the Committee on Education and Labor 
held a hearing in Washington, D.C., on ``NCLB: Preventing 
Dropouts and Enhancing School Safety.'' The purpose of the 
hearing was to examine strategies for preventing dropouts and 
improving school safety. Testifying before the Committee were 
Dr. Mariia Robledo Montecel, Executive Director, Intercultural 
Development Research Association, San Antonio, Texas; Dr. Jane 
Norwood, Vice Chair, North Carolina State Board of Education, 
Raleigh, North Carolina; Mr. Kenneth M. Smith, President, Jobs 
for America's Graduates, Alexandria, Virginia; Mr. Kenneth S. 
Trump, President and Chief Executive Officer, National School 
Safety and Security Services, Inc., Cleveland, Ohio; and The 
Honorable Bob Wise, former Governor of West Virginia and 
President, Alliance for Excellent Education, Washington, D.C.
    On April 27, 2007, the Committee on Education and Labor 
Subcommittee on Early Childhood, Elementary, and Secondary 
Education held a field hearing in San Rafael, California, on 
``Improving the No Child Left Behind Act's Accountability 
System.'' The purpose of the hearing was to gain local 
perspectives on accountability provisions within No Child Left 
Behind. Testifying before the subcommittee were Ms. Melanie 
Blake, Teacher, Sonoma Valley High School, Sonoma, California; 
Mr. Pepe Gonzalez, Vice Principal, Venetia Valley K-8 School, 
San Rafael, California; Dr. Sharon E. Liddell, Superintendent, 
Santa Rosa City Schools, Santa Rosa, California; Ms. Elizabeth 
W. Schott, Principal, McDowell Elementary School, Petaluma, 
California; and Dr. Fred Tempes, Senior Program Director, 
WestEd, San Francisco, California.
    On April 28, 2007, the Committee on Education and Labor 
Subcommittee on Early Childhood, Elementary, and Secondary 
Education held a field hearing in Sacaton, Arizona, on ``The No 
Child Left Behind Act's Impact on Indian Education.'' The 
purpose of the hearing was to explore how certain provisions of 
No Child Left Behind affect Indian Education. Testifying before 
the subcommittee were Dr. Roger Bordeaux, Director, Association 
of Community Tribal Schools, Agency Village, South Dakota; Dr. 
Willard S. Gilbert, President-elect, National Indian Education 
Association, Washington, D.C.; Mr. Tom Miller, Member, Board of 
Directors, Sault Ste. Marie Tribe of Chippewa Indians, Sault 
Ste. Marie, Michigan; Mr. William R. Rhodes, Governor, Gila 
River Indian Community, Sacaton, Arizona; and Mr. Wendsler 
Nosie Sr., Chairman, San Carlos Apache Tribe, San Carlos, 
Arizona.
    On May 10, 2007, the Committee on Education and Labor held 
a hearing in Washington, D.C., on ``Accountability for the 
Department of Education's Oversight of Student Loans and the 
Reading First Program.'' The purpose of the hearing was to 
investigate unethical practices in the student loan industry 
and the Reading First program. Testifying before the Committee 
was The Honorable Margaret Spellings, Secretary, U.S. 
Department of Education, Washington, D.C.
    On May 11, 2007, the Committee on Education and Labor held 
a hearing in Washington, D.C., on ``ESEA Reauthorization: 
Boosting Quality in the Teaching Profession.'' The purpose of 
the hearing was to examine methods of ensuring teacher quality 
in every classroom. Testifying before the Committee were Ms. 
Joan Bibeau, Member, Education Minnesota, Teacher, Eagleville 
Elementary School, Leech Lake Reservation, Minnesota; Dr. 
Joseph P. Burke, Superintendent of Schools, Springfield Public 
Schools, Springfield, Massachusetts; Dr. Jack D. Dale, 
Superintendent, Fairfax County Public Schools, Fairfax, 
Virginia; Mr. Joel I. Klein, Chancellor, New York City 
Department of Education, New York, New York; Ms. Valdine 
McLean, Teacher, Pershing County High School, Lovelock, Nevada; 
Mr. John D. Podesta, President and Chief Executive Officer, 
Center for American Progress, Washington, D.C.; Dr. Gary W. 
Ritter, Associate Professor, Endowed Chair in Education Policy, 
Department of Education Reform, College of Education and Health 
Professions, University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, Arkansas; 
and Dr. Jarvis Sanford, Principal, Dodge Renaissance Academy, 
Chicago, Illinois.
    On May 14, 2007, the Committee on Education and Labor 
Subcommittee on Early Childhood, Elementary, and Secondary 
Education held a field hearing in King of Prussia, 
Pennsylvania, on ``Examining Local Perspectives on the No Child 
Left Behind Act.'' The purpose of the hearing was to gain local 
perspectives on the consequences of No Child Left Behind. 
Testifying before the subcommittee were Dr. Leslye S. Abrutyn, 
Superintendent, Penn Delco School District, Aston, 
Pennsylvania; Dr. Theodore Hershberg, Public Policy and History 
Director, Center for Greater Philadelphia and Operation Public 
Education, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, 
Pennsylvania; Mr. Joe Howell, Principal, Norristown Area High 
School, Norristown, Pennsylvania; Mr. Stephen Kozol, Chair, 
Department of Social Studies, Upper Merion Area High School, 
King of Prussia, Pennsylvania; and Mr. Anthony C. Stevenson, 
incoming Principal, Radnor Middle School, Radnor Township, 
Pennsylvania.
    On May 17, 2007, the Committee on Education and Labor 
Subcommittee on Higher Education, Lifelong Learning, and 
Competitiveness held a hearing in Washington, D.C., on 
``Preparing Teachers for the Classroom: The Role of the Higher 
Education Act and No Child Left Behind.'' The purpose of the 
hearing was to examine the role the federal government can play 
in preparing teachers for the classroom. Testifying before the 
subcommittee were Dr. Daniel Fallon, Director, Program in 
Higher Education, Carnegie Corporation of New York, New York, 
New York; Dr. Emily Feistritzer, President, National Center for 
Alternative Certification and the National Center for Education 
Information, Washington, D.C.; Dr. Sharon P. Robinson, 
President and Chief Executive Officer, American Association of 
Colleges for Teacher Education, Washington, D.C.; Mr. George A. 
Scott, Director, Education, Workforce, and Income Security 
Issues, U.S. Government Accountability Office, Washington, 
D.C.; and Dr. Janice Wiley, Deputy Director, Region One 
Education Service Center, Edinburg, Texas.
    On June 7, 2007, the Committee on Education and Labor 
Subcommittee on Early Childhood, Elementary, and Secondary 
Education held a hearing in Washington, D.C., on 
``Reauthorization of the Elementary and Secondary Education 
Act: Current and Prospective Flexibility under the No Child 
Left Behind Act.'' The purpose of the hearing was to hear 
perspectives on flexibility under No Child Left Behind. 
Testifying before the subcommittee were Mr. Chester E. Finn 
Jr., President, Thomas B. Fordham Institute, Washington, D.C.; 
Mr. Jack Jennings, President, Center on Education Policy, 
Washington, D.C.; Dr. Carol Johnson, Superintendent, Memphis 
City Schools, Memphis, Tennessee; The Honorable Rick Melmer, 
Secretary, South Dakota Department of Education, Pierre, South 
Dakota; and Ms. Kathleen N. Straus, President, Michigan State 
Board of Education, Lansing, Michigan.
    On September 10, 2007, the Committee on Education and Labor 
held a hearing in Washington, D.C., on ``Reauthorization of the 
Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965.'' The purpose 
of the hearing was to gain feedback on proposed legislation to 
reauthorize the Elementary and Secondary Education Act. 
Testifying before the Committee were Ms. Germaine Brown, 
Teacher, Stewart Street Elementary School, Gadsden County, 
Florida; Mr. Barry Stark, Principal, Norris Middle School, 
Firth, Nebraska; Mr. Jack Jennings, President, Center for 
Education Policy, Washington, D.C.; Dr. Linda Darling-Hammond, 
Charles Ducommun Professor of Education, Stanford University, 
Stanford, California; Mr. John Podesta, President and Chief 
Executive Officer, Center for American Progress, Washington, 
D.C.; Ms. Andrea Messina, Commissioner, Aspen Institute 
Commission on NCLB, Washington, D.C.; Mr. Kevin Carey, Research 
and Policy Manager, Education Sector, Washington, D.C.; Dr. 
Billy Cannaday, Superintendent of Public Instruction, Virginia 
Department of Education, Richmond, Virginia; The Honorable Bob 
Wise, former Governor of West Virginia and President, Alliance 
for Excellent Education, Washington, D.C.; Ms. Adria Steinberg, 
Assistant Vice President of Youth Transition, Jobs for the 
Future, Boston, Massachusetts; Mr. James McPartland, Principal 
Research Scientist, Center for Social Organization of Schools, 
Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland; Mr. Brian Gong, 
Executive Director, Center for Assessment, Dover, New 
Hampshire; Mr. Mike Cohen, President, Achieve Inc., Washington, 
D.C.; Ms. Janet Bray, Director, Association for Career and 
Technical Education, Alexandria, Virginia; Ms. Nancy Zirkin, 
Vice President and Director of Public Policy, Leadership 
Conference on Civil Rights, Washington, D.C.; Mr. Peter Zamora, 
Regional Counsel, Mexican American Legal Defense and 
Educational Fund, Washington, D.C.; Ms. Stephanie Jones, 
Executive Director, The Urban League, Washington, D.C.; Mr. Dan 
Losen, Senior Education Law and Policy Associate, The Civil 
Rights Project, Los Angeles, California; Ms. Dianne Piche, 
Executive Director, Citizens Commission on Civil Rights, 
Washington, D.C.; Ms. Delia Pompa, Vice President of Education 
Programs, National Council of La Raza, Washington, D.C.; Ms. 
Katie Neas, Director of Congressional Relations, Easter Seals, 
Washington, D.C.; Ms. Myrna Mandlawitz, Policy Director, 
Learning Disabilities Association of America, Washington, D.C.; 
Mr. Jon Schnur, Chief Executive Officer and Co-Founder, New 
Leaders for New Schools, New York, New York; Mr. Charles 
Harris, Co-Founder and Executive Partner, SeaChange Capital 
Partner, South Norwalk, Connecticut; Mr. Nelson Smith, 
President, National Alliance for Public Charter Schools, 
Washington, D.C.; Mr. Joshua Wyner, Executive Vice President, 
Jack Kent Cooke Foundation, Lansdowne, Virginia; Ms. Sonia 
Hernandez Rodriguez, Executive Vice President, National Farm 
Workers Service Center, Los Angeles, California; Mr. John 
Castellani, President, Business Roundtable, Washington, D.C.; 
Mr. Jim Kohlmoos, President and Chief Executive Officer, 
Knowledge Alliance, Washington, D.C.; Mr. Mike Petrilli, Vice 
President for National Programs and Policy, The Thomas B. 
Fordham Foundation, Washington, D.C.; Ms. MaryKate Hughes, Math 
Teacher, D.C. Preparatory Academy, Washington, D.C.; Ms. 
Kathleen Rooker, Principal, Neil Armstrong Elementary School, 
Port Charlotte, Florida; Mr. Reg Weaver, President, National 
Education Association, Washington, D.C.; Ms. Kati Haycock, 
Director, The Education Trust, Washington, D.C.; Ms. Antonia 
Cortese, Executive Vice President, American Federation of 
Teachers, Washington, D.C.; Ms. Frances Bryant Bradburn, 
Director of Instructional Technologies, North Carolina 
Department of Education, Raleigh, North Carolina; Ms. Mary Kay 
Sommers, Principal, Shepardson Elementary School, Fort Collins, 
Colorado; Ms. Kristan Van Hook, Senior Vice President for 
Public Policy and Development, National Institute for 
Excellence in Teaching, Santa Monica, California; Mr. David 
Brewer, Superintendent, Los Angeles Unified School District, 
Los Angeles, California; Ms. Joan Wodiska, Director of 
Education Policy, National Governors Association, Washington, 
D.C.; Mr. Michael Casserly, Executive Director, Council of 
Great City Schools, Washington, D.C.; Mr. Paul Houston, 
Executive Director, American Association of School 
Administrators, Arlington, Virginia; Ms. LaRuth Gray, Deputy 
Director, Metropolitan Center for Urban Education, New York, 
New York; and Mr. Michael Resnick, Associate Executive 
Director, National School Boards Association, Alexandria, 
Virginia.
    On September 21, 2007, the Committee on Education and Labor 
Subcommittee on Higher Education, Lifelong Learning, and 
Competitiveness held a field hearing in Pomona, California, on 
``Examining Competitiveness Through Science, Technology, 
Engineering and Math.'' The purpose of the hearing was to 
examine strategies for improving the delivery of education in 
Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math classes to students 
in the United States. Testifying before the subcommittee were 
Dr. Warren J. Baker, President, California Polytechnic State 
University, San Luis Obispo, California; Dr. Marshall E. 
Drummond, Chancellor, Los Angeles Community College District, 
Los Angeles, California; Dr. Susan Hackwood, Executive 
Director, California Council on Science and Technology, 
Sacramento, California; Dr. Charles B. Reed, Chancellor, 
California State University System, Sacramento, California; Dr. 
Frederick A. Tarantino, President and Chief Executive Officer, 
Universities Space Research Association, Columbia, Maryland; 
and Dr. Todd Ullah, Director of Science, Los Angeles Unified 
School District, Los Angeles, California.

Hearings--Second Session

    On February 13, 2008, the Committee on Education and Labor 
held a hearing in Washington, D.C., on ``Modern Public School 
Facilities: Investing in the Future.'' The purpose of the 
hearing was to highlight the poor quality of public school 
buildings, particularly in low-income areas, and federal 
investment in public school buildings. Testifying before the 
Committee were The Honorable Ben Chandler, U.S. House of 
Representatives, Sixth District, Kentucky; The Honorable 
Michael Castle, U.S. House of Representatives, At-Large, 
Delaware; The Honorable Bob Etheridge, U.S. House of 
Representatives, Second District, North Carolina; The Honorable 
David Loebsack, U.S. House of Representatives, Second District, 
Iowa; The Honorable Charles Boustany, U.S. House of 
Representatives, Seventh District, Louisiana; The Honorable 
Darlene Hooley, U.S. House of Representatives, Fifth District, 
Oregon; The Honorable Steve King, U.S. House of 
Representatives, Fifth District, Iowa; The Honorable Rush Holt, 
U.S. House of Representatives, Twelfth District, New Jersey; 
Ms. Kathleen J. Moore, Director, School Facilities Planning 
Division, California Department of Education, Sacramento, 
California; Ms. Judi Caddick, Teacher, Memorial Junior High 
School, Illinois Education Association, Lansing, Illinois; Ms. 
Mary Cullinane, Director, Innovation and Business Development 
Team, Microsoft Corporation, New York, New York; Dr. Paula 
Vincent, Superintendent, Clear Creek Amana School District, 
Oxford, Iowa; Mr. Paul Vallas, Superintendent, Louisiana 
Recovery School District, New Orleans, Louisiana; Mr. Jim 
Waters, Director, Policy and Communications, Bluegrass 
Institute for Public Policy Solutions, Bowling Green, Kentucky; 
and Mr. Neal McCluskey, Associate Director, Center for 
Educational Freedom, CATO Institute, Washington, D.C.
    On March 11, 2008, the Committee on Education and Labor 
Subcommittee on Early Childhood, Elementary, and Secondary 
Education held a hearing in Washington, D.C., on ``After School 
Programs: How the Bush Administration's Budget Impacts Children 
and Families.'' The purpose of the hearing was to examine the 
21st Century Learning Centers program and discuss its progress. 
Testifying before the subcommittee were Mr. Michael J. Carroll, 
Chief of Police, West Goshen Township Police Department, 
Chester County, Pennsylvania; Ms. LaDonna Gamble, Interim 
Project Director, Bridges to the Future Before and Afterschool 
Program's 21st Century Community Learning Center, Flint, 
Michigan; Ms. Theresa Vendrzyk Kough, Education Associate, 
After School Programs, Delaware Department of Education, Dover, 
Delaware; and Ms. Priscilla M. Little, Associate Director, 
Harvard Family Research Project, Medford, Massachusetts.
    On May 21, 2008, the Committee on Education and Labor held 
a hearing in Washington, D.C., on ``The National Mathematics 
Advisory Panel Report: Foundations for Success.'' The purpose 
of the hearing was to discuss the findings of the National Math 
Panel's report and how U.S. math education can be improved. 
Testifying before the Committee were Mr. John Castellani, 
President, Business Roundtable, Washington, D.C.; Dr. Francis 
Fennell, former President, National Council of Teachers of 
Mathematics, Reston, Virginia; Dr. William Haver, Professor of 
Mathematics, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, 
Virginia; Ms. Laura Slover, Vice President, Achieve, Inc., 
Washington, D.C.; Dr. Wanda Talley Staggers, Dean of 
Manufacturing and Engineering, Anderson School District Five, 
Anderson, South Carolina; and Ms. Mary Ann Wolf, Executive 
Director, State Educational Technology Directors Association, 
Glen Burnie, Maryland.
    On July 17, 2008, the Committee on Education and Labor held 
a hearing in Washington, D.C., on ``Mayor and Superintendent 
Partnerships in Education: Closing the Achievement Gap.'' The 
purpose of the hearing was to examine mayor and superintendent 
partnerships in education and how they contribute to closing 
the achievement gap. Testifying before the Committee were The 
Honorable Michael R. Bloomberg, Mayor, City of New York, New 
York, New York; Mr. Arne Duncan, Chief Executive Officer, 
Chicago Public Schools, Chicago, Illinois; The Honorable Adrian 
M. Fenty, Mayor, District of Columbia, Washington, D.C.; Dr. 
Beverly L. Hall, Superintendent, Atlanta Public Schools, 
Atlanta, Georgia; Mr. Joel I. Klein, Chancellor, New York City 
Department of Education, New York, New York; and Ms. Michelle 
Rhee, Chancellor, District of Columbia Public Schools, 
Washington, D.C.
    On July 22, 2008, the Committee on Education and Labor held 
a hearing in Washington, D.C., on ``Innovation in Education 
through Business and Education STEM Partnerships.'' The purpose 
of the hearing was to examine innovative business and education 
partnerships in Science, Technology, Engineering, and 
Mathematics (STEM) education. Testifying before the Committee 
were Dr. Ramona Chang, Director of Curriculum, Torrance Unified 
School District, Torrance, California; Ms. Melendy Lovett, 
Senior Vice President and President, Education Technology, 
Texas Instruments, Dallas, Texas; Mr. Tom Luce, Chief Executive 
Officer, National Math and Science Initiative, Dallas, Texas; 
Mr. Phil Mickelson, Professional Golfer and Cofounder, 
Mickelson ExxonMobil Teachers Academy, Rancho Santa Fe, 
California; Dr. Carlo Parravano, Executive Director, Merck 
Institute for Science Education, Rahway, New Jersey; Dr. Sally 
Ride, President and Chief Executive Officer, Sally Ride 
Science, San Diego, California; Ms. Patricia Sullivan, 
Education Solutions Executive, Global Education Industry at 
IBM, Armonk, New York; and Mr. Brian H. Wells, Chief Systems 
Engineer, Raytheon Co., Waltham, Massachusetts.
    On July 24, 2008, the Committee on Education and Labor held 
a hearing in Washington, D.C., on ``The Benefits of Physical 
and Health Education for Our Nation's Children.'' The purpose 
of the hearing was to discuss the problem of childhood obesity 
and the benefits of physical education. Testifying before the 
Committee were The Honorable Ron Kind, U.S. House of 
Representatives, Third District, Wisconsin; The Honorable Zach 
Wamp, U.S. House of Representatives, Third District, Tennessee; 
Ms. Lori Rose Benson, Director, Office of Fitness and Health 
Education, New York City Department of Education, New York, New 
York; Mr. Tim Brown, former NFL All-Pro player and National 
Chairman, Athletes and Entertainers for Kids, Long Beach, 
California; Mr. Robert Keiser, Student Advisor to Governor 
Charlie Crist, Council on Physical Fitness, Tallahassee, 
Florida; Dr. Russell Pate, Associate Vice President for Health 
Sciences, Professor, Department of Exercise Science, Arnold 
School of Public Health, University of South Carolina, 
Columbia, South Carolina; and Mr. Richard Simmons, ASK America, 
Beverly Hills, California.
    On September 9, 2008, the Committee on Education and Labor 
Subcommittee on Early Childhood, Elementary, and Secondary 
Education held a hearing in Washington, D.C., on ``Challenges 
Facing Bureau of Indian Education Schools in Improving Student 
Achievement.'' The purpose of the hearing was to examine 
challenges encountered by Bureau of Indian Education schools in 
their efforts to improve student achievement. Testifying before 
the subcommittee were Ms. Cornelia Ashby, Director, Education, 
Workforce, and Income Security Issues, U.S. Government 
Accountability Office, Washington, D.C.; Ms. Anne Dudro, Chief 
of Staff, Office of Elementary and Secondary Education, U.S. 
Department of Education, Washington, D.C.; Dr. Willard 
Sakiestewa Gilbert, President, National Indian Education 
Association, Washington, D.C.; Mr. Theodore Hamilton, Executive 
Director, Oceti Sakowin Education Consortium, Kyle, South 
Dakota; and Mr. Stanley Holder, Chief, Division of Performance 
and Accountability, Bureau of Indian Education, U.S. Department 
of the Interior, Washington, D.C.

Legislative Action--First Session

    On July 12, 2007, Rep. Ben Chandler (D-KY), Rep. George 
Miller (D-CA), and Rep. Dale Kildee (D-MI) introduced H.R. 
3021, the 21st Century High-Performing Public School Facilities 
Act. The bill sought to create a new federal school 
construction program. Under the bill, the Secretary of 
Education would make grants and low-interest loans to local 
educational agencies for the construction, modernization, or 
repair of public kindergarten, elementary, and secondary 
educational facilities, and for other purposes.
    On July 12, 2007, Rep. John Sarbanes (D-MD) introduced H.R. 
3036, the No Child Left Inside Act of 2007. The bill sought to 
amend the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 to 
create new environmental education programs.
    On August 1, 2007, Rep. Mazie Hirono (D-HI), Rep. Robert 
Andrews (D-NJ), Rep. Susan Davis (D-CA), Rep. George Miller (D-
CA), and Rep. John Tierney (D-MA) introduced H.R. 3289, the 
Providing Resources Early for Kids (PRE-K) Act of 2007. The 
bill sought to amend the Elementary and Secondary Education Act 
of 1965 to create a new early education program.

Legislative Action--Second Session

    On April 30, 2008, the Committee on Education and Labor 
considered H.R. 3021, the 21st Century High-Performing Public 
School Facilities Act, in legislative session and reported the 
bill favorably, as amended, to the House of Representatives by 
a vote of 28-19.
    The Committee considered and adopted the following 
amendment to H.R. 3021:
           Rep. Dave Loebsack (D-IA) and Rep. Dale 
        Kildee (D-MI) offered an amendment in the nature of a 
        substitute. The amendment passed by a voice vote.
    The Committee further considered the following amendments 
to H.R. 3021, which were not adopted:
           Rep. Howard P. ``Buck'' McKeon (R-CA) 
        offered an amendment to strike the provision subjecting 
        new school construction projects to the requirements of 
        the Davis-Bacon Act. The amendment failed by a vote of 
        16-27.
           Rep. Mike Castle (R-DE) offered an amendment 
        requiring Title I and the Individuals with Disabilities 
        Education Act to be fully funded before federal 
        resources could be dedicated to school construction. 
        The amendment failed by a vote of 20-24.
           Rep. Rob Bishop (R-UT) offered an amendment 
        on the equitable treatment of charter schools. The 
        amendment failed by a vote of 19-25.
           Rep. John Kline (R-MN) offered an amendment 
        to require local educational agencies to provide 
        military recruiters with access to secondary student 
        information. The amendment was ruled not germane by the 
        Chair. A motion to appeal the ruling of the Chair 
        failed by a vote of 20-25.
           Rep. Tom Price (R-GA) offered an amendment 
        requiring local educational agencies to conduct 
        independent audits. The amendment failed by a vote of 
        18-26.
           Rep. Tom Price (R-GA) offered an amendment 
        prohibiting earmarks. The amendment failed by a vote of 
        21-25.
           Rep. Vernon Ehlers (R-MI) offered an 
        amendment prohibiting the purchase of carbon offsets. 
        The amendment failed by a vote of 21-25.
           Rep. David Davis (R-TN) offered an amendment 
        requiring local educational agencies to certify 
        compliance with school prayer provisions. The amendment 
        was ruled not germane by the Chair. A motion to appeal 
        the ruling of the Chair failed by a vote of 21-26.
    The House of Representatives passed H.R. 3021 on June 4, 
2008, by a vote of 250-164. The bill was sent to the Senate and 
referred to the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, 
and Pensions.
    On June 18, 2008, the Committee on Education and Labor 
considered H.R. 3036, the No Child Left Inside Act of 2007, in 
legislative session and reported the bill favorably, as 
amended, to the House of Representatives by a vote of 37-8.
    The Committee considered and adopted the following 
amendments to H.R. 3036:
           Rep. George Miller (D-CA) offered an 
        amendment in the nature of a substitute. The amendment 
        passed by a voice vote.
           Rep. Mike Castle (R-DE) offered an amendment 
        to require the Administrator of the Environmental 
        Protection Agency, the Secretary of Education, and the 
        National Environmental Education Foundation to 
        establish indicators of program quality for 
        environmental education programs. The amendment was 
        adopted by a voice vote.
           Rep. John Sarbanes (D-MD) offered an 
        amendment to make technical edits. The amendment was 
        adopted by a voice vote.
           Rep. Vern Ehlers (R-MI) offered an en bloc 
        amendment to expand the list of subject studies to 
        determine the effectiveness of environmental education 
        programs and to allow grantees to conduct studies of 
        national significance. The amendment was adopted by a 
        voice vote.
           Rep. Rush Holt (D-NJ) and Rep. Mark Souder 
        (R-IN) offered an amendment to allow grantees to 
        coordinate with any program operated by a federal 
        natural resource management agency. The amendment was 
        adopted by a voice vote.
           Rep. Tim Bishop (D-NY) offered an amendment 
        to allow grantees to replicate and disseminate 
        information about proven and tested environmental 
        education programs. The amendment was adopted by a 
        voice vote.
           Rep. Mark Souder (R-IN) offered an amendment 
        to allow grantees to develop environmental education 
        standards that include information on the need to 
        balance conservation of the environment with the 
        development of the nation's energy resources. The 
        amendment was adopted by a voice vote.
           Rep. Yvette Clark (D-NY) offered an 
        amendment to allow grantees to address environmental 
        justice issues. The amendment was adopted by a voice 
        vote.
           Rep. Tom Price (R-GA) offered an amendment 
        to clarify that federal funds may not be used to 
        mandate, direct, or control a state or local 
        educational agency's curriculum or program of 
        instruction. The amendment was adopted by a voice vote.
    The Committee further considered the following amendment to 
H.R. 3036, which was not adopted:
           Rep. Tom Price (R-GA) offered an amendment 
        on the environmental benefits of American-made energy. 
        The amendment failed by a vote of 13-28.
    The House of Representatives passed H.R. 3036 on September 
18, 2008, by a vote of 293-109. The bill was sent to the Senate 
and referred to the Senate Committee on Environment and Public 
Works.
    On June 25, 2008, the Committee on Education and Labor 
considered H.R. 3289, the Providing Resources Early for Kids 
(PRE-K) Act of 2007, in legislative session and reported the 
bill favorably, as amended, to the House of Representatives by 
a vote of 31-11.
    The Committee considered and adopted the following 
amendments to H.R. 3289:
           Rep. George Miller (D-CA) offered an 
        amendment in the nature of a substitute. The amendment 
        passed by a voice vote.
           Rep. Phil Hare (D-IL) offered an en bloc 
        amendment to address the deficiency of pre-K 
        opportunities to children in rural areas and to 
        increase coordination of state supported early 
        childhood providers and local educational agencies to 
        ensure a smooth transition to kindergarten. The 
        amendment passed by a voice vote.
           Rep. Susan Davis (D-CA) offered an amendment 
        to add an allowable use of funds for instruction and 
        support for program directors and staff during the 
        first three years of employment. The amendment passed 
        by a vote of 26-17.
           Rep. Dennis Kucinich (D-OH) offered an en 
        bloc amendment to require states to report on how they 
        are addressing transportation needs where 
        transportation is a barrier to accessing state-funded 
        preschool programs and to require states to coordinate 
        with a state advisory board on early childhood 
        education or similar entity. The amendment passed by a 
        voice vote.
           Rep. Dennis Kucinich (D-OH) and Rep. Lynn 
        Woolsey (D-CA) offered an amendment to require states 
        to report on their activities to expand state-funded 
        preschool programs and to require the Secretary of 
        Education to report to Congress on the activities 
        carried out by this bill. The amendment (as amended) 
        passed by a voice vote.
           Rep. Phil Hare (D-IL) offered a secondary 
        amendment to Reps. Kucinich and Woolsey's amendment to 
        add rural areas into the reporting requirements. The 
        amendment passed by a voice vote.
           Rep. Ruben Hinojosa (D-TX) offered an 
        amendment requiring states to provide assurances they 
        will target resources or strengthen services to English 
        Language Learners. The amendment passed by a voice 
        vote.
    The Committee considered the following amendments to H.R. 
3289, which were not adopted:
           Rep. Howard P. ``Buck'' McKeon (R-CA) 
        offered an amendment to ensure states invest the 
        resources provided in the bill to enroll all eligible 
        children in the existing Head Start program. The 
        amendment was defeated by a vote of 18-25.
           Rep. Mike Castle (R-DE) offered an amendment 
        to align the new pre-K program with Head Start. The 
        amendment was defeated by a vote of 18-25.
           Rep. Charles Boustany (R-LA) offered an 
        amendment to prioritize services only to low-income 
        children. The amendment was defeated by a vote of 17-
        26.
           Rep. Tom Price (R-GA) offered an amendment 
        to allow states to provide parents a choice of 
        preschool providers. The amendment was defeated by a 
        vote of 14-29.
           Rep. Tom Price (R-GA) also offered an 
        amendment that would require the bill to have offsets. 
        The amendment was defeated by a vote of 17-26.
           Rep. Virginia Foxx (R-NC) and Rep. Tom Price 
        (R-GA) offered an amendment that would limit federally 
        funded programs to legal U.S. residents and citizens. 
        The amendment was defeated by a vote of 18-25.
    On September 26, 2008, the House of Representatives passed 
H.R. 7110, the Job Creation and Unemployment Relief Act of 
2008, introduced by Rep. David Obey (D-WI). H.R. 7110 
appropriated $3 billion for public school modernization, 
renovation, and repair, similar to the provisions included in 
H.R. 3021. The bill was placed on the Senate calendar.

                             111TH CONGRESS

Hearings--First Session

    On April 29, 2009, the Committee on Education and Labor 
held a hearing in Washington, D.C., on ``Strengthening 
America's Competitiveness through Common Academic Standards.'' 
The purpose of the hearing was to examine how to ensure 
rigorous academic standards keep American students competitive. 
Testifying before the Committee were Mr. James B. Hunt Jr., 
former Governor of North Carolina and Chairman of the Board, 
James B. Hunt, Jr. Institute for Educational Leadership and 
Policy Foundation, Raleigh, North Carolina; Dr. Kenneth James, 
Commissioner, Arkansas Department of Education, Little Rock, 
Arkansas; Mr. Greg Jones, retired President and Chief Executive 
Officer, State Farm General Insurance, and Chairman, California 
Business Roundtable, Playa del Rey, California; Mr. David 
Levin, Co-founder, KIPP Schools, New York, New York; and Ms. 
Randi Weingarten, President, American Federation of Teachers, 
New York, New York.
    On May 12, 2009, the Committee on Education and Labor held 
a hearing in Washington, D.C., on ``America's Competitiveness 
through High School Reform.'' The purpose of the hearing was to 
learn about the challenges facing our nation's high schools in 
providing competitive, capable graduates. Testifying before the 
Committee were The Honorable Chaka Fattah, U.S. House of 
Representatives, Second District, Pennsylvania; The Honorable 
Michael Castle, U.S. House of Representatives, At-Large, 
Delaware; The Honorable Rauul M. Grijalva, U.S. House of 
Representatives, Seventh District, Arizona; The Honorable David 
P. ``Phil'' Roe, U.S. House of Representatives, First District, 
Tennessee; Mr. Robert Balfanz, Associate Research Scientist, 
Everyone Graduates Center, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, 
Maryland; Mr. Scott Gordon, Chief Executive Officer, Mastery 
Charter Schools, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Ms. Marguerite 
Kondracke, President and Chief Executive Officer, America's 
Promise Alliance, Washington, D.C.; Dr. Vicki Phillips, 
Director, Education Initiative, Bill & Melinda Gates 
Foundation, Seattle, Washington; The Honorable Bob Wise, former 
Governor of West Virginia and President, Alliance for Excellent 
Education, Washington, D.C.; and Mr. Michael Wotorson, 
Executive Director, Campaign for High School Equity, 
Washington, D.C.
    On May 19, 2009, the Committee on Education and Labor held 
a hearing in Washington, D.C., on ``Examining the Abusive and 
Deadly Use of Seclusion and Restraint in Schools.'' The purpose 
of the hearing was to understand the nature and magnitude of 
the practice of abusive restraint and seclusion techniques in 
public and private schools. Testifying before the Committee 
were Mr. Greg Kutz, Managing Director, Forensic Audits and 
Special Investigations, U.S. Government Accountability Office, 
Washington, D.C.; Ms. Toni Price, foster parent of a child 
victim, Killeen, Texas; Ms. Anne Gaydos, parent of a child 
victim, Monument, Colorado; Ms. Elizabeth Hanselman, Assistant 
Superintendent, Special Education and Support Services, 
Illinois State Board of Education, Springfield, Illinois; and 
Dr. Reece L. Peterson, Professor of Special Education, 
University of Nebraska, Lincoln, Nebraska.
    On May 20, 2009, the Committee on Education and Labor held 
a hearing in Washington, D.C., on ``The Obama Administration's 
Education Agenda.'' The purpose of the hearing was to learn 
about the administration's policies and priorities for 
education in the coming fiscal year. Testifying before the 
Committee was the Honorable Arne Duncan, Secretary, U.S. 
Department of Education, Washington, D.C.
    On June 4, 2009, the Committee on Education and Labor held 
a hearing in Washington, D.C., on ``Building on What Works at 
Charter Schools.'' The purpose of the hearing was to learn how 
states, charter school authorizers, and charter school 
providers produce high-quality charter schools and how those 
programs can be replicated and brought to scale. Testifying 
before the Committee were The Honorable Barbara O'Brien, 
Lieutenant Governor, State of Colorado, Denver, Colorado; Mr. 
James Shelton, Assistant Deputy Secretary for Innovation and 
Improvement, U.S. Department of Education, Washington, D.C.; 
Mr. Steve Barr, Founder and Chairman, Green Dot Public Schools, 
Los Angeles, California; Dr. John King, Managing Director, 
Excellence and Preparatory Network of Uncommon Schools, New 
York, New York; Mr. David Dunn, Executive Director, Texas 
Charter Schools Association, Austin, Texas; and Mr. James 
Goenner, Executive Director, The Center for Charter Schools, 
Central Michigan University, Mount Pleasant, Michigan.
    On June 16, 2009, the Committee on Education and Labor held 
a hearing in Washington, D.C., on ``The Future of Learning: How 
Technology is Transforming Public Schools.'' The purpose of the 
hearing was to examine the federal government's role in 
promoting the effective use of technology to improve public 
education. Testifying before the Committee were Ms. Jennifer 
Bergland, Chief Technology Officer, Bryan Independent School 
District, Bryan, Texas; The Honorable Aneesh Chopra, Chief 
Technology Officer, White House Office for Science and 
Technology, Washington, D.C.; Dr. Wayne Hartschuh, Executive 
Director, Delaware Center for Educational Technology, Delaware 
Department of Education, Dover, Delaware; Mr. Scott Kinney, 
Vice President Of Media And Technology, Discovery Education, 
Silver Spring, Maryland; Mr. John McAuliffe, General Manager, 
Educate Online Learning, Baltimore, Maryland.; Mr. Abel 
Alejandro Real, Student, East Carolina University, Greenville, 
North Carolina; and Ms. Lisa Short, Middle School Teacher, 
Gaithersburg Middle School, Gaithersburg, Maryland.
    On July 8, 2009, the Committee on Education and Labor 
Subcommittee on Early Childhood, Elementary, and Secondary 
Education held a joint hearing with the subcommittee on Healthy 
Families and Communities in Washington, D.C., on 
``Strengthening School Safety through Prevention of Bullying.'' 
The purpose of the hearing was to discuss how the federal 
government could support anti-bullying efforts. Testifying 
before the subcommittees were Ms. Jacquelyn Andrews and Ms. 
Josie Andrews, daughters of Rep. Rob Andrews (D-NJ); Ms. Rona 
C. Kaufmann, Principal, William Penn Senior High School, York, 
Pennsylvania; Dr. Scott Poland, Coordinator, Office of Suicide 
and Violence Prevention, Center for Psychological Studies, Nova 
Southeastern University, Fort Lauderdale, Florida; Mr. Steve 
Riach, Founder and Chairman, Heart of a Champion Foundation, 
Colleyville, Texas; Ms. Cassady Tetsworth, Vice Chair, National 
SAVE Youth Advisory Board, Greensboro, North Carolina; Mr. 
Kenneth S. Trump, President and Chief Executive Officer, 
National School Safety and Security Services, Inc., Cleveland, 
Ohio; and Ms. Sirdeaner Walker, parent of a bullied child, 
Springfield, Massachusetts.
    On September 18, 2009, the Committee on Education and Labor 
Subcommittee on Early Childhood, Elementary, and Secondary 
Education held a field hearing in Flint, Michigan, on ``High 
School/College Dual Enrollment Program.'' The purpose of the 
hearing was to learn about dual enrollment programs. Testifying 
before the subcommittee were Mr. John Otis Brooks, Student, 
Mott Community College, Flint, Michigan; Dr. Vahid Lotfi, 
Interim Provost and Vice Chancellor, Academic Affairs, 
University of Michigan, Flint, Michigan; Dr. M. Richard Shaink, 
President, Mott Community College, Flint, Michigan; Mr. Stephen 
Skorcz, President and Chief Executive Officer, Greater Flint 
Health Coalition, Flint, Michigan; Dr. Thomas Svitkovich, 
Superintendent, Genesee Intermediate School District, Flint, 
Michigan; and Dr. Michael Webb, Associate Vice President, Early 
College High School Initiative, Jobs for the Future, Boston, 
Massachusetts.
    On September 30, 2009, the Committee on Education and Labor 
held a hearing in Washington, D.C., on ``Teacher Equity: 
Effective Teachers for All Children.'' The purpose of the 
hearing was to examine how to ensure students are taught by 
effective teachers. Testifying before the Committee were The 
Honorable Chaka Fattah, U.S. House of Representatives, Second 
District, Pennsylvania; The Honorable Tom Price, U.S. House of 
Representatives, Sixth District, Georgia; Ms. Layla Avila, Vice 
President, The New Teacher Project, Brooklyn, New York; Ms. 
Latanya Daniels, Assistant Principal, Edison High School, 
Minneapolis, Minnesota; Dr. Frederick M. Hess, Director of 
Education Policy Studies, American Enterprise Institute, 
Washington, D.C.; Dr. Linda Murray, Executive Director, 
Education Trust--West, Oakland, California; Dr. Marguerite 
Roza, Research Associate Professor, Center on Reinventing 
Public Education, University of Washington, Seattle, 
Washington; and Mr. Dennis Van Roekel, President, National 
Education Association, Washington, D.C.
    On November 19, 2009, the Committee on Education and Labor 
Subcommittee on Early Childhood, Elementary, and Secondary 
Education held a hearing in Washington, D.C., on ``Improving 
the Literacy Skills of Children and Young Adults.'' The purpose 
of the hearing was to examine strategies for improving literacy 
skills among students. Testifying before the subcommittee were 
Mr. Larry Berger, Co-Founder and Chief Executive Officer, 
Wireless Generation, Brooklyn, New York; Ms. Mary Kay Doree, 
District Student Support Services Manager, Summit School 
District, Frisco, Colorado; Dr. Leo Gomeez, Professor, the 
University of Texas Pan American, and Officer, the National 
Association for Bilingual Education, Edinburg, Texas; Mr. 
Andrees Henriiquez, Program Officer, Carnegie Corporation of 
New York, New York, New York; Dr. Sandra D. Meyers, Education 
Associate, Delaware Department of Education, Dover, Delaware; 
and Dr. Dorothy S. Strickland, Professor Emeritus, Rutgers, the 
State University of New Jersey, Newark, New Jersey.
    On December 8, 2009, the Committee on Education and Labor 
held a hearing in Washington, D.C., on ``Improving Our 
Competitiveness: Common Core Education Standards.'' The purpose 
of the hearing was to take a closer look at the Common Core 
State Standards Initiative. Testifying before the Committee 
were Ms. Cathy Allen, Vice Chair, St. Mary's County Board of 
Education, Leonardtown, Maryland; Mr. Douglas Kubach, President 
and Chief Executive Officer, Pearson Assessment and 
Information, Bloomington, Minnesota; The Honorable Bill Ritter 
Jr., Governor, State of Colorado, Denver, Colorado; and Mr. 
Gene Wilhoit, Executive Director, Council of Chief State School 
Officers, Washington, D.C.

Hearings--Second Session

    On February 24, 2010, the Committee on Education and Labor 
held a legislative hearing in Washington, D.C., on ``H.R. 4330, 
the All Students Achieving through Reform Act.'' The purpose of 
this legislative hearing was to learn how charter school 
providers maintain quality in charter schools, what student 
populations charter schools serve, and the importance of 
keeping charter schools autonomous. The hearing also focused on 
H.R. 4430, which would create a new initiative under the 
Charter School Program to provide funding for the expansion and 
replication of charter schools. Testifying before the Committee 
were Ms. Eva Moskowitz, Founder, Success Charter Network, New 
York, New York; Ms. Robin J. Lake, Associate Director, Center 
on Reinventing Public Education, Seattle, Washington; Dr. 
Thomas Hehir, Professor of Practice, Harvard Graduate School of 
Education, Cambridge, Massachusetts; Mr. Greg Richmond, 
President and Chief Executive Officer, National Association of 
Charter School Authorizers, Chicago, Illinois; Ms. Eileen 
Ahern, Director, National Association of State Directors of 
Special Education, Alexandria, Virginia; and Dr. Caprice Young, 
President and Chief Executive Officer, KC Distance Learning, 
Portland, Oregon.
    On March 3, 2010, the Committee on Education and Labor held 
a hearing in Washington, D.C., on ``Building a Stronger 
Economy: Spurring Reform and Innovation in American 
Education.'' The purpose of the hearing was to identify the 
administration's priorities for education in the coming fiscal 
year. Testifying before the Committee was The Honorable Arne 
Duncan, Secretary, U.S. Department of Education, Washington, 
D.C.
    On March 17, 2010, the Committee on Education and Labor 
held a hearing in Washington, D.C., on ``The Obama 
Administration's Elementary and Secondary Education Act 
Reauthorization.'' The purpose of the hearing was to discuss 
the administration's blueprint for reauthorization of the 
Elementary and Secondary Education Act. Testifying before the 
Committee was the Honorable Arne Duncan, Secretary, U.S. 
Department of Education, Washington, D.C.
    On March 18, 2010, the Committee on Education and Labor 
Subcommittee on Early Childhood, Elementary, and Secondary 
Education held a hearing in Washington, D.C., on ``Elementary 
and Secondary Education Act Reauthorization: Addressing the 
Needs of Diverse Students.'' The purpose of the hearing was to 
discuss the importance of and the challenges states and school 
districts face in educating diverse student learners. 
Testifying before the subcommittee were Dr. Daniel Curry, 
Superintendent, Lake Forest School District, Kent County, 
Delaware; Dr. Jack Dale, Superintendent, Fairfax County Public 
Schools, Fairfax, Virginia; Ms. Arelis E. Diaz, Assistant 
Superintendent of Instruction, Godwin Heights Public Schools, 
Wyoming, Michigan; Dr. David M. Gipp, President, United Tribes 
Technical College, Bismarck, North Dakota; Dr. Jacqui Farmer 
Kearns, Principal Investigator, National Alternate Assessment 
Center, Lexington, Kentucky; and Mr. Michael Wotorson, 
Executive Director, Campaign for High School Equity, 
Washington, D.C.
    On April 14, 2010, the Committee on Education and Labor 
held a hearing in Washington, D.C., on ``How Data Can Be Used 
to Inform Educational Outcomes.'' The purpose of the hearing 
was to examine possible methods for using data to inform and 
improve test scores and other educational indicators. 
Testifying before the Committee were Ms. Katie Hartley, Teacher 
and Value Added Data Specialist, Miami East Junior High School, 
Casstown, Ohio; Mr. Joe Kitchens, Superintendent, Western 
Heights School District, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma; Mr. Joel R. 
Reidenberg, Professor of Law and Founding Academic Director, 
Center on Law and Information Policy, Fordham University School 
of Law, New York, New York; and Mr. Richard J. Wenning, 
Associate Commissioner, Colorado Department of Education, 
Denver, Colorado.
    On April 15, 2010, the Committee on Education and Labor 
Subcommittee on Healthy Families and Communities held a hearing 
in Washington, D.C., on ``Corporal Punishment in Schools and 
its Effect on Academic Success.'' The purpose of the hearing 
was to examine corporal punishment in schools and its effect on 
academic performance. Testifying before the subcommittee were 
Ms. Jana Frieler, Principal, Overland High School and 
President-elect, National Association of Secondary School 
Principals, Aurora, Colorado; Mr. Wynell Gilbert, Teacher, 
Erwin High School, Center Point, Alabama; Dr. Donald E. 
Greydanus, Professor of Pediatrics & Human Development, 
Michigan State University College of Human Medicine, Pediatrics 
Program Director, Michigan State University/Kalamazoo Center 
for Medical Studies, Kalamazoo, Michigan; and Ms. Linda Pee, 
parent of a student who received corporal punishment, Hot 
Springs, Arkansas.
    On May 4, 2010, the Committee on Education and Labor held a 
hearing in Washington, D.C., on ``Supporting America's 
Educators: The Importance of Quality Teachers and Leaders.'' 
The purpose of the hearing was to look at the importance of 
quality teachers and explore ways to support the best educators 
for the nation's children. Testifying before the Committee were 
Ms. Deborah Ball, Dean, School of Education, University of 
Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan; Mr. Tony Bennett, Superintendent 
of Public Instruction, Indiana Department of Education, 
Indianapolis, Indiana; Dr. Jeanne M. Burns, Associate 
Commissioner, Teacher and Leadership Initiatives, Louisiana 
Board of Regents, Baton Rouge, Louisiana; Mr. Jonathan A. 
Kaplan, President, Walden University, Minneapolis, Minnesota; 
Ms. Marie Parker-McElroy, Cluster-based Instructional Coach, 
Fairfax County Public Schools, Fairfax, Virginia; Dr. Pamela S. 
Salazar, Assistant Professor, Department of Educational 
Leadership, University of Nevada, Las Vegas, Nevada; Mr. 
Christopher J. Steinhauser, Superintendent of Schools, Long 
Beach Unified School District, Long Beach, California; Ms. 
Monique Burns Thompson, President, Teach Plus, Boston, 
Massachusetts; Ms. Randi Weingarten, President, American 
Federation of Teachers, New York, New York; and Dr. Marcus A. 
Winters, Senior Fellow, Manhattan Institute for Policy 
Research, New York, New York.
    On May 19, 2010, the Committee on Education and Labor held 
a hearing in Washington, D.C., on ``Research and Best Practices 
on Successful School Turnaround.'' The purpose of the hearing 
was to discuss school turnaround strategies that improve 
struggling schools and protect the best interests of students. 
Testifying before the Committee were Ms. Susan E. Bridges, 
Principal, A.G. Richardson Elementary School, Culpeper, 
Virginia; Dr. Thomas Butler, Superintendent of Schools, Ridgway 
Area School District, Ridgway, Pennsylvania; Ms. Jessica 
Johnson, Chief Program Officer, Learning Point Associates, 
Naperville, Illinois; Dr. Daniel King, Superintendent, Pharr-
San Juan-Alamo Independent School District, Pharr, Texas; Mr. 
David Silver, Principal, Think College Now, Oakland, 
California; and Mr. John Simmons, President, Strategic Learning 
Initiatives, Chicago, Illinois.
    On May 20, 2010, the Committee on Education and Labor held 
a hearing in Washington, D.C., on ``The Impact of Concussions 
on High School Athletes.'' The purpose of the hearing was to 
discuss research conducted by the Government Accountability 
Office into concussions among high school athletes. Testifying 
before the Committee were Dr. Gerard A. Gioia, Director, 
Division of Pediatric Neuropsychology, Children's National 
Medical Center, Washington, D.C.; Dr. Linda Kohn, Director of 
Health Care Issues, U.S. Government Accountability Office, 
Washington, D.C.; Mr. Michael T. Monacelli, Director of 
Athletics and Head Football Coach, Caledonia-Mumford Central 
School District, Caledonia, New York; Ms. Michelle Pelton, 
former high school athlete, Swansea, Massachusetts; and Mr. 
James Schmutz, Executive Director, American Sport Education 
Program, Champaign, Illinois.
    On June 24, 2010, the Committee on Education and Labor 
Subcommittee on Healthy Families and Communities held a hearing 
in Washington, D.C., on ``Ensuring Student Cyber Safety.'' The 
purpose of the hearing was to discuss strategies aimed at 
developing both innovative and practical approaches to 
identify, prevent, and curb the prevalence of cyberbullying. 
Testifying before the subcommittee were Mr. Parry Aftab, Esq., 
Executive Director, WiredSaftey.org, Wycoff, New Jersey; Mr. 
Dave Finnegan, Chief Information and Logistics Bear, Build-A-
Bear Workshop, Inc., St. Louis, Missouri; Dr. Phillip C. 
McGraw, syndicated daytime television talk show host and best-
selling author, Los Angeles, California; Ms. Dominique 
Napolitano, student, on behalf of Girl Scouts of the USA, 
Suffolk County, New York; Ms. Barbara-Jane ``BJ'' Paris, 
Member, National Association of Secondary School Principals, 
Austin, Texas; and Dr. Jorge C. Srabstein, Medical Director, 
Clinic for Health Problems Related to Bullying, Department of 
Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Children's National Medical 
Center, Washington, D.C.
    On September 13, 2010, the Committee on Education and Labor 
Subcommittee on Healthy Families and Communities held a field 
hearing in Selden, New York, on ``The Impact of Concussions on 
High School Athletes: The Local Perspective.'' The purpose of 
the hearing was to gain a local perspective on student 
concussion safety. Testifying before the subcommittee were Mr. 
Richard C. Caster, former NFL player, Rockville Centre, New 
York; Mr. Courtney Hall, former NFL player and Cofounder, 
Hillcrest Venture Partners, New York, New York; Mr. Craig 
LoNigro, Athletic Trainer, Comsewogue High School, Port 
Jefferson Station, New York; Ms. Caitlin Monaghan, former high 
school athlete, Garden City, New Jersey; and Dr. Hayley C. 
Rintel Queller, Primary Care Sports Medicine Physician, 
Orthopedic Associates of Long Island, East Setauket, New York.
    On September 23, 2010, the Committee on Education and Labor 
held a legislative hearing in Washington, D.C., on ``H.R. 6172, 
the Protecting Student Athletes from Concussions Act.'' The 
purpose of this legislative hearing was to look at the issue of 
concussions among high school athletes and the effects of 
traumatic brain injuries on a student's academic achievement. 
Testifying before the Committee were Rev. Dr. Katherine E. 
Brearley, parent of the late Owen Thomas, South Whitehall 
Township, Pennsylvania; Ms. Alison Conca-Cheng, student, 
Centennial High School, Ellicott City, Maryland; Dr. Gerard A. 
Gioia, Ph.D., Chief, Division of Pediatric Neuropsychology, and 
Director, Safe Concussion Outcome, Recovery, and Education 
(SCORE) Program, Children's National Medical Center, 
Washington, D.C.; Dr. Stanley Herring, M.D., Clinical 
Professor, Departments of Rehabilitation Medicine, Orthopedics 
and Sports Medicine, and Neurological Surgery, University of 
Washington, and Co-Medical Director, Seattle Sports Concussion 
Program, and Team Physician, Seattle Seahawks and Seattle 
Mariners, and Member, National Football League's Head, Neck and 
Spine Committee, Seattle, Washington; and Mr. Sean Morey, 
Executive Board Member, NFL Players Association, Toronto, 
Ontario.

Legislative Action--First Session

    On January 28, 2009, the House of Representatives passed 
H.R. 1, the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA), 
introduced by Rep. David Obey (D-WI). H.R. 1 appropriated $14 
billion for public school modernization, renovation, and 
repair. On February 12, 2009, the House passed the Conference 
Report to H.R. 1, which did not include dedicated funds for 
public school modernization, renovation, and repair. However, 
Title XIV of the bill, the State Fiscal Stabilization Fund, 
included $48.6 billion for states and local educational 
agencies, of which public school modernization, renovation, and 
repair (including modernization, renovation, and repair that 
complies with a recognized green building standard) is an 
authorized use.
    On April 30, 2009, Rep. Ben Chandler (D-KY), Rep. Robert 
Andrews (D-NJ), Rep. Joe Courtney (D-CT), Rep. Ral Grijalva (D-
AZ), Rep. Phil Hare (D-IL), Rep. Mazie Hirono (D-HI), Rep. Rush 
Holt (D-NJ), Rep. Dale Kildee (D-MI), Rep. David Loebsack (D-
IA), Rep. George Miller (D-CA), Rep. Pedro R. Pierluisi (D-PR), 
Rep. Jared Polis (D-CO), Del. Gregorio Kilili Camacho Sablan 
(D-MP), Rep. John Tierney (D-MA), Rep. Paul Tonko (D-NY), Rep. 
Lynn Woolsey (D-CA), and Rep. David Wu (D-OR) introduced H.R. 
2187, the 21st Century Green High-Performing Public School 
Facilities Act. The bill would direct the Secretary of 
Education to make grants to state educational agencies for the 
modernization, renovation, or repair of public school 
facilities.
    On May 6, 2009, the Committee on Education and Labor 
considered H.R. 2187, the 21st Century Green High-Performing 
Public School Facilities Act, in legislative session and 
ordered the bill reported favorably, as amended, to the House 
of Representatives by a vote of 31-14.
    The Committee considered and adopted the following 
amendments to H.R. 2187:
           Rep. George Miller (D-CA) offered an 
        amendment in the nature of a substitute. The amendment 
        was adopted by a voice vote.
           Rep. Jared Polis (D-CO) offered an amendment 
        to provide equitable resources to charter schools. The 
        amendment was adopted by a voice vote.
           Rep. Joe Sestak (D-PA) offered an amendment 
        to clarify improvements to ceilings and floors are 
        authorized uses of funds. The amendment was adopted by 
        a voice vote.
           Rep. Howard P. ``Buck'' McKeon (R-CA) 
        offered an amendment to require local educational 
        agencies to conduct a state-certified, independent 
        third-party audit. The amendment was adopted by a voice 
        vote.
    The Committee further considered the following amendments 
to H.R. 2187, which were not adopted:
           Rep. Mike Castle (R-DE) offered an amendment 
        to require Congress to provide full funding for the 
        Title I program before providing funding for a new 
        federal school construction program. The amendment 
        failed by a vote of 15-28.
           Rep. John Kline (R-MN) offered an amendment 
        to require Congress to provide full funding for state 
        grants for the Individual with Disabilities Education 
        Act before providing funding for a new school 
        construction program. The amendment failed by a vote of 
        15-28.
    The House of Representatives passed H.R. 2187 on May 14, 
2009, by a vote of 275-155. The bill was sent to the Senate and 
referred to the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, 
and Pensions.
    On May 6, 2009, Rep. Howard P. ''Buck'' McKeon (R-CA), Rep. 
John Boehner (R-OH), Rep. Eric Cantor (R-VA), Rep. Mike Pence 
(R-IN), Rep. Pete Hoekstra (R-MI), Rep. John Kline (R-MN), Rep. 
Rob Bishop (R-UT), Rep. Tom McClintock (R-CA), Rep. Duncan 
Hunter (R-CA), Rep. Sam Johnson (R-TX), Rep. Roscoe Bartlett 
(R-MD), Rep. John Linder (R-GA), Rep. Sue Myrick (R-NC), Rep. 
Jeb Hensarling (R-TX), Rep. John Culberson (R-TX), Rep. Kenny 
Marchant (R-TX), Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-MN), Rep. Doug 
Lamborn (R-CO), and Rep. Jason Chaffetz (R-UT) introduced H.R. 
2274, the Priorities in Education Spending Act. The bill 
repealed 70 ineffective elementary and secondary education 
programs.
    On December 9, 2009, Rep. George Miller (D-CA) and Rep. 
Cathy McMorris Rodgers (R-WA) introduced H.R. 4247, the 
Preventing Harmful Restraint and Seclusion in Schools Act. The 
bill would prevent and reduce the use of physical restraint and 
seclusion techniques in public and private schools.

Legislative Action--Second Session

    On February 4, 2010, the Committee on Education and Labor 
considered H.R. 4247, the Preventing Harmful Restraint and 
Seclusion in Schools Act, in legislative session and reported 
the bill favorably, as amended, to the House of Representatives 
by a vote of 34-10.
    The Committee considered and adopted the following 
amendment to H.R. 4247:
           Rep. George Miller (D-CA) offered an 
        amendment in the nature of a substitute. The amendment 
        was adopted by a voice vote.
    The House of Representatives passed H.R. 4247 on March 3, 
2010, by a vote of 262-153. The bill was sent to the Senate and 
referred to the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, 
and Pensions.

                             112TH CONGRESS

Hearings--First Session

    On February 10, 2011, the Committee on Education and the 
Workforce held a hearing in Washington, D.C., on ``Education in 
the Nation: Examining the Challenges and Opportunities Facing 
America's Classrooms.'' The purpose of the hearing was to learn 
what challenges states face in developing a high-quality 
education system, explore innovative policies being proposed 
and implemented at the state and local level, and examine the 
federal investment in education and its limited impact on 
student achievement. Testifying before the Committee were Dr. 
Tony Bennett, Superintendent of Public Instruction, Indiana 
Department of Education, Indianapolis, Indiana; Ms. Lisa Graham 
Keegan, Founder, Education Breakthrough Network, Phoenix, 
Arizona; Mr. Andrew Coulson, Director, Center for Educational 
Freedom, CATO Institute, Seattle, Washington; and Mr. Ted 
Mitchell, President and Chief Executive Officer, New Schools 
Venture Fund, San Francisco, California.
    On March 1, 2011, the Committee on Education and the 
Workforce held a hearing in Washington, D.C., on ``Education 
Regulations: Weighing the Burden on Schools and Students.'' The 
purpose of the hearing was to examine the burden of federal, 
state, and local regulations on the nation's education system 
and to learn whether these time consuming and duplicative 
requirements ultimately improve student achievement. Testifying 
before the Committee were Mr. Gene Wilhoit, Executive Director, 
Council of Chief State School Officers, Washington, D.C.; Dr. 
Edgar Hatrick, Superintendent, Loudoun County Public Schools, 
Ashburn, Virginia; Mr. Christopher B. Nelson, President, St. 
John's College, Annapolis, Maryland; and Ms. Kati Haycock, 
President, The Education Trust, Washington, D.C.
    On March 9, 2011, the Committee on Education and the 
Workforce held a hearing in Washington, D.C., on, ``The Budget 
and Policy Proposals of the U.S. Department of Education.'' The 
purpose of the hearing was to discuss the department's budget 
request for Fiscal Year 2012. Testifying before the Committee 
was the Honorable Arne Duncan, Secretary, U.S. Department of 
Education, Washington, D.C.
    On March 15, 2011, the Committee on Education and the 
Workforce Subcommittee on Early Childhood, Elementary, and 
Secondary Education held a hearing in Washington, D.C., on 
``Education Regulations: Burying Schools in Paperwork.'' The 
purpose of the hearing was to hear from local officials 
representing elementary and secondary schools about the 
paperwork burden bureaucratic regulations impose on their 
schools and school districts. Testifying before the 
subcommittee were Mr. Robert P. ``Bob'' Grimesey Jr., 
Superintendent, Orange County Public Schools, Orange, Virginia; 
Mr. James Willcox, Chief Executive Officer, Aspire Public 
Schools, Oakland, California; Ms. Jennifer A. Marshall, 
Director of Domestic Policy Studies, Heritage Foundation, 
Washington, D.C.; and Mr. Chuck Grable, Assistant 
Superintendent for Instruction, Huntington County Community 
School Corporation, Huntington, Indiana.
    On April 7, 2011, the Committee on Education and the 
Workforce held a hearing in Washington, D.C., on ``Education 
Reforms: Promoting Flexibility and Innovation.'' The purpose of 
the hearing was to discuss the appropriate federal role in 
elementary and secondary education and explore the work of 
state and local education leaders who are pushing for 
innovative approaches to education reform and greater state and 
local flexibility. Testifying before the Committee were Dr. 
Janet Barresi, State Superintendent of Public Instruction, 
Oklahoma State Department of Education, Oklahoma City, 
Oklahoma; Dr. Gary Amoroso, Superintendent, Lakeville Area 
Public Schools, Lakeville, Minnesota; Mr. Yohance Maqubela, 
Chief Operating Officer, Howard University Middle School of 
Mathematics and Science, Washington, D.C.; and Dr. Terry Grier, 
Superintendent, Houston Independent School District, Houston, 
Texas.
    On June 1, 2011, the Committee on Education and the 
Workforce Subcommittee on Early Childhood, Elementary, and 
Secondary Education held a hearing in Washington, D.C., on 
``Education Reforms: Exploring the Vital Role of Charter 
Schools.'' The purpose of the hearing was to examine the 
contributions of charter schools to state and local efforts to 
improve public education and the importance of empowering 
parents to choose the best school environment for their 
children. Testifying before the subcommittee were Ms. DeAnna 
Rowe, Executive Director, Arizona State Board for Charter 
Schools, Phoenix, Arizona; Ms. Debbie Beyer, Executive 
Director, Literacy First Charter Schools, El Cajon, California; 
Dr. Gary Miron, College of Education, Western Michigan 
University, Kalamazoo, Michigan; and Dr. Beth Purvis, Executive 
Director, Chicago International Charter School, Chicago, 
Illinois.
    On July 27, 2011, the Committee on Education and the 
Workforce held a hearing in Washington, D.C., on ``Education 
Reforms: Exploring Teacher Quality Initiatives.'' The purpose 
of the hearing was to highlight state and local efforts to 
improve teacher quality and examine select teacher reform 
issues that could be addressed as part of the Committee's 
ongoing effort to reauthorize the Elementary and Secondary 
Education Act. Testifying before the Committee were Mr. Kevin 
S. Huffman, Commissioner, Tennessee Department of Education, 
Nashville, Tennessee; Mr. Tom Boasberg, Superintendent, Denver 
Public Schools, Denver, Colorado; Ms. Kate Walsh, President, 
National Council on Teacher Quality, Washington, D.C.; and Mr. 
David Cicarella, President, New Haven Federation of Teachers, 
New Haven, Connecticut.
    On September 14, 2011, the Committee on Education and the 
Workforce held a hearing in Washington, D.C., on ``Education 
Reforms: Examining the Federal Role in Public School 
Accountability.'' The purpose of the hearing was to examine the 
role of the federal government in holding public schools 
accountable for student achievement. Testifying before the 
Committee were Ms. Hanna Skandera, Secretary-Designate of 
Education, New Mexico Department of Public Education, Santa Fe, 
New Mexico; Dr. Amy Sichel, Superintendent of Schools, Abington 
School District, Abington, Pennsylvania; Ms. Blaine Hawley, 
Principal, Red Pump Elementary School, Bel Air, Maryland; and 
Mr. Alberto M. Carvalho, Superintendent of Schools, Miami-Dade 
County Public Schools, Miami, Florida.
    On September 21, 2011, the Education and the Workforce 
Subcommittee on Early Childhood, Elementary, and Secondary 
Education held a hearing in Washington, D.C., on ``Education 
Reforms: Ensuring the Education System is Accountable to 
Parents and Communities.'' The purpose of the hearing was to 
examine the role of the federal government in holding public 
schools accountable for student achievement. Testifying before 
the subcommittee were Dr. Jay P. Greene, Professor, University 
of Arkansas, Fayetteville, Arkansas; Dr. Benny L. Gooden, 
Superintendent of Schools, Fort Smith Public Schools, Fort 
Smith, Arkansas; Mr. Bill Jackson, Founder and Chief Executive 
Officer, GreatSchools, San Francisco, California; and Ms. Laura 
W. Kaloi, Public Policy Director, National Center for Learning 
Disabilities, Oak Hill, Virginia.
    On November 16, 2011, the Education and the Workforce 
Subcommittee on Early Childhood, Elementary, and Secondary 
Education held a hearing in Washington, D.C., on ``Education 
Research: Identifying Effective Programs to Support Students 
and Teachers.'' The purpose of the hearing was to examine the 
federal role in supporting education research and evaluation; 
the role of the private and non-profit sector in supporting 
education research; and how states, school districts, and other 
practitioners use data gleaned from research to improve student 
achievement. Testifying before the subcommittee were Dr. Grover 
J. ``Russ'' Whitehurst, Senior Fellow and Director of the Brown 
Center on Education Policy, Brookings Institution, Washington, 
D.C.; Dr. Caroline M. Hoxby, Scott and Donya Bommer Professor 
of Economics, Stanford University, Stanford, California; Dr. 
Eric Smith, former Florida Commissioner of Education, 
Annapolis, Maryland; and Mr. Steve Fleischman, Director, 
Regional Educational Laboratory (REL) Northwest, Portland, 
Oregon.

Hearings--Second Session

    On February 16, 2012, the Committee on Education and the 
Workforce held a legislative hearing in Washington, D.C., on 
``H.R. 3989, the Student Success Act, and H.R. 3990, the 
Encouraging Innovation and Effective Teachers Act.'' The 
purpose of this legislative hearing was to hear testimony on 
the committee's two remaining bills to complete work on 
reauthorization of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act. 
Testifying before the Committee were Mr. Tom Luna, 
Superintendent of Public Instruction, Idaho Department of 
Education, Boise, Idaho; Ms. Delia Pompa, Senior Vice President 
of Programs, National Council of La Raza, Washington, D.C.; The 
Honorable Bob Schaffer, Chairman, Colorado State Board of 
Education, Fort Collins, Colorado; Dr. Robert Balfanz, Co-
Director, Everyone Graduates Center, School of Education, Johns 
Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland; Ms. Felicia Kazmier, 
Art Teacher, Otero Elementary School, Colorado Springs, 
Colorado; and Mr. Jimmy Cunningham, Superintendent of Schools, 
Hampton School District, Hampton, Arkansas.
    On May 16, 2012, the Committee on Education and the 
Workforce Subcommittee on Early Childhood, Elementary, and 
Secondary Education held a hearing in Washington, D.C., on 
``Exploring State Success in Expanding Parent and Student 
Options.'' The purpose of the hearing was to highlight state 
and local efforts to encourage parent engagement and choice in 
their children's education. Testifying before the subcommittee 
were The Honorable Kevin Chavous, Senior Advisor for the 
American Federation for Children, Washington, D.C.; Ms. 
Gwendolyn Eaddy-Samuel, President, Connecticut Parents Union, 
Meriden, Connecticut; Dr. Maria A. Fletcher, President, New 
York State PTA, Albany, New York; and Mr. Todd Ziebarth, Vice 
President for State Advocacy and Support, National Alliance for 
Public Charter Schools, Washington, D.C.
    On July 24, 2012, the Committee on Education and the 
Workforce Subcommittee on Early Childhood, Elementary, and 
Secondary Education held a hearing in Washington, D.C., on 
``Education Reforms: Discussing the Value of Alternative 
Teacher Certification Programs.'' The purpose of this hearing 
was to examine the benefits of alternative teacher 
certification routes in addressing teacher shortages in certain 
geographic areas, academic fields, and classrooms with unique 
student needs; expanding the teacher pipeline; and 
strengthening the overall quality of the teaching profession. 
Testifying before the subcommittee were Ms. Jennifer Mulhern, 
Vice President for New Teacher Effectiveness, TNTP, Baltimore, 
Maryland; Ms. Maura O. Banta, Director of Citizenship 
Initiatives in Education, IBM Corporation, Armonk, New York; 
Ms. Cynthia G. Brown, Vice President for Education Policy, 
Center for American Progress, Washington, D.C.; and Mr. Seth 
Andrew, Founder and Superintendent, Democracy Prep Public 
Schools, New York, New York.

Legislative Action--First Session

    On May 13, 2011, Rep. Duncan Hunter (R-CA), Rep. John Kline 
(R-MN), and Rep. Howard P. ``Buck'' McKeon (R-CA) introduced 
H.R. 1891, the Setting New Priorities in Education Spending 
Act. The bill repeals the authorizations of 41 wasteful 
elementary and secondary education programs, reducing the 
number of federal Elementary and Secondary Education Act 
programs by half.
    On May 25, 2011, the Committee on Education and the 
Workforce considered H.R. 1891 in legislative session and 
reported the bill favorably, as amended, to the House of 
Representatives by a vote of 23-16.
    The Committee considered and adopted the following 
amendments to H.R. 1891:
           Rep. Duncan Hunter (R-CA) offered an 
        amendment in the nature of a substitute to make 
        technical corrections to the legislation. The amendment 
        was adopted by a voice vote.
           Rep. Todd Russell Platts (R-PA) offered an 
        amendment to restore authority for the Parent 
        Information and Resource Center (PIRC) program. The 
        amendment was adopted by a vote of 20-19.
    The Committee further considered the following amendments 
to H.R. 1891, which were not adopted:
           Rep. Dale Kildee (D-MI) offered an amendment 
        to amend Reading First to provide literacy services in 
        pre-K through 12. The amendment failed by a vote of 16-
        23.
           Rep. Rush Holt (D-NJ) offered an amendment 
        to amend the Fund for Improvement of Education to 
        support foreign language education and other 
        activities. The amendment failed by a vote of 16-23.
           Rep. Dave Loebsack (D-IA) offered an 
        amendment to amend Safe and Drug Free Schools to 
        provide essential support services for students. The 
        amendment failed by a vote of 16-23.
           Rep. Robert ``Bobby'' Scott (D-VA) offered 
        an amendment to Title V, Part A (Innovative Programs) 
        to provide services for drop-out prevention. The 
        amendment failed by a vote of 16-23.
           Rep. Todd Russell Platts (R-PA) offered an 
        amendment to restore authority for Even Start. The 
        amendment failed by a vote of 16-23.
           Rep. Mazie Hirono (D-HI) offered an 
        amendment to restore Native Hawaiian Education and 
        Alaska Native programs. The amendment failed by a vote 
        of 16-23.
    On June 16, 2011, Rep. Duncan Hunter (R-CA) and Rep. John 
Kline (R-MN) introduced H.R. 2218, the Empowering Parents 
through Quality Charter Schools Act. The bill reauthorizes and 
improves the existing charter school provisions under the 
Elementary and Secondary Education Act.
    On June 22, 2011, the Committee on Education and the 
Workforce considered H.R. 2218 in legislative session and 
reported it favorably, as amended, to the House of 
Representatives by a bipartisan vote of 34-5. The Committee 
considered and adopted one amendment to the bill, an amendment 
in the nature of a substitute offered by Rep. Duncan Hunter (R-
CA). The amendment was adopted by voice vote.
    The House of Representatives passed H.R. 2218 on September 
13, 2011, by a bipartisan vote of 365-54. The bill was sent to 
the Senate and referred to the Senate Committee on Health, 
Education, Labor, and Pensions.
    On July 7, 2011, Rep. John Kline (R-MN), Rep. Lou Barletta 
(R-PA), Rep. Larry Bucshon (R-IN), Rep. Scott DesJarlais (R-
TN), Rep. Bob Goodlatte (R-VA), Rep. Richard Hanna (R-NY), Rep. 
Joseph Heck (R-NV), Rep. Duncan Hunter (R-CA), Rep. Mike Kelly 
(R-PA), Rep. Howard P. ``Buck'' McKeon (R-CA), Rep. Kristi Noem 
(R-SD), Rep. David P. ``Phil'' Roe (R-TN), and Rep. Glenn 
Thompson (R-PA) introduced H.R. 2445, the State and Local 
Funding Flexibility Act. The bill strikes the State and Local 
Educational Agencies Funding Transferability program under the 
Elementary and Secondary Education Act and replaces it with a 
more flexible program allowing for greater use of federal 
education funds.
    On July 13, 2011, the Committee on Education and the 
Workforce considered H.R. 2445 in legislative session and 
reported it favorably, as amended, to the House of 
Representatives by a vote of 23-17.
    The Committee considered and adopted the following 
amendment to H.R. 2445:
           Rep. Glenn Thompson (R-PA) offered an 
        amendment in the nature of a substitute to make 
        technical corrections to the legislation. It also 
        reiterated that states and school districts must comply 
        with all civil rights requirements and school funding 
        allocation requirements. The amendment was adopted by a 
        voice vote.
    The Committee further considered the following amendments 
to H.R. 2445, which were not adopted:
           Rep. George Miller (D-CA) offered an 
        amendment to prohibit local educational agencies from 
        using funds allocated for Title I, Part A, for any 
        other purpose. The amendment failed by a vote of 17-23.
           Rep. Rauul Grijalva (D-AZ) offered an 
        amendment to prohibit state and local educational 
        agencies from using funds allocated for English 
        Language Acquisition, Language Enhancement, and 
        Academic Achievement for any other purpose. The 
        amendment failed by a vote of 17-23.
           Rep. Rubeen Hinojosa (D-TX) offered an 
        amendment to prohibit state and local educational 
        agencies from using funds allocated for the Education 
        of Migratory Children for any other purpose. The 
        amendment failed by a vote of 17-23.
           Rep. Robert ``Bobby'' Scott (D-VA) offered 
        an amendment to prohibit state and local educational 
        agencies from using funds allocated for the Education 
        of Neglected, Delinquent, or At-Risk Children for any 
        other purpose. The amendment failed by a vote of 17-23.
           Rep. Dale Kildee (D-MI) offered an amendment 
        to prohibit local educational agencies from using funds 
        allocated for Indian Education for any other purpose. 
        The amendment failed by a vote of 17-23.
           Rep. Rush Holt (D-NJ) offered an amendment 
        to add reporting requirements on state and local 
        educational agencies on how funds are used. The 
        amendment failed by a vote of 17-23.

Legislative Action--Second Session

    On February 9, 2012, Rep. John Kline (R-MN), Rep. Scott 
DesJarlais (R-TN), Rep. Joseph Heck (R-NV), Rep. Duncan Hunter 
(R-CA), Rep. Kristi Noem (R-SD), Rep. Thomas Petri (R-WI), Rep. 
Martha Roby (R-AL), Rep. David P. ``Phil'' Roe (R-TN), Rep. 
Glenn Thompson (R-PA), and Rep. Joe Wilson (R-SC) introduced 
H.R. 3989, the Student Success Act. H.R. 3989 is co-sponsored 
by Rep. Mike Kelly (R-PA) and Rep. Austin Scott (R-GA). The 
bill eliminates onerous federal ``Adequate Yearly Progress,'' 
``Highly Qualified Teacher,'' and ``Maintenance of Effort'' 
requirements and provides states and school districts with 
increased flexibility and control to boost student achievement.
    On February 9, 2012, Rep. John Kline (R-MN), Rep. Scott 
DesJarlais (R-TN), Rep. Joseph Heck (R-NV), Rep. Duncan Hunter 
(R-CA), Rep. Kristi Noem (R-SD), Rep. Thomas Petri (R-WI), Rep. 
Martha Roby (R-AL), Rep. David P. ``Phil'' Roe (R-TN), and Rep. 
Joe Wilson (R-SC) introduced H.R. 3990, the Encouraging 
Innovation and Effective Teachers Act. H.R. 3990 is co-
sponsored by Rep. Mike Kelly (R-PA). The bill consolidates more 
than 70 existing elementary and secondary education programs 
into a new Local Academic Flexible Grant, requires locally 
developed and implemented teacher evaluations, and supports 
opportunities for parents to enroll their children in local 
magnet schools and charter schools.
    On February 28, 2012, the Committee on Education and the 
Workforce considered H.R. 3989 in legislative session and 
reported the bill favorably, as amended, to the House of 
Representatives by a vote of 23-16.
    The Committee considered and adopted the following 
amendments to H.R. 3989:
           Rep. John Kline (R-MN) offered an amendment 
        in the nature of a substitute. The amendment was 
        adopted by a voice vote.
           Rep. Todd Rokita (R-IN) offered an amendment 
        to require the Secretary of Education to eliminate the 
        full time equivalent employee positions associated with 
        the eliminated and consolidated programs under the 
        bill. The amendment was adopted by a vote of 23-16.
    The Committee further considered the following amendments 
to H.R. 3989, which were not adopted:
           Rep. George Miller (D-CA) offered an 
        amendment in the nature of a substitute. The amendment 
        failed by a vote of 16-23.
           Rep. Glenn Thompson (R-PA) offered an 
        amendment to alter the Title I formula to provide 
        greater weight to the percentage of a district's 
        students in poverty. The amendment failed by a vote of 
        16-22, with one member voting ``present.''
           Rep. Joseph Heck (R-NV) offered a secondary 
        amendment to the Thompson amendment to hold harmless 
        existing grantees. The amendment was withdrawn.
           Rep. Todd Rokita (R-IN) offered an amendment 
        to allow states to opt out of the Elementary and 
        Secondary Education Act and receive a tax credit for 
        their citizens in lieu of federal education funds. The 
        amendment was withdrawn.
    On February 28, 2012, the Committee on Education and the 
Workforce considered H.R. 3990 in legislative session and 
reported the bill favorably, as amended, to the House of 
Representatives by a vote of 23-16.
    The Committee considered and adopted the following 
amendment to H.R. 3990:
           Rep. John Kline (R-MN) offered an amendment 
        in the nature of a substitute. The amendment was 
        adopted by a voice vote.
    The Committee further considered the following amendments 
to H.R. 3990, which were not adopted:
           Rep. George Miller (D-CA) offered an 
        amendment in the nature of a substitute. The amendment 
        failed by a vote of 16-23.
           Rep. Judy Biggert (R-IL) offered an 
        amendment to remove mandates on teacher evaluations. 
        The amendment was withdrawn.

                             113TH CONGRESS

Hearings--First Session

    On February 5, 2013, the Committee on Education and the 
Workforce held a hearing in Washington, D.C., on ``Challenges 
and Opportunities Facing America's Schools and Workplaces.'' 
The purpose of the hearing was to provide a broad examination 
of issues affecting workers, employers, educators and students. 
Testifying before the Committee were The Honorable Gary R. 
Herbert, Governor, State of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah; The 
Honorable Laura W. Fornash, Secretary of Education, 
Commonwealth of Virginia, Richmond, Virginia; Mr. Jay Timmons, 
President and CEO, National Association of Manufacturers, 
Washington, D.C.; and Dr. Jared Bernstein, Senior Fellow, 
Center for Budget and Policy Priorities, Washington, D.C.
    On February 14, 2013, the Committee on Education and the 
Workforce Subcommittee on Early Childhood, Elementary, and 
Secondary Education held a hearing in Washington, D.C., on 
``Raising the Bar: How Education Innovation Can Improve Student 
Achievement.'' The purpose of the hearing was to highlight the 
growth of digital technology and related reforms in elementary 
and secondary education that are promoting individual student 
learning, driving education reform, and supporting parent 
choice. Testifying before the subcommittee were Mr. John 
Bailey, Executive Director, Digital Learning Now, Washington, 
D.C.; Mr. Preston Smith, CEO & President, Rocketship Education, 
Redwood City, California; Ms. Holly Sagues, Chief Policy 
Officer, Florida Virtual School, Orlando, Florida; and Mr. Jim 
Shelton, Assistant Deputy Secretary for Innovation and 
Improvement, U.S. Department of Education, Washington, D.C.
    On February 27, 2013, the Committee on Education and the 
Workforce held a hearing in Washington, D.C., on ``Protecting 
Students and Teachers: A Discussion on School Safety.'' The 
purpose of the hearing was to examine how elementary and 
secondary schools prepare, react to, and recover from threats 
of violence in the wake of the tragedy at Sandy Hook Elementary 
School in Newtown, Conn. Testifying before the Committee were 
Mr. Bill Bond, School Safety Specialist, National Association 
of Secondary School Principals, Paducah, Kentucky; Mr. Mo 
Canady, Executive Director, National Association of School 
Resource Officers, Hoover, Alabama; Mr. Vincent Pompei, School 
Counselor, Val Verde Unified School District, San Diego, 
California; Mr. Brett Bontrager, Senior Vice President and 
Group Executive, Stanley Black & Decker, Indianapolis, Indiana; 
Dr. David Osher, Vice President, American Institutes for 
Research, Washington, D.C.; and Mr. Frederick Ellis, Director, 
Office of Safety and Security, Fairfax County Public Schools, 
Falls Church, Virginia.
    On February 28, 2013, the Committee on Education and the 
Workforce Subcommittee on Early Childhood, Elementary, and 
Secondary Education held a hearing in Washington, D.C., on 
``Raising the Bar: How Are Schools Measuring Teacher 
Performance?'' The purpose of the hearing was to examine 
teacher quality policies, including the best way to promote 
teacher effectiveness in the classroom. Testifying before the 
subcommittee were Dr. Steve Cantrell, Chief Research Officer, 
Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, Seattle, Washington; Dr. James 
P. McIntyre, Jr., Superintendent, Knox County Schools, 
Knoxville, Tennessee; Dr. Rodney Watson, Chief of Human 
Resources, Houston Independent School District, Houston, Texas; 
and Mr. Emanuel Harper, French Teacher, Herron High School, 
Indianapolis, Indiana.
    On April 10, 2013, the Committee on Education and the 
Workforce Subcommittee on Early Childhood, Elementary, and 
Secondary Education held a hearing in Washington, D.C., on 
``Raising the Bar: Reviewing STEM Education in America.'' The 
purpose of the hearing was to examine the state of science, 
technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) education in 
America. Testifying before the subcommittee were Mr. George A. 
Scott, Director for Education, Workforce, and Income Security 
Issues, U.S. Government Accountability Office, Washington, 
D.C.; Dr. Ioannis Miaoulis, President and Director, Museum of 
Science, Boston, Boston, Massachusetts; Dr. Steve Schneider, 
Senior Program Director, WestEd, San Francisco, California; and 
Mr. Bill Kurtz, Chief Executive Officer, Denver School of 
Science and Technology, Denver, Colorado.
    On May 7, 2013, the Committee on Education and the 
Workforce held a hearing in Washington, D.C., on ``Raising the 
Bar: Exploring State and Local Efforts to Improve 
Accountability.'' The purpose of the hearing was to examine the 
role of the federal government in holding public schools 
accountable for student achievement. Testifying before the 
Committee were Mr. John White, State Superintendent of 
Education, Louisiana Department of Education, Baton Rouge, 
Louisiana; Dr. Chris Richardson, Superintendent of Schools, 
Northfield Public Schools, Northfield, Minnesota; Mr. Eric S. 
Gordon, Chief Executive Officer, Cleveland Metropolitan School 
District, Cleveland, Ohio; and Mr. Matthew Given, Chief 
Development Officer, EdisonLearning, Atlanta, Georgia.
    On May 21, 2013, the Committee on Education and the 
Workforce held a hearing in Washington, D.C., on ``Reviewing 
the President's Fiscal Year 2014 Budget Proposal for the U.S. 
Department of Education.'' The purpose of the hearing was to 
discuss the department's budget request for FY 2014. Testifying 
before the Committee was The Honorable Arne Duncan, Secretary, 
U.S. Department of Education, Washington, D.C.

Hearings--Second Session

    On February 27, 2014, the Committee on Education and the 
Workforce Subcommittee on Early Childhood, Elementary, and 
Secondary Education jointly with the Subcommittee on Higher 
Education and Workforce Training held a hearing in Washington, 
D.C., on ``Exploring Efforts to Strengthen the Teaching 
Profession.'' The purpose of this hearing was to discuss the 
state of teacher preparation nationwide as the committee 
continues its efforts to reauthorize both the Higher Education 
Act (HEA) and Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA). 
Testifying before the subcommittees were The Honorable Deborah 
Gist, Commissioner, Rhode Island Department of Elementary and 
Secondary Education, Providence, Rhode Island; Dr. Marcy 
Singer-Gabella, Professor of the Practice of Education, 
Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee; Ms. Christina 
Hall, Co-Founder and Co-Director, Urban Teacher Center, 
Baltimore; and The Honorable Heather Peske, Associate 
Commissioner for Educator Quality, Massachusetts Department of 
Elementary and Secondary Education, Malden, Massachusetts.
    On March 12, 2014, the Committee on Education and the 
Workforce held a hearing in Washington, D.C., on ``Raising the 
Bar: The Role of Charter Schools in K-12 Education.'' The 
purpose of this hearing was to highlight the critical role 
charter schools play in public education and the importance of 
giving parents the option to choose the best school environment 
for their children. Testifying before the Committee were Dr. 
Deborah McGriff, Chair of the Board, National Alliance for 
Public Charter Schools, Milwaukee, Wisconsin; Mrs. Lisa Graham 
Keegan, Chair of the Board, National Association of Charter 
School Authorizers, Peoria, Arizona; Mr. Alan Rosskamm, Chief 
Executive Officer, Breakthrough Schools, Cleveland, Ohio; Mr. 
David Linzey, Executive Director, Clayton Valley Charter High 
School, Concord, California; and Ms. Alyssa Whitehead-Bust, 
Chief of Innovation and Reform, Denver Public Schools, Denver, 
Colorado.
    On April 29, 2014, the Committee on Education and the 
Workforce held a hearing in Washington, D.C., on ``Reviewing 
the President's Fiscal Year 2015 Budget Proposal for the 
Department of Education.'' The purpose of the hearing was to 
discuss the department's budget request for FY 2015. Testifying 
before the Committee was The Honorable Arne Duncan, Secretary, 
U.S. Department of Education, Washington, D.C.

Legislative Action--First Session

    On June 6, 2013, Rep. John Kline (R-MN), Rep. Todd Rokita 
(R-IN), Rep. Thomas Petri (R-WI), Rep. Virginia Foxx (R-NC), 
Rep. David P. ``Phil'' Roe (R-TN), Rep. Glenn Thompson (R-PA), 
Rep. Brett Guthrie (R-KY), Rep. Larry Bucshon (R-IN), Rep. 
Martha Roby (R-AL), Rep. Joe Heck (R-NV), Rep. Susan Brooks (R-
IN), and Rep. Luke Messer (R-IN) introduced H.R. 5, the Student 
Success Act. H.R. 5 was co-sponsored by Rep. Matt Salmon (R-
AZ). The bill eliminated onerous federal ``Adequate Yearly 
Progress,'' ``Highly Qualified Teacher,'' and ``Maintenance of 
Effort'' requirements; provided states and school districts 
with increased flexibility and control to boost student 
achievement; consolidated more than 70 existing elementary and 
secondary education programs into a new Local Academic Flexible 
Grant; and supported locally developed and implemented teacher 
evaluations and opportunities for parents to enroll their 
children in local magnet schools and charter schools.
    On June 19, 2013, the Committee on Education and the 
Workforce considered H.R. 5 in legislative session and reported 
the bill favorably, as amended, to the House of Representatives 
by a vote of 23-16.
    The Committee considered and adopted the following 
amendments to H.R. 5:
           Rep. Todd Rokita (R-IN) offered an amendment 
        in the nature of a substitute. The amendment was 
        adopted by a voice vote.
           Rep. Joe Heck (R-NV) offered an amendment to 
        allow school districts to support dual enrollment 
        programs and early college high schools. The amendment 
        was adopted by a voice vote.
    The Committee further considered the following amendments 
to H.R. 5, which were not adopted:
           Rep. George Miller (D-CA) offered an 
        amendment in the nature of a substitute. The amendment 
        failed by a vote of 16-23.
           Rep. Glenn Thompson (R-PA) offered an 
        amendment to repeal Targeted grants and Education 
        Finance Incentive Grants under Title I, Part A. The 
        amendment was withdrawn.
    On July 19, 2013, the House of Representatives passed H.R. 
5, as amended, by a vote of 221-207. The bill was sent to the 
Senate and referred to the Committee on Health, Education, 
Labor, and Pensions.

Legislative Action--Second Session

    On April 1 2014, Rep. John Kline (R-MN) and Rep. George 
Miller (D-CA) introduced H.R. 10, the Success and Opportunity 
through Quality Charter Schools Act. The bill amended and 
improved the existing charter school program under ESEA.
    On April 8, 2014, the Committee on Education and the 
Workforce considered H.R. 10 in legislative session and 
reported it favorably, as amended, to the House of 
Representatives by a bipartisan vote of 36-3.
    The Committee considered and adopted one amendment to H.R. 
5:
           Rep. Luke Messer (R-IN) offered an amendment 
        in the nature of a substitute. The amendment was 
        adopted by a voice vote.
    The House of Representatives passed H.R. 10 on May 9, 2014, 
by a bipartisan vote of 360-45. The bill was sent to the Senate 
and referred to the Senate Committee on Health, Education, 
Labor, and Pensions.

                             114TH CONGRESS

Legislative Action--First Session

    On February 3, 2015 Rep. John Kline (R-MN) and Rep. Todd 
Rokita (R-IN) introduced H.R. 5, the Student Success Act. H.R. 
5 is co-sponsored by Rep. Virginia Foxx (R-NC), Rep. David P. 
``Phil'' Roe (R-TN), Rep. Luke Messer (R-IN), Rep. Bradley 
Byrne (R-AL), Rep. Pete Sessions (R-TX), Rep. Duncan Hunter (R-
CA), Rep. Joe Heck (R-NV), Rep. Brett Guthrie (R-KY), Rep. Rick 
Allen (R-GA), and Rep. Carlos Curbelo (R-FL). The bill 
eliminates onerous federal ``Adequate Yearly Progress,'' 
``Highly Qualified Teacher,'' and ``Maintenance of Effort'' 
requirements; provides states and school districts with 
increased flexibility and control to boost student achievement; 
consolidates more than 65 existing elementary and secondary 
education programs into a new Local Academic Flexible Grant; 
and supports locally developed and implemented teacher 
evaluations and opportunities for parents to enroll their 
children in local magnet schools and charter schools.
    On February 11, 2015, the Committee on Education and the 
Workforce considered H.R. 5 in legislative session and reported 
the bill favorably, as amended, to the House of Representatives 
by a vote of 21-16.
    The Committee considered and adopted the following 
amendments to H.R. 5:
           Rep. Todd Rokita (R-IN) offered an amendment 
        in the nature of a substitute. The amendment was 
        adopted by a voice vote.
           Rep. Steve Russell (R-OK) offered an 
        amendment to clarify that states retain authority over 
        education. The amendment was adopted by a voice vote.
           Rep. Joe Heck (R-NV) offered an amendment to 
        add military dependent students to the list of 
        subgroups of children that schools report student 
        achievement of. The amendment was adopted by a voice 
        vote.
           Rep. Dave Brat (R-VA) offered an amendment 
        that requires an annual report on the reductions in 
        federal spending under the Student Success Act. The 
        amendment was adopted by a vote of 21-16.
           Rep. Carlos Curbelo (R-FL) offered an 
        amendment to delay scores of English Learners in state 
        accountability systems for two years on reading 
        assessments and three years on math assessments. The 
        amendment was adopted by a vote of 22-15.
    The Committee further considered the following amendments 
to H.R. 5, which were not adopted:
           Rep. Rubeen Hinojosa (D-TX) offered an 
        amendment to reinstate Title III with increased 
        authorizations. The amendment failed by a voice vote.
           Rep. Susan Davis (D-CA) offered an amendment 
        to reinstate the Title II Teacher Preparation Program. 
        The amendment failed by a vote of 16-21.
           Rep. Joe Courtney (D-CT) offered an 
        amendment to authorize dedicated funding streams for 
        STEM programs. The amendment failed by a vote of 16-21.
           Rep. Luke Messer (R-IN) offered an amendment 
        to include private schools within the Portability 
        provisions for Title I. The amendment was withdrawn.
           Rep. Rauul Grijalva (D-AZ) offered an 
        amendment to reinstate the Highly Qualified Teacher 
        (HQT) provision and mandate equitable distribution of 
        teachers and resources. The amendment failed by a vote 
        of 16-21.
           Rep. Marcia Fudge (D-OH) offered an 
        amendment to address fiscal provisions within Title I 
        including portability, maintenance of effort, 
        supplement not supplant, and to increase funding. The 
        amendment failed by a vote of 16-21.
           Rep. Jared Polis (D-CO) offered an amendment 
        to restore federal requirements around state 
        accountability systems and intervention in the 
        improvement of schools. The amendment failed by a voice 
        vote.
           Rep. Tim Walberg (R-MI) offered an amendment 
        to ensure that state regulations under the Act would 
        not create barriers into careers. The amendment was 
        withdrawn.
           Rep. Gregorio Sablan (D-MP) offered an 
        amendment to fund researched based innovation in 
        schools, specifically through the Investing in 
        Innovation (i3) fund. The amendment failed by a voice 
        vote.
           Rep. Glenn Grothman (R-WI) offered an 
        amendment to disburse funds under the Local Academic 
        Flexible Grant without state applications. The 
        amendment was withdrawn.
           Rep. Frederica Wilson (D-FL) offered an 
        amendment to reinstate the School Dropout Prevention 
        Program grants. The amendment failed by a vote of 16-
        21.
           Rep. Suzanne Bonamici (D-OR) offered an 
        amendment to require states and districts to conduct 
        audits of their state and local tests. The amendment 
        was withdrawn.
           Rep. Mark Pocan (D-WI) offered an amendment 
        to reinstate literacy programs and offer them specific 
        funding streams. The amendment failed by a voice vote.
           Rep. Mark Takano (D-CA) offered an amendment 
        to require charter school or school authorizer 
        accountability standards in Title I. The amendment 
        failed by a vote of 15-22.
           Rep. Hakeem Jeffries (D-NY) offered an 
        amendment that would require federal college and career 
        ready standards for all students. The amendment failed 
        by a vote of 16-21.
           Rep. Katherine Clark (D-MA) offered an 
        amendment to create a new title within the Act that 
        would support pre-K programs. The amendment failed by a 
        vote of 16-21.
           Rep. Alma Adams (D-NC) offered an amendment 
        that would reinstate portions of title V of current 
        law, including a variety of programs to give students 
        access to a well-rounded education. The amendment 
        failed by a vote of 16-21.
           Rep. Mark DeSaulnier (D-CA) offered an 
        amendment to authorize wrap-around services and 
        community partnership programs under Title IV. The 
        amendment failed by a vote of 16-21.
           Rep. Jared Polis (D-CO) offered an amendment 
        to incorporate the Student Non-Discrimination Act into 
        the Act to address bullying, school safety, and 
        discipline policies for LGBTQ students. The amendment 
        was ruled non-germane.
           Rep. Marcia Fudge (D-OH) offered an 
        amendment to restore mandatory funding streams for 
        IDEA, Title I initiatives, and early Childhood 
        programs. The amendment failed by a vote of 16-21.
           Rep. Robert ``Bobby'' Scott (D-VA) offered 
        an amendment in the nature of a substitute, to the 
        amendment that Rep. Rokita offered in the nature of a 
        substitute, to increase federal involvement in school 
        accountability and improvement systems, eliminate state 
        and school district funding flexibility, mandate 
        teacher and principal evaluation requirements, restore 
        separate funding authorizations for several 
        consolidated or eliminated programs, among other 
        provisions. The amendment failed by a vote of 16-21.

                                Summary

    ESEA, currently known as the No Child Left Behind Act 
(NCLB), is in need of significant reform. When it was enacted 
more than 13 years ago, NCLB was heralded as groundbreaking, 
and in some ways it was. The expanded use of data helped 
superintendents, school leaders, and teachers identify students 
most in need of additional instruction and offered parents 
access to important information about the quality of their 
schools.
    However, weaknesses in the law have been clearly 
identified. One-size-fits-all accountability metrics restrict 
the ability of states and school districts to appropriately 
gauge student learning and tailor curriculum to enable students 
to graduate high school prepared for postsecondary education or 
the workforce. Federally-prescribed interventions and 
turnaround strategies have not worked as intended and are not 
producing the desired results in low-performing schools. More 
than 80 programs tied to K-12 schools, which impose tremendous 
paperwork and regulatory burdens on states and school 
districts, have had limited success in improving student 
achievement and offer states and communities little flexibility 
in how they use federal dollars to meet their own unique needs.
    House and Senate inaction to reauthorize the law for over 
eight years has allowed the Obama administration to circumvent 
Congress and impose its own vision of education reform on the 
nation, subjecting America's classrooms to unprecedented 
oversight by the U.S. Department of Education.
    The Student Success Act offers a better way forward for the 
nation's classrooms by:
           Returning responsibility for student 
        achievement to states, school districts, and parents, 
        while maintaining high expectations;
           Eliminating ineffective federal programs and 
        investing limited taxpayer dollars wisely;
           Strengthening programs for schools and 
        targeted populations;
           Supporting local efforts to measure teacher 
        effectiveness;
           Engaging parents in their child's education;
           Supporting Impact Aid;
           Maintaining and strengthening long-standing 
        protections for state and local autonomy; and
           Providing services for homeless students.

Returning Responsibility for Student Achievement to States, School 
        Districts, and Parents, While Maintaining High Expectations

    The Student Success Act dramatically reduces the federal 
role in education by returning authority for measuring student 
performance and turning around low-performing schools to states 
and local officials. Across the country, states and school 
districts are leading efforts to reform the nation's troubled 
education system. As these bold reformers step up, the federal 
government can step back, limiting its role to ensuring parents 
have the information they need to judge the quality of their 
children's schools. The bill includes a number of key revisions 
to the current Title I program to increase state and local 
flexibility and restore local control of education.
       Academic Standards: Consistent with current law, 
the bill requires states to establish academic standards that 
apply to all students and schools in the state in reading, 
math, and science, while allowing states to develop standards 
for other subjects at their discretion. Achievement standards 
used for judging student and school performance must align with 
content standards, but the bill removes federal requirements 
mandating basic, proficient, and advanced levels of 
achievement. States also are allowed to establish alternate 
achievement standards aligned to content standards for students 
with the most significant cognitive disabilities. Finally, the 
bill incorporates the requirements for English proficiency 
standards from Title III into the main Title I program.
       Academic Assessments: Consistent with current 
law, the bill requires states to develop and implement a set of 
assessments for all students in the state in reading and math 
in each of grades three through eight and once in high school, 
and in science once in each of the grade spans for grades three 
through five, six through nine, and 10 through 12. States 
retain the option to develop assessments in other subjects at 
their discretion and have the flexibility to use multiple 
measures of student achievement. States must ensure their 
assessments include reasonable accommodations for students with 
disabilities and are allowed to adopt alternate assessments for 
students with the most significant cognitive disabilities and 
computer adaptive assessments. The bill maintains requirements 
on disaggregating subgroup data, assessing the English 
proficiency of English learners and ensuring 95 percent 
participation rates for all students and each subgroup.
       Accountability: The bill eliminates the federal 
``Adequate Yearly Progress'' (AYP) metric and the requirement 
that all students reach proficiency in reading and math by the 
end of the next school year. In their place, states are allowed 
to develop their own accountability systems that must comply 
with three broad parameters:
           Annually measure the academic 
        achievement of all public school students against the 
        state's academic standards (including, at the state's 
        discretion, growth toward the standards) using the 
        statewide assessments in reading and math and other 
        academic indicators;
           Annually evaluate and identify the 
        academic performance of each public school in the state 
        based on student academic achievement, including the 
        achievement of all students and achievement gaps 
        between student subgroups, and other measures of school 
        success; and
           Include a school improvement system 
        implemented by school districts that includes 
        interventions in poor performing Title I schools.
       School Improvement: The bill requires states to 
include, as part of their statewide accountability structure, a 
system of school improvement interventions to be implemented at 
the local level for Title I schools the state determines to be 
poorly performing. The bill repeals the federally mandated 
school improvement, corrective action, and restructuring labels 
and interventions included in current law, giving states and 
districts maximum flexibility to develop appropriate turnaround 
strategies and rewards for their schools. The bill increases 
the state set-aside for school improvement to 7 percent (up 
from 4 percent) and eliminates existing local set-asides, 
meaning more Title I money will flow directly to school 
districts. Finally, the bill eliminates the School Improvement 
Grants (SIG) program the Secretary of Education used to create 
four unworkable turnaround models, instead dedicating those 
funds for the Title I program.
       Parent Information: The bill maintains the 
current requirement for school districts and states to produce 
annual report cards outlining academic achievement but 
streamlines data reporting to ensure meaningful information is 
easily available to parents and communities. States and 
districts must report disaggregated student achievement data on 
the state assessment and other academic indicators used in the 
statewide accountability system, participation rates on those 
assessments, the adjusted cohort graduation rate, each school's 
evaluation under the statewide accountability system, English 
language proficiency, and National Assessment of Educational 
Progress results on fourth and eighth grade reading and 
mathematics. The bill maintains parents' right to know their 
students' achievement levels and moves the right to know 
teacher qualifications from Title I to Title II of ESEA.
       State Laws on Parent Authority: The bill 
includes a provision stating that nothing in the law should be 
interpreted to impact state laws on parent exercise of 
authority over low-performing schools.
       Funding Flexibility: The bill allows states and 
school districts to use federal funds for certain special 
population programs for any activity authorized under those 
programs. Instead of having to comply with a host of federal 
program requirements each dictating exactly how funds may be 
spent, state and local officials will be able to use federal 
funds to meet their own unique needs. While school districts 
will not be allowed to use Title I funds outside of those 
schools, they can move additional funding to low-income 
schools. The bill maintains separate funding streams for the 
Migratory Education, Neglected and Delinquent, and English 
Language Acquisition programs but merges them into Title I.
       Schoolwide Programs: The bill eliminates the 40 
percent poverty threshold for schoolwide programs, allowing all 
Title I schools to operate whole school reform efforts. This 
change will allow low-income schools greater flexibility to 
consolidate programs and focus their efforts on raising the 
achievement of all students.

Eliminating Ineffective Federal Programs and Investing Limited Taxpayer 
        Dollars Wisely

    The Student Success Act restores fiscal discipline and 
allows taxpayer dollars to be put toward more effective uses 
such as funding programs with a proven track record of putting 
the needs of students first. This will streamline and simplify 
the federal role in public education, so states, school 
districts, teachers, and parents are empowered to pursue 
innovative reforms that meet the needs of their students and 
children. The federal government operates more than 80 separate 
programs under current elementary and secondary education law. 
Despite the tripling of overall per pupil funding since 1964, 
national academic performance has not improved. The bill 
includes a number of important reforms across various titles to 
ensure every taxpayer dollar is spent effectively and 
efficiently.
       Authorization Levels: The bill updates overall 
authorization levels for each of the fiscal years 2016-2021 to 
reflect the funding amounts provided by Congress for ESEA 
programs in FY 2015, while maintaining Title I Aid for the 
Disadvantaged and targeted population programs (Migrant 
Education, Neglected & Delinquent, English Language 
Acquisition, Rural Education, Indian Education, Alaska Native 
Education, and Native Hawaiian Education) at or above the FY 
2012 levels. The amount authorized for all ESEA programs under 
the bill is lower than the Title I authorization for the last 
year it was authorized under current law.
    Spending Reduction Reports: H.R. 5 requires the 
Secretary of Education, through the Institute of Education 
Sciences, to contract with an economist with expertise in 
workforce and government efficiency issues to produce an annual 
report examining the reduced need for federal spending 
commensurate with the reduced mandates in the Student Success 
Act. The report would include recommendations for those 
spending reductions and would be submitted to the House and 
Senate Budget and Appropriations Committees, the House 
Education and the Workforce Committee, and the Senate Health, 
Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee.
    Eliminated Programs: The bill eliminates more than 
65 existing elementary and secondary education programs, many 
of which have been deemed ineffective by the federal 
government, are too small to meaningfully improve student 
achievement, or have never been funded. This promotes a more 
focused, streamlined, transparent, and appropriate federal role 
in the nation's education system.
    State and Local Innovation: The bill creates a new 
Local Academic Flexible Grant to provide funds to states and 
school districts to support initiatives based on their unique 
priorities. While ensuring federal funds are spent to increase 
student achievement as part of in-school or after-school 
activities, states and school districts will have maximum 
flexibility to spend their resources on activities authorized 
under state law, including efforts to protect student safety. 
Instead of federal bureaucrats making funding decisions for 
superintendents, school leaders, and teachers, local officials 
will be able to make these decisions based on what they know 
will help improve student learning.
    Private Sector Initiatives: The bill requires 
states to reserve 10 percent of their Local Academic Flexible 
Grant to support state and local programs that operate outside 
of traditional public school systems. This infusion of private 
sector innovation will support states and districts in 
improving student achievement.
    State and Local Spending Decisions: The bill 
removes all ``Maintenance of Effort'' (MOE) requirements, 
allowing states and school districts to set their own funding 
levels for elementary and secondary education. The requirements 
are removed for four reasons:
          Dictating how states and school districts 
        spend their tax revenues as a condition of receiving 
        federal funds is not an appropriate federal role;
          MOE requirements assume increased 
        education spending improves educational outcomes. 
        Decades of data prove this argument false;
          MOE requirements provide disincentives 
        for states and school districts to innovate and deliver 
        better educational services more efficiently; and
          Data from the U.S. Department of 
        Education show that since enactment of NCLB more than 
        70 percent of MOE waiver requests have been granted. 
        This bill acknowledges this reality and eliminates the 
        burden up front for school districts.
    At the same time, the legislation maintains the existing 
``supplement, not supplant'' requirements, which ensure federal 
dollars are used on top of state and local resources, 
protecting the traditional federal role in education.
     Department Bureaucracy: The bill requires the 
Secretary of Education to identify the number of full time 
equivalent employee positions associated with the eliminated or 
consolidated programs under the bill and to reduce the 
department's workforce by that number within approximately a 
year of the bill's enactment.
     Program Evaluations: The bill directs the 
Secretary of Education to work through the Institute of 
Education Sciences (IES), the department's main research arm, 
if the Secretary chooses to exercise existing authority to 
reserve program funds for program evaluations. The bill 
requires the Secretary to engage IES and relevant officials 
from the U.S. Department of Education in the development of a 
multi-year, comprehensive plan for carrying out evaluations and 
submit that plan to Congress and the public for review and 
comment. This will help ensure program evaluations are 
coordinated, objective, and provide useful information 
regarding the effectiveness of federal education initiatives.
     Earmarks: The bill eliminates all of the current 
programs targeted to specific national organizations to comply 
with the House earmark ban.

Strengthening Programs for Schools and Targeted Populations

    The Student Success Act maintains separate funding streams 
for the Migratory Education, Neglected and Delinquent, English 
Language Acquisition, and Rural Education programs and 
strengthens each targeted population program to improve its 
performance. The bill also reauthorizes the American Indian, 
Alaska Native Education, and Native Hawaiian Education programs 
under a separate title.
     Education of Migratory Children: The bill provides 
a reservation of funds to continue the current program, which 
assists states in supporting high-quality educational programs 
and services to address the unique educational needs of 
migratory children, including during summer or intersession 
time periods. The legislation strengthens how migrant student 
counts are determined in each state, basing state allocations 
on the average number of eligible migratory children from the 
previous three years and a count of the number of migratory 
children who receive services under summer or intersession 
programs. The bill also allows states, school districts, and 
other public and private entities to improve intrastate and 
interstate coordination and information exchanges regarding 
migratory children.
     Prevention and Intervention Programs for Children 
and Youth who are Neglected, Delinquent, or At-Risk: The bill 
provides a reservation of funds to continue the current 
program, which improves educational services for students in 
state and local correctional institutions or for those children 
who are transferring out of institutionalization. The 
legislation emphasizes receipt of a regular high school diploma 
to the extent feasible and makes minor technical and clarifying 
changes to improve operation of the program.
     English Language Acquisition, Language 
Enhancement, and Academic Achievement: The bill includes a 
reservation of funds to continue the current program, which 
provides services to help non-English speaking students learn 
English and meet state academic standards. The legislation 
incorporates accountability and reporting requirements for 
English learners into the Title I program to encourage greater 
alignment, while maintaining student achievement expectations 
for these students and public reporting of progress. The bill 
changes how the Secretary of Education determines immigrant 
student and English learner counts, to ensure states and school 
districts receive accurate and reliable data and stable 
funding. The bill eliminates the Improving Language Instruction 
Educational Programs, which have never been funded and are 
duplicative of the main program.
     Rural Education: The bill reserves funds for rural 
school districts and schools in both the Small Rural School 
Achievement (SRSA) program and the Rural and Low-Income School 
(RLIS) program. The legislation updates current locale codes 
that determine eligibility of rural districts and schools under 
both programs and includes a sliding scale hold-harmless 
formula for districts that become ineligible under the SRSA 
program because of the new codes. The bill allows school 
districts eligible for both the SRSA and RLIS programs to apply 
for funding under the program of their choice.
     American Indian, Alaska Native, and Native 
Hawaiian Education: The bill reauthorizes the American Indian, 
Alaska Native, and Native Hawaiian education programs under a 
redesigned Title V of the law. The American Indian education 
program makes Indian and Alaska Native organizations and Indian 
and Alaska Native community-based organizations--under certain 
circumstances--eligible for grants. The program also includes a 
focus on Native American languages and allows tribes, tribal 
organizations, and Alaska Native organizations to apply for 
formula grants in consortia if an eligible local educational 
agency chooses not to apply. The American Indian special 
programs include new Tribal Education Agencies Cooperative 
Agreements. The American Indian national activities section 
includes a new Improvement of Academic Success for Students 
through Native American Language program and eliminates the In-
Service Training for Teachers of Indian Children and the Gifted 
and Talented Indian Students programs. Under the Alaska Native 
Education program, the bill mandates grantees develop a 
strategy for improving the education of Alaska Native children 
and collect data to that effect, and it makes other, minor 
changes to the program. The Native Hawaiian program includes 
new allowable activities, including to support public charter 
schools serving high concentrations of Native Hawaiian 
students. The Native Hawaiian program also increases the role 
of the Native Hawaiian Education Council in providing technical 
assistance to grantees.

Supporting Local Efforts to Measure Teacher Effectiveness

    The Student Success Act updates federal teacher policy to 
reflect current state and local efforts to emphasize an 
educator's ability to effectively motivate students and improve 
their academic achievement. Parents know that the best teachers 
are those who keep their students motivated and challenged in 
the classroom. Instead of relying on bureaucratic and outdated 
provisions such as teacher credentials or tenure, states and 
school districts should have the tools to measure an educator's 
ability to help students excel in the classroom. The bill makes 
a number of important changes to current law to improve teacher 
quality.
     Highly Qualified Teachers (HQT): The bill repeals 
the federal government's onerous and meaningless ``Highly 
Qualified Teachers'' requirements, enabling federal, state, and 
local policies to move toward strategies that will reassure 
parents their students' teachers are effective in the 
classroom.
     Teacher Evaluations: The main teacher quality 
program within the bill is amended to allow for the development 
and implementation of state or locally driven teacher 
evaluation systems. Unlike the U.S. Department of Education's 
Race to the Top plan or waiver package, which mandate specific 
requirements for school districts to follow, the bill sets five 
broad parameters that states or school districts may include in 
any teacher evaluation system. This approach gives greater 
flexibility to school districts or states to develop teacher 
evaluation systems that best meet the specific needs of their 
teachers and students. Those optional parameters include:
           Making student achievement data, derived 
        from a variety of sources, a significant part of the 
        evaluation;
           Using multiple measures of evaluation in 
        assessing teacher performance;
           Having more than two rating categories 
        for the performance of teachers;
           Making personnel decisions based on the 
        evaluations, as determined by the district; and
           Seeking input from parents, teachers, 
        school leaders, and other staff in the school in 
        developing the evaluation system.
     Uses of Funds: The bill allows states that have 
already developed statewide teacher evaluation systems to use 
teacher quality funds to work with their school districts to 
implement the system. Funds may also be used to train school 
leaders in how to evaluate teachers under the system; develop 
and implement school leader evaluation systems; provide 
evidence-based, job-embedded, and continuous professional 
development for teachers and school leaders focused on academic 
subjects or specific student populations; professional 
development for teachers to teach dual credit or dual 
enrollment courses; and provide support to teachers identified 
as in need of additional assistance. States and school 
districts can use teacher funds for class size reduction, but 
the bill caps this use at 10 percent. A substantial amount of 
teacher quality funds under current law are used to reduce 
class size, which evidence shows has little to no effect on 
student learning.
     Teacher and School Leader Innovation: The bill 
consolidates the remaining teacher quality programs, including 
the Teacher Quality Partnership Grant program authorized under 
the Higher Education Act, into a new Teacher and School Leader 
Flexible Grant. The program will award grants to states and 
school districts to increase student achievement through 
evidence-based innovative initiatives. School districts, solely 
or in partnership with institutions of higher education, can 
receive funding to:
           Increase access to or develop 
        alternative certification or licensure routes;
           Recruit, hire, and retain effective 
        teachers and school leaders;
           Improve teacher preparation programs 
        within the state;
           Implement performance-based pay systems 
        and differential incentive pay;
           Create teacher or school leader 
        advancement and multiple career paths;
           Establish new teacher or school leader 
        induction and residency programs; and
           Provide additional professional 
        development activities or other evidence-based 
        initiatives likely to increase teacher and school 
        leader effectiveness.
     Teacher and School Leader Academies: The bill 
allows states to reserve up to 3 percent of their flexible 
grant to award funds to eligible entities for the establishment 
or expansion of teacher or school leader preparation academies.
     Teacher Liability: The bill maintains liability 
protections included in current law that protect school 
employees (including teachers, administrators, and school board 
members) acting to control, discipline, expel, or suspend a 
student as well as to maintain order in the classroom or school 
through reasonable actions.

Engaging Parents in their Child's Education

    The Student Success Act recognizes that parents must play 
an active role in their child's education. The federal 
government currently supports a number of vital initiatives 
aimed at providing additional educational options for parents 
and students looking to escape low-performing schools and 
providing assistance to those students in need of extra 
instructional support to be able to excel academically. The 
legislation drives these federal reform efforts down to the 
state and local level and moves many of these programs from 
Title V of current law to a redesigned Title III.
     Title I Portability: The bill gives states the 
option of allowing Title I money to follow low-income students 
to the traditional public or charter school of the parent's 
choice. Under current law, school districts choose which 
schools receive Title I funds within some parameters. This 
legislation, however, ensures all low-income students receive 
their fair share of federal dollars, rather than allowing the 
bureaucracy to choose winners and losers.
     Charter Schools: The bill reauthorizes the Charter 
School Program, which supports the start-up, replication, and 
expansion of high-quality charter schools. The bill 
incorporates the provisions of H.R. 10, the Success and 
Opportunity Through Quality Charter Schools Act, which passed 
the House in the 113th Congress. The legislation expands the 
entities eligible for funding to include additional statewide 
entities (charter school boards, governors, and charter support 
organizations) to foster greater charter school growth; 
encourages greater expansion and replication of proven, high-
quality charter school models; requires states to fund efforts 
to increase charter school authorizer quality; allows the use 
of weighted admission lotteries to better serve disadvantaged 
students; clarifies a student can continue in a charter school 
program at another school in the same network without returning 
to the lottery; and adds a set-aside in the national activities 
funding to support high-quality charter management 
organizations in opening and expanding high-quality charter 
schools.
     Direct Student Services: The bill requires states 
to set aside 3 percent of Title I money to provide competitive 
grants to school districts that wish to offer tutoring or 
public school choice to their students, including those in poor 
performing schools.
     Magnet Schools: The bill continues the current 
program, which provides funds to support the development and 
implementation of innovative education methods and practices 
that increase choices in public education. The legislation 
includes changes to improve program operation.
     Family Engagement Centers: The bill renames and 
makes improvements to the existing Parental Information and 
Resource Centers (PIRC) program, which helps implement family 
engagement policies, programs, and activities that lead to 
improvements in student academic achievement. The legislation 
strengthens partnerships among parents, teachers, school 
leaders, administrators, and other school personnel designed to 
meet the educational needs of children. The bill promotes the 
better sharing of effective strategies and increases 
coordination between states, family engagement centers, and 
parents.
     Background Checks: The bill requires states and 
school districts to conduct background checks on employees and 
prospective employees who have direct unsupervised access to 
children. Parents entrust their children to schools during the 
day and should have the comfort of knowing that any adult 
working around their child at school has undergone a background 
check.

Supporting Impact Aid

    The Student Success Act strengthens the five existing 
Impact Aid programs, which reimburse school districts located 
near, or serving students from, military bases, federal lands, 
and Indian reservations, for the loss of property taxes due to 
the presence of the federal government. Many of the bill's 
provisions were included in the FY 2013 National Defense 
Authorization Act and expire in early 2018. The legislation 
makes such language permanent and moves Impact Aid programs 
from Title VIII of current law to a new Title IV.
     Payments for Federal Property: The bill updates 
the formula by which school district allotments are determined 
for a district with federal property located within its 
boundaries that cannot be taxed. The new formula includes two 
parts. First, an eligible school district will get a foundation 
or base payment of either 90 percent of the payment most 
recently received (FY 2009) or 90 percent of the average 
payment received from FY 2006-2009, whichever is higher. 
Second, the district will receive an additional payment using a 
calculated per acre value.
     Payments for Federally-Connected Children: The 
bill streamlines provisions for Heavily Impacted school 
districts, which are districts with high percentages of 
military, Native American, or other federally-connected 
children. The legislation standardizes eligibility criteria for 
these districts at 45 percent enrollment of federally-connected 
children; bases per pupil expenditure eligibility requirements 
on state averages rather than national averages; and allows 
federally-connected children to be counted in enrollment 
numbers in the case of open enrollment policies in a state. The 
bill also amends the Basic Support Payments formula to provide 
equal prorated payments greater than 100 percent of the 
Learning Opportunity Threshold for eligible districts. Finally, 
the language allows school districts to continue to count 
children who have been relocated off-base due to renovation, 
rebuilding, or demolition after three years if the district 
continues to serve such children because of project delays and 
simplifies the annual process for counting these children.
     Timely Payments: The bill requires the Secretary 
of Education to provide Impact Aid payments within three years. 
This addresses long-standing school district concerns regarding 
the lack of on-time payments from the U.S. Department of 
Education, as Impact Aid accounts for a substantial portion of 
the operating budgets for many of these districts.

Maintaining and Strengthening Long-Standing Protections for State and 
        Local Autonomy

    The Student Success Act restores and protects state and 
local autonomy over public education. Since taking office in 
2009, the Obama administration has pushed the largest expansion 
of the federal role in education in the nation's history. The 
Secretary of Education has usurped Congressional authority to 
rewrite NCLB, coercing states into adopting common standards 
and assessments in exchange for temporary relief of the law's 
burdensome requirements. The legislation strengthens the 
important protections for students, parents, communities, 
states, and school districts found in the General Provisions of 
ESEA. It also moves them from Title IX of current law to a 
redesigned Title VI.
     Secretary's Authority: The bill limits the 
authority of the Secretary of Education over decisions in the 
classroom. The legislation: (1) prohibits the Secretary from 
imposing conditions on states and school districts, including 
the adoption of the Common Core State Standards, in exchange 
for a waiver of federal elementary and secondary education law 
or federal grant funds; (2) prevents the Secretary from 
creating additional burdens on states and districts through the 
regulatory process, particularly in the areas of standards, 
assessments, and state accountability plans; (3) prohibits the 
Secretary from demanding changes to state standards and 
influencing and coercing states to enter into partnerships with 
other states; and (4) outlines specific procedures the 
Secretary must follow when issuing federal regulations and 
conducting peer review processes for grant applications, 
including publicly releasing the identity of peer reviewers, 
which will bring greater transparency.
     Private School Students: The bill strengthens 
provisions to ensure the participation of private school 
students and teachers in the programs funded under the Act. The 
legislation improves the consultation and negotiation processes 
to provide clearer procedures and faster notice for private 
school officials. These changes will better protect access for 
private school students.
     Military Recruiters: The bill improves the 
military recruiting provisions in current law by ensuring 
recruiters have the same access to high schools as colleges and 
universities.

Providing Services for Homeless Students

    The Student Success Act reauthorizes the Education for 
Homeless Children and Youths program within the McKinney-Vento 
Homeless Assistance Act, the primary federal program that 
provides funding to states and school districts to educate 
homeless children.
     Improved Collaboration: The bill places a greater 
emphasis on improved identification of homeless children and 
youth and provides better collaboration and information sharing 
among federal and state agencies to provide services for 
homeless students.
     School Stability: The legislation strengthens 
provisions in current law to provide greater school stability 
and protections for homeless youth and parents.

                            Committee Views


Introduction

    In 1965, Congress passed ESEA with the limited goal of 
providing states and local school districts with additional 
resources to ensure disadvantaged students have access to a 
quality education. The importance of helping students gain the 
skills necessary to graduate high school prepared for 
postsecondary education and the workforce is clear. A well-
educated workforce is directly tied to the nation's ability to 
create jobs and maintain our competitive edge in a global 
economy.
    The latest iteration of the ESEA--NCLB--was heralded as 
groundbreaking when it was signed into law, and in some ways it 
was. The expanded use of data helped superintendents, school 
leaders, and teachers identify students most in need of 
additional instruction and offered parents access to important 
information about the quality of their schools.
    However, the law's weaknesses are now clearly identified. 
One-size-fits-all accountability metrics restrict states' and 
school districts' ability to appropriately gauge student 
learning and tailor curriculum to enable students to graduate 
high school prepared for postsecondary education or the 
workforce. Federally prescribed interventions and turnaround 
strategies have not worked as intended and are not producing 
the desired results in low-performing schools. More than 80 
federal elementary and secondary education programs impose 
tremendous paperwork and regulatory burdens on states and 
school districts, demonstrate limited success in improving 
student achievement, and offer states and communities little 
flexibility in how they use federal dollars to meet their own 
unique needs. Federal teacher policy creates onerous mandates 
that emphasize credentials over an educator's ability to 
effectively motivate students and improve achievement levels.
    In addition, the failure to enact a new law has allowed the 
Obama administration to circumvent Congress and impose its own 
vision of education reform on the nation.
    The House Committee on Education and the Workforce is 
moving forward with education reform. For too long, states and 
school districts have been inundated with federal intervention 
and bureaucratic red tape that has done little to improve 
student performance. The Student Success Act (H.R. 5) will 
return responsibility for student achievement to states and 
school districts by reducing the federal footprint, restoring 
local control, and empowering parents and education leaders to 
hold schools accountable for providing students an excellent 
education.

Funding Authorizations

    In the more than four decades since passage of ESEA, 
federal control of public education has steadily increased and 
spending has exploded. According to the National Center for 
Education Statistics' Digest of Education Statistics, in 2010-
11 the United States spent more than $12,000 per pupil per 
year, nearly triple what was spent in 1965.\1\ Despite this 
record investment in public education by federal, state, and 
local governments, national academic performance has not 
improved.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \1\National Center for Education Statistics. Digest of Education 
Statistics, 2010-11. http://nces.ed.gov/fastfacts/display.asp?id=66
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    The last 30 years have seen particularly dramatic increases 
in federal spending. U.S. Department of Education K-12 funding 
increased from less than $7 billion in 1980 to over $37 billion 
in 2015.\2\ These increases have made the United States a world 
leader in education spending. The Organization for Economic 
Cooperation and Development (OECD) reported in 2012 the United 
States spent 7.3 percent of its Gross Domestic Product on 
education, well above the international average and more than 
all but four other OECD countries (Denmark, Iceland, Korea, and 
New Zealand).\3\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \2\Department of Education. Fiscal Year 2016 Summary and Background 
Information. Appendix 1: Summary of Discretionary Funds. Available at: 
http://www.2.ed.gov/about/overview/budget/budget16/summary/
16summary.pdf
    \3\Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) Results 
from 2012. United States Key Findings. http://www.oecd.org/
unitedstates/PISA-2012-results-US.pdf
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Despite these record investments, student achievement has 
not improved. At a February 10, 2011, Committee on Education 
and the Workforce hearing titled ``Education in the Nation: 
Examining the Challenges and Opportunities Facing America's 
Classrooms,'' Mr. Andrew Coulson, from the non-profit, 
nonpartisan CATO Institute, stated math and reading scores for 
graduating high school seniors have remained unchanged over the 
last 40 years, while science scores have declined. 
International comparisons reflect these trends. The OECD's 
latest Programme for International Student Assessment results 
showed for the 2012 assessment, the United States ranked 17th 
in reading, 27th in math, and 20th in science among developed 
nations. The report also explains that while the U.S. spends 
more than most countries per student, this does not translate 
into better performance.\4\ Mr. Coulson went on to say:

    \4\Ibid.
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          To sum up, we have little to show for the $2 trillion 
        in federal education spending of the past half century. 
        In the face of concerted and unflagging efforts by 
        Congress and the states . . . it now costs three times 
        as much to provide essentially the same education as we 
        provided in 1970. . . . The only thing [spending] 
        appears to have accomplished is to apply the brakes to 
        the nation's economic growth, by taxing trillions of 
        dollars out of the productive sector of the economy and 
        spending it on ineffective programs.

    At the same time, our country faces a fiscal crisis. Our 
national debt now exceeds the total size of the U.S. economy. 
The federal government must be a better steward of taxpayer 
dollars, and H.R. 5 takes an important step in the right 
direction. Even within these limits, the bill authorizes at 
least as much funds, and in most cases more, in FY 2015 for 
disadvantaged students than was appropriated in FY 2012. The 
Committee believes the nation's funding priorities must reflect 
the need to support our most disadvantaged.

Aid to Local Educational Agencies

    Title I of the Student Success Act restructures and amends 
Title I of ESEA and addresses the following major issues:
            Academic Standards
    H.R. 5 maintains current requirements for states to 
establish academic standards that apply to all students and 
schools in the state in at least reading, science, and 
mathematics, while allowing states to develop standards in 
other subjects at their discretion. Achievement standards used 
for judging student and school performance must align with the 
content standards, but the bill removes federal requirements 
for basic, proficient, and advanced levels of achievement. 
States are also allowed to establish alternate achievement 
standards aligned to the content standards for students with 
the most significant disabilities. In addition, the bill 
consolidates the requirements for English proficiency standards 
into the main Title I program.
    H.R. 5 also continues and strengthens language allowing 
states to enter into voluntary partnerships with each other to 
fulfill the law's requirements around academic standards and 
assessments. It is the Committee's intent to allow states to 
enter into voluntary partnerships with other states and to use 
federal funds to do so. However, such decisions must be 
entirely at the discretion of the state, free from interference 
by the Secretary of Education. The bill further clarifies that 
the Secretary is not authorized to require states to enter into 
any such partnerships as a condition of receiving federal 
funds, nor is the Secretary authorized to offer such 
partnerships as a way to meet any other condition the Secretary 
may place upon a state.
            Academic Assessments
    H.R. 5 maintains current requirements for states to develop 
and implement assessments in reading, mathematics, and science.
    As under current law, states are required to give the same 
grade level reading and mathematics assessment to all students 
in the state in each of grades three through eight and once in 
high school. Science assessments must be administered at least 
once in each grade span for grades three through five, six 
through nine, and 10 through 12. Assessments still must include 
reasonable accommodations for students with disabilities, and 
states are allowed to adopt alternate assessments for students 
with the most significant cognitive disabilities. States are 
allowed to develop and administer computer adaptive assessments 
so educators can receive more meaningful feedback on classroom 
instruction and have the flexibility to use multiple measures 
of student achievement. The bill maintains requirements on 
disaggregating subgroup data, assessing the English proficiency 
of English learners, and ensuring 95 percent participation 
rates for all students and each subgroup.
    Much criticism has been leveled at NCLB for promoting 
excessive testing and forcing teachers to teach to the test. 
While the Committee views these charges as exaggerated, the 
reauthorized law must balance the need for assessments with the 
recognition that classroom instruction should be the primary 
engine for meaningful improvements in performance. Assessments 
should be used as a tool to tailor instruction and to inform 
students, teachers, and families about academic performance and 
to inform the community about the quality of its schools. They 
should not, however, be the only tool. The Student Success Act 
specifically states that state accountability systems should 
include multiple measures of student achievement and other 
measures of school success. The Committee believes the bill 
properly divorces assessments designed to promote transparency 
from one-size-fits-all high-stakes accountability and state 
accountability systems that are broader than students' 
performance on high-stakes tests will address the excessive 
focus on assessments.
            School Accountability and Improvement
    H.R. 5 eliminates the federal accountability system known 
as AYP and rejects calls to replace it with a similar one-size-
fits-all metric by a different name. In its place, the bill 
requires states to develop and implement a statewide 
accountability system that will result in students graduating 
from high school prepared for postsecondary education and the 
workforce. The system must include the following elements:
     Annually measure the academic achievement of all 
public school students against the state's academic standards 
(including growth toward the standards) using the statewide 
assessment and other academic indicators determined by the 
state;
     Annually evaluate and identify the academic 
performance of each public school in the state based on student 
academic achievement, including the achievement of all students 
and achievement gaps between student subgroups, and other 
measures of school success determined by the state; and
     Include a school improvement system implemented by 
school districts that includes interventions in poor performing 
Title I schools.
    As noted above, the Student Success Act requires states to 
include a system of school improvement interventions as part of 
their statewide accountability structure. The bill repeals the 
federally mandated interventions included in Sections 1116 and 
1117 of current law, giving states and districts maximum 
flexibility to develop appropriate school improvement 
strategies and rewards for their schools. The bill also 
increases the state set-aside for school improvement to 7 
percent (up from 4 percent) but eliminates the local set-
asides, meaning more Title I money will flow directly to school 
districts. The bill eliminates the SIG program through which 
the Secretary of Education created four unworkable turnaround 
models, and it instead uses those funds to increase the 
authorization level for the Title I program.
    While much of the nation has embraced the need to return 
control over how schools are evaluated and improved to states 
and school districts, some persistently fail to recognize the 
damage done when federal mandates replace the judgment of 
states, communities, and families. The Committee supports 
standards-based education reform, but removing decisions about 
school quality from those closest to our nation's students is 
delegitimizing such reforms and placing the reform movement at 
risk. In a January 30, 2015, Education Week blog post titled 
``The Problem with NCLB-Style `Political Cover','' Rick Hess 
observed,

          . . . school improvement is invariably better off, in 
        the long run, when ambitious reforms have local 
        political backers and meaningful local support. . . . 
        The irony is that the very act of providing federal 
        `cover' can also serve to undermine local backing, or 
        cause it to atrophy, by making it seem less necessary 
        or urgent.

    The U.S. Department of Education's waiver scheme also is 
not the right answer. The department's waivers have undoubtedly 
offered more flexibility than NCLB, but flexibility tied to the 
whims of the Secretary of Education is unsustainable. States 
need the freedom to develop effective strategies without having 
the Secretary looking over their shoulders. As Michael McShane 
observed in a June 19, 2013, blog post on the American 
Enterprise Institute website entitled ``Rethinking NCLB Does 
Not Mean Admitting Defeat,''

          When states develop their own plans, the architects 
        on the state board, in [the] state legislature, and at 
        the governor's mansion are much more likely to be held 
        to account by voters and taxpayers than the Secretary 
        of Education or distant bureaucrats in the Department 
        of Education charged with ensuring compliance.

    The Student Success Act offers a better way forward. 
McShane concluded his piece with an observation about the 
Student Success Act as it was progressing through the 113th 
Congress, saying, ``Maybe the [Student Success Act] reflects 
the lessons we've learned after all--accountability is 
important, but the federal government might not be the best 
people to have in the driver's seat.''
    H.R. 5 also includes a provision to ensure the new law does 
not impede or undermine state efforts to empower parents to 
assume authority over their students' schools. For example, in 
California the parent trigger law is directly tied to 
requirements under Section 1116 of current law. It is not the 
intent of the Committee to weaken the purposes of that 
California law or other similar state laws. The Committee 
encourages states to maintain the authority granted to parents 
under state law as they develop and implement new 
accountability systems as required under this Act.
            Title I Formula
    H.R. 5 updates the findings in section 1125AA with respect 
to the distribution of Title I funds under the Targeted and 
Education Finance Incentive Grants formulas. The Committee 
acknowledges that number weighting in those two formulas 
generally results in higher allocations to school districts 
with very large numbers, but not necessarily higher 
concentrations, of Title I-eligible students. The Committee 
also acknowledges that the current scales used to calculate the 
number and percentage weights were established based on data 
available in 2001. The Committee believes these scales should 
be updated with the most recent possible data prior to 
enactment of the Student Success Act. The Congressional 
Research Service has told the Committee updated data will be 
available in a few months. The Committee believes that updated 
weighting scales should be established by a Conference 
Committee between the House and the Senate. The Committee 
further believes that as the Conference Committee updates those 
scales, the Conference Committee should evaluate the use of 
those scales to ensure the most equitable distribution of 
Targeted and Education Finance Incentive Grant funds to school 
districts with the greatest concentrations of poverty.
            Title I Portability
    H.R. 5 gives states the option of allowing Title I money to 
follow low-income students to the traditional public or charter 
school the student attends. Under current law, school districts 
choose which schools receive Title I funds within some 
parameters. This legislation, however, helps low-income 
students receive their fair share of federal assistance by 
allowing federal funds to follow children to the traditional 
public or charter school of the parent's choice. The Committee 
believes any effort to incentivize good schools to attract low-
income students is deserving of Congress' support.
            Direct Student Services
    H.R. 5 requires states to set aside 3 percent of their 
Title I allocation to award grants to local school districts to 
support Direct Student Services. The Committee believes 
students should have access to important options that will help 
improve academic achievement. For example, students should have 
the option to immediately attend high-performing public schools 
to ensure they are not trapped in the education system as 
school officials work to turnaround poor performing schools. 
Students should also have the ability to access high-quality 
academic tutoring programs for additional help to succeed 
academically.
    Unlike the current requirement to provide supplemental 
educational services, repealed under the Student Success Act, 
state educational agencies will approve providers, including 
both for-profit and non-profit academic tutors, and school 
districts will select a wide variety of approved providers, 
including both for-profits and non-profits, to ensure parents 
and students have a diverse group of entities from which to 
choose to meet unique student needs. The Committee urges states 
to award grants only to those eligible school districts that 
provide meaningful tutoring providers to parents and believes 
this can only happen if school districts select a number of 
providers that offer small group tutoring through a variety of 
methods, including online and on campus offerings. As the new 
leading partner of the Direct Student Services program, school 
districts must take ownership of this important program geared 
toward providing choice options to all students, which means 
offering ample space in high performing schools and quality 
tutoring options for students.
            Data Transparency
    NCLB has been roundly praised for shining a light on 
achievement gaps that exist among a school's students. The 
Committee believes this important feature of NCLB must be 
continued--no longer can schools hide behind schoolwide 
averages, while disadvantaged students struggle in the shadows.
    H.R. 5 maintains the current requirement that states and 
school districts distribute annual report cards, while 
streamlining the data reporting to ensure meaningful 
information is easily available to parents and communities. 
States and districts must continue to report disaggregated data 
on student achievement on the state assessments and other 
academic indicators used in the statewide accountability 
system, participation rates on those assessments, the adjusted 
cohort graduation rate, each school's evaluation under the 
statewide accountability system, and English language 
proficiency. States and districts will also continue to 
participate in the fourth and eighth grade reading and 
mathematics NAEP and publicly report their results so the 
public can compare data across states to ensure their state's 
standards and achievement results are sufficiently rigorous and 
meaningful. Ultimately, schools must be accountable to parents 
and communities. The Student Success Act ensures parents and 
education leaders have the information they need to adequately 
evaluate the quality of their schools.
            Local capacity building
    H.R. 5 directs states to provide technical assistance to 
school districts in implementing the requirements of this Act, 
similar to current law. It is the Committee's intent for states 
to provide technical assistance in areas of need identified by 
districts, which could include implementation of standards 
assessments; new systems for accountability and school 
improvement; and identification of appropriate instructional 
materials.
            Schoolwide Program Authority
    H.R. 5 eliminates the 40 percent poverty threshold for 
schoolwide programs, allowing all Title I schools to operate 
whole school reform efforts. Under current law, only eligible 
schools with a poverty level of at least 40 percent are able to 
use Title I funds for schoolwide programs that benefit all 
students. This poverty threshold was lowered from 75 percent to 
50 percent in the 1994 Improving America's Schools Act, and it 
was reduced to the current threshold in NCLB. There is a long-
standing, bipartisan recognition that the best way to address 
the needs of the most at-risk students is to enable and 
encourage schoolwide solutions.
            Highly Qualified Teachers
    H.R. 5 repeals the definition of ``highly qualified 
teacher'' (HQT) and related provisions currently included in 
Section 1119 of NCLB. Under current law, school districts 
receiving Title I funds are required to ensure all teachers of 
core academic subjects are ``highly qualified,'' defined as a 
teacher who has earned a bachelor's degree, holds a state 
certification or license, and can demonstrate knowledge of the 
subject matter in question. These federal requirements place 
too much emphasis on a teacher's credentials, degrees, and 
licensing; as a result, schools have come to value a teacher's 
resume over his or her ability to increase student achievement. 
These undue burdens placed on teachers to meet input 
requirements are meaningless and have nothing to do with 
teacher effectiveness in the classroom. Additionally, the 
Committee notes members of the educational establishment have 
used the HQT definition to shutter alternative certification 
programs and innovative teaching approaches at many charter 
schools, which often recruit energetic and talented young 
teachers who inspire students to succeed.
    According to a 2011 study by the Education Development 
Center, a majority of teachers in 140 schools surveyed did not 
think the ``highly qualified'' status was linked to a teacher's 
effectiveness, and they identified other aspects of teaching 
that were equally, if not more, important to effective 
teaching.\5\ Additionally, a 2012 study by McREL International, 
a private nonprofit, nonpartisan education research 
corporation, found there is ``little to no relationship between 
teacher qualifications and instructional quality . . . hiring 
highly qualified teachers is simply a regulatory necessity--it 
does not automatically guarantee high-quality instruction.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \5\No Teacher Left Unqualified: How Teachers and Principals Respond 
to the Highly Qualified Mandate. Published 5/2/2011. Accessed At: 
http://www.nsela.org/images/stories/scienceeducator/A013353i_SciEd-
1_text.pdf
    \6\The Characteristics of Effective Teachers. March 22, 2012. 
Accessed At: http://www.mcrel.org/about-us/hot-topics/ht-effective-
teachers''
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    At a July 24, 2012, Early Childhood, Elementary, and 
Secondary Education Subcommittee hearing titled ``Education 
Reforms: Discussing the Value of Alternative Teacher 
Certification Programs,'' Seth Andrew, Founder and 
Superintendent of Democracy Prep Public Schools in Harlem, NY, 
shared his thoughts on the HQT provision:

          The HQT standard places the illogical restriction on 
        the talent pool that my principals are permitted to 
        access and unnecessarily hamstrings our search for the 
        amazing teachers that our students need. Under current 
        policy concerning HQT, it is a remarkable indicator 
        that I could not hire any of the members of this 
        committee to teach history or civics at Democracy Prep 
        even with the benefit of the exemption in New York 
        State Charter Law.

    Furthermore, additional burdens from the federal level can 
be especially harmful to rural school districts, which often 
face unique challenges, including those related to hiring and 
retaining effective teachers. The federal government does not 
need to place additional requirements on school districts 
regarding the qualifications teachers must meet before entering 
the classroom, especially in light of existing state teacher 
licensing requirements. The Committee believes it is time to 
reduce the size and scope of the U.S. Department of Education 
and roll back federal bureaucratic requirements and 
regulations.
            Equitable Participation of Private School Students
    The equitable participation of private school students has 
been a part of ESEA since its creation in 1965. These 
provisions are intended to help disadvantaged students who 
attend private schools and are included in the calculation of 
federal funds allocated to public school districts. The 
Committee believes the current process, which set out to ensure 
access for private school students to these important services 
guaranteed to them for more than 45 years, is often an arduous 
and contentious process for private school and school district 
officials. Current law lacks clarity regarding the goals and 
topics of consultation, the timely expenditure of funds, the 
types of services to be provided, and the allowable means for 
delivering them to private school students.
    H.R. 5 includes provisions in Title I and Title VI (General 
Provisions) to establish clearer requirements under the 
consultation provisions for equitable participation. Under the 
proposed changes, participants in the consultation process will 
have clear and consistent goals, topics, and procedures to 
ensure disadvantaged students are receiving the services to 
which they are entitled in a timely manner. The provisions will 
also allow private schools to consult with school districts and 
request services be provided on a schoolwide basis, as long as 
providing the services would be permitted constitutionally. 
Additionally, the purpose of the addition of Section 
1120(b)(1)(K) is to ensure that private school students are 
able to receive services at the location and time that is most 
suitable for the student and the student's coursework. Nothing 
in this section should be construed to imply that services are 
required to be provided at times other than during their 
regular school or coursework. Finally, the bill provides for an 
official ombudsman at the state educational agency. This 
designated employee will serve as the primary point of contact 
for all interested parties for questions on equitable 
participation of private school students and will be 
responsible for maintaining the record of the required 
consultation. The Committee notes state educational agencies 
could designate an existing employee to fulfill this important 
requirement.
            Maintenance of Effort
    H.R. 5 removes all ``maintenance of effort'' (MOE) 
requirements, allowing states and school districts to set their 
own funding levels for elementary and secondary education. 
These requirements are removed for four primary reasons:
     The Committee does not believe dictating how 
states and school districts spend their tax revenues as a 
condition of receiving federal funds is an appropriate federal 
role;
     MOE requirements assume increased education 
spending will improve educational outcomes, though decades of 
data prove this argument false;
     MOE requirements provide disincentives for states 
and school districts to innovate and deliver better educational 
services more efficiently; and
     Data from the U.S. Department of Education show 
that since enactment of NCLB more than 70 percent of MOE waiver 
requests have been granted. This bill acknowledges this reality 
and eliminates the burden up front for school districts.
    At the same time, the Student Success Act maintains the 
law's ``supplement, not supplant'' requirements, which ensure 
federal dollars are used as an addition to state and local 
resources, protecting the limited federal role in education. 
Maintaining these provisions ensure states and districts will 
not be able to cut education spending dramatically and fill in 
the gaps with federal dollars.
            Targeted Populations and Funding Flexibility
    H.R. 5 consolidates programs for migratory children, 
neglected and delinquent children, English learners, and rural 
school districts into Part A of Title I of ESEA, while 
maintaining separate reservations of funds for each of the 
vulnerable populations. The bill also enables states and school 
districts to rededicate funds across these programs to address 
the areas of greatest need for their students.
    The Committee does not intend for states and school 
districts to neglect the needs of their most vulnerable 
students. But too often, school districts receive funds for 
specific purposes in amounts too small to have a meaningful 
benefit. H.R. 5 allows states and districts to consolidate 
funding streams to develop innovative programs that will better 
meet the needs of their students. The bill's requirement for 
disaggregation of student achievement data by subgroup will 
continue to ensure transparency around the progress of 
particular subgroups in meeting state academic standards. 
Overall, the Student Success Act maintains a focus on special 
populations, while providing states and districts the 
flexibility to address their unique student needs.
    Additionally, H.R. 5 makes minor changes to these targeted 
population programs to improve their performance. The bill 
allows for greater coordination across states and school 
districts regarding the exchange of migratory children's health 
and academic records, improves the manner by which student 
counts for migrant and immigrant students, in addition to 
English learners, are determined, and provides new 
opportunities for Indian tribes and Bureau of Indian Education 
schools to improve student achievement by removing existing 
regulatory barriers and allowing tribes to apply for funds in 
consortia.

Teacher Preparation and Effectiveness

    Title II of the Student Success Act restructures and amends 
Title II of current law and addresses the following major 
issues:
            Supporting Effective Instruction
    H.R. 5 rewrites the existing Teacher and Principal Training 
and Recruiting Fund included in Part A of Title II to support 
state and local efforts to improve teaching, including through 
the development and implementation of teacher evaluation 
systems. The legislation replaces Title II Part A with a new 
Supporting Effective Instruction program. The program allows 
for, but does not require, the development and implementation 
of state or locally driven teacher evaluation systems that 
measure an educator's success in increasing student 
achievement. The bill suggests, but does not require, general 
guidelines around the evaluation components, leaving the 
details of any evaluation system up to local school districts. 
The Committee takes this approach for two reasons. First, 
independent research demonstrates the need for a mix of metrics 
for measuring teacher performance. In an Early Childhood, 
Elementary, and Secondary Education Subcommittee hearing on 
February 28, 2013, titled ``Raising the Bar: How are Schools 
Measuring Teacher Performance?'' chief research officer at the 
Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, Dr. Steve Cantrell, shared his 
research on this issue, stating,

          Preliminary MET findings demonstrated that three 
        measures--student assessments, classroom observations, 
        and student surveys--helped predict whether teachers 
        would raise the performance of future groups of 
        students. Indeed, the combination of these measures 
        does a far better job predicting which teachers will 
        succeed in raising student performance than master's 
        degrees and years of teaching experience . . . Final 
        MET findings literally proved that effective teachers 
        cause their students to learn more.

    There is consensus that many current teacher evaluation 
systems fail to measure teacher effectiveness properly and 
should be retooled to include measurements of student 
achievement. However, school districts need the flexibility to 
determine and define which actual metrics meet the specific 
needs of their teachers and students, especially those 
educators who teach non-tested subjects. The Committee believes 
school districts, and states choosing to implement statewide 
systems, should include student achievement metrics from a 
number of sources in their teacher evaluations. These options 
include end-of-course exams, student coursework, formative 
assessments, and other objective measurements of student 
achievement that cannot be easily manipulated.
    Second, past practice of dictating specific and 
prescriptive requirements at the federal level, such as 
defining what constitutes a highly qualified teacher and 
mandating only educators who meet these standards can teach in 
the classroom, has been a dismal failure. The federal 
government should play an important, although limited, role in 
education policy decisions. Federal policy should include broad 
parameters and goals for success to ensure taxpayer dollars are 
spent effectively and efficiently. But federal law must allow 
local school districts to determine how best to get there and 
must refrain from imposing overly prescriptive requirements 
that restrict innovation and undermine local control.
    Under H.R. 5, Title II, Part A funds may also be used to: 
(1) train school leaders in how to effectively evaluate 
teachers; (2) develop and implement school leader evaluation 
systems; (3) provide evidence-based, job-embedded, and 
continuous professional development for teachers and schools 
leaders focused on subject-based academic courses (including 
civics, geography, literacy, computer science and other STEM 
subjects), specific student populations such as students with 
disabilities or gifted and talented students, or specific 
student needs; (4) provide professional development for 
teachers to teach dual credit or dual enrollment courses; (5) 
provide support to teachers identified by the evaluation system 
as in need of additional assistance; and (6) support any other 
initiatives that will assist teachers and school leaders in 
increasing student achievement. The Committee also notes the 
bill caps the funds that can be used for class size reduction 
at 10 percent. A substantial amount of teacher quality funds 
under current law are used for this purpose, which research 
indicates has little to no effect on student learning. The 
Committee believes encouraging states and school districts to 
use these funds to improve teaching in the classroom will 
ultimately improve student outcomes.
            Teacher and School Leader Flexible Grant
    H.R. 5 consolidates the remaining teacher quality programs, 
including the Teacher Quality Partnership Grant program 
authorized under the Higher Education Act, into a new Teacher 
and School Leader Flexible Grant. Under the new construct, 
states are provided funds to award grants to eligible entities, 
including school districts, for-profit and non-profit 
organizations, institutions of higher education, or a 
consortium of such entities, to pursue evidence-based, 
innovative initiatives focused on teachers and school leaders. 
If an eligible entity other than a local educational agency is 
awarded a grant, the entity must partner with a school district 
to ensure funds are being used to support increased student 
achievement.
    The Committee believes a single consolidated program that 
provides greater flexibility to states, school districts, and 
other eligible entities in the use of federal teacher quality 
funds is preferable to the existing system of small programs 
that cater to certain constituencies and have very limited 
benefit for classroom instruction. For example, a 2011 
Government Accountability Office (GAO) report entitled 
``Opportunities to Reduce Potential Duplication in Federal 
Teacher Quality Programs'' revealed more than 80 distinct 
federal programs designed to help improve teacher quality. Not 
only does this jumble of programs add to the confusion and red 
tape already facing educators, it is also a costly burden for 
taxpayers. According to GAO Comptroller General Gene Dodaro, 
the federal government spent more than $4 billion on these 
programs in FY 2009, yet little is known about whether they are 
or were actually successful.
    The Teacher and School Leader Flexible Grant program 
retains many of the same uses of funds for the consolidated 
programs. For example, states and eligible entities can support 
creative approaches to:
     Increase access to or develop alternative 
certification or licensure routes;
     Recruit, hire, and retain effective teachers and 
school leaders;
     Improve teacher preparation programs within the 
state;
     Implement performance-based pay systems and 
differential incentive pay;
     Create teacher or school leader advancement and 
multiple career paths;
     Establish new teacher or school leader induction 
and residency programs; and
     Provide additional professional development 
activities or other evidence-based initiatives likely to 
increase teacher and school leader effectiveness.
    The legislation provides flexibility to eligible entities 
to fund initiatives that have evidence of working within 
particular schools. It engages the private sector, including 
the for- and non-profit communities, to partner with school 
districts to drive improvements and innovation in the teaching 
profession. The Committee anticipates organizations with a 
track record of success, such as Teach for America and the 
National Writing Project, will partner effectively with states 
and school districts to improve the teaching profession and 
student achievement.
            Teacher Preparation Academies
    H.R. 5 contains an optional 3 percent set-aside within the 
Teacher and School Leader Flexible Grant for states to create 
and fund teacher and school leader preparation academies. These 
funds allow for a state-based approach to create a competitive 
market for teacher and school leader training. This is 
particularly important as work by the National Council on 
Teacher Quality highlights the majority of traditional teacher 
preparation programs do not adequately prepare potential 
educators for the classroom, even as they produce well over 
twice the number of elementary teachers needed. In the 
``Teacher Prep Review 2014 Report,'' fewer than 10 percent of 
teacher-education programs earned a ``top-ranked'' distinction. 
Only 26 elementary programs and 81 secondary programs of the 
more than 1,600 programs ranked earned the highest level. More 
than 50 percent of the programs, 848 in all, were given the 
lowest ranking.
    States taking advantage of this new funding source can use 
funds to reform educator preparation practices and free 
academies from meeting antiquated, input-based requirements. 
States will be required to ensure candidates recruited for the 
academies will be high-achieving, receive clinical training in 
the classroom from an accomplished mentor, and complete the 
academy only after they demonstrate they are an effective 
educator. The program's emphasis on flexibility, combined with 
accountability, will enable these academies to innovate and 
transform the practice of teacher and school leader training.
            Teacher Liability Protections
    H.R. 5 maintains liability protections included in current 
law that protect school employees (including teachers, 
administrators, and school board members) when acting to 
control, discipline, expel, or suspend a student or maintain 
order in the classroom or school through reasonable actions. 
The Committee believes educators must be protected when acting 
to maintain a safe school environment for all students.

Parental Engagement and Local Flexibility

    Title III of H.R. 5 focuses on parental engagement and 
local flexibility. This title includes important changes to the 
Charter School Program, a continuation of the magnet school 
program, and a critical redesign of the parent information 
resource centers under current law. The charter school 
provisions reflect H.R. 10, the Success and Opportunity through 
Quality Charter Schools Act, which passed the House of 
Representatives with overwhelming bipartisan support in the 
113th Congress.
            Charter Schools
    H.R. 5 modernizes and streamlines the charter school 
provisions under ESEA. The bill makes improvements to the 
Charter School Program to emphasize quality, accountability, 
and equity and to better support high-quality charter schools. 
The bill consolidates the current funding streams for charter 
schools under one authorization at $300 million to increase 
efficiencies within the operation of the program and better 
leverage federal funds.
    A public charter school is a publicly-funded elementary or 
secondary school operated according to the terms of a charter 
or contract granted by a public chartering agency. The terms of 
a charter typically provide the charter school operator with 
increased autonomy in how to operate the school in exchange for 
greater accountability for results or student outcomes. 
Charters are usually granted for a limited time period, 
typically ranging from fewer than five years to as many as 15 
years. In order to retain or renew its charter, a school must 
adhere to the accountability requirements written into its 
charter and attract enough students to continue functioning as 
a viable school.
    Charter schools are a state education reform initiative 
that began in Minnesota in 1991. The Improving America's 
Schools Act of 1994 included support for starting charter 
schools. The Credit Enhancement Program, which began in 2001 
through the appropriations process, provides grants to eligible 
entities to help charter schools leverage other funds through 
credit enhancement initiatives to acquire, construct, renovate, 
or lease academic facilities.
    The first charter school opened in 1992. Today, 6,400 
charter schools in 42 states and the District of Columbia serve 
more than 2.5 million students. Forty-two states have enacted 
charter school laws, giving parents and students an education 
alternative to traditional public schools. However, this growth 
is not enough to meet the demand. Over 1,000,000 student names 
are on waitlists to enter charter schools. The demand is 
understandable. Since 2010, 15 of 16 ``gold standard'' research 
studies conducted on public charter school student achievement 
have found public charter school students are outperforming 
their traditional school peers. In 2013, the Center for 
Research on Educational Outcomes released a study that found a 
charter school education had a positive impact for many 
subgroups, including African American students, students in 
poverty, English learners, and students in special education. 
For English learner students who are Hispanic, attending a 
charter school resulted in 50 additional days of learning in 
reading and 43 additional days of learning in math.\7\ Yet, 
charter schools continue to face challenges in serving certain 
populations of students, in particular students with 
disabilities--including those with lower incidence 
disabilities--and English learners.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \7\http://credo.stanford.edu/documents/
NCSS%202013%20Executive%20Summary.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    H.R. 5 improves access for traditionally underserved 
populations, supports the creation, replication and expansion 
of high-quality charter schools, and strengthens accountability 
for developers who receive federal funding to open, replicate, 
or expand charter schools. Consolidating the two charter school 
provisions into one program better focuses support for all 
elements important to creating high-quality charter schools.
    The charter school movement has seen robust growth over the 
past decade. There are now many high-quality charter schools 
eligible to receive federal and state support to expand and 
replicate their successes. The Committee on Appropriations 
supported this effort through a reservation within the Charter 
School Program appropriation, and the Committee on Education 
and the Workforce believes it is important to update the 
authorizing legislation to ensure states support these schools. 
The Student Success Act adds an expansion and replication use 
of funds under each State Quality Charter School Grant to 
support the start-up of new, innovative charter school models, 
as well as the expansion and replication of high-quality 
charter schools. The Committee believes successful replication 
and expansion of high-quality charter schools is dependent on 
state support and community buy-in. This belief is reflected in 
the allowance of state entity subgranting for these purposes 
and a decreased reliance on funds awarded directly to 
developers from the Secretary of Education.
    Charter schools receiving funds under this program must 
admit their students through a lottery system if the demand for 
attendance exceeds the available slots in the schools. It is 
important to assist these schools in reaching all students who 
may benefit from the opening or expansion of charter schools. 
However, the focus must be on increasing the number of quality 
education options, not just increasing the number of charter 
schools available. In order to expand access to quality public 
charter schools, the legislation includes provisions to help 
state grantees reach out to charter school developers and 
school leaders to (1) recruit traditionally underserved 
students, including students with disabilities and English 
learners; (2) promote inclusion and retention; and (3) meet the 
needs of those students. Further, the state grantees must award 
grants to urban, suburban, and rural areas (including Indian 
reservations) to ensure quality charter school options reach as 
many students as possible, including American Indian and Alaska 
Native students.
    H.R. 5 supports charter schools in serving students with 
disabilities, including students with lower incidence 
disabilities, English learners, and other traditionally 
underserved students. The legislation recognizes charter 
schools need support in recruiting, enrolling, and retaining 
these students and includes provisions to help charter schools 
address those challenges. The Committee believes the technical 
assistance required of grantees will help charter schools with 
these goals. The Student Success Act will allow weighted 
lotteries that help ensure educationally disadvantaged students 
have a better chance to attend a charter school. A weighted 
lottery is a mechanism used to create diverse student 
populations. The Act permits the weighting of specific student 
attributes to give a statistical advantage to disadvantaged 
students, or a subset of those students. The lottery should 
remain a fair process to ensure all students have the 
opportunity to attend these sought-after schools. In addition, 
this provision clarifies charter schools in receipt of Charter 
School Program funds may use a weighted lottery for 
educationally disadvantaged students, provided the weighted 
lottery is not prohibited by state law and is not used to 
create a school made exclusively of one student subgroup.
    Ensuring grantees award funds for the creation, 
replication, and expansion of high-quality charter school 
remains paramount. When awarding subgrants, state entities 
should ensure charter school developers open a school that 
meets the intent and requirements of the law, and in 
particular, the definition of a charter school. When 
subgrantees are applying to expand or replicate already 
existing charter school models, the state entity must ensure 
the models meet the definition of a high-quality charter 
school. In particular, the state entity should ensure the 
charter school is exempt from significant state and local 
requirements that inhibit the operation of a school and has a 
high degree of autonomy over budget and all operations.
    When recruiting students, charter schools should ensure 
parents have the information they need to make the best 
decisions possible for their children. This includes 
encouraging parents to examine the academic success of the 
school, the teaching philosophy of the school, and the ability 
of the school to meet the education needs of any student 
admitted to the school. The legislation encourages state 
entities to monitor charter schools to ensure compliance with 
all federal civil rights statutes and there are no barriers to 
enrollment that could prevent the enrollment of students based 
on socioeconomic status, language proficiency, academic 
performance, disability, or parental involvement. The 
legislation supports charter schools that promote an inclusive 
environment. High-quality charter schools, as defined in the 
legislation, raise the achievement of all students, including 
students with disabilities, English learners, and other 
traditionally underserved populations.
    In modernizing the Charter School Program, H.R. 5 includes 
a new provision that reserves 7 percent of each state grant to 
support initiatives to improve charter school authorizing. This 
initiative will help charter school authorizers identify key 
indicators of quality, including how to ensure the school and 
the authorizer clearly articulate the goals and expectations of 
each party. It will also help charter schools meet their 
obligations under existing laws and this Act. The funds will 
also be used to increase the number of high-quality charter 
schools available to students by opening new charter schools 
and by helping charter schools recruit, enroll, and meet the 
needs of students with disabilities, including students with 
low-incidence disabilities, and English learners.
    The bill requires eligible applicants to describe the 
quality controls agreed to in the authorizing contract and the 
terms of contracts with other organizations. In their 
applications, charter schools must describe how their 
authorizers evaluate the success of the schools primarily on 
the academic achievement of all of their students, as well as 
through other performance measures determined by state law, the 
authorizer, and the school, as outlined in a legally binding 
performance contract.
    The legislation requires charter schools to have 
transparent contractual relationships with management 
organizations. As stipulated in the U.S. Department of 
Education non-regulatory guidance for the current Charter 
School Program, charter schools receiving grants under this 
program should avoid conflicts of interest. In promoting 
quality authorizing practices, state grantees should support 
authorizers that make annual, independent financial audits 
publicly available and easily accessible, such as through 
posting on the school or authorizer website. In addition, state 
grantees must describe how they will provide oversight of 
authorizing activity in their application.
    The Committee intends the requirement to describe such a 
system will not inhibit participation or competition by states 
with legal, constitutional, or structural barriers that 
constrain the state's authority over the authorized public 
chartering agency or the type or number of authorized public 
chartering agencies. Further, as the purpose of the Charter 
School Program is to expand the number of high-quality charter 
schools available to students across the nation, it is the 
Committee's intent that oversight of authorizing activity must 
not abolish all public chartering agencies or all authorizing 
activity in any given geographic area, as this would prevent 
the expansion of high-quality charter schools and would be 
contrary to the purpose of this Act. The Committee believes it 
is important authorizers and charter schools have as much 
flexibility in complying with these provisions as possible to 
ensure charter schools meet the expectations of their 
respective authorizers and still operate in an autonomous 
manner to meet the goals of the school.
    The Act allows new eligible entities to compete for funding 
under State Quality Charter School Grants and provides 
increased flexibility in the operation of the state grant 
competition for start-up of charter schools. The bill expands 
the eligible entities for state grants to include state charter 
school boards, governors, and charter school support 
organizations, in addition to the state educational agency 
(SEA) allowed under current law. This expansion of eligible 
grantees will ensure charter schools have an opportunity to 
open and expand with the support of a grantee that believes in 
the benefit of charter schools and offers the greatest 
assistance to those schools that win subgrants. To ensure 
grantees are able to meet the requirements of the program, the 
legislation allows states to partner with an entity that can 
help it operate a quality program that adequately supports the 
thoughtful growth of charter schools in the state. While there 
may be multiple eligible grantees for each state, the Committee 
supports limiting each state to one grant to avoid duplication 
in the state, ensure funds are used to build a cohesive 
statewide network of support, and ensure funds reach as many 
states, and therefore schools, as possible across the nation.
    The newly eligible grantees are also required to 
collaborate with the SEA, where appropriate. While this 
provision does not give the SEA any authority over the grantee 
or program the grantee is running, it will ensure the SEA and 
charter school operators are working together in a cohesive, 
statewide system, rather than creating parallel systems. The 
SEA may help distribute grants to schools, help the entity run 
the grant competition, or provide guidance to support the peer 
review requirement in the law. In addition, should a charter 
school support organization administer the grant, nothing in 
this bill shall be interpreted to grant the charter school 
support organization any authority over authorized public 
chartering agencies.
    H.R. 5 includes a clear listing of assurances, priorities, 
and selection criteria for awarding charter school grants, 
which will improve charter schools, improve access to high-
quality charter schools, and expand the availability of high-
quality charter schools as an integral component of state 
public school systems. For example, grantees will ensure 
charter schools actively participate in decisions about the 
public school system, providing charter schools as public 
schools the same voice in decisions affecting the schools and 
their students as traditional public schools. The Committee 
believes this important change is an opportunity to share best 
practices between all public schools and ensure all schools 
have an equal voice in the public school system. An assurance 
each charter school has a high level of autonomy, particularly 
over budgets and all operations (including personnel) will also 
ensure the schools can be innovative in responding to the needs 
of the community. Additionally, the bill includes a selection 
priority for state entities in states that maximize the 
flexibility of their charter school statute to foster 
innovation and support quality charter schools.
    The legislation incentivizes states to support more high-
quality charter schools that meet the needs of the local 
community. Provisions supporting the elimination of caps on 
students or schools will help get funds to states that can open 
new schools. The bill includes a priority for those states that 
have more than one statewide authorizer, or an appeals process 
if the only local authorizer is the local educational agency. 
The Committee believes this will ensure charter schools are not 
held hostage to the traditional public school system that sees 
charter schools as competition, rather than an enhancement to 
the public school system. The Committee believes these 
provisions will help charter schools better serve students, 
including students with disabilities and English learners.
    The Student Success Act removes language in current law 
that impedes the effective use of subgrants for start-up costs, 
and instead permits funds to be used for appropriate activity 
related to opening and preparing to operate a new charter 
school. The Committee believes this language will ensure 
charter schools can use funds for any non-sustained costs, 
including costs not permitted under current law. For example, 
transportation outlays such as a school bus, initial personnel 
costs, and building renovations and improvements to meet code 
would be permitted under this language. H.R. 5 also requires 
all subgrantees submit planned expenditures for the life of the 
grant and demonstrate the financial sustainability of each 
charter school receiving program funds following the grant 
period.
    The Committee believes responsible reporting requirements 
are an important tool for evaluating the success of grantees in 
fulfilling the purpose of the program. The Act requires 
grantees to report to the Secretary of Education at the end of 
the third year of the five-year grant period. The information 
submitted to the Secretary on the number of students served 
during each year of the grant period should be reported by 
subgrant, but this stipulation is not intended to create any 
increased burdens for the schools participating in the program.
    The legislation consolidates the existing credit 
enhancement program and the state facilities aid program to 
streamline the law. The requirement to reserve 12.5 percent of 
the total appropriated funds ensures there are funds sufficient 
to award more than one grant each year under the credit 
enhancement program. This program helps charter schools access 
credit to obtain or renovate facilities to open the school. The 
legislative changes made to this provision increase the 
administrative reservation to 2.5 percent of each grant to 
ensure the grantee can reach out to, serve, and properly 
monitor charter schools assisted under the grant. The bill also 
increases the flexibility in awarding grants under the credit 
enhancement program to ensure the best grantees are receiving 
federal funds.
    The Student Success Act updates the national activities 
provisions to allow the Secretary of Education to run a 
competition for charter schools wanting to open in states that 
did not win or compete for a state grant. Additionally, the 
legislation authorizes the Secretary to run a competition for 
Charter Management Organizations (CMOs), targeted to those 
having a proven record of success increasing academic 
achievement for students, operating and managing a network of 
schools, and partnering with states and districts to turn 
around chronically low-performing schools, and not simply to 
open new schools. These competitions will ensure students are 
not left behind in states that have not demonstrated the 
leadership to support charter schools. Successful CMOs can 
thoughtfully replicate and expand high-quality charter school 
models, approved by individual states in accordance with state 
laws.
    It is the Committee's expectation the Secretary will assess 
the quality of applicants in the same manner as in the state 
competition and will consider their demonstrated track record 
of opening high quality schools serving a high percentage of 
economically disadvantaged students, and the application 
requirements will reflect this purpose of the program. The 
Secretary will also be required to offer technical assistance 
to maximize the impact of the funds. The Secretary will 
disseminate best practices to help all public schools benefit 
from the success of charter schools. Finally, the Secretary 
will be required to conduct an evaluation measuring the 
effectiveness of the program on charter schools, including 
student achievement. A rigorous evaluation is critical to 
determining whether the program has been successful in meeting 
its purpose of supporting high-quality charter schools.
            Family Engagement Centers
    The Student Success Act authorizes Statewide Family 
Engagement Centers as a replacement for the existing Parental 
Information Resource Centers. This revised program is intended 
to help strengthen family engagement through assistance to 
states, school districts, teachers, and families. The changes 
to the program will strengthen outcomes and continue critical 
direct services to families to help them support their 
children's education, while sharing best practices with 
schools. This will ensure states and school districts are 
equipped with the proper tools to partner with parents to 
increase student learning. The Committee believes sharing 
proven models amongst practitioners and providing effective 
direct services will support parents in helping their children 
find success in the classroom.
            Local Academic Flexible Grant
    In hearings, roundtables, and meetings around the country, 
Committee members have heard from countless state and local 
school officials asking Congress to remove barriers to spending 
and let local officials spend federal funds on problems they 
know exist, rather than spending money on Washington priorities 
that do not benefit their schools or districts. At a March 1, 
2011, hearing entitled ``Education Regulations: Weighing the 
Burden on Schools and Students,'' Edgar Hatrick, Loudon County 
(VA) Public Schools Superintendent, stated navigating the 
burdensome rules and reporting requirements of the more than 80 
federal programs often results in ``resources being diverted 
from the mission of teaching and learning.'' In a letter sent 
in support of a program elimination bill (H.R. 1891, the 
Setting New Priorities in Education Spending Act, the Committee 
passed in the 112th Congress, Michael Casserly, Executive 
Director of the Council of Great City Schools, wrote, ``[A]n 
array of small grant programs contributes little to the 
academic attainment necessary for national competitiveness nor 
helps overcome the achievement gaps that serve as a persistent 
barrier to educational and economic opportunity.''
    H.R. 5 consolidates most federal elementary and secondary 
education programs--many of which have conflicting eligibility 
and other requirements--into a new Local Academic Flexible 
Grant that will provide unprecedented flexibility to states and 
school districts in using federal funds. Instead of determining 
the priorities for states and school districts, the legislation 
allows school officials to decide what funding is needed to 
support programs and projects they believe will increase 
student academic achievement, including those programs focused 
on 21st century skills.
    The Committee strongly believes the new Local Academic 
Flexible Grant will provide states and school districts with 
true flexibility to support innovative approaches to reforming 
public education. Rather than funding programs like Race to the 
Top, which awards funds to the few states willing to adopt 
numerous federal requirements, or Investing in Innovation (i3), 
which artificially limits participation to only non-profit 
entities, this new grant will provide a certain funding stream 
to states and school districts in need of additional assistance 
to support initiatives that will help improve student learning.
    Under the new program, states will receive funding through 
a formula and offer competitive grants to school districts, in 
partnership with nongovernmental entities, to support programs 
or projects that provide supplemental student support 
activities (e.g., tutoring or after-school programs) or 
student-focused activities (e.g., extended learning time 
programs, parent engagement, or specific academic subject 
initiatives). The funds can also be used to improve student 
safety, which is an important part of improving academic 
achievement. The Committee also expects many school districts 
will use funds to support various STEM initiatives, including 
expanding the availability of computer science. The Committee 
recognizes the importance of STEM education, including computer 
science education, to the future competitiveness of the 
American workforce. Unlike most federal programs concerned 
solely with compliance with federal requirements, the Local 
Academic Flexible Grant is focused solely on student outcomes. 
The only requirements for the use of funds are that the program 
or project will increase student academic achievement and is 
allowed under state law.
            Private Sector Engagement
    H.R. 5 requires states to reserve 10 percent of their Local 
Academic Flexible Grant to award grants to nongovernmental 
entities, including businesses and community-based 
organizations, to support important and innovative programs 
outside of the public school system that will benefit students 
in public schools. These grants could be awarded to museums 
that offer interesting science programs or companies that 
provide students with real-world applications of classroom 
material. Under the program, nongovernmental entities will be 
required to provide a 50 percent match and the project must 
help increase academic achievement. The intent of this program 
is to acknowledge the public school system does not have a 
monopoly on student learning and outside entities can bring 
great value to students' academic success.
            Statewide Activities
    H.R. 5 authorizes states to reserve 15 percent of funds 
from the Local Academic Flexible Grant, before grants are 
awarded to school districts or nongovernmental entities, for 
statewide activities. Through these funds, states can support 
the development and implementation of academic assessments 
required under Title I. The remaining funds set aside at the 
state level can be used to administer the program, support 
statewide activities to increase academic achievement, and 
share among school districts best practices of programs and 
projects that have proven successful for students.
            Afterschool Programs
    Afterschool programs are important to keep young people 
safe, engage children in enriching activities, and help parents 
during the hours when they are at work. According to the 
results of the 2014 America After 3PM national research survey 
of over 30,000 households which asked families how their 
children spend their hours after school, more than 800,000 
elementary school students and 2.2 million middle school 
students spend time alone and unsupervised during the after 
school hours. In all, 11.3 million school age children--one in 
five--are unsupervised in the afternoons. Participation in 
afterschool programs spans income levels, ethnicity and gender, 
but unmet demand for afterschool is much higher among children 
from low-income households compared to higher-income 
households, and higher among African American and Hispanic 
children than white children. Afterschool programs not only 
keep young people safe, they also help improve students' 
academic performance, school attendance and behavior and 
health. Given the evidence base for afterschool and summer 
learning programs, the Committee recognizes that afterschool 
and summer learning programs are valuable to help ensure the 
success of young people in both academics and life.
            Impact Aid
    Title IV of H.R. 5 reauthorizes and strengthens the 
existing Impact Aid program, which provides direct funding to 
school districts impacted by the presence of the federal 
government. The program reimburses districts located near, or 
serving students from, military bases, federal lands, and 
Indian reservations for the loss of property taxes. The 
Committee believes the federal government has a fundamental 
responsibility to compensate school districts impacted by the 
presence of the federal government to ensure they have adequate 
resources to provide their students with a quality education. 
Many of the bill's provisions were included in the FY 2013 
National Defense Authorization Act and expire in early 2018. 
The legislation makes such provisions permanent.
    The legislation updates the formula by which school 
district allotments are determined for a district with federal 
property located within its boundaries that cannot be taxed. 
The new formula includes two parts. First, an eligible school 
district will receive a foundation, or base payment, based on 
either 90 percent of the payment most recently received (FY 
2009) or 90 percent of the average payment received from FY 
2006-2009, whichever is higher. Second, the district will get 
an additional payment using a calculated per acre value. The 
Committee notes the Student Success Act reauthorizes Payments 
for Federal Property and rejects the Obama administration's 
budget request to eliminate this important program which 
provides critical resources to school districts that lack 
revenue due to federal ownership of land.
    H.R. 5 streamlines provisions for heavily impacted school 
districts, which are districts with high percentages of 
military, Native American, or other federally-connected 
children. The legislation standardizes eligibility criteria for 
these districts at 45 percent enrollment of federally connected 
children, bases per pupil expenditure eligibility requirements 
on state average expenditures rather than national average 
expenditures, and maintains the tax rate requirement for 
eligible districts of at least 95 percent of the average tax 
rate for general fund purposes of comparable districts in the 
state. The bill also allows federally-connected children to be 
counted in enrollment numbers in the case of open enrollment 
policies in a state but does not allow children to be counted 
if they are enrolled in a distance education program located 
outside the boundaries of the district.
    H.R. 5 also provides equal prorated payments greater than 
100 percent of the ``learning opportunity threshold'' for 
eligible districts. The language allows school districts to 
continue to count children who have been relocated off-base due 
to renovation, rebuilding, or demolition after three years if 
the district continues to serve such children because of 
project delays, and the language simplifies the annual process 
for counting these children.
    Finally, the bill requires the Secretary to provide Impact 
Aid payments within three years. The Committee has included the 
timely payment language to address long-standing school 
district concerns regarding the lack of on-time payments from 
the U.S. Department of Education. The Committee expects the 
proposed changes to payments for federal property to 
significantly reduce the delays school districts are currently 
experiencing and urges the department to set a goal of 
providing timely payments more quickly than called for under 
this legislation.
            General Provisions
    H.R. 5 amends Title IX of current law and moves those 
provisions to Title VI of the Act. The bill addresses the 
following significant issues:
            Definitions
    Graduation Rate: In 2005, all 50 of the nation's governors 
agreed to a common definition for calculating high school 
graduation rates. The rate is determined by the number of 
entering ninth graders divided by the number of graduating 
twelfth graders four years later. States are also allowed to 
report on an extended year rate, encompassing those students 
that need an additional one or two years to graduate high 
school. In 2010, Mr. John Thomasian, Director of the National 
Governors Association Center for Best Practices, stated, 
``Governors agreed to use a more consistent and accurate 
graduation rate formula because they understand that better 
information on student outcomes is critical for ensuring that 
all students graduate from high school prepared for college, 
work, and life.'' States have been using this common definition 
since the 2010-2011 school year.
    H.R. 5 codifies this approach by defining the terms ``four-
year adjusted cohort graduation rate'' and ``extended-year 
adjusted cohort graduation rate.'' States will be required to 
report the four year rate and will be allowed to report the 
extended year rate to the public. The Committee believes the 
new definition will allow students, school leaders, parents, 
and lawmakers to have accurate and reliable information about 
high school and student performance.
    Technology: H.R. 5 redefines the term ``technology'' to 
include the use of the Internet, computer devices, software 
applications, and data systems, among other modern information 
tools, in order to reflect technology's role in a 21st century 
economy. Throughout the Student Success Act, states and school 
districts are given flexibility to use technology in delivering 
academic assessments, professional development, distance 
education, and curriculum. The infusion of technology provides 
timely results to educators and parents, coursework that is 
dynamic and engaging, and personalized instruction to meet 
individual students' needs. The definition should reflect its 
modern uses.
            Waiver Authority
    H.R. 5 clarifies and limits the Secretary of Education's 
authority to issue waivers of the statutory and regulatory 
requirements of the ESEA. Unlike current law, the Student 
Success Act is clear the Secretary may not add, impose, or 
require any condition outside of complying with the law in 
exchange for granting a waiver.
    In a September 23, 2011, letter to chief state school 
officers, the Secretary announced the department would grant 
waivers from certain requirements of NCLB. He stated, ``This 
voluntary opportunity will provide educators and state and 
local leaders with flexibility regarding specific requirements 
of NCLB in exchange for rigorous and comprehensive state-
developed plans designed to improve educational outcomes for 
all students, close achievement gaps, increase equity, and 
improve the quality of instruction'' (emphasis added).
    Since February 2012, the Secretary has granted 45 states 
and the District of Columbia conditional waivers in exchange 
for adopting the department's preferred mandates, including in 
most cases the adoption of the Common Core State Standards. The 
state of Washington has seen its waiver revoked. The legality 
of this approach to conditional waivers has been questioned by 
outside legal experts, including former Department of Education 
General Counsel Kent Talbert and former Deputy General Counsel 
Robert Eitel, in a February 2012 report from the Pioneer 
Institute entitled ``The Road to A National Curriculum: The 
Legal Aspects of the Common Core Standards, Race to the Top, 
and Conditional Waivers.'' Additionally, in a February 2012 
report entitled ``Educational Accountability and Secretarial 
Waiver Authority Under the ESEA,'' the nonpartisan 
Congressional Research Service cited the broad nature of the 
conditions the Secretary imposed on states and school districts 
as a reason the proposed waivers may not survive a court 
challenge.
    The Committee believes the Secretary should have the 
authority to provide waivers of certain statutory and 
regulatory requirements to states and school districts affected 
by unexpected and unforeseen circumstances or to implement 
important reforms to improve student achievement. In continuing 
this waiver authority, it is not the intent of the Committee to 
prohibit the Secretary from waiving provisions of law when 
necessary. The Student Success Act maintains important 
provisions authorizing the Secretary to provide flexibility to 
states and districts, but it properly prohibits the Secretary 
from using the waiver authority to place new mandates or 
requirements on states and school districts in exchange for 
that flexibility, including an explicit prohibition against the 
Secretary encouraging adoption of the Common Core State 
Standards.
            Prohibitions on Federal Control
    H.R. 5 consolidates various prohibitions included in 
current law to restrict the authority of the U.S. Department of 
Education, and it strengthens and clarifies the prohibitions to 
ensure the limits of the Secretary of Education and federal 
government are clear. The bill specifically prohibits the 
Secretary from establishing a national curriculum, supporting a 
national test for students, or requiring particular academic 
standards, whether directly or indirectly through grants or 
other means.
    The Committee believes it is clear the role of the federal 
government is and should be limited in nature. Prohibitions 
included in the General Education Provisions Act, the 
Department of Education Organization Act, and ESEA restrict the 
Secretary and other federal employees from mandating, 
directing, or controlling a state, school district, or school's 
curriculum or instructional programs. ESEA also includes 
prohibitions on federal approval or certification of academic 
standards and on developing and testing, implementing, 
administering, or distributing national tests in any subject. 
Despite these provisions, the Secretary has taken unprecedented 
steps to coerce states into adopting the Common Core State 
Standards in exchange for a state waiver from unruly 
accountability requirements or in order to apply for 
competitive funding through Race to the Top.
    As stated previously, to rein in the Secretary and restore 
state and local control, H.R. 5 explicitly prohibits the 
Secretary from requiring adoption of particular standards, 
``including the Common Core State Standards as developed by the 
Common Core State Standards Initiative.'' Such prohibitions 
extend to the Secretary's involvement in what partnerships a 
state forms and what assessments a state chooses to use. 
Unfortunately, this administration has created holes in the 
federal law that do not exist. Accordingly, explicitly 
clarifying these prohibitions is critical to ensuring the 
Secretary and U.S. Department of Education bureaucrats cannot 
willfully misinterpret the intent of the bill. The Secretary 
shall not involve himself in state and local decisions.
            Protections for State and Local Autonomy
    H.R. 5 redesignates other important sections of current law 
to fit within the new configuration of Title VI. The 
redesignated sections include: By-Pass Determination Process; 
Prohibition Against Funds for Religious Worship or Instruction; 
Private, Religious, and Home Schools; Prohibition Regarding 
State Aid; Privacy of Assessment Results; School Prayer; Equal 
Access to Public School Facilities; Prohibition on Nationwide 
Database; Prohibition on Discrimination; and Civil Rights. The 
Committee strongly supports these protections and requirements, 
believes they should remain a strong part of the law, and urges 
the U.S. Department of Education to fully implement and enforce 
such provisions.
            Curtailing Excessive Regulations
    The proliferation of federal regulations with which states 
and school districts must comply has grown over the last three 
decades, placing an overwhelming burden on schools that takes 
away their focus on educating our nation's students. The 
Committee has held numerous hearings to examine the issue in 
greater detail. One witness, Dr. Robert P. Grimesey, Jr., the 
Superintendent of Orange County Public Schools in Virginia, 
explained the problem in testimony at a March 15, 2011, hearing 
on ``Education Regulations: Burying Schools in Paperwork,'' 
stating:

          The vast majority of rural school superintendents and 
        school board members understand and respect the need 
        for reasonable accountability and transparency as we 
        receive and invest federal dollars. However we believe 
        that there is much that is not reasonable about the 
        ever-expanding nature of many federal obligations. We 
        also see a need for streamlined collaboration between 
        [the U.S. Department of Education] and the [state 
        educational agencies] in the articulation of data 
        reporting requirements. Ultimately, many well-intended 
        federal regulations are creating a `culture of 
        compliance' that leads to a local fear of failure. Such 
        a context makes federal compliance an end in itself. 
        For localities at the end of this regulatory food 
        chain, it becomes very difficult to maintain our focus 
        on the achievement and welfare of our children.

    H.R. 5 begins to address this over-regulation of the 
education system. The bill rewrites the regulatory process the 
Secretary of Education must follow in issuing new regulations, 
including providing for longer review periods for public 
comment, implementing a new review period for Congress, 
requiring the Secretary calculate the proposed regulatory 
burden prior to the regulation being made final, and requiring 
old and duplicative regulations be repealed. This new process 
will help reduce excessive federal regulation on states, school 
districts, principals, and teachers; prevent the Secretary from 
compounding the burden of federal regulations already on the 
books; and ensure stakeholders have ample time to raise 
concerns with proposed regulations and to request they be 
addressed accordingly before the regulations are finalized.
            Military Recruiters
    School districts receiving funds under the ESEA are 
required to provide military recruiters the same access to high 
schools as well as basic student contact information that is 
provided to colleges, universities, and other recruiters. These 
provisions are in place so the nation's military recruiters are 
able to work with students to make sure they are aware of the 
benefits of joining the military upon graduation and are able 
to weigh that career option.
    Unfortunately, some school districts have tried to limit 
access to military recruiters and/or establish additional 
barriers that do not exist for colleges and universities or 
other prospective employers. The Student Success Act includes 
new language in this long-standing section clarifying that 
parents (or students once they have turned 18) can opt-out of 
having student information shared with military recruiters, but 
the school district cannot implement an opt-in provision. The 
Committee strongly urges all school districts in the country to 
institute policies that will provide prospective graduates with 
all of their postsecondary options, including the ability to 
enroll in the Armed Forces. States and school districts should 
understand it is against federal law to place military 
recruiting at a disadvantage to other prospective post-high 
school opportunities.
            Reducing Federal Bureaucracy
    H.R. 5 requires the Secretary of Education to eliminate 
those staff positions associated with programs eliminated or 
consolidated under the bill. Under the provision, the Secretary 
will have two months to identify the number of full time 
equivalent employees who work on or administer the eliminated 
programs, and the Secretary will have one year to reduce the 
department's workforce by that number.
            Spending Reduction Reports
    H.R. 5 requires the Secretary of Education, through the 
Institute of Education Sciences, to contract with an economist 
with expertise in workforce and government efficiency issues to 
produce an annual report examining the reduced need for federal 
spending commensurate with the reduced mandates in the Student 
Success Act. The report would include recommendations for those 
spending reductions and would be submitted to the House and 
Senate Budget and Appropriations Committees, the House 
Education and the Workforce Committee, and the Senate Health, 
Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee.

Providing Services for Homeless Students

    H.R. 5 reauthorizes the Education for Homeless Children and 
Youths program of the McKinney-Vento Homeless Assistance Act, 
the primary federal law that provides funding to states and 
school districts to educate homeless children and youth. The 
bill places a greater emphasis on improved identification of 
homeless children and youth and provides better collaboration 
and information sharing among federal and state agencies to 
provide services for homeless students. The legislation 
strengthens provisions in current law to provide greater school 
stability and protections for homeless youth and parents, 
ensuring designated homeless liaisons in the school district 
inform parents of all rights available to them under the law 
and have the opportunity to receive professional development 
around the specific needs of homeless youth.

Conclusion

    Every child in every school deserves an excellent 
education. Unfortunately, our nation continues to fall far 
short of reaching that goal. The Committee is pursuing a new 
approach to education by reforming the federal role in 
elementary and secondary education. The federal government is 
too involved in our nation's classrooms, and states and school 
districts should bear the primary responsibility for public 
education. The Committee aims to rein in the U.S Department of 
Education, which has shown in the last six years an 
unprecedented appetite for expanding the federal government's 
reach. The Student Success Act rolls back federal bureaucratic 
requirements and regulations, and the bill eliminates and 
consolidates ineffective and duplicative federal education 
programs to help get the federal deficit and debt under 
control. The Committee's efforts will empower parents and 
education leaders to address unacceptable achievement gaps, 
provide additional educational options to parents and students, 
and successfully prepare students for a lifetime of opportunity 
and success.

                           Section-by-Section


Section 1--Short Title

    States the short title as the Student Success Act.

Section 2--Table of Contents

    Lists the table of contents for the Act.

Section 3--References

    States all references, unless otherwise noted, are to the 
Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965.

Section 4--Transitions

    States that any person or agency that previously received a 
grant under the ESEA prior to enactment of this Act will 
continue to receive that funding in accordance with the terms 
of that award for a period of up to one year from the enactment 
of the Act, unless otherwise stated.

Section 5--Effective Dates

    Specifies the effective dates of the amendments and 
programs.

Section 6--Authorization of Appropriations

    Authorizes appropriations to carry out the Act.

Section 7--Sense of the Congress

    Expresses the sense of Congress that state and local 
agencies should maintain the rights and responsibilities of 
determining for themselves curriculum, programs of instruction, 
and assessments for elementary and secondary education.

               Title I--Aid to Local Educational Agencies


                         SUBTITLE A--IN GENERAL

Section 101--Title Heading

    Amends the title heading for Title I to read ``Title I--Aid 
to Local Educational Agencies.''

Section 102--Statement of Purpose

    Updates the purpose of Title I to be to ``provide all 
children the opportunity to graduate high school prepared for 
postsecondary education or the workforce'' and explains that 
the purpose can be accomplished by four explicit goals.

Section 103--Flexibility to Use Federal Funds

    Specifies the requirements and limitations for alternative 
uses of certain federal funds by state and local educational 
agencies under Title I. Specifies requirements of which state 
educational agencies and local educational agencies may not be 
relieved.

Section 104--School Improvement

    Explains the general requirements for improvement of poorly 
performing Title I schools and increases the amount each state 
shall reserve from 4 percent to 7 percent each fiscal year. 
Specifies that no less 95 percent of funds shall be allocated 
directly to local educational agencies to carry out a state's 
system of school improvement (removing schools identified as 
needing corrective action and restructuring, or other 
activities, and clarifying that the state shall develop the 
school improvement system). Adds the ability for non-profit or 
for-profit external providers to directly provide school 
improvement activities to improve student achievement. Changes 
the priority for allocating funds to those schools which 
demonstrate commitments to improve schools, rather than 
demonstrating highest need. Removes the requirement for states 
to report the percentage of low-income students at schools 
receiving funds under this chapter. Removes the ``Assistance 
for Local School Improvement'' program.

Section 105--Direct Student Services

    This new section requires states to set aside 3 percent of 
their Title I money each fiscal year to award competitive 
grants to school districts supporting direct student services 
and explains the application process. Awards should be made by 
states to geographically diverse local educational agencies, 
and if a lack of funds exists, priorities should be given to 
districts with large numbers of neglected, delinquent, migrant, 
at-risk, Native American, and English learner students. The 
awards shall be used to pay for transportation required for 
public school choice or for the hourly rate for a high quality 
academic tutoring service, administrative costs, and parental 
outreach.

Section 106--State Administration

    Amends Section 1004 to specify states may reserve either 1 
percent or $400,000, whichever is greater, to carry out 
administrative duties and caps the amount states may reserve.

  SUBTITLE B--IMPROVING THE ACADEMIC ACHIEVEMENT OF THE DISADVANTAGED

Section 111--Part A Headings

    Amends the following headings: for Part A of Title I, 
``Part A--Improving the Academic Achievement of the 
Disadvantaged;'' for Subpart 1 of Part A of Title I, ``Subpart 
1--Improving Basic Programs Operated by Local Educational 
Agencies `Chapter A--Basic Program Requirements;''' and for 
Subpart 2 of Part A of Title I as ``Chapter B--Allocations.''

Section 112--State Plans

    Plans Required. Amends Section 1111 to specify the general 
requirements for plans submitted by states wishing to receive a 
grant under this subpart. Adds public charter school 
representatives, private sector employers, entrepreneurs, and 
others to the list of entities a state agency should consult 
with while developing the plan.
    Academic Standards, Academic Assessments, and State 
Accountability. States shall demonstrate they have adopted 
academic content and achievement standards in math, reading or 
language arts, and science, in addition to any other subjects 
determined by the state. These shall apply to all public 
schools and students within the state, but alternate academic 
achievement standards and assessments may be developed for 
students with significant cognitive disabilities. Specific 
requirements of assessments are included. Statewide reading and 
math assessments should be administered in each of grades three 
through eight and again once in high school; science 
assessments should be administered at least once between grades 
three through five, grades six through nine, and grades 10 
through 12.
    Other Provisions. States must assure they will notify 
relevant entities and individuals of the standards, 
assessments, and accountability system developed within the 
section. States must participate in biennial NAEP assessments 
of fourth and eighth grade reading and math.
    The Secretary of Education shall establish a peer-review 
process to assist the review of state plans and shall then 
approve the plan within 120 days of submission. Each plan shall 
remain in effect for the duration of their participation and be 
periodically reviewed and revised as necessary by the state to 
reflect changes. The Secretary can reserve funds for state 
administration if the state fails to meet requirements.
    Reports. Annually, state and local education agencies must 
prepare and disseminate an annual state report card, including 
publishing the report card on the state educational agency's 
website. The report shall include performance of students, 
participation on assessments, four-year graduation rates, 
public school evaluation results, acquisition of English 
proficiency, and results of assessments. Special rules apply to 
Bureau of Indian Education-funded schools.

Section 113--Local Educational Agency Plans

    Amends Section 1112 to specify the general requirements for 
plans submitted by local educational agencies wishing to 
receive sub-grants under this subpart, similar to the previous 
section. Local agencies shall coordinate with state agencies 
and other government aid programs.

Section 114--Eligible School Attendance Areas

    Explains requirements for making schools eligible to 
receive funds. Amends Section 1113 by replacing references to 
schools identified as needing ``corrective action'' and 
``restructuring'' with references to a state's school 
improvement system.

Section 115--Schoolwide Programs

    Outlines the use of funds, components, and pre-K components 
of school-wide programs operated through funds allocated in 
this subpart. Amends Section 1114 to specify the ability for 
non-profit or for-profit external providers to directly provide 
school improvement activities to improve student achievement. 
Removes the requirement that schoolwide programs must be taught 
by ``highly qualified teachers,'' instead they shall be taught 
by ``effective'' teachers. Removes the list of specific 
preschool and early childhood programs for which transitional 
assistance to the kindergarten classroom was allowed, thus 
allowing for transition from any early childhood and preschool 
program into kindergarten.

Section 116--Targeted Assistance Schools

    Funds may be provided under this section to provide 
services to eligible children at schools that choose not to 
operate a schoolwide program under Section 1115. Amends Section 
1115 by removing the Even Start and Early Reading First 
programs as eligible to receive funds. Further amends program 
components to remove the requirement that instruction must be 
taught by ``highly qualified teachers.'' Adds a section 
allowing non-profit or for-profit external providers to 
directly provide assistance to improve student achievement

Section 117--Academic Assessment and Local Educational Agency and 
        School Improvement; School Support and Recognition

    Repeals Sections 1116 and 1117 regarding local educational 
agency and school improvement as well as school support and 
recognition.

Section 118--Parental Involvement

    Requires families and organizations be made aware of the 
existence of this section's programs by the local educational 
agency or school. Amends the general requirements for the use 
of funds regarding parental involvement programs, ensuring this 
section aligns with requirements for academic achievement and 
assessments, specialized instructional support, and other 
language throughout this Act.

Section 119--Qualifications for Teachers and Paraprofessionals

    Repeals Section 1119, thereby removing the requirement that 
teachers be highly qualified.

Section 120--Participation of Children Enrolled in Private Schools

    Provides for the equitable participation of private school 
students, teachers, and families in the programs funded under 
this Act, while improving the consultation and negotiation 
processes to provide clearer procedures and faster notice for 
private school officials.

Section 121--Fiscal Requirements

    Outlines the fiscal requirements of this subpart and 
removes the maintenance of effort provision.

Section 122--Coordination Requirements

    Specifies the general requirements for coordination with 
entities carrying out early childhood development programs.

Section 12 Grants for the Outlying Areas and the Secretary of the 
        Interior

    Clarifies the general requirements for grants for the 
outlying areas and the Secretary of the Interior. Removes the 
previous requirement to consider recommendations from the 
Pacific Region Educational Laboratory in Honolulu, Hawaii, and 
the subsequent funding provided for those costs.

Section 12 Allocations to States

    Explains the general requirements for allocating to states 
the funds reserved under this Act and the formula for 
allocating such funds.

Section 12 Basic Grants to Local Educational Agencies

    Makes minor technical changes to Section 1124, which 
specify the general requirements for awarding basic grants to 
local educational agencies.

Section 12--Targeted Grants to Local Educational Agencies

    Amends the quintiles used as part of the Targeted Grants 
formula.

Section 127--Adequacy of Funding to Local Educational Agencies in 
        Fiscal Years after FY 2001

    Specifies the distribution of funds to local educational 
agencies consistent with section 1122. Amends the findings to 
encourage Congress to update the formulas for Targeted and 
Education Finance Incentive Grants when updated data become 
available.

Section 128--Education Finance Incentive Grant Program

    Clarifies the general requirements of the Education Finance 
Incentive Grant Program and removes the maintenance of effort, 
authorization of appropriations, and the authorization of 
grants provisions. Amends the quintiles used as part of the 
Education Finance Incentive Grants formula.

Section 129--Carryover and Waiver

    Includes general requirements regarding the carryover of 
funds to additional years and the waiver of those requirements.

Section 130--Portability

    Introduces a new section entitled ``Title I Funds Follow 
the Low-Income Child State Option,'' which gives the ability 
for a state education agency to allocate grants to local 
agencies based upon the number of low-income children in each 
local agency.

       SUBTITLE C--ADDITIONAL AID TO STATES AND SCHOOL DISTRICTS

Section 131--Additional Aid

    Amends current law to explain the general requirements for 
additional aid to schools and school districts. Maintains 
separate funding streams for the Migratory Education, Neglected 
and Delinquent, English Language Acquisition, Rural Education, 
and Indian Education programs but merges them into Title I.

                    SUBTITLE D--NATIONAL ASSESSMENT

Section 141--National Assessment of Title I

    Redesignates Part E of Title I as Part B of Title I. 
Repeals sections 1502 and 1504 to remove the grant program for 
demonstrations of innovation practices and the Close Up 
Fellowship program. Redesignates Sections 1501 and 1503 as 
Sections 1301 and 1302, respectively, and amends them to 
specify the general requirements for the national assessment of 
Title I.

                 SUBTITLE E--TITLE I GENERAL PROVISIONS

Section 151--General Provisions for Title I

    Redesignates Part I of Title I as Part C of Title I, and 
amends it to specify the Secretary of Education may issue 
reasonable regulations, subject to negotiated or proposed 
rulemaking processes and published in the Federal Register. The 
Secretary may not require local programs to follow particular 
instruction models. Lastly, this section prohibits the mandate 
of equalized spending per pupil.

            Title II--Teacher Preparation and Effectiveness


Section 201--Teacher Preparation and Effectiveness

    Changes the heading for Title II to read ``Title II--
Teacher Preparation and Effectiveness.''
            Part A--Supporting Effective Instruction
    Updates the purposes for this section to include increasing 
student achievement as aligned with state academic standards; 
improving teacher and leadership effectiveness; providing 
evidence-based, job-embedded, continuous professional 
development; and, if the state chooses, developing and 
implementing teacher evaluation systems. Specifies general 
requirements for providing grants to state educational agencies 
and subgrants to local educational agencies, including 
allotment determinations, so they may support effective 
instruction under this section. Explains if a state does not 
apply for these funds, money may be given to remaining states. 
Outlines the local uses of funds, such as developing and 
implementing teacher evaluation systems, implementing teacher 
evaluation systems, training on such systems, and professional 
development that is evidence-based, job-embedded, and 
continuous. Allows funds to be used for partnerships that can 
assist states in developing and implementing teacher evaluation 
systems or administering professional development. Also allows 
for up to 10 percent of funds to be used for class size 
reduction. Requires annual reports with regards to how funds 
are used under this section.
            Part B--Teacher and School Leader Flexible Grant
    Defines the purposes of this section to be improving 
student academic achievement by supporting and pursuing 
innovative and evidence-based practices and increasing the 
number of teachers and leaders who are effective in doing so. 
Specifies general requirements of state grants by the 
Secretary, including allotment determinations and re-allotment 
allowances. Outlines the local competitive grant program for 
which awards may be awarded for up to five years. Explains the 
application process, authorized activities, reporting 
requirements, and federal matching requirement of no less than 
10 percent. Repeals Subparts I to IV of Part C and specifies 
general requirements for teacher liability protection.
            Part D--General Provisions
    Includes charter schools in the definition of ``local 
educational agency'' and supports parents' right to know the 
qualifications of their student's teachers if they should 
request it. Explains funds may supplement but not supplant non-
federal funds.

Section 202--Conforming Repeals

    Repeals Sections 201 to 204 of Title II of the Higher 
Education Act of 1965 to address the changes made under this 
legislation and specifies the effective date of the repeals.

          Title III--Parental Engagement and Local Flexibility


Section 301--Parental Engagement and Local Flexibility

            Part A--Parental Engagement
    Subpart 1--Charter School Program: Specifies the Charter 
School Program shall be amended to improve educational 
opportunities by supporting innovation in public school 
settings that prepare students; to provide financial 
assistance; to expand the number of high-quality charter 
schools; to evaluate the impact of such schools; to encourage 
states to support charter schools; to increase services and 
opportunities for students with disabilities and other 
traditionally underserved students; to include a provision to 
support High Quality Charter Management Organizations; and to 
strengthen the charter authorizing process. Provides funding 
allotments and grants to support charter schools, along with 
objectives and requirements of schools receiving such funds.
    Subpart 2--Magnet School Assistance: Explains the general 
requirements for magnet school assistance with the purpose of 
assisting in the desegregation of schools, with a priority 
being given to those schools (1) demonstrating the greatest 
need, (2) proposing new programs, (3) selecting students by 
means other than academic selection (such as by lottery), and 
(4) proposing to serve the entire student population.
    Subpart 3--Family Engagement in Academic Programs: Outlines 
the purposes of the subpart in line with the Act and authorizes 
Statewide Family Engagement Center grants to carry out parent 
education and family engagement programs.
            Part B--Local Academic Flexible Grant
    States can apply to the Secretary of Education for funding 
to improve academic achievement and student engagement, protect 
student safety, and allow for non-government entities to work 
with students to do so. States provide these funds on a 
competitive basis to local entities, and the uses of such funds 
are outlined, as are the duration of awards and allowable 
activities.

                          Title IV--Impact Aid


Section 401--Purpose

    Reflects updates from elsewhere in the law, specifically by 
conforming to the use of ``state academic standards'' instead 
of ``challenging state standards.''

Section 402--Payments Relating to Federal Acquisition of Real Property

    Updates language surrounding the original assessed value of 
real property and explains requirements for property whose 
records have been destroyed prior to fiscal year 2000.

Section 403--Payments for Eligible Federally Connected Children

    Amends the computation of payments for Eligible Federally 
Connected Children, basic support payments for heavily impacted 
local educational agencies, appropriations regarding children 
with disabilities and general requirements with regards to 
prior year data, the hold harmless provision, and repeals the 
maintenance of effort provision.

Section 404--Policies and Procedures Relating to Children Residing on 
        Indian Lands

    Changes wording from ``Bureau of Indian Affairs'' to 
``Bureau of Indian Education.''

Section 405--Applications for Payments Under Sections 8002 and 8003

    Outlines the general application requirements for payments 
under Sections 8002 (relating to federal acquisition of real 
property) and 8003 (eligible federally connected children) and 
prohibits the Secretary of Education from limiting eligibility 
based on certain determinations.

Section 406--Construction

    Explains requirements under Section 8007 for the 
authorization of construction payments and school facility 
emergency and modernization grants.

Section 407--Facilities

    Makes a minor technical change to Section 8008, which 
specifies general requirements regarding facilities funding.

Section 408--State Consideration of Payments Providing State Aid

    Changes the information required in state equalization 
plans by allowing such information as the state determines 
appropriate while completing the Secretary of Education's 
consideration form, instead of including what explicit 
information the Secretary.

Section 409--Federal Administration

    Includes a provision on timely payments.

Section 410--Administrative Hearings and Judicial Review

    Introduces minor technical changes.

Section 411--Definitions

    Changes definition of ``armed forces'' to include the 
Marine Corps, as well as definitions of ``current 
expenditures,'' ``federal property,'' ``local contribution 
percentage,'' and ``local educational agency.''

Section 412--Authorization of Appropriations

    Repeals Section 8014, regarding the authorization of 
appropriations for this title.

Section 413--Conforming Amendments

    Modifies ESEA to address the changes made under this 
legislation.

  Title V--The Federal Government's Trust Responsibility to American 
          Indian, Alaska Native, and Native Hawaiian Education


Section 501--The Federal Government's Trust Responsibility to American 
        Indian, Alaska Native, and Native Hawaiian Education

    Replaces Title V with Title VII renamed, ``Federal 
Government's Trust responsibility to American Indian, Alaska 
Native, and Native Hawaiian Education.'' Specifically, updates 
the purpose of the title to reflect language found elsewhere in 
the Act and removes a main purpose of providing direct 
assistance for research, evaluation, data collection, and 
technical assistance.
    Updates Formula Grants to Local Educational Agencies and 
Tribes, organizations, and consortia. States minimum grant 
awards should be no less than $3,000, or no more than $4,000 if 
the Secretary determines an increase is necessary to ensure 
quality of the funded programs, and each awardee is based upon 
a successful application. Outlines authorized services and 
activities for which the funds shall be used for and explains 
payments and times of when children shall be counted for 
funding and eligibility purposes. Allows for other special 
grant awards for a variety of services, professional 
development for teachers and education professionals, 
administrative planning and development, and funds to be used 
for national research activities.
    Includes the Alaska Native Educational Equity, Support, and 
Assistance Act, which authorizes grants and contracts with 
Alaska Native organizations, educational agencies, and entities 
with experience in developing educational programs geared 
toward Alaska Natives, in order to serve those children.
    Maintains the Native Hawaiian Education grants in order to 
improve the academic achievement of such students by meeting 
unique cultural and language needs. Supports development and 
implementation of innovative programs, rigorous native language 
programs, and a culturally based education.

                Title VI--General Provisions for the Act


Section 601--General Provisions for the Act

    Includes definitions of ``average daily attendance,'' 
``average per-pupil expenditure,'' ``charter school,'' 
``child,'' ``child with a disability,'' ``community based 
organization,'' ``consolidated local application,'' 
``consolidated local plan,'' ``consolidated state 
application,'' ``consolidated state plan,'' ``core academic 
subjects,'' ``county,'' ``covered program,'' ``current 
expenditures,'' ``department,'' ``direct student services,'' 
``distance education,'' ``educational service agency,'' 
``elementary school,'' ``English learner,'' ``extended-year 
adjusted cohort graduation rate,'' ``cohort removal,'' 
``transferred out,'' ``special rule,'' ``family literacy 
services,'' ``four-year adjusted cohort graduation rate,'' 
``gifted and talented,'' ``high-quality academic tutoring,'' 
``high school,'' ``institution of higher education,'' ``local 
educational agency,'' ``native American and native American 
language,'' ``other staff,'' ``outlying area,'' ``parent,'' 
``parental involvement,'' ``poverty line,'' ``professional 
development,'' ``regular high school diploma,'' ``school 
leader,'' ``secondary school,'' ``Secretary,'' ``specialized 
instructional support personnel,'' ``specialized instructional 
support services,'' ``State,'' ``State Educational Agency,'' 
and ``Technology.''
            Part A--Applicability to Bureau of Indian Education 
                    Operated Schools
    Defines how Bureau of Indian Education operated schools may 
apply for any competitive grant program under the Act either 
individually or as a consortium and be given the same 
consideration as local educational agencies.
            Part B--Flexibility in the Use of Administrative and Other 
                    Funds
    Allows for the consolidation of specific funds for the uses 
of administration and other programs that the Secretary of 
Education may designate as appropriate, such as coordinating 
these programs with other federal and non-federal programs, 
establishment of peer review mechanisms in line with this Act, 
dissemination of information, state-level activities, technical 
assistance, training audit and monitoring personnel, and 
implementing audit and oversight duties. Duplicative efforts 
must be described in state plans. Outlines the transfer of 
funds to the Department of the Interior for covered programs 
under the Act.
            Part C--Coordination of Programs; Consolidated State and 
                    Local Plans and Applications
    Encourages cross-program coordination; increases 
flexibility through consolidated plans, applications, and 
reporting; and enhances integration of programs under this Act 
with other state and local programs. To this end, state and 
local agencies and any other eligible applicant may submit 
consolidated applications and plans for each program the 
applicant participates in, as well as consolidated reports.
            Part D--Waivers
    Allows a state or local education agency or Indian tribe to 
request a waiver for any statutory or regulatory requirement 
under this Act for a period of up to three years. Requirements 
of such request are detailed and are to be sent in a plan to 
the Secretary of Education, which shall include: federal 
programs affected; requirements to be waived; a demonstration 
of how the waiver will improve instruction for students and 
advance achievement; methods of monitoring effectiveness of 
said plan; and a description of how schools will continue 
providing assistance to the same populations for which program 
waivers are requested. Includes a strict process for approving 
or denying waiver requests and restricts waiving requirements 
related to allocating funds, comparability of services, 
supplementing and not supplanting non-federal funds through 
this Act, equitable participation, parent participation, and 
civil rights requirements. Prohibits the Secretary from 
conditioning waivers on adoption of Common Core State Standards 
or other specific standards and assessments.
            Part E--Uniform Provisions
    Subpart 1--Private Schools: Title I eligible private school 
children should be provided special education services or other 
benefits to address their needs in a secular, neutral, and non-
ideological way. These services shall be provided either 
directly by the state or through contracts if requested. 
Outlines the complaint process for participating private school 
children.
    Subpart 2--Prohibitions: Outlines the prohibitions against 
federal mandates, direction, or control over content, academic 
standards and assessments, curricula, and programs of 
instruction. Additionally, no funds shall be made upon 
conditions for doing so. Prohibits funds to be used for 
developing or administering a federally sponsored national 
test, or for testing materials unless explicitly authorized, 
for both students and for teachers. Allows states to opt out of 
receiving funds in exchange for not complying with the 
requirements of the Act. Clarifies the Secretary of Education 
may not attach the adoption of the Common Core State Standards 
to any of these provisions.
    Subpart 3--Other Provisions: Allows military recruitment of 
postsecondary students, allows students to consent after the 
age of 18, and outlines other provisions of the law such as 
department staff and background checks.
    Subpart 4--Restoration of State Sovereignty over Public 
Education and Parental Rights over the Education of Their 
Children: Establishes retention of rights and authorities of 
the state over the Secretary of Education, and it allows states 
to release assistance from grant programs established by the 
Act by legislature vote. Re-allocates funds states do not 
accept into reducing the budget instead of re-allocating among 
other states.
            Part F--Evaluations
    The Secretary of Education may reserve no more than 0.5 
percent of the amount appropriated to carry out each 
categorical program, except Title I, to conduct evaluations, 
studies of effectiveness, evaluate the programs under this Act, 
and increase the usefulness of such evaluations.

Section 602--Repeal

    Repeals Title IX, which previously specified the general 
provisions for the Act.

Section 603--Other Laws

    Specifies references to the term ``highly qualified'' in 
other laws.

Section 604--Amendment to IDEA

    Amends Section 602 of the Individuals with Disabilities 
Education Act (IDEA) to remove the highly qualified teacher 
provision in the Act.

                     Title VII--Homeless Education


Section 701--Statement of Policy

    Amends the McKinney-Vento Homeless Assistance Act to 
strengthen identification of homeless children and youth.

Section 702--Grants for State and Local Activities for the Education of 
        Homeless Children and Youths

    Amends the McKinney-Vento Homeless Assistance Act to 
specify the general requirements for grants for state and local 
activities for the education of homeless children and youths by 
removing the application requirement, instead outlining state 
plan requirements. Removes the option of states to receive the 
amount of funding which was received under this section for FY 
2001, making funding dependent on the greater of two options. 
Updates professional development programs for liaisons as 
designated by other portions of the Act. Requires existing 
reports to be made annually and to include information on how 
programs are helping students meet state academic standards. 
Updates functions of the office coordinator. Includes students 
with disabilities, unaccompanied youth, and other underserved 
populations and ensures they have opportunities to meet the 
same standards as other students.

Section 703--Local Educational Agency Subgrants for the Education of 
        Homeless Children and Youths

    Provides subgrants for no more than three years, assures 
proper data collection, and adds language to assist the 
identification of homeless youth consistent with elsewhere in 
the Act.

Section 704--Secretarial Responsibilities

    Updates responsibilities regarding collecting and 
disseminating public data surrounding homeless children and 
youth. Expands to 120 days the period of time states must 
complete their plan, and expands to 180 days the time the 
Secretary of Education has to approve it. Requires the 
Secretary to provide technical assistance.

Section 705--Definitions

    Modifies the definition of ``homeless children and 
youths,'' ``local educational agency,'' and ``state educational 
agency'' to address prior changes made under this legislation.

Section 706--Authorization of Appropriations

    Amends the authorization of appropriations for the Act.

                  Title VIII--Miscellaneous Provisions


Section 801--Findings and Sense of the Congress

    Outlines confidentiality agreements between local 
educational agencies or schools and suspected child sex abusers 
should be prohibited, and outlines the sense that Congress 
should help to protect children by stopping that practice and 
the practice of transferring such individuals into other 
locations after determining misconduct between employee and a 
minor.

                       Explanation of Amendments

    The amendments, including the amendment in the nature of a 
substitute, are explained in the body of this report.

              Application of Law to the Legislative Branch

    Section 102(b)(3) of Public Law 104-1 requires a 
description of the application of this bill to the legislative 
branch. H.R. 5 will support state and local accountability for 
public education; provide important information to parents on 
their schools' and students' performance; enhance local 
flexibility; protect taxpayers' investments in education; 
strengthen state and local autonomy; support more effective 
teachers in the classroom; and provide state and local leaders 
with the freedom to direct federal resources to the programs 
that best serve their student populations.

                       Unfunded Mandate Statement

    Section 423 of the Congressional Budget and Impoundment 
Control Act (as amended by Section 101(a)(2) of the Unfunded 
Mandates Reform Act, P.L. 104--4) requires a statement of 
whether the provisions of the reported bill include unfunded 
mandates. This issue is addressed in the CBO letter.

                           Earmark Statement

    H.R. 5 does not contain any congressional earmarks, limited 
tax benefits, or limited tariff benefits as defined in clause 9 
of House Rule XXI.

                            Roll Call Votes

    Clause 3(b) of rule XIII of the Rules of the House of 
Representatives requires the Committee Report to include for 
each record vote on a motion to report the measure or matter 
and on any amendments offered to the measure or matter the 
total number of votes for and against and the names of the 
Members voting for and against.


                             Correspondence

    Exchange of letters with the Committee on Financial 
Services.

                     U.S. House of Representatives,
                           Committee on Financial Services,
                                 Washington, DC, February 19, 2015.
Hon. John Kline,
Chairman, Committee on Education and the Workforce,
Washington, DC.
    Dear Chairman Kline: On February 11, 2015, the Committee on 
Education and the Workforce ordered H.R. 5, the Student Success 
Act, as amended, to be reported favorably to the House. As a 
result of your having consulted with the Committee on Financial 
Services concerning provisions of the bill that fall within our 
Rule X jurisdiction, I agree to discharge our committee from 
further consideration of the bill so that it may proceed 
expeditiously to the House Floor.
    The Committee on Financial Services takes this action with 
our mutual understanding that, by foregoing consideration of 
H.R. 5, as amended, at this time, we do not waive any 
jurisdiction over the subject matter contained in this or 
similar legislation, and that our committee will be 
appropriately consulted and involved as the bill or similar 
legislation moves forward so that we may address any remaining 
issues that fall within our Rule X jurisdiction. Our committee 
also reserves the right to seek appointment of an appropriate 
number of conferees to any House-Senate conference involving 
this or similar legislation, and requests your support for any 
such request.
    Finally, I would appreciate your response to this letter 
confirming this understanding with respect to H.R. 5, as 
amended, and would ask that a copy of our exchange of letters 
on this matter be included in your committee's report to 
accompany the legislation and/or in the Congressional Record 
during floor consideration thereof.
            Sincerely,
                                            Jeb Hensarling,
                                                          Chairman.
                                ------                                

                     U.S. House of Representatives,
                  Committee on Education and the Workforce,
                                 Washington, DC, February 19, 2015.
Hon. Jeb Hensarling,
Chairman, Committee on Financial Services,
U.S. House of Representatives, Washington, DC.
    Dear Mr. Chairman: Thank you for your letter regarding the 
Committee on Financial Services jurisdictional interest in H.R. 
5, Student Success Act, as amended. I appreciate your 
willingness to forgo further consideration of H.R. 5 by your 
committee.
    I agree the Committee on Financial Services has a valid 
jurisdictional interest in certain provisions of H.R. 5 and the 
committee's jurisdiction will not be adversely affected by your 
decision to forgo further consideration of the bill. Your 
committee will be appropriately consulted and involved as this 
or similar legislation moves forward. As you have requested, I 
will include a copy of your letter and this response in the 
committee report for H.R. 5 and in the Congressional Record 
during the Floor consideration of this bill. As always, thank 
you for our cooperation.
            Sincerely,
                                                John Kline,
                                                          Chairman.

         Statement of General Performance Goals and Objectives

    In accordance with clause (3)(c) of House rule XIII, the 
goals of H.R. 5 are to reduce the federal footprint and restore 
local control of education, while empowering parents and 
education leaders to hold schools accountable for effectively 
teaching students.

                    Duplication of Federal Programs

    No provision of H.R. 5 establishes or reauthorizes a 
program of the Federal Government known to be duplicative of 
another Federal program, a program that was included in any 
report from the Government Accountability Office to Congress 
pursuant to section 21 of Public Law 111-139, or a program 
related to a program identified in the most recent Catalog of 
Federal Domestic Assistance.

                  Disclosure of Directed Rule Makings

    The committee estimates that enacting H.R. 5 does not 
specifically direct the completion of any specific rule makings 
within the meaning of 5 U.S.C. 551.

  Statement of Oversight Findings and Recommendations of the Committee

    In compliance with clause 3(c)(1) of rule XIII and clause 
2(b)(1) of rule X of the Rules of the House of Representatives, 
the committee's oversight findings and recommendations are 
reflected in the body of this report.

               New Budget Authority and CBO Cost Estimate

    With respect to the requirements of clause 3(c)(2) of rule 
XIII of the Rules of the House of Representatives and section 
308(a) of the Congressional Budget Act of 1974 and with respect 
to requirements of clause 3(c)(3) of rule XIII of the Rules of 
the House of Representatives and section 402 of the 
Congressional Budget Act of 1974, the committee has received 
the following estimate for H.R. 5 from the Director of the 
Congressional Budget Office:

                                     U.S. Congress,
                               Congressional Budget Office,
                                 Washington, DC, February 18, 2015.
Hon. John Kline,
Chairman, Committee on Education and the Workforce,
U.S. House of Representatives, Washington, DC.
    Dear Mr. Chairman: The Congressional Budget Office has 
prepared the enclosed cost estimate for H.R. 5, the Student 
Success Act.
    If you wish further details on this estimate, we will be 
pleased to provide them. The CBO staff contact is Justin 
Humphrey.
            Sincerely,
                                               Douglas W. Elmendorf
    Enclosure.

H.R. 5--Student Success Act

    Summary: H.R. 5 would amend and reauthorize the Elementary 
and Secondary Education Act of 1965 (the ESEA, commonly 
referred to, in its most recently reauthorized form, as No 
Child Left Behind). The underlying authorizations for those 
programs have expired, although most have continued to receive 
appropriations since their authorizations have expired.
    This bill would authorize funding through fiscal year 2021 
for various grant programs; those authorizations would 
automatically be extended one year, through 2022, under the 
General Education Provisions Act. The bill also would amend and 
reauthorize the McKinney-Vento Homeless Assistance Act, which 
authorizes grants to assist in the education of homeless 
children,
    CBO estimates that H.R. 5 would authorize the appropriation 
of $23.3 billion in 2016 and $116.5 billion over the 2016-2020 
period. Implementing the bill would have discretionary costs of 
$87.7 billion over the 2016-2020 period, assuming appropriation 
of the specified and estimated amounts.
    Enacting the bill would have no effect on direct spending 
or revenues; therefore, pay-as-you-go procedures do not apply.
    H.R. 5 contains no intergovernmental or private-sector 
mandates as defined in the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act (UMRA).
    Estimated Cost to the Federal Government: The estimated 
budgetary impact of the bill is shown in the following table. 
The costs of this legislation fall within budget function 500 
(education, training, employment, and social services).

 
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                               By Fiscal year, in millions of dollars--
                                                    ------------------------------------------------------------
                                                       2016      2017      2018      2019      2020    2016-2020
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                  CHANGES IN SPENDING SUBJECT TO APPROPRIATION
 
Title I: Aid to Local Educational Agencies:
    Authorization Level............................    16,246    16,246    16,246    16,246    16,246     81,229
    Estimated Outlays..............................       325    12,672    15,596    16,246    16,246     61,084
Title II: Teacher Preparation and Effectiveness:
    Authorization Level............................     2,788     2,788     2,788     2,788     2,788     13,942
    Estimated Outlays..............................        56     1,673     2,510     2,788     2,788      9,815
Title III: Parental Engagement and Local
 Flexibility:
    Authorization Level............................     2,719     2,719     2,719     2,719     2,719     13,595
    Estimated Outlays..............................        54     1,631     2,447     2,719     2,719      9,571
Title IV: Impact Aid:
    Authorization Level............................     1,289     1,289     1,289     1,289     1,289      6,443
    Estimated Outlays..............................     1,146     1,176     1,286     1,289     1,289      6,185
Title V: The Federal Government's Trust
 Responsibility to American Indian, Alaska Native,
 and Native Hawaiian Education:
    Authorization Level............................       198       198       198       198       198        991
    Estimated Outlays..............................         4       174       190       194       194        757
Title VI: General Provisions:
    Estimated Authorization Level..................        -2        -2        -2        -2        -2        -10
    Estimated Outlays..............................        -2        -2        -2        -2        -2        -10
Title VII: Homeless Education:
    Authorization Level............................        65        65        65        65        65        325
    Estimated Outlays..............................         1        57        62        64        64        248
Total Changes:
    Estimated Authorization Level..................    23,303    23,303    23,303    23,303    23,303    116,515
    Estimated Outlays..............................     1,584    17,382    22,089    23,298    23,298     87,651
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Notes: Some programs have received advance appropriations for fiscal year 2016; those amounts are not reflected
  in the table, Instead, the table shows the additional funding that would be authorized for 2016.
Components may not sum to totals because of rounding.

    Basis of Estimate: For this estimate, CBO assumes that the 
bill will be enacted before the start of fiscal year 2016, that 
the specified and estimated amounts will be appropriated each 
year, and that spending will follow historical patterns for the 
affected programs.
    CBO estimates that H.R. 5 would authorize the appropriation 
of $23.3 billion in fiscal year 2016 and $116.5 billion over 
the 2016-2020 period. Implementing the provisions in the bill 
would cost about $87.7 billion over the 2016-2020 period and an 
additional $52 billion after 2020, assuming appropriation of 
the specified and estimated amounts. The Congress appropriated 
about $23 billion in fiscal year 2015 for activities similar to 
those that would be authorized in this bill.

Title I of ESEA--Aid to local educational agencies

    Title I of H.R. 5 would replace title I of the current 
ESEA. The bill would authorize the appropriation of $16.2 
billion for each of fiscal years 2016 through 2021 for 
activities in part A such as grants for rural school districts 
and those with high proportions of low-income students, as well 
as funding for the children of migrant workers and other at-
risk children and students learning English. Part B would 
authorize the appropriation of less than $1 million each year 
for studies to assess the effectiveness of title I. CBO 
estimates that implementing title I would cost about $61 
billion over the 2016-2020 period, subject to appropriation of 
the authorized amounts.
    Specifically, the funding authorized by H.R. 5 would 
support programs in five new subparts in part A and the 
assessments under part B:
     Improving Basic Programs Operated by Local 
Educational Agencies. The bill would amend provisions governing 
grants to local educational agencies, reauthorize funding for 
those grants, and reserve 91.4 percent of all the funding 
provided for part A for those grants (approximately $14.9 
billion in each fiscal year). CBO estimates that implementing 
this provision would cost $55.9 billion over the 2016-2020 
period. The Congress appropriated $14.4 billion for similar 
activities in fiscal year 2015.
     Education of Migratory Children. H.R. 5 would make 
changes to programs that support the education of children of 
migrant workers. The bill would reserve about 2.5 percent of 
the funding for all of part A for those programs (approximately 
$400 million per fiscal year). CBO estimates that implementing 
this provision would cost $1.5 billion over the 2016-2020 
period. The Congress appropriated $375 million for similar 
activities in fiscal year 2015.
     Prevention and Intervention Programs for Children 
and Youth Who Are Neglected, Delinquent, or At-Risk. The bill 
would reauthorize programs that support the education of 
delinquent and at-risk children and reserve 0.3 percent (about 
$50 million) of funding for part A for those activities. CBO 
estimates that implementing this provision would cost almost 
$200 million over the 2016-2020 period. Available funding 
totaled almost $50 million for at-risk children for fiscal year 
2015.
     English Language Acquisition, Language 
Enhancement, and Academic Achievement. The bill would modify 
the programs that provide support for teaching the English 
language to recent immigrants and other nonnative speakers 
under title III of the ESEA. The bill would reserve 4.6 percent 
of funding for part A for these activities for each fiscal year 
(about $750 million) CBO estimates that implementing this 
provision would cost about $2.8 billion over the 2016-2020 
period. The Congress appropriated roughly $740 million for 
similar activities in fiscal year 2015.
     Rural Education Achievement Program. H.R. 5 would 
modify and reauthorize the rural education achievement 
programs, which provide grants to assist rural school districts 
in improving teaching and learning outcomes. The bill would 
reserve 1.2 percent (almost $200 million each fiscal year) of 
the total amount provided for part A for those programs. CBO 
estimates that implementing this provision would cost more than 
$700 million over the 2016-2020 period. The Congress 
appropriated about $170 million for similar activities in 
fiscal year 2015.
     National Assessments. H.R. 5 would modify and 
reauthorize the programs designed to assess the effectiveness 
of title I, under part E of title I in the ESEA. The bill would 
transfer those programs to part B and authorize the 
appropriation of less than $1 million for each of fiscal years 
2016 through 2020. CBO estimates that implementing this 
provision would cost $3 million over the 2016-2020 period, 
assuming the appropriation of the authorized amounts. Available 
funding for evaluations under title I totaled less than $1 
million in fiscal year 2015.

Title II of ESEA--Teacher preparation and effectiveness

    H.R. 5 would modify the grant programs designed to support 
teacher training and improvement under title II of the ESEA and 
authorize the appropriation of $2.8 billion for such programs 
for each of fiscal years 2016 through 2021. The bill would 
reserve 75 percent of this total each year (about $2.1 billion) 
for state grants. H.R. 5 also would replace the current Math 
and Science Partnership program with the Teacher and School 
Leader Flexible Grant program and reserve 25 percent of the 
funding for this title each year for those activities (about 
$700 million). CBO estimates that implementing this title would 
cost about $9.8 billion over the 2016-2020 period. In fiscal 
year 2015, the Congress appropriated about $2.3 billion for 
state grants and about $150 million for math and science 
partnerships.

Title III of ESEA--Parental Engagement and Local Flexibility

    H.R. 5 would modify the charter and magnet school programs 
under title V of the ESEA and transfer them to title III of the 
ESEA. It also would authorize two grant programs designed to 
encourage parental engagement in their children's education and 
authorize additional funding to support supplemental learning 
activities for students, The bill would authorize the 
appropriation of about $2.7 billion for each of fiscal years 
2016 through 2021. Assuming the appropriation of the specified 
amounts, CBO estimates that implementing those provisions would 
cost $9.6 billion over the 2016-2020 period.
    Specifically, the title would authorize the following 
activities:
     Charter School Program. H.R. 5 would modify the 
Charter School Program and the Credit Enhancement for Charter 
School Initiatives and would authorize the appropriation of 
$300 million for each of fiscal years 2016 through 2021. CBO 
estimates that implementing this provision would cost $1.1 
billion over the 2016- 2020 period. In 2015, the Congress 
appropriated about $250 million for the Charter School Program 
(no funding was provided for Credit Enhancement for Charter 
School Initiatives).
     Magnet School Assistance. H.R. 5 would modify the 
Magnet School Program and would authorize the appropriation of 
more than $90 million for each of fiscal years 2016 through 
2021. CBO estimates that implementing this provision would cost 
about $320 million over the 2016-2020 period, assuming 
appropriation of the specified amounts. The Congress 
appropriated $90 million for magnet schools in 2015.
     Family Engagement in Education Programs. The bill 
also would authorize the appropriation of $25 million in each 
of fiscal years 2016 through 2021 for the Family Engagement in 
Education Programs, which would be similar to the Parental 
Assistance and Local Family Information Centers in title V of 
ESEA. CBO estimates that implementing this provision would cost 
about $90 million over the 2016-2020 period. No finding was 
provided for Parental Assistance and Local Family Information 
Centers in fiscal year 2015.
     Local Academic Flexible Grant. Finally, H.R. 5 
would authorize a new grant program that would provide funds to 
school districts to develop supplemental student activities, 
such as before- or after-school learning, and additional 
activities that support students, such as adjunct teacher 
programs and academic-subject-specific programs. The bill would 
authorize the appropriation of $2.3 billion for each of fiscal 
years 2016 through 2021. CBO estimates that implementing this 
program would cost $8.1 billion over the 2016-2020 period, 
assuming appropriation of the specified amounts.

Title IV of ESEA--Impact Aid

    Title IV of the bill would amend the impact aid programs 
that provide funding to assist local education agencies (LEAs) 
affected by the activities of the federal government, such as 
those on a military base or Indian reservation. The bill would 
authorize the appropriation of $1.3 billion in each of fiscal 
years 2016 through 2021. CBO estimates that implementing this 
tide would result in discretionary costs of $6.2 billion over 
the 2016-2020 period, assuming the appropriation of the 
authorized amounts The bulk of that spending (about $5.8 
billion), would be for basic support payments to LEAs to assist 
in the education of children in areas affected by federal 
activities. The other $400 million would be used to construct 
and maintain schools that educate children in such areas. The 
Congress appropriated almost $1.3 billion for impact aid in 
2015.

Title V of ESEA--The Federal Government's Trust Responsibility to 
        American Indian, Alaska Native, and Native Hawaiian Education

    The bill would reauthorize and modify grant programs for 
American Indians, Alaska Natives, and Native Hawaiians. The 
bill would authorize the appropriation of about $200 million 
for fiscal years 2016 through 2021 for those programs. CBO 
estimates that implementing this provision would cost almost 
$760 million over the 2016-2020 period; of that total, about 
$500 million would be spent on education programs for American 
Indians and about $130 million would be spent for each of the 
programs for Alaska Natives and Native Hawaiians. The Congress 
appropriated about $190 million for those programs in fiscal 
year 2015.

Title VI of ESEA--General provisions

    Title VI would amend the general provisions specified under 
current law in title IX of the ESEA. The bill would require 
that, within one year of enactment, the Department of Education 
reduce its workforce by the number of full-time-equivalent 
(FTE) employees who work in or administer programs that would 
be eliminated by this bill. CBO estimates that implementing 
title VI would reduce the numbers of FTE employees by between 
15 and 25 each year and would reduce discretionary spending by 
$10 million over the 2016-2020 period, assuming appropriation 
actions consistent with the bill.

Title VII--Homeless Education

    Title VII would reauthorize the McKinney-Vento Homeless 
Assistance Act, which authorizes grants to states to assist in 
the education of homeless children. The bill would authorize 
the appropriation of $65 million for each of fiscal years 2016 
through 2021. CBO estimates that implementing this title would 
cost about $250 million over the 2016-2020 period, assuming the 
appropriation of the specified amounts. The Congress 
appropriated $65 million for the education of homeless children 
in fiscal year 2015.
    Pay-As-You-Go Considerations: None.
    Intergovernmental and Private-Sector Impact: H.R. 5 
contains no intergovernmental or private-sector mandates as 
defined in UMRA and would impose no costs on state, local, or 
tribal governments. Those governments would benefit from grants 
authorized in the bill for elementary and secondary education. 
Any costs associated with the grants would be incurred 
voluntarily as a result of complying with conditions of federal 
assistance.
    Estimate Prepared by: Federal Costs: Justin Humphrey; 
Impact on State, Local, and Tribal Governments: J'nell Blanco 
Suchy; Impact on the Private Sector: Amy Petz.
    Estimate Approved by: Peter H. Fontaine, Assistant Director 
for Budget Analysis.

                        Committee Cost Estimate

    Clause 3(d)(1) of rule XIII of the Rules of the House of 
Representatives requires an estimate and a comparison of the 
costs that would be incurred in carrying out H.R. 5. However, 
clause 3(d)(2)(B) of that rule provides that this requirement 
does not apply when the committee has included in its report a 
timely submitted cost estimate of the bill prepared by the 
Director of the Congressional Budget Office under section 402 
of the Congressional Budget Act.

         Changes in Existing Law Made by the Bill, as Reported

    In compliance with clause 3(e) of rule XIII of the Rules of 
the House of Representatives, changes in existing law made by 
the bill, as reported, are shown as follows (new matter is 
printed in italic and existing law in which no change is 
proposed is shown in roman):

ELEMENTARY AND SECONDARY EDUCATION ACT OF 1965

           *       *       *       *       *       *       *



SECTION 1. SHORT TITLE.

  This Act may be cited as the ``Elementary and Secondary 
Education Act of 1965''.

           *       *       *       *       *       *       *


SEC. 3. AUTHORIZATIONS OF APPROPRIATIONS.

  (a) Title I.--
          (1) Part A.--There are authorized to be appropriated 
        to carry out part A of title I $16,245,163,000 for each 
        of fiscal years 2016 through 2021.
          (2) Part B.--There are authorized to be appropriated 
        to carry out part B of title I $710,000 for each of 
        fiscal years 2016 through 2021.
  (b) Title II.--There are authorized to be appropriated to 
carry out title II $2,788,356,000 for each of fiscal years 2016 
through 2021.
  (c) Title III.--
          (1) Part A.--
                  (A) Subpart 1.--There are authorized to be 
                appropriated to carry out subpart 1 of part A 
                of title III $300,000,000 for each of fiscal 
                years 2016 through 2021.
                  (B) Subpart 2.--There are authorized to be 
                appropriated to carry out subpart 2 of part A 
                of title III $91,647,000 for each of fiscal 
                years 2016 through 2021.
                  (C) Subpart 3.--There are authorized to be 
                appropriated to carry out subpart 3 of part A 
                of title III $25,000,000 for each of fiscal 
                years 2016 through 2021.
          (2) Part B.--There are authorized to be appropriated 
        to carry out part B of title III $2,302,287,000 for 
        each of fiscal years 2016 through 2021.
  (d) Title IV.--
          (1) Payments for Federal acquisition of real 
        property.--For the purpose of making payments under 
        section 4002, there are authorized to be appropriated 
        $66,813,000 for each of fiscal years 2016 through 2021.
          (2) Basic payments; payments for heavily impacted 
        local educational agencies.--For the purpose of making 
        payments under section 4003(b), there are authorized to 
        be appropriated $1,151,233,000 for each of fiscal years 
        2016 through 2021.
          (3) Payments for children with disabilities.--For the 
        purpose of making payments under section 4003(d), there 
        are authorized to be appropriated $48,316,000 for each 
        of fiscal years 2016 through 2021.
          (4) Construction.--For the purpose of carrying out 
        section 4007, there are authorized to be appropriated 
        $17,406,000 for each of fiscal years 2016 through 2021.
          (5) Facilities maintenance.--For the purpose of 
        carrying out section 4008, there are authorized to be 
        appropriated $4,835,000 for each of fiscal years 2016 
        through 2021.

   [TITLE I--IMPROVING THE ACADEMIC ACHIEVEMENT OF THE DISADVANTAGED]

               TITLE I--AID TO LOCAL EDUCATIONAL AGENCIES

[SEC. 1001. STATEMENT OF PURPOSE.

   [The purpose of this title is to ensure that all children 
have a fair, equal, and significant opportunity to obtain a 
high-quality education and reach, at a minimum, proficiency on 
challenging State academic achievement standards and state 
academic assessments. This purpose can be accomplished by--
          [(1) ensuring that high-quality academic assessments, 
        accountability systems, teacher preparation and 
        training, curriculum, and instructional materials are 
        aligned with challenging State academic standards so 
        that students, teachers, parents, and administrators 
        can measure progress against common expectations for 
        student academic achievement;
          [(2) meeting the educational needs of low-achieving 
        children in our Nation's highest-poverty schools, 
        limited English proficient children, migratory 
        children, children with disabilities, Indian children, 
        neglected or delinquent children, and young children in 
        need of reading assistance;
          [(3) closing the achievement gap between high- and 
        low-performing children, especially the achievement 
        gaps between minority and nonminority students, and 
        between disadvantaged children and their more 
        advantaged peers;
          [(4) holding schools, local educational agencies, and 
        States accountable for improving the academic 
        achievement of all students, and identifying and 
        turning around low-performing schools that have failed 
        to provide a high-quality education to their students, 
        while providing alternatives to students in such 
        schools to enable the students to receive a high-
        quality education;
          [(5) distributing and targeting resources 
        sufficiently to make a difference to local educational 
        agencies and schools where needs are greatest;
          [(6) improving and strengthening accountability, 
        teaching, and learning by using State assessment 
        systems designed to ensure that students are meeting 
        challenging State academic achievement and content 
        standards and increasing achievement overall, but 
        especially for the disadvantaged;
          [(7) providing greater decisionmaking authority and 
        flexibility to schools and teachers in exchange for 
        greater responsibility for student performance;
          [(8) providing children an enriched and accelerated 
        educational program, including the use of schoolwide 
        programs or additional services that increase the 
        amount and quality of instructional time;
          [(9) promoting schoolwide reform and ensuring the 
        access of children to effective, scientifically based 
        instructional strategies and challenging academic 
        content;
          [(10) significantly elevating the quality of 
        instruction by providing staff in participating schools 
        with substantial opportunities for professional 
        development;
          [(11) coordinating services under all parts of this 
        title with each other, with other educational services, 
        and, to the extent feasible, with other agencies 
        providing services to youth, children, and families; 
        and
          [(12) affording parents substantial and meaningful 
        opportunities to participate in the education of their 
        children.

[SEC. 1002. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS.

  [(a) Local Educational Agency Grants.--For the purpose of 
carrying out part A, there are authorized to be appropriated--
          [(1) $13,500,000,000 for fiscal year 2002;
          [(2) $16,000,000,000 for fiscal year 2003;
          [(3) $18,500,000,000 for fiscal year 2004;
          [(4) $20,500,000,000 for fiscal year 2005;
          [(5) $22,750,000,000 for fiscal year 2006; and
          [(6) $25,000,000,000 for fiscal year 2007.
  [(b) Reading First.--
          [(1) Reading first.--For the purpose of carrying out 
        subpart 1 of part B, there are authorized to be 
        appropriated $900,000,000 for fiscal year 2002 and such 
        sums as may be necessary for each of the 5 succeeding 
        fiscal years.
          [(2) Early reading first.--For the purpose of 
        carrying out subpart 2 of part B, there are authorized 
        to be appropriated $75,000,000 for fiscal year 2002 and 
        such sums as may be necessary for each of the 5 
        succeeding fiscal years.
          [(3) Even start.--For the purpose of carrying out 
        subpart 3 of part B, there are authorized to be 
        appropriated $260,000,000 for fiscal year 2002 and such 
        sums as may be necessary for each of the 5 succeeding 
        fiscal years.
          [(4) Improving literacy through school libraries.--
        For the purpose of carrying out subpart 4 of part B, 
        there are authorized to be appropriated $250,000,000 
        for fiscal year 2002 and such sums as may be necessary 
        for each of the 5 succeeding fiscal years.
  [(c) Education of Migratory Children.--For the purpose of 
carrying out part C, there are authorized to be appropriated 
$410,000,000 for fiscal year 2002 and such sums as may be 
necessary for each of the 5 succeeding fiscal years.
  [(d) Prevention and Intervention Programs for Youth Who Are 
Neglected, Delinquent, or at Risk.--For the purpose of carrying 
out part D, there are authorized to be appropriated $50,000,000 
for fiscal year 2002 and such sums as may be necessary for each 
of the 5 succeeding fiscal years.
  [(e) Federal Activities.--
          [(1) Sections 1501 and 1502.--For the purpose of 
        carrying out sections 1501 and 1502, there are 
        authorized to be appropriated such sums as may be 
        necessary for fiscal year 2002 and each of the 5 
        succeeding fiscal years.
          [(2) Section 1504.--
                  [(A) In general.--For the purpose of carrying 
                out section 1504, there are authorized to be 
                appropriated such sums as may be necessary for 
                fiscal year 2002 and for each of the 5 
                succeeding fiscal years.
                  [(B) Special rule.--Of the funds appropriated 
                pursuant to subparagraph (A), not more than 30 
                percent may be used for teachers associated 
                with students participating in the programs 
                described in subsections (a)(1), (b)(1), and 
                (c)(1).
  [(f) Comprehensive School Reform.--For the purpose of 
carrying out part F, there are authorized to be appropriated 
such sums as may be necessary for fiscal year 2002 and each of 
the 5 succeeding fiscal years.
  [(g) Advanced Placement.--For the purposes of carrying out 
part G, there are authorized to be appropriated such sums for 
fiscal year 2002 and each 5 succeeding fiscal year.
  [(h) School Dropout Prevention.--For the purpose of carrying 
out part H, there are authorized to be appropriated 
$125,000,000 for fiscal year 2002 and such sums as may be 
necessary for each of the 5 succeeding fiscal years, of which--
          [(1) up to 10 percent shall be available to carry out 
        subpart 1 of part H for each fiscal year; and
          [(2) the remainder shall be available to carry out 
        subpart 2 of part H for each fiscal year.
  [(i) School Improvement.--For the purpose of carrying out 
section 1003(g), there are authorized to be appropriated 
$500,000,000 for fiscal year 2002 and such sums as may be 
necessary for each of the 5 succeeding fiscal years.]

SEC. 1001. STATEMENT OF PURPOSE.

  The purpose of this title is to provide all children the 
opportunity to graduate high school prepared for postsecondary 
education or the workforce. This purpose can be accomplished 
by--
          (1) meeting the educational needs of low-achieving 
        children in our Nation's highest-poverty schools, 
        English learners, migratory children, children with 
        disabilities, Indian children, and neglected or 
        delinquent children;
          (2) closing the achievement gap between high- and 
        low-performing children, especially the achievement 
        gaps between minority and nonminority students, and 
        between disadvantaged children and their more 
        advantaged peers;
          (3) affording parents substantial and meaningful 
        opportunities to participate in the education of their 
        children; and
          (4) challenging States and local educational agencies 
        to embrace meaningful, evidence-based education reform, 
        while encouraging state and local innovation.

SEC. 1002. FLEXIBILITY TO USE FEDERAL FUNDS.

  (a) Alternative Uses of Federal Funds for State Educational 
Agencies.--
          (1) In general.--Subject to subsections (c) and (d) 
        and notwithstanding any other provision of law, a State 
        educational agency may use the applicable funding that 
        the agency receives for a fiscal year to carry out any 
        State activity authorized or required under one or more 
        of the following provisions:
                  (A) Section 1003.
                  (B) Section 1004.
                  (C) Subpart 2 of part A of title I.
                  (D) Subpart 3 of part A of title I.
                  (E) Subpart 4 of part A of title I.
          (2) Notification.--Not later than June 1 of each 
        year, a State educational agency shall notify the 
        Secretary of the State educational agency's intention 
        to use the applicable funding for any of the 
        alternative uses under paragraph (1).
          (3) Applicable funding defined.--
                  (A) In general.--Except as provided in 
                subparagraph (B), in this subsection, the term 
                ``applicable funding'' means funds provided to 
                carry out State activities under one or more of 
                the following provisions.
                          (i) Section 1003.
                          (ii) Section 1004.
                          (iii) Subpart 2 of part A of title I.
                          (iv) Subpart 3 of part A of title I.
                          (v) Subpart 4 of part A of title I.
                  (B) Limitation.--In this subsection, the term 
                ``applicable funding'' does not include funds 
                provided under any of the provisions listed in 
                subparagraph (A) that State educational 
                agencies are required by this Act--
                          (i) to reserve, allocate, or spend 
                        for required activities;
                          (ii) to allocate, allot, or award to 
                        local educational agencies or other 
                        entities eligible to receive such 
                        funds; or
                          (iii) to use for technical assistance 
                        or monitoring.
          (4) Disbursement.--The Secretary shall disburse the 
        applicable funding to State educational agencies for 
        alternative uses under paragraph (1) for a fiscal year 
        at the same time as the Secretary disburses the 
        applicable funding to State educational agencies that 
        do not intend to use the applicable funding for such 
        alternative uses for the fiscal year.
  (b) Alternative Uses of Federal Funds for Local Educational 
Agencies.--
          (1) In general.--Subject to subsections (c) and (d) 
        and notwithstanding any other provision of law, a local 
        educational agency may use the applicable funding that 
        the agency receives for a fiscal year to carry out any 
        local activity authorized or required under one or more 
        of the following provisions:
                  (A) Section 1003.
                  (B) Subpart 1 of part A of title I.
                  (C) Subpart 2 of part A of title I.
                  (D) Subpart 3 of part A of title I.
                  (E) Subpart 4 of part A of title I.
          (2) Notification.--A local educational agency shall 
        notify the State educational agency of the local 
        educational agency's intention to use the applicable 
        funding for any of the alternative uses under paragraph 
        (1) by a date that is established by the State 
        educational agency for the notification.
          (3) Applicable funding defined.--
                  (A) In general.--Except as provided in 
                subparagraph (B), in this subsection, the term 
                ``applicable funding'' means funds provided to 
                carry out local activities under one or more of 
                the following provisions:
                          (i) Subpart 2 of part A of title I.
                          (ii) Subpart 3 of part A of title I.
                          (iii) Subpart 4 of part A of title I.
                  (B) Limitation.--In this subsection, the term 
                ``applicable funding'' does not include funds 
                provided under any of the provisions listed in 
                subparagraph (A) that local educational 
                agencies are required by this Act--
                          (i) to reserve, allocate, or spend 
                        for required activities;
                          (ii) to allocate, allot, or award to 
                        entities eligible to receive such 
                        funds; or
                          (iii) to use for technical assistance 
                        or monitoring.
          (4) Disbursement.--Each State educational agency that 
        receives applicable funding for a fiscal year shall 
        disburse the applicable funding to local educational 
        agencies for alternative uses under paragraph (1) for 
        the fiscal year at the same time as the State 
        educational agency disburses the applicable funding to 
        local educational agencies that do not intend to use 
        the applicable funding for such alternative uses for 
        the fiscal year.
  (c) Rule for Administrative Costs.--A State educational 
agency or a local educational agency shall only use applicable 
funding (as defined in subsection (a)(3) or (b)(3), 
respectively) for administrative costs incurred in carrying out 
a provision listed in subsection (a)(1) or (b)(1), 
respectively, to the extent that the agency, in the absence of 
this section, could have used funds for administrative costs 
with respect to a program listed in subsection (a)(3) or 
(b)(3), respectively.
  (d) Rule of Construction.--Nothing in this section shall be 
construed to relieve a State educational agency or local 
educational agency of any requirements relating to--
          (1) use of Federal funds to supplement, not supplant, 
        non-Federal funds;
          (2) comparability of services;
          (3) equitable participation of private school 
        students and teachers;
          (4) applicable civil rights requirements;
          (5) section 1113; or
          (6) section 1111.

SEC. 1003. SCHOOL IMPROVEMENT.

  (a) State Reservations.--Each State shall reserve [2 percent] 
7 percent of the amount the State receives under [subpart 2 of 
part A for fiscal years 2002 and 2003, and 4 percent of the 
amount received under such subpart for fiscal years 2004 
through 2007, to carry out subsection (b) and to carry out the 
State's responsibilities under sections 1116 and 1117,] chapter 
B of subpart 1 of part A for each fiscal year to carry out 
subsection (b), including carrying out the State educational 
agency's statewide system of technical assistance and support 
for local educational agencies.
  (b) Uses.--Of the amount reserved under subsection (a) for 
any fiscal year, the State educational agency--
          (1) shall allocate not less than 95 percent of that 
        amount directly to local educational agencies [for 
        schools identified for school improvement, corrective 
        action, and restructuring, for activities under section 
        1116(b)] to carry out the State's system of school 
        improvement under section 1111(b)(3)(B)(iii); or
          (2) may, with the approval of the local educational 
        agency, directly provide for these activities or 
        arrange for their provision through other entities such 
        as school support teams [or educational service 
        agencies], educational service agencies, or non-profit 
        or for-profit external providers with expertise in 
        using evidence-based or other effective strategies to 
        improve student achievement.
  (c) Priority.--The State educational agency, in allocating 
funds to local educational agencies under this section, shall 
give priority to local educational agencies that--
          (1) serve the lowest-achieving schools; and
          (2) demonstrate the greatest [need for such funds; 
        and] commitment to using such funds to improve such 
        schools.
          [(3) demonstrate the strongest commitment to ensuring 
        that such funds are used to enable the lowest-achieving 
        schools to meet the progress goals in school 
        improvement plans under section 1116 (b)(3)(A)(v).]
  (d) Unused Funds.--If, after consultation with local 
educational agencies in the State, the State educational agency 
determines that the amount of funds reserved to carry out 
subsection (b) is greater than the amount needed to provide the 
assistance described in that subsection, the State educational 
agency shall allocate the excess amount to local educational 
agencies in accordance with--
          (1) the relative allocations the State educational 
        agency made to those agencies for that fiscal year 
        under [subpart 2 of part A;] chapter B of subpart 1 of 
        part A; or
          (2) section 1126(c).
  (e) Special Rule.--Notwithstanding any other provision of 
this section, the amount of funds reserved by the State 
educational agency under subsection (a) [in any fiscal year] in 
fiscal year 2016 and each subsequent fiscal year shall not 
decrease the amount of funds each local educational agency 
receives under [subpart 2] chapter B of subpart 1 of part A 
below the amount received by such local educational agency 
under [such subpart] such chapter for the preceding fiscal 
year.
  (f) Reporting.--The State educational agency shall make 
publicly available a list of those schools that have received 
funds or services pursuant to subsection (b) [and the 
percentage of students from each school from families with 
incomes below the poverty line].
  [(g) Assistance for Local School Improvement.--
          [(1) Program authorized.--The Secretary shall award 
        grants to States to enable the States to provide 
        subgrants to local educational agencies for the purpose 
        of providing assistance for school improvement 
        consistent with section 1116.
          [(2) State allotments.--Such grants shall be allotted 
        among States, the Bureau of Indian Affairs, and the 
        outlying areas, in proportion to the funds received by 
        the States, the Bureau of Indian Affairs, and the 
        outlying areas, respectively, for the fiscal year under 
        parts A, C, and D of this title. The Secretary shall 
        expeditiously allot a portion of such funds to States 
        for the purpose of assisting local educational agencies 
        and schools that were in school improvement status on 
        the date preceding the date of enactment of the No 
        Child Left Behind Act of 2001.
          [(3) Reallocations.--If a State does not receive 
        funds under this subsection, the Secretary shall 
        reallocate such funds to other States in the same 
        proportion funds are allocated under paragraph (2).
          [(4) State applications.--Each State educational 
        agency that desires to receive funds under this 
        subsection shall submit an application to the Secretary 
        at such time, and containing such information, as the 
        Secretary shall reasonably require, except that such 
        requirement shall be waived if a State educational 
        agency submitted such information as part of its State 
        plan under this part. Each State application shall 
        describe how the State educational agency will allocate 
        such funds in order to assist the State educational 
        agency and local educational agencies in complying with 
        school improvement, corrective action, and 
        restructuring requirements of section 1116.
          [(5) Local educational agency grants.--A grant to a 
        local educational agency under this subsection shall 
        be--
                  [(A) of sufficient size and scope to support 
                the activities required under sections 1116 and 
                1117, but not less than $50,000 and not more 
                than $500,000 for each participating school;
                  [(B) integrated with other funds awarded by 
                the State under this Act; and
                  [(C) renewable for two additional 1-year 
                periods if schools are meeting the goals in 
                their school improvement plans developed under 
                section 1116.
          [(6) Priority.--The State, in awarding such grants, 
        shall give priority to local educational agencies with 
        the lowest-achieving schools that demonstrate--
                  [(A) the greatest need for such funds; and
                  [(B) the strongest commitment to ensuring 
                that such funds are used to provide adequate 
                resources to enable the lowest-achieving 
                schools to meet the goals under school and 
                local educational agency improvement, 
                corrective action, and restructuring plans 
                under section 1116.
          [(7) Allocation.--A State educational agency that 
        receives a grant under this subsection shall allocate 
        at least 95 percent of the grant funds directly to 
        local educational agencies for schools identified for 
        school improvement, corrective action, or restructuring 
        to carry out activities under section 1116(b), or may, 
        with the approval of the local educational agency, 
        directly provide for these activities or arrange for 
        their provision through other entities such as school 
        support teams or educational service agencies.
          [(8) Administrative costs.--A State educational 
        agency that receives a grant award under this 
        subsection may reserve not more than 5 percent of such 
        grant funds for administration, evaluation, and 
        technical assistance expenses.
          [(9) Local awards.--Each local educational agency 
        that applies for assistance under this subsection shall 
        describe how it will provide the lowest-achieving 
        schools the resources necessary to meet goals under 
        school and local educational agency improvement, 
        corrective action, and restructuring plans under 
        section 1116.]

SEC. 1003A. DIRECT STUDENT SERVICES.

  (a) State Reservation.--Each State shall reserve 3 percent of 
the amount the State receives under chapter B of subpart 1 of 
part A for each fiscal year to carry out this section. Of such 
reserved funds, the State educational agency may use up to 1 
percent to administer direct student services.
  (b) Direct Student Services.--From the amount available after 
the application of subsection (a), each State shall award 
grants in accordance with this section to local educational 
agencies to support direct student services.
  (c) Awards.--The State educational agency shall award grants 
to geographically diverse local educational agencies including 
suburban, rural, and urban local educational agencies. If there 
are not enough funds to award all applicants in a sufficient 
size and scope to run an effective direct student services 
program, the State shall prioritize awards to local educational 
agencies with the greatest number of students with 
disabilities, neglected, delinquent, migrant students, English 
learners, at-risk students, and Native Americans, to increase 
academic achievement of such students.
  (d) Local Use of Funds.--A local educational agency receiving 
an award under this section--
          (1) shall use up to 1 percent of each award for 
        outreach and communication to parents about their 
        options and to register students for direct student 
        services;
          (2) may use not more than 2 percent of each award for 
        administrative costs related to direct student 
        services; and
          (3) shall use the remainder of the award to pay the 
        transportation required to provide public school choice 
        or the hourly rate for high-quality academic tutoring 
        services, as determined by a provider on the State-
        approved list required under subsection (f)(2).
  (e) Application.--A local educational agency desiring to 
receive an award under subsection (b) shall submit an 
application describing how the local educational agency will--
          (1) provide adequate outreach to ensure parents can 
        exercise a meaningful choice of direct student services 
        for their child's education;
          (2) ensure parents have adequate time and information 
        to make a meaningful choice prior to enrolling their 
        child in a direct student service;
          (3) ensure sufficient availability of seats in the 
        public schools the local educational agency will make 
        available for public school choice options;
          (4) determine the requirements or criteria for 
        student eligibility for direct student services;
          (5) select a variety of providers of high-quality 
        academic tutoring from the State-approved list required 
        under subsection (f)(2) and ensure fair negotiations in 
        selecting such providers of high-quality academic 
        tutoring, including online, on campus, and other models 
        of tutoring which provide meaningful choices to parents 
        to find the best service for their child; and
          (6) develop an estimated per pupil expenditure 
        available for eligible students to use toward high-
        quality academic tutoring which shall allow for an 
        adequate level of services to increase academic 
        achievement from a variety of high-quality academic 
        tutoring providers.
  (f) Providers and Schools.--The State--
          (1) shall ensure that each local educational agency 
        receiving an award to provide public school choice can 
        provide a sufficient number of options to provide a 
        meaningful choice for parents;
          (2) shall compile a list of State-approved high-
        quality academic tutoring providers that includes 
        online, on campus, and other models of tutoring; and
          (3) shall ensure that each local educational agency 
        receiving an award will provide an adequate number of 
        high-quality academic tutoring options to ensure 
        parents have a meaningful choice of services.

[SEC. 1004. STATE ADMINISTRATION.

  [(a) In General.--Except as provided in subsection (b), to 
carry out administrative duties assigned under parts A, C, and 
D of this title, each State may reserve the greater of--
          [(1) 1 percent of the amounts received under such 
        parts; or
          [(2) $400,000 ($50,000 in the case of each outlying 
        area).
  [(b) Exception.--If the sum of the amounts appropriated for 
parts A, C, and D of this title is equal to or greater than 
$14,000,000,000, then the reservation described in subsection 
(a)(1) shall not exceed 1 percent of the amount the State would 
receive, if $14,000,000,000 were allocated among the States for 
parts A, C, and D of this title.]

SEC. 1004. STATE ADMINISTRATION.

  (a) In General.--Except as provided in subsection (b), to 
carry out administrative duties assigned under subparts 1, 2, 
and 3 of part A of this title, each State may reserve the 
greater of--
          (1) 1 percent of the amounts received under such 
        subparts; or
          (2) $400,000 ($50,000 in the case of each outlying 
        area).
  (b) Exception.--If the sum of the amounts reserved under 
subparts 1, 2, and 3 of part A of this title is equal to or 
greater than $14,000,000,000, then the reservation described in 
subsection (a)(1) shall not exceed 1 percent of the amount the 
State would receive if $14,000,000,000 were allocated among the 
States for subparts 1, 2, and 3 of part A of this title.

    [PART A--IMPROVING BASIC PROGRAMS OPERATED BY LOCAL EDUCATIONAL 
                               AGENCIES]

    PART A--IMPROVING THE ACADEMIC ACHIEVEMENT OF THE DISADVANTAGED

   Subpart 1--[Basic Program Requirements] Improving Basic Programs 
                 Operated by Local Educational Agencies

                 CHAPTER A--BASIC PROGRAM REQUIREMENTS

[SEC. 1111. STATE PLANS.

  [(a) Plans Required.--
          [(1) In general.--For any State desiring to receive a 
        grant under this part, the State educational agency 
        shall submit to the Secretary a plan, developed by the 
        State educational agency, in consultation with local 
        educational agencies, teachers, principals, pupil 
        services personnel, administrators (including 
        administrators of programs described in other parts of 
        this title), other staff, and parents, that satisfies 
        the requirements of this section and that is 
        coordinated with other programs under this Act, the 
        Individuals with Disabilities Education Act, the Carl 
        D. Perkins Career and Technical Education Act of 2006, 
        the Head Start Act, the Adult Education and Family 
        Literacy Act, and the McKinney-Vento Homeless 
        Assistance Act.
          [(2) Consolidated plan.--A State plan submitted under 
        paragraph (1) may be submitted as part of a 
        consolidated plan under section 9302.
  [(b) Academic Standards, Academic Assessments, and 
Accountability.--
          [(1) Challenging academic standards.--
                  [(A) In general.--Each State plan shall 
                demonstrate that the State has adopted 
                challenging academic content standards and 
                challenging student academic achievement 
                standards that will be used by the State, its 
                local educational agencies, and its schools to 
                carry out this part, except that a State shall 
                not be required to submit such standards to the 
                Secretary.
                  [(B) Same standards.--The academic standards 
                required by subparagraph (A) shall be the same 
                academic standards that the State applies to 
                all schools and children in the State.
                  [(C) Subjects.--The State shall have such 
                academic standards for all public elementary 
                school and secondary school children, including 
                children served under this part, in subjects 
                determined by the State, but including at least 
                mathematics, reading or language arts, and 
                (beginning in the 2005-2006 school year) 
                science, which shall include the same 
                knowledge, skills, and levels of achievement 
                expected of all children.
                  [(D) Challenging academic standards.--
                Standards under this paragraph shall include--
                          [(i) challenging academic content 
                        standards in academic subjects that--
                                  [(I) specify what children 
                                are expected to know and be 
                                able to do;
                                  [(II) contain coherent and 
                                rigorous content; and
                                  [(III) encourage the teaching 
                                of advanced skills; and
                          [(ii) challenging student academic 
                        achievement standards that--
                                  [(I) are aligned with the 
                                State's academic content 
                                standards;
                                  [(II) describe two levels of 
                                high achievement (proficient 
                                and advanced) that determine 
                                how well children are mastering 
                                the material in the State 
                                academic content standards; and
                                  [(III) describe a third level 
                                of achievement (basic) to 
                                provide complete information 
                                about the progress of the 
                                lower-achieving children toward 
                                mastering the proficient and 
                                advanced levels of achievement.
                  [(E) Information.--For the subjects in which 
                students will be served under this part, but 
                for which a State is not required by 
                subparagraphs (A), (B), and (C) to develop, and 
                has not otherwise developed, such academic 
                standards, the State plan shall describe a 
                strategy for ensuring that students are taught 
                the same knowledge and skills in such subjects 
                and held to the same expectations as are all 
                children.
                  [(F) Existing standards.--Nothing in this 
                part shall prohibit a State from revising, 
                consistent with this section, any standard 
                adopted under this part before or after the 
                date of enactment of the No Child Left Behind 
                Act of 2001.
          [(2) Accountability.--
                  [(A) In general.--Each State plan shall 
                demonstrate that the State has developed and is 
                implementing a single, statewide State 
                accountability system that will be effective in 
                ensuring that all local educational agencies, 
                public elementary schools, and public secondary 
                schools make adequate yearly progress as 
                defined under this paragraph. Each State 
                accountability system shall--
                          [(i) be based on the academic 
                        standards and academic assessments 
                        adopted under paragraphs (1) and (3), 
                        and other academic indicators 
                        consistent with subparagraph (C)(vi) 
                        and (vii), and shall take into account 
                        the achievement of all public 
                        elementary school and secondary school 
                        students;
                          [(ii) be the same accountability 
                        system the State uses for all public 
                        elementary schools and secondary 
                        schools or all local educational 
                        agencies in the State, except that 
                        public elementary schools, secondary 
                        schools, and local educational agencies 
                        not participating under this part are 
                        not subject to the requirements of 
                        section 1116; and
                          [(iii) include sanctions and rewards, 
                        such as bonuses and recognition, the 
                        State will use to hold local 
                        educational agencies and public 
                        elementary schools and secondary 
                        schools accountable for student 
                        achievement and for ensuring that they 
                        make adequate yearly progress in 
                        accordance with the State's definition 
                        under subparagraphs (B) and (C).
                  [(B) Adequate yearly progress.--Each State 
                plan shall demonstrate, based on academic 
                assessments described in paragraph (3), and in 
                accordance with this paragraph, what 
                constitutes adequate yearly progress of the 
                State, and of all public elementary schools, 
                secondary schools, and local educational 
                agencies in the State, toward enabling all 
                public elementary school and secondary school 
                students to meet the State's student academic 
                achievement standards, while working toward the 
                goal of narrowing the achievement gaps in the 
                State, local educational agencies, and schools.
                  [(C) Definition.-- ``Adequate yearly 
                progress'' shall be defined by the State in a 
                manner that--
                          [(i) applies the same high standards 
                        of academic achievement to all public 
                        elementary school and secondary school 
                        students in the State;
                          [(ii) is statistically valid and 
                        reliable;
                          [(iii) results in continuous and 
                        substantial academic improvement for 
                        all students;
                          [(iv) measures the progress of public 
                        elementary schools, secondary schools 
                        and local educational agencies and the 
                        State based primarily on the academic 
                        assessments described in paragraph (3);
                          [(v) includes separate measurable 
                        annual objectives for continuous and 
                        substantial improvement for each of the 
                        following:
                                  [(I) The achievement of all 
                                public elementary school and 
                                secondary school students.
                                  [(II) The achievement of--
                                          [(aa) economically 
                                        disadvantaged students;
                                          [(bb) students from 
                                        major racial and ethnic 
                                        groups;
                                          [(cc) students with 
                                        disabilities; and
                                          [(dd) students with 
                                        limited English 
                                        proficiency;
                                except that disaggregation of 
                                data under subclause (II) shall 
                                not be required in a case in 
                                which the number of students in 
                                a category is insufficient to 
                                yield statistically reliable 
                                information or the results 
                                would reveal personally 
                                identifiable information about 
                                an individual student;
                          [(vi) in accordance with subparagraph 
                        (D), includes graduation rates for 
                        public secondary school students 
                        (defined as the percentage of students 
                        who graduate from secondary school with 
                        a regular diploma in the standard 
                        number of years) and at least one other 
                        academic indicator, as determined by 
                        the State for all public elementary 
                        school students; and
                          [(vii) in accordance with 
                        subparagraph (D), at the State's 
                        discretion, may also include other 
                        academic indicators, as determined by 
                        the State for all public school 
                        students, measured separately for each 
                        group described in clause (v), such as 
                        achievement on additional State or 
                        locally administered assessments, 
                        decreases in grade-to-grade retention 
                        rates, attendance rates, and changes in 
                        the percentages of students completing 
                        gifted and talented, advanced 
                        placement, and college preparatory 
                        courses.
                  [(D) Requirements for other indicators.--In 
                carrying out subparagraph (C)(vi) and (vii), 
                the State--
                          [(i) shall ensure that the indicators 
                        described in those provisions are valid 
                        and reliable, and are consistent with 
                        relevant, nationally recognized 
                        professional and technical standards, 
                        if any; and
                          [(ii) except as provided in 
                        subparagraph (I)(i), may not use those 
                        indicators to reduce the number of, or 
                        change, the schools that would 
                        otherwise be subject to school 
                        improvement, corrective action, or 
                        restructuring under section 1116 if 
                        those additional indicators were not 
                        used, but may use them to identify 
                        additional schools for school 
                        improvement or in need of corrective 
                        action or restructuring.
                  [(E) Starting point.--Each State, using data 
                for the 2001-2002 school year, shall establish 
                the starting point for measuring, under 
                subparagraphs (G) and (H), the percentage of 
                students meeting or exceeding the State's 
                proficient level of academic achievement on the 
                State assessments under paragraph (3) and 
                pursuant to the timeline described in 
                subparagraph (F). The starting point shall be, 
                at a minimum, based on the higher of the 
                percentage of students at the proficient level 
                who are in--
                          [(i) the State's lowest achieving 
                        group of students described in 
                        subparagraph (C)(v)(II); or
                          [(ii) the school at the 20th 
                        percentile in the State, based on 
                        enrollment, among all schools ranked by 
                        the percentage of students at the 
                        proficient level.
                  [(F) Timeline.--Each State shall establish a 
                timeline for adequate yearly progress. The 
                timeline shall ensure that not later than 12 
                years after the end of the 2001-2002 school 
                year, all students in each group described in 
                subparagraph (C)(v) will meet or exceed the 
                State's proficient level of academic 
                achievement on the State assessments under 
                paragraph (3).
                  [(G) Measurable objectives.--Each State shall 
                establish statewide annual measurable 
                objectives, pursuant to subparagraph (C)(v), 
                for meeting the requirements of this paragraph, 
                and which--
                          [(i) shall be set separately for the 
                        assessments of mathematics and reading 
                        or language arts under subsection 
                        (a)(3);
                          [(ii) shall be the same for all 
                        schools and local educational agencies 
                        in the State;
                          [(iii) shall identify a single 
                        minimum percentage of students who are 
                        required to meet or exceed the 
                        proficient level on the academic 
                        assessments that applies separately to 
                        each group of students described in 
                        subparagraph (C)(v);
                          [(iv) shall ensure that all students 
                        will meet or exceed the State's 
                        proficient level of academic 
                        achievement on the State assessments 
                        within the State's timeline under 
                        subparagraph (F); and
                          [(v) may be the same for more than 1 
                        year, subject to the requirements of 
                        subparagraph (H).
                  [(H) Intermediate goals for annual yearly 
                progress.--Each State shall establish 
                intermediate goals for meeting the 
                requirements, including the measurable 
                objectives in subparagraph (G), of this 
                paragraph and that shall--
                          [(i) increase in equal increments 
                        over the period covered by the State's 
                        timeline under subparagraph (F);
                          [(ii) provide for the first increase 
                        to occur in not more than 2 years; and
                          [(iii) provide for each following 
                        increase to occur in not more than 3 
                        years.
                  [(I) Annual improvement for schools.--Each 
                year, for a school to make adequate yearly 
                progress under this paragraph--
                          [(i) each group of students described 
                        in subparagraph (C)(v) must meet or 
                        exceed the objectives set by the State 
                        under subparagraph (G), except that if 
                        any group described in subparagraph 
                        (C)(v) does not meet those objectives 
                        in any particular year, the school 
                        shall be considered to have made 
                        adequate yearly progress if the 
                        percentage of students in that group 
                        who did not meet or exceed the 
                        proficient level of academic 
                        achievement on the State assessments 
                        under paragraph (3) for that year 
                        decreased by 10 percent of that 
                        percentage from the preceding school 
                        year and that group made progress on 
                        one or more of the academic indicators 
                        described in subparagraph (C)(vi) or 
                        (vii); and
                          [(ii) not less than 95 percent of 
                        each group of students described in 
                        subparagraph (C)(v) who are enrolled in 
                        the school are required to take the 
                        assessments, consistent with paragraph 
                        (3)(C)(xi) and with accommodations, 
                        guidelines, and alternative assessments 
                        provided in the same manner as those 
                        provided under section 612(a)(16)(A) of 
                        the Individuals with Disabilities 
                        Education Act and paragraph (3), on 
                        which adequate yearly progress is based 
                        (except that the 95 percent requirement 
                        described in this clause shall not 
                        apply in a case in which the number of 
                        students in a category is insufficient 
                        to yield statistically reliable 
                        information or the results would reveal 
                        personally identifiable information 
                        about an individual student).
                  [(J) Uniform averaging procedure.--For the 
                purpose of determining whether schools are 
                making adequate yearly progress, the State may 
                establish a uniform procedure for averaging 
                data which includes one or more of the 
                following:
                          [(i) The State may average data from 
                        the school year for which the 
                        determination is made with data from 
                        one or two school years immediately 
                        preceding that school year.
                          [(ii) Until the assessments described 
                        in paragraph (3) are administered in 
                        such manner and time to allow for the 
                        implementation of the uniform procedure 
                        for averaging data described in clause 
                        (i), the State may use the academic 
                        assessments that were required under 
                        paragraph (3) as that paragraph was in 
                        effect on the day preceding the date of 
                        enactment of the No Child Left Behind 
                        Act of 2001, provided that nothing in 
                        this clause shall be construed to 
                        undermine or delay the determination of 
                        adequate yearly progress, the 
                        requirements of section 1116, or the 
                        implementation of assessments under 
                        this section.
                          [(iii) The State may use data across 
                        grades in a school.
                  [(K) Accountability for charter schools.--The 
                accountability provisions under this Act shall 
                be overseen for charter schools in accordance 
                with State charter school law.
          [(3) Academic assessments.--
                  [(A) In general.--Each State plan shall 
                demonstrate that the State educational agency, 
                in consultation with local educational 
                agencies, has implemented a set of high-
                quality, yearly student academic assessments 
                that include, at a minimum, academic 
                assessments in mathematics, reading or language 
                arts, and science that will be used as the 
                primary means of determining the yearly 
                performance of the State and of each local 
                educational agency and school in the State in 
                enabling all children to meet the State's 
                challenging student academic achievement 
                standards, except that no State shall be 
                required to meet the requirements of this part 
                relating to science assessments until the 
                beginning of the 2007-2008 school year.
                  [(B) Use of assessments.--Each State 
                educational agency may incorporate the data 
                from the assessments under this paragraph into 
                a State-developed longitudinal data system that 
                links student test scores, length of 
                enrollment, and graduation records over time.
                  [(C) Requirements.--Such assessments shall--
                          [(i) be the same academic assessments 
                        used to measure the achievement of all 
                        children;
                          [(ii) be aligned with the State's 
                        challenging academic content and 
                        student academic achievement standards, 
                        and provide coherent information about 
                        student attainment of such standards;
                          [(iii) be used for purposes for which 
                        such assessments are valid and 
                        reliable, and be consistent with 
                        relevant, nationally recognized 
                        professional and technical standards;
                          [(iv) be used only if the State 
                        educational agency provides to the 
                        Secretary evidence from the test 
                        publisher or other relevant sources 
                        that the assessments used are of 
                        adequate technical quality for each 
                        purpose required under this Act and are 
                        consistent with the requirements of 
                        this section, and such evidence is made 
                        public by the Secretary upon request;
                          [(v)(I) except as otherwise provided 
                        for grades 3 through 8 under clause 
                        vii, measure the proficiency of 
                        students in, at a minimum, mathematics 
                        and reading or language arts, and be 
                        administered not less than once 
                        during--
                                  [(aa) grades 3 through 5;
                                  [(bb) grades 6 through 9; and
                                  [(cc) grades 10 through 12;
                          [(II) beginning not later than school 
                        year 2007-2008, measure the proficiency 
                        of all students in science and be 
                        administered not less than one time 
                        during--
                                  [(aa) grades 3 through 5;
                                  [(bb) grades 6 through 9; and
                                  [(cc) grades 10 through 12;
                          [(vi) involve multiple up-to-date 
                        measures of student academic 
                        achievement, including measures that 
                        assess higher-order thinking skills and 
                        understanding;
                          [(vii) beginning not later than 
                        school year 2005-2006, measure the 
                        achievement of students against the 
                        challenging State academic content and 
                        student academic achievement standards 
                        in each of grades 3 through 8 in, at a 
                        minimum, mathematics, and reading or 
                        language arts, except that the 
                        Secretary may provide the State 1 
                        additional year if the State 
                        demonstrates that exceptional or 
                        uncontrollable circumstances, such as a 
                        natural disaster or a precipitous and 
                        unforeseen decline in the financial 
                        resources of the State, prevented full 
                        implementation of the academic 
                        assessments by that deadline and that 
                        the State will complete implementation 
                        within the additional 1-year period;
                          [(viii) at the discretion of the 
                        State, measure the proficiency of 
                        students in academic subjects not 
                        described in clauses (v), (vi), (vii) 
                        in which the State has adopted 
                        challenging academic content and 
                        academic achievement standards;
                          [(ix) provide for--
                                  [(I) the participation in 
                                such assessments of all 
                                students;
                                  [(II) the reasonable 
                                adaptations and accommodations 
                                for students with disabilities 
                                (as defined under section 
                                602(3) of the Individuals with 
                                Disabilities Education Act) 
                                necessary to measure the 
                                academic achievement of such 
                                students relative to State 
                                academic content and State 
                                student academic achievement 
                                standards; and
                                  [(III) the inclusion of 
                                limited English proficient 
                                students, who shall be assessed 
                                in a valid and reliable manner 
                                and provided reasonable 
                                accommodations on assessments 
                                administered to such students 
                                under this paragraph, 
                                including, to the extent 
                                practicable, assessments in the 
                                language and form most likely 
                                to yield accurate data on what 
                                such students know and can do 
                                in academic content areas, 
                                until such students have 
                                achieved English language 
                                proficiency as determined under 
                                paragraph (7);
                          [(x) notwithstanding subclause (III), 
                        the academic assessment (using tests 
                        written in English) of reading or 
                        language arts of any student who has 
                        attended school in the United States 
                        (not including Puerto Rico) for three 
                        or more consecutive school years, 
                        except that if the local educational 
                        agency determines, on a case-by-case 
                        individual basis, that academic 
                        assessments in another language or form 
                        would likely yield more accurate and 
                        reliable information on what such 
                        student knows and can do, the local 
                        educational agency may make a 
                        determination to assess such student in 
                        the appropriate language other than 
                        English for a period that does not 
                        exceed two additional consecutive 
                        years, provided that such student has 
                        not yet reached a level of English 
                        language proficiency sufficient to 
                        yield valid and reliable information on 
                        what such student knows and can do on 
                        tests (written in English) of reading 
                        or language arts;
                          [(xi) include students who have 
                        attended schools in a local educational 
                        agency for a full academic year but 
                        have not attended a single school for a 
                        full academic year, except that the 
                        performance of students who have 
                        attended more than 1 school in the 
                        local educational agency in any 
                        academic year shall be used only in 
                        determining the progress of the local 
                        educational agency;
                          [(xii) produce individual student 
                        interpretive, descriptive, and 
                        diagnostic reports, consistent with 
                        clause (iii) that allow parents, 
                        teachers, and principals to understand 
                        and address the specific academic needs 
                        of students, and include information 
                        regarding achievement on academic 
                        assessments aligned with State academic 
                        achievement standards, and that are 
                        provided to parents, teachers, and 
                        principals, as soon as is practicably 
                        possible after the assessment is given, 
                        in an understandable and uniform 
                        format, and to the extent practicable, 
                        in a language that parents can 
                        understand;
                          [(xiii) enable results to be 
                        disaggregated within each State, local 
                        educational agency, and school by 
                        gender, by each major racial and ethnic 
                        group, by English proficiency status, 
                        by migrant status, by students with 
                        disabilities as compared to nondisabled 
                        students, and by economically 
                        disadvantaged students as compared to 
                        students who are not economically 
                        disadvantaged, except that, in the case 
                        of a local educational agency or a 
                        school, such disaggregation shall not 
                        be required in a case in which the 
                        number of students in a category is 
                        insufficient to yield statistically 
                        reliable information or the results 
                        would reveal personally identifiable 
                        information about an individual 
                        student;
                          [(xiv) be consistent with widely 
                        accepted professional testing 
                        standards, objectively measure academic 
                        achievement, knowledge, and skills, and 
                        be tests that do not evaluate or assess 
                        personal or family beliefs and 
                        attitudes, or publicly disclose 
                        personally identifiable information; 
                        and
                          [(xv) enable itemized score analyses 
                        to be produced and reported, consistent 
                        with clause (iii), to local educational 
                        agencies and schools, so that parents, 
                        teachers, principals, and 
                        administrators can interpret and 
                        address the specific academic needs of 
                        students as indicated by the students' 
                        achievement on assessment items.
                  [(D) Deferral.--A State may defer the 
                commencement, or suspend the administration, 
                but not cease the development, of the 
                assessments described in this paragraph, that 
                were not required prior to the date of 
                enactment of the No Child Left Behind Act of 
                2001, for 1 year for each year for which the 
                amount appropriated for grants under section 
                6113(a)(2) is less than--
                          [(i) $370,000,000 for fiscal year 
                        2002;
                          [(ii) $380,000,000 for fiscal year 
                        2003;
                          [(iii) $390,000,000 for fiscal year 
                        2004; and
                          [(iv) $400,000,000 for fiscal years 
                        2005 through 2007.
          [(4) Special rule.--Academic assessment measures in 
        addition to those in paragraph (3) that do not meet the 
        requirements of such paragraph may be included in the 
        assessment under paragraph (3) as additional measures, 
        but may not be used in lieu of the academic assessments 
        required under paragraph (3). Such additional 
        assessment measures may not be used to reduce the 
        number of or change, the schools that would otherwise 
        be subject to school improvement, corrective action, or 
        restructuring under section 1116 if such additional 
        indicators were not used, but may be used to identify 
        additional schools for school improvement or in need of 
        corrective action or restructuring except as provided 
        in paragraph (2)(I)(i).
          [(5) State authority.--If a State educational agency 
        provides evidence, which is satisfactory to the 
        Secretary, that neither the State educational agency 
        nor any other State government official, agency, or 
        entity has sufficient authority, under State law, to 
        adopt curriculum content and student academic 
        achievement standards, and academic assessments aligned 
        with such academic standards, which will be applicable 
        to all students enrolled in the State's public 
        elementary schools and secondary schools, then the 
        State educational agency may meet the requirements of 
        this subsection by--
                  [(A) adopting academic standards and academic 
                assessments that meet the requirements of this 
                subsection, on a statewide basis, and limiting 
                their applicability to students served under 
                this part; or
                  [(B) adopting and implementing policies that 
                ensure that each local educational agency in 
                the State that receives grants under this part 
                will adopt curriculum content and student 
                academic achievement standards, and academic 
                assessments aligned with such standards, 
                which--
                          [(i) meet all of the criteria in this 
                        subsection and any regulations 
                        regarding such standards and 
                        assessments that the Secretary may 
                        publish; and
                          [(ii) are applicable to all students 
                        served by each such local educational 
                        agency.
          [(6) Language assessments.--Each State plan shall 
        identify the languages other than English that are 
        present in the participating student population and 
        indicate the languages for which yearly student 
        academic assessments are not available and are needed. 
        The State shall make every effort to develop such 
        assessments and may request assistance from the 
        Secretary if linguistically accessible academic 
        assessment measures are needed. Upon request, the 
        Secretary shall assist with the identification of 
        appropriate academic assessment measures in the needed 
        languages, but shall not mandate a specific academic 
        assessment or mode of instruction.
          [(7) Academic assessments of english language 
        proficiency.--Each State plan shall demonstrate that 
        local educational agencies in the State will, beginning 
        not later than school year 2002-2003, provide for an 
        annual assessment of English proficiency (measuring 
        students' oral language, reading, and writing skills in 
        English) of all students with limited English 
        proficiency in the schools served by the State 
        educational agency, except that the Secretary may 
        provide the State 1 additional year if the State 
        demonstrates that exceptional or uncontrollable 
        circumstances, such as a natural disaster or a 
        precipitous and unforeseen decline in the financial 
        resources of the State, prevented full implementation 
        of this paragraph by that deadline and that the State 
        will complete implementation within the additional 1-
        year period.
          [(8) Requirement.--Each State plan shall describe--
                  [(A) how the State educational agency will 
                assist each local educational agency and school 
                affected by the State plan to develop the 
                capacity to comply with each of the 
                requirements of sections 1112(c)(1)(D), 
                1114(b), and 1115(c) that is applicable to such 
                agency or school;
                  [(B) how the State educational agency will 
                assist each local educational agency and school 
                affected by the State plan to provide 
                additional educational assistance to individual 
                students assessed as needing help to achieve 
                the State's challenging academic achievement 
                standards;
                  [(C) the specific steps the State educational 
                agency will take to ensure that both schoolwide 
                programs and targeted assistance schools 
                provide instruction by highly qualified 
                instructional staff as required by sections 
                1114(b)(1)(C) and 1115(c)(1)(E), including 
                steps that the State educational agency will 
                take to ensure that poor and minority children 
                are not taught at higher rates than other 
                children by inexperienced, unqualified, or out-
                of-field teachers, and the measures that the 
                State educational agency will use to evaluate 
                and publicly report the progress of the State 
                educational agency with respect to such steps;
                  [(D) an assurance that the State educational 
                agency will assist local educational agencies 
                in developing or identifying high-quality 
                effective curricula aligned with State academic 
                achievement standards and how the State 
                educational agency will disseminate such 
                curricula to each local educational agency and 
                school within the State; and
                  [(E) such other factors the State educational 
                agency determines appropriate to provide 
                students an opportunity to achieve the 
                knowledge and skills described in the 
                challenging academic content standards adopted 
                by the State.
          [(9) Factors affecting student achievement.--Each 
        State plan shall include an assurance that the State 
        educational agency will coordinate and collaborate, to 
        the extent feasible and necessary as determined by the 
        State educational agency, with agencies providing 
        services to children, youth, and families, with respect 
        to local educational agencies within the State that are 
        identified under section 1116 and that request 
        assistance with addressing major factors that have 
        significantly affected the academic achievement of 
        students in the local educational agency or schools 
        served by such agency.
          [(10) Use of academic assessment results to improve 
        student academic achievement.--Each State plan shall 
        describe how the State educational agency will ensure 
        that the results of the State assessments described in 
        paragraph (3)--
                  [(A) will be promptly provided to local 
                educational agencies, schools, and teachers in 
                a manner that is clear and easy to understand, 
                but not later than before the beginning of the 
                next school year; and
                  [(B) be used by those local educational 
                agencies, schools, and teachers to improve the 
                educational achievement of individual students.
  [(c) Other Provisions To Support Teaching and Learning.--Each 
State plan shall contain assurances that--
          [(1) the State educational agency will meet the 
        requirements of subsection (h)(1) and, beginning with 
        the 2002-2003 school year, will produce the annual 
        State report cards described in such subsection, except 
        that the Secretary may provide the State educational 
        agency 1 additional year if the State educational 
        agency demonstrates that exceptional or uncontrollable 
        circumstances, such as a natural disaster or a 
        precipitous and unforeseen decline in the financial 
        resources of the State, prevented full implementation 
        of this paragraph by that deadline and that the State 
        will complete implementation within the additional 1-
        year period;
          [(2) the State will, beginning in school year 2002-
        2003, participate in biennial State academic 
        assessments of 4th and 8th grade reading and 
        mathematics under the National Assessment of 
        Educational Progress carried out under section 
        303(b)(2) of the National Assessment of Educational 
        Progress Authorization Act if the Secretary pays the 
        costs of administering such assessments;
          [(3) the State educational agency, in consultation 
        with the Governor, will include, as a component of the 
        State plan, a plan to carry out the responsibilities of 
        the State under sections 1116 and 1117, including 
        carrying out the State educational agency's statewide 
        system of technical assistance and support for local 
        educational agencies;
          [(4) the State educational agency will work with 
        other agencies, including educational service agencies 
        or other local consortia, and institutions to provide 
        technical assistance to local educational agencies and 
        schools, including technical assistance in providing 
        professional development under section 1119, technical 
        assistance under section 1117, and technical assistance 
        relating to parental involvement under section 1118;
          [(5)(A) where educational service agencies exist, the 
        State educational agency will consider providing 
        professional development and technical assistance 
        through such agencies; and
          [(B) where educational service agencies do not exist, 
        the State educational agency will consider providing 
        professional development and technical assistance 
        through other cooperative agreements such as through a 
        consortium of local educational agencies;
          [(6) the State educational agency will notify local 
        educational agencies and the public of the content and 
        student academic achievement standards and academic 
        assessments developed under this section, and of the 
        authority to operate schoolwide programs, and will 
        fulfill the State educational agency's responsibilities 
        regarding local educational agency improvement and 
        school improvement under section 1116, including such 
        corrective actions as are necessary;
          [(7) the State educational agency will provide the 
        least restrictive and burdensome regulations for local 
        educational agencies and individual schools 
        participating in a program assisted under this part;
          [(8) the State educational agency will inform the 
        Secretary and the public of how Federal laws, if at 
        all, hinder the ability of States to hold local 
        educational agencies and schools accountable for 
        student academic achievement;
          [(9) the State educational agency will encourage 
        schools to consolidate funds from other Federal, State, 
        and local sources for schoolwide reform in schoolwide 
        programs under section 1114;
          [(10) the State educational agency will modify or 
        eliminate State fiscal and accounting barriers so that 
        schools can easily consolidate funds from other 
        Federal, State, and local sources for schoolwide 
        programs under section 1114;
          [(11) the State educational agency has involved the 
        committee of practitioners established under section 
        1903(b) in developing the plan and monitoring its 
        implementation;
          [(12) the State educational agency will inform local 
        educational agencies in the State of the local 
        educational agency's authority to transfer funds under 
        title VI, to obtain waivers under part D of title IX, 
        and, if the State is an Ed-Flex Partnership State, to 
        obtain waivers under the Education Flexibility 
        Partnership Act of 1999;
          [(13) the State educational agency will coordinate 
        activities funded under this part with other Federal 
        activities as appropriate; and
          [(14) the State educational agency will encourage 
        local educational agencies and individual schools 
        participating in a program assisted under this part to 
        offer family literacy services (using funds under this 
        part), if the agency or school determines that a 
        substantial number of students served under this part 
        by the agency or school have parents who do not have a 
        secondary school diploma or its recognized equivalent 
        or who have low levels of literacy.
  [(d) Parental Involvement.--Each State plan shall describe 
how the State educational agency will support the collection 
and dissemination to local educational agencies and schools of 
effective parental involvement practices. Such practices 
shall--
          [(1) be based on the most current research that meets 
        the highest professional and technical standards, on 
        effective parental involvement that fosters achievement 
        to high standards for all children; and
          [(2) be geared toward lowering barriers to greater 
        participation by parents in school planning, review, 
        and improvement experienced.
  [(e) Peer Review and Secretarial Approval.--
          [(1) Secretarial duties.--The Secretary shall--
                  [(A) establish a peer-review process to 
                assist in the review of State plans;
                  [(B) appoint individuals to the peer-review 
                process who are representative of parents, 
                teachers, State educational agencies, and local 
                educational agencies, and who are familiar with 
                educational standards, assessments, 
                accountability, the needs of low-performing 
                schools, and other educational needs of 
                students;
                  [(C) approve a State plan within 120 days of 
                its submission unless the Secretary determines 
                that the plan does not meet the requirements of 
                this section;
                  [(D) if the Secretary determines that the 
                State plan does not meet the requirements of 
                subsection (a), (b), or (c), immediately notify 
                the State of such determination and the reasons 
                for such determination;
                  [(E) not decline to approve a State's plan 
                before--
                          [(i) offering the State an 
                        opportunity to revise its plan;
                          [(ii) providing technical assistance 
                        in order to assist the State to meet 
                        the requirements of subsections (a), 
                        (b), and (c); and
                          [(iii) providing a hearing; and
                  [(F) have the authority to disapprove a State 
                plan for not meeting the requirements of this 
                part, but shall not have the authority to 
                require a State, as a condition of approval of 
                the State plan, to include in, or delete from, 
                such plan one or more specific elements of the 
                State's academic content standards or to use 
                specific academic assessment instruments or 
                items.
          [(2) State revisions.--A State plan shall be revised 
        by the State educational agency if it is necessary to 
        satisfy the requirements of this section.
  [(f) Duration of the Plan.--
          [(1) In general.--Each State plan shall--
                  [(A) remain in effect for the duration of the 
                State's participation under this part; and
                  [(B) be periodically reviewed and revised as 
                necessary by the State educational agency to 
                reflect changes in the State's strategies and 
                programs under this part.
          [(2) Additional information.--If significant changes 
        are made to a State's plan, such as the adoption of new 
        State academic content standards and State student 
        achievement standards, new academic assessments, or a 
        new definition of adequate yearly progress, such 
        information shall be submitted to the Secretary.
  [(g) Penalties.--
          [(1) Failure to meet deadlines enacted in 1994.--
                  [(A) In general.--If a State fails to meet 
                the deadlines established by the Improving 
                America's Schools Act of 1994 (or under any 
                waiver granted by the Secretary or under any 
                compliance agreement with the Secretary) for 
                demonstrating that the State has in place 
                challenging academic content standards and 
                student achievement standards, and a system for 
                measuring and monitoring adequate yearly 
                progress, the Secretary shall withhold 25 
                percent of the funds that would otherwise be 
                available to the State for State administration 
                and activities under this part in each year 
                until the Secretary determines that the State 
                meets those requirements.
                  [(B) No extension.--Notwithstanding any other 
                provision of law, 90 days after the date of 
                enactment of the No Child Left Behind Act of 
                2001 the Secretary shall not grant any 
                additional waivers of, or enter into any 
                additional compliance agreements to extend, the 
                deadlines described in subparagraph (A) for any 
                State.
          [(2) Failure to meet requirements enacted in 2001.--
        If a State fails to meet any of the requirements of 
        this section, other than the requirements described in 
        paragraph (1), then the Secretary may withhold funds 
        for State administration under this part until the 
        Secretary determines that the State has fulfilled those 
        requirements.
  [(h) Reports.--
          [(1) Annual state report card.--
                  [(A) In general.--Not later than the 
                beginning of the 2002-2003 school year, unless 
                the State has received a 1-year extension 
                pursuant to subsection (c)(1), a State that 
                receives assistance under this part shall 
                prepare and disseminate an annual State report 
                card.
                  [(B) Implementation.--The State report card 
                shall be--
                          [(i) concise; and
                          [(ii) presented in an understandable 
                        and uniform format and, to the extent 
                        practicable, provided in a language 
                        that the parents can understand.
                  [(C) Required information.--The State shall 
                include in its annual State report card--
                          [(i) information, in the aggregate, 
                        on student achievement at each 
                        proficiency level on the State academic 
                        assessments described in subsection 
                        (b)(3) (disaggregated by race, 
                        ethnicity, gender, disability status, 
                        migrant status, English proficiency, 
                        and status as economically 
                        disadvantaged, except that such 
                        disaggregation shall not be required in 
                        a case in which the number of students 
                        in a category is insufficient to yield 
                        statistically reliable information or 
                        the results would reveal personally 
                        identifiable information about an 
                        individual student);
                          [(ii) information that provides a 
                        comparison between the actual 
                        achievement levels of each group of 
                        students described in subsection 
                        (b)(2)(C)(v) and the State's annual 
                        measurable objectives for each such 
                        group of students on each of the 
                        academic assessments required under 
                        this part;
                          [(iii) the percentage of students not 
                        tested (disaggregated by the same 
                        categories and subject to the same 
                        exception described in clause (i));
                          [(iv) the most recent 2-year trend in 
                        student achievement in each subject 
                        area, and for each grade level, for 
                        which assessments under this section 
                        are required;
                          [(v) aggregate information on any 
                        other indicators used by the State to 
                        determine the adequate yearly progress 
                        of students in achieving State academic 
                        achievement standards;
                          [(vi) graduation rates for secondary 
                        school students consistent with 
                        subsection (b)(2)(C)(vi);
                          [(vii) information on the performance 
                        of local educational agencies in the 
                        State regarding making adequate yearly 
                        progress, including the number and 
                        names of each school identified for 
                        school improvement under section 1116; 
                        and
                          [(viii) the professional 
                        qualifications of teachers in the 
                        State, the percentage of such teachers 
                        teaching with emergency or provisional 
                        credentials, and the percentage of 
                        classes in the State not taught by 
                        highly qualified teachers, in the 
                        aggregate and disaggregated by high-
                        poverty compared to low-poverty schools 
                        which, for the purpose of this clause, 
                        means schools in the top quartile of 
                        poverty and the bottom quartile of 
                        poverty in the State.
                  [(D) Optional information.--The State may 
                include in its annual State report card such 
                other information as the State believes will 
                best provide parents, students, and other 
                members of the public with information 
                regarding the progress of each of the State's 
                public elementary schools and public secondary 
                schools. Such information may include 
                information regarding--
                          [(i) school attendance rates;
                          [(ii) average class size in each 
                        grade;
                          [(iii) academic achievement and gains 
                        in English proficiency of limited 
                        English proficient students;
                          [(iv) the incidence of school 
                        violence, drug abuse, alcohol abuse, 
                        student suspensions, and student 
                        expulsions;
                          [(v) the extent and type of parental 
                        involvement in the schools;
                          [(vi) the percentage of students 
                        completing advanced placement courses, 
                        and the rate of passing of advanced 
                        placement tests; and
                          [(vii) a clear and concise 
                        description of the State's 
                        accountability system, including a 
                        description of the criteria by which 
                        the State evaluates school performance, 
                        and the criteria that the State has 
                        established, consistent with subsection 
                        (b)(2), to determine the status of 
                        schools regarding school improvement, 
                        corrective action, and restructuring.
          [(2) Annual local educational agency report cards.--
                  [(A) Report cards.--
                          [(i) In general.--Not later than the 
                        beginning of the 2002-2003 school year, 
                        a local educational agency that 
                        receives assistance under this part 
                        shall prepare and disseminate an annual 
                        local educational agency report card, 
                        except that the State educational 
                        agency may provide the local 
                        educational agency 1 additional year if 
                        the local educational agency 
                        demonstrates that exceptional or 
                        uncontrollable circumstances, such as a 
                        natural disaster or a precipitous and 
                        unforeseen decline in the financial 
                        resources of the local educational 
                        agency, prevented full implementation 
                        of this paragraph by that deadline and 
                        that the local educational agency will 
                        complete implementation within the 
                        additional 1-year period.
                          [(ii) Special rule.--If a State 
                        educational agency has received an 
                        extension pursuant to subsection 
                        (c)(1), then a local educational agency 
                        within that State shall not be required 
                        to include the information required 
                        under paragraph (1)(C) in such report 
                        card during such extension.
                  [(B) Minimum requirements.--The State 
                educational agency shall ensure that each local 
                educational agency collects appropriate data 
                and includes in the local educational agency's 
                annual report the information described in 
                paragraph (1)(C) as applied to the local 
                educational agency and each school served by 
                the local educational agency, and--
                          [(i) in the case of a local 
                        educational agency--
                                  [(I) the number and 
                                percentage of schools 
                                identified for school 
                                improvement under section 
                                1116(c) and how long the 
                                schools have been so 
                                identified; and
                                  [(II) information that shows 
                                how students served by the 
                                local educational agency 
                                achieved on the statewide 
                                academic assessment compared to 
                                students in the State as a 
                                whole; and
                          [(ii) in the case of a school--
                                  [(I) whether the school has 
                                been identified for school 
                                improvement; and
                                  [(II) information that shows 
                                how the school's students 
                                achievement on the statewide 
                                academic assessments and other 
                                indicators of adequate yearly 
                                progress compared to students 
                                in the local educational agency 
                                and the State as a whole.
                  [(C) Other information.--A local educational 
                agency may include in its annual local 
                educational agency report card any other 
                appropriate information, whether or not such 
                information is included in the annual State 
                report card.
                  [(D) Data.--A local educational agency or 
                school shall only include in its annual local 
                educational agency report card data that are 
                sufficient to yield statistically reliable 
                information, as determined by the State, and 
                that do not reveal personally identifiable 
                information about an individual student.
                  [(E) Public dissemination.--The local 
                educational agency shall, not later than the 
                beginning of the 2002-2003 school year, unless 
                the local educational agency has received a 1-
                year extension pursuant to subparagraph (A), 
                publicly disseminate the information described 
                in this paragraph to all schools in the school 
                district served by the local educational agency 
                and to all parents of students attending those 
                schools in an understandable and uniform format 
                and, to the extent practicable, provided in a 
                language that the parents can understand, and 
                make the information widely available through 
                public means, such as posting on the Internet, 
                distribution to the media, and distribution 
                through public agencies, except that if a local 
                educational agency issues a report card for all 
                students, the local educational agency may 
                include the information under this section as 
                part of such report.
          [(3) Preexisting report cards.--A State educational 
        agency or local educational agency that was providing 
        public report cards on the performance of students, 
        schools, local educational agencies, or the State prior 
        to the enactment of the No Child Left Behind Act of 
        2001 may use those report cards for the purpose of this 
        subsection, so long as any such report card is 
        modified, as may be needed, to contain the information 
        required by this subsection.
          [(4) Annual state report to the secretary.--Each 
        State educational agency receiving assistance under 
        this part shall report annually to the Secretary, and 
        make widely available within the State--
                  [(A) beginning with school year 2002-2003, 
                information on the State's progress in 
                developing and implementing the academic 
                assessments described in subsection (b)(3);
                  [(B) beginning not later than school year 
                2002-2003, information on the achievement of 
                students on the academic assessments required 
                by subsection (b)(3), including the 
                disaggregated results for the categories of 
                students identified in subsection (b)(2)(C)(v);
                  [(C) in any year before the State begins to 
                provide the information described in 
                subparagraph (B), information on the results of 
                student academic assessments (including 
                disaggregated results) required under this 
                section;
                  [(D) beginning not later than school year 
                2002-2003, unless the State has received an 
                extension pursuant to subsection (c)(1), 
                information on the acquisition of English 
                proficiency by children with limited English 
                proficiency;
                  [(E) the number and names of each school 
                identified for school improvement under section 
                1116(c), the reason why each school was so 
                identified, and the measures taken to address 
                the achievement problems of such schools;
                  [(F) the number of students and schools that 
                participated in public school choice and 
                supplemental service programs and activities 
                under this title; and
                  [(G) beginning not later than the 2002-2003 
                school year, information on the quality of 
                teachers and the percentage of classes being 
                taught by highly qualified teachers in the 
                State, local educational agency, and school.
          [(5) Report to congress.--The Secretary shall 
        transmit annually to the Committee on Education and the 
        Workforce of the House of Representatives and the 
        Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions of 
        the Senate a report that provides national and State-
        level data on the information collected under paragraph 
        (4).
          [(6) Parents right-to-know.--
                  [(A) Qualifications.--At the beginning of 
                each school year, a local educational agency 
                that receives funds under this part shall 
                notify the parents of each student attending 
                any school receiving funds under this part that 
                the parents may request, and the agency will 
                provide the parents on request (and in a timely 
                manner), information regarding the professional 
                qualifications of the student's classroom 
                teachers, including, at a minimum, the 
                following:
                          [(i) Whether the teacher has met 
                        State qualification and licensing 
                        criteria for the grade levels and 
                        subject areas in which the teacher 
                        provides instruction.
                          [(ii) Whether the teacher is teaching 
                        under emergency or other provisional 
                        status through which State 
                        qualification or licensing criteria 
                        have been waived.
                          [(iii) The baccalaureate degree major 
                        of the teacher and any other graduate 
                        certification or degree held by the 
                        teacher, and the field of discipline of 
                        the certification or degree.
                          [(iv) Whether the child is provided 
                        services by paraprofessionals and, if 
                        so, their qualifications.
                  [(B) Additional information.--In addition to 
                the information that parents may request under 
                subparagraph (A), a school that receives funds 
                under this part shall provide to each 
                individual parent--
                          [(i) information on the level of 
                        achievement of the parent's child in 
                        each of the State academic assessments 
                        as required under this part; and
                          [(ii) timely notice that the parent's 
                        child has been assigned, or has been 
                        taught for four or more consecutive 
                        weeks by, a teacher who is not highly 
                        qualified.
                  [(C) Format.--The notice and information 
                provided to parents under this paragraph shall 
                be in an understandable and uniform format and, 
                to the extent practicable, provided in a 
                language that the parents can understand.
  [(i) Privacy.--Information collected under this section shall 
be collected and disseminated in a manner that protects the 
privacy of individuals.
  [(j) Technical Assistance.--The Secretary shall provide a 
State educational agency, at the State educational agency's 
request, technical assistance in meeting the requirements of 
this section, including the provision of advice by experts in 
the development of high-quality academic assessments, the 
setting of State standards, the development of measures of 
adequate yearly progress that are valid and reliable, and other 
relevant areas.
  [(k) Voluntary Partnerships.--A State may enter into a 
voluntary partnership with another State to develop and 
implement the academic assessments and standards required under 
this section.
  [(l) Construction.--Nothing in this part shall be construed 
to prescribe the use of the academic assessments described in 
this part for student promotion or graduation purposes.
  [(m) Special Rule With Respect to Bureau-Funded Schools.--In 
determining the assessments to be used by each operated or 
funded by BIA school receiving funds under this part, the 
following shall apply:
          [(1) Each such school that is accredited by the State 
        in which it is operating shall use the assessments the 
        State has developed and implemented to meet the 
        requirements of this section, or such other appropriate 
        assessment as approved by the Secretary of the 
        Interior.
          [(2) Each such school that is accredited by a 
        regional accrediting organization shall adopt an 
        appropriate assessment, in consultation with and with 
        the approval of, the Secretary of the Interior and 
        consistent with assessments adopted by other schools in 
        the same State or region, that meets the requirements 
        of this section.
          [(3) Each such school that is accredited by a tribal 
        accrediting agency or tribal division of education 
        shall use an assessment developed by such agency or 
        division, except that the Secretary of the Interior 
        shall ensure that such assessment meets the 
        requirements of this section.

[SEC. 1112. LOCAL EDUCATIONAL AGENCY PLANS.

  [(a) Plans Required.--
          [(1) Subgrants.--A local educational agency may 
        receive a subgrant under this part for any fiscal year 
        only if such agency has on file with the State 
        educational agency a plan, approved by the State 
        educational agency, that is coordinated with other 
        programs under this Act, the Individuals with 
        Disabilities Education Act, the Carl D. Perkins Career 
        and Technical Education Act of 2006, the McKinney-Vento 
        Homeless Assistance Act, and other Acts, as 
        appropriate.
          [(2) Consolidated application.--The plan may be 
        submitted as part of a consolidated application under 
        section 9305.
  [(b) Plan Provisions.--
          [(1) In general.--In order to help low-achieving 
        children meet challenging achievement academic 
        standards, each local educational agency plan shall 
        include--
                  [(A) a description of high-quality student 
                academic assessments, if any, that are in 
                addition to the academic assessments described 
                in the State plan under section 1111(b)(3), 
                that the local educational agency and schools 
                served under this part will use--
                          [(i) to determine the success of 
                        children served under this part in 
                        meeting the State student academic 
                        achievement standards, and to provide 
                        information to teachers, parents, and 
                        students on the progress being made 
                        toward meeting the State student 
                        academic achievement standards 
                        described in section 1111(b)(1)(D)(ii);
                          [(ii) to assist in diagnosis, 
                        teaching, and learning in the classroom 
                        in ways that best enable low-achieving 
                        children served under this part to meet 
                        State student achievement academic 
                        standards and do well in the local 
                        curriculum;
                          [(iii) to determine what revisions 
                        are needed to projects under this part 
                        so that such children meet the State 
                        student academic achievement standards; 
                        and
                          [(iv) to identify effectively 
                        students who may be at risk for reading 
                        failure or who are having difficulty 
                        reading, through the use of screening, 
                        diagnostic, and classroom-based 
                        instructional reading assessments, as 
                        defined under section 1208;
                  [(B) at the local educational agency's 
                discretion, a description of any other 
                indicators that will be used in addition to the 
                academic indicators described in section 1111 
                for the uses described in such section;
                  [(C) a description of how the local 
                educational agency will provide additional 
                educational assistance to individual students 
                assessed as needing help in meeting the State's 
                challenging student academic achievement 
                standards;
                  [(D) a description of the strategy the local 
                educational agency will use to coordinate 
                programs under this part with programs under 
                title II to provide professional development 
                for teachers and principals, and, if 
                appropriate, pupil services personnel, 
                administrators, parents and other staff, 
                including local educational agency level staff 
                in accordance with sections 1118 and 1119;
                  [(E) a description of how the local 
                educational agency will coordinate and 
                integrate services provided under this part 
                with other educational services at the local 
                educational agency or individual school level, 
                such as--
                          [(i) Even Start, Head Start, Reading 
                        First, Early Reading First, and other 
                        preschool programs, including plans for 
                        the transition of participants in such 
                        programs to local elementary school 
                        programs; and
                          [(ii) services for children with 
                        limited English proficiency, children 
                        with disabilities, migratory children, 
                        neglected or delinquent youth, Indian 
                        children served under part A of title 
                        VII, homeless children, and immigrant 
                        children in order to increase program 
                        effectiveness, eliminate duplication, 
                        and reduce fragmentation of the 
                        instructional program;
                  [(F) an assurance that the local educational 
                agency will participate, if selected, in the 
                State National Assessment of Educational 
                Progress in 4th and 8th grade reading and 
                mathematics carried out under section 303(b)(2) 
                of the National Assessment of Educational 
                Progress Authorization Act;
                  [(G) a description of the poverty criteria 
                that will be used to select school attendance 
                areas under section 1113;
                  [(H) a description of how teachers, in 
                consultation with parents, administrators, and 
                pupil services personnel, in targeted 
                assistance schools under section 1115, will 
                identify the eligible children most in need of 
                services under this part;
                  [(I) a general description of the nature of 
                the programs to be conducted by such agency's 
                schools under sections 1114 and 1115 and, where 
                appropriate, educational services outside such 
                schools for children living in local 
                institutions for neglected or delinquent 
                children, and for neglected and delinquent 
                children in community day school programs;
                  [(J) a description of how the local 
                educational agency will ensure that migratory 
                children and formerly migratory children who 
                are eligible to receive services under this 
                part are selected to receive such services on 
                the same basis as other children who are 
                selected to receive services under this part;
                  [(K) if appropriate, a description of how the 
                local educational agency will use funds under 
                this part to support preschool programs for 
                children, particularly children participating 
                in Early Reading First, or in a Head Start or 
                Even Start program, which services may be 
                provided directly by the local educational 
                agency or through a subcontract with the local 
                Head Start agency designated by the Secretary 
                of Health and Human Services under section 641 
                of the Head Start Act, or an agency operating 
                an Even Start program, an Early Reading First 
                program, or another comparable public early 
                childhood development program;
                  [(L) a description of the actions the local 
                educational agency will take to assist its low-
                achieving schools identified under section 1116 
                as in need of improvement;
                  [(M) a description of the actions the local 
                educational agency will take to implement 
                public school choice and supplemental services, 
                consistent with the requirements of section 
                1116;
                  [(N) a description of how the local 
                educational agency will meet the requirements 
                of section 1119;
                  [(O) a description of the services the local 
                educational agency will provide homeless 
                children, including services provided with 
                funds reserved under section 1113(c)(3)(A);
                  [(P) a description of the strategy the local 
                educational agency will use to implement 
                effective parental involvement under section 
                1118; and
                  [(Q) where appropriate, a description of how 
                the local educational agency will use funds 
                under this part to support after school 
                (including before school and summer school) and 
                school-year extension programs.
          [(2) Exception.--The academic assessments and 
        indicators described in subparagraphs (A) and (B) of 
        paragraph (1) shall not be used--
                  [(A) in lieu of the academic assessments 
                required under section 1111(b)(3) and other 
                State academic indicators under section 
                1111(b)(2); or
                  [(B) to reduce the number of, or change 
                which, schools would otherwise be subject to 
                school improvement, corrective action, or 
                restructuring under section 1116, if such 
                additional assessments or indicators described 
                in such subparagraphs were not used, but such 
                assessments and indicators may be used to 
                identify additional schools for school 
                improvement or in need of corrective action or 
                restructuring.
  [(c) Assurances.--
          [(1) In general.--Each local educational agency plan 
        shall provide assurances that the local educational 
        agency will--
                  [(A) inform eligible schools and parents of 
                schoolwide program authority and the ability of 
                such schools to consolidate funds from Federal, 
                State, and local sources;
                  [(B) provide technical assistance and support 
                to schoolwide programs;
                  [(C) work in consultation with schools as the 
                schools develop the schools' plans pursuant to 
                section 1114 and assist schools as the schools 
                implement such plans or undertake activities 
                pursuant to section 1115 so that each school 
                can make adequate yearly progress toward 
                meeting the State student academic achievement 
                standards;
                  [(D) fulfill such agency's school improvement 
                responsibilities under section 1116, including 
                taking actions under paragraphs (7) and (8) of 
                section 1116(b);
                  [(E) provide services to eligible children 
                attending private elementary schools and 
                secondary schools in accordance with section 
                1120, and timely and meaningful consultation 
                with private school officials regarding such 
                services;
                  [(F) take into account the experience of 
                model programs for the educationally 
                disadvantaged, and the findings of relevant 
                scientifically based research indicating that 
                services may be most effective if focused on 
                students in the earliest grades at schools that 
                receive funds under this part;
                  [(G) in the case of a local educational 
                agency that chooses to use funds under this 
                part to provide early childhood development 
                services to low-income children below the age 
                of compulsory school attendance, ensure that 
                such services comply with the education 
                performance standards in effect under section 
                641A(a)(1)(B) of the Head Start Act;
                  [(H) work in consultation with schools as the 
                schools develop and implement their plans or 
                activities under sections 1118 and 1119;
                  [(I) comply with the requirements of section 
                1119 regarding the qualifications of teachers 
                and paraprofessionals and professional 
                development;
                  [(J) inform eligible schools of the local 
                educational agency's authority to obtain 
                waivers on the school's behalf under title IX 
                and, if the State is an Ed-Flex Partnership 
                State, to obtain waivers under the Education 
                Flexibility Partnership Act of 1999;
                  [(K) coordinate and collaborate, to the 
                extent feasible and necessary as determined by 
                the local educational agency, with the State 
                educational agency and other agencies providing 
                services to children, youth, and families with 
                respect to a school in school improvement, 
                corrective action, or restructuring under 
                section 1116 if such a school requests 
                assistance from the local educational agency in 
                addressing major factors that have 
                significantly affected student achievement at 
                the school;
                  [(L) ensure, through incentives for voluntary 
                transfers, the provision of professional 
                development, recruitment programs, or other 
                effective strategies, that low-income students 
                and minority students are not taught at higher 
                rates than other students by unqualified, out-
                of-field, or inexperienced teachers;
                  [(M) use the results of the student academic 
                assessments required under section 1111(b)(3), 
                and other measures or indicators available to 
                the agency, to review annually the progress of 
                each school served by the agency and receiving 
                funds under this part to determine whether all 
                of the schools are making the progress 
                necessary to ensure that all students will meet 
                the State's proficient level of achievement on 
                the State academic assessments described in 
                section 1111(b)(3) within 12 years from the end 
                of the 2001-2002 school year;
                  [(N) ensure that the results from the 
                academic assessments required under section 
                1111(b)(3) will be provided to parents and 
                teachers as soon as is practicably possible 
                after the test is taken, in an understandable 
                and uniform format and, to the extent 
                practicable, provided in a language that the 
                parents can understand; and
                  [(O) assist each school served by the agency 
                and assisted under this part in developing or 
                identifying examples of high-quality, effective 
                curricula consistent with section 
                1111(b)(8)(D).
          [(2) Special rule.--In carrying out subparagraph (G) 
        of paragraph (1), the Secretary--
                  [(A) shall consult with the Secretary of 
                Health and Human Services and shall establish 
                procedures (taking into consideration existing 
                State and local laws, and local teacher 
                contracts) to assist local educational agencies 
                to comply with such subparagraph; and
                  [(B) shall disseminate to local educational 
                agencies the education performance standards in 
                effect under section 641A(a)(1)(B) of the Head 
                Start Act, and such agencies affected by such 
                subparagraph shall plan for the implementation 
                of such subparagraph (taking into consideration 
                existing State and local laws, and local 
                teacher contracts), including pursuing the 
                availability of other Federal, State, and local 
                funding sources to assist in compliance with 
                such subparagraph.
          [(3) Inapplicability.--Paragraph (1)(G) of this 
        subsection shall not apply to preschool programs using 
        the Even Start model or to Even Start programs that are 
        expanded through the use of funds under this part.
  [(d) Plan Development and Duration.--
          [(1) Consultation.--Each local educational agency 
        plan shall be developed in consultation with teachers, 
        principals, administrators (including administrators of 
        programs described in other parts of this title), and 
        other appropriate school personnel, and with parents of 
        children in schools served under this part.
          [(2) Duration.--Each such plan shall be submitted for 
        the first year for which this part is in effect 
        following the date of enactment of the No Child Left 
        Behind Act of 2001 and shall remain in effect for the 
        duration of the agency's participation under this part.
          [(3) Review.--Each local educational agency shall 
        periodically review and, as necessary, revise its plan.
  [(e) State Approval.--
          [(1) In general.--Each local educational agency plan 
        shall be filed according to a schedule established by 
        the State educational agency.
          [(2) Approval.--The State educational agency shall 
        approve a local educational agency's plan only if the 
        State educational agency determines that the local 
        educational agency's plan--
                  [(A) enables schools served under this part 
                to substantially help children served under 
                this part meet the academic standards expected 
                of all children described in section 
                1111(b)(1); and
                  [(B) meets the requirements of this section.
          [(3) Review.--The State educational agency shall 
        review the local educational agency's plan to determine 
        if such agencies activities are in accordance with 
        sections 1118 and 1119.
  [(f) Program Responsibility.--The local educational agency 
plan shall reflect the shared responsibility of schools, 
teachers, and the local educational agency in making decisions 
regarding activities under sections 1114 and 1115.
  [(g) Parental Notification.--
          [(1) In general.--
                  [(A) Notice.--Each local educational agency 
                using funds under this part to provide a 
                language instruction educational program as 
                determined in part C of title III shall, not 
                later than 30 days after the beginning of the 
                school year, inform a parent or parents of a 
                limited English proficient child identified for 
                participation or participating in, such a 
                program of--
                          [(i) the reasons for the 
                        identification of their child as 
                        limited English proficient and in need 
                        of placement in a language instruction 
                        educational program;
                          [(ii) the child's level of English 
                        proficiency, how such level was 
                        assessed, and the status of the child's 
                        academic achievement;
                          [(iii) the methods of instruction 
                        used in the program in which their 
                        child is, or will be participating, and 
                        the methods of instruction used in 
                        other available programs, including how 
                        such programs differ in content, 
                        instructional goals, and the use of 
                        English and a native language in 
                        instruction;
                          [(iv) how the program in which their 
                        child is, or will be participating, 
                        will meet the educational strengths and 
                        needs of their child;
                          [(v) how such program will 
                        specifically help their child learn 
                        English, and meet age-appropriate 
                        academic achievement standards for 
                        grade promotion and graduation;
                          [(vi) the specific exit requirements 
                        for the program, including the expected 
                        rate of transition from such program 
                        into classrooms that are not tailored 
                        for limited English proficient 
                        children, and the expected rate of 
                        graduation from secondary school for 
                        such program if funds under this part 
                        are used for children in secondary 
                        schools;
                          [(vii) in the case of a child with a 
                        disability, how such program meets the 
                        objectives of the individualized 
                        education program of the child;
                          [(viii) information pertaining to 
                        parental rights that includes written 
                        guidance--
                                  [(I) detailing--
                                          [(aa) the right that 
                                        parents have to have 
                                        their child immediately 
                                        removed from such 
                                        program upon their 
                                        request; and
                                          [(bb) the options 
                                        that parents have to 
                                        decline to enroll their 
                                        child in such program 
                                        or to choose another 
                                        program or method of 
                                        instruction, if 
                                        available; and
                                  [(II) assisting parents in 
                                selecting among various 
                                programs and methods of 
                                instruction, if more than one 
                                program or method is offered by 
                                the eligible entity.
                  [(B) Separate notification.--In addition to 
                providing the information required to be 
                provided under paragraph (1), each eligible 
                entity that is using funds provided under this 
                part to provide a language instruction 
                educational program, and that has failed to 
                make progress on the annual measurable 
                achievement objectives described in section 
                3122 for any fiscal year for which part A is in 
                effect, shall separately inform a parent or the 
                parents of a child identified for participation 
                in such program, or participating in such 
                program, of such failure not later than 30 days 
                after such failure occurs.
          [(2) Notice.--The notice and information provided in 
        paragraph (1) to a parent or parents of a child 
        identified for participation in a language instruction 
        educational program for limited English proficient 
        children shall be in an understandable and uniform 
        format and, to the extent practicable, provided in a 
        language that the parents can understand.
          [(3) Special rule applicable during the school 
        year.--For those children who have not been identified 
        as limited English proficient prior to the beginning of 
        the school year the local educational agency shall 
        notify parents within the first 2 weeks of the child 
        being placed in a language instruction educational 
        program consistent with paragraphs (1) and (2).
          [(4) Parental participation.--Each local educational 
        agency receiving funds under this part shall implement 
        an effective means of outreach to parents of limited 
        English proficient students to inform the parents 
        regarding how the parents can be involved in the 
        education of their children, and be active participants 
        in assisting their children to attain English 
        proficiency, achieve at high levels in core academic 
        subjects, and meet challenging State academic 
        achievement standards and State academic content 
        standards expected of all students, including holding, 
        and sending notice of opportunities for, regular 
        meetings for the purpose of formulating and responding 
        to recommendations from parents of students assisted 
        under this part.
          [(5) Basis for admission or exclusion.--A student 
        shall not be admitted to, or excluded from, any 
        federally assisted education program on the basis of a 
        surname or language-minority status.]

SEC. 1111. STATE PLANS.

  (a) Filing for Grants.--
          (1) In general.--For any State desiring to receive a 
        grant under this subpart, the State educational agency 
        file with the Secretary a plan, developed by the State 
        educational agency, in consultation with local 
        educational agencies, teachers, school leaders, public 
        charter school representatives, specialized 
        instructional support personnel, other appropriate 
        school personnel, parents, private sector employers, 
        entrepreneurs, and representatives of Indian tribes 
        located in the State, that satisfies the requirements 
        of this section and that is coordinated with other 
        programs under this Act, the Individuals with 
        Disabilities Education Act, the Carl D. Perkins Career 
        and Technical Education Act of 2006, the Head Start 
        Act, the Adult Education and Family Literacy Act, and 
        the McKinney-Vento Homeless Assistance Act.
          (2) Consolidated plan.--A State plan submitted under 
        paragraph (1) may be submitted as part of a 
        consolidated plan under section 6302.
  (b) Academic Standards, Academic Assessments, and State 
Accountability.--
          (1) Academic standards.--
                  (A) In general.--Each State plan shall 
                demonstrate that the State has adopted academic 
                content standards and academic achievement 
                standards aligned with such content standards 
                that comply with the requirements of this 
                paragraph.
                  (B) Subjects.--The State shall have such 
                academic standards for mathematics, reading or 
                language arts, and science, and may have such 
                standards for any other subject determined by 
                the State.
                  (C) Requirements.--The standards described in 
                subparagraph (A) shall--
                          (i) apply to all public schools and 
                        public school students in the State; 
                        and
                          (ii) with respect to academic 
                        achievement standards, include the same 
                        knowledge, skills, and levels of 
                        achievement expected of all public 
                        school students in the State.
                  (D) Alternate academic achievement 
                standards.--Notwithstanding any other provision 
                of this paragraph, a State retains the right, 
                through a documented and validated standards-
                setting process, to adopt alternate academic 
                achievement standards for students with the 
                most significant cognitive disabilities, if--
                          (i) the determination about whether 
                        the achievement of an individual 
                        student should be measured against such 
                        standards is made separately for each 
                        student; and
                          (ii) such standards--
                                  (I) are aligned with the 
                                State academic standards 
                                required under subparagraph 
                                (A);
                                  (II) promote access to the 
                                general curriculum; and
                                  (III) reflect professional 
                                judgment as to the highest 
                                possible standards achievable 
                                by such students.
                  (E) English language proficiency standards.--
                Each State plan shall describe how the State 
                educational agency will establish English 
                language proficiency standards that are--
                          (i) derived from the four recognized 
                        domains of speaking, listening, 
                        reading, and writing; and
                          (ii) aligned with the State's 
                        academic content standards in reading 
                        or language arts under subparagraph 
                        (A).
          (2) Academic assessments.--
                  (A) In general.--Each State plan shall 
                demonstrate that the State educational agency, 
                in consultation with local educational 
                agencies, has implemented a set of high-quality 
                student academic assessments in mathematics, 
                reading or language arts, and science. The 
                State retains the right to implement such 
                assessments in any other subject chosen by the 
                State.
                  (B) Requirements.--Such assessments shall--
                          (i) in the case of mathematics and 
                        reading or language arts, be used in 
                        determining the performance of each 
                        local educational agency and public 
                        school in the State in accordance with 
                        the State's accountability system under 
                        paragraph (3);
                          (ii) be the same academic assessments 
                        used to measure the academic 
                        achievement of all public school 
                        students in the State;
                          (iii) be aligned with the State's 
                        academic standards and provide coherent 
                        and timely information about student 
                        attainment of such standards;
                          (iv) be used for purposes for which 
                        such assessments are valid and 
                        reliable, be of adequate technical 
                        quality for each purpose required under 
                        this Act, and be consistent with 
                        relevant, nationally recognized 
                        professional and technical standards;
                          (v)(I) in the case of mathematics and 
                        reading or language arts, be 
                        administered in each of grades 3 
                        through 8 and at least once in grades 9 
                        through 12;
                          (II) in the case of science, be 
                        administered not less than one time 
                        during--
                                  (aa) grades 3 through 5;
                                  (bb) grades 6 through 9; and
                                  (cc) grades 10 through 12; 
                                and
                          (III) in the case of any other 
                        subject chosen by the State, be 
                        administered at the discretion of the 
                        State;
                          (vi) measure individual student 
                        academic proficiency and, at the 
                        State's discretion, growth;
                          (vii) at the State's discretion--
                                  (I) be administered through a 
                                single annual summative 
                                assessment; or
                                  (II) be administered through 
                                multiple assessments during the 
                                course of the academic year 
                                that result in a single 
                                summative score that provides 
                                valid, reliable, and 
                                transparent information on 
                                student achievement;
                          (viii) include measures that assess 
                        higher-order thinking skills and 
                        understanding;
                          (ix) provide for--
                                  (I) the participation in such 
                                assessments of all students;
                                  (II) the reasonable 
                                adaptations and accommodations 
                                for students with disabilities 
                                necessary to measure the 
                                academic achievement of such 
                                students relative to the 
                                State's academic standards; and
                                  (III) the inclusion of 
                                English learners, who shall be 
                                assessed in a valid and 
                                reliable manner and provided 
                                reasonable accommodations, 
                                including, to the extent 
                                practicable, assessments in the 
                                language and form most likely 
                                to yield accurate and reliable 
                                information on what such 
                                students know and can do in 
                                academic content areas, until 
                                such students have achieved 
                                English language proficiency, 
                                as assessed by the State under 
                                subparagraph (D);
                          (x) notwithstanding clause (ix)(III), 
                        provide for the assessment of reading 
                        or language arts in English for English 
                        learners who have attended school in 
                        the United States (not including Puerto 
                        Rico) for 3 or more consecutive school 
                        years, except that a local educational 
                        agency may, on a case-by-case basis, 
                        provide for the assessment of reading 
                        or language arts for each such student 
                        in a language other than English for a 
                        period not to exceed 2 additional 
                        consecutive years if the assessment 
                        would be more likely to yield accurate 
                        and reliable information on what such 
                        student knows and can do, provided that 
                        such student has not yet reached a 
                        level of English language proficiency 
                        sufficient to yield valid and reliable 
                        information on what such student knows 
                        and can do on reading or language arts 
                        assessments written in English;
                          (xi) produce individual student 
                        interpretive, descriptive, and 
                        diagnostic reports regarding 
                        achievement on such assessments that 
                        allow parents, teachers, and school 
                        leaders to understand and address the 
                        specific academic needs of students, 
                        and that are provided to parents, 
                        teachers, and school leaders, as soon 
                        as is practicable after the assessment 
                        is given, in an understandable and 
                        uniform format, and to the extent 
                        practicable, in a language that parents 
                        can understand;
                          (xii) enable results to be 
                        disaggregated within each State, local 
                        educational agency, and school by 
                        gender, by each major racial and ethnic 
                        group, by English language proficiency 
                        status, by migrant status, by status as 
                        a student with a disability, by status 
                        as a student with a parent who is an 
                        active duty member of the Armed Forces 
                        (as defined in section 101(a)(4) of 
                        title 10, United States Code), and by 
                        economically disadvantaged status, 
                        except that, in the case of a local 
                        educational agency or a school, such 
                        disaggregation shall not be required in 
                        a case in which the number of students 
                        in a category is insufficient to yield 
                        statistically reliable information or 
                        the results would reveal personally 
                        identifiable information about an 
                        individual student;
                          (xiii) be administered to not less 
                        than 95 percent of all students, and 
                        not less than 95 percent of each 
                        subgroup of students described in 
                        paragraph (3)(B)(ii)(II); and
                          (xiv) where practicable, be developed 
                        using the principles of universal 
                        design for learning as defined in 
                        section 103(24) of the Higher Education 
                        Act of 1965 (20 U.S.C. 1003(24)).
                  (C) Alternate assessments.--A State may 
                provide for alternate assessments aligned with 
                the alternate academic standards adopted in 
                accordance with paragraph (1)(D), for students 
                with the most significant cognitive 
                disabilities, if the State--
                          (i) establishes and monitors 
                        implementation of clear and appropriate 
                        guidelines for individualized education 
                        program teams (as defined in section 
                        614(d)(1)(B) of the Individuals with 
                        Disabilities Education Act) to apply 
                        when determining when a child's 
                        significant cognitive disability 
                        justifies assessment based on alternate 
                        achievement standards;
                          (ii) ensures that the parents of such 
                        students are informed that--
                                  (I) their child's academic 
                                achievement will be measured 
                                against such alternate 
                                standards; and
                                  (II) whether participation in 
                                such assessments precludes the 
                                student from completing the 
                                requirements for a regular high 
                                school diploma;
                          (iii) demonstrates that such students 
                        are, to the extent practicable, 
                        included in the general curriculum and 
                        that such alternate assessments are 
                        aligned with such curriculum;
                          (iv) develops, disseminates 
                        information about, and promotes the use 
                        of appropriate accommodations to 
                        increase the number of students with 
                        disabilities who are tested against 
                        academic achievement standards for the 
                        grade in which a student is enrolled; 
                        and
                          (v) ensures that regular and special 
                        education teachers and other 
                        appropriate staff know how to 
                        administer the alternate assessments, 
                        including making appropriate use of 
                        accommodations for students with 
                        disabilities.
                  (D) Assessments of english language 
                proficiency.--
                          (i) In general.--Each State plan 
                        shall demonstrate that local 
                        educational agencies in the State will 
                        provide for an annual assessment of 
                        English proficiency of all English 
                        learners in the schools served by the 
                        State educational agency.
                          (ii) Alignment.--The assessments 
                        described in clause (i) shall be 
                        aligned with the State's English 
                        language proficiency standards 
                        described in paragraph (1)(E).
                  (E) Language assessments.--Each State plan 
                shall identify the languages other than English 
                that are present in the participating student 
                population and indicate the languages for which 
                yearly student academic assessments are not 
                available and are needed. The State shall make 
                every effort to develop such assessments and 
                may request assistance from the Secretary if 
                linguistically accessible academic assessment 
                measures are needed. Upon request, the 
                Secretary shall assist with the identification 
                of appropriate academic assessment measures in 
                the needed languages, but shall not mandate a 
                specific academic assessment or mode of 
                instruction.
                  (F) Adaptive assessments.--A State retains 
                the right to develop and administer computer 
                adaptive assessments as the assessments 
                required under subparagraph (A). If a State 
                develops and administers a computer adaptive 
                assessment for such purposes, the assessment 
                shall meet the requirements of this paragraph, 
                except as follows:
                          (i) Notwithstanding subparagraph 
                        (B)(iii), the assessment--
                                  (I) shall measure, at a 
                                minimum, each student's 
                                academic proficiency against 
                                the State's academic standards 
                                for the student's grade level 
                                and growth toward such 
                                standards; and
                                  (II) if the State chooses, 
                                may be used to measure the 
                                student's level of academic 
                                proficiency and growth using 
                                assessment items above or below 
                                the student's grade level, 
                                including for use as part of a 
                                State's accountability system 
                                under paragraph (3).
                          (ii) Subparagraph (B)(ii) shall not 
                        be interpreted to require that all 
                        students taking the computer adaptive 
                        assessment be administered the same 
                        assessment items.
          (3) State accountability systems.--
                  (A) In general.--Each State plan shall 
                demonstrate that the State has developed and is 
                implementing a single, statewide accountability 
                system to ensure that all public school 
                students graduate from high school prepared for 
                postsecondary education or the workforce 
                without the need for remediation.
                  (B) Elements.--Each State accountability 
                system described in subparagraph (A) shall at a 
                minimum--
                          (i) annually measure the academic 
                        achievement of all public school 
                        students in the State against the 
                        State's mathematics and reading or 
                        language arts academic standards 
                        adopted under paragraph (1), which may 
                        include measures of student growth 
                        toward such standards, using the 
                        mathematics and reading or language 
                        arts assessments described in paragraph 
                        (2)(B) and other valid and reliable 
                        academic indicators related to student 
                        achievement as identified by the State;
                          (ii) annually evaluate and identify 
                        the academic performance of each public 
                        school in the State based on--
                                  (I) student academic 
                                achievement as measured in 
                                accordance with clause (i);
                                  (II) the overall performance, 
                                and achievement gaps as 
                                compared to all students in the 
                                school, for economically 
                                disadvantaged students, 
                                students from major racial and 
                                ethnic groups, students with 
                                disabilities, and English 
                                learners, except that 
                                disaggregation of data under 
                                this subclause shall not be 
                                required in a case in which the 
                                number of students in a 
                                category is insufficient to 
                                yield statistically reliable 
                                information or the results 
                                would reveal personally 
                                identifiable information about 
                                an individual student; and
                                  (III) other measures of 
                                school success; and
                          (iii) include a system for school 
                        improvement for low-performing public 
                        schools receiving funds under this 
                        subpart that--
                                  (I) implements interventions 
                                in such schools that are 
                                designed to address such 
                                schools' weaknesses; and
                                  (II) is implemented by local 
                                educational agencies serving 
                                such schools.
                  (C) Prohibition.--Nothing in this section 
                shall be construed to permit the Secretary to 
                establish any criteria that specifies, defines, 
                or prescribes any aspect of a State's 
                accountability system developed and implemented 
                in accordance with this paragraph.
                  (D) Accountability for charter schools.--The 
                accountability provisions under this Act shall 
                be overseen for charter schools in accordance 
                with State charter school law.
                  (E) Recently arrived english learners.--A 
                State may delay inclusion of the academic 
                achievement of English learners for purposes of 
                the evaluation and identification described in 
                subparagraph (B)(ii) if such students have 
                attended schools in the 50 states or the 
                District of Columbia for less than two years 
                (in the case of mathematics) and less than 
                three years (in the case of reading or language 
                arts), except that if the State uses growth 
                calculations as described in clause (i) of such 
                subparagraph in such evaluation and 
                identification, the State shall include such 
                students in such calculations.
          (4) Requirements.--Each State plan shall describe--
                  (A) how the State educational agency will 
                assist each local educational agency and each 
                public school affected by the State plan to 
                comply with the requirements of this subpart, 
                including how the State educational agency will 
                work with local educational agencies to provide 
                technical assistance; and
                  (B) how the State educational agency will 
                ensure that the results of the State 
                assessments described in paragraph (2), the 
                other indicators selected by the State under 
                paragraph (3)(B)(i), and the school evaluations 
                described in paragraph (3)(B)(ii), will be 
                promptly provided to local educational 
                agencies, schools, teachers, and parents in a 
                manner that is clear and easy to understand, 
                but not later than before the beginning of the 
                school year following the school year in which 
                such assessments, other indicators, or 
                evaluations are taken or completed.
          (5) Timeline for implementation.--Each State plan 
        shall describe the process by which the State will 
        adopt and implement the State academic standards, 
        assessments, and accountability system required under 
        this section within 2 years of enactment of the Student 
        Success Act.
          (6) Existing standards.--Nothing in this subpart 
        shall prohibit a State from revising, consistent with 
        this section, any standard adopted under this section 
        before or after the date of the enactment of the 
        Student Success Act.
          (7) Existing state law.--Nothing in this section 
        shall be construed to alter any State law or regulation 
        granting parents authority over schools that repeatedly 
        failed to make adequate yearly progress under this 
        section, as in effect on the day before the date of the 
        enactment of the Student Success Act.
  (c) Other Provisions to Support Teaching and Learning.--Each 
State plan shall contain assurances that--
          (1) the State will notify local educational agencies, 
        schools, teachers, parents, and the public of the 
        academic standards, academic assessments, and State 
        accountability system developed and implemented under 
        this section;
          (2) the State will participate in biennial State 
        academic assessments of 4th and 8th grade reading and 
        mathematics under the National Assessment of 
        Educational Progress carried out under section 
        303(b)(2) of the National Assessment of Educational 
        Progress Authorization Act if the Secretary pays the 
        costs of administering such assessments;
          (3) the State educational agency will notify local 
        educational agencies and the public of the authority to 
        operate schoolwide programs;
          (4) the State educational agency will provide the 
        least restrictive and burdensome regulations for local 
        educational agencies and individual schools 
        participating in a program assisted under this subpart;
          (5) the State educational agency will encourage 
        schools to consolidate funds from other Federal, State, 
        and local sources for schoolwide reform in schoolwide 
        programs under section 1114;
          (6) the State educational agency will modify or 
        eliminate State fiscal and accounting barriers so that 
        schools can easily consolidate funds from other 
        Federal, State, and local sources for schoolwide 
        programs under section 1114; and
          (7) the State educational agency will inform local 
        educational agencies in the State of the local 
        educational agency's authority to transfer funds under 
        section 1002 and to obtain waivers under section 6401.
  (d) Parental Involvement.--Each State plan shall describe how 
the State educational agency will support the collection and 
dissemination to local educational agencies and schools of 
effective parental involvement practices. Such practices 
shall--
          (1) be based on the most current research that meets 
        the highest professional and technical standards on 
        effective parental involvement that fosters achievement 
        to high standards for all children;
          (2) be geared toward lowering barriers to greater 
        participation by parents in school planning, review, 
        and improvement; and
          (3) be coordinated with programs funded under subpart 
        3 of part A of title III.
  (e) Peer Review and Secretarial Approval.--
          (1) Establishment.--Notwithstanding section 6543, the 
        Secretary shall--
                  (A) establish a peer-review process to assist 
                in the review of State plans; and
                  (B) appoint individuals to the peer-review 
                process who are representative of parents, 
                teachers, State educational agencies, local 
                educational agencies, and private sector 
                employers (including representatives of 
                entrepreneurial ventures), and who are familiar 
                with educational standards, assessments, 
                accountability, the needs of low-performing 
                schools, and other educational needs of 
                students, and ensure that 65 percent of such 
                appointees are practitioners and 10 percent are 
                representatives of private sector employers.
          (2) Approval.--The Secretary shall--
                  (A) approve a State plan within 120 days of 
                its submission;
                  (B) disapprove of the State plan only if the 
                Secretary demonstrates how the State plan fails 
                to meet the requirements of this section and 
                immediately notifies the State of such 
                determination and the reasons for such 
                determination;
                  (C) not decline to approve a State's plan 
                before--
                          (i) offering the State an opportunity 
                        to revise its plan;
                          (ii) providing technical assistance 
                        in order to assist the State to meet 
                        the requirements of this section; and
                          (iii) providing a hearing; and
                  (D) have the authority to disapprove a State 
                plan for not meeting the requirements of this 
                subpart, but shall not have the authority to 
                require a State, as a condition of approval of 
                the State plan, to include in, or delete from, 
                such plan one or more specific elements of the 
                State's academic standards or State 
                accountability system, or to use specific 
                academic assessments or other indicators.
          (3) State revisions.--A State plan shall be revised 
        by the State educational agency if it is necessary to 
        satisfy the requirements of this section.
          (4) Public review.--All communications, feedback, and 
        notifications under this subsection shall be conducted 
        in a manner that is immediately made available to the 
        public through the website of the Department, 
        including--
                  (A) peer review guidance;
                  (B) the names of the peer reviewers;
                  (C) State plans submitted or resubmitted by a 
                State, including the current approved plans;
                  (D) peer review notes;
                  (E) State plan determinations by the 
                Secretary, including approvals or disapprovals, 
                and any deviations from the peer reviewers' 
                recommendations with an explanation of the 
                deviation; and
                  (F) hearings.
          (5) Prohibition.--The Secretary, and the Secretary's 
        staff, may not attempt to participate in, or influence, 
        the peer review process. No Federal employee may 
        participate in, or attempt to influence the peer review 
        process, except to respond to questions of a technical 
        nature, which shall be publicly reported.
  (f) Duration of the Plan.--
          (1) In general.--Each State plan shall--
                  (A) remain in effect for the duration of the 
                State's participation under this subpart; and
                  (B) be periodically reviewed and revised as 
                necessary by the State educational agency to 
                reflect changes in the State's strategies and 
                programs under this subpart.
          (2) Additional information.--If a State makes 
        significant changes to its State plan, such as the 
        adoption of new State academic standards or new 
        academic assessments, or adopts a new State 
        accountability system, such information shall be 
        submitted to the Secretary under subsection (e)(2) for 
        approval.
  (g) Failure to Meet Requirements.--If a State fails to meet 
any of the requirements of this section then the Secretary 
shall withhold funds for State administration under this 
subpart until the Secretary determines that the State has 
fulfilled those requirements.
  (h) Reports.--
          (1) Annual state report card.--
                  (A) In general.--A State that receives 
                assistance under this subpart shall prepare and 
                disseminate an annual State report card. Such 
                dissemination shall include, at a minimum, 
                publicly posting the report card on the home 
                page of the State educational agency's website.
                  (B) Implementation.--The State report card 
                shall be--
                          (i) concise; and
                          (ii) presented in an understandable 
                        and uniform format that is developed in 
                        consultation with parents and, to the 
                        extent practicable, provided in a 
                        language that parents can understand.
                  (C) Required information.--The State shall 
                include in its annual State report card 
                information on--
                          (i) the performance of students, in 
                        the aggregate and disaggregated by the 
                        categories of students described in 
                        subsection (b)(2)(B)(xii) (except that 
                        such disaggregation shall not be 
                        required in a case in which the number 
                        of students in a category is 
                        insufficient to yield statistically 
                        reliable information or the results 
                        would reveal personally identifiable 
                        information about an individual 
                        student), on the State academic 
                        assessments described in subsection 
                        (b)(2);
                          (ii) the participation rate on such 
                        assessments, in the aggregate and 
                        disaggregated in accordance with clause 
                        (i);
                          (iii) the performance of students, in 
                        the aggregate and disaggregated in 
                        accordance with clause (i), on other 
                        academic indicators described in 
                        subsection (b)(3)(B)(i);
                          (iv) for each public high school in 
                        the State, in the aggregate and 
                        disaggregated in accordance with clause 
                        (i)--
                                  (I) the four-year adjusted 
                                cohort graduation rate, and
                                  (II) if applicable, the 
                                extended-year adjusted cohort 
                                graduation rate, reported 
                                separately for students 
                                graduating in 5 years or less, 
                                students graduating in 6 years 
                                or less, and students 
                                graduating in 7 or more years;
                          (v) each public school's evaluation 
                        results as determined in accordance 
                        with subsection (b)(3)(B)(ii);
                          (vi) the acquisition of English 
                        proficiency by English learners;
                          (vii) if appropriate, as determined 
                        by the State, the number and percentage 
                        of teachers in each category 
                        established under section 2123(1), 
                        except that such information shall not 
                        reveal personally identifiable 
                        information about an individual 
                        teacher; and
                          (viii) the results of the assessments 
                        described in subsection (c)(2).
                  (D) Optional information.--The State may 
                include in its annual State report card such 
                other information as the State believes will 
                best provide parents, students, and other 
                members of the public with information 
                regarding the progress of each of the State's 
                public elementary schools and public secondary 
                schools, such as the number of students 
                enrolled in each public secondary school in the 
                State attaining career and technical 
                proficiencies, as defined in section 
                113(b)(2)(A) of the Carl D. Perkins Career and 
                Technical Education Act of 2006, and reported 
                by the State in a manner consistent with 
                section 113(c) of such Act.
                  (E) Data.--All personal, private student data 
                shall be prohibited from use beyond assessing 
                student performance as provided for in 
                subparagraph (C). The State's annual report 
                shall only use such data as sufficient to yield 
                statistically reliable information, and does 
                not reveal personally identifiable information 
                about individual students.
          (2) Annual local educational agency report cards.--
                  (A) In general.--A local educational agency 
                that receives assistance under this subpart 
                shall prepare and disseminate an annual local 
                educational agency report card.
                  (B) Minimum requirements.--The State 
                educational agency shall ensure that each local 
                educational agency collects appropriate data 
                and includes in the local educational agency's 
                annual report the information described in 
                paragraph (1)(C) as applied to the local 
                educational agency and each school served by 
                the local educational agency, and--
                          (i) in the case of a local 
                        educational agency, information that 
                        shows how students served by the local 
                        educational agency achieved on the 
                        statewide academic assessment and other 
                        academic indicators adopted in 
                        accordance with subsection (b)(3)(B)(i) 
                        compared to students in the State as a 
                        whole; and
                          (ii) in the case of a school, the 
                        school's evaluation under subsection 
                        (b)(3)(B)(ii).
                  (C) Other information.--A local educational 
                agency may include in its annual local 
                educational agency report card any other 
                appropriate information, whether or not such 
                information is included in the annual State 
                report card.
                  (D) Data.--A local educational agency or 
                school shall only include in its annual local 
                educational agency report card data that are 
                sufficient to yield statistically reliable 
                information, as determined by the State, and 
                that do not reveal personally identifiable 
                information about an individual student.
                  (E) Public dissemination.--The local 
                educational agency shall publicly disseminate 
                the information described in this paragraph to 
                all schools served by the local educational 
                agency and to all parents of students attending 
                those schools in an understandable and uniform 
                format, and, to the extent practicable, in a 
                language that parents can understand, and make 
                the information widely available through public 
                means, such as posting on the Internet, 
                distribution to the media, and distribution 
                through public agencies, except that if a local 
                educational agency issues a report card for all 
                students, the local educational agency may 
                include the information under this section as 
                part of such report.
          (3) Preexisting report cards.--A State educational 
        agency or local educational agency may use public 
        report cards on the performance of students, schools, 
        local educational agencies, or the State, that were in 
        effect prior to the enactment of the Student Success 
        Act for the purpose of this subsection, so long as any 
        such report card is modified, as may be needed, to 
        contain the information required by this subsection, 
        and protects the privacy of individual students.
          (4) Parents right-to-know.--
                  (A) Achievement information.--At the 
                beginning of each school year, a school that 
                receives funds under this subpart shall provide 
                to each individual parent information on the 
                level of achievement of the parent's child in 
                each of the State academic assessments and 
                other academic indicators adopted in accordance 
                with this subpart.
                  (B) Format.--The notice and information 
                provided to parents under this paragraph shall 
                be in an understandable and uniform format and, 
                to the extent practicable, provided in a 
                language that the parents can understand.
  (i) Privacy.--Information collected under this section shall 
be collected and disseminated in a manner that protects the 
privacy of individuals consistent with section 444 of the 
General Education Provisions Act and this Act.
  (j) Voluntary Partnerships.--A State retains the right to 
enter into a voluntary partnership with another State to 
develop and implement the academic standards and assessments 
required under this section, except that the Secretary shall 
not, either directly or indirectly, attempt to influence, 
incentivize, or coerce State--
          (1) adoption of the Common Core State Standards 
        developed under the Common Core State Standards 
        Initiative, any other academic standards common to a 
        significant number of States, or assessments tied to 
        such standards; or
          (2) participation in any such partnerships.
  (k) Construction.--Nothing in this part shall be construed to 
prescribe the use of the academic assessments described in this 
part for student promotion or graduation purposes.
  (l) Special Rule With Respect to Bureau-funded Schools.--In 
determining the assessments to be used by each school operated 
or funded by the Bureau of Indian Education receiving funds 
under this subpart, the following shall apply:
          (1) Each such school that is accredited by the State 
        in which it is operating shall use the assessments and 
        other academic indicators the State has developed and 
        implemented to meet the requirements of this section, 
        or such other appropriate assessment and academic 
        indicators as approved by the Secretary of the 
        Interior.
          (2) Each such school that is accredited by a regional 
        accrediting organization shall adopt an appropriate 
        assessment and other academic indicators, in 
        consultation with and with the approval of, the 
        Secretary of the Interior and consistent with 
        assessments and academic indicators adopted by other 
        schools in the same State or region, that meet the 
        requirements of this section.
          (3) Each such school that is accredited by a tribal 
        accrediting agency or tribal division of education 
        shall use an assessment and other academic indicators 
        developed by such agency or division, except that the 
        Secretary of the Interior shall ensure that such 
        assessment and academic indicators meet the 
        requirements of this section.

SEC. 1112. LOCAL EDUCATIONAL AGENCY PLANS.

  (a) Plans Required.--
          (1) Subgrants.--A local educational agency may 
        receive a subgrant under this subpart for any fiscal 
        year only if such agency has on file with the State 
        educational agency a plan, approved by the State 
        educational agency, that is coordinated with other 
        programs under this Act, the Individuals with 
        Disabilities Education Act, the Carl D. Perkins Career 
        and Technical Education Act of 2006, the McKinney-Vento 
        Homeless Assistance Act, and other Acts, as 
        appropriate.
          (2) Consolidated application.--The plan may be 
        submitted as part of a consolidated application under 
        section 6305.
  (b) Plan Provisions.--Each local educational agency plan 
shall describe--
          (1) how the local educational agency will monitor, in 
        addition to the State assessments described in section 
        1111(b)(2), students' progress in meeting the State's 
        academic standards;
          (2) how the local educational agency will identify 
        quickly and effectively those students who may be at 
        risk of failing to meet the State's academic standards;
          (3) how the local educational agency will provide 
        additional educational assistance to individual 
        students in need of additional help in meeting the 
        State's academic standards;
          (4) how the local educational agency will implement 
        the school improvement system described in section 
        1111(b)(3)(B)(iii) for any of the agency's schools 
        identified under such section;
          (5) how the local educational agency will coordinate 
        programs under this subpart with other programs under 
        this Act and other Acts, as appropriate;
          (6) the poverty criteria that will be used to select 
        school attendance areas under section 1113;
          (7) how teachers, in consultation with parents, 
        administrators, and specialized instructional support 
        personnel, in targeted assistance schools under section 
        1115, will identify the eligible children most in need 
        of services under this subpart;
          (8) in general, the nature of the programs to be 
        conducted by the local educational agency's schools 
        under sections 1114 and 1115, and, where appropriate, 
        educational services outside such schools for children 
        living in local institutions for neglected and 
        delinquent children, and for neglected and delinquent 
        children in community day school programs;
          (9) how the local educational agency will ensure that 
        migratory children who are eligible to receive services 
        under this subpart are selected to receive such 
        services on the same basis as other children who are 
        selected to receive services under this subpart;
          (10) the services the local educational agency will 
        provide homeless children, including services provided 
        with funds reserved under section 1113(c)(3)(A);
          (11) the strategy the local educational agency will 
        use to implement effective parental involvement under 
        section 1118;
          (12) if appropriate, how the local educational agency 
        will use funds under this subpart to support preschool 
        programs for children, particularly children 
        participating in a Head Start program, which services 
        may be provided directly by the local educational 
        agency or through a subcontract with the local Head 
        Start agency designated by the Secretary of Health and 
        Human Services under section 641 of the Head Start Act, 
        or another comparable early childhood development 
        program;
          (13) how the local educational agency, through 
        incentives for voluntary transfers, the provision of 
        professional development, recruitment programs, 
        incentive pay, performance pay, or other effective 
        strategies, will address disparities in the rates of 
        low-income and minority students and other students 
        being taught by ineffective teachers;
          (14) if appropriate, how the local educational agency 
        will use funds under this subpart to support programs 
        that coordinate and integrate--
                  (A) career and technical education aligned 
                with State technical standards that promote 
                skills attainment important to in-demand 
                occupations or industries in the State and the 
                State's academic standards under section 
                1111(b)(1); and
                  (B) work-based learning opportunities that 
                provide students in-depth interaction with 
                industry professionals; and
          (15) if appropriate, how the local educational agency 
        will use funds under this subpart to support dual 
        enrollment programs, early college high schools, and 
        Advanced Placement or International Baccalaureate 
        programs.
  (c) Assurances.--Each local educational agency plan shall 
provide assurances that the local educational agency will--
          (1) participate, if selected, in biennial State 
        academic assessments of 4th and 8th grade reading and 
        mathematics under the National Assessment of 
        Educational Progress carried out under section 
        303(b)(2) of the National Assessment of Educational 
        Progress Authorization Act;
          (2) inform schools of schoolwide program authority 
        and the ability to consolidate funds from Federal, 
        State, and local sources;
          (3) provide technical assistance to schoolwide 
        programs;
          (4) provide services to eligible children attending 
        private elementary and secondary schools in accordance 
        with section 1120, and timely and meaningful 
        consultation with private school officials or 
        representatives regarding such services;
          (5) in the case of a local educational agency that 
        chooses to use funds under this subpart to provide 
        early childhood development services to low-income 
        children below the age of compulsory school attendance, 
        ensure that such services comply with the performance 
        standards established under section 641A(a) of the Head 
        Start Act;
          (6) inform eligible schools of the local educational 
        agency's authority to request waivers on the school's 
        behalf under title VI; and
          (7) ensure that the results of the academic 
        assessments required under section 1111(b)(2) will be 
        provided to parents and teachers as soon as is 
        practicably possible after the test is taken, in an 
        understandable and uniform format and, to the extent 
        practicable, provided in a language that the parents 
        can understand.
  (d) Special Rule.--In carrying out subsection (c)(5), the 
Secretary shall--
          (1) consult with the Secretary of Health and Human 
        Services and shall establish procedures (taking into 
        consideration existing State and local laws, and local 
        teacher contracts) to assist local educational agencies 
        to comply with such subparagraph; and
          (2) disseminate to local educational agencies the 
        education performance standards in effect under section 
        641A(a) of the Head Start Act, and such agencies 
        affected by such subsection shall plan for the 
        implementation of such subsection (taking into 
        consideration existing State and local laws, and local 
        teacher contracts).
  (e) Plan Development and Duration.--
          (1) Consultation.--Each local educational agency plan 
        shall be developed in consultation with teachers, 
        school leaders, public charter school representatives, 
        administrators, and other appropriate school personnel, 
        and with parents of children in schools served under 
        this subpart.
          (2) Duration.--Each such plan shall be submitted for 
        the first year for which this part is in effect 
        following the date of the enactment of this Act and 
        shall remain in effect for the duration of the agency's 
        participation under this subpart.
          (3) Review.--Each local educational agency shall 
        periodically review and, as necessary, revise its plan.
  (f) State Approval.--
          (1) In general.--Each local educational agency plan 
        shall be filed according to a schedule established by 
        the State educational agency.
          (2) Approval.--The State educational agency shall 
        approve a local educational agency's plan only if the 
        State educational agency determines that the local 
        educational agency's plan--
                  (A) enables schools served under this subpart 
                to substantially help children served under 
                this subpart to meet the State's academic 
                standards described in section 1111(b)(1); and
                  (B) meets the requirements of this section.
          (3) Review.--The State educational agency shall 
        review the local educational agency's plan to determine 
        if such agency's activities are in accordance with 
        section 1118.
  (g) Parental Notification.--
          (1) In general.--Each local educational agency using 
        funds under this subpart and subpart 4 to provide a 
        language instruction educational program shall, not 
        later than 30 days after the beginning of the school 
        year, inform parents of an English learner identified 
        for participation, or participating in, such a program 
        of--
                  (A) the reasons for the identification of 
                their child as an English learner and in need 
                of placement in a language instruction 
                educational program;
                  (B) the child's level of English proficiency, 
                how such level was assessed, and the status of 
                the child's academic achievement;
                  (C) the methods of instruction used in the 
                program in which their child is, or will be 
                participating, and the methods of instruction 
                used in other available programs, including how 
                such programs differ in content, instructional 
                goals, and the use of English and a native 
                language in instruction;
                  (D) how the program in which their child is, 
                or will be participating, will meet the 
                educational strengths and needs of their child;
                  (E) how such program will specifically help 
                their child learn English, and meet age-
                appropriate academic achievement standards for 
                grade promotion and graduation;
                  (F) the specific exit requirements for the 
                program, including the expected rate of 
                transition from such program into classrooms 
                that are not tailored for English learners, and 
                the expected rate of graduation from high 
                school for such program if funds under this 
                subpart are used for children in secondary 
                schools;
                  (G) in the case of a child with a disability, 
                how such program meets the objectives of the 
                individualized education program of the child; 
                and
                  (H) information pertaining to parental rights 
                that includes written guidance--
                          (i) detailing--
                                  (I) the right that parents 
                                have to have their child 
                                immediately removed from such 
                                program upon their request; and
                                  (II) the options that parents 
                                have to decline to enroll their 
                                child in such program or to 
                                choose another program or 
                                method of instruction, if 
                                available; and
                          (ii) assisting parents in selecting 
                        among various programs and methods of 
                        instruction, if more than one program 
                        or method is offered by the eligible 
                        entity.
          (2) Notice.--The notice and information provided in 
        paragraph (1) to parents of a child identified for 
        participation in a language instruction educational 
        program for English learners shall be in an 
        understandable and uniform format and, to the extent 
        practicable, provided in a language that the parents 
        can understand.
          (3) Special rule applicable during the school year.--
        For those children who have not been identified as 
        English learners prior to the beginning of the school 
        year the local educational agency shall notify parents 
        within the first 2 weeks of the child being placed in a 
        language instruction educational program consistent 
        with paragraphs (1) and (2).
          (4) Parental participation.--Each local educational 
        agency receiving funds under this subpart shall 
        implement an effective means of outreach to parents of 
        English learners to inform the parents regarding how 
        the parents can be involved in the education of their 
        children, and be active participants in assisting their 
        children to attain English proficiency, achieve at high 
        levels in core academic subjects, and meet the State's 
        academic standards expected of all students, including 
        holding, and sending notice of opportunities for, 
        regular meetings for the purpose of formulating and 
        responding to recommendations from parents of students 
        assisted under this subpart.
          (5) Basis for admission or exclusion.--A student 
        shall not be admitted to, or excluded from, any 
        federally assisted education program on the basis of a 
        surname or language-minority status.

SEC. 1113. ELIGIBLE SCHOOL ATTENDANCE AREAS.

  (a) Determination.--
          (1) In general.--A local educational agency shall use 
        funds received under this [part] subpart only in 
        eligible school attendance areas.
          (2) Eligible school attendance areas.--For the 
        purposes of this [part] subpart--
                  (A) the term ``school attendance area'' 
                means, in relation to a particular school, the 
                geographical area in which the children who are 
                normally served by that school reside; and
                  (B) the term ``eligible school attendance 
                area'' means a school attendance area in which 
                the percentage of children from low-income 
                families is at least as high as the percentage 
                of children from low-income families served by 
                the local educational agency as a whole.
          (3) Ranking order.--If funds allocated in accordance 
        with subsection (c) are insufficient to serve all 
        eligible school attendance areas, a local educational 
        agency shall--
                  (A) annually rank, without regard to grade 
                spans, such agency's eligible school attendance 
                areas in which the concentration of children 
                from low-income families exceeds 75 percent 
                from highest to lowest according to the 
                percentage of children from low-income 
                families; and
                  (B) serve such eligible school attendance 
                areas in rank order.
          (4) Remaining funds.--If funds remain after serving 
        all eligible school attendance areas under paragraph 
        (3), a local educational agency shall--
                  (A) annually rank such agency's remaining 
                eligible school attendance areas from highest 
                to lowest either by grade span or for the 
                entire local educational agency according to 
                the percentage of children from low-income 
                families; and
                  (B) serve such eligible school attendance 
                areas in rank order either within each grade-
                span grouping or within the local educational 
                agency as a whole.
          (5) Measures.--The local educational agency shall use 
        the same measure of poverty, which measure shall be the 
        number of children ages 5 through 17 in poverty counted 
        in the most recent census data approved by the 
        Secretary, the number of children eligible for free and 
        reduced priced lunches under the Richard B. Russell 
        National School Lunch Act, the number of children in 
        families receiving assistance under the State program 
        funded under [part] subpart A of title IV of the Social 
        Security Act, or the number of children eligible to 
        receive medical assistance under the Medicaid program, 
        or a composite of such indicators, with respect to all 
        school attendance areas in the local educational 
        agency--
                  (A) to identify eligible school attendance 
                areas;
                  (B) to determine the ranking of each area; 
                and
                  (C) to determine allocations under subsection 
                (c).
          (6) Exception.--This subsection shall not apply to a 
        local educational agency with a total enrollment of 
        less than 1,000 children.
          (7) Waiver for desegregation plans.--The Secretary 
        may approve a local educational agency's written 
        request for a waiver of the requirements of subsections 
        (a) and (c), and permit such agency to treat as 
        eligible, and serve, any school that children attend 
        with a State-ordered, court-ordered school 
        desegregation plan or a plan that continues to be 
        implemented in accordance with a State-ordered or 
        court-ordered desegregation plan, if--
                  (A) the number of economically disadvantaged 
                children enrolled in the school is at least 25 
                percent of the school's total enrollment; and
                  (B) the Secretary determines on the basis of 
                a written request from such agency and in 
                accordance with such criteria as the Secretary 
                establishes, that approval of that request 
                would further the purposes of this [part] 
                subpart.
  (b) Local Educational Agency Discretion.--
          (1) In general.--Notwithstanding subsection (a)(2), a 
        local educational agency may--
                  (A) designate as eligible any school 
                attendance area or school in which at least 35 
                percent of the children are from low-income 
                families;
                  (B) use funds received under this [part] 
                subpart in a school that is not in an eligible 
                school attendance area, if the percentage of 
                children from low-income families enrolled in 
                the school is equal to or greater than the 
                percentage of such children in a participating 
                school attendance area of such agency;
                  (C) designate and serve a school attendance 
                area or school that is not eligible under this 
                section, but that was eligible and that was 
                served in the preceding fiscal year, but only 
                for 1 additional fiscal year; and
                  (D) elect not to serve an eligible school 
                attendance area or eligible school that has a 
                higher percentage of children from low-income 
                families if--
                          (i) the school meets the 
                        comparability requirements of section 
                        1120A(c);
                          (ii) the school is receiving 
                        supplemental funds from other State or 
                        local sources that are spent according 
                        to the requirements of section 1114 or 
                        1115; and
                          (iii) the funds expended from such 
                        other sources equal or exceed the 
                        amount that would be provided under 
                        this [part] subpart.
          (2) Special rule.--Notwithstanding paragraph (1)(D), 
        the number of children attending private elementary 
        schools and secondary schools who are to receive 
        services, and the assistance such children are to 
        receive under this [part] subpart, shall be determined 
        without regard to whether the public school attendance 
        area in which such children reside is assisted under 
        subparagraph (A).
  (c) Allocations.--
          (1) In general.--A local educational agency shall 
        allocate funds received under this [part] subpart to 
        eligible school attendance areas or eligible schools, 
        identified under subsections (a) and (b), in rank 
        order, on the basis of the total number of children 
        from low-income families in each area or school.
          (2) Special rule.--
                  (A) In general.--Except as provided in 
                subparagraph (B), the per-pupil amount of funds 
                allocated to each school attendance area or 
                school under paragraph (1) shall be at least 
                125 percent of the per-pupil amount of funds a 
                local educational agency received for that year 
                under the poverty criteria described by the 
                local educational agency in the plan submitted 
                under section 1112, except that this paragraph 
                shall not apply to a local educational agency 
                that only serves schools in which the 
                percentage of such children is 35 percent or 
                greater.
                  (B) Exception.--A local educational agency 
                may reduce the amount of funds allocated under 
                subparagraph (A) for a school attendance area 
                or school by the amount of any supplemental 
                State and local funds expended in that school 
                attendance area or school for programs that 
                meet the requirements of section 1114 or 1115.
          (3) Reservation.--A local educational agency shall 
        reserve such funds as are necessary under this [part] 
        subpart to provide services comparable to those 
        provided to children in schools funded under this 
        [part] subpart to serve--
                  (A) homeless children who do not attend 
                participating schools, including providing 
                educationally related support services to 
                children in shelters and other locations where 
                children may live;
                  (B) children in local institutions for 
                neglected children; and
                  (C) if appropriate, children in local 
                institutions for delinquent children, and 
                neglected or delinquent children in community 
                day school programs.
          (4) Financial incentives and rewards reservation.--A 
        local educational agency may reserve such funds as are 
        necessary from those funds received by the local 
        educational agency under title II, and not more than 5 
        percent of those funds received by the local 
        educational agency under [subpart 2] chapter B, to 
        provide financial incentives and rewards to teachers 
        who serve in schools eligible under this section and 
        identified for [school improvement, corrective action, 
        and restructuring under section 1116(b)] school 
        improvement under section 1111(b)(3)(B)(iii) for the 
        purpose of attracting and retaining qualified and 
        effective teachers.

SEC. 1114. SCHOOLWIDE PROGRAMS.

  (a) Use of Funds for Schoolwide Programs.--
          (1) In general.--A local educational agency may 
        consolidate and use funds under this [part] subpart, 
        together with other Federal, State, and local funds, in 
        order to upgrade the entire educational program of a 
        school that serves an eligible school attendance area 
        [in which not less than 40 percent of the children are 
        from low-income families, or not less than 40 percent 
        of the children enrolled in the school are from such 
        families].
          (2) Identification of students not required.--
                  (A) In general.--No school participating in a 
                schoolwide program shall be required--
                          (i) to identify particular children 
                        under this [part] subpart as eligible 
                        to participate in a schoolwide program; 
                        or
                          (ii) to provide services to such 
                        children that are supplementary, as 
                        otherwise required by section 1120A(b).
                  (B) Supplemental funds.--A school 
                participating in a schoolwide program shall use 
                funds available to carry out this section only 
                to supplement the amount of funds that would, 
                in the absence of funds under this [part] 
                subpart, be made available from non-Federal 
                sources for the school, including funds needed 
                to provide services that are required by law 
                for children with disabilities and [children 
                with limited English proficiency] English 
                learners.
          (3) Exemption from statutory and regulatory 
        requirements.--
                  (A) Exemption.--Except as provided in 
                subsection (b), the Secretary may, through 
                publication of a notice in the Federal 
                Register, exempt schoolwide programs under this 
                section from statutory or regulatory provisions 
                of any other noncompetitive formula grant 
                program administered by the Secretary (other 
                than formula or discretionary grant programs 
                under the Individuals with Disabilities 
                Education Act, except as provided in section 
                613(a)(2)(D) of such Act), or any discretionary 
                grant program administered by the Secretary, to 
                support schoolwide programs if the intent and 
                purposes of such other programs are met.
                  (B) Requirements.--A school that chooses to 
                use funds from such other programs shall not be 
                relieved of the requirements relating to 
                health, safety, civil rights, student and 
                parental participation and involvement, 
                services to private school children, 
                [maintenance of effort,] comparability of 
                services, uses of Federal funds to supplement, 
                not supplant non-Federal funds, or the 
                distribution of funds to State educational 
                agencies or local educational agencies that 
                apply to the receipt of funds from such 
                programs.
                  (C) Records.--A school that consolidates and 
                uses funds from different Federal programs 
                under this section shall not be required to 
                maintain separate fiscal accounting records, by 
                program, that identify the specific activities 
                supported by those particular funds as long as 
                the school maintains records that demonstrate 
                that the schoolwide program, considered as a 
                whole, addresses the intent and purposes of 
                each of the Federal programs that were 
                consolidated to support the schoolwide program.
          [(4) Professional development.--Each school receiving 
        funds under this part for any fiscal year shall devote 
        sufficient resources to effectively carry out the 
        activities described in subsection (b)(1)(D) in 
        accordance with section 1119 for such fiscal year, 
        except that a school may enter into a consortium with 
        another school to carry out such activities.]
  (b) Components of a Schoolwide Program.--
          (1) In general.--A schoolwide program shall include 
        the following components:
                  (A) A comprehensive needs assessment of the 
                entire school [(including taking into account 
                the needs of migratory children as defined in 
                section 1309(2))] that is based on information 
                which includes the achievement of children in 
                relation to the State academic [content 
                standards and the State student academic 
                achievement standards] standards described in 
                section 1111(b)(1).
                  (B) Schoolwide reform strategies that--
                          (i) provide opportunities for all 
                        children to meet the State's 
                        [proficient and advanced levels of 
                        student academic achievement described 
                        in section 1111(b)(1)(D)] academic 
                        standards described in section 
                        1111(b)(1);
                          (ii) use effective methods and 
                        instructional strategies that are 
                        [based on scientifically based 
                        research] evidence-based that--
                                  (I) strengthen the core 
                                academic program in the school;
                                  (II) increase the amount and 
                                quality of learning time, such 
                                as providing an extended school 
                                year and before- and after-
                                school and summer programs and 
                                opportunities, and help provide 
                                an enriched and accelerated 
                                curriculum; and
                                  (III) include strategies for 
                                meeting the educational needs 
                                of historically underserved 
                                populations;
                          (iii)(I) include strategies to 
                        address the needs of all children in 
                        the school, but particularly the needs 
                        of low-achieving children and those at 
                        risk of not meeting the State [student 
                        academic achievement standards] 
                        academic standards who are members of 
                        the target population of any program 
                        that is included in the [schoolwide 
                        program, which may include--] 
                        schoolwide programs; and
                                  [(aa) counseling, pupil 
                                services, and mentoring 
                                services;
                                  [(bb) college and career 
                                awareness and preparation, such 
                                as college and career guidance, 
                                personal finance education, and 
                                innovative teaching methods, 
                                which may include applied 
                                learning and team-teaching 
                                strategies; and]
                                  [(cc) the integration of 
                                vocational and technical 
                                education programs; and]
                          (II) address how the school will 
                        determine if such needs have been met; 
                        [and]
                          (iv) are consistent with, and are 
                        designed to implement, [the State and 
                        local improvement plans] school 
                        improvement strategies, if any[.]; and
                          (v) may be delivered by nonprofit or 
                        for-profit external providers with 
                        expertise in using evidence-based or 
                        other effective strategies to improve 
                        student achievement.
                  (C) Instruction by [highly qualified] 
                effective teachers.
                  (D) [In accordance with section 1119 and 
                subsection (a)(4), high-quality] High-quality 
                and ongoing professional development for 
                teachers, principals, and paraprofessionals 
                and, if appropriate, [pupil services] 
                specialized instructional support services 
                personnel, parents, and other staff to enable 
                all children in the school to meet the State's 
                [student academic achievement] academic 
                standards.
                  (E) Strategies to attract [high-quality 
                highly qualified] effective teachers to high-
                need schools.
                  (F) Strategies to increase parental 
                involvement in accordance with section 1118, 
                such as family literary services.
                  (G) Plans for assisting preschool children in 
                the transition from early childhood programs[, 
                such as Head Start, Even Start, Early Reading 
                First, or a State-run preschool program,] to 
                local elementary school programs.
                  (H) Measures to include teachers in the 
                decisions regarding the use of academic 
                assessments described in [section 1111(b)(3)] 
                section 1111(b)(2) in order to provide 
                information on, and to improve, the achievement 
                of individual students and the overall 
                instructional program.
                  (I) Activities to ensure that students who 
                experience difficulty mastering the [proficient 
                or advanced levels of academic achievement 
                standards] State academic standards required by 
                section 1111(b)(1) shall be provided with 
                effective, timely additional assistance which 
                shall include measures to ensure that students' 
                difficulties are identified on a timely basis 
                and to provide sufficient information on which 
                to base effective assistance.
                  (J) Coordination and integration of Federal, 
                State, and local services and programs, 
                including programs supported under this Act, 
                violence prevention programs, nutrition 
                programs, housing programs, Head Start, adult 
                education, [vocational] career and technical 
                education, and job training.
          (2) Plan.--
                  (A) In general.--Any eligible school that 
                desires to operate a schoolwide program shall 
                [first develop (or amend a plan for such a 
                program that was in existence on the day before 
                the date of enactment of the No Child Left 
                Behind Act of 2001)] have in place, in 
                consultation with the local educational agency 
                [and its school support team or other technical 
                assistance provider under section 1117], a 
                comprehensive plan for reforming the total 
                instructional program in the school that--
                          (i) describes how the school will 
                        implement the components described in 
                        paragraph (1);
                          (ii) describes how the school will 
                        use resources under this [part] subpart 
                        and from other sources to implement 
                        those components;
                          (iii) includes a list of State 
                        educational agency and local 
                        educational agency programs and other 
                        Federal programs under subsection 
                        (a)(3) that will be consolidated in the 
                        schoolwide program; and
                          (iv) describes how the school will 
                        provide individual student academic 
                        assessment results in a language the 
                        parents can understand, including an 
                        interpretation of those results, to the 
                        parents of a child who participates in 
                        the academic assessments required by 
                        [section 1111(b)(3)] section 
                        1111(b)(2).
                  (B) Plan development.--The comprehensive plan 
                shall be--
                          (i) developed during a one-year 
                        period, unless--
                                  (I) the local educational 
                                agency[, after considering the 
                                recommendation of the technical 
                                assistance providers under 
                                section 1117,] determines that 
                                less time is needed to develop 
                                and implement the schoolwide 
                                program; or
                                  (II) the school is operating 
                                a schoolwide program on the day 
                                preceding the date of enactment 
                                of the [No Child Left Behind 
                                Act of 2001] Student Success 
                                Act, in which case such school 
                                may continue to operate such 
                                program, but shall develop 
                                amendments to its existing plan 
                                during the first year of 
                                assistance after that date to 
                                reflect the provisions of this 
                                section;
                          (ii) developed with the involvement 
                        of parents and other members of the 
                        community to be served and individuals 
                        who will carry out such plan, including 
                        teachers, principals, and 
                        administrators [(including 
                        administrators of programs described in 
                        other parts of this title)], and, if 
                        appropriate, [pupil services] 
                        specialized instructional support 
                        services personnel, technical 
                        assistance providers, school staff, 
                        and, if the plan relates to a secondary 
                        school, students from such school;
                          (iii) in effect for the duration of 
                        the school's participation under this 
                        [part] subpart and reviewed and 
                        revised, as necessary, by the school;
                          (iv) available to the local 
                        educational agency, parents, and the 
                        public, and the information contained 
                        in such plan shall be in an 
                        understandable and uniform format and, 
                        to the extent practicable, provided in 
                        a language that the parents can 
                        understand; and
                          (v) if appropriate, developed in 
                        coordination with programs under 
                        [Reading First, Early Reading First, 
                        Even Start,] the Carl D. Perkins Career 
                        and Technical Education Act of 2006, 
                        and the Head Start Act.
  (c) Prekindergarten Program.--A school that is eligible for a 
schoolwide program under this section may use funds made 
available under this [part] subpart to establish or enhance 
prekindergarten programs for children below the age of [6, such 
as Even Start programs or Early Reading First programs.] 6.

SEC. 1115. TARGETED ASSISTANCE SCHOOLS.

  (a) In General.--In all schools selected to receive funds 
under section 1113(c) that [are ineligible for a schoolwide 
program under section 1114, or that] choose not to [operate 
such] operate a schoolwide program, a local educational agency 
serving such school may use funds received under this [part] 
subpart only for programs that provide services to eligible 
children under subsection (b) identified as having the greatest 
need for special assistance.
  (b) Eligible Children.--
          (1) Eligible population.--
                  (A) In general.--The eligible population for 
                services under this section is--
                          (i) children not older than age 21 
                        who are entitled to a free public 
                        education through grade 12; and
                          (ii) children who are not yet at a 
                        grade level at which the local 
                        educational agency provides a free 
                        public education.
                  (B) Eligible children from eligible 
                population.--From the population described in 
                subparagraph (A), eligible children are 
                children identified by the school as failing, 
                or most at risk of failing, to meet the State's 
                [challenging student academic achievement] 
                academic standards on the basis of multiple, 
                educationally related, objective criteria 
                established by the local educational agency and 
                supplemented by the school, except that 
                children from preschool through grade 2 shall 
                be selected solely on the basis of such 
                criteria as teacher judgment, interviews with 
                parents, and developmentally appropriate 
                measures.
          (2) Children included.--
                  (A) In general.--Children who are 
                economically disadvantaged, children with 
                disabilities, migrant children or [limited 
                English proficient children] English learners, 
                are eligible for services under this [part] 
                subpart on the same basis as other children 
                selected to receive services under this [part] 
                subpart.
                  (B) Head start[, even start, or early reading 
                first] children.--A child who, at any time in 
                the 2 years preceding the year for which the 
                determination is made, participated in a Head 
                Start[, Even Start, or Early Reading First] 
                program, or in preschool services under this 
                title, is eligible for services under this 
                [part] subpart.
                  (C)  [Part c children.--]  Subpart 3 
                children._  A child who, at any time in the 2 
                years preceding the year for which the 
                determination is made, received services under 
                [part C] subpart 3 is eligible for services 
                under this [part] subpart.
                  (D) Neglected or delinquent children.--A 
                child in a local institution for neglected or 
                delinquent children and youth or attending a 
                community day program for such children is 
                eligible for services under this [part] 
                subpart.
                  (E) Homeless children.--A child who is 
                homeless and attending any school served by the 
                local educational agency is eligible for 
                services under this [part] subpart.
          (3) Special rule.--Funds received under this [part] 
        subpart may not be used to provide services that are 
        otherwise required by law to be made available to 
        children described in paragraph (2) but may be used to 
        coordinate or supplement such services.
  (c) Components of a Targeted Assistance School Program.--
          (1) In general.--To assist targeted assistance 
        schools and local educational agencies to meet their 
        responsibility to provide for all their students served 
        under this [part] subpart the opportunity to meet the 
        State's [challenging student academic achievement] 
        academic standards in subjects as determined by the 
        State, each targeted assistance program under this 
        section shall--
                  (A) use such program's resources under this 
                [part] subpart to help participating children 
                meet such State's [challenging student academic 
                achievement] academic standards expected for 
                all children;
                  (B) ensure that planning for students served 
                under this [part] subpart is incorporated into 
                existing school planning;
                  (C) use effective methods and instructional 
                strategies that are [based on scientifically 
                based research] evidence-based that strengthens 
                the core academic program of the school and 
                that--
                          (i) give primary consideration to 
                        providing extended learning time, such 
                        as an extended school year, before- and 
                        after-school, and summer programs and 
                        opportunities;
                          (ii) help provide an accelerated, 
                        high-quality curriculum, including 
                        applied learning; and
                          (iii) minimize removing children from 
                        the regular classroom during regular 
                        school hours for instruction provided 
                        under this [part] subpart;
                  (D) coordinate with and support the regular 
                education program, which may include services 
                to assist preschool children in the transition 
                from early childhood programs [such as Head 
                Start, Even Start, Early Reading First or 
                State-run preschool programs] to elementary 
                school programs;
                  (E) provide instruction by [highly qualified] 
                effective teachers;
                  (F) [in accordance with subsection (e)(3) and 
                section 1119,] provide opportunities for 
                professional development with resources 
                provided under this [part] subpart, and, to the 
                extent practicable, from other sources, for 
                teachers, principals, and paraprofessionals, 
                including, if appropriate, [pupil services 
                personnel] specialized instructional support 
                personnel, parents, and other staff, who work 
                with participating children in programs under 
                this section or in the regular education 
                program;
                  (G) provide strategies to increase parental 
                involvement in accordance with section 1118, 
                such as family literacy services; and
                  (H) coordinate and integrate Federal, State, 
                and local services and programs, including 
                programs supported under this Act, violence 
                prevention programs, nutrition programs, 
                housing programs, Head Start, adult education, 
                [vocational] career and technical education, 
                and job training.
          (2) Requirements.--Each school conducting a program 
        under this section shall assist participating children 
        selected in accordance with subsection (b) to meet the 
        State's [proficient and advanced levels of achievement] 
        academic standards by--
                  (A) the coordinating of resources provided 
                under this [part] subpart with other resources; 
                and
                  (B) reviewing, on an ongoing basis, the 
                progress of participating children and revising 
                the targeted assistance program, if necessary, 
                to provide additional assistance to enable such 
                children to meet the State's [challenging 
                student academic achievement] academic 
                standards, such as an extended school year, 
                before- and after-school, and summer programs 
                and opportunities, training for teachers 
                regarding how to identify students who need 
                additional assistance, and training for 
                teachers regarding how to implement student 
                academic achievement standards in the 
                classroom.
  (d) Integration of Professional Development.--To promote the 
integration of staff supported with funds under this [part] 
subpart into the regular school program and overall school 
planning and improvement efforts, public school personnel who 
are paid with funds received under this [part] subpart may--
          (1) participate in general professional development 
        and school planning activities; and
          (2) assume limited duties that are assigned to 
        similar personnel who are not so paid, including duties 
        beyond classroom instruction or that do not benefit 
        participating children, so long as the amount of time 
        spent on such duties is the same proportion of total 
        work time as prevails with respect to similar personnel 
        at the same school.
  (e) Special Rules.--
          (1) Simultaneous service.--Nothing in this section 
        shall be construed to prohibit a school from serving 
        students under this section simultaneously with 
        students with similar educational needs, in the same 
        educational settings where appropriate.
          (2) Comprehensive services.--If--
                  (A) health, nutrition, and other social 
                services are not otherwise available to 
                eligible children in a targeted assistance 
                school and such school, if appropriate, has 
                engaged in a comprehensive needs assessment and 
                established a collaborative partnership with 
                local service providers; and
                  (B) funds are not reasonably available from 
                other public or private sources to provide such 
                services, then a portion of the funds provided 
                under this [part] subpart may be used as a last 
                resort to provide such services, including--
                          (i) the provision of basic medical 
                        equipment, such as eyeglasses and 
                        hearing aids;
                          (ii) compensation of a coordinator; 
                        and
                          (iii) professional development 
                        necessary to assist teachers, [pupil 
                        services] specialized instructional 
                        support services personnel, other 
                        staff, and parents in identifying and 
                        meeting the comprehensive needs of 
                        eligible children.
          [(3) Professional development.--Each school receiving 
        funds under this part for any fiscal year shall devote 
        sufficient resources to carry out effectively the 
        professional development activities described in 
        subparagraph (F) of subsection (c)(1) in accordance 
        with section 1119 for such fiscal year, and a school 
        may enter into a consortium with another school to 
        carry out such activities.]
  (f) Delivery of Services.--The elements of a targeted 
assistance program under this section may be delivered by 
nonprofit or for-profit external providers with expertise in 
using evidence-based or other effective strategies to improve 
student achievement.

[SEC. 1116. ACADEMIC ASSESSMENT AND LOCAL EDUCATIONAL AGENCY AND SCHOOL 
                    IMPROVEMENT.

  [(a) Local Review.--
          [(1) In general.--Each local educational agency 
        receiving funds under this part shall--
                  [(A) use the State academic assessments and 
                other indicators described in the State plan to 
                review annually the progress of each school 
                served under this part to determine whether the 
                school is making adequate yearly progress as 
                defined in section 1111(b)(2);
                  [(B) at the local educational agency's 
                discretion, use any academic assessments or any 
                other academic indicators described in the 
                local educational agency's plan under section 
                1112(b)(1)(A) and (B) to review annually the 
                progress of each school served under this part 
                to determine whether the school is making 
                adequate yearly progress as defined in section 
                1111(b)(2), except that the local educational 
                agency may not use such indicators (other than 
                as provided for in section 1111(b)(2)(I)) if 
                the indicators reduce the number or change the 
                schools that would otherwise be subject to 
                school improvement, corrective action, or 
                restructuring under section 1116 if such 
                additional indicators were not used, but may 
                identify additional schools for school 
                improvement or in need of corrective action or 
                restructuring;
                  [(C) publicize and disseminate the results of 
                the local annual review described in paragraph 
                (1) to parents, teachers, principals, schools, 
                and the community so that the teachers, 
                principals, other staff, and schools can 
                continually refine, in an instructionally 
                useful manner, the program of instruction to 
                help all children served under this part meet 
                the challenging State student academic 
                achievement standards established under section 
                1111(b)(1); and
                  [(D) review the effectiveness of the actions 
                and activities the schools are carrying out 
                under this part with respect to parental 
                involvement, professional development, and 
                other activities assisted under this part.
          [(2) Available results.--The State educational agency 
        shall ensure that the results of State academic 
        assessments administered in that school year are 
        available to the local educational agency before the 
        beginning of the next school year.
  [(b) School Improvement.--
          [(1) General requirements.--
                  [(A) Identification.--Subject to subparagraph 
                (C), a local educational agency shall identify 
                for school improvement any elementary school or 
                secondary school served under this part that 
                fails, for 2 consecutive years, to make 
                adequate yearly progress as defined in the 
                State's plan under section 1111(b)(2).
                  [(B) Deadline.--The identification described 
                in subparagraph (A) shall take place before the 
                beginning of the school year following such 
                failure to make adequate yearly progress.
                  [(C) Application.--Subparagraph (A) shall not 
                apply to a school if almost every student in 
                each group specified in section 
                1111(b)(2)(C)(v) enrolled in such school is 
                meeting or exceeding the State's proficient 
                level of academic achievement.
                  [(D) Targeted assistance schools.--To 
                determine if an elementary school or a 
                secondary school that is conducting a targeted 
                assistance program under section 1115 should be 
                identified for school improvement, corrective 
                action, or restructuring under this section, a 
                local educational agency may choose to review 
                the progress of only the students in the school 
                who are served, or are eligible for services, 
                under this part.
                  [(E) Public school choice.--
                          [(i) In general.--In the case of a 
                        school identified for school 
                        improvement under this paragraph, the 
                        local educational agency shall, not 
                        later than the first day of the school 
                        year following such identification, 
                        provide all students enrolled in the 
                        school with the option to transfer to 
                        another public school served by the 
                        local educational agency, which may 
                        include a public charter school, that 
                        has not been identified for school 
                        improvement under this paragraph, 
                        unless such an option is prohibited by 
                        State law.
                          [(ii) Rule.--In providing students 
                        the option to transfer to another 
                        public school, the local educational 
                        agency shall give priority to the 
                        lowest achieving children from low-
                        income families, as determined by the 
                        local educational agency for purposes 
                        of allocating funds to schools under 
                        section 1113(c)(1).
                  [(F) Transfer.--Students who use the option 
                to transfer under subparagraph (E) and 
                paragraph (5)(A), (7)(C)(i), or (8)(A)(i) or 
                subsection (c)(10)(C)(vii) shall be enrolled in 
                classes and other activities in the public 
                school to which the students transfer in the 
                same manner as all other children at the public 
                school.
          [(2) Opportunity to review and present evidence; time 
        limit.--
                  [(A) Identification.--Before identifying an 
                elementary school or a secondary school for 
                school improvement under paragraphs (1) or 
                (5)(A), for corrective action under paragraph 
                (7), or for restructuring under paragraph (8), 
                the local educational agency shall provide the 
                school with an opportunity to review the 
                school-level data, including academic 
                assessment data, on which the proposed 
                identification is based.
                  [(B) Evidence.--If the principal of a school 
                proposed for identification under paragraph 
                (1), (5)(A), (7), or (8) believes, or a 
                majority of the parents of the students 
                enrolled in such school believe, that the 
                proposed identification is in error for 
                statistical or other substantive reasons, the 
                principal may provide supporting evidence to 
                the local educational agency, which shall 
                consider that evidence before making a final 
                determination.
                  [(C) Final determination.--Not later than 30 
                days after a local educational agency provides 
                the school with the opportunity to review such 
                school-level data, the local educational agency 
                shall make public a final determination on the 
                status of the school with respect to the 
                identification.
          [(3) School plan.--
                  [(A) Revised plan.--After the resolution of a 
                review under paragraph (2), each school 
                identified under paragraph (1) for school 
                improvement shall, not later than 3 months 
                after being so identified, develop or revise a 
                school plan, in consultation with parents, 
                school staff, the local educational agency 
                serving the school, and outside experts, for 
                approval by such local educational agency. The 
                school plan shall cover a 2-year period and--
                          [(i) incorporate strategies based on 
                        scientifically based research that will 
                        strengthen the core academic subjects 
                        in the school and address the specific 
                        academic issues that caused the school 
                        to be identified for school 
                        improvement, and may include a strategy 
                        for the implementation of a 
                        comprehensive school reform model that 
                        includes each of the components 
                        described in part F;
                          [(ii) adopt policies and practices 
                        concerning the school's core academic 
                        subjects that have the greatest 
                        likelihood of ensuring that all groups 
                        of students specified in section 
                        1111(b)(2)(C)(v) and enrolled in the 
                        school will meet the State's proficient 
                        level of achievement on the State 
                        academic assessment described in 
                        section 1111(b)(3) not later than 12 
                        years after the end of the 2001-2002 
                        school year;
                          [(iii) provide an assurance that the 
                        school will spend not less than 10 
                        percent of the funds made available to 
                        the school under section 1113 for each 
                        fiscal year that the school is in 
                        school improvement status, for the 
                        purpose of providing to the school's 
                        teachers and principal high-quality 
                        professional development that--
                                  [(I) directly addresses the 
                                academic achievement problem 
                                that caused the school to be 
                                identified for school 
                                improvement;
                                  [(II) meets the requirements 
                                for professional development 
                                activities under section 1119; 
                                and
                                  [(III) is provided in a 
                                manner that affords increased 
                                opportunity for participating 
                                in that professional 
                                development;
                          [(iv) specify how the funds described 
                        in clause (iii) will be used to remove 
                        the school from school improvement 
                        status;
                          [(v) establish specific annual, 
                        measurable objectives for continuous 
                        and substantial progress by each group 
                        of students specified in section 
                        1111(b)(2)(C)(v) and enrolled in the 
                        school that will ensure that all such 
                        groups of students will, in accordance 
                        with adequate yearly progress as 
                        defined in section 1111(b)(2), meet the 
                        State's proficient level of achievement 
                        on the State academic assessment 
                        described in section 1111(b)(3) not 
                        later than 12 years after the end of 
                        the 2001-2002 school year;
                          [(vi) describe how the school will 
                        provide written notice about the 
                        identification to parents of each 
                        student enrolled in such school, in a 
                        format and, to the extent practicable, 
                        in a language that the parents can 
                        understand;
                          [(vii) specify the responsibilities 
                        of the school, the local educational 
                        agency, and the State educational 
                        agency serving the school under the 
                        plan, including the technical 
                        assistance to be provided by the local 
                        educational agency under paragraph (4) 
                        and the local educational agency's 
                        responsibilities under section 1120A;
                          [(viii) include strategies to promote 
                        effective parental involvement in the 
                        school;
                          [(ix) incorporate, as appropriate, 
                        activities before school, after school, 
                        during the summer, and during any 
                        extension of the school year; and
                          [(x) incorporate a teacher mentoring 
                        program.
                  [(B) Conditional approval.--The local 
                educational agency may condition approval of a 
                school plan under this paragraph on--
                          [(i) inclusion of one or more of the 
                        corrective actions specified in 
                        paragraph (7)(C)(iv); or
                          [(ii) feedback on the school 
                        improvement plan from parents and 
                        community leaders.
                  [(C) Plan implementation.--Except as provided 
                in subparagraph (D), a school shall implement 
                the school plan (including a revised plan) 
                expeditiously, but not later than the beginning 
                of the next full school year following the 
                identification under paragraph (1).
                  [(D) Plan approved during school year.--
                Notwithstanding subparagraph (C), if a plan is 
                not approved prior to the beginning of a school 
                year, such plan shall be implemented 
                immediately upon approval.
                  [(E) Local educational agency approval.--The 
                local educational agency, within 45 days of 
                receiving a school plan, shall--
                          [(i) establish a peer review process 
                        to assist with review of the school 
                        plan; and
                          [(ii) promptly review the school 
                        plan, work with the school as 
                        necessary, and approve the school plan 
                        if the plan meets the requirements of 
                        this paragraph.
          [(4) Technical assistance.--
                  [(A) In general.--For each school identified 
                for school improvement under paragraph (1), the 
                local educational agency serving the school 
                shall ensure the provision of technical 
                assistance as the school develops and 
                implements the school plan under paragraph (3) 
                throughout the plan's duration.
                  [(B) Specific assistance.--Such technical 
                assistance--
                          [(i) shall include assistance in 
                        analyzing data from the assessments 
                        required under section 1111(b)(3), and 
                        other examples of student work, to 
                        identify and address problems in 
                        instruction, and problems if any, in 
                        implementing the parental involvement 
                        requirements described in section 1118, 
                        the professional development 
                        requirements described in section 1119, 
                        and the responsibilities of the school 
                        and local educational agency under the 
                        school plan, and to identify and 
                        address solutions to such problems;
                          [(ii) shall include assistance in 
                        identifying and implementing 
                        professional development, instructional 
                        strategies, and methods of instruction 
                        that are based on scientifically based 
                        research and that have proven effective 
                        in addressing the specific 
                        instructional issues that caused the 
                        school to be identified for school 
                        improvement;
                          [(iii) shall include assistance in 
                        analyzing and revising the school's 
                        budget so that the school's resources 
                        are more effectively allocated to the 
                        activities most likely to increase 
                        student academic achievement and to 
                        remove the school from school 
                        improvement status; and
                          [(iv) may be provided--
                                  [(I) by the local educational 
                                agency, through mechanisms 
                                authorized under section 1117; 
                                or
                                  [(II) by the State 
                                educational agency, an 
                                institution of higher education 
                                (that is in full compliance 
                                with all the reporting 
                                provisions of title II of the 
                                Higher Education Act of 1965), 
                                a private not-for-profit 
                                organization or for-profit 
                                organization, an educational 
                                service agency, or another 
                                entity with experience in 
                                helping schools improve 
                                academic achievement.
                  [(C) Scientifically based research.--
                Technical assistance provided under this 
                section by a local educational agency or an 
                entity approved by that agency shall be based 
                on scientifically based research.
          [(5) Failure to make adequate yearly progress after 
        identification.--In the case of any school served under 
        this part that fails to make adequate yearly progress, 
        as set out in the State's plan under section 
        1111(b)(2), by the end of the first full school year 
        after identification under paragraph (1), the local 
        educational agency serving such school--
                  [(A) shall continue to provide all students 
                enrolled in the school with the option to 
                transfer to another public school served by the 
                local educational agency in accordance with 
                subparagraphs (E) and (F);
                  [(B) shall make supplemental educational 
                services available consistent with subsection 
                (e)(1); and
                  [(C) shall continue to provide technical 
                assistance.
          [(6) Notice to parents.--A local educational agency 
        shall promptly provide to a parent or parents (in an 
        understandable and uniform format and, to the extent 
        practicable, in a language the parents can understand) 
        of each student enrolled in an elementary school or a 
        secondary school identified for school improvement 
        under paragraph (1), for corrective action under 
        paragraph (7), or for restructuring under paragraph 
        (8)--
                  [(A) an explanation of what the 
                identification means, and how the school 
                compares in terms of academic achievement to 
                other elementary schools or secondary schools 
                served by the local educational agency and the 
                State educational agency involved;
                  [(B) the reasons for the identification;
                  [(C) an explanation of what the school 
                identified for school improvement is doing to 
                address the problem of low achievement;
                  [(D) an explanation of what the local 
                educational agency or State educational agency 
                is doing to help the school address the 
                achievement problem;
                  [(E) an explanation of how the parents can 
                become involved in addressing the academic 
                issues that caused the school to be identified 
                for school improvement; and
                  [(F) an explanation of the parents' option to 
                transfer their child to another public school 
                under paragraphs (1)(E), (5)(A), (7)(C)(i), 
                (8)(A)(i), and subsection (c)(10)(C)(vii) (with 
                transportation provided by the agency when 
                required by paragraph (9)) or to obtain 
                supplemental educational services for the 
                child, in accordance with subsection (e).
          [(7) Corrective action.--
                  [(A) In general.--In this subsection, the 
                term ``corrective action'' means action, 
                consistent with State law, that--
                          [(i) substantially and directly 
                        responds to--
                                  [(I) the consistent academic 
                                failure of a school that caused 
                                the local educational agency to 
                                take such action; and
                                  [(II) any underlying 
                                staffing, curriculum, or other 
                                problems in the school; and
                          [(ii) is designed to increase 
                        substantially the likelihood that each 
                        group of students described in 
                        1111(b)(2)(C) enrolled in the school 
                        identified for corrective action will 
                        meet or exceed the State's proficient 
                        levels of achievement on the State 
                        academic assessments described in 
                        section 1111(b)(3).
                  [(B) System.--In order to help students 
                served under this part meet challenging State 
                student academic achievement standards, each 
                local educational agency shall implement a 
                system of corrective action in accordance with 
                subparagraphs (C) through (E).
                  [(C) Role of local educational agency.--In 
                the case of any school served by a local 
                educational agency under this part that fails 
                to make adequate yearly progress, as defined by 
                the State under section 1111(b)(2), by the end 
                of the second full school year after the 
                identification under paragraph (1), the local 
                educational agency shall--
                          [(i) continue to provide all students 
                        enrolled in the school with the option 
                        to transfer to another public school 
                        served by the local educational agency, 
                        in accordance with paragraph (1)(E) and 
                        (F);
                          [(ii) continue to provide technical 
                        assistance consistent with paragraph 
                        (4) while instituting any corrective 
                        action under clause (iv);
                          [(iii) continue to make supplemental 
                        educational services available, in 
                        accordance with subsection (e), to 
                        children who remain in the school; and
                          [(iv) identify the school for 
                        corrective action and take at least one 
                        of the following corrective actions:
                                  [(I) Replace the school staff 
                                who are relevant to the failure 
                                to make adequate yearly 
                                progress.
                                  [(II) Institute and fully 
                                implement a new curriculum, 
                                including providing appropriate 
                                professional development for 
                                all relevant staff, that is 
                                based on scientifically based 
                                research and offers substantial 
                                promise of improving 
                                educational achievement for 
                                low-achieving students and 
                                enabling the school to make 
                                adequate yearly progress.
                                  [(III) Significantly decrease 
                                management authority at the 
                                school level.
                                  [(IV) Appoint an outside 
                                expert to advise the school on 
                                its progress toward making 
                                adequate yearly progress, based 
                                on its school plan under 
                                paragraph (3).
                                  [(V) Extend the school year 
                                or school day for the school.
                                  [(VI) Restructure the 
                                internal organizational 
                                structure of the school.
                  [(D) Delay.--Notwithstanding any other 
                provision of this paragraph, the local 
                educational agency may delay, for a period not 
                to exceed 1 year, implementation of the 
                requirements under paragraph (5), corrective 
                action under this paragraph, or restructuring 
                under paragraph (8) if the school makes 
                adequate yearly progress for 1 year or if its 
                failure to make adequate yearly progress is due 
                to exceptional or uncontrollable circumstances, 
                such as a natural disaster or a precipitous and 
                unforeseen decline in the financial resources 
                of the local educational agency or school. No 
                such period shall be taken into account in 
                determining the number of consecutive years of 
                failure to make adequate yearly progress.
                  [(E) Publication and dissemination.--The 
                local educational agency shall publish and 
                disseminate information regarding any 
                corrective action the local educational agency 
                takes under this paragraph at a school--
                          [(i) to the public and to the parents 
                        of each student enrolled in the school 
                        subject to corrective action;
                          [(ii) in an understandable and 
                        uniform format and, to the extent 
                        practicable, provided in a language 
                        that the parents can understand; and
                          [(iii) through such means as the 
                        Internet, the media, and public 
                        agencies.
          [(8) Restructuring.--
                  [(A) Failure to make adequate yearly 
                progress.--If, after 1 full school year of 
                corrective action under paragraph (7), a school 
                subject to such corrective action continues to 
                fail to make adequate yearly progress, then the 
                local educational agency shall--
                          [(i) continue to provide all students 
                        enrolled in the school with the option 
                        to transfer to another public school 
                        served by the local educational agency, 
                        in accordance with paragraph (1)(E) and 
                        (F);
                          [(ii) continue to make supplemental 
                        educational services available, in 
                        accordance with subsection (e), to 
                        children who remain in the school; and
                          [(iii) prepare a plan and make 
                        necessary arrangements to carry out 
                        subparagraph (B).
                  [(B) Alternative governance.--Not later than 
                the beginning of the school year following the 
                year in which the local educational agency 
                implements subparagraph (A), the local 
                educational agency shall implement one of the 
                following alternative governance arrangements 
                for the school consistent with State law:
                          [(i) Reopening the school as a public 
                        charter school.
                          [(ii) Replacing all or most of the 
                        school staff (which may include the 
                        principal) who are relevant to the 
                        failure to make adequate yearly 
                        progress.
                          [(iii) Entering into a contract with 
                        an entity, such as a private management 
                        company, with a demonstrated record of 
                        effectiveness, to operate the public 
                        school.
                          [(iv) Turning the operation of the 
                        school over to the State educational 
                        agency, if permitted under State law 
                        and agreed to by the State.
                          [(v) Any other major restructuring of 
                        the school's governance arrangement 
                        that makes fundamental reforms, such as 
                        significant changes in the school's 
                        staffing and governance, to improve 
                        student academic achievement in the 
                        school and that has substantial promise 
                        of enabling the school to make adequate 
                        yearly progress as defined in the State 
                        plan under section 1111(b)(2). In the 
                        case of a rural local educational 
                        agency with a total of less than 600 
                        students in average daily attendance at 
                        the schools that are served by the 
                        agency and all of whose schools have a 
                        School Locale Code of 7 or 8, as 
                        determined by the Secretary, the 
                        Secretary shall, at such agency's 
                        request, provide technical assistance 
                        to such agency for the purpose of 
                        implementing this clause.
                  [(C) Prompt notice.--The local educational 
                agency shall--
                          [(i) provide prompt notice to 
                        teachers and parents whenever 
                        subparagraph (A) or (B) applies; and
                          [(ii) provide the teachers and 
                        parents with an adequate opportunity 
                        to--
                                  [(I) comment before taking 
                                any action under those 
                                subparagraphs; and
                                  [(II) participate in 
                                developing any plan under 
                                subparagraph (A)(iii).
          [(9) Transportation.--In any case described in 
        paragraph (1)(E) for schools described in paragraphs 
        (1)(A), (5), (7)(C)(i), and (8)(A), and subsection 
        (c)(10)(C)(vii), the local educational agency shall 
        provide, or shall pay for the provision of, 
        transportation for the student to the public school the 
        student attends.
          [(10) Funds for transportation and supplemental 
        educational services.--
                  [(A) In general.--Unless a lesser amount is 
                needed to comply with paragraph (9) and to 
                satisfy all requests for supplemental 
                educational services under subsection (e), a 
                local educational agency shall spend an amount 
                equal to 20 percent of its allocation under 
                subpart 2, from which the agency shall spend--
                          [(i) an amount equal to 5 percent of 
                        its allocation under subpart 2 to 
                        provide, or pay for, transportation 
                        under paragraph (9);
                          [(ii) an amount equal to 5 percent of 
                        its allocation under subpart 2 to 
                        provide supplemental educational 
                        services under subsection (e); and
                          [(iii) an amount equal to the 
                        remaining 10 percent of its allocation 
                        under subpart 2 for transportation 
                        under paragraph (9), supplemental 
                        educational services under subsection 
                        (e), or both, as the agency determines.
                  [(B) Total amount.--The total amount 
                described in subparagraph (A)(ii) is the 
                maximum amount the local educational agency 
                shall be required to spend under this part on 
                supplemental educational services described in 
                subsection (e).
                  [(C) Insufficient funds.--If the amount of 
                funds described in subparagraph (A)(ii) or 
                (iii) and available to provide services under 
                this subsection is insufficient to provide 
                supplemental educational services to each child 
                whose parents request the services, the local 
                educational agency shall give priority to 
                providing the services to the lowest-achieving 
                children.
                  [(D) Prohibition.--A local educational agency 
                shall not, as a result of the application of 
                this paragraph, reduce by more than 15 percent 
                the total amount made available under section 
                1113(c) to a school described in paragraph 
                (7)(C) or (8)(A) of subsection (b).
          [(11) Cooperative agreement.--In any case described 
        in paragraph (1)(E), (5)(A), (7)(C)(i), or (8)(A)(i), 
        or subsection (c)(10)(C)(vii) if all public schools 
        served by the local educational agency to which a child 
        may transfer are identified for school improvement, 
        corrective action or restructuring, the agency shall, 
        to the extent practicable, establish a cooperative 
        agreement with other local educational agencies in the 
        area for a transfer.
          [(12) Duration.--If any school identified for school 
        improvement, corrective action, or restructuring makes 
        adequate yearly progress for two consecutive school 
        years, the local educational agency shall no longer 
        subject the school to the requirements of school 
        improvement, corrective action, or restructuring or 
        identify the school for school improvement for the 
        succeeding school year.
          [(13) Special rule.--A local educational agency shall 
        permit a child who transferred to another school under 
        this subsection to remain in that school until the 
        child has completed the highest grade in that school. 
        The obligation of the local educational agency to 
        provide, or to provide for, transportation for the 
        child ends at the end of a school year if the local 
        educational agency determines that the school from 
        which the child transferred is no longer identified for 
        school improvement or subject to corrective action or 
        restructuring.
          [(14) State educational agency responsibilities.--The 
        State educational agency shall--
                  [(A) make technical assistance under section 
                1117 available to schools identified for school 
                improvement, corrective action, or 
                restructuring under this subsection consistent 
                with section 1117(a)(2);
                  [(B) if the State educational agency 
                determines that a local educational agency 
                failed to carry out its responsibilities under 
                this subsection, take such corrective actions 
                as the State educational agency determines to 
                be appropriate and in compliance with State 
                law;
                  [(C) ensure that academic assessment results 
                under this part are provided to schools before 
                any identification of a school may take place 
                under this subsection; and
                  [(D) for local educational agencies or 
                schools identified for improvement under this 
                subsection, notify the Secretary of major 
                factors that were brought to the attention of 
                the State educational agency under section 
                1111(b)(9) that have significantly affected 
                student academic achievement.
  [(c) State Review and Local Educational Agency Improvement.--
          [(1) In general.--A State shall--
                  [(A) annually review the progress of each 
                local educational agency receiving funds under 
                this part to determine whether schools 
                receiving assistance under this part are making 
                adequate yearly progress as defined in section 
                1111(b)(2) toward meeting the State's student 
                academic achievement standards and to determine 
                if each local educational agency is carrying 
                out its responsibilities under this section and 
                sections 1117, 1118, and 1119; and
                  [(B) publicize and disseminate to local 
                educational agencies, teachers and other staff, 
                parents, students, and the community the 
                results of the State review, including 
                statistically sound disaggregated results, as 
                required by section 1111(b)(2).
          [(2) Rewards.--In the case of a local educational 
        agency that, for 2 consecutive years, has exceeded 
        adequate yearly progress as defined in the State plan 
        under section 1111(b)(2), the State may make rewards of 
        the kinds described under section 1117 to the agency.
          [(3) Identification of local educational agency for 
        improvement.--A State shall identify for improvement 
        any local educational agency that, for 2 consecutive 
        years, including the period immediately prior to the 
        date of enactment of the No Child Left Behind Act of 
        2001, failed to make adequate yearly progress as 
        defined in the State's plan under section 1111(b)(2).
          [(4) Targeted assistance schools.--When reviewing 
        targeted assistance schools served by a local 
        educational agency, a State educational agency may 
        choose to review the progress of only the students in 
        such schools who are served, or are eligible for 
        services, under this part.
          [(5) Opportunity to review and present evidence.--
                  [(A) Review.--Before identifying a local 
                educational agency for improvement under 
                paragraph (3) or corrective action under 
                paragraph (10), a State educational agency 
                shall provide the local educational agency with 
                an opportunity to review the data, including 
                academic assessment data, on which the proposed 
                identification is based.
                  [(B) Evidence.--If the local educational 
                agency believes that the proposed 
                identification is in error for statistical or 
                other substantive reasons, the agency may 
                provide supporting evidence to the State 
                educational agency, which shall consider the 
                evidence before making a final determination 
                not later than 30 days after the State 
                educational agency provides the local 
                educational agency with the opportunity to 
                review such data under subparagraph (A).
          [(6) Notification to parents.--The State educational 
        agency shall promptly provide to the parents (in a 
        format and, to the extent practicable, in a language 
        the parents can understand) of each student enrolled in 
        a school served by a local educational agency 
        identified for improvement, the results of the review 
        under paragraph (1) and, if the agency is identified 
        for improvement, the reasons for that identification 
        and how parents can participate in upgrading the 
        quality of the local educational agency.
          [(7) Local educational agency revisions.--
                  [(A) Plan.--Each local educational agency 
                identified under paragraph (3) shall, not later 
                than 3 months after being so identified, 
                develop or revise a local educational agency 
                plan, in consultation with parents, school 
                staff, and others. Such plan shall--
                          [(i) incorporate scientifically based 
                        research strategies that strengthen the 
                        core academic program in schools served 
                        by the local educational agency;
                          [(ii) identify actions that have the 
                        greatest likelihood of improving the 
                        achievement of participating children 
                        in meeting the State's student academic 
                        achievement standards;
                          [(iii) address the professional 
                        development needs of the instructional 
                        staff serving the agency by committing 
                        to spend not less than 10 percent of 
                        the funds received by the local 
                        educational agency under subpart 2 for 
                        each fiscal year in which the agency is 
                        identified for improvement for 
                        professional development (including 
                        funds reserved for professional 
                        development under subsection 
                        (b)(3)(A)(iii)), but excluding funds 
                        reserved for professional development 
                        under section 1119;
                          [(iv) include specific measurable 
                        achievement goals and targets for each 
                        of the groups of students identified in 
                        the disaggregated data pursuant to 
                        section 1111(b)(2)(C)(v), consistent 
                        with adequate yearly progress as 
                        defined under section 1111(b)(2);
                          [(v) address the fundamental teaching 
                        and learning needs in the schools of 
                        that agency, and the specific academic 
                        problems of low-achieving students, 
                        including a determination of why the 
                        local educational agency's prior plan 
                        failed to bring about increased student 
                        academic achievement;
                          [(vi) incorporate, as appropriate, 
                        activities before school, after school, 
                        during the summer, and during an 
                        extension of the school year;
                          [(vii) specify the responsibilities 
                        of the State educational agency and the 
                        local educational agency under the 
                        plan, including specifying the 
                        technical assistance to be provided by 
                        the State educational agency under 
                        paragraph (9) and the local educational 
                        agency's responsibilities under section 
                        1120A; and
                          [(viii) include strategies to promote 
                        effective parental involvement in the 
                        school.
                  [(B) Implementation.--The local educational 
                agency shall implement the plan (including a 
                revised plan) expeditiously, but not later than 
                the beginning of the next school year after the 
                school year in which the agency was identified 
                for improvement.
          [(9) State educational agency responsibility.--
                  [(A) Technical or other assistance.--For each 
                local educational agency identified under 
                paragraph (3), the State educational agency 
                shall provide technical or other assistance if 
                requested, as authorized under section 1117, to 
                better enable the local educational agency to--
                          [(i) develop and implement the local 
                        educational agency's plan; and
                          [(ii) work with schools needing 
                        improvement.
                  [(B) Methods and strategies.--Technical 
                assistance provided under this section by the 
                State educational agency or an entity 
                authorized by such agency shall be supported by 
                effective methods and instructional strategies 
                based on scientifically based research. Such 
                technical assistance shall address problems, if 
                any, in implementing the parental involvement 
                activities described in section 1118 and the 
                professional development activities described 
                in section 1119.
          [(10) Corrective action.--In order to help students 
        served under this part meet challenging State student 
        academic achievement standards, each State shall 
        implement a system of corrective action in accordance 
        with the following:
                  [(A) Definition.--As used in this paragraph, 
                the term ``corrective action'' means action, 
                consistent with State law, that--
                          [(i) substantially and directly 
                        responds to the consistent academic 
                        failure that caused the State to take 
                        such action and to any underlying 
                        staffing, curricular, or other problems 
                        in the agency; and
                          [(ii) is designed to meet the goal of 
                        having all students served under this 
                        part achieve at the proficient and 
                        advanced student academic achievement 
                        levels.
                  [(B) General requirements.--After providing 
                technical assistance under paragraph (9) and 
                subject to subparagraph (E), the State--
                          [(i) may take corrective action at 
                        any time with respect to a local 
                        educational agency that has been 
                        identified under paragraph (3);
                          [(ii) shall take corrective action 
                        with respect to any local educational 
                        agency that fails to make adequate 
                        yearly progress, as defined by the 
                        State, by the end of the second full 
                        school year after the identification of 
                        the agency under paragraph (3); and
                          [(iii) shall continue to provide 
                        technical assistance while instituting 
                        any corrective action under clause (i) 
                        or (ii).
                  [(C) Certain corrective actions required.--In 
                the case of a local educational agency 
                identified for corrective action, the State 
                educational agency shall take at least one of 
                the following corrective actions:
                          [(i) Deferring programmatic funds or 
                        reducing administrative funds.
                          [(ii) Instituting and fully 
                        implementing a new curriculum that is 
                        based on State and local academic 
                        content and achievement standards, 
                        including providing appropriate 
                        professional development based on 
                        scientifically based research for all 
                        relevant staff, that offers substantial 
                        promise of improving educational 
                        achievement for low-achieving students.
                          [(iii) Replacing the local 
                        educational agency personnel who are 
                        relevant to the failure to make 
                        adequate yearly progress.
                          [(iv) Removing particular schools 
                        from the jurisdiction of the local 
                        educational agency and establishing 
                        alternative arrangements for public 
                        governance and supervision of such 
                        schools.
                          [(v) Appointing, through the State 
                        educational agency, a receiver or 
                        trustee to administer the affairs of 
                        the local educational agency in place 
                        of the superintendent and school board.
                          [(vi) Abolishing or restructuring the 
                        local educational agency.
                          [(vii) Authorizing students to 
                        transfer from a school operated by the 
                        local educational agency to a higher-
                        performing public school operated by 
                        another local educational agency in 
                        accordance with subsections (b)(1)(E) 
                        and (F), and providing to such students 
                        transportation (or the costs of 
                        transportation) to such schools 
                        consistent with subsection (b)(9), in 
                        conjunction with carrying out not less 
                        than one additional action described 
                        under this subparagraph.
                  [(D) Hearing.--Prior to implementing any 
                corrective action under this paragraph, the 
                State educational agency shall provide notice 
                and a hearing to the affected local educational 
                agency, if State law provides for such notice 
                and hearing. The hearing shall take place not 
                later than 45 days following the decision to 
                implement corrective action.
                  [(E) Notice to parents.--The State 
                educational agency shall publish, and 
                disseminate to parents and the public, 
                information on any corrective action the State 
                educational agency takes under this paragraph 
                through such means as the Internet, the media, 
                and public agencies.
                  [(F) Delay.--Notwithstanding subparagraph 
                (B)(ii), a State educational agency may delay, 
                for a period not to exceed 1 year, 
                implementation of corrective action under this 
                paragraph if the local educational agency makes 
                adequate yearly progress for 1 year or its 
                failure to make adequate yearly progress is due 
                to exceptional or uncontrollable circumstances, 
                such as a natural disaster or a precipitous and 
                unforeseen decline in the financial resources 
                of the local educational agency. No such period 
                shall be taken into account in determining the 
                number of consecutive years of failure to make 
                adequate yearly progress.
          [(11) Special rule.--If a local educational agency 
        makes adequate yearly progress for two consecutive 
        school years beginning after the date of identification 
        of the agency under paragraph (3), the State 
        educational agency need no longer identify the local 
        educational agency for improvement or subject the local 
        educational agency to corrective action for the 
        succeeding school year.
  [(d) Construction.--Nothing in this section shall be 
construed to alter or otherwise affect the rights, remedies, 
and procedures afforded school or school district employees 
under Federal, State, or local laws (including applicable 
regulations or court orders) or under the terms of collective 
bargaining agreements, memoranda of understanding, or other 
agreements between such employees and their employers.
  [(e) Supplemental Educational Services.--
          [(1) Supplemental educational services.--In the case 
        of any school described in paragraph (5), (7), or (8) 
        of subsection (b), the local educational agency serving 
        such school shall, subject to this subsection, arrange 
        for the provision of supplemental educational services 
        to eligible children in the school from a provider with 
        a demonstrated record of effectiveness, that is 
        selected by the parents and approved for that purpose 
        by the State educational agency in accordance with 
        reasonable criteria, consistent with paragraph (5), 
        that the State educational agency shall adopt.
          [(2) Local educational agency responsibilities.--Each 
        local educational agency subject to this subsection 
        shall--
                  [(A) provide, at a minimum, annual notice to 
                parents (in an understandable and uniform 
                format and, to the extent practicable, in a 
                language the parents can understand) of--
                          [(i) the availability of services 
                        under this subsection;
                          [(ii) the identity of approved 
                        providers of those services that are 
                        within the local educational agency or 
                        whose services are reasonably available 
                        in neighboring local educational 
                        agencies; and
                          [(iii) a brief description of the 
                        services, qualifications, and 
                        demonstrated effectiveness of each such 
                        provider;
                  [(B) if requested, assist parents in choosing 
                a provider from the list of approved providers 
                maintained by the State;
                  [(C) apply fair and equitable procedures for 
                serving students if the number of spaces at 
                approved providers is not sufficient to serve 
                all students; and
                  [(D) not disclose to the public the identity 
                of any student who is eligible for, or 
                receiving, supplemental educational services 
                under this subsection without the written 
                permission of the parents of the student.
          [(3) Agreement.--In the case of the selection of an 
        approved provider by a parent, the local educational 
        agency shall enter into an agreement with such 
        provider. Such agreement shall--
                  [(A) require the local educational agency to 
                develop, in consultation with parents (and the 
                provider chosen by the parents), a statement of 
                specific achievement goals for the student, how 
                the student's progress will be measured, and a 
                timetable for improving achievement that, in 
                the case of a student with disabilities, is 
                consistent with the student's individualized 
                education program under section 614(d) of the 
                Individuals with Disabilities Education Act;
                  [(B) describe how the student's parents and 
                the student's teacher or teachers will be 
                regularly informed of the student's progress;
                  [(C) provide for the termination of such 
                agreement if the provider is unable to meet 
                such goals and timetables;
                  [(D) contain provisions with respect to the 
                making of payments to the provider by the local 
                educational agency; and
                  [(E) prohibit the provider from disclosing to 
                the public the identity of any student eligible 
                for, or receiving, supplemental educational 
                services under this subsection without the 
                written permission of the parents of such 
                student.
          [(4) State educational agency responsibilities.--A 
        State educational agency shall--
                  [(A) in consultation with local educational 
                agencies, parents, teachers, and other 
                interested members of the public, promote 
                maximum participation by providers to ensure, 
                to the extent practicable, that parents have as 
                many choices as possible;
                  [(B) develop and apply objective criteria, 
                consistent with paragraph (5), to potential 
                providers that are based on a demonstrated 
                record of effectiveness in increasing the 
                academic proficiency of students in subjects 
                relevant to meeting the State academic content 
                and student achievement standards adopted under 
                section 1111(b)(1);
                  [(C) maintain an updated list of approved 
                providers across the State, by school district, 
                from which parents may select;
                  [(D) develop, implement, and publicly report 
                on standards and techniques for monitoring the 
                quality and effectiveness of the services 
                offered by approved providers under this 
                subsection, and for withdrawing approval from 
                providers that fail, for 2 consecutive years, 
                to contribute to increasing the academic 
                proficiency of students served under this 
                subsection as described in subparagraph (B); 
                and
                  [(E) provide annual notice to potential 
                providers of supplemental educational services 
                of the opportunity to provide services under 
                this subsection and of the applicable 
                procedures for obtaining approval from the 
                State educational agency to be an approved 
                provider of those services.
          [(5) Criteria for providers.--In order for a provider 
        to be included on the State list under paragraph 
        (4)(C), a provider shall agree to carry out the 
        following:
                  [(A) Provide parents of children receiving 
                supplemental educational services under this 
                subsection and the appropriate local 
                educational agency with information on the 
                progress of the children in increasing 
                achievement, in a format and, to the extent 
                practicable, a language that such parents can 
                understand.
                  [(B) Ensure that instruction provided and 
                content used by the provider are consistent 
                with the instruction provided and content used 
                by the local educational agency and State, and 
                are aligned with State student academic 
                achievement standards.
                  [(C) Meet all applicable Federal, State, and 
                local health, safety, and civil rights laws.
                  [(D) Ensure that all instruction and content 
                under this subsection are secular, neutral, and 
                nonideological.
          [(6) Amounts for supplemental educational services.--
        The amount that a local educational agency shall make 
        available for supplemental educational services for 
        each child receiving those services under this 
        subsection shall be the lesser of--
                  [(A) the amount of the agency's allocation 
                under subpart 2, divided by the number of 
                children from families below the poverty level 
                counted under section 1124(c)(1)(A); or
                  [(B) the actual costs of the supplemental 
                educational services received by the child.
          [(7) Funds provided by state educational agency.--
        Each State educational agency may use funds that the 
        agency reserves under this part, and part A of title V, 
        to assist local educational agencies that do not have 
        sufficient funds to provide services under this 
        subsection for all eligible students requesting such 
        services.
          [(8) Duration.--The local educational agency shall 
        continue to provide supplemental educational services 
        to a child receiving such services under this 
        subsection until the end of the school year in which 
        such services were first received.
          [(9) Prohibition.--Nothing contained in this 
        subsection shall permit the making of any payment for 
        religious worship or instruction.
          [(10) Waiver.--
                  [(A) Requirement.--At the request of a local 
                educational agency, a State educational agency 
                may waive, in whole or in part, the requirement 
                of this subsection to provide supplemental 
                educational services if the State educational 
                agency determines that--
                          [(i) none of the providers of those 
                        services on the list approved by the 
                        State educational agency under 
                        paragraph (4)(C) makes those services 
                        available in the area served by the 
                        local educational agency or within a 
                        reasonable distance of that area; and
                          [(ii) the local educational agency 
                        provides evidence that it is not able 
                        to provide those services.
                  [(B) Notification.--The State educational 
                agency shall notify the local educational 
                agency, within 30 days of receiving the local 
                educational agency's request for a waiver under 
                subparagraph (A), whether the request is 
                approved or disapproved and, if disapproved, 
                the reasons for the disapproval, in writing.
          [(11) Special rule.--If State law prohibits a State 
        educational agency from carrying out one or more of its 
        responsibilities under paragraph (4) with respect to 
        those who provide, or seek approval to provide, 
        supplemental educational services, each local 
        educational agency in the State shall carry out those 
        responsibilities with respect to its students who are 
        eligible for those services.
          [(12) Definitions.--In this subsection--
                  [(A) the term ``eligible child'' means a 
                child from a low-income family, as determined 
                by the local educational agency for purposes of 
                allocating funds to schools under section 
                1113(c)(1);
                  [(B) the term ``provider'' means a non-profit 
                entity, a for-profit entity, or a local 
                educational agency that--
                          [(i) has a demonstrated record of 
                        effectiveness in increasing student 
                        academic achievement;
                          [(ii) is capable of providing 
                        supplemental educational services that 
                        are consistent with the instructional 
                        program of the local educational agency 
                        and the academic standards described 
                        under section 1111; and
                          [(iii) is financially sound; and
                  [(C) the term ``supplemental educational 
                services'' means tutoring and other 
                supplemental academic enrichment services that 
                are--
                          [(i) in addition to instruction 
                        provided during the school day; and
                          [(ii) are of high quality, research-
                        based, and specifically designed to 
                        increase the academic achievement of 
                        eligible children on the academic 
                        assessments required under section 1111 
                        and attain proficiency in meeting the 
                        State's academic achievement standards.
  [(f) Schools and LEAs Previously Identified for Improvement 
or Corrective Action.--
          [(1) Schools.--
                  [(A) School improvement.--
                          [(i) Schools in school-improvement 
                        status before date of enactment.--Any 
                        school that was in the first year of 
                        school improvement status under this 
                        section on the day preceding the date 
                        of enactment of the No Child Left 
                        Behind Act of 2001 (as this section was 
                        in effect on such day) shall be treated 
                        by the local educational agency as a 
                        school that is in the first year of 
                        school improvement status under 
                        paragraph (1).
                          [(ii) Schools in school-improvement 
                        status for 2 or more years before date 
                        of enactment.--Any school that was in 
                        school improvement status under this 
                        section for two or more consecutive 
                        school years preceding the date of 
                        enactment of the No Child Left Behind 
                        Act of 2001 (as this section was in 
                        effect on such day) shall be treated by 
                        the local educational agency as a 
                        school described in subsection (b)(5).
                  [(B) Corrective action.--Any school that was 
                in corrective action status under this section 
                on the day preceding the date of enactment of 
                the No Child Left Behind Act of 2001 (as this 
                section was in effect on such day) shall be 
                treated by the local educational agency as a 
                school described in paragraph (7).
          [(2) LEAs.--
                  [(A) LEA improvement.--A State shall identify 
                for improvement under subsection (c)(3) any 
                local educational agency that was in 
                improvement status under this section as this 
                section was in effect on the day preceding the 
                date of enactment of the No Child Left Behind 
                Act of 2001.
                  [(B) Corrective action.--A State shall 
                identify for corrective action under subsection 
                (c)(10) any local educational agency that was 
                in corrective action status under this section 
                as this section was in effect on the day 
                preceding the date of enactment of the No Child 
                Left Behind Act of 2001.
                  [(C) Special rule.--For the schools and other 
                local educational agencies described under 
                paragraphs (1) and (2), as required, the State 
                shall ensure that public school choice in 
                accordance with subparagraphs (b)(1)(E) and (F) 
                and supplemental education services in 
                accordance with subsection (e) are provided not 
                later than the first day of the 2002-2003 
                school year.
                  [(D) Transition.--With respect to a 
                determination that a local educational agency 
                has for 2 consecutive years failed to make 
                adequate yearly progress as defined in the 
                State plan under section 1111(b)(2), such 
                determination shall include in such 2-year 
                period any continuous period of time 
                immediately preceding the date of enactment of 
                the No Child Left Behind Act of 2001 during 
                which the agency has failed to make such 
                progress.
  [(g) Schools Funded by the Bureau of Indian Affairs.--
          [(1) Adequate yearly progress for bureau funded 
        schools.--
                  [(A) Development of definition.--
                          [(i) Definition.--The Secretary of 
                        the Interior, in consultation with the 
                        Secretary if the Secretary of Interior 
                        requests the consultation, using the 
                        process set out in section 1138(b) of 
                        the Education Amendments of 1978, shall 
                        define adequate yearly progress, 
                        consistent with section 1111(b), for 
                        the schools funded by the Bureau of 
                        Indian Affairs on a regional or tribal 
                        basis, as appropriate, taking into 
                        account the unique circumstances and 
                        needs of such schools and the students 
                        served by such schools.
                          [(ii) Use of definition.--The 
                        Secretary of the Interior, consistent 
                        with clause (i), may use the definition 
                        of adequate yearly progress that the 
                        State in which the school that is 
                        funded by the Bureau is located uses 
                        consistent with section 1111(b), or in 
                        the case of schools that are located in 
                        more than one State, the Secretary of 
                        the Interior may use whichever State 
                        definition of adequate yearly progress 
                        that best meets the unique 
                        circumstances and needs of such school 
                        or schools and the students the schools 
                        serve.
                  [(B) Waiver.--The tribal governing body or 
                school board of a school funded by the Bureau 
                of Indian Affairs may waive, in part or in 
                whole, the definition of adequate yearly 
                progress established pursuant to paragraph (A) 
                where such definition is determined by such 
                body or school board to be inappropriate. If 
                such definition is waived, the tribal governing 
                body or school board shall, within 60 days 
                thereafter, submit to the Secretary of Interior 
                a proposal for an alternative definition of 
                adequate yearly progress, consistent with 
                section 1111(b), that takes into account the 
                unique circumstances and needs of such school 
                or schools and the students served. The 
                Secretary of the Interior, in consultation with 
                the Secretary if the Secretary of Interior 
                requests the consultation, shall approve such 
                alternative definition unless the Secretary 
                determines that the definition does not meet 
                the requirements of section 1111(b), taking 
                into account the unique circumstances and needs 
                of such school or schools and the students 
                served.
                  [(C) Technical assistance.--The Secretary of 
                Interior shall, in consultation with the 
                Secretary if the Secretary of Interior requests 
                the consultation, either directly or through a 
                contract, provide technical assistance, upon 
                request, to a tribal governing body or school 
                board of a school funded by the Bureau of 
                Indian Affairs that seeks to develop an 
                alternative definition of adequate yearly 
                progress.
          [(2) Accountability for bia schools.--For the 
        purposes of this section, schools funded by the Bureau 
        of Indian Affairs shall be considered schools subject 
        to subsection (b), as specifically provided for in this 
        subsection, except that such schools shall not be 
        subject to subsection (c), or the requirements to 
        provide public school choice and supplemental 
        educational services under subsections (b) and (e).
          [(3) School improvement for bureau schools.--
                  [(A) Contract and grant schools.--For a 
                school funded by the Bureau of Indian Affairs 
                which is operated under a contract issued by 
                the Secretary of the Interior pursuant to the 
                Indian Self-Determination Act (25 U.S.C. 450 et 
                seq.) or under a grant issued by the Secretary 
                of the Interior pursuant to the Tribally 
                Controlled Schools Act of 1988 (25 U.S.C. 2501 
                et seq.), the school board of such school shall 
                be responsible for meeting the requirements of 
                subsection (b) relating to development and 
                implementation of any school improvement plan 
                as described in subsections (b)(1) through 
                (b)(3), and subsection (b)(5), other than 
                subsection (b)(1)(E). The Bureau of Indian 
                Affairs shall be responsible for meeting the 
                requirements of subsection (b)(4) relating to 
                technical assistance.
                  [(B) Bureau operated schools.--For schools 
                operated by the Bureau of Indian Affairs, the 
                Bureau shall be responsible for meeting the 
                requirements of subsection (b) relating to 
                development and implementation of any school 
                improvement plan as described in subsections 
                (b)(1) through (b)(5), other than subsection 
                (b)(1)(E).
          [(4) Corrective action and restructuring for bureau-
        funded schools.--
                  [(A) Contract and grant schools.--For a 
                school funded by the Bureau of Indian Affairs 
                which is operated under a contract issued by 
                the Secretary of the Interior pursuant to the 
                Indian Self-Determination Act (25 U.S.C. 450 et 
                seq.) or under a grant issued by the Secretary 
                of the Interior pursuant to the Tribally 
                Controlled Schools Act of 1988 (25 U.S.C. 2501 
                et seq.), the school board of such school shall 
                be responsible for meeting the requirements of 
                subsection (b) relating to corrective action 
                and restructuring as described in subsection 
                (b)(7) and (b)(8). Any action taken by such 
                school board under subsection (b)(7) or (b)(8) 
                shall take into account the unique 
                circumstances and structure of the Bureau of 
                Indian Affairs-funded school system and the 
                laws governing that system.
                  [(B) Bureau operated schools.--For schools 
                operated by the Bureau of Indian Affairs, the 
                Bureau shall be responsible for meeting the 
                requirements of subsection (b) relating to 
                corrective action and restructuring as 
                described in subsection (b)(7) and (b)(8). Any 
                action taken by the Bureau under subsection 
                (b)(7) or (b)(8) shall take into account the 
                unique circumstances and structure of the 
                Bureau of Indian Affairs-funded school system 
                and the laws governing that system.
          [(5) Annual report.--On an annual basis, the 
        Secretary of the Interior shall report to the Secretary 
        of Education and to the appropriate committees of 
        Congress regarding any schools funded by the Bureau of 
        Indian Affairs which have been identified for school 
        improvement. Such report shall include--
                  [(A) the identity of each school;
                  [(B) a statement from each affected school 
                board regarding the factors that lead to such 
                identification; and
                  [(C) an analysis by the Secretary of the 
                Interior, in consultation with the Secretary if 
                the Secretary of Interior requests the 
                consultation, as to whether sufficient 
                resources were available to enable such school 
                to achieve adequate yearly progress.
  [(h) Other Agencies.--After receiving the notice described in 
subsection (b)(14)(D), the Secretary may notify, to the extent 
feasible and necessary as determined by the Secretary, other 
relevant Federal agencies regarding the major factors that were 
determined by the State educational agency to have 
significantly affected student academic achievement.

[SEC. 1117. SCHOOL SUPPORT AND RECOGNITION.

  [(a) System for Support.--
          [(1) In general.--Each State shall establish a 
        statewide system of intensive and sustained support and 
        improvement for local educational agencies and schools 
        receiving funds under this part, in order to increase 
        the opportunity for all students served by those 
        agencies and schools to meet the State's academic 
        content standards and student academic achievement 
        standards.
          [(2) Priorities.--In carrying out this subsection, a 
        State shall--
                  [(A) first, provide support and assistance to 
                local educational agencies with schools subject 
                to corrective action under section 1116 and 
                assist those schools, in accordance with 
                section 1116(b)(11), for which a local 
                educational agency has failed to carry out its 
                responsibilities under paragraphs (7) and (8) 
                of section 1116(b);
                  [(B) second, provide support and assistance 
                to other local educational agencies with 
                schools identified as in need of improvement 
                under section 1116(b); and
                  [(C) third, provide support and assistance to 
                other local educational agencies and schools 
                participating under this part that need that 
                support and assistance in order to achieve the 
                purpose of this part.
          [(3) Regional centers.--Such a statewide system 
        shall, to the extent practicable, work with and receive 
        support and assistance from regional educational 
        laboratories established under part D of the Education 
        Sciences Reform Act of 2002 and comprehensive centers 
        established under the Educational Technical Assistance 
        Act of 2002 and the comprehensive regional technical 
        assistance centers and the regional educational 
        laboratories under section 941(h) of the Educational 
        Research, Development, Dissemination, and Improvement 
        Act of 1994 (as such section existed on the day before 
        the date of enactment of the Education Sciences Reform 
        Act of 2002), or other providers of technical 
        assistance.
          [(4) Statewide system.--
                  [(A) In order to achieve the purpose 
                described in paragraph (1), the statewide 
                system shall include, at a minimum, the 
                following approaches:
                          [(i) Establishing school support 
                        teams in accordance with subparagraph 
                        (C) for assignment to, and working in, 
                        schools in the State that are described 
                        in paragraph (2).
                          [(ii) Providing such support as the 
                        State educational agency determines 
                        necessary and available in order to 
                        ensure the effectiveness of such teams.
                          [(iii) Designating and using 
                        distinguished teachers and principals 
                        who are chosen from schools served 
                        under this part that have been 
                        especially successful in improving 
                        academic achievement.
                          [(iv) Devising additional approaches 
                        to providing the assistance described 
                        in paragraph (1), such as providing 
                        assistance through institutions of 
                        higher education and educational 
                        service agencies or other local 
                        consortia, and private providers of 
                        scientifically based technical 
                        assistance.
                  [(B) Priority.--The State educational agency 
                shall give priority to the approach described 
                in clause (i) of subparagraph (A).
          [(5) School support teams.--
                  [(A) Composition.--Each school support team 
                established under this section shall be 
                composed of persons knowledgeable about 
                scientifically based research and practice on 
                teaching and learning and about successful 
                schoolwide projects, school reform, and 
                improving educational opportunities for low-
                achieving students, including--
                          [(i) highly qualified or 
                        distinguished teachers and principals;
                          [(ii) pupil services personnel;
                          [(iii) parents;
                          [(iv) representatives of institutions 
                        of higher education;
                          [(v) representatives of regional 
                        educational laboratories or 
                        comprehensive regional technical 
                        assistance centers;
                          [(vi) representatives of outside 
                        consultant groups; or
                          [(vii) other individuals as the State 
                        educational agency, in consultation 
                        with the local educational agency, may 
                        determine appropriate.
                  [(B) Functions.--Each school support team 
                assigned to a school under this section shall--
                          [(i) review and analyze all facets of 
                        the school's operation, including the 
                        design and operation of the 
                        instructional program, and assist the 
                        school in developing recommendations 
                        for improving student performance in 
                        that school;
                          [(ii) collaborate with parents and 
                        school staff and the local educational 
                        agency serving the school in the 
                        design, implementation, and monitoring 
                        of a plan that, if fully implemented, 
                        can reasonably be expected to improve 
                        student performance and help the school 
                        meet its goals for improvement, 
                        including adequate yearly progress 
                        under section 1111(b)(2)(B);
                          [(iii) evaluate, at least 
                        semiannually, the effectiveness of 
                        school personnel assigned to the 
                        school, including identifying 
                        outstanding teachers and principals, 
                        and make findings and recommendations 
                        to the school, the local educational 
                        agency, and, where appropriate, the 
                        State educational agency; and
                          [(iv) make additional recommendations 
                        as the school implements the plan 
                        described in clause (ii) to the local 
                        educational agency and the State 
                        educational agency concerning 
                        additional assistance that is needed by 
                        the school or the school support team.
                  [(C) Continuation of assistance.--After one 
                school year, from the beginning of the 
                activities, such school support team, in 
                consultation with the local educational agency, 
                may recommend that the school support team 
                continue to provide assistance to the school, 
                or that the local educational agency or the 
                State educational agency, as appropriate, take 
                alternative actions with regard to the school.
  [(b) State Recognition.--
          [(1) Academic achievement awards program.--
                  [(A) In general.--Each State receiving a 
                grant under this part--
                          [(i) shall establish a program for 
                        making academic achievement awards to 
                        recognize schools that meet the 
                        criteria described in subparagraph (B); 
                        and
                          [(ii) as appropriate and as funds are 
                        available under subsection (c)(2)(A), 
                        may financially reward schools served 
                        under this part that meet the criteria 
                        described in clause (ii).
                  [(B) Criteria.--The criteria referred to in 
                subparagraph (A) are that a school--
                          [(i) significantly closed the 
                        achievement gap between the groups of 
                        students described in section 
                        1111(b)(2); or
                          [(ii) exceeded their adequate yearly 
                        progress, consistent with section 
                        1111(b)(2), for 2 or more consecutive 
                        years.
          [(2) Distinguished schools.--Of those schools meeting 
        the criteria described in paragraph (2), each State 
        shall designate as distinguished schools those schools 
        that have made the greatest gains in closing the 
        achievement gap as described in subparagraph (B)(i) or 
        exceeding adequate yearly progress as described in 
        subparagraph (B)(ii). Such distinguished schools may 
        serve as models for and provide support to other 
        schools, especially schools identified for improvement 
        under section 1116, to assist such schools in meeting 
        the State's academic content standards and student 
        academic achievement standards.
          [(3) Awards to teachers.--A State program under 
        paragraph (1) may also recognize and provide financial 
        awards to teachers teaching in a school described in 
        such paragraph that consistently makes significant 
        gains in academic achievement in the areas in which the 
        teacher provides instruction, or to teachers or 
        principals designated as distinguished under subsection 
        (a)(4)(A)(iii).
  [(c) Funding.--
          [(1) In general.--Each State--
                  [(A) shall use funds reserved under section 
                1003(a) and may use funds made available under 
                section 1003(g) for the approaches described 
                under subsection (a)(4)(A); and
                  [(B) shall use State administrative funds 
                authorized under section 1004(a) to establish 
                the statewide system of support described under 
                subsection (a).
          [(2) Reservations of funds by state.--
                  [(A) Awards program.--For the purpose of 
                carrying out subsection (b)(1), each State 
                receiving a grant under this part may reserve, 
                from the amount (if any) by which the funds 
                received by the State under subpart 2 for a 
                fiscal year exceed the amount received by the 
                State under that subpart for the preceding 
                fiscal year, not more than 5 percent of such 
                excess amount.
                  [(B) Teacher awards.--For the purpose of 
                carrying out subsection (b)(3), a State 
                educational agency may reserve such funds as 
                necessary from funds made available under 
                section 2113.
          [(3) Use within 3 years.--Notwithstanding any other 
        provision of law, the amount reserved under 
        subparagraph (A) by a State for each fiscal year shall 
        remain available to the State until expended for a 
        period not exceeding 3 years receipt of funds.
          [(4) Special allocation rule for schools in high-
        poverty areas.--
                  [(A) In general.--Each State shall distribute 
                not less than 75 percent of any amount reserved 
                under paragraph (2)(A) for each fiscal year to 
                schools described in subparagraph (B), or to 
                teachers in those schools consistent with 
                subsection (b)(3).
                  [(B) School described.--A school described in 
                subparagraph (A) is a school whose student 
                population is in the highest quartile of 
                schools statewide in terms of the percentage of 
                children from low income families.]

SEC. 1118. PARENTAL INVOLVEMENT.

  (a) Local Educational Agency Policy.--
          (1) In general.--A local educational agency may 
        receive funds under this [part] subpart only if such 
        agency implements programs, activities, and procedures 
        for the involvement of parents in programs assisted 
        under this [part] subpart consistent with this section. 
        Such programs, activities, and procedures shall be 
        planned and implemented with meaningful consultation 
        with parents of participating children.
          (2) Written policy.--Each local educational agency 
        that receives funds under this [part] subpart shall 
        develop jointly with, agree on with, and distribute to, 
        parents of participating children a written parent 
        involvement policy. The policy shall be incorporated 
        into the local educational agency's plan developed 
        under section 1112, establish the agency's expectations 
        for parent involvement, and describe how the agency 
        will--
                  (A) involve parents in the joint development 
                of the plan under section 1112[, and the 
                process of school review and improvement under 
                section 1116];
                  (B) provide the coordination, technical 
                assistance, and other support necessary to 
                assist participating schools in planning and 
                implementing effective parent involvement 
                activities to improve student academic 
                achievement and school performance;
                  (C) build the schools' and parents' capacity 
                for strong parental involvement as described in 
                subsection (e);
                  (D) coordinate and integrate parental 
                involvement strategies under this [part] 
                subpart with parental involvement strategies 
                under other programs[, such as the Head Start 
                program, Reading First program, Early Reading 
                First program, Even Start program, Parents as 
                Teachers program, and Home Instruction Program 
                for Preschool Youngsters, and State-run 
                preschool programs];
                  (E) conduct, with the involvement of parents, 
                an annual evaluation of the content and 
                effectiveness of the parental involvement 
                policy in improving the academic quality of the 
                schools served under this [part] subpart, 
                including identifying barriers to greater 
                participation by parents in activities 
                authorized by this section (with particular 
                attention to parents who are economically 
                disadvantaged, are disabled, have limited 
                English proficiency, have limited literacy, or 
                are of any racial or ethnic minority 
                background), and use the findings of such 
                evaluation to design strategies for more 
                effective parental involvement, and to revise, 
                if necessary, the parental involvement policies 
                described in this section; and
                  (F) involve parents in the activities of the 
                schools served under this [part] subpart.
          (3) Reservation.--
                  (A) In general.--Each local educational 
                agency shall reserve not less than 1 percent of 
                such agency's allocation under [subpart 2 of 
                this part] chapter B of this subpart to carry 
                out this section, including promoting family 
                literacy and parenting skills, except that this 
                paragraph shall not apply if 1 percent of such 
                agency's allocation under [subpart 2 of this 
                part] chapter B of this subpart for the fiscal 
                year for which the determination is made is 
                $5,000 or less.
                  (B) Parental input.--Parents of children 
                receiving services under this [part] subpart 
                shall be involved in the decisions regarding 
                how funds reserved under subparagraph (A) are 
                allotted for parental involvement activities.
                  (C) Distribution of funds.--Not less than 95 
                percent of the funds reserved under 
                subparagraph (A) shall be distributed to 
                schools served under this [part] subpart.
  (b) School Parental Involvement Policy.--
          (1) In general.--Each school served under this [part] 
        subpart shall jointly develop with, and distribute to, 
        parents of participating children a written parental 
        involvement policy, agreed on by such parents, that 
        shall describe the means for carrying out the 
        requirements of subsections (c) through (f). Parents 
        shall be notified of the policy in an understandable 
        and uniform format and, to the extent practicable, 
        provided in a language the parents can understand. Such 
        policy shall be made available to the local community 
        and updated periodically to meet the changing needs of 
        parents and the school.
          (2) Special rule.--If the school has a parental 
        involvement policy that applies to all parents, such 
        school may amend that policy, if necessary, to meet the 
        requirements of this subsection.
          (3) Amendment.--If the local educational agency 
        involved has a school district-level parental 
        involvement policy that applies to all parents, such 
        agency may amend that policy, if necessary, to meet the 
        requirements of this subsection.
          (4) Parental comments.--If the plan under section 
        1112 is not satisfactory to the parents of 
        participating children, the local educational agency 
        shall submit any parent comments with such plan when 
        such local educational agency submits the plan to the 
        State.
  (c) Policy Involvement.--Each school served under this [part] 
subpart shall--
          (1) convene an annual meeting, at a convenient time, 
        to which all parents of participating children shall be 
        invited and encouraged to attend, to inform parents of 
        their school's participation under this [part] subpart 
        and to explain the requirements of this [part] subpart, 
        and the right of the parents to be involved;
          (2) offer a flexible number of meetings, such as 
        meetings in the morning or evening, and may provide, 
        with funds provided under this [part] subpart, 
        transportation, child care, or home visits, as such 
        services relate to parental involvement;
          (3) involve parents, in an organized, ongoing, and 
        timely way, in the planning, review, and improvement of 
        programs under this [part] subpart, including the 
        planning, review, and improvement of the school 
        parental involvement policy and the joint development 
        of the schoolwide program plan under section 
        1114(b)(2), except that if a school has in place a 
        process for involving parents in the joint planning and 
        design of the school's programs, the school may use 
        that process, if such process includes an adequate 
        representation of parents of participating children;
          (4) provide parents of participating children--
                  (A) timely information about programs under 
                this [part] subpart;
                  [(B) a description and explanation of the 
                curriculum in use at the school, the forms of 
                academic assessment used to measure student 
                progress, and the proficiency levels students 
                are expected to meet; and]
                  (B) a description and explanation of the 
                curriculum in use at the school and the forms 
                of academic assessment used to measure student 
                progress; and
                  (C) if requested by parents, opportunities 
                for regular meetings to formulate suggestions 
                and to participate, as appropriate, in 
                decisions relating to the education of their 
                children, and respond to any such suggestions 
                as soon as practicably possible; and
          (5) if the schoolwide program plan under section 
        1114(b)(2) is not satisfactory to the parents of 
        participating children, submit any parent comments on 
        the plan when the school makes the plan available to 
        the local educational agency.
  (d) Shared Responsibilities for High Student Academic 
Achievement.--As a component of the school-level parental 
involvement policy developed under subsection (b), each school 
served under this [part] subpart shall jointly develop with 
parents for all children served under this [part] subpart a 
school-parent compact that outlines how parents, the entire 
school staff, and students will share the responsibility for 
improved student academic achievement and the means by which 
the school and parents will build and develop a partnership to 
help children achieve the State's high standards. Such compact 
shall--
          (1) describe the school's responsibility to provide 
        high-quality curriculum and instruction in a supportive 
        and effective learning environment that enables the 
        children served under this [part] subpart to meet the 
        State's [student academic achievement] academic 
        standards, and the ways in which each parent will be 
        responsible for supporting their children's learning, 
        such as monitoring attendance, homework completion, and 
        television watching; volunteering in their child's 
        classroom; and participating, as appropriate, in 
        decisions relating to the education of their children 
        and positive use of extracurricular time; and
          (2) address the importance of communication between 
        teachers and parents on an ongoing basis through, at a 
        minimum--
                  (A) parent-teacher conferences in elementary 
                schools, at least annually, during which the 
                compact shall be discussed as the compact 
                relates to the individual child's achievement;
                  (B) frequent reports to parents on their 
                children's progress; and
                  (C) reasonable access to staff, opportunities 
                to volunteer and participate in their child's 
                class, and observation of classroom activities.
  (e) Building Capacity for Involvement.--To ensure effective 
involvement of parents and to support a partnership among the 
school involved, parents, and the community to improve student 
academic achievement, each school and local educational agency 
assisted under this [part] subpart--
          (1) shall provide assistance to parents of children 
        served by the school or local educational agency, as 
        appropriate, in understanding such topics as the 
        [State's academic content standards and State student 
        academic achievement standards] State's academic 
        standards, State and local academic assessments, the 
        requirements of this [part] subpart, and how to monitor 
        a child's progress and work with educators to improve 
        the achievement of their children;
          (2) shall provide materials and training to help 
        parents to work with their children to improve their 
        children's achievement, such as literacy training and 
        using technology, as appropriate, to foster parental 
        involvement;
          (3) shall educate teachers, [pupil services 
        personnel,] specialized instructional support 
        personnel, [principals,] school leaders, and other 
        staff, with the assistance of parents, in the value and 
        utility of contributions of parents, and in how to 
        reach out to, communicate with, and work with parents 
        as equal partners, implement and coordinate parent 
        programs, and build ties between parents and the 
        school;
          (4) shall, to the extent feasible and appropriate, 
        coordinate and integrate parent involvement programs 
        and activities with [Head Start, Reading First, Early 
        Reading First, Even Start, the Home Instruction 
        Programs for Preschool Youngsters, the Parents as 
        Teachers Program, and public preschool and other] other 
        Federal, State, and local programs, and conduct other 
        activities, such as parent resource centers, that 
        encourage and support parents in more fully 
        participating in the education of their children;
          (5) shall ensure that information related to school 
        and parent programs, meetings, and other activities is 
        sent to the parents of participating children in a 
        format and, to the extent practicable, in a language 
        the parents can understand;
          (6) may involve parents in the development of 
        training for teachers, principals, and other educators 
        to improve the effectiveness of such training;
          (7) may provide necessary literacy training from 
        funds received under this [part] subpart if the local 
        educational agency has exhausted all other reasonably 
        available sources of funding for such training;
          (8) may pay reasonable and necessary expenses 
        associated with local parental involvement activities, 
        including transportation and child care costs, to 
        enable parents to participate in school-related 
        meetings and training sessions;
          (9) may train parents to enhance the involvement of 
        other parents;
          (10) may arrange school meetings at a variety of 
        times, or conduct in-home conferences between teachers 
        or other educators, who work directly with 
        participating children, with parents who are unable to 
        attend such conferences at school, in order to maximize 
        parental involvement and participation;
          (11) may adopt and implement model approaches to 
        improving parental involvement;
          (12) may establish a districtwide parent advisory 
        council to provide advice on all matters related to 
        parental involvement in programs supported under this 
        section;
          (13) may develop appropriate roles for community-
        based organizations and businesses in parent 
        involvement activities; and
          (14) shall provide such other reasonable support for 
        parental involvement activities under this section as 
        parents may request.
  (f) Accessibility.--In carrying out the parental involvement 
requirements of this [part] subpart, local educational agencies 
and schools, to the extent practicable, shall provide full 
opportunities for the participation of parents with limited 
English proficiency, parents with disabilities, and parents of 
migratory children, including providing information and school 
reports required under section 1111 in a format and, to the 
extent practicable, in a language such parents understand.
  [(g) Information From Parental Information and Resource 
Centers.--In a State where a parental information and resource 
center is established to provide training, information, and 
support to parents and individuals who work with local parents, 
local educational agencies, and schools receiving assistance 
under this part, each local educational agency or school that 
receives assistance under this part and is located in the State 
shall assist parents and parental organizations by informing 
such parents and organizations of the existence and purpose of 
such centers.]
  (g) Family Engagement in Education Programs.--In a State 
operating a program under subpart 3 of part A of title III, 
each local educational agency or school that receives 
assistance under this subpart shall inform such parents and 
organizations of the existence of such programs.
  (h) Review.--The State educational agency shall review the 
local educational agency's parental involvement policies and 
practices to determine if the policies and practices meet the 
requirements of this section.

[SEC. 1119. QUALIFICATIONS FOR TEACHERS AND PARAPROFESSIONALS.

  [(a) Teacher Qualifications and Measurable Objectives.--
          [(1) In general.--Beginning with the first day of the 
        first school year after the date of enactment of the No 
        Child Left Behind Act of 2001, each local educational 
        agency receiving assistance under this part shall 
        ensure that all teachers hired after such day and 
        teaching in a program supported with funds under this 
        part are highly qualified.
          [(2) State plan.--As part of the plan described in 
        section 1111, each State educational agency receiving 
        assistance under this part shall develop a plan to 
        ensure that all teachers teaching in core academic 
        subjects within the State are highly qualified not 
        later than the end of the 2005-2006 school year. Such 
        plan shall establish annual measurable objectives for 
        each local educational agency and school that, at a 
        minimum--
                  [(A) shall include an annual increase in the 
                percentage of highly qualified teachers at each 
                local educational agency and school, to ensure 
                that all teachers teaching in core academic 
                subjects in each public elementary school and 
                secondary school are highly qualified not later 
                than the end of the 2005-2006 school year;
                  [(B) shall include an annual increase in the 
                percentage of teachers who are receiving high-
                quality professional development to enable such 
                teachers to become highly qualified and 
                successful classroom teachers; and
                  [(C) may include such other measures as the 
                State educational agency determines to be 
                appropriate to increase teacher qualifications.
          [(3) Local plan.--As part of the plan described in 
        section 1112, each local educational agency receiving 
        assistance under this part shall develop a plan to 
        ensure that all teachers teaching within the school 
        district served by the local educational agency are 
        highly qualified not later than the end of the 2005-
        2006 school year.
  [(b) Reports.--
          [(1) Annual state and local reports.--
                  [(A) Local reports.--Each State educational 
                agency described in subsection (a)(2) shall 
                require each local educational agency receiving 
                funds under this part to publicly report, each 
                year, beginning with the 2002-2003 school year, 
                the annual progress of the local educational 
                agency as a whole and of each of the schools 
                served by the agency, in meeting the measurable 
                objectives described in subsection (a)(2).
                  [(B) State reports.--Each State educational 
                agency receiving assistance under this part 
                shall prepare and submit each year, beginning 
                with the 2002-2003 school year, a report to the 
                Secretary, describing the State educational 
                agency's progress in meeting the measurable 
                objectives described in subsection (a)(2).
                  [(C) Information from other reports.--A State 
                educational agency or local educational agency 
                may submit information from the reports 
                described in section 1111(h) for the purposes 
                of this subsection, if such report is modified, 
                as may be necessary, to contain the information 
                required by this subsection, and may submit 
                such information as a part of the reports 
                required under section 1111(h).
          [(2) Annual reports by the secretary.--Each year, 
        beginning with the 2002-2003 school year, the Secretary 
        shall publicly report the annual progress of State 
        educational agencies, local educational agencies, and 
        schools, in meeting the measurable objectives described 
        in subsection (a)(2).
  [(c) New Paraprofessionals.--
          [(1) In general.--Each local educational agency 
        receiving assistance under this part shall ensure that 
        all paraprofessionals hired after the date of enactment 
        of the No Child Left Behind Act of 2001 and working in 
        a program supported with funds under this part shall 
        have--
                  [(A) completed at least 2 years of study at 
                an institution of higher education;
                  [(B) obtained an associate's (or higher) 
                degree; or
                  [(C) met a rigorous standard of quality and 
                can demonstrate, through a formal State or 
                local academic assessment--
                          [(i) knowledge of, and the ability to 
                        assist in instructing, reading, 
                        writing, and mathematics; or
                          [(ii) knowledge of, and the ability 
                        to assist in instructing, reading 
                        readiness, writing readiness, and 
                        mathematics readiness, as appropriate.
          [(2) Clarification.--The receipt of a secondary 
        school diploma (or its recognized equivalent) shall be 
        necessary but not sufficient to satisfy the 
        requirements of paragraph (1)(C).
  [(d) Existing Paraprofessionals.--Each local educational 
agency receiving assistance under this part shall ensure that 
all paraprofessionals hired before the date of enactment of the 
No Child Left Behind Act of 2001, and working in a program 
supported with funds under this part shall, not later than 4 
years after the date of enactment satisfy the requirements of 
subsection (c).
  [(e) Exceptions for Translation and Parental Involvement 
Activities.--Subsections (c) and (d) shall not apply to a 
paraprofessional--
          [(1) who is proficient in English and a language 
        other than English and who provides services primarily 
        to enhance the participation of children in programs 
        under this part by acting as a translator; or
          [(2) whose duties consist solely of conducting 
        parental involvement activities consistent with section 
        1118.
  [(f) General Requirement for All Paraprofessionals.--Each 
local educational agency receiving assistance under this part 
shall ensure that all paraprofessionals working in a program 
supported with funds under this part, regardless of the 
paraprofessionals' hiring date, have earned a secondary school 
diploma or its recognized equivalent.
  [(g) Duties of Paraprofessionals.--
          [(1) In general.--Each local educational agency 
        receiving assistance under this part shall ensure that 
        a paraprofessional working in a program supported with 
        funds under this part is not assigned a duty 
        inconsistent with this subsection.
          [(2) Responsibilities paraprofessionals may be 
        assigned.--A paraprofessional described in paragraph 
        (1) may be assigned--
                  [(A) to provide one-on-one tutoring for 
                eligible students, if the tutoring is scheduled 
                at a time when a student would not otherwise 
                receive instruction from a teacher;
                  [(B) to assist with classroom management, 
                such as organizing instructional and other 
                materials;
                  [(C) to provide assistance in a computer 
                laboratory;
                  [(D) to conduct parental involvement 
                activities;
                  [(E) to provide support in a library or media 
                center;
                  [(F) to act as a translator; or
                  [(G) to provide instructional services to 
                students in accordance with paragraph (3).
          [(3) Additional limitations.--A paraprofessional 
        described in paragraph (1)--
                  [(A) may not provide any instructional 
                service to a student unless the 
                paraprofessional is working under the direct 
                supervision of a teacher consistent with 
                section 1119; and
                  [(B) may assume limited duties that are 
                assigned to similar personnel who are not 
                working in a program supported with funds under 
                this part, including duties beyond classroom 
                instruction or that do not benefit 
                participating children, so long as the amount 
                of time spent on such duties is the same 
                proportion of total work time as prevails with 
                respect to similar personnel at the same 
                school.
  [(h) Use of Funds.--A local educational agency receiving 
funds under this part may use such funds to support ongoing 
training and professional development to assist teachers and 
paraprofessionals in satisfying the requirements of this 
section.
  [(i) Verification of Compliance.--
          [(1) In general.--In verifying compliance with this 
        section, each local educational agency, at a minimum, 
        shall require that the principal of each school 
        operating a program under section 1114 or 1115 attest 
        annually in writing as to whether such school is in 
        compliance with the requirements of this section.
          [(2) Availability of information.--Copies of 
        attestations under paragraph (1)--
                  [(A) shall be maintained at each school 
                operating a program under section 1114 or 1115 
                and at the main office of the local educational 
                agency; and
                  [(B) shall be available to any member of the 
                general public on request.
  [(j) Combinations of Funds.--Funds provided under this part 
that are used for professional development purposes may be 
combined with funds provided under title II of this Act, other 
Acts, and other sources.
  [(k) Special Rule.--Except as provided in subsection (l), no 
State educational agency shall require a school or a local 
educational agency to expend a specific amount of funds for 
professional development activities under this part, except 
that this paragraph shall not apply with respect to 
requirements under section 1116(c)(3).
  [(l) Minimum Expenditures.--Each local educational agency 
that receives funds under this part shall use not less than 5 
percent, or more than 10 percent, of such funds for each of 
fiscal years 2002 and 2003, and not less than 5 percent of the 
funds for each subsequent fiscal year, for professional 
development activities to ensure that teachers who are not 
highly qualified become highly qualified not later than the end 
of the 2005-2006 school year.

[SEC. 1120. PARTICIPATION OF CHILDREN ENROLLED IN PRIVATE SCHOOLS.

  [(a) General Requirement.--
          [(1) In general.--To the extent consistent with the 
        number of eligible children identified under section 
        1115(b) in the school district served by a local 
        educational agency who are enrolled in private 
        elementary schools and secondary schools, a local 
        educational agency shall, after timely and meaningful 
        consultation with appropriate private school officials, 
        provide such children, on an equitable basis, special 
        educational services or other benefits under this part 
        (such as dual enrollment, educational radio and 
        television, computer equipment and materials, other 
        technology, and mobile educational services and 
        equipment) that address their needs, and shall ensure 
        that teachers and families of the children participate, 
        on an equitable basis, in services and activities 
        developed pursuant to sections 1118 and 1119.
          [(2) Secular, neutral, nonideological.--Such 
        educational services or other benefits, including 
        materials and equipment, shall be secular, neutral, and 
        nonideological.
          [(3) Equity.--Educational services and other benefits 
        for such private school children shall be equitable in 
        comparison to services and other benefits for public 
        school children participating under this part, and 
        shall be provided in a timely manner.
          [(4) Expenditures.--Expenditures for educational 
        services and other benefits to eligible private school 
        children shall be equal to the proportion of funds 
        allocated to participating school attendance areas 
        based on the number of children from low-income 
        families who attend private schools, which the local 
        educational agency may determine each year or every 2 
        years.
          [(5) Provision of services.--The local educational 
        agency may provide services under this section directly 
        or through contracts with public and private agencies, 
        organizations, and institutions.
  [(b) Consultation.--
          [(1) In general.--To ensure timely and meaningful 
        consultation, a local educational agency shall consult 
        with appropriate private school officials during the 
        design and development of such agency's programs under 
        this part, on issues such as--
                  [(A) how the children's needs will be 
                identified;
                  [(B) what services will be offered;
                  [(C) how, where, and by whom the services 
                will be provided;
                  [(D) how the services will be academically 
                assessed and how the results of that assessment 
                will be used to improve those services;
                  [(E) the size and scope of the equitable 
                services to be provided to the eligible private 
                school children, and the proportion of funds 
                that is allocated under subsection (a)(4) for 
                such services;
                  [(F) the method or sources of data that are 
                used under subsection (c) and section 
                1113(c)(1) to determine the number of children 
                from low-income families in participating 
                school attendance areas who attend private 
                schools;
                  [(G) how and when the agency will make 
                decisions about the delivery of services to 
                such children, including a thorough 
                consideration and analysis of the views of the 
                private school officials on the provision of 
                services through a contract with potential 
                third-party providers; and
                  [(H) how, if the agency disagrees with the 
                views of the private school officials on the 
                provision of services through a contract, the 
                local educational agency will provide in 
                writing to such private school officials an 
                analysis of the reasons why the local 
                educational agency has chosen not to use a 
                contractor.
          [(2) Timing.--Such consultation shall include 
        meetings of agency and private school officials and 
        shall occur before the local educational agency makes 
        any decision that affects the opportunities of eligible 
        private school children to participate in programs 
        under this part. Such meetings shall continue 
        throughout implementation and assessment of services 
        provided under this section.
          [(3) Discussion.--Such consultation shall include a 
        discussion of service delivery mechanisms a local 
        educational agency can use to provide equitable 
        services to eligible private school children.
          [(4) Documentation.--Each local educational agency 
        shall maintain in the agency's records and provide to 
        the State educational agency involved a written 
        affirmation signed by officials of each participating 
        private school that the consultation required by this 
        section has occurred. If such officials do not provide 
        such affirmation within a reasonable period of time, 
        the local educational agency shall forward the 
        documentation that such consultation has taken place to 
        the State educational agency.
          [(5) Compliance.--
                  [(A) In general.--A private school official 
                shall have the right to complain to the State 
                educational agency that the local educational 
                agency did not engage in consultation that was 
                meaningful and timely, or did not give due 
                consideration to the views of the private 
                school official.
                  [(B) Procedure.--If the private school 
                official wishes to complain, the official shall 
                provide the basis of the noncompliance with 
                this section by the local educational agency to 
                the State educational agency, and the local 
                educational agency shall forward the 
                appropriate documentation to the State 
                educational agency.
  [(c) Allocation for Equitable Service to Private School 
Students.--
          [(1) Calculation.--A local educational agency shall 
        have the final authority, consistent with this section, 
        to calculate the number of children, ages 5 through 17, 
        who are from low-income families and attend private 
        schools by--
                  [(A) using the same measure of low income 
                used to count public school children;
                  [(B) using the results of a survey that, to 
                the extent possible, protects the identity of 
                families of private school students, and 
                allowing such survey results to be extrapolated 
                if complete actual data are unavailable;
                  [(C) applying the low-income percentage of 
                each participating public school attendance 
                area, determined pursuant to this section, to 
                the number of private school children who 
                reside in that school attendance area; or
                  [(D) using an equated measure of low income 
                correlated with the measure of low income used 
                to count public school children.
          [(2) Complaint process.--Any dispute regarding low-
        income data for private school students shall be 
        subject to the complaint process authorized in section 
        9505.
  [(d) Public Control of Funds.--
          [(1) In general.--The control of funds provided under 
        this part, and title to materials, equipment, and 
        property purchased with such funds, shall be in a 
        public agency, and a public agency shall administer 
        such funds, materials, equipment, and property.
          [(2) Provision of services.--
                  [(A) Provider.--The provision of services 
                under this section shall be provided--
                          [(i) by employees of a public agency; 
                        or
                          [(ii) through contract by such public 
                        agency with an individual, association, 
                        agency, or organization.
                  [(B) Requirement.--In the provision of such 
                services, such employee, individual, 
                association, agency, or organization shall be 
                independent of such private school and of any 
                religious organization, and such employment or 
                contract shall be under the control and 
                supervision of such public agency.
  [(e) Standards for a Bypass.--If a local educational agency 
is prohibited by law from providing for the participation in 
programs on an equitable basis of eligible children enrolled in 
private elementary schools and secondary schools, or if the 
Secretary determines that a local educational agency has 
substantially failed or is unwilling, to provide for such 
participation, as required by this section, the Secretary 
shall--
          [(1) waive the requirements of this section for such 
        local educational agency;
          [(2) arrange for the provision of services to such 
        children through arrangements that shall be subject to 
        the requirements of this section and sections 9503 and 
        9504; and
          [(3) in making the determination under this 
        subsection, consider one or more factors, including the 
        quality, size, scope, and location of the program and 
        the opportunity of eligible children to participate.]

SEC. 1120. PARTICIPATION OF CHILDREN ENROLLED IN PRIVATE SCHOOLS.

  (a) General Requirement.--
          (1) In general.--To the extent consistent with the 
        number of eligible children identified under section 
        1115(b) in the school district served by a local 
        educational agency who are enrolled in private 
        elementary schools and secondary schools, a local 
        educational agency shall--
                  (A) after timely and meaningful consultation 
                with appropriate private school officials or 
                representatives, provide such service, on an 
                equitable basis and individually or in 
                combination, as requested by the officials or 
                representatives to best meet the needs of such 
                children, special educational services, 
                instructional services (including evaluations 
                to determine students' progress in their 
                academic needs), counseling, mentoring, one-on-
                one tutoring, or other benefits under this 
                subpart (such as dual enrollment, educational 
                radio and television, computer equipment and 
                materials, other technology, and mobile 
                educational services and equipment) that 
                address their needs; and
                  (B) ensure that teachers and families of the 
                children participate, on an equitable basis, in 
                services and activities developed pursuant to 
                this subpart.
          (2) Secular, neutral, nonideological.--Such 
        educational services or other benefits, including 
        materials and equipment, shall be secular, neutral, and 
        nonideological.
          (3) Equity.--
                  (A) In general.--Educational services and 
                other benefits for such private school children 
                shall be equitable in comparison to services 
                and other benefits for public school children 
                participating under this subpart, and shall be 
                provided in a timely manner.
                  (B) Ombudsman.--To help ensure such equity 
                for such private school children, teachers, and 
                other educational personnel, the State 
                educational agency involved shall designate an 
                ombudsman to monitor and enforce the 
                requirements of this subpart.
          (4) Expenditures.--
                  (A) In general.--Expenditures for educational 
                services and other benefits to eligible private 
                school children shall be equal to the 
                expenditures for participating public school 
                children, taking into account the number, and 
                educational needs, of the children to be 
                served. The share of funds shall be determined 
                based on the total allocation received by the 
                local educational agency prior to any allowable 
                expenditures authorized under this title.
                  (B) Obligation of funds.--Funds allocated to 
                a local educational agency for educational 
                services and other benefits to eligible private 
                school children shall--
                          (i) be obligated in the fiscal year 
                        for which the funds are received by the 
                        agency; and
                          (ii) with respect to any such funds 
                        that cannot be so obligated, be used to 
                        serve such children in the following 
                        fiscal year.
                  (C) Notice of allocation.--Each State 
                educational agency shall--
                          (i) determine, in a timely manner, 
                        the proportion of funds to be allocated 
                        to each local educational agency in the 
                        State for educational services and 
                        other benefits under this subpart to 
                        eligible private school children; and
                          (ii) provide notice, simultaneously, 
                        to each such local educational agency 
                        and the appropriate private school 
                        officials or their representatives in 
                        the State of such allocation of funds.
          (5) Provision of services.--The local educational 
        agency or, in a case described in subsection (b)(6)(C), 
        the State educational agency involved, may provide 
        services under this section directly or through 
        contracts with public or private agencies, 
        organizations, and institutions.
  (b) Consultation.--
          (1) In general.--To ensure timely and meaningful 
        consultation, a local educational agency shall consult 
        with appropriate private school officials or 
        representatives during the design and development of 
        such agency's programs under this subpart in order to 
        reach an agreement between the agency and the officials 
        or representatives about equitable and effective 
        programs for eligible private school children, the 
        results of which shall be transmitted to the designated 
        ombudsmen under section 1120(a)(3)(B). Such process 
        shall include consultation on issues such as--
                  (A) how the children's needs will be 
                identified;
                  (B) what services will be offered;
                  (C) how, where, and by whom the services will 
                be provided;
                  (D) how the services will be academically 
                assessed and how the results of that assessment 
                will be used to improve those services;
                  (E) the size and scope of the equitable 
                services to be provided to the eligible private 
                school children, and the proportion of funds 
                that is allocated under subsection (a)(4)(A) 
                for such services, how that proportion of funds 
                is determined under such subsection, and an 
                itemization of the costs of the services to be 
                provided;
                  (F) the method or sources of data that are 
                used under subsection (c) and section 
                1113(c)(1) to determine the number of children 
                from low-income families in participating 
                school attendance areas who attend private 
                schools;
                  (G) how and when the agency will make 
                decisions about the delivery of services to 
                such children, including a thorough 
                consideration and analysis of the views of the 
                private school officials or representatives on 
                the provision of services through a contract 
                with potential third-party providers;
                  (H) how, if the agency disagrees with the 
                views of the private school officials or 
                representatives on the provision of services 
                through a contract, the local educational 
                agency will provide in writing to such private 
                school officials an analysis of the reasons why 
                the local educational agency has chosen not to 
                use a contractor;
                  (I) whether the agency will provide services 
                under this section directly or through 
                contracts with public and private agencies, 
                organizations, and institutions;
                   (L) whether to provide equitable services to 
                eligible private school children--
                          (i) by creating a pool or pools of 
                        funds with all of the funds allocated 
                        under subsection (a)(4) based on all 
                        the children from low-income families 
                        who attend private schools in a 
                        participating school attendance area of 
                        the agency from which the local 
                        educational agency will provide such 
                        services to all such children; or
                          (ii) by providing such services to 
                        eligible children in each private 
                        school in the agency's participating 
                        school attendance area with the 
                        proportion of funds allocated under 
                        subsection (a)(4) based on the number 
                        of children from low-income families 
                        who attend such school;
                   (L) at what time and where services will be 
                provided so such students can receive such 
                services without interrupting their other 
                school or coursework; and
                   (L) whether to consolidate and use funds 
                under this subpart to provide schoolwide 
                programs for a private school.
          (2) Disagreement.--If a local educational agency 
        disagrees with the views of private school officials or 
        representatives with respect to an issue described in 
        paragraph (1), the local educational agency shall 
        provide in writing to such private school officials an 
        analysis of the reasons why the local educational 
        agency has chosen not to adopt the course of action 
        requested by such officials.
          (3) Timing.--Such consultation shall include meetings 
        of agency and private school officials or 
        representatives and shall occur before the local 
        educational agency makes any decision that affects the 
        opportunities of eligible private school children to 
        participate in programs under this subpart. Such 
        meetings shall continue throughout implementation and 
        assessment of services provided under this section.
          (4) Discussion.--Such consultation shall include a 
        discussion of service delivery mechanisms a local 
        educational agency can use to provide equitable 
        services to eligible private school children.
          (5) Documentation.--Each local educational agency 
        shall maintain in the agency's records and provide to 
        the State educational agency involved a written 
        affirmation signed by officials or representatives of 
        each participating private school that the meaningful 
        consultation required by this section has occurred. The 
        written affirmation shall provide the option for 
        private school officials or representatives to indicate 
        that timely and meaningful consultation has not 
        occurred or that the program design is not equitable 
        with respect to eligible private school children. If 
        such officials or representatives do not provide such 
        affirmation within a reasonable period of time, the 
        local educational agency shall forward the 
        documentation that such consultation has, or attempts 
        at such consultation have, taken place to the State 
        educational agency.
          (6) Compliance.--
                  (A) In general.--A private school official 
                shall have the right to file a complaint with 
                the State educational agency that the local 
                educational agency did not engage in 
                consultation that was meaningful and timely, 
                did not give due consideration to the views of 
                the private school official, or did not treat 
                the private school or its students equitably as 
                required by this section.
                  (B) Procedure.--If the private school 
                official wishes to file a complaint, the 
                official shall provide the basis of the 
                noncompliance with this section by the local 
                educational agency to the State educational 
                agency, and the local educational agency shall 
                forward the appropriate documentation to the 
                State educational agency.
                  (C) State educational agencies.--A State 
                educational agency shall provide services under 
                this section directly or through contracts with 
                public or private agencies, organizations, and 
                institutions, if--
                          (i) the appropriate private school 
                        officials or their representatives 
                        have--
                                  (I) requested that the State 
                                educational agency provide such 
                                services directly; and
                                  (II) demonstrated that the 
                                local educational agency 
                                involved has not met the 
                                requirements of this section; 
                                or
                          (ii) in a case in which--
                                  (I) a local educational 
                                agency has more than 10,000 
                                children from low-income 
                                families who attend private 
                                elementary schools or secondary 
                                schools in a participating 
                                school attendance area of the 
                                agency that are not being 
                                served by the agency's program 
                                under this section; or
                                  (II) 90 percent of the 
                                eligible private school 
                                students in a participating 
                                school attendance area of the 
                                agency are not being served by 
                                the agency's program under this 
                                section.
  (c) Allocation for Equitable Service to Private School 
Students.--
          (1) Calculation.--A local educational agency shall 
        have the final authority, consistent with this section, 
        to calculate the number of children, ages 5 through 17, 
        who are from low-income families and attend private 
        schools by--
                  (A) using the same measure of low income used 
                to count public school children;
                  (B) using the results of a survey that, to 
                the extent possible, protects the identity of 
                families of private school students, and 
                allowing such survey results to be extrapolated 
                if complete actual data are unavailable;
                  (C) applying the low-income percentage of 
                each participating public school attendance 
                area, determined pursuant to this section, to 
                the number of private school children who 
                reside in that school attendance area; or
                  (D) using an equated measure of low income 
                correlated with the measure of low income used 
                to count public school children.
          (2) Complaint process.--Any dispute regarding low-
        income data for private school students shall be 
        subject to the complaint process authorized in section 
        6503.
  (d) Public Control of Funds.--
          (1) In general.--The control of funds provided under 
        this subpart, and title to materials, equipment, and 
        property purchased with such funds, shall be in a 
        public agency, and a public agency shall administer 
        such funds, materials, equipment, and property.
          (2) Provision of services.--
                  (A) Provider.--The provision of services 
                under this section shall be provided--
                          (i) by employees of a public agency; 
                        or
                          (ii) through a contract by such 
                        public agency with an individual, 
                        association, agency, or organization.
                  (B) Requirement.--In the provision of such 
                services, such employee, individual, 
                association, agency, or organization shall be 
                independent of such private school and of any 
                religious organization, and such employment or 
                contract shall be under the control and 
                supervision of such public agency.
  (e) Standards for a Bypass.--If a local educational agency is 
prohibited by law from providing for the participation in 
programs on an equitable basis of eligible children enrolled in 
private elementary schools and secondary schools, or if the 
Secretary determines that a local educational agency has 
substantially failed or is unwilling to provide for such 
participation, as required by this section, the Secretary 
shall--
          (1) waive the requirements of this section for such 
        local educational agency;
          (2) arrange for the provision of services to such 
        children through arrangements that shall be subject to 
        the requirements of this section and sections 6503 and 
        6504; and
          (3) in making the determination under this 
        subsection, consider one or more factors, including the 
        quality, size, scope, and location of the program and 
        the opportunity of eligible children to participate.

SEC. 1120A. FISCAL REQUIREMENTS.

  [(a) Maintenance of Effort.--A local educational agency may 
receive funds under this part for any fiscal year only if the 
State educational agency involved finds that the local 
educational agency has maintained the agency's fiscal effort in 
accordance with section 9521.]
  [(b)] (a) Federal Funds To Supplement, Not Supplant, Non-
Federal Funds.--
          (1) In general.--A State educational agency or local 
        educational agency shall use Federal funds received 
        under this [part] subpart only to supplement the funds 
        that would, in the absence of such Federal funds, be 
        made available from non-Federal sources for the 
        education of pupils participating in programs assisted 
        under this [part] subpart, and not to supplant such 
        funds.
          (2) Special rule.--No local educational agency shall 
        be required to provide services under this [part] 
        subpart through a particular instructional method or in 
        a particular instructional setting in order to 
        demonstrate such agency's compliance with paragraph 
        (1).
  [(c)] (b) Comparability of Services.--
          (1) In general.--
                  (A) Comparable services.--Except as provided 
                in paragraphs (4) and (5), a local educational 
                agency may receive funds under this [part] 
                subpart only if State and local funds will be 
                used in schools served under this [part] 
                subpart to provide services that, taken as a 
                whole, are at least comparable to services in 
                schools that are not receiving funds under this 
                [part] subpart.
                  (B) Substantially comparable services.--If 
                the local educational agency is serving all of 
                such agency's schools under this [part] 
                subpart, such agency may receive funds under 
                this [part] subpart only if such agency will 
                use State and local funds to provide services 
                that, taken as a whole, are substantially 
                comparable in each school.
                  (C) Basis.--A local educational agency may 
                meet the requirements of subparagraphs (A) and 
                (B) on a grade-span by grade-span basis or a 
                school-by-school basis.
          (2) Written assurance.--
                  (A) Equivalence.--A local educational agency 
                shall be considered to have met the 
                requirements of paragraph (1) if such agency 
                has filed with the State educational agency a 
                written assurance that such agency has 
                established and implemented--
                          (i) a local educational agency-wide 
                        salary schedule;
                          (ii) a policy to ensure equivalence 
                        among schools in teachers, 
                        administrators, and other staff; and
                          (iii) a policy to ensure equivalence 
                        among schools in the provision of 
                        curriculum materials and instructional 
                        supplies.
                  (B) Determinations.--For the purpose of this 
                subsection, in the determination of 
                expenditures per pupil from State and local 
                funds, or instructional salaries per pupil from 
                State and local funds, staff salary 
                differentials for years of employment shall not 
                be included in such determinations.
                  (C) Exclusions.--A local educational agency 
                need not include unpredictable changes in 
                student enrollment or personnel assignments 
                that occur after the beginning of a school year 
                in determining comparability of services under 
                this subsection.
          (3) Procedures and records.--Each local educational 
        agency assisted under this [part] subpart shall--
                  (A) develop procedures for compliance with 
                this subsection; and
                  (B) maintain records that are updated 
                biennially documenting such agency's compliance 
                with this subsection.
          (4) Inapplicability.--This subsection shall not apply 
        to a local educational agency that does not have more 
        than one building for each grade span.
          (5) Compliance.--For the purpose of determining 
        compliance with paragraph (1), a local educational 
        agency may exclude State and local funds expended for--
                  (A) language instruction educational 
                programs; and
                  (B) the excess costs of providing services to 
                children with disabilities as determined by the 
                local educational agency.
  [(d)] (c) Exclusion of Funds.--For the purpose of complying 
with subsections (b) and (c), a State educational agency or 
local educational agency may exclude supplemental State or 
local funds expended in any school attendance area or school 
for programs that meet the intent and purposes of this [part] 
subpart.

SEC. 1120B. COORDINATION REQUIREMENTS.

  (a) In General.--Each local educational agency receiving 
assistance under this [part] subpart shall carry out the 
activities described in subsection (b) with Head Start agencies 
and, if feasible, other entities carrying out early childhood 
development programs [such as the Early Reading First program].
  (b) Activities.--The activities referred to in subsection (a) 
are activities that increase coordination between the local 
educational agency and a Head Start agency and, if feasible, 
other entities carrying out early childhood development 
programs[, such as the Early Reading First program,] serving 
children who will attend the schools of the local educational 
agency, including--
          (1) developing and implementing a systematic 
        procedure for receiving records regarding such 
        children, transferred with parental consent from a Head 
        Start program or, where applicable, another early 
        childhood development program [such as the Early 
        Reading First program];
          (2) establishing channels of communication between 
        school staff and their counterparts (including 
        teachers, social workers, and health staff) in such 
        Head Start agencies or other entities carrying out 
        early childhood development programs [such as the Early 
        Reading First program], as appropriate, to facilitate 
        coordination of programs;
          (3) conducting meetings involving parents, 
        kindergarten or elementary school teachers, and Head 
        Start teachers or, if appropriate, teachers from other 
        early childhood development programs [such as the Early 
        Reading First program], to discuss the developmental 
        and other needs of individual children;
          (4) organizing and participating in joint transition-
        related training of school staff, Head Start program 
        staff, [Early Reading First program staff,] and, where 
        appropriate, other early childhood development program 
        staff; and
          (5) linking the educational services provided by such 
        local educational agency with the services provided by 
        local Head Start agencies [and entities carrying out 
        Early Reading First programs].
  (c) Coordination of Regulations.--The Secretary shall work 
with the Secretary of Health and Human Services to coordinate 
regulations promulgated under this [part] subpart with 
regulations promulgated under the Head Start Act.

                        [Subpart 2--Allocations]

                         CHAPTER B--ALLOCATIONS

SEC. 1121. GRANTS FOR THE OUTLYING AREAS AND THE SECRETARY OF THE 
                    INTERIOR.

  (a) Reservation of Funds.--From the amount [appropriated for 
payments to States for any fiscal year under section 1002(a) 
and 1125A(f)] reserved for this chapter under section 1122(a), 
the Secretary shall reserve a total of 1 percent to provide 
assistance to--
          (1) the outlying areas in the amount determined in 
        accordance with subsection (b); and
          (2) the Secretary of the Interior in the amount 
        necessary to make payments pursuant to subsection (d).
  (b) Assistance to Outlying Areas.--
          (1) Funds reserved.--From the amount made available 
        for any fiscal year under subsection (a), the Secretary 
        shall award grants to local educational agencies in the 
        outlying areas.
          (2) Competitive grants.--Until each appropriate 
        outlying area enters into an agreement for extension of 
        United States educational assistance under the Compact 
        of Free Association after the date of enactment of [the 
        No Child Left Behind Act of 2001] the Student Success 
        Act, the Secretary shall carry out the competition 
        described in paragraph (3), except that the amount 
        reserved to carry out such competition shall not exceed 
        $5,000,000.
          (3) Limitation for competitive grants.--
                  (A) Competitive grants.--The Secretary shall 
                use funds described in paragraph (2) to award 
                grants to the outlying areas and freely 
                associated States to carry out the purposes of 
                this part.
                  (B) Award basis.--The Secretary shall award 
                grants under subparagraph (A) on a competitive 
                [basis, taking into consideration the 
                recommendations of the Pacific Region 
                Educational Laboratory in Honolulu, Hawaii.] 
                basis.
                  (C) Uses.--Except as provided in subparagraph 
                (D), grant funds awarded under this paragraph 
                may be used only--
                          (i) for programs described in this 
                        Act, including teacher training, 
                        curriculum development, instructional 
                        materials, or general school 
                        improvement and reform; and
                          (ii) to provide direct educational 
                        services that assist all students with 
                        meeting [challenging State academic 
                        content standards] State academic 
                        standards.
                  [(D) Administrative costs.--The Secretary may 
                provide not more than 5 percent of the amount 
                reserved for grants under this paragraph to pay 
                the administrative costs of the Pacific Region 
                Educational Laboratory under subparagraph (B).]
          (4) Special rule.--The provisions of Public Law 95-
        134, permitting the consolidation of grants by the 
        outlying areas, shall not apply to funds provided to 
        the freely associated States under this section.
  (c) Definitions.--For the purpose of subsections (a) and 
(b)--
          (1) the term ``freely associated states'' means the 
        Republic of the Marshall Islands, the Federated States 
        of Micronesia, and the Republic of Palau; and
          (2) the term ``outlying area'' means the United 
        States Virgin Islands, Guam, American Samoa, and the 
        Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands.
  (d) Allotment to the Secretary of the Interior.--
          (1) In general.--The amount allotted for payments to 
        the Secretary of the Interior under subsection (a)(2) 
        for any fiscal year shall be, as determined pursuant to 
        criteria established by the Secretary, the amount 
        necessary to meet the special educational needs of--
                  (A) Indian children on reservations served by 
                elementary schools and secondary schools for 
                Indian children operated or supported by the 
                Department of the Interior; and
                  (B) out-of-State Indian children in 
                elementary schools and secondary schools in 
                local educational agencies under special 
                contracts with the Department of the Interior.
          (2) Payments.--From the amount allotted for payments 
        to the Secretary of the Interior under subsection 
        (a)(2), the Secretary of the Interior shall make 
        payments to local educational agencies, on such terms 
        as the Secretary determines will best carry out the 
        purposes of this [part] subpart, with respect to out-
        of-State Indian children described in paragraph (1). 
        The amount of such payment may not exceed, for each 
        such child, the greater of--
                  (A) 40 percent of the average per-pupil 
                expenditure in the State in which the agency is 
                located; or
                  (B) 48 percent of such expenditure in the 
                United States.

SEC. 1122. ALLOCATIONS TO STATES.

  [(a) Allocation Formula.--Of the amount appropriated under 
section 1002(a) to carry out this part for each of fiscal years 
2002-2007 (referred to in this subsection as the current fiscal 
year)--
          [(1) an amount equal to the amount made available to 
        carry out section 1124 for fiscal year 2001 shall be 
        allocated in accordance with section 1124;
          [(2) an amount equal to the amount made available to 
        carry out section 1124A for fiscal year 2001 shall be 
        allocated in accordance with section 1124A; and
          [(3) an amount equal to 100 percent of the amount, if 
        any, by which the amount made available to carry out 
        sections 1124, 1124A, and 1125 for the current fiscal 
        year for which the determination is made exceeds the 
        amount available to carry out sections 1124 and 1124A 
        for fiscal year 2001 shall be allocated in accordance 
        with section 1125.]
  (a) Reservation.--
          (1) In general.--From the amounts appropriated under 
        section 3(a)(1), the Secretary shall reserve 91.44 
        percent of such amounts to carry out this chapter.
          (2) Allocation formula.--Of the amount reserved under 
        paragraph (1) for each of fiscal years 2016 to 2021 
        (referred to in this subsection as the current fiscal 
        year)--
                  (A) an amount equal to the amount made 
                available to carry out section 1124 for fiscal 
                year 2001 shall be used to carry out section 
                1124;
                  (B) an amount equal to the amount made 
                available to carry out section 1124A for fiscal 
                year 2001 shall be used to carry out section 
                1124A; and
                  (C) an amount equal to 100 percent of the 
                amount, if any, by which the total amount made 
                available to carry out this chapter for the 
                fiscal year for which the determination is made 
                exceeds the total amount available to carry out 
                sections 1124 and 1124A for fiscal year 2001 
                shall be used to carry out sections 1125 and 
                1125A and such amount shall be divided equally 
                between sections 1125 and 1125A.
  (b) Adjustments Where Necessitated by Appropriations.--
          (1) In general.--If the sums available under this 
        [subpart] chapter for any fiscal year are insufficient 
        to pay the full amounts that all local educational 
        agencies in States are eligible to receive under 
        sections 1124, 1124A, and 1125 for such year, the 
        Secretary shall ratably reduce the allocations to such 
        local educational agencies, subject to subsections (c) 
        and (d) of this section.
          (2) Additional funds.--If additional funds become 
        available for making payments under sections 1124, 
        1124A, and 1125 for such fiscal year, allocations that 
        were reduced under paragraph (1) shall be increased on 
        the same basis as they were reduced.
  (c) Hold-Harmless Amounts.--
          (1) Amounts for sections 1124, 1124a, and 1125.--For 
        each fiscal year, the amount made available to each 
        local educational agency under each of sections 1124, 
        1124A, and 1125 shall be--
                  (A) not less than 95 percent of the amount 
                made available for the preceding fiscal year if 
                the number of children counted for grants under 
                section 1124 is not less than 30 percent of the 
                total number of children aged 5 to 17 years, 
                inclusive, in the local educational agency;
                  (B) not less than 90 percent of the amount 
                made available for the preceding fiscal year if 
                the percentage described in subparagraph (A) is 
                between 15 percent and 30 percent; and
                  (C) not less than 85 percent of the amount 
                made available for the preceding fiscal year if 
                the percentage described in subparagraph (A) is 
                below 15 percent.
          (2) Payments.--If sufficient funds are appropriated, 
        the amounts described in paragraph (1) shall be paid to 
        all local educational agencies that received grants 
        under section 1124A for the preceding fiscal year, 
        regardless of whether the local educational agency 
        meets the minimum eligibility criteria for that fiscal 
        year described in section 1124A(a)(1)(A) except that a 
        local educational agency that does not meet such 
        minimum eligibility criteria for 4 consecutive years 
        shall no longer be eligible to receive a hold harmless 
        amount referred to in paragraph (1).
          (3) Applicability.--Notwithstanding any other 
        provision of law, the Secretary shall not take into 
        consideration the hold-harmless provisions of this 
        subsection for any fiscal year for purposes of 
        calculating State or local allocations for the fiscal 
        year under any program administered by the Secretary 
        other than a program authorized under this [part] 
        subpart.
          (4) Population data.--For any fiscal year for which 
        the Secretary calculates grants on the basis of 
        population data for counties, the Secretary shall apply 
        the hold-harmless percentages in paragraphs (1) and (2) 
        to counties and, if the Secretary's allocation for a 
        county is not sufficient to meet the hold-harmless 
        requirements of this subsection for every local 
        educational agency within that county, the State 
        educational agency shall reallocate funds 
        proportionately from all other local educational 
        agencies in the State that are receiving funds in 
        excess of the hold-harmless amounts specified in this 
        subsection.
  (d) Ratable Reductions.--
          (1) In general.--If the sums made available under 
        this [subpart] chapter for any fiscal year are 
        insufficient to pay the full amounts that local 
        educational agencies in all States are eligible to 
        receive under subsection (c) for such year, the 
        Secretary shall ratably reduce such amounts for such 
        year.
          (2) Additional funds.--If additional funds become 
        available for making payments under subsection (c) for 
        such fiscal year, amounts that were reduced under 
        paragraph (1) shall be increased on the same basis as 
        such amounts were reduced.
  (e) Definition.--For the purpose of this section and sections 
1124, 1124A, 1125, and 1125A, the term ``State'' means each of 
the 50 States, the District of Columbia, and the Commonwealth 
of Puerto Rico.

SEC. 1124. BASIC GRANTS TO LOCAL EDUCATIONAL AGENCIES.

  (a) Amount of Grants.--
          (1) Grants for local educational agencies and puerto 
        rico.--Except as provided in paragraph (4) and in 
        section 1126, the grant that a local educational agency 
        is eligible to receive under this section for a fiscal 
        year is the amount determined by multiplying--
                  (A) the number of children counted under 
                subsection (c); and
                  (B) 40 percent of the average per-pupil 
                expenditure in the State, except that the 
                amount determined under this subparagraph shall 
                not be less than 32 percent, or more than 48 
                percent, of the average per-pupil expenditure 
                in the United States.
          (2) Calculation of grants.--
                  (A) Allocations to local educational 
                agencies.--The Secretary shall calculate grants 
                under this section on the basis of the number 
                of children counted under subsection (c) for 
                local educational agencies, unless the 
                Secretary and the Secretary of Commerce 
                determine that some or all of those data are 
                unreliable or that their use would be otherwise 
                inappropriate, in which case--
                          (i) the two Secretaries shall 
                        publicly disclose the reasons for their 
                        determination in detail; and
                          (ii) paragraph (3) shall apply.
                  (B) Allocations to large and small local 
                educational agencies.--
                          (i) For any fiscal year to which this 
                        paragraph applies, the Secretary shall 
                        calculate grants under this section for 
                        each local educational agency.
                          (ii) The amount of a grant under this 
                        section for each large local 
                        educational agency shall be the amount 
                        determined under clause (i).
                          (iii) For small local educational 
                        agencies, the State educational agency 
                        may either--
                                  (I) distribute grants under 
                                this section in amounts 
                                determined by the Secretary 
                                under clause (i); or
                                  (II) use an alternative 
                                method approved by the 
                                Secretary to distribute the 
                                portion of the State's total 
                                grants under this section that 
                                is based on those small 
                                agencies.
                          (iv) An alternative method under 
                        clause (iii)(II) shall be based on 
                        population data that the State 
                        educational agency determines best 
                        reflect the current distribution of 
                        children in poor families among the 
                        State's small local educational 
                        agencies that meet the eligibility 
                        criteria of subsection (b).
                          (v) If a small local educational 
                        agency is dissatisfied with the 
                        determination of its grant by the State 
                        educational agency under clause 
                        (iii)(II), it may appeal that 
                        determination to the Secretary, who 
                        shall respond not later than 45 days 
                        after receipt of such appeal.
                          (vi) As used in this subparagraph--
                                  (I) the term ``large local 
                                educational agency'' means a 
                                local educational agency 
                                serving an area with a total 
                                population of 20,000 or more; 
                                and
                                  (II) the term ``small local 
                                educational agency'' means a 
                                local educational agency 
                                serving an area with a total 
                                population of less than 20,000.
          (3) Allocations to counties.--
                  (A) Calculation.--For any fiscal year to 
                which this paragraph applies, the Secretary 
                shall calculate grants under this section on 
                the basis of the number of children counted 
                under subsection (c) for counties, and State 
                educational agencies shall suballocate county 
                amounts to local educational agencies, in 
                accordance with regulations issued by the 
                Secretary.
                  (B) Direct allocations.--In any State in 
                which a large number of local educational 
                agencies overlap county boundaries, or for 
                which the State believes it has data that would 
                better target funds than allocating them by 
                county, the State educational agency may apply 
                to the Secretary for authority to make the 
                allocations under this [subpart] chapter for a 
                particular fiscal year directly to local 
                educational agencies without regard to 
                counties.
                  (C) Allocations to local educational 
                agencies.--If the Secretary approves the State 
                educational agency's application under 
                subparagraph (B), the State educational agency 
                shall provide the Secretary an assurance that 
                such allocations shall be made--
                          (i) using precisely the same factors 
                        for determining a grant as are used 
                        under this [subpart] chapter; or
                          (ii) using data that the State 
                        educational agency submits to the 
                        Secretary for approval that more 
                        accurately target poverty.
                  (D) Appeal.--The State educational agency 
                shall provide the Secretary an assurance that 
                it will establish a procedure through which a 
                local educational agency that is dissatisfied 
                with its determinations under subparagraph (B) 
                may appeal directly to the Secretary for a 
                final determination.
          (4) Puerto rico.--
                  (A) In general.--For each fiscal year, the 
                grant that the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico 
                shall be eligible to receive under this section 
                shall be the amount determined by multiplying 
                the number of children counted under subsection 
                (c) for the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico by the 
                product of--
                          (i) subject to subparagraph (B), the 
                        percentage that the average per-pupil 
                        expenditure in the Commonwealth of 
                        Puerto Rico is of the lowest average 
                        per-pupil expenditure of any of the 50 
                        States; and
                          (ii) 32 percent of the average per-
                        pupil expenditure in the United States.
                  (B) Minimum percentage.--The percentage in 
                subparagraph (A)(i) shall not be less than--
                          (i) for fiscal year 2002, 77.5 
                        percent;
                          (ii) for fiscal year 2003, 80.0 
                        percent;
                          (iii) for fiscal year 2004, 82.5 
                        percent;
                          (iv) for fiscal year 2005, 85.0 
                        percent;
                          (v) for fiscal year 2006, 92.5 
                        percent; and
                          (vi) for fiscal year 2007 and 
                        succeeding fiscal years, 100.0 percent.
                  (C) Limitation.--If the application of 
                subparagraph (B) would result in any of the 50 
                States or the District of Columbia receiving 
                less under this [subpart] chapter than it 
                received under this [subpart] chapter for the 
                preceding fiscal year, the percentage in 
                subparagraph (A) shall be the greater of--
                          (i) the percentage in subparagraph 
                        (A)(i);
                          (ii) the percentage specified in 
                        subparagraph (B) for the preceding 
                        fiscal year; or
                          (iii) the percentage used for the 
                        preceding fiscal year.
  (b) Minimum Number of Children To Qualify.--A local 
educational agency is eligible for a basic grant under this 
section for any fiscal year only if the number of children 
counted under subsection (c) for that agency is both--
          (1) 10 or more; and
          (2) more than 2 percent of the total school-age 
        population in the agency's jurisdiction.
  (c) Children To Be Counted.--
          (1) Categories of children.--The number of children 
        to be counted for purposes of this section is the 
        aggregate of--
                  (A) the number of children aged 5 to 17, 
                inclusive, in the school district of the local 
                educational agency from families below the 
                poverty level as determined under paragraph 
                (2);
                  (B) the number of children (determined under 
                paragraph (4) for either the preceding year as 
                described in that paragraph, or for the second 
                preceding year, as the Secretary finds 
                appropriate) aged 5 to 17, inclusive, in the 
                school district of such agency in institutions 
                for neglected and delinquent children (other 
                than such institutions operated by the United 
                States), but not counted pursuant to [subpart 1 
                of part D] chapter A of subpart 3 for the 
                purposes of a grant to a State agency, or being 
                supported in foster homes with public funds; 
                and
                  (C) the number of children aged 5 to 17, 
                inclusive, in the school district of such 
                agency from families above the poverty level as 
                determined under paragraph (4).
          (2) Determination of number of children.--For the 
        purposes of this section, the Secretary shall determine 
        the number of children aged 5 to 17, inclusive, from 
        families below the poverty level on the basis of the 
        most recent satisfactory data, described in paragraph 
        (3), available from the Department of Commerce. The 
        District of Columbia and the Commonwealth of Puerto 
        Rico shall be treated as individual local educational 
        agencies. If a local educational agency contains two or 
        more counties in their entirety, then each county will 
        be treated as if such county were a separate local 
        educational agency for purposes of calculating grants 
        under this [part] subpart. The total of grants for such 
        counties shall be allocated to such a local educational 
        agency, which local educational agency shall distribute 
        to schools in each county within such agency a share of 
        the local educational agency's total grant that is no 
        less than the county's share of the population counts 
        used to calculate the local educational agency's grant.
          (3) Population updates.--
                  (A) In general.--In fiscal year 2002 and each 
                subsequent fiscal year, the Secretary shall use 
                updated data on the number of children, aged 5 
                to 17, inclusive, from families below the 
                poverty level for counties or local educational 
                agencies, published by the Department of 
                Commerce, unless the Secretary and the 
                Secretary of Commerce determine that the use of 
                the updated population data would be 
                inappropriate or unreliable. If appropriate and 
                reliable data are not available annually, the 
                Secretary shall use data which are updated 
                every 2 years.
                  (B) Inappropriate or unreliable data.--If the 
                Secretary and the Secretary of Commerce 
                determine that some or all of the data referred 
                to in subparagraph (A) are inappropriate or 
                unreliable, the Secretary and the Secretary of 
                Commerce shall publicly disclose their reasons.
                  (C) Criteria of poverty.--In determining the 
                families that are below the poverty level, the 
                Secretary shall use the criteria of poverty 
                used by the Bureau of the Census in compiling 
                the most recent decennial census, as the 
                criteria have been updated by increases in the 
                Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers, 
                published by the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
          (4) Other children to be counted.--
                  (A) For the purpose of this section, the 
                Secretary shall determine the number of 
                children aged 5 to 17, inclusive, from families 
                above the poverty level on the basis of the 
                number of such children from families receiving 
                an annual income, in excess of the current 
                criteria of poverty, from payments under a 
                State program funded under part A of title IV 
                of the Social Security Act; and in making such 
                determinations, the Secretary shall use the 
                criteria of poverty used by the Bureau of the 
                Census in compiling the most recent decennial 
                census for a family of four in such form as 
                those criteria have been updated by increases 
                in the Consumer Price Index for All Urban 
                Consumers, published by the Bureau of Labor 
                Statistics.
                  (B) The Secretary shall determine the number 
                of such children and the number of children 
                aged 5 through 17 living in institutions for 
                neglected or delinquent children, or being 
                supported in foster homes with public funds, on 
                the basis of the caseload data for the month of 
                October of the preceding fiscal year (using, in 
                the case of children described in the preceding 
                sentence, the criteria of poverty and the form 
                of such criteria required by such sentence 
                which were determined for the calendar year 
                preceding such month of October) or, to the 
                extent that such data are not available to the 
                Secretary before January of the calendar year 
                in which the Secretary's determination is made, 
                then on the basis of the most recent reliable 
                data available to the Secretary at the time of 
                such determination.
                  (C) Except for the data on children living in 
                institutions for neglected or delinquent 
                children, the Secretary of Health and Human 
                Services shall collect and transmit the 
                information required by this subparagraph to 
                the Secretary not later than January 1 of each 
                year.
                  (D) For the purpose of this section, the 
                Secretary shall consider all children who are 
                in correctional institutions to be living in 
                institutions for delinquent children.
          (5) Estimate.--When requested by the Secretary, the 
        Secretary of Commerce shall make a special updated 
        estimate of the number of children of such ages who are 
        from families below the poverty level (as determined 
        under paragraph (1)(A)) in each school district, and 
        the Secretary is authorized to pay (either in advance 
        or by way of reimbursement) the Secretary of Commerce 
        the cost of making this special estimate. The Secretary 
        of Commerce shall give consideration to any request of 
        the chief executive of a State for the collection of 
        additional census information.
  (d) State Minimum.--Notwithstanding section 1122, the 
aggregate amount allotted for all local educational agencies 
within a State may not be less than the lesser of--
          (1) 0.25 percent of the total amount allocated to 
        States under this section for fiscal year 2001, plus 
        0.35 percent of the total amount allocated to States 
        under this section in excess of the amount allocated 
        for fiscal year 2001; or
          (2) the average of--
                  (A) the amount calculated in paragraph (1), 
                above; and
                  (B) the number of children in such State 
                counted under subsection (c) in the fiscal year 
                multiplied by 150 percent of the national 
                average per-pupil payment made with funds 
                available under this section for that year.

           *       *       *       *       *       *       *


SEC. 1125. TARGETED GRANTS TO LOCAL EDUCATIONAL AGENCIES.

  (a) Eligibility of Local Educational Agencies.--
          (1) In general.--A local educational agency in a 
        State is eligible to receive a targeted grant under 
        this section for any fiscal year if--
                  (A) the number of children in the local 
                educational agency counted under section 
                1124(c), before application of the weighted 
                child count described in subsection (c), is at 
                least 10; and
                  (B) if the number of children counted for 
                grants under section 1124(c), before 
                application of the weighted child count 
                described in subsection (c), is at least 5 
                percent of the total number of children aged 5 
                to 17 years, inclusive, in the school district 
                of the local educational agency.
          (2) Special rule.--For any fiscal year for which the 
        Secretary allocates funds under this section on the 
        basis of counties, funds made available as a result of 
        applying this subsection shall be reallocated by the 
        State educational agency to other eligible local 
        educational agencies in the State in proportion to the 
        distribution of other funds under this section.
  (b) Grants for Local Educational Agencies, the District of 
Columbia, and the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico.--
          (1) In general.--The amount of the grant that a local 
        educational agency in a State (other than the 
        Commonwealth of Puerto Rico) is eligible to receive 
        under this section for any fiscal year shall be the 
        product of--
                  (A) the weighted child count determined under 
                subsection (c); and
                  (B) the amount determined under section 
                1124(a)(1)(B).
          (2) Puerto rico.--For each fiscal year, the amount of 
        the grant the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico is eligible 
        to receive under this section shall be equal to the 
        number of children counted under subsection (c) for the 
        Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, multiplied by the amount 
        determined in section 1124(a)(4) for the Commonwealth 
        of Puerto Rico.
  (c) Weighted Child Count.--
          (1) Weights for allocations to counties.--
                  (A) In general.--For each fiscal year for 
                which the Secretary uses county population data 
                to calculate grants, the weighted child count 
                used to determine a county's allocation under 
                this section is the larger of the two amounts 
                determined under subparagraphs (B) and (C).
                  (B) By percentage of children.--The amount 
                referred to in subparagraph (A) is determined 
                by adding--
                          (i) the number of children determined 
                        under section 1124(c) for that county 
                        who constitute not more than 15.00 
                        percent, inclusive, of the county's 
                        total population aged 5 to 17, 
                        inclusive, multiplied by 1.0;
                          (ii) the number of such children who 
                        constitute more than 15.00 percent, but 
                        not more than 19.00 percent, of such 
                        population, multiplied by 1.75;
                          (iii) the number of such children who 
                        constitute more than 19.00 percent, but 
                        not more than 24.20 percent, of such 
                        population, multiplied by 2.5;
                          (iv) the number of such children who 
                        constitute more than 24.20 percent, but 
                        not more than 29.20 percent, of such 
                        population, multiplied by 3.25; and
                          (v) the number of such children who 
                        constitute more than 29.20 percent of 
                        such population, multiplied by 4.0.
                  (C) By number of children.--The amount 
                referred to in subparagraph (A) is determined 
                by adding--
                          (i) the number of children determined 
                        under section 1124(c) who constitute 
                        not more than 2,311, inclusive, of the 
                        county's total population aged 5 to 17, 
                        inclusive, multiplied by 1.0;
                          (ii) the number of such children 
                        between 2,312 and 7,913, inclusive, in 
                        such population, multiplied by 1.5;
                          (iii) the number of such children 
                        between 7,914 and 23,917, inclusive, in 
                        such population, multiplied by 2.0;
                          (iv) the number of such children 
                        between 23,918 and 93,810, inclusive, 
                        in such population, multiplied by 2.5; 
                        and
                          (v) the number of such children in 
                        excess of 93,811 in such population, 
                        multiplied by 3.0.
                  (D) Puerto rico.--Notwithstanding 
                subparagraph (A), the weighting factor for the 
                Commonwealth of Puerto Rico under this 
                paragraph shall not be greater than the total 
                number of children counted under section 
                1124(c) multiplied by 1.82.
          (2) Weights for allocations to local educational 
        agencies.--
                  (A) In general.--For each fiscal year for 
                which the Secretary uses local educational 
                agency data, the weighted child count used to 
                determine a local educational agency's grant 
                under this section is the larger of the two 
                amounts determined under subparagraphs (B) and 
                (C).
                  (B) By percentage of children.--The amount 
                referred to in subparagraph (A) is determined 
                by adding--
                          (i) the number of children determined 
                        under section 1124(c) for that local 
                        educational agency who constitute not 
                        more than [15.58] 15.59 percent, 
                        inclusive, of the agency's total 
                        population aged 5 to 17, inclusive, 
                        multiplied by 1.0;
                          (ii) the number of such children who 
                        constitute more than [15.58] 15.59 
                        percent, but not more than [22.11] 
                        22.12 percent, of such population, 
                        multiplied by 1.75;
                          (iii) the number of such children who 
                        constitute more than [22.11] 22.12 
                        percent, but not more than [30.16] 
                        30.17 percent, of such population, 
                        multiplied by 2.5;
                          (iv) the number of such children who 
                        constitute more than [30.16] 30.17 
                        percent, but not more than [38.24] 
                        38.25 percent, of such population, 
                        multiplied by 3.25; and
                          (v) the number of such children who 
                        constitute more than [38.24] 38.25 
                        percent of such population, multiplied 
                        by 4.0.
                  (C) By number of children.--The amount 
                referred to in subparagraph (A) is determined 
                by adding--
                          (i) the number of children determined 
                        under section 1124(c) who constitute 
                        not more than [691] 692, inclusive, of 
                        the agency's total population aged 5 to 
                        17, inclusive, multiplied by 1.0;
                          (ii) the number of such children 
                        between [692] 693 and [2,262] 2,263, 
                        inclusive, in such population, 
                        multiplied by 1.5;
                          (iii) the number of such children 
                        between [2,263] 2,264 and [7,851] 
                        7,852, inclusive, in such population, 
                        multiplied by 2.0;
                          (iv) the number of such children 
                        between [7,852] 7,853 and [35,514] 
                        35,515, inclusive, in such population, 
                        multiplied by 2.5; and
                          (v) the number of such children in 
                        excess of [35,514] 35,515 in such 
                        population, multiplied by 3.0.
                  (D) Puerto rico.--Notwithstanding 
                subparagraph (A), the weighting factor for the 
                Commonwealth of Puerto Rico under this 
                paragraph shall not be greater than the total 
                number of children counted under section 
                1124(c) multiplied by 1.82.
  (d) Calculation of Grant Amounts.--Grant amounts under this 
section shall be calculated in the same manner as grant amounts 
are calculated under section 1124(a)(2) and (3).
  (e) State Minimum.--Notwithstanding any other provision of 
this section or section 1122, from the total amount available 
for any fiscal year to carry out this section, each State shall 
be allotted at least the lesser of--
          (1) 0.35 percent of the total amount available to 
        carry out this section; or
          (2) the average of--
                  (A) 0.35 percent of the total amount 
                available to carry out this section; and
                  (B) 150 percent of the national average grant 
                under this section per child described in 
                section 1124(c), without application of a 
                weighting factor, multiplied by the State's 
                total number of children described in section 
                1124(c), without application of a weighting 
                factor.
  (f) Application.--
          (1) In general.--The percentage and number ranges 
        described in subparagraphs (B) and (C) of subsection 
        (c)(2) shall be applied with respect to fiscal years 
        2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, and 2021 as such 
        percentages and numbers were in effect on the day 
        before the date of the enactment of the Student Success 
        Act.
          (2) Secretary's certification.--For fiscal year 2022 
        and each subsequent fiscal year, the percentage and 
        number ranges described in subparagraphs (B) and (C) of 
        subsection (c)(2) shall be applied as such percentages 
        and numbers were in effect on the day before the date 
        of the enactment of the Student Success Act unless the 
        Secretary certifies that amendments made to such 
        percentages and numbers by the Student Success Act will 
        not result in harm to any school district.

SEC. 1125A. EDUCATION FINANCE INCENTIVE GRANT PROGRAM.

  [(a) Grants.--From funds appropriated under subsection (f) 
the Secretary is authorized to make grants to States, from 
allotments under subsection (b), to carry out the programs and 
activities of this part.]
  [(b)] (a) Distribution Based Upon Fiscal Effort and Equity.--
          (1) In general.--
                  (A) In general.--Except as provided in 
                subparagraph (B), funds [appropriated pursuant 
                to subsection (f)] made available for any 
                fiscal year to carry out this section shall be 
                allotted to each State based upon the number of 
                children counted under section 1124(c) in such 
                State multiplied by the product of--
                          (i) the amount in section 
                        1124(a)(1)(B) for all States other than 
                        the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, except 
                        that the amount determined under that 
                        subparagraph shall not be less that 34 
                        percent or more than 46 percent of the 
                        average per pupil expenditure in the 
                        United States, and the amount in 
                        section 1124(a)(4) for the Commonwealth 
                        of Puerto Rico, except that the amount 
                        in section 1124(a)(4)(A)(ii) shall be 
                        34 percent of the average per pupil 
                        expenditure in the United States; 
                        multiplied by
                          (ii) such State's effort factor 
                        described in paragraph (2); multiplied 
                        by
                          (iii) 1.30 minus such State's equity 
                        factor described in paragraph (3).
                  (B) State minimum.--Notwithstanding any other 
                provision of this section or section 1122, from 
                the total amount available for any fiscal year 
                to carry out this section, each State shall be 
                allotted at least the lesser of--
                          (i) 0.35 percent of [total 
                        appropriations] the total amount 
                        reserved under section 1122(a) to carry 
                        out this section; or
                          (ii) the average of--
                                  (I) 0.35 percent of the total 
                                amount available to carry out 
                                this section; and
                                  (II) 150 percent of the 
                                national average grant under 
                                this section per child 
                                described in section 1124(c), 
                                without application of a 
                                weighting factor, multiplied by 
                                the State's total number of 
                                children described in section 
                                1124(c), without application of 
                                a weighting factor.
          (2) Effort factor.--
                  (A) In general.--Except as provided in 
                subparagraph (B), the effort factor for a State 
                shall be determined in accordance with the 
                succeeding sentence, except that such factor 
                shall not be less than 0.95 nor greater than 
                1.05. The effort factor determined under this 
                sentence shall be a fraction the numerator of 
                which is the product of the 3-year average per-
                pupil expenditure in the State multiplied by 
                the 3-year average per capita income in the 
                United States and the denominator of which is 
                the product of the 3-year average per capita 
                income in such State multiplied by the 3-year 
                average per-pupil expenditure in the United 
                States.
                  (B) Commonwealth of puerto rico.--The effort 
                factor for the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico 
                shall be equal to the lowest effort factor 
                calculated under subparagraph (A) for any 
                State.
          (3) Equity factor.--
                  (A) Determination.--
                          (i) In general.--Except as provided 
                        in subparagraph (B), the Secretary 
                        shall determine the equity factor under 
                        this section for each State in 
                        accordance with clause (ii).
                          (ii) Computation.--
                                  (I) In general.--For each 
                                State, the Secretary shall 
                                compute a weighted coefficient 
                                of variation for the per-pupil 
                                expenditures of local 
                                educational agencies in 
                                accordance with subclauses 
                                (II), (III), and (IV).
                                  (II) Variation.--In computing 
                                coefficients of variation, the 
                                Secretary shall weigh the 
                                variation between per-pupil 
                                expenditures in each local 
                                educational agency and the 
                                average per-pupil expenditures 
                                in the State according to the 
                                number of pupils served by the 
                                local educational agency.
                                  (III) Number of pupils.--In 
                                determining the number of 
                                pupils under this paragraph 
                                served by each local 
                                educational agency and in each 
                                State, the Secretary shall 
                                multiply the number of children 
                                counted under section 1124(c) 
                                by a factor of 1.4.
                                  (IV) Enrollment 
                                requirement.--In computing 
                                coefficients of variation, the 
                                Secretary shall include only 
                                those local educational 
                                agencies with an enrollment of 
                                more than 200 students.
                  (B) Special rule.--The equity factor for a 
                State that meets the disparity standard 
                described in section 222.162 of title 34, Code 
                of Federal Regulations (as such section was in 
                effect on the day preceding the date of 
                enactment of the No Child Left Behind Act of 
                2001) or a State with only one local 
                educational agency shall be not greater than 
                0.10.
  [(c)] (b) Use of Funds; Eligibility of Local Educational 
Agencies.--All funds awarded to each State under this section 
shall be allocated to local educational agencies under the 
following provisions. Within local educational agencies, funds 
allocated under this section shall be distributed to schools on 
a basis consistent with section 1113, and may only be used to 
carry out activities under this [part] subpart. A local 
educational agency in a State is eligible to receive a targeted 
grant under this section for any fiscal year if--
          [(A)] (1) the number of children in the local 
        educational agency counted under section 1124(c), 
        before application of the weighted child count 
        described in paragraph (3), is at least 10; and
          [(B)] (2) if the number of children counted for 
        grants under section 1124(c), before application of the 
        weighted child count described in paragraph (3), is at 
        least 5 percent of the total number of children aged 5 
        to 17 years, inclusive, in the school district of the 
        local educational agency.
  For any fiscal year for which the Secretary allocates funds 
under this section on the basis of counties, funds made 
available as a result of applying this subsection shall be 
reallocated by the State educational agency to other eligible 
local educational agencies in the State in proportion to the 
distribution of other funds under this section.
  [(d)] (c) Allocation of Funds to Eligible Local Educational 
Agencies.--Funds received by States under this section shall be 
allocated within States to eligible local educational agencies 
on the basis of weighted child counts calculated in accordance 
with paragraph (1), (2), or (3), as appropriate for each State.
          (1) States with an equity factor less than.10.--In 
        States with an equity factor less than .10, the 
        weighted child counts referred to in subsection (d) 
        shall be calculated as follows:
                  (A) Weights for allocations to counties.--
                          (i) In general.--For each fiscal year 
                        for which the Secretary uses county 
                        population data to calculate grants, 
                        the weighted child count used to 
                        determine a county's allocation under 
                        this section is the larger of the two 
                        amounts determined under clauses (ii) 
                        and (iii).
                          (ii) By percentage of children.--The 
                        amount referred to in clause ``(i) is 
                        determined by adding--
                                  (I) the number of children 
                                determined under section 
                                1124(c) for that county who 
                                constitute not more than 15.00 
                                percent, inclusive, of the 
                                county's total population aged 
                                5 to 17, inclusive, multiplied 
                                by 1.0;
                                  (II) the number of such 
                                children who constitute more 
                                than 15.00 percent, but not 
                                more than 19.00 percent, of 
                                such population, multiplied by 
                                1.75;
                                  (III) the number of such 
                                children who constitute more 
                                than 19.00 percent, but not 
                                more than 24.20 percent, of 
                                such population, multiplied by 
                                2.5;
                                  (IV) the number of such 
                                children who constitute more 
                                than 24.20 percent, but not 
                                more than 29.20 percent, of 
                                such population, multiplied by 
                                3.25; and
                                  (V) the number of such 
                                children who constitute more 
                                than 29.20 percent of such 
                                population, multiplied by 4.0.
                          (iii) By number of children.--The 
                        amount referred to in clause (i) is 
                        determined by adding
                                  (I) the number of children 
                                determined under section 
                                1124(c) who constitute not more 
                                than 2,311, inclusive, of the 
                                county's total population aged 
                                5 to 17, inclusive, multiplied 
                                by 1.0;
                                  (II) the number of such 
                                children between 2,312 and 
                                7,913, inclusive, in such 
                                population, multiplied by 1.5;
                                  (III) the number of such 
                                children between 7,914 and 
                                23,917, inclusive, in such 
                                population, multiplied by 2.0;
                                  (IV) the number of such 
                                children between 23,918 and 
                                93,810, inclusive, in such 
                                population, multiplied by 2.5; 
                                and
                                  (V) the number of such 
                                children in excess of 93,811 in 
                                such population, multiplied by 
                                3.0.
                  (B) Weights for allocations to local 
                educational agencies.--
                          (i) In general.--For each fiscal year 
                        for which the Secretary uses local 
                        educational agency data, the weighted 
                        child count used to determine a local 
                        educational agency's grant under this 
                        section is the larger of the two 
                        amounts determined under clauses (ii) 
                        and (iii).
                          (ii) By percentage of children.--The 
                        amount referred to in clause (i) is 
                        determined by adding--
                                  (I) the number of children 
                                determined under section 
                                1124(c) for that local 
                                educational agency who 
                                constitute not more than 
                                [15.58] 15.59 percent, 
                                inclusive, of the agency's 
                                total population aged 5 to 17, 
                                inclusive, multiplied by 1.0;
                                  (II) the number of such 
                                children who constitute more 
                                than [15.58] 15.59 percent, but 
                                not more than [22.11] 22.12 
                                percent, of such population, 
                                multiplied by 1.75;
                                  (III) the number of such 
                                children who constitute more 
                                than [22.11] 22.12 percent, but 
                                not more than [30.16] 30.17 
                                percent, of such population, 
                                multiplied by 2.5;
                                  (IV) the number of such 
                                children who constitute more 
                                than [30.16] 30.17 percent, but 
                                not more than [38.24] 38.25 
                                percent, of such population, 
                                multiplied by 3.25; and
                                  (V) the number of such 
                                children who constitute more 
                                than [38.24] 38.25 percent of 
                                such population, multiplied by 
                                4.0.
                          (iii) By number of children.--The 
                        amount referred to in clause (i) is 
                        determined by adding--
                                  (I) the number of children 
                                determined under section 
                                1124(c) who constitute not more 
                                than [691] 692, inclusive, of 
                                the agency's total population 
                                aged 5 to 17, inclusive, 
                                multiplied by 1.0;
                                  (II) the number of such 
                                children between [692] 693 and 
                                [2,262] 2,263, inclusive, in 
                                such population, multiplied by 
                                1.5;
                                  (III) the number of such 
                                children between [2,263] 2,264 
                                and [7,851] 7,852, inclusive, 
                                in such population, multiplied 
                                by 2.0;
                                  (IV) the number of such 
                                children between [7,852] 7,853 
                                and [35,514] 35,515, inclusive, 
                                in such population, multiplied 
                                by 2.5; and
                                  (V) the number of such 
                                children in excess of [35,514] 
                                35,515 in such population, 
                                multiplied by 3.0.
          (2) States with an equity factor greater than or 
        equal to.10 and less than.20.--In States with an equity 
        factor greater than or equal to .10 and less than .20, 
        the weighted child counts referred to in subsection (d) 
        shall be calculated as follows:
                  (A) Weights for allocations to counties.--
                          (i) In general.--For each fiscal year 
                        for which the Secretary uses county 
                        population data to calculate grants, 
                        the weighted child count used to 
                        determine a county's allocation under 
                        this section is the larger of the two 
                        amounts determined under clauses (ii) 
                        and (iii).
                          (ii) By percentage of children.--The 
                        amount referred to in clause (i) is 
                        determined by adding--
                                  (I) the number of children 
                                determined under section 
                                1124(c) for that county who 
                                constitute not more than 15.00 
                                percent, inclusive, of the 
                                county's total population aged 
                                5 to 17, inclusive, multiplied 
                                by 1.0;
                                  (II) the number of such 
                                children who constitute more 
                                than 15.00 percent, but not 
                                more than 19.00 percent, of 
                                such population, multiplied by 
                                1.5;
                                  (III) the number of such 
                                children who constitute more 
                                than 19.00 percent, but not 
                                more than 24.20 percent, of 
                                such population, multiplied by 
                                3.0;
                                  (IV) the number of such 
                                children who constitute more 
                                than 24.20 percent, but not 
                                more than 29.20 percent, of 
                                such population, multiplied by 
                                4.5; and
                                  (V) the number of such 
                                children who constitute more 
                                than 29.20 percent of such 
                                population, multiplied by 6.0.
                          (iii) By number of children.--The 
                        amount referred to in clause (i) is 
                        determined by adding--
                                  (I) the number of children 
                                determined under section 
                                1124(c) who constitute not more 
                                than 2,311, inclusive, of the 
                                county's total population aged 
                                5 to 17, inclusive, multiplied 
                                by 1.0;
                                  (II) the number of such 
                                children between 2,312 and 
                                7,913, inclusive, in such 
                                population, multiplied by 1.5;
                                  (III) the number of such 
                                children between 7,914 and 
                                23,917, inclusive, in such 
                                population, multiplied by 2.25;
                                  (IV) the number of such 
                                children between 23,918 and 
                                93,810, inclusive, in such 
                                population, multiplied by 
                                3.375; and
                                  (V) the number of such 
                                children in excess of 93,811 in 
                                such population, multiplied by 
                                4.5.
                  (B) Weights for allocations to local 
                educational agencies.--
                          (i) In general.--For each fiscal year 
                        for which the Secretary uses local 
                        educational agency data, the weighted 
                        child count used to determine a local 
                        educational agency's grant under this 
                        section is the larger of the two 
                        amounts determined under clauses (ii) 
                        and (iii).
                          (ii) By percentage of children.--The 
                        amount referred to in clause (i) is 
                        determined by adding--
                                  (I) the number of children 
                                determined under section 
                                1124(c) for that local 
                                educational agency who 
                                constitute not more than 
                                [15.58] 15.59 percent, 
                                inclusive, of the agency's 
                                total population aged 5 to 17, 
                                inclusive, multiplied by 1.0;
                                  (II) the number of such 
                                children who constitute more 
                                than [15.58] 15.59 percent, but 
                                not more than [22.11] 22.12 
                                percent, of such population, 
                                multiplied by 1.5;
                                  (III) the number of such 
                                children who constitute more 
                                than [22.11] 22.12 percent, but 
                                not more than [30.16] 30.17 
                                percent, of such population, 
                                multiplied by 3.0;
                                  (IV) the number of such 
                                children who constitute more 
                                than [30.16] 30.17 percent, but 
                                not more than [38.24] 38.25 
                                percent, of such population, 
                                multiplied by 4.5; and
                                  (V) the number of such 
                                children who constitute more 
                                than [38.24] 38.25 percent of 
                                such population, multiplied by 
                                6.0.
                          (iii) By number of children.--The 
                        amount referred to in clause (i) is 
                        determined by adding--
                                  (I) the number of children 
                                determined under section 
                                1124(c) who constitute not more 
                                than [691] 692, inclusive, of 
                                the agency's total population 
                                aged 5 to 17, inclusive, 
                                multiplied by 1.0;
                                  (II) the number of such 
                                children between [692] 693 and 
                                [2,262] 2,263, inclusive, in 
                                such population, multiplied by 
                                1.5;
                                  (III) the number of such 
                                children between [2,263] 2,264 
                                and [7,851] 7,852, inclusive, 
                                in such population, multiplied 
                                by 2.25;
                                  (IV) the number of such 
                                children between [7,852] 7,853 
                                and [35,514] 35,515, inclusive, 
                                in such population, multiplied 
                                by 3.375; and
                                  (V) the number of such 
                                children in excess of [35,514] 
                                35,515 in such population, 
                                multiplied by 4.5.
          (3) States with an equity factor greater than or 
        equal to.20.--In States with an equity factor greater 
        than or equal to .20, the weighted child counts 
        referred to in subsection (d) shall be calculated as 
        follows:
                  (A) Weights for allocations to counties.--
                          (i) In general.--For each fiscal year 
                        for which the Secretary uses county 
                        population data to calculate grants, 
                        the weighted child count used to 
                        determine a county's allocation under 
                        this section is the larger of the two 
                        amounts determined under clauses (ii) 
                        and (iii).
                          (ii) By percentage of children.--The 
                        amount referred to in clause (i) is 
                        determined by adding--
                                  (I) the number of children 
                                determined under section 
                                1124(c) for that county who 
                                constitute not more than 15.00 
                                percent, inclusive, of the 
                                county's total population aged 
                                5 to 17, inclusive, multiplied 
                                by 1.0;
                                  (II) the number of such 
                                children who constitute more 
                                than 15.00 percent, but not 
                                more than 19.00 percent, of 
                                such population, multiplied by 
                                2.0;
                                  (III) the number of such 
                                children who constitute more 
                                than 19.00 percent, but not 
                                more than 24.20 percent, of 
                                such population, multiplied by 
                                4.0;
                                  (IV) the number of such 
                                children who constitute more 
                                than 24.20 percent, but not 
                                more than 29.20 percent, of 
                                such population, multiplied by 
                                6.0; and
                                  (V) the number of such 
                                children who constitute more 
                                than 29.20 percent of such 
                                population, multiplied by 8.0.
                          (iii) By number of children.--The 
                        amount referred to in clause (i) is 
                        determined by adding--
                                  (I) the number of children 
                                determined under section 
                                1124(c) who constitute not more 
                                than 2,311, inclusive, of the 
                                county's total population aged 
                                5 to 17, inclusive, multiplied 
                                by 1.0;
                                  (II) the number of such 
                                children between 2,312 and 
                                7,913, inclusive, in such 
                                population, multiplied by 2.0;
                                  (III) the number of such 
                                children between 7,914 and 
                                23,917, inclusive, in such 
                                population, multiplied by 3.0;
                                  (IV) the number of such 
                                children between 23,918 and 
                                93,810, inclusive, in such 
                                population, multiplied by 4.5; 
                                and
                                  (V) the number of such 
                                children in excess of 93,811 in 
                                such population, multiplied by 
                                6.0.
                  (B) Weights for allocations to local 
                educational agencies.--
                          (i) In general.--For each fiscal year 
                        for which the Secretary uses local 
                        educational agency data, the weighted 
                        child count used to determine a local 
                        educational agency's grant under this 
                        section is the larger of the two 
                        amounts determined under clauses (ii) 
                        and (iii).
                          (ii) By percentage of children.--The 
                        amount referred to in clause (i) is 
                        determined by adding--
                                  (I) the number of children 
                                determined under section 
                                1124(c) for that local 
                                educational agency who 
                                constitute not more than 
                                [15.58] 15.59 percent, 
                                inclusive, of the agency's 
                                total population aged 5 to 17, 
                                inclusive, multiplied by 1.0;
                                  (II) the number of such 
                                children who constitute more 
                                than [15.58] 15.59 percent, but 
                                not more than [22.11] 22.12 
                                percent, of such population, 
                                multiplied by 2.0;
                                  (III) the number of such 
                                children who constitute more 
                                than [22.11] 22.12 percent, but 
                                not more than [30.16] 30.17 
                                percent, of such population, 
                                multiplied by 4.0;
                                  (IV) the number of such 
                                children who constitute more 
                                than [30.16] 30.17 percent, but 
                                not more than [38.24] 38.25 
                                percent, of such population, 
                                multiplied by 6.0; and
                                  (V) the number of such 
                                children who constitute more 
                                than [38.24] 38.25 percent of 
                                such population, multiplied by 
                                8.0.
                          (iii) By number of children.--The 
                        amount referred to in clause (i) is 
                        determined by adding--
                                  (I) the number of children 
                                determined under section 
                                1124(c) who constitute not more 
                                than [691] 692, inclusive, of 
                                the agency's total population 
                                aged 5 to 17, inclusive, 
                                multiplied by 1.0;
                                  (II) the number of such 
                                children between [692] 693 and 
                                [2,262] 2,263, inclusive, in 
                                such population, multiplied by 
                                2.0;
                                  (III) the number of such 
                                children between [2,263] 2,264 
                                and [7,851] 7,852, inclusive, 
                                in such population, multiplied 
                                by 3.0;
                                  (IV) the number of such 
                                children between [7,852] 7,853 
                                and [35,514] 35,515, inclusive, 
                                in such population, multiplied 
                                by 4.5; and
                                  (V) the number of such 
                                children in excess of [35,514] 
                                35,515 in such population, 
                                multiplied by 6.0.
  [(e) Maintenance of Effort.--
          [(1) In general.--Except as provided in paragraph 
        (2), a State is entitled to receive its full allotment 
        of funds under this section for any fiscal year if the 
        Secretary finds that either the combined fiscal effort 
        per student or the aggregate expenditures within the 
        State with respect to the provision of free public 
        education for the fiscal year preceding the fiscal year 
        for which the determination is made was not less than 
        90 percent of such combined fiscal effort or aggregate 
        expenditures for the second fiscal year preceding the 
        fiscal year for which the determination is made.
          [(2) Reduction of funds.--The Secretary shall reduce 
        the amount of funds awarded to any State under this 
        section in any fiscal year in the exact proportion to 
        which the State fails to meet the requirements of 
        paragraph (1) by falling below 90 percent of both the 
        fiscal effort per student and aggregate expenditures 
        (using the measure most favorable to the State), and no 
        such lesser amount shall be used for computing the 
        effort required under paragraph (1) for subsequent 
        years.
          [(3) Waivers.--The Secretary may waive, for 1 fiscal 
        year only, the requirements of this subsection if the 
        Secretary determines that such a waiver would be 
        equitable due to exceptional or uncontrollable 
        circumstances such as a natural disaster or a 
        precipitous and unforeseen decline in the financial 
        resources of the State.
  [(f) Authorization of Appropriations.--There are authorized 
to be appropriated to carry out this section such sums as may 
be necessary for fiscal year 2002 and for each of the 5 
succeeding fiscal years.]
  [(g)] (d) Adjustments Where Necessitated by Appropriations.--
          (1) In general.--If the sums available under this 
        section for any fiscal year are insufficient to pay the 
        full amounts that all local educational agencies in 
        States are eligible to receive under this section for 
        such year, the Secretary shall ratably reduce the 
        allocations to such local educational agencies, subject 
        to paragraphs (2) and (3).
          (2) Additional funds.--If additional funds become 
        available for making payments under this section for 
        such fiscal year, allocations that were reduced under 
        paragraph (1) shall be increased on the same basis as 
        they were reduced.
          (3) Hold-harmless amounts.--For each fiscal year, if 
        sufficient funds are available, the amount made 
        available to each local educational agency under this 
        section shall be
                  (A) not less than 95 percent of the amount 
                made available for the preceding fiscal year if 
                the number of children counted for grants under 
                section 1124 is not less than 30 percent of the 
                total number of children aged 5 to 17 years, 
                inclusive, in the local educational agency;
                  (B) not less than 90 percent of the amount 
                made available for the preceding fiscal year if 
                the percentage described in subparagraph (A) is 
                between 15 percent and 30 percent; and
                  (C) not less than 85 percent of the amount 
                made available for the preceding fiscal year if 
                the percentage described in subparagraph (A) is 
                below 15 percent.
          (4) Applicability.--Notwithstanding any other 
        provision of law, the Secretary shall not take into 
        consideration the hold-harmless provisions of this 
        subsection for any fiscal year for purposes of 
        calculating State or local allocations for the fiscal 
        year under any program administered by the Secretary 
        other than a program authorized under this [part] 
        subpart.
  (e) Application.--
          (1) In general.--The percentage and number ranges 
        described in clauses (ii) and (iii) of paragraph 
        (1)(B), clauses (ii) and (iii) of paragraph (2)(B), and 
        clauses (ii) and (iii) of paragraph (3)(B) shall be 
        applied with respect to fiscal years 2016, 2017, 2018, 
        2019, 2020, and 2021 as such percentages and numbers 
        were in effect on the day before the date of the 
        enactment of the Student Success Act.
          (2) Secretary's certification.--For fiscal year 2022 
        and each subsequent fiscal year, the percentage and 
        number ranges described in clauses (ii) and (iii) of 
        paragraph (1)(B), clauses (ii) and (iii) of paragraph 
        (2)(B), and clauses (ii) and (iii) of paragraph (3)(B) 
        shall be applied as such percentages and numbers were 
        in effect on the day before the date of the enactment 
        of the Student Success Act unless the Secretary 
        certifies that amendments made to such percentages and 
        numbers by the Student Success Act will not result in 
        harm to any school district.

[SEC. 1125AA. ADEQUACY OF FUNDING OF TARGETED GRANTS TO LOCAL 
                    EDUCATIONAL AGENCIES IN FISCAL YEARS AFTER FISCAL 
                    YEAR 2001.

  [(a) Findings.--Congress makes the following findings:
          [(1) The current Basic Grant Formula for the 
        distribution of funds under this part often does not 
        provide funds for the economically disadvantaged 
        students for which such funds are targeted.
          [(2) Any school district in which more than 2 percent 
        of the students live below the poverty level qualifies 
        for funding under the Basic Grant Formula. As a result, 
        9 out of every 10 school districts in the country 
        receive some form of aid under the Formula.
          [(3) Fifty-eight percent of all schools receive at 
        least some funding under this part, including many 
        suburban schools with predominantly well-off students.
          [(4) One out of every 5 schools with concentrations 
        of poor students between 50 and 75 percent receive no 
        funding at all under this part.
          [(5) In passing the Improving America's Schools Act 
        in 1994, Congress declared that grants under this part 
        would more sharply target high poverty schools by using 
        the Targeted Grant Formula, but annual appropriation 
        Acts have prevented the use of that Formula.
          [(6) The advantage of the Targeted Grant Formula over 
        other funding formulas under this part is that the 
        Targeted Grant Formula provides increased grants per 
        poor child as the percentage of economically 
        disadvantaged children in a school district increases.
          [(7) Studies have found that the poverty of a child's 
        family is much more likely to be associated with 
        educational disadvantage if the family lives in an area 
        with large concentrations of poor families.
          [(8) States with large populations of high poverty 
        students would receive significantly more funding if 
        more funds under this part were allocated through the 
        Targeted Grant Formula.
          [(9) Congress has an obligation to allocate funds 
        under this part so that such funds will positively 
        affect the largest number of economically disadvantaged 
        students.
  [(b) Limitation on Allocation of Title I Funds Contingent on 
Adequate Funding of Targeted Grants.--Pursuant to section 1122, 
the total amount allocated in any fiscal year after fiscal year 
2001 for programs and activities under this part shall not 
exceed the amount allocated in fiscal year 2001 for such 
programs and activities unless the amount available for 
targeted grants to local educational agencies under section 
1125 in the applicable fiscal year meets the requirements of 
section 1122(a).]

SEC. 1125AA. ADEQUACY OF FUNDING TO LOCAL EDUCATIONAL AGENCIES IN 
                    FISCAL YEARS AFTER FISCAL YEAR 2001.

  (a) Limitation of Allocation.--Pursuant to section 1122, the 
total amount allocated in any fiscal year after fiscal year 
2001 for programs and activities under this subpart shall not 
exceed the amount allocated in fiscal year 2001 for such 
programs and activities unless the amount available for 
targeted grants to local educational agencies under section 
1125 in the applicable fiscal year meets the requirements of 
section 1122(a).
  (b) Findings.--Congress makes the following findings:
          (1) The formulas for distributing Targeted and 
        Education Finance Incentive grants use two weighting 
        systems, one based on the percentage of the aged 5-17 
        population in a local educational agency that is 
        eligible to receive funds under this title (percentage 
        weighting), and another based on the absolute number of 
        such students (number weighting). Whichever of these 
        weighting systems results in the highest total weighted 
        formula student count for a local educational agency is 
        the weighting system used for that agency in the final 
        allocation of Targeted and Education Finance Incentive 
        Grant funds.
          (2) The Congressional Research Service has said the 
        number weighting alternative is generally more 
        favorable to large local educational agencies with much 
        larger counts of eligible children, but not necessarily 
        higher concentrations, weighted at the highest point in 
        the scale than smaller local educational agencies with 
        smaller counts, but higher concentrations, of eligible 
        children.
          (3) The current percentage and number weighting 
        scales are based on the most current data available in 
        2001 on the distribution of eligible children across 
        local educational agencies.
          (4) Prior to the date of the enactment of the Student 
        Success Act, Congress expects updated data to be 
        available, which will provide Congress an opportunity 
        to update these scales based on such data.
          (5) When these scales are updated, Congress has a 
        further obligation to evaluate the use of percentage 
        and number weighting to ensure the most equitable 
        distribution of Targeted and Education Finance 
        Incentive Grant funds to local educational agencies.

           *       *       *       *       *       *       *


SEC. 1127. CARRYOVER AND WAIVER.

  (a) Limitation on Carryover.--Notwithstanding section 421(b) 
of the General Education Provisions Act or any other provision 
of law, not more than 15 percent of the funds allocated to a 
local educational agency for any fiscal year under this 
[subpart] chapter (but not including funds received through any 
reallocation under this [subpart] chapter) may remain available 
for obligation by such agency for one additional fiscal year.
  (b) Waiver.--A State educational agency may, once every 3 
years, waive the percentage limitation in subsection (a) if--
          (1) the agency determines that the request of a local 
        educational agency is reasonable and necessary; or
          (2) supplemental appropriations for this [subpart] 
        chapter become available.
  (c) Exclusion.--The percentage limitation under subsection 
(a) shall not apply to any local educational agency that 
receives less than $50,000 under this [subpart] chapter for any 
fiscal year.

SEC. 1128. TITLE I FUNDS FOLLOW THE LOW-INCOME CHILD STATE OPTION.

  (a) In General.--Notwithstanding any other provision of law 
and to the extent permitted under State law, a State 
educational agency may allocate grant funds under this chapter 
among the local educational agencies in the State based on the 
number of eligible children enrolled in the public schools 
served by each local educational agency.
  (b) Eligible Child.--
          (1) Definition.--In this section, the term ``eligible 
        child'' means a child aged 5 to 17, inclusive, from a 
        family with an income below the poverty level on the 
        basis of the most recent satisfactory data published by 
        the Department of Commerce.
          (2) Criteria of poverty.--In determining the families 
        with incomes below the poverty level for the purposes 
        of this section, a State educational agency shall use 
        the criteria of poverty used by the Census Bureau in 
        compiling the most recent decennial census, as the 
        criteria have been updated by increases in the Consumer 
        Price Index for All Urban Consumers, published by the 
        Bureau of Labor Statistics.
  (c) Student Enrollment in Public Schools.--
          (1) Identification of eligible children.--On an 
        annual basis, on a date to be determined by the State 
        educational agency, each local educational agency that 
        receives grant funding in accordance with subsection 
        (a) shall inform the State educational agency of the 
        number of eligible children enrolled in public schools 
        served by the local educational agency.
          (2) Allocation to local educational agencies.--Based 
        on the identification of eligible children in paragraph 
        (1), the State educational agency shall provide to a 
        local educational agency an amount equal to the sum of 
        the amount available for each eligible child in the 
        State multiplied by the number of eligible children 
        identified by the local educational agency under 
        paragraph (1).
          (3) Distribution to schools.--Each local educational 
        agency that receives funds under paragraph (2) shall 
        distribute such funds to the public schools served by 
        the local educational agency--
                  (A) based on the number of eligible children 
                enrolled in such schools; and
                  (B) in a manner that would, in the absence of 
                such Federal funds, supplement the funds made 
                available from non-Federal resources for the 
                education of pupils participating in programs 
                under this subpart, and not to supplant such 
                funds.

               Subpart 2--Education of Migratory Children

SEC. 1131. PROGRAM PURPOSES.

  The purposes of this subpart are as follows:
          (1) To assist States in supporting high-quality and 
        comprehensive educational programs and services during 
        the school year, and as applicable, during summer or 
        intercession periods, that address the unique 
        educational needs of migratory children.
          (2) To ensure that migratory children who move among 
        the States, not be penalized in any manner by 
        disparities among the States in curriculum, graduation 
        requirements, and State academic standards.
          (3) To help such children succeed in school, meet the 
        State academic standards that all children are expected 
        to meet, and graduate from high school prepared for 
        postsecondary education and the workforce without the 
        need for remediation.
          (4) To help such children overcome educational 
        disruption, cultural and language barriers, social 
        isolation, various health-related problems, and other 
        factors that inhibit the ability of such children to 
        succeed in school.
          (5) To help such children benefit from State and 
        local systemic reforms.

SEC. 1132. PROGRAM AUTHORIZED.

  (a) In General.--From the amounts appropriated under section 
3(a)(1), the Secretary shall reserve 2.45 percent to carry out 
this subpart.
  (b) Grants Awarded.--From the amounts reserved under 
subsection (a) and not reserved under section 1138(c), the 
Secretary shall make allotments for the fiscal year to State 
educational agencies, or consortia of such agencies, to 
establish or improve, directly or through local operating 
agencies, programs of education for migratory children in 
accordance with this subpart.

SEC. 1133. STATE ALLOCATIONS.

  (a) State Allocations.--Except as provided in subsection (c), 
each State (other than the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico) is 
entitled to receive under this subpart an amount equal to the 
product of--
          (1) the sum of--
                  (A) the average number of identified eligible 
                full-time equivalent migratory children aged 3 
                through 21 residing in the State, based on data 
                for the preceding 3 years; and
                  (B) the number of identified eligible 
                migratory children, aged 3 through 21, who 
                received services under this subpart in summer 
                or intersession programs provided by the State 
                during the previous year; multiplied by
          (2) 40 percent of the average per-pupil expenditure 
        in the State, except that the amount determined under 
        this paragraph shall not be less than 32 percent, nor 
        more than 48 percent, of the average per-pupil 
        expenditure in the United States.
  (b) Hold Harmless.--Notwithstanding subsection (a), for each 
of fiscal years 2016 through 2018, no State shall receive less 
than 90 percent of the State's allocation under this section 
for the previous year.
  (c) Allocation to Puerto Rico.--For each fiscal year, the 
grant which the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico shall be eligible 
to receive under this subpart shall be the amount determined by 
multiplying the number of children who would be counted under 
subsection (a)(1) if such subsection applied to the 
Commonwealth of Puerto Rico by the product of--
          (1) the percentage that the average per-pupil 
        expenditure in the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico is of 
        the lowest average per-pupil expenditure of any of the 
        50 States, except that the percentage calculated under 
        this subparagraph shall not be less than 85 percent; 
        and
          (2) 32 percent of the average per-pupil expenditure 
        in the United States.
  (d) Ratable Reductions; Reallocations.--
          (1) In general.--
                  (A) Ratable reductions.--If, after the 
                Secretary reserves funds under section 1138(c), 
                the amount appropriated to carry out this 
                subpart for any fiscal year is insufficient to 
                pay in full the amounts for which all States 
                are eligible, the Secretary shall ratably 
                reduce each such amount.
                  (B) Reallocation.--If additional funds become 
                available for making such payments for any 
                fiscal year, the Secretary shall allocate such 
                funds to States in amounts that the Secretary 
                determines will best carry out the purpose of 
                this subpart.
          (2) Special rule.--
                  (A) Further reductions.--The Secretary shall 
                further reduce the amount of any grant to a 
                State under this subpart for any fiscal year if 
                the Secretary determines, based on available 
                information on the numbers and needs of 
                migratory children in the State and the program 
                proposed by the State to address such needs, 
                that such amount exceeds the amount required 
                under section 1134.
                  (B) Reallocation.--The Secretary shall 
                reallocate such excess funds to other States 
                whose grants under this subpart would otherwise 
                be insufficient to provide an appropriate level 
                of services to migratory children, in such 
                amounts as the Secretary determines are 
                appropriate.
  (e) Consortium Arrangements.--
          (1) In general.--In the case of a State that receives 
        a grant of $1,000,000 or less under this section, the 
        Secretary shall consult with the State educational 
        agency to determine whether consortium arrangements 
        with another State or other appropriate entity would 
        result in delivery of services in a more effective and 
        efficient manner.
          (2) Proposals.--Any State, regardless of the amount 
        of such State's allocation, may submit a consortium 
        arrangement to the Secretary for approval.
          (3) Approval.--The Secretary shall approve a 
        consortium arrangement under paragraph (1) or (2) if 
        the proposal demonstrates that the arrangement will--
                  (A) reduce administrative costs or program 
                function costs for State programs; and
                  (B) make more funds available for direct 
                services to add substantially to the 
                educational achievement of children to be 
                served under this subpart.
  (f) Determining Numbers of Eligible Children.--In order to 
determine the identified number of migratory children residing 
in each State for purposes of this section, the Secretary 
shall--
          (1) use the most recent information that most 
        accurately reflects the actual number of migratory 
        children;
          (2) develop and implement a procedure for monitoring 
        the accuracy of such information;
          (3) develop and implement a procedure for more 
        accurately reflecting cost factors for different types 
        of summer and intersession program designs;
          (4) adjust the full-time equivalent number of 
        migratory children who reside in each State to take 
        into account--
                  (A) the unique needs of those children 
                participating in evidence-based or other 
                effective special programs provided under this 
                subpart that operate during the summer and 
                intersession periods; and
                  (B) the additional costs of operating such 
                programs; and
          (5) conduct an analysis of the options for adjusting 
        the formula so as to better direct services to 
        migratory children, including the most at-risk 
        migratory children.
  (g) Nonparticipating States.--In the case of a State desiring 
to receive an allocation under this subpart for a fiscal year 
that did not receive an allocation for the previous fiscal year 
or that has been participating for less than 3 consecutive 
years, the Secretary shall calculate the State's number of 
identified migratory children aged 3 through 21 for purposes of 
subsection (a)(1)(A) by using the most recent data available 
that identifies the migratory children residing in the State 
until data is available to calculate the 3-year average number 
of such children in accordance with such subsection.

SEC. 1134. STATE APPLICATIONS; SERVICES.

  (a) Application Required.--Any State desiring to receive a 
grant under this subpart for any fiscal year shall submit an 
application to the Secretary at such time and in such manner as 
the Secretary may require.
  (b) Program Information.--Each such application shall 
include--
          (1) a description of how, in planning, implementing, 
        and evaluating programs and projects assisted under 
        this subpart, the State and its local operating 
        agencies will ensure that the unique educational needs 
        of migratory children, including preschool migratory 
        children, are identified and addressed through--
                  (A) the full range of services that are 
                available for migratory children from 
                appropriate local, State, and Federal 
                educational programs;
                  (B) joint planning among local, State, and 
                Federal educational programs serving migratory 
                children, including language instruction 
                educational programs under chapter A of subpart 
                4; and
                  (C) the integration of services available 
                under this subpart with services provided by 
                those other programs;
          (2) a description of the steps the State is taking to 
        provide all migratory students with the opportunity to 
        meet the same State academic standards that all 
        children are expected to meet;
          (3) a description of how the State will use funds 
        received under this subpart to promote interstate and 
        intrastate coordination of services for migratory 
        children, including how the State will provide for 
        educational continuity through the timely transfer of 
        pertinent school records, including information on 
        health, when children move from one school to another, 
        whether or not such a move occurs during the regular 
        school year;
          (4) a description of the State's priorities for the 
        use of funds received under this subpart, and how such 
        priorities relate to the State's assessment of needs 
        for services in the State;
          (5) a description of how the State will determine the 
        amount of any subgrants the State will award to local 
        operating agencies, taking into account the numbers and 
        needs of migratory children, the requirements of 
        subsection (d), and the availability of funds from 
        other Federal, State, and local programs; and
          (6) a description of how the State will encourage 
        programs and projects assisted under this subpart to 
        offer family literacy services if the programs and 
        projects serve a substantial number of migratory 
        children whose parents do not have a regular high 
        school diploma or its recognized equivalent or who have 
        low levels of literacy.
  (c) Assurances.--Each such application shall also include 
assurances that--
          (1) funds received under this subpart will be used 
        only--
                  (A) for programs and projects, including the 
                acquisition of equipment, in accordance with 
                section 1136; and
                  (B) to coordinate such programs and projects 
                with similar programs and projects within the 
                State and in other States, as well as with 
                other Federal programs that can benefit 
                migratory children and their families;
          (2) such programs and projects will be carried out in 
        a manner consistent with the objectives of section 
        1114, subsections (b) and (d) of section 1115, 
        subsections (b) and (c) of section 1120A, and part C;
          (3) in the planning and operation of programs and 
        projects at both the State and local agency operating 
        level, there is consultation with parents of migratory 
        children for programs of not less than one school year 
        in duration, and that all such programs and projects 
        are carried out--
                  (A) in a manner that provides for the same 
                parental involvement as is required for 
                programs and projects under section 1118, 
                unless extraordinary circumstances make such 
                provision impractical; and
                  (B) in a format and language understandable 
                to the parents;
          (4) in planning and carrying out such programs and 
        projects, there has been, and will be, adequate 
        provision for addressing the unmet education needs of 
        preschool migratory children;
          (5) the effectiveness of such programs and projects 
        will be determined, where feasible, using the same 
        approaches and standards that will be used to assess 
        the performance of students, schools, and local 
        educational agencies under subpart 1;
          (6) to the extent feasible, such programs and 
        projects will provide for--
                  (A) advocacy and outreach activities for 
                migratory children and their families, 
                including informing such children and families 
                of, or helping such children and families gain 
                access to, other education, health, nutrition, 
                and social services;
                  (B) professional development programs, 
                including mentoring, for teachers and other 
                program personnel;
                  (C) high-quality, evidence-based family 
                literacy programs;
                  (D) the integration of information technology 
                into educational and related programs; and
                  (E) programs to facilitate the transition of 
                secondary school students to postsecondary 
                education or employment without the need for 
                remediation; and
          (7) the State will assist the Secretary in 
        determining the number of migratory children under 
        paragraph (1) of section 1133(a).
  (d) Priority for Services.--In providing services with funds 
received under this subpart, each recipient of such funds shall 
give priority to migratory children who are failing, or most at 
risk of failing, to meet the State's academic standards under 
section 1111(b)(1).
  (e) Continuation of Services.--Notwithstanding any other 
provision of this subpart--
          (1) a child who ceases to be a migratory child during 
        a school term shall be eligible for services until the 
        end of such term;
          (2) a child who is no longer a migratory child may 
        continue to receive services for one additional school 
        year, but only if comparable services are not available 
        through other programs; and
          (3) secondary school students who were eligible for 
        services in secondary school may continue to be served 
        through credit accrual programs until graduation.

SEC. 1135. SECRETARIAL APPROVAL; PEER REVIEW.

  The Secretary shall approve each State application that meets 
the requirements of this subpart, and may review any such 
application using a peer review process.

SEC. 1136. COMPREHENSIVE NEEDS ASSESSMENT AND SERVICE-DELIVERY PLAN; 
                    AUTHORIZED ACTIVITIES.

  (a) Comprehensive Plan.--
          (1) In general.--Each State that receives assistance 
        under this subpart shall ensure that the State and its 
        local operating agencies identify and address the 
        unique educational needs of migratory children in 
        accordance with a comprehensive State plan that--
                  (A) is integrated with other programs under 
                this Act or other Acts, as appropriate;
                  (B) may be submitted as a part of a 
                consolidated application under section 6302, 
                if--
                          (i) the unique needs of migratory 
                        children are specifically addressed in 
                        the comprehensive State plan;
                          (ii) the comprehensive State plan is 
                        developed in collaboration with parents 
                        of migratory children; and
                          (iii) the comprehensive State plan is 
                        not used to supplant State efforts 
                        regarding, or administrative funding 
                        for, this subpart;
                  (C) provides that migratory children will 
                have an opportunity to meet the same State 
                academic standards under section 1111(b)(1) 
                that all children are expected to meet;
                  (D) specifies measurable program goals and 
                outcomes;
                  (E) encompasses the full range of services 
                that are available for migratory children from 
                appropriate local, State, and Federal 
                educational programs;
                  (F) is the product of joint planning among 
                such local, State, and Federal programs, 
                including programs under subpart 1, early 
                childhood programs, and language instruction 
                educational programs under chapter A of subpart 
                4; and
                  (G) provides for the integration of services 
                available under this subpart with services 
                provided by such other programs.
          (2) Duration of the plan.--Each such comprehensive 
        State plan shall--
                  (A) remain in effect for the duration of the 
                State's participation under this subpart; and
                  (B) be periodically reviewed and revised by 
                the State, as necessary, to reflect changes in 
                the State's strategies and programs under this 
                subpart.
  (b) Authorized Activities.--
          (1) Flexibility.--In implementing the comprehensive 
        plan described in subsection (a), each State 
        educational agency, where applicable through its local 
        educational agencies, retains the flexibility to 
        determine the activities to be provided with funds made 
        available under this subpart, except that such funds 
        first shall be used to meet the identified needs of 
        migratory children that result from their migratory 
        lifestyle, and to permit these children to participate 
        effectively in school.
          (2) Unaddressed needs.--Funds provided under this 
        subpart shall be used to address the needs of migratory 
        children that are not addressed by services available 
        from other Federal or non-Federal programs, except that 
        migratory children who are eligible to receive services 
        under subpart 1 may receive those services through 
        funds provided under that subpart, or through funds 
        under this subpart that remain after the agency 
        addresses the needs described in paragraph (1).
          (3) Construction.--Nothing in this subpart shall be 
        construed to prohibit a local educational agency from 
        serving migratory children simultaneously with students 
        with similar educational needs in the same educational 
        settings, where appropriate.

SEC. 1137. BYPASS.

  The Secretary may use all or part of any State's allocation 
under this subpart to make arrangements with any public or 
private agency to carry out the purpose of this subpart in such 
State if the Secretary determines that--
          (1) the State is unable or unwilling to conduct 
        educational programs for migratory children;
          (2) such arrangements would result in more efficient 
        and economic administration of such programs; or
          (3) such arrangements would add substantially to the 
        educational achievement of such children.

SEC. 1138. COORDINATION OF MIGRATORY EDUCATION ACTIVITIES.

  (a) Improvement of Coordination.--
          (1) In general.--The Secretary, in consultation with 
        the States, may make grants to, or enter into contracts 
        with, State educational agencies, local educational 
        agencies, institutions of higher education, and other 
        public and private entities to improve the interstate 
        and intrastate coordination among such agencies' 
        educational programs, including through the 
        establishment or improvement of programs for credit 
        accrual and exchange, available to migratory students.
          (2) Duration.--Grants or contracts under this 
        subsection may be awarded for not more than 5 years.
  (b) Student Records.--
          (1) Assistance.--The Secretary shall assist States in 
        developing and maintaining an effective system for the 
        electronic transfer of student records and in 
        determining the number of migratory children in each 
        State.
          (2) Information system.--
                  (A) In general.--The Secretary, in 
                consultation with the States, shall ensure the 
                linkage of migratory student record systems for 
                the purpose of electronically exchanging, among 
                the States, health and educational information 
                regarding all migratory students. The Secretary 
                shall ensure such linkage occurs in a cost-
                effective manner, utilizing systems used by the 
                States prior to, or developed after, the date 
                of the enactment of this Act. The Secretary 
                shall determine the minimum data elements that 
                each State receiving funds under this subpart 
                shall collect and maintain. Such minimum data 
                elements may include--
                          (i) immunization records and other 
                        health information;
                          (ii) elementary and secondary 
                        academic history (including partial 
                        credit), credit accrual, and results 
                        from State assessments required under 
                        section 1111(b)(2);
                          (iii) other academic information 
                        essential to ensuring that migratory 
                        children achieve to the States's 
                        academic standards; and
                          (iv) eligibility for services under 
                        the Individuals with Disabilities 
                        Education Act.
                  (B) The Secretary shall consult with States 
                before updating the data elements that each 
                State receiving funds under this subpart shall 
                be required to collect for purposes of 
                electronic transfer of migratory student 
                information and the requirements that States 
                shall meet for immediate electronic access to 
                such information.
          (3) No cost for certain transfers.--A State 
        educational agency or local educational agency 
        receiving assistance under this subpart shall make 
        student records available to another State educational 
        agency or local educational agency that requests the 
        records at no cost to the requesting agency, if the 
        request is made in order to meet the needs of a 
        migratory child.
          (4) Report to congress.--
                  (A) In general.--Not later than April 30, 
                2016, the Secretary shall report to the 
                Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and 
                Pensions of the Senate and the Committee on 
                Education and the Workforce of the House of 
                Representatives the Secretary's findings and 
                recommendations regarding the maintenance and 
                transfer of health and educational information 
                for migratory students by the States.
                  (B) Required contents.--The Secretary shall 
                include in such report--
                          (i) a review of the progress of 
                        States in developing and linking 
                        electronic records transfer systems;
                          (ii) recommendations for maintaining 
                        such systems; and
                          (iii) recommendations for improving 
                        the continuity of services provided for 
                        migratory students.
  (c) Availability of Funds.--The Secretary shall reserve not 
more than $10,000,000 of the amount reserved under section 1132 
to carry out this section for each fiscal year.
  (d) Data Collection.--The Secretary shall direct the National 
Center for Education Statistics to collect data on migratory 
children.

SEC. 1139. DEFINITIONS.

  As used in this subpart:
          (1) Local operating agency.--The term ``local 
        operating agency'' means--
                  (A) a local educational agency to which a 
                State educational agency makes a subgrant under 
                this subpart;
                  (B) a public or private agency with which a 
                State educational agency or the Secretary makes 
                an arrangement to carry out a project under 
                this subpart; or
                  (C) a State educational agency, if the State 
                educational agency operates the State's 
                migratory education program or projects 
                directly.
          (2) Migratory child.--The term ``migratory child'' 
        means a child who is, or whose parent or spouse is, a 
        migratory agricultural worker, including a migratory 
        dairy worker, or a migratory fisher, and who, in the 
        preceding 36 months, in order to obtain, or accompany 
        such parent or spouse, in order to obtain, temporary or 
        seasonal employment in agricultural or fishing work--
                  (A) has moved from one school district to 
                another;
                  (B) in a State that is comprised of a single 
                school district, has moved from one 
                administrative area to another within such 
                district; or
                  (C) resides in a school district of more than 
                15,000 square miles, and migrates a distance of 
                20 miles or more to a temporary residence to 
                engage in a fishing activity.

Subpart 3--Prevention and Intervention Programs for Children and Youth 
               Who Are Neglected, Delinquent, or At-risk

SEC. 1141. PURPOSE AND PROGRAM AUTHORIZATION.

  (a) Purpose.--It is the purpose of this subpart--
          (1) to improve educational services for children and 
        youth in local and State institutions for neglected or 
        delinquent children and youth so that such children and 
        youth have the opportunity to meet the same State 
        academic standards that all children in the State are 
        expected to meet;
          (2) to provide such children and youth with the 
        services needed to make a successful transition from 
        institutionalization to further schooling or 
        employment; and
          (3) to prevent at-risk youth from dropping out of 
        school, and to provide dropouts, and children and youth 
        returning from correctional facilities or institutions 
        for neglected or delinquent children and youth, with a 
        support system to ensure their continued education.
  (b) Program Authorized.--From amounts appropriated under 
section 3(a)(1), the Secretary shall reserve 0.31 of one 
percent to carry out this subpart.
  (c) Grants Awarded.--From the amounts reserved under 
subsection (b) and not reserved under section 1004 and section 
1159, the Secretary shall make grants to State educational 
agencies that have plans submitted under section 1154 approved 
to enable such agencies to award subgrants to State agencies 
and local educational agencies to establish or improve programs 
of education for neglected, delinquent, or at-risk children and 
youth.

SEC. 1142. PAYMENTS FOR PROGRAMS UNDER THIS SUBPART.

  (a) Agency Subgrants.--Based on the allocation amount 
computed under section 1152, the Secretary shall allocate to 
each State educational agency an amount necessary to make 
subgrants to State agencies under chapter A.
  (b) Local Subgrants.--Each State shall retain, for the 
purpose of carrying out chapter B, funds generated throughout 
the State under subpart 1 of this part based on children and 
youth residing in local correctional facilities, or attending 
community day programs for delinquent children and youth.

                    CHAPTER A--STATE AGENCY PROGRAMS

SEC. 1151. ELIGIBILITY.

  A State agency is eligible for assistance under this chapter 
if such State agency is responsible for providing free public 
education for children and youth--
          (1) in institutions for neglected or delinquent 
        children and youth;
          (2) attending community day programs for neglected or 
        delinquent children and youth; or
          (3) in adult correctional institutions.

SEC. 1152. ALLOCATION OF FUNDS.

  (a) Subgrants to State Agencies.--
          (1) In general.--Each State agency described in 
        section 1151 (other than an agency in the Commonwealth 
        of Puerto Rico) is eligible to receive a subgrant under 
        this chapter, for each fiscal year, in an amount equal 
        to the product of--
                  (A) the number of neglected or delinquent 
                children and youth described in section 1151 
                who--
                          (i) are enrolled for at least 15 
                        hours per week in education programs in 
                        adult correctional institutions; and
                          (ii) are enrolled for at least 20 
                        hours per week--
                                  (I) in education programs in 
                                institutions for neglected or 
                                delinquent children and youth; 
                                or
                                  (II) in community day 
                                programs for neglected or 
                                delinquent children and youth; 
                                and
                  (B) 40 percent of the average per-pupil 
                expenditure in the State, except that the 
                amount determined under this subparagraph shall 
                not be less than 32 percent, nor more than 48 
                percent, of the average per-pupil expenditure 
                in the United States.
          (2) Special rule.--The number of neglected or 
        delinquent children and youth determined under 
        paragraph (1) shall--
                  (A) be determined by the State agency by a 
                deadline set by the Secretary, except that no 
                State agency shall be required to determine the 
                number of such children and youth on a specific 
                date set by the Secretary; and
                  (B) be adjusted, as the Secretary determines 
                is appropriate, to reflect the relative length 
                of such agency's annual programs.
  (b) Subgrants to State Agencies in Puerto Rico.--
          (1) In general.--For each fiscal year, the amount of 
        the subgrant which a State agency in the Commonwealth 
        of Puerto Rico shall be eligible to receive under this 
        chapter shall be the amount determined by multiplying 
        the number of children counted under subsection 
        (a)(1)(A) for the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico by the 
        product of--
                  (A) the percentage which the average per-
                pupil expenditure in the Commonwealth of Puerto 
                Rico is of the lowest average per-pupil 
                expenditure of any of the 50 States; and
                  (B) 32 percent of the average per-pupil 
                expenditure in the United States.
          (2) Minimum percentage.--The percentage in paragraph 
        (1)(A) shall not be less than 85 percent.
  (c) Ratable Reductions in Case of Insufficient 
Appropriations.--If the amount reserved for any fiscal year for 
subgrants under subsections (a) and (b) is insufficient to pay 
the full amount for which all State agencies are eligible under 
such subsections, the Secretary shall ratably reduce each such 
amount.

SEC. 1153. STATE REALLOCATION OF FUNDS.

  If a State educational agency determines that a State agency 
does not need the full amount of the subgrant for which such 
State agency is eligible under this chapter for any fiscal 
year, the State educational agency may reallocate the amount 
that will not be needed to other eligible State agencies that 
need additional funds to carry out the purpose of this chapter, 
in such amounts as the State educational agency shall 
determine.

SEC. 1154. STATE PLAN AND STATE AGENCY APPLICATIONS.

  (a) State Plan.--
          (1) In general.--Each State educational agency that 
        desires to receive a grant under this chapter shall 
        submit, for approval by the Secretary, a plan--
                  (A) for meeting the educational needs of 
                neglected, delinquent, and at-risk children and 
                youth;
                  (B) for assisting in the transition of 
                children and youth from correctional facilities 
                to locally operated programs; and
                  (C) that is integrated with other programs 
                under this Act or other Acts, as appropriate.
          (2) Contents.--Each such State plan shall--
                  (A) describe how the State will assess the 
                effectiveness of the program in improving the 
                academic, career, and technical skills of 
                children in the program;
                  (B) provide that, to the extent feasible, 
                such children will have the same opportunities 
                to achieve as such children would have if such 
                children were in the schools of local 
                educational agencies in the State;
                  (C) describe how the State will place a 
                priority for such children to obtain a regular 
                high school diploma, to the extent feasible; 
                and
                  (D) contain an assurance that the State 
                educational agency will--
                          (i) ensure that programs assisted 
                        under this chapter will be carried out 
                        in accordance with the State plan 
                        described in this subsection;
                          (ii) carry out the evaluation 
                        requirements of section 1171; and
                          (iii) ensure that the State agencies 
                        receiving subgrants under this chapter 
                        comply with all applicable statutory 
                        and regulatory requirements.
          (3) Duration of the plan.--Each such State plan 
        shall--
                  (A) remain in effect for the duration of the 
                State's participation under this chapter; and
                  (B) be periodically reviewed and revised by 
                the State, as necessary, to reflect changes in 
                the State's strategies and programs under this 
                chapter.
  (b) Secretarial Approval and Peer Review.--
          (1) Secretarial approval.--The Secretary shall 
        approve each State plan that meets the requirements of 
        this chapter.
          (2) Peer review.--The Secretary may review any State 
        plan with the assistance and advice of individuals with 
        relevant expertise.
  (c) State Agency Applications.--Any State agency that desires 
to receive funds to carry out a program under this chapter 
shall submit an application to the State educational agency 
that--
          (1) describes the procedures to be used, consistent 
        with the State plan under section 1111, to assess the 
        educational needs of the children to be served under 
        this chapter;
          (2) provide an assurance that in making services 
        available to children and youth in adult correctional 
        institutions, priority will be given to such children 
        and youth who are likely to complete incarceration 
        within a 2-year period;
          (3) describes the program, including a budget for the 
        first year of the program, with annual updates to be 
        provided to the State educational agency;
          (4) describes how the program will meet the goals and 
        objectives of the State plan;
          (5) describes how the State agency will consult with 
        experts and provide the necessary training for 
        appropriate staff, to ensure that the planning and 
        operation of institution-wide projects under section 
        1156 are of high quality;
          (6) describes how the programs will be coordinated 
        with other appropriate State and Federal programs, such 
        as programs under title I of Public Law 105-220, career 
        and technical education programs, State and local 
        dropout prevention programs, and special education 
        programs;
          (7) describes how the State agency will encourage 
        correctional facilities receiving funds under this 
        chapter to coordinate with local educational agencies 
        or alternative education programs attended by 
        incarcerated children and youth prior to and after 
        their incarceration to ensure that student assessments 
        and appropriate academic records are shared jointly 
        between the correctional facility and the local 
        educational agency or alternative education program;
          (8) describes how appropriate professional 
        development will be provided to teachers and other 
        staff;
          (9) designates an individual in each affected 
        correctional facility or institution for neglected or 
        delinquent children and youth to be responsible for 
        issues relating to the transition of such children and 
        youth from such facility or institution to locally 
        operated programs;
          (10) describes how the State agency will endeavor to 
        coordinate with businesses for training and mentoring 
        for participating children and youth;
          (11) provides an assurance that the State agency will 
        assist in locating alternative programs through which 
        students can continue their education if the students 
        are not returning to school after leaving the 
        correctional facility or institution for neglected or 
        delinquent children and youth;
          (12) provides assurances that the State agency will 
        work with parents to secure parents' assistance in 
        improving the educational achievement of their children 
        and youth, and preventing their children's and youth's 
        further involvement in delinquent activities;
          (13) provides an assurance that the State agency will 
        work with children and youth with disabilities in order 
        to meet an existing individualized education program 
        and an assurance that the agency will notify the 
        child's or youth's local school if the child or youth--
                  (A) is identified as in need of special 
                education services while the child or youth is 
                in the correctional facility or institution for 
                neglected or delinquent children and youth; and
                  (B) intends to return to the local school;
          (14) provides an assurance that the State agency will 
        work with children and youth who dropped out of school 
        before entering the correctional facility or 
        institution for neglected or delinquent children and 
        youth to encourage the children and youth to reenter 
        school and obtain a regular high school diploma once 
        the term of the incarceration is completed, or provide 
        the child or youth with the skills necessary to gain 
        employment, continue the education of the child or 
        youth, or obtain a regular high school diploma or its 
        recognized equivalent if the child or youth does not 
        intend to return to school;
          (15) provides an assurance that effective teachers 
        and other qualified staff are trained to work with 
        children and youth with disabilities and other students 
        with special needs taking into consideration the unique 
        needs of such students;
          (16) describes any additional services to be provided 
        to children and youth, such as career counseling, 
        distance education, and assistance in securing student 
        loans and grants; and
          (17) provides an assurance that the program under 
        this chapter will be coordinated with any programs 
        operated under the Juvenile Justice and Delinquency 
        Prevention Act of 1974 (42 U.S.C. 5601 et seq.) or 
        other comparable programs, if applicable.

SEC. 1155. USE OF FUNDS.

  (a) Uses.--
          (1) In general.--A State agency shall use funds 
        received under this chapter only for programs and 
        projects that--
                  (A) are consistent with the State plan under 
                section 1154(a); and
                  (B) concentrate on providing participants 
                with the knowledge and skills needed to make a 
                successful transition to secondary school 
                completion, career and technical education, 
                further education, or employment without the 
                need for remediation.
          (2) Programs and projects.--Such programs and 
        projects--
                  (A) may include the acquisition of equipment;
                  (B) shall be designed to support educational 
                services that--
                          (i) except for institution-wide 
                        projects under section 1156, are 
                        provided to children and youth 
                        identified by the State agency as 
                        failing, or most at-risk of failing, to 
                        meet the State's academic standards;
                          (ii) supplement and improve the 
                        quality of the educational services 
                        provided to such children and youth by 
                        the State agency; and
                          (iii) afford such children and youth 
                        an opportunity to meet State academic 
                        standards; and
                  (C) shall be carried out in a manner 
                consistent with section 1120A and part C (as 
                applied to programs and projects under this 
                chapter).
  (b) Supplement, Not Supplant.--A program under this chapter 
that supplements the number of hours of instruction students 
receive from State and local sources shall be considered to 
comply with the supplement, not supplant requirement of section 
1120A (as applied to this chapter) without regard to the 
subject areas in which instruction is given during those hours.

SEC. 1156. INSTITUTION-WIDE PROJECTS.

  A State agency that provides free public education for 
children and youth in an institution for neglected or 
delinquent children and youth (other than an adult correctional 
institution) or attending a community day program for such 
children and youth may use funds received under this chapter to 
serve all children in, and upgrade the entire educational 
effort of, that institution or program if the State agency has 
developed, and the State educational agency has approved, a 
comprehensive plan for that institution or program that--
          (1) provides for a comprehensive assessment of the 
        educational needs of all children and youth in the 
        institution or program serving juveniles;
          (2) provides for a comprehensive assessment of the 
        educational needs of youth aged 20 and younger in adult 
        facilities who are expected to complete incarceration 
        within a 2-year period;
          (3) describes the steps the State agency has taken, 
        or will take, to provide all children and youth under 
        age 21 with the opportunity to meet State academic 
        standards in order to improve the likelihood that the 
        children and youth will complete secondary school, 
        obtain a regular high school diploma or its recognized 
        equivalent, or find employment after leaving the 
        institution;
          (4) describes the instructional program, specialized 
        instructional support services, and procedures that 
        will be used to meet the needs described in paragraph 
        (1), including, to the extent feasible, the provision 
        of mentors for the children and youth described in 
        paragraph (1);
          (5) specifically describes how such funds will be 
        used;
          (6) describes the measures and procedures that will 
        be used to assess and improve student achievement;
          (7) describes how the agency has planned, and will 
        implement and evaluate, the institution-wide or 
        program-wide project in consultation with personnel 
        providing direct instructional services and support 
        services in institutions or community day programs for 
        neglected or delinquent children and youth, and with 
        personnel from the State educational agency; and
          (8) includes an assurance that the State agency has 
        provided for appropriate training for teachers and 
        other instructional and administrative personnel to 
        enable such teachers and personnel to carry out the 
        project effectively.

SEC. 1157. THREE-YEAR PROGRAMS OR PROJECTS.

  If a State agency operates a program or project under this 
chapter in which individual children or youth are likely to 
participate for more than one year, the State educational 
agency may approve the State agency's application for a 
subgrant under this chapter for a period of not more than 3 
years.

SEC. 1158. TRANSITION SERVICES.

  (a) Transition Services.--Each State agency shall reserve not 
less than 15 percent and not more than 30 percent of the amount 
such agency receives under this chapter for any fiscal year to 
support--
          (1) projects that facilitate the transition of 
        children and youth from State-operated institutions to 
        schools served by local educational agencies; or
          (2) the successful re-entry of youth offenders, who 
        are age 20 or younger and have received a regular high 
        school diploma or its recognized equivalent, into 
        postsecondary education, or career and technical 
        training programs, through strategies designed to 
        expose the youth to, and prepare the youth for, 
        postsecondary education, or career and technical 
        training programs, such as--
                  (A) preplacement programs that allow 
                adjudicated or incarcerated youth to audit or 
                attend courses on college, university, or 
                community college campuses, or through programs 
                provided in institutional settings;
                  (B) worksite schools, in which institutions 
                of higher education and private or public 
                employers partner to create programs to help 
                students make a successful transition to 
                postsecondary education and employment; and
                  (C) essential support services to ensure the 
                success of the youth, such as--
                          (i) personal, career and technical, 
                        and academic counseling;
                          (ii) placement services designed to 
                        place the youth in a university, 
                        college, or junior college program;
                          (iii) information concerning, and 
                        assistance in obtaining, available 
                        student financial aid;
                          (iv) counseling services; and
                          (v) job placement services.
  (b) Conduct of Projects.--A project supported under this 
section may be conducted directly by the State agency, or 
through a contract or other arrangement with one or more local 
educational agencies, other public agencies, or private 
organizations.
  (c) Rule of Construction.--Nothing in this section shall be 
construed to prohibit a school that receives funds under 
subsection (a) from serving neglected and delinquent children 
and youth simultaneously with students with similar educational 
needs, in the same educational settings where appropriate.

SEC. 1159. TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE.

  The Secretary shall reserve not more than 1 percent of the 
amount reserved under section 1141 to provide technical 
assistance to and support State agency programs assisted under 
this chapter.

                    CHAPTER B--LOCAL AGENCY PROGRAMS

SEC. 1161. PURPOSE.

  The purpose of this chapter is to support the operation of 
local educational agency programs that involve collaboration 
with locally operated correctional facilities--
          (1) to carry out high quality education programs to 
        prepare children and youth for secondary school 
        completion, training, employment, or further education;
          (2) to provide activities to facilitate the 
        transition of such children and youth from the 
        correctional program to further education or 
        employment; and
          (3) to operate programs in local schools for children 
        and youth returning from correctional facilities, and 
        programs which may serve at-risk children and youth.

SEC. 1162. PROGRAMS OPERATED BY LOCAL EDUCATIONAL AGENCIES.

  (a) Local Subgrants.--With funds made available under section 
1142(b), the State educational agency shall award subgrants to 
local educational agencies with high numbers or percentages of 
children and youth residing in locally operated (including 
county operated) correctional facilities for children and youth 
(including facilities involved in community day programs).
  (b) Special Rule.--A local educational agency that serves a 
school operated by a correctional facility is not required to 
operate a program of support for children and youth returning 
from such school to a school that is not operated by a 
correctional agency but served by such local educational 
agency, if more than 30 percent of the children and youth 
attending the school operated by the correctional facility will 
reside outside the boundaries served by the local educational 
agency after leaving such facility.
  (c) Notification.--A State educational agency shall notify 
local educational agencies within the State of the eligibility 
of such agencies to receive a subgrant under this chapter.
  (d) Transitional and Academic Services.--Transitional and 
supportive programs operated in local educational agencies 
under this chapter shall be designed primarily to meet the 
transitional and academic needs of students returning to local 
educational agencies or alternative education programs from 
correctional facilities. Services to students at-risk of 
dropping out of school shall not have a negative impact on 
meeting the transitional and academic needs of the students 
returning from correctional facilities.

SEC. 1163. LOCAL EDUCATIONAL AGENCY APPLICATIONS.

  Each local educational agency desiring assistance under this 
chapter shall submit an application to the State educational 
agency that contains such information as the State educational 
agency may require. Each such application shall include--
          (1) a description of the program to be assisted;
          (2) a description of formal agreements, regarding the 
        program to be assisted, between--
                  (A) the local educational agency; and
                  (B) correctional facilities and alternative 
                school programs serving children and youth 
                involved with the juvenile justice system;
          (3) as appropriate, a description of how 
        participating schools will coordinate with facilities 
        working with delinquent children and youth to ensure 
        that such children and youth are participating in an 
        education program comparable to one operating in the 
        local school such youth would attend;
          (4) a description of the program operated by 
        participating schools for children and youth returning 
        from correctional facilities and, as appropriate, the 
        types of services that such schools will provide such 
        children and youth and other at-risk children and 
        youth;
          (5) a description of the characteristics (including 
        learning difficulties, substance abuse problems, and 
        other needs) of the children and youth who will be 
        returning from correctional facilities and, as 
        appropriate, other at-risk children and youth expected 
        to be served by the program, and a description of how 
        the school will coordinate existing educational 
        programs to meet the unique educational needs of such 
        children and youth;
          (6) as appropriate, a description of how schools will 
        coordinate with existing social, health, and other 
        services to meet the needs of students returning from 
        correctional facilities and at-risk children or youth, 
        including prenatal health care and nutrition services 
        related to the health of the parent and the child or 
        youth, parenting and child development classes, child 
        care, targeted reentry and outreach programs, referrals 
        to community resources, and scheduling flexibility;
          (7) as appropriate, a description of any partnerships 
        with local businesses to develop training, curriculum-
        based youth entrepreneurship education, and mentoring 
        services for participating students;
          (8) as appropriate, a description of how the program 
        will involve parents in efforts to improve the 
        educational achievement of their children, assist in 
        dropout prevention activities, and prevent the 
        involvement of their children in delinquent activities;
          (9) a description of how the program under this 
        chapter will be coordinated with other Federal, State, 
        and local programs, such as programs under title I of 
        Public Law 105-220 and career and technical education 
        programs serving at-risk children and youth;
          (10) a description of how the program will be 
        coordinated with programs operated under the Juvenile 
        Justice and Delinquency Prevention Act of 1974 and 
        other comparable programs, if applicable;
          (11) as appropriate, a description of how schools 
        will work with probation officers to assist in meeting 
        the needs of children and youth returning from 
        correctional facilities;
          (12) a description of the efforts participating 
        schools will make to ensure correctional facilities 
        working with children and youth are aware of a child's 
        or youth's existing individualized education program; 
        and
          (13) as appropriate, a description of the steps 
        participating schools will take to find alternative 
        placements for children and youth interested in 
        continuing their education but unable to participate in 
        a traditional public school program.

SEC. 1164. USES OF FUNDS.

  (a) In General.--Funds provided to local educational agencies 
under this chapter may be used, as appropriate, for--
          (1) programs that serve children and youth returning 
        to local schools from correctional facilities, to 
        assist in the transition of such children and youth to 
        the school environment and help them remain in school 
        in order to complete their education;
          (2) dropout prevention programs which serve at-risk 
        children and youth;
          (3) the coordination of health and social services 
        for such individuals if there is a likelihood that the 
        provision of such services, including day care, drug 
        and alcohol counseling, and mental health services, 
        will improve the likelihood such individuals will 
        complete their education;
          (4) special programs to meet the unique academic 
        needs of participating children and youth, including 
        career and technical education, special education, 
        career counseling, curriculum-based youth 
        entrepreneurship education, and assistance in securing 
        student loans or grants for postsecondary education; 
        and
          (5) programs providing mentoring and peer mediation.
  (b) Contracts and Grants.--A local educational agency may use 
a grant received under this chapter to carry out the activities 
described under paragraphs (1) through (5) of subsection (a) 
directly or through grants, contracts, or cooperative 
agreements.

SEC. 1165. PROGRAM REQUIREMENTS FOR CORRECTIONAL FACILITIES RECEIVING 
                    FUNDS UNDER THIS SECTION.

  Each correctional facility entering into an agreement with a 
local educational agency under section 1163(2) to provide 
services to children and youth under this chapter shall--
          (1) where feasible, ensure that educational programs 
        in the correctional facility are coordinated with the 
        student's home school, particularly with respect to a 
        student with an individualized education program under 
        part B of the Individuals with Disabilities Education 
        Act;
          (2) if the child or youth is identified as in need of 
        special education services while in the correctional 
        facility, notify the local school of the child or youth 
        of such need;
          (3) where feasible, provide transition assistance to 
        help the child or youth stay in school, including 
        coordination of services for the family, counseling, 
        assistance in accessing drug and alcohol abuse 
        prevention programs, tutoring, and family counseling;
          (4) provide support programs that encourage children 
        and youth who have dropped out of school to re-enter 
        school and obtain a regular high school diploma once 
        their term at the correctional facility has been 
        completed, or provide such children and youth with the 
        skills necessary to gain employment or seek a regular 
        high school diploma or its recognized equivalent;
          (5) work to ensure that the correctional facility is 
        staffed with effective teachers and other qualified 
        staff who are trained to work with children and youth 
        with disabilities taking into consideration the unique 
        needs of such children and youth;
          (6) ensure that educational programs in the 
        correctional facility are related to assisting students 
        to meet the States's academic standards;
          (7) to the extent possible, use technology to assist 
        in coordinating educational programs between the 
        correctional facility and the community school;
          (8) where feasible, involve parents in efforts to 
        improve the educational achievement of their children 
        and prevent the further involvement of such children in 
        delinquent activities;
          (9) coordinate funds received under this chapter with 
        other local, State, and Federal funds available to 
        provide services to participating children and youth, 
        such as funds made available under title I of Public 
        Law 105-220, and career and technical education funds;
          (10) coordinate programs operated under this chapter 
        with activities funded under the Juvenile Justice and 
        Delinquency Prevention Act of 1974 and other comparable 
        programs, if applicable;
          (11) if appropriate, work with local businesses to 
        develop training, curriculum-based youth 
        entrepreneurship education, and mentoring programs for 
        children and youth; and
          (12) consult with the local educational agency for a 
        period jointly determined necessary by the correctional 
        facility and local educational agency upon discharge 
        from that facility to coordinate educational services 
        so as to minimize disruption to the child's or youth's 
        achievement.

SEC. 1166. ACCOUNTABILITY.

  The State educational agency--
          (1) may require correctional facilities or 
        institutions for neglected or delinquent children and 
        youth to demonstrate, after receiving assistance under 
        this chapter for 3 years, that there has been an 
        increase in the number of children and youth returning 
        to school, obtaining a regular high school diploma or 
        its recognized equivalent, or obtaining employment 
        after such children and youth are released; and
          (2) may reduce or terminate funding for projects 
        under this chapter if a local educational agency does 
        not show progress in the number of children and youth 
        obtaining a regular high school diploma or its 
        recognized equivalent.

                     CHAPTER C--GENERAL PROVISIONS

SEC. 1171. PROGRAM EVALUATIONS.

  (a) Scope of Evaluation.--Each State agency or local 
educational agency that conducts a program under chapter A or B 
shall evaluate the program, disaggregating data on 
participation by gender, race, ethnicity, and age, while 
protecting individual student privacy, not less than once every 
3 years, to determine the program's impact on the ability of 
participants--
          (1) to maintain and improve educational achievement;
          (2) to accrue school credits that meet State 
        requirements for grade promotion and high school 
        graduation;
          (3) to make the transition to a regular program or 
        other education program operated by a local educational 
        agency;
          (4) to complete high school (or high school 
        equivalency requirements) and obtain employment after 
        leaving the correctional facility or institution for 
        neglected or delinquent children and youth; and
          (5) as appropriate, to participate in postsecondary 
        education and job training programs.
  (b) Exception.--The disaggregation required under subsection 
(a) shall not be required in a case in which the number of 
students in a category is insufficient to yield statistically 
reliable information or the results would reveal personally 
identifiable information about an individual student.
  (c) Evaluation Measures.--In conducting each evaluation under 
subsection (a), a State agency or local educational agency 
shall use multiple and appropriate measures of student 
progress.
  (d) Evaluation Results.--Each State agency and local 
educational agency shall--
          (1) submit evaluation results to the State 
        educational agency and the Secretary; and
          (2) use the results of evaluations under this section 
        to plan and improve subsequent programs for 
        participating children and youth.

SEC. 1172. DEFINITIONS.

  In this subpart:
          (1) Adult correctional institution.--The term ``adult 
        correctional institution'' means a facility in which 
        persons (including persons under 21 years of age) are 
        confined as a result of a conviction for a criminal 
        offense.
          (2) At-risk.--The term ``at-risk'', when used with 
        respect to a child, youth, or student, means a school-
        aged individual who--
                  (A) is at-risk of academic failure; and
                  (B) has a drug or alcohol problem, is 
                pregnant or is a parent, has come into contact 
                with the juvenile justice system in the past, 
                is at least 1 year behind the expected grade 
                level for the age of the individual, is an 
                English learner, is a gang member, has dropped 
                out of school in the past, or has a high 
                absenteeism rate at school.
          (3) Community day program.--The term ``community day 
        program'' means a regular program of instruction 
        provided by a State agency at a community day school 
        operated specifically for neglected or delinquent 
        children and youth.
          (4) Institution for neglected or delinquent children 
        and youth.--The term ``institution for neglected or 
        delinquent children and youth'' means--
                  (A) a public or private residential facility, 
                other than a foster home, that is operated for 
                the care of children who have been committed to 
                the institution or voluntarily placed in the 
                institution under applicable State law, due to 
                abandonment, neglect, or death of their parents 
                or guardians; or
                  (B) a public or private residential facility 
                for the care of children who have been 
                adjudicated to be delinquent or in need of 
                supervision.

  Subpart 4--English Language Acquisition, Language Enhancement, and 
                          Academic Achievement

SEC. 1181. PURPOSES.

  The purposes of this subpart are--
          (1) to help ensure that English learners, including 
        immigrant children and youth, attain English 
        proficiency and develop high levels of academic 
        achievement in English;
          (2) to assist all English learners, including 
        immigrant children and youth, to achieve at high levels 
        so that those children can meet the same State academic 
        standards that all children are expected to meet, 
        consistent with section 1111(b)(1);
          (3) to assist State educational agencies, local 
        educational agencies, and schools in establishing, 
        implementing, and sustaining high-quality, flexible, 
        evidence-based language instruction educational 
        programs designed to assist in teaching English 
        learners, including immigrant children and youth;
          (4) to assist State educational agencies and local 
        educational agencies to develop and enhance their 
        capacity to provide high-quality, evidence-based 
        instructional programs designed to prepare English 
        learners, including immigrant children and youth, to 
        enter all-English instruction settings; and
          (5) to promote parental and community participation 
        in language instruction educational programs for the 
        parents and communities of English learners.

 CHAPTER A--GRANTS AND SUBGRANTS FOR ENGLISH LANGUAGE ACQUISITION AND 
                          LANGUAGE ENHANCEMENT

SEC. 1191. FORMULA GRANTS TO STATES.

  (a) In General.--In the case of each State educational agency 
having a plan approved by the Secretary for a fiscal year under 
section 1192, the Secretary shall reserve 4.6 percent of funds 
appropriated under section 3(a)(1) to make a grant for the year 
to the agency for the purposes specified in subsection (b). The 
grant shall consist of the allotment determined for the State 
educational agency under subsection (c).
  (b) Use of Funds.--
          (1) Subgrants to eligible entities.--The Secretary 
        may make a grant under subsection (a) only if the State 
        educational agency involved agrees to expend at least 
        95 percent of the State educational agency's allotment 
        under subsection (c) for a fiscal year--
                  (A) to award subgrants, from allocations 
                under section 1193, to eligible entities to 
                carry out the activities described in section 
                1194 (other than subsection (e)); and
                  (B) to award subgrants under section 
                1193(d)(1) to eligible entities that are 
                described in that section to carry out the 
                activities described in section 1194(e).
          (2) State activities.--Subject to paragraph (3), each 
        State educational agency receiving a grant under 
        subsection (a) may reserve not more than 5 percent of 
        the agency's allotment under subsection (c) to carry 
        out the following activities:
                  (A) Professional development activities, and 
                other activities, which may include assisting 
                personnel in--
                          (i) meeting State and local 
                        certification and licensing 
                        requirements for teaching English 
                        learners; and
                          (ii) improving teacher skills in 
                        meeting the diverse needs of English 
                        learners, including in how to implement 
                        evidence-based programs and curricula 
                        on teaching English learners.
                  (B) Planning, evaluation, administration, and 
                interagency coordination related to the 
                subgrants referred to in paragraph (1).
                  (C) Providing technical assistance and other 
                forms of assistance to eligible entities that 
                are receiving subgrants from a State 
                educational agency under this chapter, 
                including assistance in--
                          (i) identifying and implementing 
                        evidence-based language instruction 
                        educational programs and curricula for 
                        teaching English learners;
                          (ii) helping English learners meet 
                        the same State academic standards that 
                        all children are expected to meet;
                          (iii) identifying or developing, and 
                        implementing, measures of English 
                        proficiency; and
                          (iv) strengthening and increasing 
                        parent, family, and community 
                        engagement.
                  (D) Providing recognition, which may include 
                providing financial awards, to subgrantees that 
                have significantly improved the achievement and 
                progress of English learners in--
                          (i) reaching English language 
                        proficiency, based on the State's 
                        English language proficiency assessment 
                        under section 1111(b)(2)(D); and
                          (ii) meeting the State academic 
                        standards under section 1111(b)(1).
          (3) Administrative expenses.--From the amount 
        reserved under paragraph (2), a State educational 
        agency may use not more than 40 percent of such amount 
        or $175,000, whichever is greater, for the planning and 
        administrative costs of carrying out paragraphs (1) and 
        (2).
  (c) Reservations and Allotments.--
          (1) Reservations.--From the amount reserved under 
        section 1191(a) for each fiscal year, the Secretary 
        shall reserve--
                  (A) 0.5 percent of such amount for payments 
                to outlying areas, to be allotted in accordance 
                with their respective needs for assistance 
                under this chapter, as determined by the 
                Secretary, for activities, approved by the 
                Secretary, consistent with this chapter; and
                  (B) 6.5 percent of such amount for national 
                activities under sections 1211 and 1222, except 
                that not more than $2,000,000 of such amount 
                may be reserved for the National Clearinghouse 
                for English Language Acquisition and Language 
                Instruction Educational Programs described in 
                section 1222.
          (2) State allotments.--
                  (A) In general.--Except as provided in 
                subparagraph (B), from the amount reserved 
                under section 1191(a) for each fiscal year that 
                remains after making the reservations under 
                paragraph (1), the Secretary shall allot to 
                each State educational agency having a plan 
                approved under section 1192(c)--
                          (i) an amount that bears the same 
                        relationship to 80 percent of the 
                        remainder as the number of English 
                        learners in the State bears to the 
                        number of such children in all States, 
                        as determined by data available from 
                        the American Community Survey conducted 
                        by the Department of Commerce or State-
                        reported data; and
                          (ii) an amount that bears the same 
                        relationship to 20 percent of the 
                        remainder as the number of immigrant 
                        children and youth in the State bears 
                        to the number of such children and 
                        youth in all States, as determined 
                        based only on data available from the 
                        American Community Survey conducted by 
                        the Department of Commerce.
                  (B) Minimum allotments.--No State educational 
                agency shall receive an allotment under this 
                paragraph that is less than $500,000.
                  (C) Reallotment.--If any State educational 
                agency described in subparagraph (A) does not 
                submit a plan to the Secretary for a fiscal 
                year, or submits a plan (or any amendment to a 
                plan) that the Secretary, after reasonable 
                notice and opportunity for a hearing, 
                determines does not satisfy the requirements of 
                this chapter, the Secretary shall reallot any 
                portion of such allotment to the remaining 
                State educational agencies in accordance with 
                subparagraph (A).
                  (D) Special rule for puerto rico.--The total 
                amount allotted to Puerto Rico for any fiscal 
                year under subparagraph (A) shall not exceed 
                0.5 percent of the total amount allotted to all 
                States for that fiscal year.
          (3) Use of data for determinations.--In making State 
        allotments under paragraph (2) for each fiscal year, 
        the Secretary shall determine the number of English 
        learners in a State and in all States, using the most 
        accurate, up-to-date data, which shall be--
                  (A) data from the American Community Survey 
                conducted by the Department of Commerce, which 
                may be multiyear estimates;
                  (B) the number of students being assessed for 
                English language proficiency, based on the 
                State's English language proficiency assessment 
                under section 1111(b)(2)(D), which may be 
                multiyear estimates; or
                  (C) a combination of data available under 
                subparagraphs (A) and (B).

SEC. 1192. STATE EDUCATIONAL AGENCY PLANS.

  (a) Filing for Subgrants.--Each State educational agency 
desiring a grant under this chapter shall submit a plan to the 
Secretary at such time and in such manner as the Secretary may 
require.
  (b) Contents.--Each plan submitted under subsection (a) 
shall--
          (1) describe the process that the agency will use in 
        awarding subgrants to eligible entities under section 
        1193(d)(1);
          (2) provide an assurance that--
                  (A) the agency will ensure that eligible 
                entities receiving a subgrant under this 
                chapter comply with the requirement in section 
                1111(b)(2)(B)(x) to annually assess in English 
                learners who have been in the United States for 
                3 or more consecutive years;
                  (B) the agency will ensure that eligible 
                entities receiving a subgrant under this 
                chapter annually assess the English proficiency 
                of all English learners participating in a 
                program funded under this chapter, consistent 
                with section 1111(b)(2)(D);
                  (C) in awarding subgrants under section 1193, 
                the agency will address the needs of school 
                systems of all sizes and in all geographic 
                areas, including school systems with rural and 
                urban schools;
                  (D) subgrants to eligible entities under 
                section 1193(d)(1) will be of sufficient size 
                and scope to allow such entities to carry out 
                high-quality, evidence-based language 
                instruction educational programs for English 
                learners;
                  (E) the agency will require an eligible 
                entity receiving a subgrant under this chapter 
                to use the subgrant in ways that will build 
                such recipient's capacity to continue to offer 
                high-quality evidence-based language 
                instruction educational programs that assist 
                English learners in meeting State academic 
                standards;
                  (F) the agency will monitor the eligible 
                entity receiving a subgrant under this chapter 
                for compliance with applicable Federal fiscal 
                requirements; and
                  (G) the plan has been developed in 
                consultation with local educational agencies, 
                teachers, administrators of programs 
                implemented under this chapter, parents, and 
                other relevant stakeholders;
          (3) describe how the agency will coordinate its 
        programs and activities under this chapter with other 
        programs and activities under this Act and other Acts, 
        as appropriate;
          (4) describe how eligible entities in the State will 
        be given the flexibility to teach English learners--
                  (A) using a high-quality, evidence-based 
                language instruction curriculum for teaching 
                English learners; and
                  (B) in the manner the eligible entities 
                determine to be the most effective; and
          (5) describe how the agency will assist eligible 
        entities in increasing the number of English learners 
        who acquire English proficiency.
  (c) Approval.--The Secretary, after using a peer review 
process, shall approve a plan submitted under subsection (a) if 
the plan meets the requirements of this section.
  (d) Duration of Plan.--
          (1) In general.--Each plan submitted by a State 
        educational agency and approved under subsection (c) 
        shall--
                  (A) remain in effect for the duration of the 
                agency's participation under this chapter; and
                  (B) be periodically reviewed and revised by 
                the agency, as necessary, to reflect changes to 
                the agency's strategies and programs carried 
                out under this subpart.
          (2) Additional information.--
                  (A) Amendments.--If the State educational 
                agency amends the plan, the agency shall submit 
                such amendment to the Secretary.
                  (B) Approval.--The Secretary shall approve 
                such amendment to an approved plan, unless the 
                Secretary determines that the amendment will 
                result in the agency not meeting the 
                requirements, or fulfilling the purposes, of 
                this subpart.
  (e) Consolidated Plan.--A plan submitted under subsection (a) 
may be submitted as part of a consolidated plan under section 
6302.
  (f) Secretary Assistance.--The Secretary shall provide 
technical assistance, if requested by the State, in the 
development of English proficiency standards and assessments.

SEC. 1193. WITHIN-STATE ALLOCATIONS.

  (a) In General.--After making the reservation required under 
subsection (d)(1), each State educational agency receiving a 
grant under section 1191(c)(2) shall award subgrants for a 
fiscal year by allocating in a timely manner to each eligible 
entity in the State having a plan approved under section 1195 
an amount that bears the same relationship to the amount 
received under the grant and remaining after making such 
reservation as the population of English learners in schools 
served by the eligible entity bears to the population of 
English learners in schools served by all eligible entities in 
the State.
  (b) Limitation.--A State educational agency shall not award a 
subgrant from an allocation made under subsection (a) if the 
amount of such subgrant would be less than $10,000.
  (c) Reallocation.--Whenever a State educational agency 
determines that an amount from an allocation made to an 
eligible entity under subsection (a) for a fiscal year will not 
be used by the entity for the purpose for which the allocation 
was made, the agency shall, in accordance with such rules as it 
determines to be appropriate, reallocate such amount, 
consistent with such subsection, to other eligible entities in 
the State that the agency determines will use the amount to 
carry out that purpose.
  (d) Required Reservation.--A State educational agency 
receiving a grant under this chapter for a fiscal year--
          (1) shall reserve not more than 15 percent of the 
        agency's allotment under section 1191(c)(2) to award 
        subgrants to eligible entities in the State that have 
        experienced a significant increase, as compared to the 
        average of the 2 preceding fiscal years, in the 
        percentage or number of immigrant children and youth, 
        who have enrolled, during the fiscal year preceding the 
        fiscal year for which the subgrant is made, in public 
        and nonpublic elementary schools and secondary schools 
        in the geographic areas under the jurisdiction of, or 
        served by, such entities; and
          (2) in awarding subgrants under paragraph (1)--
                  (A) shall equally consider eligible entities 
                that satisfy the requirement of such paragraph 
                but have limited or no experience in serving 
                immigrant children and youth; and
                  (B) shall consider the quality of each local 
                plan under section 1195 and ensure that each 
                subgrant is of sufficient size and scope to 
                meet the purposes of this subpart.

SEC. 1194. SUBGRANTS TO ELIGIBLE ENTITIES.

  (a) Purposes of Subgrants.--A State educational agency may 
make a subgrant to an eligible entity from funds received by 
the agency under this chapter only if the entity agrees to 
expend the funds to improve the education of English learners, 
by assisting the children to learn English and meet State 
academic standards. In carrying out activities with such funds, 
the eligible entity shall use evidence-based approaches and 
methodologies for teaching English learners and immigrant 
children and youth for the following purposes:
          (1) Developing and implementing new language 
        instruction educational programs and academic content 
        instruction programs for English learners and immigrant 
        children and youth, including programs of early 
        childhood education, elementary school programs, and 
        secondary school programs.
          (2) Carrying out highly focused, innovative, locally 
        designed, evidence-based activities to expand or 
        enhance existing language instruction educational 
        programs and academic content instruction programs for 
        English learners and immigrant children and youth.
          (3) Implementing, within an individual school, 
        schoolwide programs for restructuring, reforming, and 
        upgrading all relevant programs, activities, and 
        operations relating to language instruction educational 
        programs and academic content instruction for English 
        learners and immigrant children and youth.
          (4) Implementing, within the entire jurisdiction of a 
        local educational agency, agencywide programs for 
        restructuring, reforming, and upgrading all relevant 
        programs, activities, and operations relating to 
        language instruction educational programs and academic 
        content instruction for English learners and immigrant 
        children and youth.
  (b) Administrative Expenses.--Each eligible entity receiving 
funds under section 1193(a) for a fiscal year shall use not 
more than 2 percent of such funds for the cost of administering 
this chapter.
  (c) Required Subgrantee Activities.--An eligible entity 
receiving funds under section 1193(a) shall use the funds--
          (1) to increase the English language proficiency of 
        English learners by providing high-quality, evidence-
        based language instruction educational programs that 
        meet the needs of English learners and have 
        demonstrated success in increasing--
                  (A) English language proficiency; and
                  (B) student academic achievement;
          (2) to provide high-quality, evidence-based 
        professional development to classroom teachers 
        (including teachers in classroom settings that are not 
        the settings of language instruction educational 
        programs), school leaders, administrators, and other 
        school or community-based organization personnel, that 
        is--
                  (A) designed to improve the instruction and 
                assessment of English learners;
                  (B) designed to enhance the ability of 
                teachers and school leaders to understand and 
                implement curricula, assessment practices and 
                measures, and instruction strategies for 
                English learners;
                  (C) evidence-based in increasing children's 
                English language proficiency or substantially 
                increasing the subject matter knowledge, 
                teaching knowledge, and teaching skills of 
                teachers; and
                  (D) of sufficient intensity and duration 
                (which shall not include activities such as 
                one-day or short-term workshops and 
                conferences) to have a positive and lasting 
                impact on the teachers' performance in the 
                classroom, except that this subparagraph shall 
                not apply to an activity that is one component 
                of a long-term, comprehensive professional 
                development plan established by a teacher and 
                the teacher's supervisor based on an assessment 
                of the needs of the teacher, the supervisor, 
                the students of the teacher, and any local 
                educational agency employing the teacher, as 
                appropriate; and
          (3) to provide and implement other evidence-based 
        activities and strategies that enhance or supplement 
        language instruction educational programs for English 
        learners, including parental and community engagement 
        activities and strategies that serve to coordinate and 
        align related programs.
  (d) Authorized Subgrantee Activities.--Subject to subsection 
(c), an eligible entity receiving funds under section 1193(a) 
may use the funds to achieve one of the purposes described in 
subsection (a) by undertaking one or more of the following 
activities:
          (1) Upgrading program objectives and effective 
        instruction strategies.
          (2) Improving the instruction program for English 
        learners by identifying, acquiring, and upgrading 
        curricula, instruction materials, educational software, 
        and assessment procedures.
          (3) Providing to English learners--
                  (A) tutorials and academic or career 
                education for English learners; and
                  (B) intensified instruction.
          (4) Developing and implementing elementary school or 
        secondary school language instruction educational 
        programs that are coordinated with other relevant 
        programs and services.
          (5) Improving the English language proficiency and 
        academic achievement of English learners.
          (6) Providing community participation programs, 
        family literacy services, and parent outreach and 
        training activities to English learners and their 
        families--
                  (A) to improve the English language skills of 
                English learners; and
                  (B) to assist parents in helping their 
                children to improve their academic achievement 
                and becoming active participants in the 
                education of their children.
          (7) Improving the instruction of English learners by 
        providing for--
                  (A) the acquisition or development of 
                educational technology or instructional 
                materials;
                  (B) access to, and participation in, 
                electronic networks for materials, training, 
                and communication; and
                  (C) incorporation of the resources described 
                in subparagraphs (A) and (B) into curricula and 
                programs, such as those funded under this 
                chapter.
          (8) Carrying out other activities that are consistent 
        with the purposes of this section.
  (e) Activities by Agencies Experiencing Substantial Increases 
in Immigrant Children and Youth.--
          (1) In general.--An eligible entity receiving funds 
        under section 1193(d)(1) shall use the funds to pay for 
        activities that provide enhanced instructional 
        opportunities for immigrant children and youth, which 
        may include--
                  (A) family literacy, parent outreach, and 
                training activities designed to assist parents 
                to become active participants in the education 
                of their children;
                  (B) support for personnel, including 
                paraprofessionals who have been specifically 
                trained, or are being trained, to provide 
                services to immigrant children and youth;
                  (C) provision of tutorials, mentoring, and 
                academic or career counseling for immigrant 
                children and youth;
                  (D) identification, development, and 
                acquisition of curricular materials, 
                educational software, and technologies to be 
                used in the program carried out with awarded 
                funds;
                  (E) basic instruction services that are 
                directly attributable to the presence in the 
                local educational agency involved of immigrant 
                children and youth, including the payment of 
                costs of providing additional classroom 
                supplies, costs of transportation, or such 
                other costs as are directly attributable to 
                such additional basic instruction services;
                  (F) other instruction services that are 
                designed to assist immigrant children and youth 
                to achieve in elementary schools and secondary 
                schools in the United States, such as programs 
                of introduction to the educational system and 
                civics education; and
                  (G) activities, coordinated with community-
                based organizations, institutions of higher 
                education, private sector entities, or other 
                entities with expertise in working with 
                immigrants, to assist parents of immigrant 
                children and youth by offering comprehensive 
                community services.
          (2) Duration of subgrants.--The duration of a 
        subgrant made by a State educational agency under 
        section 1193(d)(1) shall be determined by the agency in 
        its discretion.
  (f) Selection of Method of Instruction.--
          (1) In general.--To receive a subgrant from a State 
        educational agency under this chapter, an eligible 
        entity shall select one or more methods or forms of 
        instruction to be used in the programs and activities 
        undertaken by the entity to assist English learners to 
        attain English language proficiency and meet State 
        academic standards.
          (2) Consistency.--Such selection shall be consistent 
        with sections 1204 through 1206.
  (g) Supplement, Not Supplant.--Federal funds made available 
under this chapter shall be used so as to supplement the level 
of Federal, State, and local public funds that, in the absence 
of such availability, would have been expended for programs for 
English learners and immigrant children and youth and in no 
case to supplant such Federal, State, and local public funds.

SEC. 1195. LOCAL PLANS.

  (a) Filing for Subgrants.--Each eligible entity desiring a 
subgrant from the State educational agency under section 1193 
shall submit a plan to the State educational agency at such 
time, in such manner, and containing such information as the 
State educational agency may require.
  (b) Contents.--Each plan submitted under subsection (a) 
shall--
          (1) describe the evidence-based programs and 
        activities proposed to be developed, implemented, and 
        administered under the subgrant that will help English 
        learners increase their English language proficiency 
        and meet the State academic standards;
          (2) describe how the eligible entity will hold 
        elementary schools and secondary schools receiving 
        funds under this chapter accountable for annually 
        assessing the English language proficiency of all 
        children participating under this subpart, consistent 
        with section 1111(b);
          (3) describe how the eligible entity will promote 
        parent and community engagement in the education of 
        English learners;
          (4) contain an assurance that the eligible entity 
        consulted with teachers, researchers, school 
        administrators, parents and community members, public 
        or private organizations, and institutions of higher 
        education, in developing and implementing such plan;
          (5) describe how language instruction educational 
        programs carried out under the subgrant will ensure 
        that English learners being served by the programs 
        develop English language proficiency; and
          (6) contain assurances that--
                  (A) each local educational agency that is 
                included in the eligible entity is complying 
                with section 1112(g) prior to, and throughout, 
                each school year; and
                  (B) the eligible entity is not in violation 
                of any State law, including State 
                constitutional law, regarding the education of 
                English learners, consistent with sections 1205 
                and 1206.
  (c) Teacher English Fluency.--Each eligible entity receiving 
a subgrant under section 1193 shall include in its plan a 
certification that all teachers in any language instruction 
educational program for English learners that is, or will be, 
funded under this subpart are fluent in English and any other 
language used for instruction, including having written and 
oral communications skills.

                       CHAPTER B--ADMINISTRATION

SEC. 1201. REPORTING.

  (a) In General.--Each eligible entity that receives a 
subgrant from a State educational agency under chapter A shall 
provide such agency, at the conclusion of every second fiscal 
year during which the subgrant is received, with a report, in a 
form prescribed by the agency, on the activities conducted and 
students served under this subpart that includes--
          (1) a description of the programs and activities 
        conducted by the entity with funds received under 
        chapter A during the two immediately preceding fiscal 
        years, including how such programs and activities 
        supplemented programs funded primarily with State or 
        local funds;
          (2) a description of the progress made by English 
        learners in learning the English language and in 
        meeting State academic standards;
          (3) the number and percentage of English learners in 
        the programs and activities attaining English language 
        proficiency based on the State English language 
        proficiency standards established under section 
        1111(b)(1)(E) by the end of each school year, as 
        determined by the State's English language proficiency 
        assessment under section 1111(b)(2)(D);
          (4) the number of English learners who exit the 
        language instruction educational programs based on 
        their attainment of English language proficiency and 
        transitioned to classrooms not tailored for English 
        learners;
          (5) a description of the progress made by English 
        learners in meeting the State academic standards for 
        each of the 2 years after such children are no longer 
        receiving services under this subpart;
          (6) the number and percentage of English learners who 
        have not attained English language proficiency within 
        five years of initial classification as an English 
        learner and first enrollment in the local educational 
        agency; and
          (7) any such other information as the State 
        educational agency may require.
  (b) Use of Report.--A report provided by an eligible entity 
under subsection (a) shall be used by the entity and the State 
educational agency--
          (1) to determine the effectiveness of programs and 
        activities in assisting children who are English 
        learners--
                  (A) to attain English language proficiency; 
                and
                  (B) to make progress in meeting State 
                academic standards under section 1111(b)(1); 
                and
          (2) upon determining the effectiveness of programs 
        and activities based on the criteria in paragraph (1), 
        to decide how to improve programs.

SEC. 1202. ANNUAL REPORT.

  (a) States.--Based upon the reports provided to a State 
educational agency under section 1201, each such agency that 
receives a grant under this subpart shall prepare and submit 
annually to the Secretary a report on programs and activities 
carried out by the State educational agency under this subpart 
and the effectiveness of such programs and activities in 
improving the education provided to English learners.
  (b) Secretary.--Annually, the Secretary shall prepare and 
submit to the Committee on Education and the Workforce of the 
House of Representatives and the Committee on Health, 
Education, Labor, and Pensions of the Senate a report--
          (1) on programs and activities carried out to serve 
        English learners under this subpart, and the 
        effectiveness of such programs and activities in 
        improving the academic achievement and English language 
        proficiency of English learners;
          (2) on the types of language instruction educational 
        programs used by local educational agencies or eligible 
        entities receiving funding under this subpart to teach 
        English learners;
          (3) containing a critical synthesis of data reported 
        by eligible entities to States under section 1201(a);
          (4) containing a description of technical assistance 
        and other assistance provided by State educational 
        agencies under section 1191(b)(2)(C);
          (5) containing an estimate of the number of effective 
        teachers working in language instruction educational 
        programs and educating English learners, and an 
        estimate of the number of such teachers that will be 
        needed for the succeeding 5 fiscal years;
          (6) containing the number of programs or activities, 
        if any, that were terminated because the entities 
        carrying out the programs or activities were not able 
        to reach program goals;
          (7) containing the number of English learners served 
        by eligible entities receiving funding under this 
        subpart who were transitioned out of language 
        instruction educational programs funded under this 
        subpart into classrooms where instruction is not 
        tailored for English learners; and
          (8) containing other information gathered from other 
        reports submitted to the Secretary under this subpart 
        when applicable.

SEC. 1203. COORDINATION WITH RELATED PROGRAMS.

  In order to maximize Federal efforts aimed at serving the 
educational needs of English learners, the Secretary shall 
coordinate and ensure close cooperation with other entities 
carrying out programs serving language-minority and English 
learners that are administered by the Department and other 
agencies. The Secretary shall report to the Congress on 
parallel Federal programs in other agencies and departments.

SEC. 1204. RULES OF CONSTRUCTION.

  Nothing in this subpart shall be construed--
          (1) to prohibit a local educational agency from 
        serving English learners simultaneously with children 
        with similar educational needs, in the same educational 
        settings where appropriate;
          (2) to require a State or a local educational agency 
        to establish, continue, or eliminate any particular 
        type of instructional program for English learners; or
          (3) to limit the preservation or use of Native 
        American languages.

SEC. 1205. LEGAL AUTHORITY UNDER STATE LAW.

  Nothing in this subpart shall be construed to negate or 
supersede State law, or the legal authority under State law of 
any State agency, State entity, or State public official, over 
programs that are under the jurisdiction of the State agency, 
entity, or official.

SEC. 1206. CIVIL RIGHTS.

  Nothing in this subpart shall be construed in a manner 
inconsistent with any Federal law guaranteeing a civil right.

SEC. 1207. PROHIBITION.

  In carrying out this subpart, the Secretary shall neither 
mandate nor preclude the use of a particular curricular or 
pedagogical approach to educating English learners.

SEC. 1208. PROGRAMS FOR NATIVE AMERICANS AND PUERTO RICO.

  Notwithstanding any other provision of this subpart, programs 
authorized under this subpart that serve Native American 
(including Native American Pacific Islander) children and 
children in the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico may include 
programs of instruction, teacher training, curriculum 
development, evaluation, and assessment designed for Native 
American children learning and studying Native American 
languages and children of limited Spanish proficiency, except 
that an outcome of programs serving such children shall be 
increased English proficiency among such children.

                     CHAPTER C--NATIONAL ACTIVITIES

SEC. 1211. NATIONAL PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT PROJECT.

  The Secretary shall use funds made available under section 
1191(c)(1)(B) to award grants on a competitive basis, for a 
period of not more than 5 years, to institutions of higher 
education or public or private organizations with relevant 
experience and capacity (in consortia with State educational 
agencies or local educational agencies) to provide for 
professional development activities that will improve classroom 
instruction for English learners and assist educational 
personnel working with such children to meet high professional 
standards, including standards for certification and licensure 
as teachers who work in language instruction educational 
programs or serve English learners. Grants awarded under this 
subsection may be used--
          (1) for preservice, evidence-based professional 
        development programs that will assist local schools and 
        institutions of higher education to upgrade the 
        qualifications and skills of educational personnel who 
        are not certified or licensed, especially educational 
        paraprofessionals;
          (2) for the development of curricula or other 
        instructional strategies appropriate to the needs of 
        the consortia participants involved;
          (3) to support strategies that strengthen and 
        increase parent and community member engagement in the 
        education of English learners; and
          (4) to share and disseminate evidence-based practices 
        in the instruction of English learners and in 
        increasing their student achievement.

                     CHAPTER D--GENERAL PROVISIONS

SEC. 1221. DEFINITIONS.

  Except as otherwise provided, in this subpart:
          (1) Child.--The term ``child'' means any individual 
        aged 3 through 21.
          (2) Community-based organization.--The term 
        ``community-based organization'' means a private 
        nonprofit organization of demonstrated effectiveness, 
        Indian tribe, or tribally sanctioned educational 
        authority, that is representative of a community or 
        significant segments of a community and that provides 
        educational or related services to individuals in the 
        community. Such term includes a Native Hawaiian or 
        Native American Pacific Islander native language 
        educational organization.
          (3) Eligible entity.--The term ``eligible entity'' 
        means--
                  (A) one or more local educational agencies; 
                or
                  (B) one or more local educational agencies, 
                in consortia (or collaboration) with an 
                institution of higher education, community-
                based organization, or State educational 
                agency.
          (4) Immigrant children and youth.--The term 
        ``immigrant children and youth'' means individuals 
        who--
                  (A) are age 3 through 21;
                  (B) were not born in any State; and
                  (C) have not been attending one or more 
                schools in any one or more States for more than 
                3 full academic years.
          (5) Indian tribe.--The term ``Indian tribe'' means 
        any Indian tribe, band, nation, or other organized 
        group or community, including any Native village or 
        Regional Corporation or Village Corporation as defined 
        in or established pursuant to the Alaska Native Claims 
        Settlement Act, that is recognized as eligible for the 
        special programs and services provided by the United 
        States to Indians because of their status as Indians.
          (6) Language instruction educational program.--The 
        term ``language instruction educational program'' means 
        an instruction course--
                  (A) in which an English learner is placed for 
                the purpose of developing and attaining English 
                language proficiency, while meeting State 
                academic standards, as required by section 
                1111(b)(1); and
                  (B) that may make instructional use of both 
                English and a child's native language to enable 
                the child to develop and attain English 
                language proficiency, and may include the 
                participation of English language proficient 
                children if such course is designed to enable 
                all participating children to become proficient 
                in English and a second language.
          (7) Native language.--The term ``native language'', 
        when used with reference to English learner, means--
                  (A) the language normally used by such 
                individual; or
                  (B) in the case of a child or youth, the 
                language normally used by the parents of the 
                child or youth.
          (8) Paraprofessional.--The term ``paraprofessional'' 
        means an individual who is employed in a preschool, 
        elementary school, or secondary school under the 
        supervision of a certified or licensed teacher, 
        including individuals employed in language instruction 
        educational programs, special education, and migratory 
        education.
          (9) State.--The term ``State'' means each of the 50 
        States, the District of Columbia, and the Commonwealth 
        of Puerto Rico.

SEC. 1222. NATIONAL CLEARINGHOUSE.

  (a) In General.--The Secretary shall establish and support 
the operation of a National Clearinghouse for English Language 
Acquisition and Language Instruction Educational Programs, 
which shall collect, analyze, synthesize, and disseminate 
information about language instruction educational programs for 
English learners, and related programs. The National 
Clearinghouse shall--
          (1) be administered as an adjunct clearinghouse of 
        the Educational Resources Information Center 
        Clearinghouses system supported by the Institute of 
        Education Sciences;
          (2) coordinate activities with Federal data and 
        information clearinghouses and entities operating 
        Federal dissemination networks and systems;
          (3) develop a system for improving the operation and 
        effectiveness of federally funded language instruction 
        educational programs;
          (4) collect and disseminate information on--
                  (A) educational research and processes 
                related to the education of English learners; 
                and
                  (B) accountability systems that monitor the 
                academic progress of English learners in 
                language instruction educational programs, 
                including information on academic content and 
                English language proficiency assessments for 
                language instruction educational programs; and
          (5) publish, on an annual basis, a list of grant 
        recipients under this subpart.
  (b) Construction.--Nothing in this section shall authorize 
the Secretary to hire new personnel to execute subsection (a).

SEC. 1223. REGULATIONS.

  In developing regulations under this subpart, the Secretary 
shall consult with State educational agencies and local 
educational agencies, organizations representing English 
learners, and organizations representing teachers and other 
personnel involved in the education of English learners.

             Subpart 5--Rural Education Achievement Program

SEC. 1230. PURPOSE.

  It is the purpose of this subpart to address the unique needs 
of rural school districts that frequently--
          (1) lack the personnel and resources needed to 
        compete effectively for Federal competitive grants; and
          (2) receive formula grant allocations in amounts too 
        small to be effective in meeting their intended 
        purposes.

           CHAPTER A--SMALL, RURAL SCHOOL ACHIEVEMENT PROGRAM

SEC. 1231. GRANT PROGRAM AUTHORIZED.

  (a) In General.--From amounts appropriated under section 
3(a)(1) for a fiscal year, the Secretary shall reserve 0.6 of 
one percent to award grants to eligible local educational 
agencies to enable the local educational agencies to carry out 
activities authorized under any of the following provisions:
          (1) Part A of title I.
          (2) Title II.
          (3) Title III.
  (b) Allocation.--
          (1) In general.--Except as provided in paragraph (3), 
        the Secretary shall award a grant under subsection (a) 
        to a local educational agency eligible under subsection 
        (d) for a fiscal year in an amount equal to the initial 
        amount determined under paragraph (2) for the fiscal 
        year minus the total amount received by the agency in 
        subpart 2 of part A of title II for the preceding 
        fiscal year.
          (2) Determination of initial amount.--The initial 
        amount referred to in paragraph (1) is equal to $100 
        multiplied by the total number of students in excess of 
        50 students, in average daily attendance at the schools 
        served by the local educational agency, plus $20,000, 
        except that the initial amount may not exceed $60,000.
          (3) Ratable adjustment.--
                  (A) In general.--If the amount made available 
                to carry out this section for any fiscal year 
                is not sufficient to pay in full the amounts 
                that local educational agencies are eligible to 
                receive under paragraph (1) for such year, the 
                Secretary shall ratably reduce such amounts for 
                such year.
                  (B) Additional amounts.--If additional funds 
                become available for making payments under 
                paragraph (1) for such fiscal year, payments 
                that were reduced under subparagraph (A) shall 
                be increased on the same basis as such payments 
                were reduced.
  (c) Disbursement.--The Secretary shall disburse the funds 
awarded to a local educational agency under this section for a 
fiscal year not later than July 1 of that fiscal year.
  (d) Eligibility.--
          (1) In general.--A local educational agency shall be 
        eligible to use the applicable funding in accordance 
        with subsection (a) if--
                  (A)(i)(I) the total number of students in 
                average daily attendance at all of the schools 
                served by the local educational agency is fewer 
                than 600; or
                  (II) each county in which a school served by 
                the local educational agency is located has a 
                total population density of fewer than 10 
                persons per square mile; and
                  (ii) all of the schools served by the local 
                educational agency are designated with a school 
                locale code of 41, 42, or 43, as determined by 
                the Secretary; or
                  (B) the agency meets the criteria established 
                in subparagraph (A)(i) and the Secretary, in 
                accordance with paragraph (2), grants the local 
                educational agency's request to waive the 
                criteria described in subparagraph (A)(ii).
          (2) Certification.--The Secretary shall determine 
        whether to waive the criteria described in paragraph 
        (1)(A)(ii) based on a demonstration by the local 
        educational agency, and concurrence by the State 
        educational agency, that the local educational agency 
        is located in an area defined as rural by a 
        governmental agency of the State.
          (3) Hold harmless.--For a local educational agency 
        that is not eligible under this chapter but met the 
        eligibility requirements under this subsection as it 
        was in effect prior to the date of the enactment of the 
        Student Success Act, the agency shall receive--
                  (A) for fiscal year 2016, 75 percent of the 
                amount such agency received for fiscal year 
                2013;
                  (B) for fiscal year 2017, 50 percent of the 
                amount such agency received for fiscal year 
                2013; and
                  (C) for fiscal year 2018, 25 percent of the 
                amount such agency received for fiscal year 
                2013.
  (e) Special Eligibility Rule.--A local educational agency 
that receives a grant under this chapter for a fiscal year is 
not eligible to receive funds for such fiscal year under 
chapter B.

             CHAPTER B--RURAL AND LOW-INCOME SCHOOL PROGRAM

SEC. 1235. PROGRAM AUTHORIZED.

  (a) Grants to States.--
          (1) In general.--From amounts appropriated under 
        section 3(a)(1) for a fiscal year, the Secretary shall 
        reserve 0.6 of one percent for this chapter for a 
        fiscal year that are not reserved under subsection (c) 
        to award grants (from allotments made under paragraph 
        (2)) for the fiscal year to State educational agencies 
        that have applications submitted under section 1237 
        approved to enable the State educational agencies to 
        award grants to eligible local educational agencies for 
        local authorized activities described in section 
        1236(a).
          (2) Allotment.--From amounts described in paragraph 
        (1) for a fiscal year, the Secretary shall allot to 
        each State educational agency for that fiscal year an 
        amount that bears the same ratio to those amounts as 
        the number of students in average daily attendance 
        served by eligible local educational agencies in the 
        State for that fiscal year bears to the number of all 
        such students served by eligible local educational 
        agencies in all States for that fiscal year.
          (3) Specially qualified agencies.--
                  (A) Eligibility and application.--If a State 
                educational agency elects not to participate in 
                the program under this subpart or does not have 
                an application submitted under section 1237 
                approved, a specially qualified agency in such 
                State desiring a grant under this subpart may 
                submit an application under such section 
                directly to the Secretary to receive an award 
                under this subpart.
                  (B) Direct awards.--The Secretary may award, 
                on a competitive basis or by formula, the 
                amount the State educational agency is eligible 
                to receive under paragraph (2) directly to a 
                specially qualified agency in the State that 
                has submitted an application in accordance with 
                subparagraph (A) and obtained approval of the 
                application.
                  (C) Specially qualified agency defined.--In 
                this subpart, the term ``specially qualified 
                agency'' means an eligible local educational 
                agency served by a State educational agency 
                that does not participate in a program under 
                this subpart in a fiscal year, that may apply 
                directly to the Secretary for a grant in such 
                year under this subsection.
  (b) Local Awards.--
          (1) Eligibility.--A local educational agency shall be 
        eligible to receive a grant under this subpart if--
                  (A) 20 percent or more of the children ages 5 
                through 17 years served by the local 
                educational agency are from families with 
                incomes below the poverty line; and
                  (B) all of the schools served by the agency 
                are designated with a school locale code of 32, 
                33, 41, 42, 43, as determined by the Secretary.
          (2) Award basis.--A State educational agency shall 
        award grants to eligible local educational agencies--
                  (A) on a competitive basis;
                  (B) according to a formula based on the 
                number of students in average daily attendance 
                served by the eligible local educational 
                agencies or schools in the State; or
                  (C) according to an alternative formula, if, 
                prior to awarding the grants, the State 
                educational agency demonstrates, to the 
                satisfaction of the Secretary, that the 
                alternative formula enables the State 
                educational agency to allot the grant funds in 
                a manner that serves equal or greater 
                concentrations of children from families with 
                incomes below the poverty line, relative to the 
                concentrations that would be served if the 
                State educational agency used the formula 
                described in subparagraph (B).
  (c) Reservations.--From amounts reserved under section 
1235(a)(1) for this chapter for a fiscal year, the Secretary 
shall reserve--
          (1) one-half of 1 percent to make awards to 
        elementary schools or secondary schools operated or 
        supported by the Bureau of Indian Education, to carry 
        out the activities authorized under this chapter; and
          (2) one-half of 1 percent to make awards to the 
        outlying areas in accordance with their respective 
        needs, to carry out the activities authorized under 
        this chapter.

SEC. 1236. USES OF FUNDS.

  (a) Local Awards.--Grant funds awarded to local educational 
agencies under this chapter shall be used for activities 
authorized under any of the following:
          (1) Part A of title I.
          (2) Title II.
          (3) Title III.
  (b) Administrative Costs.--A State educational agency 
receiving a grant under this chapter may not use more than 5 
percent of the amount of the grant for State administrative 
costs and to provide technical assistance to eligible local 
educational agencies.

SEC. 1237. APPLICATIONS.

  (a) In General.--Each State educational agency or specially 
qualified agency desiring to receive a grant under this chapter 
shall submit an application to the Secretary at such time and 
in such manner as the Secretary may require.
  (b) Contents.--Each application submitted under subsection 
(a) shall include--
          (1) a description of how the State educational agency 
        or specially qualified agency will ensure eligible 
        local educational agencies receiving a grant under this 
        chapter will use such funds to help students meet the 
        State academic standards under section 1111(b)(1);
          (2) if the State educational agency or specially 
        qualified agency will competitively award grants to 
        eligible local educational agencies, as described in 
        section 1235(b)(2)(A), the application under the 
        section shall include--
                  (A) the methods and criteria the State 
                educational agency or specially qualified 
                agency will use for reviewing applications and 
                awarding funds to local educational agencies on 
                a competitive basis; and
                  (B) how the State educational agency or 
                specially qualified agency will notify eligible 
                local educational agencies of the grant 
                competition; and
          (3) a description of how the State educational agency 
        or specially qualified agency will provide technical 
        assistance to eligible local educational agencies to 
        help such agencies implement the activities described 
        in section 1236(a).

SEC. 1238. ACCOUNTABILITY.

  Each State educational agency or specially qualified agency 
that receives a grant under this chapter shall prepare and 
submit an annual report to the Secretary. The report shall 
describe--
          (1) the methods and criteria the State educational 
        agency or specially qualified agency used to award 
        grants to eligible local educational agencies, and to 
        provide assistance to schools, under this chapter;
          (2) how local educational agencies and schools used 
        funds provided under this chapter; and
          (3) the degree to which progress has been made toward 
        having all students meet the State academic standards 
        under section 1111(b)(1).

SEC. 1239. CHOICE OF PARTICIPATION.

  (a) In General.--If a local educational agency is eligible 
for funding under chapters A and B of this subpart, such local 
educational agency may receive funds under either chapter A or 
chapter B for a fiscal year, but may not receive funds under 
both chapters.
  (b) Notification.--A local educational agency eligible for 
both chapters A and B of this subpart shall notify the 
Secretary and the State educational agency under which of such 
chapters such local educational agency intends to receive funds 
for a fiscal year by a date that is established by the 
Secretary for the notification.

                     CHAPTER C--GENERAL PROVISIONS

SEC. 1241. ANNUAL AVERAGE DAILY ATTENDANCE DETERMINATION.

  (a) Census Determination.--Each local educational agency 
desiring a grant under section 1231 and each local educational 
agency or specially qualified agency desiring a grant under 
chapter B shall--
          (1) not later than December 1 of each year, conduct a 
        census to determine the number of students in average 
        daily attendance in kindergarten through grade 12 at 
        the schools served by the agency; and
          (2) not later than March 1 of each year, submit the 
        number described in paragraph (1) to the Secretary (and 
        to the State educational agency, in the case of a local 
        educational agency seeking a grant under subpart 2).
  (b) Penalty.--If the Secretary determines that a local 
educational agency or specially qualified agency has knowingly 
submitted false information under subsection (a) for the 
purpose of gaining additional funds under section 1231 or 
chapter B, then the agency shall be fined an amount equal to 
twice the difference between the amount the agency received 
under this section and the correct amount the agency would have 
received under section 1231 or chapter B if the agency had 
submitted accurate information under subsection (a).

SEC. 1242. SUPPLEMENT, NOT SUPPLANT.

  Funds made available under chapter A or chapter B shall be 
used to supplement, and not supplant, any other Federal, State, 
or local education funds.

SEC. 1243. RULE OF CONSTRUCTION.

  Nothing in this subpart shall be construed to prohibit a 
local educational agency that enters into cooperative 
arrangements with other local educational agencies for the 
provision of special, compensatory, or other education 
services, pursuant to State law or a written agreement, from 
entering into similar arrangements for the use, or the 
coordination of the use, of the funds made available under this 
subpart.

           [PART B--STUDENT READING SKILLS IMPROVEMENT GRANTS

                       [Subpart 1--Reading First

[SEC. 1201. PURPOSES.

   [The purposes of this subpart are as follows:
          [(1) To provide assistance to State educational 
        agencies and local educational agencies in establishing 
        reading programs for students in kindergarten through 
        grade 3 that are based on scientifically based reading 
        research, to ensure that every student can read at 
        grade level or above not later than the end of grade 3.
          [(2) To provide assistance to State educational 
        agencies and local educational agencies in preparing 
        teachers, including special education teachers, through 
        professional development and other support, so the 
        teachers can identify specific reading barriers facing 
        their students and so the teachers have the tools to 
        effectively help their students learn to read.
          [(3) To provide assistance to State educational 
        agencies and local educational agencies in selecting or 
        administering screening, diagnostic, and classroom-
        based instructional reading assessments.
          [(4) To provide assistance to State educational 
        agencies and local educational agencies in selecting or 
        developing effective instructional materials (including 
        classroom-based materials to assist teachers in 
        implementing the essential components of reading 
        instruction), programs, learning systems, and 
        strategies to implement methods that have been proven 
        to prevent or remediate reading failure within a State.
          [(5) To strengthen coordination among schools, early 
        literacy programs, and family literacy programs to 
        improve reading achievement for all children.

[SEC. 1202. FORMULA GRANTS TO STATE EDUCATIONAL AGENCIES.

  [(a) In General.--
          [(1) Authorization to make grants.--In the case of 
        each State educational agency that in accordance with 
        section 1203 submits to the Secretary an application 
        for a 6-year period, the Secretary, from amounts 
        appropriated under section 1002(b)(1) and subject to 
        the application's approval, shall make a grant to the 
        State educational agency for the uses specified in 
        subsections (c) and (d). For each fiscal year, the 
        funds provided under the grant shall equal the 
        allotment determined for the State educational agency 
        under subsection (b).
          [(2) Duration of grants.--Subject to subsection 
        (e)(3), a grant under this section shall be awarded for 
        a period of not more than 6 years.
  [(b) Determination of Amount of Allotments.--
          [(1) Reservations from appropriations.--From the 
        total amount made available to carry out this subpart 
        for a fiscal year, the Secretary--
                  [(A) shall reserve one-half of 1 percent for 
                allotments for the United States Virgin 
                Islands, Guam, American Samoa, and the 
                Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, 
                to be distributed among these outlying areas on 
                the basis of their relative need, as determined 
                by the Secretary in accordance with the 
                purposes of this subpart;
                  [(B) shall reserve one-half of 1 percent for 
                the Secretary of the Interior for programs 
                under this subpart in schools operated or 
                funded by the Bureau of Indian Affairs;
                  [(C) may reserve not more than 2\1/2\ percent 
                or $25,000,000, whichever is less, to carry out 
                section 1205 (relating to external evaluation) 
                and section 1206 (relating to national 
                activities);
                  [(D) shall reserve $5,000,000 to carry out 
                sections 1207 and 1224 (relating to information 
                dissemination); and
                  [(E) for any fiscal year, beginning with 
                fiscal year 2004, for which the amount 
                appropriated to carry out this subpart exceeds 
                the amount appropriated for fiscal year 2003, 
                shall reserve, to carry out section 1204, the 
                lesser of--
                          [(i) $90,000,000; or
                          [(ii) 10 percent of such excess 
                        amount.
          [(2) State allotments.--In accordance with paragraph 
        (3), the Secretary shall allot among each of the States 
        the total amount made available to carry out this 
        subpart for any fiscal year and not reserved under 
        paragraph (1).
          [(3) Determination of state allotment amounts.--
                  [(A) In general.--Subject to subparagraph 
                (B), the Secretary shall allot the amount made 
                available under paragraph (2) for a fiscal year 
                among the States in proportion to the number of 
                children, aged 5 to 17, who reside within the 
                State and are from families with incomes below 
                the poverty line for the most recent fiscal 
                year for which satisfactory data are available, 
                compared to the number of such individuals who 
                reside in all such States for that fiscal year.
                  [(B) Exceptions.--
                          [(i) Minimum grant amount.--Subject 
                        to clause (ii), no State receiving an 
                        allotment under subparagraph (A) may 
                        receive less than one-fourth of 1 
                        percent of the total amount allotted 
                        under such subparagraph.
                          [(ii) Puerto rico.--The percentage of 
                        the amount allotted under subparagraph 
                        (A) that is allotted to the 
                        Commonwealth of Puerto Rico for a 
                        fiscal year may not exceed the 
                        percentage that was received by the 
                        Commonwealth of Puerto Rico of the 
                        funds allocated to all States under 
                        subpart 2 of part A for the preceding 
                        fiscal year.
          [(4) Distribution of subgrants.--The Secretary may 
        make a grant to a State educational agency only if the 
        State educational agency agrees to expend at least 80 
        percent of the amount of the funds provided under the 
        grant for the purpose of making, in accordance with 
        subsection (c), competitive subgrants to eligible local 
        educational agencies.
          [(5) Reallotment.--If a State educational agency 
        described in paragraph (2) does not apply for an 
        allotment under this section for any fiscal year, or if 
        the State educational agency's application is not 
        approved, the Secretary shall reallot such amount to 
        the remaining State educational agencies in accordance 
        with paragraph (3).
          [(6) Definition of state.--For purposes of this 
        subsection, the term ``State'' means each of the 50 
        States, the District of Columbia, and the Commonwealth 
        of Puerto Rico.
  [(c) Subgrants to Local Educational Agencies.--
          [(1) Authorization to make subgrants.--In accordance 
        with paragraph (2), a State educational agency that 
        receives a grant under this section shall make 
        competitive subgrants to eligible local educational 
        agencies.
          [(2) Allocation.--
                  [(A) Minimum subgrant amount.--In making 
                subgrants under paragraph (1), a State 
                educational agency shall allocate to each 
                eligible local educational agency that receives 
                such a subgrant, at a minimum, an amount that 
                bears the same relation to the funds made 
                available under subsection (b)(4) as the amount 
                the eligible local educational agency received 
                under part A for the preceding fiscal year 
                bears to the amount all the local educational 
                agencies in the State received under part A for 
                the preceding fiscal year.
                  [(B) Priority.--In making subgrants under 
                paragraph (1), a State educational agency shall 
                give priority to eligible local educational 
                agencies in which at least--
                          [(i) 15 percent of the children 
                        served by the eligible local 
                        educational agency are from families 
                        with incomes below the poverty line; or
                          [(ii) 6,500 children served by the 
                        eligible local educational agency are 
                        from families with incomes below the 
                        poverty line.
          [(3) Notice.--A State educational agency receiving a 
        grant under this section shall provide notice to all 
        eligible local educational agencies in the State of the 
        availability of competitive subgrants under this 
        subsection and of the requirements for applying for the 
        subgrants.
          [(4) Local application.--To be eligible to receive a 
        subgrant under this subsection, an eligible local 
        educational agency shall submit an application to the 
        State educational agency at such time, in such manner, 
        and containing such information as the State 
        educational agency may reasonably require.
          [(5) State requirement.--In distributing subgrant 
        funds to eligible local educational agencies under this 
        subsection, a State educational agency shall--
                  [(A) provide funds in sufficient size and 
                scope to enable the eligible local educational 
                agencies to improve reading instruction; and
                  [(B) provide the funds in amounts related to 
                the number or percentage of students in 
                kindergarten through grade 3 who are reading 
                below grade level.
          [(6) Limitation to certain schools.--In distributing 
        subgrant funds under this subsection, an eligible local 
        educational agency shall provide funds only to schools 
        that both--
                  [(A) are among the schools served by that 
                eligible local educational agency with the 
                highest percentages or numbers of students in 
                kindergarten through grade 3 reading below 
                grade level, based on the most currently 
                available data; and
                  [(B)(i) are identified for school improvement 
                under section 1116(b); or
                  [(ii) have the highest percentages or numbers 
                of children counted under section 1124(c).
          [(7) Local uses of funds.--
                  [(A) Required uses.--Subject to paragraph 
                (8), an eligible local educational agency that 
                receives a subgrant under this subsection shall 
                use the funds provided under the subgrant to 
                carry out the following activities:
                          [(i) Selecting and administering 
                        screening, diagnostic, and classroom-
                        based instructional reading 
                        assessments.
                          [(ii) Selecting and implementing a 
                        learning system or program of reading 
                        instruction based on scientifically 
                        based reading research that--
                                  [(I) includes the essential 
                                components of reading 
                                instruction; and
                                  [(II) provides such 
                                instruction to the children in 
                                kindergarten through grade 3 in 
                                the schools served by the 
                                eligible local educational 
                                agency, including children 
                                who--
                                          [(aa) may have 
                                        reading difficulties;
                                          [(bb) are at risk of 
                                        being referred to 
                                        special education based 
                                        on these difficulties;
                                          [(cc) have been 
                                        evaluated under section 
                                        614 of the Individuals 
                                        with Disabilities 
                                        Education Act but, in 
                                        accordance with section 
                                        614(b)(5) of that Act, 
                                        have not been 
                                        identified as being a 
                                        child with a disability 
                                        (as defined in section 
                                        602 of that Act);
                                          [(dd) are being 
                                        served under such Act 
                                        primarily due to being 
                                        identified as being a 
                                        child with a specific 
                                        learning disability (as 
                                        defined in section 602 
                                        of that Act) related to 
                                        reading;
                                          [(ee) are deficient 
                                        in the essential 
                                        components of reading 
                                        skills, as listed in 
                                        subparagraphs (A) 
                                        through (E) of section 
                                        1208(3); or
                                          [(ff) are identified 
                                        as having limited 
                                        English proficiency.
                          [(iii) Procuring and implementing 
                        instructional materials, including 
                        education technology such as software 
                        and other digital curricula, that are 
                        based on scientifically based reading 
                        research.
                          [(iv) Providing professional 
                        development for teachers of 
                        kindergarten through grade 3, and 
                        special education teachers of 
                        kindergarten through grade 12, that--
                                  [(I) will prepare these 
                                teachers in all of the 
                                essential components of reading 
                                instruction;
                                  [(II) shall include--
                                          [(aa) information on 
                                        instructional 
                                        materials, programs, 
                                        strategies, and 
                                        approaches based on 
                                        scientifically based 
                                        reading research, 
                                        including early 
                                        intervention, classroom 
                                        reading materials, and 
                                        remedial programs and 
                                        approaches; and
                                          [(bb) instruction in 
                                        the use of screening, 
                                        diagnostic, and 
                                        classroom-based 
                                        instructional reading 
                                        assessments and other 
                                        procedures that 
                                        effectively identify 
                                        students who may be at 
                                        risk for reading 
                                        failure or who are 
                                        having difficulty 
                                        reading;
                                  [(III) shall be provided by 
                                eligible professional 
                                development providers; and
                                  [(IV) will assist teachers in 
                                becoming highly qualified in 
                                reading instruction in 
                                accordance with the 
                                requirements of section 1119.
                          [(v) Collecting and summarizing 
                        data--
                                  [(I) to document the 
                                effectiveness of activities 
                                carried out under this subpart 
                                in individual schools and in 
                                the local educational agency as 
                                a whole; and
                                  [(II) to stimulate and 
                                accelerate improvement by 
                                identifying the schools that 
                                produce significant gains in 
                                reading achievement.
                          [(vi) Reporting data for all students 
                        and categories of students described in 
                        section 1111(b)(2)(C)(v)(II).
                          [(vii) Promoting reading and library 
                        programs that provide access to 
                        engaging reading material, including 
                        coordination with programs funded 
                        through grants received under subpart 
                        4, where applicable.
                  [(B) Additional uses.--Subject to paragraph 
                (8), an eligible local educational agency that 
                receives a subgrant under this subsection may 
                use the funds provided under the subgrant to 
                carry out the following activities:
                          [(i) Humanities-based family literacy 
                        programs (which may be referred to as 
                        ``Prime Time Family Reading Time'') 
                        that bond families around the acts of 
                        reading and using public libraries.
                          [(ii) Providing training in the 
                        essential components of reading 
                        instruction to a parent or other 
                        individual who volunteers to be a 
                        student's reading tutor, to enable such 
                        parent or individual to support 
                        instructional practices that are based 
                        on scientifically based reading 
                        research and are being used by the 
                        student's teacher.
                          [(iii) Assisting parents, through the 
                        use of materials and reading programs, 
                        strategies, and approaches (including 
                        family literacy services) that are 
                        based on scientifically based reading 
                        research, to encourage reading and 
                        support their child's reading 
                        development.
          [(8) Local planning and administration.--An eligible 
        local educational agency that receives a subgrant under 
        this subsection may use not more than 3.5 percent of 
        the funds provided under the subgrant for planning and 
        administration.
  [(d) State Uses of Funds.--
          [(1) In general.--A State educational agency that 
        receives a grant under this section may expend not more 
        than a total of 20 percent of the grant funds to carry 
        out the activities described in paragraphs (3), (4), 
        and (5).
          [(2) Priority.--A State educational agency shall give 
        priority to carrying out the activities described in 
        paragraphs (3), (4), and (5) for schools described in 
        subsection (c)(6).
          [(3) Professional inservice and preservice 
        development and review.--A State educational agency may 
        expend not more than 65 percent of the amount of the 
        funds made available under paragraph (1)--
                  [(A) to develop and implement a program of 
                professional development for teachers, 
                including special education teachers, of 
                kindergarten through grade 3 that--
                          [(i) will prepare these teachers in 
                        all the essential components of reading 
                        instruction;
                          [(ii) shall include--
                                  [(I) information on 
                                instructional materials, 
                                programs, strategies, and 
                                approaches based on 
                                scientifically based reading 
                                research, including early 
                                intervention and reading 
                                remediation materials, 
                                programs, and approaches; and
                                  [(II) instruction in the use 
                                of screening, diagnostic, and 
                                classroom-based instructional 
                                reading assessments and other 
                                scientifically based procedures 
                                that effectively identify 
                                students who may be at risk for 
                                reading failure or who are 
                                having difficulty reading; and
                          [(iii) shall be provided by eligible 
                        professional development providers;
                  [(B) to strengthen and enhance preservice 
                courses for students preparing, at all public 
                institutions of higher education in the State, 
                to teach kindergarten through grade 3 by--
                          [(i) reviewing such courses to 
                        determine whether the courses' content 
                        is consistent with the findings of the 
                        most current scientifically based 
                        reading research, including findings on 
                        the essential components of reading 
                        instruction;
                          [(ii) following up such reviews with 
                        recommendations to ensure that such 
                        institutions offer courses that meet 
                        the highest standards; and
                          [(iii) preparing a report on the 
                        results of such reviews, submitting the 
                        report to the reading and literacy 
                        partnership for the State established 
                        under section 1203(d), and making the 
                        report available for public review by 
                        means of the Internet; and
                  [(C) to make recommendations on how the State 
                licensure and certification standards in the 
                area of reading might be improved.
          [(4) Technical assistance for local educational 
        agencies and schools.--A State educational agency may 
        expend not more than 25 percent of the amount of the 
        funds made available under paragraph (1) for one or 
        more of the following:
                  [(A) Assisting local educational agencies in 
                accomplishing the tasks required to design and 
                implement a program under this subpart, 
                including--
                          [(i) selecting and implementing a 
                        program or programs of reading 
                        instruction based on scientifically 
                        based reading research;
                          [(ii) selecting screening, 
                        diagnostic, and classroom-based 
                        instructional reading assessments; and
                          [(iii) identifying eligible 
                        professional development providers to 
                        help prepare reading teachers to teach 
                        students using the programs and 
                        assessments described in clauses (i) 
                        and (ii).
                  [(B) Providing expanded opportunities to 
                students in kindergarten through grade 3 who 
                are served by eligible local educational 
                agencies for receiving reading assistance from 
                alternative providers that includes--
                          [(i) screening, diagnostic, and 
                        classroom-based instructional reading 
                        assessments; and
                          [(ii) as need is indicated by the 
                        assessments under clause (i), 
                        instruction based on scientifically 
                        based reading research that includes 
                        the essential components of reading 
                        instruction.
          [(5) Planning, administration, and reporting.--
                  [(A) Expenditure of funds.--A State 
                educational agency may expend not more than 10 
                percent of the amount of funds made available 
                under paragraph (1) for the activities 
                described in this paragraph.
                  [(B) Planning and administration.--A State 
                educational agency that receives a grant under 
                this section may expend funds made available 
                under subparagraph (A) for planning and 
                administration relating to the State uses of 
                funds authorized under this subpart, including 
                the following:
                          [(i) Administering the distribution 
                        of competitive subgrants to eligible 
                        local educational agencies under 
                        subsection (c) and section 1204(d).
                          [(ii) Assessing and evaluating, on a 
                        regular basis, eligible local 
                        educational agency activities assisted 
                        under this subpart, with respect to 
                        whether they have been effective in 
                        increasing the number of children in 
                        grades 1, 2, and 3 served under this 
                        subpart who can read at or above grade 
                        level.
                  [(C) Annual reporting.--
                          [(i) In general.--A State educational 
                        agency that receives a grant under this 
                        section shall expend funds made 
                        available under subparagraph (A) to 
                        provide the Secretary annually with a 
                        report on the implementation of this 
                        subpart.
                          [(ii) Information included.--Each 
                        report under this subparagraph shall 
                        include information on the following:
                                  [(I) Evidence that the State 
                                educational agency is 
                                fulfilling its obligations 
                                under this subpart.
                                  [(II) Specific identification 
                                of those schools and local 
                                educational agencies that 
                                report the largest gains in 
                                reading achievement.
                                  [(III) The progress the State 
                                educational agency and local 
                                educational agencies within the 
                                State are making in reducing 
                                the number of students served 
                                under this subpart in grades 1, 
                                2, and 3 who are reading below 
                                grade level, as demonstrated by 
                                such information as teacher 
                                reports and school evaluations 
                                of mastery of the essential 
                                components of reading 
                                instruction.
                                  [(IV) Evidence on whether the 
                                State educational agency and 
                                local educational agencies 
                                within the State have 
                                significantly increased the 
                                number of students reading at 
                                grade level or above, 
                                significantly increased the 
                                percentages of students 
                                described in section 
                                1111(b)(2)(C)(v)(II) who are 
                                reading at grade level or 
                                above, and successfully 
                                implemented this subpart.
                          [(iii) Privacy protection.--Data in 
                        the report shall be reported in a 
                        manner that protects the privacy of 
                        individuals.
                          [(iv) Contract.--To the extent 
                        practicable, a State educational agency 
                        shall enter into a contract with an 
                        entity that conducts scientifically 
                        based reading research, under which 
                        contract the entity will assist the 
                        State educational agency in producing 
                        the reports required to be submitted 
                        under this subparagraph.
  [(e) Review.--
          [(1) Progress report.--
                  [(A) Submission.--Not later than 60 days 
                after the termination of the third year of the 
                grant period, each State educational agency 
                receiving a grant under this section shall 
                submit a progress report to the Secretary.
                  [(B) Information included.--The progress 
                report shall include information on the 
                progress the State educational agency and local 
                educational agencies within the State are 
                making in reducing the number of students 
                served under this subpart in grades 1, 2, and 3 
                who are reading below grade level (as 
                demonstrated by such information as teacher 
                reports and school evaluations of mastery of 
                the essential components of reading 
                instruction). The report shall also include 
                evidence from the State educational agency and 
                local educational agencies within the State 
                that the State educational agency and the local 
                educational agencies have significantly 
                increased the number of students reading at 
                grade level or above, significantly increased 
                the percentages of students described in 
                section 1111(b)(2)(C)(v)(II) who are reading at 
                grade level or above, and successfully 
                implemented this subpart.
          [(2) Peer review.--The progress report described in 
        paragraph (1) shall be reviewed by the peer review 
        panel convened under section 1203(c)(2).
          [(3) Consequences of insufficient progress.--After 
        submission of the progress report described in 
        paragraph (1), if the Secretary determines that the 
        State educational agency is not making significant 
        progress in meeting the purposes of this subpart, the 
        Secretary may withhold from the State educational 
        agency, in whole or in part, further payments under 
        this section in accordance with section 455 of the 
        General Education Provisions Act or take such other 
        action authorized by law as the Secretary determines 
        necessary, including providing technical assistance 
        upon request of the State educational agency.
  [(f) Funds not Used for State Level Activities.--Any portion 
of funds described in subsection (d)(1) that a State 
educational agency does not expend in accordance with 
subsection (d)(1) shall be expended for the purpose of making 
subgrants in accordance with subsection (c).
  [(g) Supplement, not Supplant.--A State or local educational 
agency shall use funds received under this subpart only to 
supplement the level of non-Federal funds that, in the absence 
of funds under this subpart, would be expended for activities 
authorized under this subpart, and not to supplant those non-
Federal funds.

[SEC. 1203. STATE FORMULA GRANT APPLICATIONS.

  [(a) Applications.--
          [(1) In general.--A State educational agency that 
        desires to receive a grant under section 1202 shall 
        submit an application to the Secretary at such time and 
        in such form as the Secretary may require. The 
        application shall contain the information described in 
        subsection (b).
          [(2) Special application provisions.--For those State 
        educational agencies that have received a grant under 
        part C of title II (as such part was in effect on the 
        day before the date of enactment of the No Child Left 
        Behind Act of 2001), the Secretary shall establish a 
        modified set of requirements for an application under 
        this section that takes into account the information 
        already submitted and approved under that program and 
        minimizes the duplication of effort on the part of such 
        State educational agencies.
  [(b) Contents.--An application under this section shall 
contain the following:
          [(1) An assurance that the Governor of the State, in 
        consultation with the State educational agency, has 
        established a reading and literacy partnership 
        described in subsection (d), and a description of how 
        such partnership--
                  [(A) coordinated the development of the 
                application; and
                  [(B) will assist in the oversight and 
                evaluation of the State educational agency's 
                activities under this subpart.
          [(2) A description, if applicable, of the State's 
        strategy to expand, continue, or modify activities 
        authorized under part C of title II (as such part was 
        in effect on the day before the date of enactment of 
        the No Child Left Behind Act of 2001).
          [(3) An assurance that the State educational agency, 
        and any local educational agencies receiving a subgrant 
        from that State educational agency under section 1202, 
        will, if requested, participate in the external 
        evaluation under section 1205.
          [(4) A State educational agency plan containing a 
        description of the following:
                  [(A) How the State educational agency will 
                assist local educational agencies in 
                identifying screening, diagnostic, and 
                classroom-based instructional reading 
                assessments.
                  [(B) How the State educational agency will 
                assist local educational agencies in 
                identifying instructional materials, programs, 
                strategies, and approaches, based on 
                scientifically based reading research, 
                including early intervention and reading 
                remediation materials, programs, and 
                approaches.
                  [(C) How the State educational agency will 
                ensure that professional development activities 
                related to reading instruction and provided 
                under section 1202 are--
                          [(i) coordinated with other Federal, 
                        State, and local level funds, and used 
                        effectively to improve instructional 
                        practices for reading; and
                          [(ii) based on scientifically based 
                        reading research.
                  [(D) How the activities assisted under 
                section 1202 will address the needs of teachers 
                and other instructional staff in implementing 
                the essential components of reading 
                instruction.
                  [(E) How subgrants made by the State 
                educational agency under section 1202 will meet 
                the requirements of section 1202, including how 
                the State educational agency will ensure that 
                eligible local educational agencies receiving 
                subgrants under section 1202 will use practices 
                based on scientifically based reading research.
                  [(F) How the State educational agency will, 
                to the extent practicable, make grants to 
                eligible local educational agencies in both 
                rural and urban areas.
                  [(G) How the State educational agency will 
                build on, and promote coordination among 
                literacy programs in the State (including 
                federally funded programs such as programs 
                under the Adult Education and Family Literacy 
                Act, the Individuals with Disabilities 
                Education Act, and subpart 2), to increase the 
                effectiveness of the programs in improving 
                reading for adults and children and to avoid 
                duplication of the efforts of the program.
                  [(H) How the State educational agency will 
                assess and evaluate, on a regular basis, 
                eligible local educational agency activities 
                assisted under section 1202, with respect to 
                whether the activities have been effective in 
                achieving the purposes of section 1202.
                  [(I) Any other information that the Secretary 
                may reasonably require.
  [(c) Approval of Applications.--
          [(1) In general.--The Secretary shall approve an 
        application of a State educational agency under this 
        section only if such application meets the requirements 
        of this section.
          [(2) Peer review.--
                  [(A) In general.--The Secretary, in 
                consultation with the National Institute for 
                Literacy, shall convene a panel to evaluate 
                applications under this section. At a minimum, 
                the panel shall include--
                          [(i) three individuals selected by 
                        the Secretary;
                          [(ii) three individuals selected by 
                        the National Institute for Literacy;
                          [(iii) three individuals selected by 
                        the National Research Council of the 
                        National Academy of Sciences; and
                          [(iv) three individuals selected by 
                        the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National 
                        Institute of Child Health and Human 
                        Development.
                  [(B) Experts.--The panel shall include--
                          [(i) experts who are competent, by 
                        virtue of their training, expertise, or 
                        experience, to evaluate applications 
                        under this section;
                          [(ii) experts who provide 
                        professional development to individuals 
                        who teach reading to children and 
                        adults based on scientifically based 
                        reading research;
                          [(iii) experts who provide 
                        professional development to other 
                        instructional staff based on 
                        scientifically based reading research; 
                        and
                          [(iv) an individual who has expertise 
                        in screening, diagnostic, and 
                        classroom-based instructional reading 
                        assessments.
                  [(C) Recommendations.--The panel shall 
                recommend grant applications from State 
                educational agencies under this section to the 
                Secretary for funding or for disapproval.
  [(d) Reading and Literacy Partnerships.--
          [(1) In general.--For a State educational agency to 
        receive a grant under section 1202, the Governor of the 
        State, in consultation with the State educational 
        agency, shall establish a reading and literacy 
        partnership.
          [(2) Required participants.--The reading and literacy 
        partnership shall include the following participants:
                  [(A) The Governor of the State.
                  [(B) The chief State school officer.
                  [(C) The chairman and the ranking member of 
                each committee of the State legislature that is 
                responsible for education policy.
                  [(D) A representative, selected jointly by 
                the Governor and the chief State school 
                officer, of at least one eligible local 
                educational agency.
                  [(E) A representative, selected jointly by 
                the Governor and the chief State school 
                officer, of a community-based organization 
                working with children to improve their reading 
                skills, particularly a community-based 
                organization using tutors and scientifically 
                based reading research.
                  [(F) State directors of appropriate Federal 
                or State programs with a strong reading 
                component, selected jointly by the Governor and 
                the chief State school officer.
                  [(G) A parent of a public or private school 
                student or a parent who educates the parent's 
                child in the parent's home, selected jointly by 
                the Governor and the chief State school 
                officer.
                  [(H) A teacher, who may be a special 
                education teacher, who successfully teaches 
                reading, and another instructional staff 
                member, selected jointly by the Governor and 
                the chief State school officer.
                  [(I) A family literacy service provider 
                selected jointly by the Governor and the chief 
                State school officer.
          [(3) Optional participants.--The reading and literacy 
        partnership may include additional participants, who 
        shall be selected jointly by the Governor and the chief 
        State school officer, and who may include a 
        representative of--
                  [(A) an institution of higher education 
                operating a program of teacher preparation in 
                the State that is based on scientifically based 
                reading research;
                  [(B) a local educational agency;
                  [(C) a private nonprofit or for-profit 
                eligible professional development provider 
                providing instruction based on scientifically 
                based reading research;
                  [(D) an adult education provider;
                  [(E) a volunteer organization that is 
                involved in reading programs; or
                  [(F) a school library or a public library 
                that offers reading or literacy programs for 
                children or families.
          [(4) Preexisting partnership.--If, before the date of 
        enactment of the No Child Left Behind Act of 2001, a 
        State educational agency established a consortium, 
        partnership, or any other similar body that was 
        considered a reading and literacy partnership for 
        purposes of part C of title II of this Act (as such 
        part was in effect on the day before the date of 
        enactment of No Child Left Behind Act of 2001), that 
        consortium, partnership, or body may be considered a 
        reading and literacy partnership for purposes of this 
        subsection consistent with the provisions of this 
        subpart.

[SEC. 1204. TARGETED ASSISTANCE GRANTS.

  [(a) Eligibility Criteria for Awarding Targeted Assistance 
Grants to States.--Beginning with fiscal year 2004, from funds 
appropriated under section 1202(b)(1)(E), the Secretary shall 
make grants, on a competitive basis, to those State educational 
agencies that--
          [(1) for each of 2 consecutive years, demonstrate 
        that an increasing percentage of third graders in each 
        of the groups described in section 1111(b)(2)(C)(v)(II) 
        in the schools served by the local educational agencies 
        receiving funds under section 1202 are reaching the 
        proficient level in reading; and
          [(2) for each of the same such consecutive 2 years, 
        demonstrate that schools receiving funds under section 
        1202 are improving the reading skills of students in 
        grades 1, 2, and 3 based on screening, diagnostic, and 
        classroom-based instructional reading assessments.
  [(b) Continuation of Performance Awards.--For any State 
educational agency that receives a competitive grant under this 
section, the Secretary shall make an award for each of the 
succeeding years that the State educational agency demonstrates 
it is continuing to meet the criteria described in subsection 
(a).
  [(c) Distribution of Targeted Assistance Grants.--
          [(1) In general.--The Secretary shall make a grant to 
        each State educational agency with an application 
        approved under this section in an amount that bears the 
        same relation to the amount made available to carry out 
        this section for a fiscal year as the number of 
        children counted under section 1124(c) for the State 
        bears to the number of such children so counted for all 
        States with applications approved for that year.
          [(2) Peer review.--The peer review panel convened 
        under section 1203(c)(2) shall review the applications 
        submitted under this subsection. The panel shall 
        recommend such applications to the Secretary for 
        funding or for disapproval.
          [(3) Application contents.--A State educational 
        agency that desires to receive a grant under this 
        section shall submit an application to the Secretary at 
        such time, in such manner, and accompanied by such 
        information as the Secretary may require. Each such 
        application shall include the following:
                  [(A) Evidence that the State educational 
                agency has carried out its obligations under 
                section 1203.
                  [(B) Evidence that the State educational 
                agency has met the criteria described in 
                subsection (a).
                  [(C) The amount of funds requested by the 
                State educational agency and a description of 
                the criteria the State educational agency 
                intends to use in distributing subgrants to 
                eligible local educational agencies under this 
                section to continue or expand activities under 
                subsection (d)(5).
                  [(D) Evidence that the State educational 
                agency has increased significantly the 
                percentage of students reading at grade level 
                or above.
                  [(E) Any additional evidence that 
                demonstrates success in the implementation of 
                this section.
  [(d) Subgrants to Eligible Local Educational Agencies.--
          [(1) In general.--The Secretary may make a grant to a 
        State educational agency under this section only if the 
        State educational agency agrees to expend 100 percent 
        of the amount of the funds provided under the grant for 
        the purpose of making competitive subgrants in 
        accordance with this subsection to eligible local 
        educational agencies.
          [(2) Notice.--A State educational agency receiving a 
        grant under this section shall provide notice to all 
        local educational agencies in the State of the 
        availability of competitive subgrants under this 
        subsection and of the requirements for applying for the 
        subgrants.
          [(3) Application.--To be eligible to receive a 
        subgrant under this subsection, an eligible local 
        educational agency shall submit an application to the 
        State educational agency at such time, in such manner, 
        and containing such information as the State 
        educational agency may reasonably require.
          [(4) Distribution.--
                  [(A) In general.--A State educational agency 
                shall distribute subgrants under this section 
                through a competitive process based on relative 
                need of eligible local educational agencies and 
                the evidence described in this paragraph.
                  [(B) Evidence used in all years.--For all 
                fiscal years, a State educational agency shall 
                distribute subgrants under this section based 
                on evidence that an eligible local educational 
                agency--
                          [(i) satisfies the requirements of 
                        section 1202(c)(4);
                          [(ii) will carry out its obligations 
                        under this subpart;
                          [(iii) will work with other local 
                        educational agencies in the State that 
                        have not received a subgrant under this 
                        subsection to assist such nonreceiving 
                        agencies in increasing the reading 
                        achievement of students; and
                          [(iv) is meeting the criteria 
                        described in subsection (a).
          [(5) Local uses of funds.--An eligible local 
        educational agency that receives a subgrant under this 
        subsection--
                  [(A) shall use the funds provided under the 
                subgrant to carry out the activities described 
                in section 1202(c)(7)(A); and
                  [(B) may use such funds to carry out the 
                activities described in section 1202(c)(7)(B).

[SEC. 1205. EXTERNAL EVALUATION.

  [(a) In General.--From funds reserved under section 
1202(b)(1)(C), the Secretary shall contract with an independent 
organization outside of the Department for a 5-year, rigorous, 
scientifically valid, quantitative evaluation of this subpart.
  [(b) Process.--The evaluation under subsection (a) shall be 
conducted by an organization that is capable of designing and 
carrying out an independent evaluation that identifies the 
effects of specific activities carried out by State educational 
agencies and local educational agencies under this subpart on 
improving reading instruction. Such evaluation shall take into 
account factors influencing student performance that are not 
controlled by teachers or education administrators.
  [(c) Analysis.--The evaluation under subsection (a) shall 
include the following:
          [(1) An analysis of the relationship between each of 
        the essential components of reading instruction and 
        overall reading proficiency.
          [(2) An analysis of whether assessment tools used by 
        State educational agencies and local educational 
        agencies measure the essential components of reading.
          [(3) An analysis of how State reading standards 
        correlate with the essential components of reading 
        instruction.
          [(4) An analysis of whether the receipt of a targeted 
        assistance grant under section 1204 results in an 
        increase in the number of children who read 
        proficiently.
          [(5) A measurement of the extent to which specific 
        instructional materials improve reading proficiency.
          [(6) A measurement of the extent to which specific 
        screening, diagnostic, and classroom-based 
        instructional reading assessments assist teachers in 
        identifying specific reading deficiencies.
          [(7) A measurement of the extent to which 
        professional development programs implemented by State 
        educational agencies using funds received under this 
        subpart improve reading instruction.
          [(8) A measurement of how well students preparing to 
        enter the teaching profession are prepared to teach the 
        essential components of reading instruction.
          [(9) An analysis of changes in students' interest in 
        reading and time spent reading outside of school.
          [(10) Any other analysis or measurement pertinent to 
        this subpart that is determined to be appropriate by 
        the Secretary.
  [(d) Program Improvement.--The findings of the evaluation 
conducted under this section shall be provided to State 
educational agencies and local educational agencies on a 
periodic basis for use in program improvement.

[SEC. 1206. NATIONAL ACTIVITIES.

   [From funds reserved under section 1202(b)(1)(C), the 
Secretary--
          [(1) may provide technical assistance in achieving 
        the purposes of this subpart to State educational 
        agencies, local educational agencies, and schools 
        requesting such assistance;
          [(2) shall, at a minimum, evaluate the impact of 
        services provided to children under this subpart with 
        respect to their referral to, and eligibility for, 
        special education services under the Individuals with 
        Disabilities Education Act (based on their difficulties 
        learning to read); and
          [(3) shall carry out the external evaluation as 
        described in section 1205.

[SEC. 1207. INFORMATION DISSEMINATION.

  [(a) In General.--From funds reserved under section 
1202(b)(1)(D), the National Institute for Literacy, in 
collaboration with the Secretary of Education, the Secretary of 
Health and Human Services, and the Director of the Eunice 
Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human 
Development shall--
          [(1) disseminate information on scientifically based 
        reading research pertaining to children, youth, and 
        adults;
          [(2) identify and disseminate information about 
        schools, local educational agencies, and State 
        educational agencies that have effectively developed 
        and implemented classroom reading programs that meet 
        the requirements of this subpart, including those State 
        educational agencies, local educational agencies, and 
        schools that have been identified as effective through 
        the evaluation and peer review provisions of this 
        subpart; and
          [(3) support the continued identification and 
        dissemination of information on reading programs that 
        contain the essential components of reading instruction 
        as supported by scientifically based reading research, 
        that can lead to improved reading outcomes for 
        children, youth, and adults.
  [(b) Dissemination and Coordination.--At a minimum, the 
National Institute for Literacy shall disseminate the 
information described in subsection (a) to--
          [(1) recipients of Federal financial assistance under 
        this title, title III, the Head Start Act, the 
        Individuals with Disabilities Education Act, and the 
        Adult Education and Family Literacy Act; and
          [(2) each Bureau funded school (as defined in section 
        1141 of the Education Amendments of 1978).
  [(c) Use of Existing Networks.--In carrying out this section, 
the National Institute for Literacy shall, to the extent 
practicable, use existing information and dissemination 
networks developed and maintained through other public and 
private entities including through the Department and the 
National Center for Family Literacy.
  [(d) National Institute for Literacy.--For purposes of funds 
reserved under section 1202(b)(1)(D) to carry out this section, 
the National Institute for Literacy shall administer such funds 
in accordance with section 242(b) of Public Law 105-220 
(relating to the establishment and administration of the 
National Institute for Literacy).

[SEC. 1208. DEFINITIONS.

   [In this subpart:
          [(1) Eligible local educational agency.--The term 
        ``eligible local educational agency'' means a local 
        educational agency that--
                  [(A) is among the local educational agencies 
                in the State with the highest numbers or 
                percentages of students in kindergarten through 
                grade 3 reading below grade level, based on the 
                most currently available data; and
                  [(B) has--
                          [(i) jurisdiction over a geographic 
                        area that includes an area designated 
                        as an empowerment zone, or an 
                        enterprise community, under part I of 
                        subchapter U of chapter 1 of the 
                        Internal Revenue Code of 1986;
                          [(ii) jurisdiction over a significant 
                        number or percentage of schools that 
                        are identified for school improvement 
                        under section 1116(b); or
                          [(iii) the highest numbers or 
                        percentages of children who are counted 
                        under section 1124(c), in comparison to 
                        other local educational agencies in the 
                        State.
          [(2) Eligible professional development provider.--The 
        term ``eligible professional development provider'' 
        means a provider of professional development in reading 
        instruction to teachers, including special education 
        teachers, that is based on scientifically based reading 
        research.
          [(3) Essential components of reading instruction.--
        The term ``essential components of reading 
        instruction'' means explicit and systematic instruction 
        in--
                  [(A) phonemic awareness;
                  [(B) phonics;
                  [(C) vocabulary development;
                  [(D) reading fluency, including oral reading 
                skills; and
                  [(E) reading comprehension strategies.
          [(4) Instructional staff.--The term ``instructional 
        staff''--
                  [(A) means individuals who have 
                responsibility for teaching children to read; 
                and
                  [(B) includes principals, teachers, 
                supervisors of instruction, librarians, library 
                school media specialists, teachers of academic 
                subjects other than reading, and other 
                individuals who have responsibility for 
                assisting children to learn to read.
          [(5) Reading.--The term ``reading'' means a complex 
        system of deriving meaning from print that requires all 
        of the following:
                  [(A) The skills and knowledge to understand 
                how phonemes, or speech sounds, are connected 
                to print.
                  [(B) The ability to decode unfamiliar words.
                  [(C) The ability to read fluently.
                  [(D) Sufficient background information and 
                vocabulary to foster reading comprehension.
                  [(E) The development of appropriate active 
                strategies to construct meaning from print.
                  [(F) The development and maintenance of a 
                motivation to read.
          [(6) Scientifically based reading research.--The term 
        ``scientifically based reading research'' means 
        research that--
                  [(A) applies rigorous, systematic, and 
                objective procedures to obtain valid knowledge 
                relevant to reading development, reading 
                instruction, and reading difficulties; and
                  [(B) includes research that--
                          [(i) employs systematic, empirical 
                        methods that draw on observation or 
                        experiment;
                          [(ii) involves rigorous data analyses 
                        that are adequate to test the stated 
                        hypotheses and justify the general 
                        conclusions drawn;
                          [(iii) relies on measurements or 
                        observational methods that provide 
                        valid data across evaluators and 
                        observers and across multiple 
                        measurements and observations; and
                          [(iv) has been accepted by a peer-
                        reviewed journal or approved by a panel 
                        of independent experts through a 
                        comparably rigorous, objective, and 
                        scientific review.
          [(7) Screening, diagnostic, and classroom-based 
        instructional reading assessments.--
                  [(A) In general.--The term ``screening, 
                diagnostic, and classroom-based instructional 
                reading assessments'' means--
                          [(i) screening reading assessments;
                          [(ii) diagnostic reading assessments; 
                        and
                          [(iii) classroom-based instructional 
                        reading assessments.
                  [(B) Screening reading assessment.--The term 
                ``screening reading assessment'' means an 
                assessment that is--
                          [(i) valid, reliable, and based on 
                        scientifically based reading research; 
                        and
                          [(ii) a brief procedure designed as a 
                        first step in identifying children who 
                        may be at high risk for delayed 
                        development or academic failure and in 
                        need of further diagnosis of their need 
                        for special services or additional 
                        reading instruction.
                  [(C) Diagnostic reading assessment.--The term 
                ``diagnostic reading assessment'' means an 
                assessment that is--
                          [(i) valid, reliable, and based on 
                        scientifically based reading research; 
                        and
                          [(ii) used for the purpose of--
                                  [(I) identifying a child's 
                                specific areas of strengths and 
                                weaknesses so that the child 
                                has learned to read by the end 
                                of grade 3;
                                  [(II) determining any 
                                difficulties that a child may 
                                have in learning to read and 
                                the potential cause of such 
                                difficulties; and
                                  [(III) helping to determine 
                                possible reading intervention 
                                strategies and related special 
                                needs.
                  [(D) Classroom-based instructional reading 
                assessment.--The term ``classroom-based 
                instructional reading assessment'' means an 
                assessment that--
                          [(i) evaluates children's learning 
                        based on systematic observations by 
                        teachers of children performing 
                        academic tasks that are part of their 
                        daily classroom experience; and
                          [(ii) is used to improve instruction 
                        in reading, including classroom 
                        instruction.

                    [Subpart 2--Early Reading First

[SEC. 1221. PURPOSES; DEFINITIONS.

  [(a) Purposes.--The purposes of this subpart are as follows:
          [(1) To support local efforts to enhance the early 
        language, literacy, and prereading development of 
        preschool age children, particularly those from low-
        income families, through strategies and professional 
        development that are based on scientifically based 
        reading research.
          [(2) To provide preschool age children with cognitive 
        learning opportunities in high-quality language and 
        literature-rich environments, so that the children can 
        attain the fundamental knowledge and skills necessary 
        for optimal reading development in kindergarten and 
        beyond.
          [(3) To demonstrate language and literacy activities 
        based on scientifically based reading research that 
        supports the age-appropriate development of--
                  [(A) recognition, leading to automatic 
                recognition, of letters of the alphabet;
                  [(B) knowledge of letter sounds, the blending 
                of sounds, and the use of increasingly complex 
                vocabulary;
                  [(C) an understanding that written language 
                is composed of phonemes and letters each 
                representing one or more speech sounds that in 
                combination make up syllables, words, and 
                sentences;
                  [(D) spoken language, including vocabulary 
                and oral comprehension abilities; and
                  [(E) knowledge of the purposes and 
                conventions of print.
          [(4) To use screening assessments to effectively 
        identify preschool age children who may be at risk for 
        reading failure.
          [(5) To integrate such scientific reading research-
        based instructional materials and literacy activities 
        with existing programs of preschools, child care 
        agencies and programs, Head Start centers, and family 
        literacy services.
  [(b) Definitions.--For purposes of this subpart:
          [(1) Eligible applicant.--The term ``eligible 
        applicant'' means--
                  [(A) one or more local educational agencies 
                that are eligible to receive a subgrant under 
                subpart 1;
                  [(B) one or more public or private 
                organizations or agencies, acting on behalf of 
                one or more programs that serve preschool age 
                children (such as a program at a Head Start 
                center, a child care program, or a family 
                literacy program), which organizations or 
                agencies shall be located in a community served 
                by a local educational agency described in 
                subparagraph (A); or
                  [(C) one or more local educational agencies 
                described in subparagraph (A) in collaboration 
                with one or more organizations or agencies 
                described in subparagraph (B).
          [(2) Scientifically based reading research.--The term 
        ``scientifically based reading research'' has the same 
        meaning given to that term in section 1208.
          [(3) Screening reading assessment.--The term 
        ``screening reading assessment'' has the same meaning 
        given to that term in section 1208.

[SEC. 1222. LOCAL EARLY READING FIRST GRANTS.

  [(a) Program Authorized.--From amounts appropriated under 
section 1002(b)(2), the Secretary shall award grants, on a 
competitive basis, for periods of not more than 6 years, to 
eligible applicants to enable the eligible applicants to carry 
out the authorized activities described in subsection (d).
  [(b) Applications.--An eligible applicant that desires to 
receive a grant under this section shall submit an application 
to the Secretary, which shall include a description of--
          [(1) the programs to be served by the proposed 
        project, including demographic and socioeconomic 
        information on the preschool age children enrolled in 
        the programs;
          [(2) how the proposed project will enhance the school 
        readiness of preschool age children in high-quality 
        oral language and literature-rich environments;
          [(3) how the proposed project will prepare and 
        provide ongoing assistance to staff in the programs, 
        through professional development and other support, to 
        provide high-quality language, literacy, and prereading 
        activities using scientifically based reading research, 
        for preschool age children;
          [(4) how the proposed project will provide services 
        and use instructional materials that are based on 
        scientifically based reading research on early language 
        acquisition, prereading activities, and the development 
        of spoken vocabulary skills;
          [(5) how the proposed project will help staff in the 
        programs to meet more effectively the diverse needs of 
        preschool age children in the community, including such 
        children with limited English proficiency, 
        disabilities, or other special needs;
          [(6) how the proposed project will integrate such 
        instructional materials and literacy activities with 
        existing preschool programs and family literacy 
        services;
          [(7) how the proposed project will help children, 
        particularly children experiencing difficulty with 
        spoken language, prereading, and early reading skills, 
        to make the transition from preschool to formal 
        classroom instruction in school;
          [(8) if the eligible applicant has received a 
        subgrant under subpart 1, how the activities conducted 
        under this subpart will be coordinated with the 
        eligible applicant's activities under subpart 1 at the 
        kindergarten through grade 3 level;
          [(9) how the proposed project will evaluate the 
        success of the activities supported under this subpart 
        in enhancing the early language, literacy, and 
        prereading development of preschool age children served 
        by the project; and
          [(10) such other information as the Secretary may 
        require.
  [(c) Approval of Local Applications.--The Secretary shall 
select applicants for funding under this subpart based on the 
quality of the applications and the recommendations of a peer 
review panel convened under section 1203(c)(2), that includes, 
at a minimum, three individuals, selected from the entities 
described in clauses (ii), (iii), and (iv) of section 
1203(c)(2)(A), who are experts in early reading development and 
early childhood development.
  [(d) Authorized Activities.--An eligible applicant that 
receives a grant under this subpart shall use the funds 
provided under the grant to carry out the following activities:
          [(1) Providing preschool age children with high-
        quality oral language and literature-rich environments 
        in which to acquire language and prereading skills.
          [(2) Providing professional development that is based 
        on scientifically based reading research knowledge of 
        early language and reading development for the staff of 
        the eligible applicant and that will assist in 
        developing the preschool age children's--
                  [(A) recognition, leading to automatic 
                recognition, of letters of the alphabet, 
                knowledge of letters, sounds, blending of 
                letter sounds, and increasingly complex 
                vocabulary;
                  [(B) understanding that written language is 
                composed of phonemes and letters each 
                representing one or more speech sounds that in 
                combination make up syllables, words, and 
                sentences;
                  [(C) spoken language, including vocabulary 
                and oral comprehension abilities; and
                  [(D) knowledge of the purposes and 
                conventions of print.
          [(3) Identifying and providing activities and 
        instructional materials that are based on 
        scientifically based reading research for use in 
        developing the skills and abilities described in 
        paragraph (2).
          [(4) Acquiring, providing training for, and 
        implementing screening reading assessments or other 
        appropriate measures that are based on scientifically 
        based reading research to determine whether preschool 
        age children are developing the skills described in 
        this subsection.
          [(5) Integrating such instructional materials, 
        activities, tools, and measures into the programs 
        offered by the eligible applicant.
  [(e) Award Amounts.--The Secretary may establish a maximum 
award amount, or ranges of award amounts, for grants under this 
subpart.

[SEC. 1223. FEDERAL ADMINISTRATION.

  [The Secretary shall consult with the Secretary of Health and 
Human Services to coordinate the activities under this subpart 
with preschool age programs administered by the Department of 
Health and Human Services.

[SEC. 1224. INFORMATION DISSEMINATION.

  [From the funds the National Institute for Literacy receives 
under section 1202(b)(1)(D), the National Institute for 
Literacy, in consultation with the Secretary, shall disseminate 
information regarding projects assisted under this subpart that 
have proven effective.

[SEC. 1225. REPORTING REQUIREMENTS.

   [Each eligible applicant receiving a grant under this 
subpart shall report annually to the Secretary regarding the 
eligible applicant's progress in addressing the purposes of 
this subpart. Such report shall include, at a minimum, a 
description of--
          [(1) the research-based instruction, materials, and 
        activities being used in the programs funded under the 
        grant;
          [(2) the types of programs funded under the grant and 
        the ages of children served by such programs;
          [(3) the qualifications of the program staff who 
        provide early literacy instruction under such programs 
        and the type of ongoing professional development 
        provided to such staff; and
          [(4) the results of the evaluation described in 
        section 1222(b)(9).

[SEC. 1226. EVALUATION.

  [(a) In General.--From the total amount made available under 
section 1002(b)(2) for the period beginning October 1, 2002, 
and ending September 30, 2006, the Secretary shall reserve not 
more than $3,000,000 to conduct an independent evaluation of 
the effectiveness of this subpart.
  [(b) Reports.--
          [(1) Interim report.--Not later than October 1, 2004, 
        the Secretary shall submit an interim report to the 
        Committee on Education and the Workforce of the House 
        of Representatives and the Committee on Health, 
        Education, Labor, and Pensions of the Senate.
          [(2) Final report.--Not later than September 30, 
        2006, the Secretary shall submit a final report to the 
        committees described in paragraph (1).
  [(c) Contents.--The reports submitted under subsection (b) 
shall include information on the following:
          [(1) How the grant recipients under this subpart are 
        improving the prereading skills of preschool children.
          [(2) The effectiveness of the professional 
        development program assisted under this subpart.
          [(3) How early childhood teachers are being prepared 
        with scientifically based reading research on early 
        reading development.
          [(4) What activities and instructional practices are 
        most effective.
          [(5) How prereading instructional materials and 
        literacy activities based on scientifically based 
        reading research are being integrated into preschools, 
        child care agencies and programs, programs carried out 
        under the Head Start Act, and family literacy programs.
          [(6) Any recommendations on strengthening or 
        modifying this subpart.

  [Subpart 3--William F. Goodling Even Start Family Literacy Programs

[SEC. 1231. STATEMENT OF PURPOSE.

   [It is the purpose of this subpart to help break the cycle 
of poverty and illiteracy by--
          [(1) improving the educational opportunities of the 
        Nation's low-income families by integrating early 
        childhood education, adult literacy or adult basic 
        education, and parenting education into a unified 
        family literacy program, to be referred to as ``Even 
        Start''; and
          [(2) establishing a program that shall--
                  [(A) be implemented through cooperative 
                projects that build on high-quality existing 
                community resources to create a new range of 
                services;
                  [(B) promote the academic achievement of 
                children and adults;
                  [(C) assist children and adults from low-
                income families to achieve to challenging State 
                content standards and challenging State student 
                achievement standards; and
                  [(D) use instructional programs based on 
                scientifically based reading research and 
                addressing the prevention of reading 
                difficulties for children and adults, to the 
                extent such research is available.

[SEC. 1232. PROGRAM AUTHORIZED.

  [(a) Reservation for Migrant Programs, Outlying Areas, and 
Indian Tribes.--
          [(1) In general.--For each fiscal year, the Secretary 
        shall reserve 5 percent of the amount appropriated 
        under section 1002(b)(3) (or, if such appropriated 
        amount exceeds $200,000,000, 6 percent of such amount) 
        for programs, under such terms and conditions as the 
        Secretary shall establish, that are consistent with the 
        purpose of this subpart, and according to their 
        relative needs, for--
                  [(A) children of migratory workers;
                  [(B) the outlying areas; and
                  [(C) Indian tribes and tribal organizations.
          [(2) Special rule.--After December 21, 2000, the 
        Secretary shall award a grant, on a competitive basis, 
        of sufficient size and for a period of sufficient 
        duration to demonstrate the effectiveness of a family 
        literacy program in a prison that houses women and 
        their preschool age children and that has the 
        capability of developing a program of high quality.
          [(3) Coordination of programs for american indians.--
        The Secretary shall ensure that programs under 
        paragraph (1)(C) are coordinated with family literacy 
        programs operated by the Bureau of Indian Affairs in 
        order to avoid duplication and to encourage the 
        dissemination of information on high-quality family 
        literacy programs serving American Indians.
  [(b) Reservation for Federal Activities.--
          [(1) Evaluation, technical assistance, program 
        improvement, and replication activities.--Subject to 
        paragraph (2), from amounts appropriated under section 
        1002(b)(3), the Secretary may reserve not more than 3 
        percent of such amounts for purposes of--
                  [(A) carrying out the evaluation required by 
                section 1239; and
                  [(B) providing, through grants or contracts 
                with eligible organizations, technical 
                assistance, program improvement, and 
                replication activities.
          [(2) Research.--In any fiscal year, if the amount 
        appropriated under section 1002(b)(3) for such year--
                  [(A) is equal to or less than the amount 
                appropriated for the preceding fiscal year, the 
                Secretary may reserve from such amount only the 
                amount necessary to continue multi-year 
                activities carried out pursuant to section 
                1241(b) that began during or prior to the 
                fiscal year preceding the fiscal year for which 
                the determination is made; or
                  [(B) exceeds the amount appropriated for the 
                preceding fiscal year, then the Secretary shall 
                reserve from such excess amount $2,000,000 or 
                50 percent, whichever is less, to carry out 
                section 1241(b).
  [(c) Reservation for Grants.--
          [(1) Grants authorized.--
                  [(A) In general.--For any fiscal year for 
                which at least one State educational agency 
                applies and submits an application that meets 
                the requirements and goals of this subsection 
                and for which the amount appropriated under 
                section 1002(b)(3) exceeds the amount 
                appropriated under that section for the 
                preceding fiscal year, the Secretary shall 
                reserve, from the amount of the excess 
                remaining after the application of subsection 
                (b)(2), the amount of the remainder or 
                $1,000,000, whichever is less, to award grants, 
                on a competitive basis, to State educational 
                agencies to enable them to plan and implement 
                statewide family literacy initiatives to 
                coordinate and, where appropriate, integrate 
                existing Federal, State, and local literacy 
                resources consistent with the purposes of this 
                subpart.
                  [(B) Coordination and integration.--The 
                coordination and integration described in 
                subparagraph (A) shall include coordination and 
                integration of funds available under the Adult 
                Education and Family Literacy Act, the Head 
                Start Act, this subpart, part A of this title, 
                and part A of title IV of the Social Security 
                Act.
                  [(C) Restriction.--No State educational 
                agency may receive more than one grant under 
                this subsection.
          [(2) Consortia.--
                  [(A) Establishment.--To receive a grant under 
                this subsection, a State educational agency 
                shall establish a consortium of State-level 
                programs under the following provisions of 
                laws:
                          [(i) This title (other than part D).
                          [(ii) The Head Start Act.
                          [(iii) The Adult Education and Family 
                        Literacy Act.
                          [(iv) All other State-funded 
                        preschool programs and programs 
                        providing literacy services to adults.
                  [(B) Plan.--To receive a grant under this 
                subsection, the consortium established by a 
                State educational agency shall create a plan to 
                use a portion of the State educational agency's 
                resources, derived from the programs referred 
                to in subparagraph (A), to strengthen and 
                expand family literacy services in the State.
                  [(C) Coordination with subpart 1.--The 
                consortium shall coordinate its activities 
                under this paragraph with the activities of the 
                reading and literacy partnership for the State 
                educational agency established under section 
                1203(d), if the State educational agency 
                receives a grant under section 1202.
          [(3) Reading instruction.--Statewide family literacy 
        initiatives implemented under this subsection shall 
        base reading instruction on scientifically based 
        reading research.
          [(4) Technical assistance.--The Secretary shall 
        provide, directly or through a grant or contract with 
        an organization with experience in the development and 
        operation of successful family literacy services, 
        technical assistance to State educational agencies 
        receiving a grant under this subsection.
          [(5) Matching requirement.--The Secretary shall not 
        make a grant to a State educational agency under this 
        subsection unless the State educational agency agrees 
        that, with respect to the costs to be incurred by the 
        eligible consortium in carrying out the activities for 
        which the grant was awarded, the State educational 
        agency will make available non-Federal contributions in 
        an amount equal to not less than the Federal funds 
        provided under the grant.
  [(d) State Educational Agency Allocation.--
          [(1) In general.--From amounts appropriated under 
        section 1002(b)(3) and not reserved under subsection 
        (a), (b), or (c), the Secretary shall make grants to 
        State educational agencies from allocations under 
        paragraph (2).
          [(2) Allocations.--Except as provided in paragraph 
        (3), from the total amount available under paragraph 
        (1) for allocation to State educational agencies in any 
        fiscal year, each State educational agency shall be 
        eligible to receive a grant under paragraph (1) in an 
        amount that bears the same ratio to the total amount as 
        the amount allocated under part A to that State 
        educational agency bears to the total amount allocated 
        under that part to all State educational agencies.
          [(3) Minimum.--No State educational agency shall 
        receive a grant under paragraph (1) in any fiscal year 
        in an amount that is less than $250,000, or one-half of 
        1 percent of the amount appropriated under section 
        1002(b)(3) and not reserved under subsections (a), (b), 
        and (c) for such year, whichever is greater.
  [(e) Definitions.--For the purpose of this subpart--
          [(1) the term ``eligible entity'' means a partnership 
        composed of--
                  [(A) a local educational agency; and
                  [(B) a nonprofit community-based 
                organization, a public agency other than a 
                local educational agency, an institution of 
                higher education, or a public or private 
                nonprofit organization other than a local 
                educational agency, of demonstrated quality;
          [(2) the term ``eligible organization'' means any 
        public or private nonprofit organization with a record 
        of providing effective services to family literacy 
        providers, such as the National Center for Family 
        Literacy, Parents as Teachers, Inc., the Home 
        Instruction Program for Preschool Youngsters, and the 
        Home and School Institute, Inc.;
          [(3) the terms ``Indian tribe'' and ``tribal 
        organization'' have the meanings given those terms in 
        section 4 of the Indian Self-Determination and 
        Education Assistance Act;
          [(4) the term ``scientifically based reading 
        research'' has the meaning given that term in section 
        1208; and
          [(5) the term ``State'' means each of the 50 States, 
        the District of Columbia, and the Commonwealth of 
        Puerto Rico.

[SEC. 1233. STATE EDUCATIONAL AGENCY PROGRAMS.

  [(a) State Educational Agency Level Activities.--Each State 
educational agency that receives a grant under section 
1232(d)(1) may use not more than a total of 6 percent of the 
grant funds for the costs of--
          [(1) administration, which amount shall not exceed 
        half of the total;
          [(2) providing, through one or more subgrants or 
        contracts, technical assistance for program improvement 
        and replication, to eligible entities that receive 
        subgrants under subsection (b); and
          [(3) carrying out sections 1240 and 1234(c).
  [(b) Subgrants for Local Programs.--
          [(1) In general.--Each State educational agency shall 
        use the grant funds received under section 1232(d)(1) 
        and not reserved under subsection (a) to award 
        subgrants to eligible entities to carry out Even Start 
        programs.
          [(2) Minimum subgrant amounts.--
                  [(A) In general.--Except as provided in 
                subparagraphs (B) and (C), no State educational 
                agency shall award a subgrant under paragraph 
                (1) in an amount less than $75,000.
                  [(B) Subgrantees in ninth and succeeding 
                years.--No State educational agency shall award 
                a subgrant under paragraph (1) in an amount 
                less than $52,500 to an eligible entity for a 
                fiscal year to carry out an Even Start program 
                that is receiving assistance under this subpart 
                or its predecessor authority for the ninth (or 
                any subsequent) fiscal year.
                  [(C) Exception for single subgrant.--A State 
                educational agency may award one subgrant in 
                each fiscal year of sufficient size, scope, and 
                quality to be effective in an amount less than 
                $75,000 if, after awarding subgrants under 
                paragraph (1) for that fiscal year in 
                accordance with subparagraphs (A) and (B), less 
                than $75,000 is available to the State 
                educational agency to award those subgrants.

[SEC. 1234. USES OF FUNDS.

  [(a) In General.--In carrying out an Even Start program under 
this subpart, a recipient of funds under this subpart shall use 
those funds to pay the Federal share of the cost of providing 
intensive family literacy services that involve parents and 
children, from birth through age 7, in a cooperative effort to 
help parents become full partners in the education of their 
children and to assist children in reaching their full 
potential as learners.
  [(b) Federal Share Limitation.--
          [(1) In general.--
                  [(A) Federal share.--Except as provided in 
                paragraph (2), the Federal share under this 
                subpart may not exceed--
                          [(i) 90 percent of the total cost of 
                        the program in the first year that the 
                        program receives assistance under this 
                        subpart or its predecessor authority;
                          [(ii) 80 percent in the second year;
                          [(iii) 70 percent in the third year;
                          [(iv) 60 percent in the fourth year;
                          [(v) 50 percent in the fifth, sixth, 
                        seventh, and eighth such years; and
                          [(vi) 35 percent in any subsequent 
                        year.
                  [(B) Remaining cost.--The remaining cost of a 
                program assisted under this subpart may be 
                provided in cash or in kind, fairly evaluated, 
                and may be obtained from any source, including 
                other Federal funds under this Act.
          [(2) Waiver.--The State educational agency may waive, 
        in whole or in part, the Federal share described in 
        paragraph (1) for an eligible entity if the entity--
                  [(A) demonstrates that it otherwise would not 
                be able to participate in the program assisted 
                under this subpart; and
                  [(B) negotiates an agreement with the State 
                educational agency with respect to the amount 
                of the remaining cost to which the waiver will 
                be applicable.
          [(3) Prohibition.--Federal funds provided under this 
        subpart may not be used for the indirect costs of a 
        program assisted under this subpart, except that the 
        Secretary may waive this paragraph if an eligible 
        recipient of funds reserved under section 1232(a)(1)(C) 
        demonstrates to the Secretary's satisfaction that the 
        recipient otherwise would not be able to participate in 
        the program assisted under this subpart.
  [(c) Use of Funds for Family Literacy Services.--
          [(1) In general.--A State educational agency may use 
        a portion of funds reserved under section 1233(a), to 
        assist eligible entities receiving a subgrant under 
        section 1233(b) in improving the quality of family 
        literacy services provided under Even Start programs 
        under this subpart, except that in no case may a State 
        educational agency's use of funds for this purpose for 
        a fiscal year result in a decrease from the level of 
        activities and services provided to program 
        participants in the preceding year.
          [(2) Priority.--In carrying out paragraph (1), a 
        State educational agency shall give priority to 
        programs that were of low quality, as evaluated based 
        on the indicators of program quality developed by the 
        State educational agency under section 1240.
          [(3) Technical assistance to help local programs 
        raise additional funds.--In carrying out paragraph (1), 
        a State educational agency may use the funds referred 
        to in that paragraph to provide technical assistance to 
        help local programs of demonstrated effectiveness to 
        access and leverage additional funds for the purpose of 
        expanding services and reducing waiting lists, 
        including requesting and applying for non-Federal 
        resources.
          [(4) Technical assistance and training.--Assistance 
        under paragraph (1) shall be in the form of technical 
        assistance and training, provided by a State 
        educational agency through a grant, contract, or 
        cooperative agreement with an entity that has 
        experience in offering high-quality training and 
        technical assistance to family literacy providers.

[SEC. 1235. PROGRAM ELEMENTS.

   [Each program assisted under this subpart shall--
          [(1) include the identification and recruitment of 
        families most in need of services provided under this 
        subpart, as indicated by a low level of income, a low 
        level of adult literacy or English language proficiency 
        of the eligible parent or parents, and other need-
        related indicators;
          [(2) include screening and preparation of parents, 
        including teenage parents, and children to enable those 
        parents and children to participate fully in the 
        activities and services provided under this subpart, 
        including testing, referral to necessary counselling, 
        other developmental and support services, and related 
        services;
          [(3) be designed to accommodate the participants' 
        work schedule and other responsibilities, including the 
        provision of support services, when those services are 
        unavailable from other sources, necessary for 
        participation in the activities assisted under this 
        subpart, such as--
                  [(A) scheduling and locating of services to 
                allow joint participation by parents and 
                children;
                  [(B) child care for the period that parents 
                are involved in the program provided under this 
                subpart; and
                  [(C) transportation for the purpose of 
                enabling parents and their children to 
                participate in programs authorized by this 
                subpart;
          [(4) include high-quality, intensive instructional 
        programs that promote adult literacy and empower 
        parents to support the educational growth of their 
        children, developmentally appropriate early childhood 
        educational services, and preparation of children for 
        success in regular school programs;
          [(5) with respect to the qualifications of staff the 
        cost of whose salaries are paid, in whole or in part, 
        with Federal funds provided under this subpart, ensure 
        that--
                  [(A) not later than December 21, 2004--
                          [(i) a majority of the individuals 
                        providing academic instruction--
                                  [(I) shall have obtained an 
                                associate's, bachelor's, or 
                                graduate degree in a field 
                                related to early childhood 
                                education, elementary school or 
                                secondary school education, or 
                                adult education; and
                                  [(II) if applicable, shall 
                                meet qualifications established 
                                by the State for early 
                                childhood education, elementary 
                                school or secondary school 
                                education, or adult education 
                                provided as part of an Even 
                                Start program or another family 
                                literacy program;
                          [(ii) the individual responsible for 
                        administration of family literacy 
                        services under this subpart has 
                        received training in the operation of a 
                        family literacy program; and
                          [(iii) paraprofessionals who provide 
                        support for academic instruction have a 
                        secondary school diploma or its 
                        recognized equivalent; and
                  [(B) all new personnel hired to provide 
                academic instruction--
                          [(i) have obtained an associate's, 
                        bachelor's, or graduate degree in a 
                        field related to early childhood 
                        education, elementary school or 
                        secondary school education, or adult 
                        education; and
                          [(ii) if applicable, meet 
                        qualifications established by the State 
                        for early childhood education, 
                        elementary school or secondary school 
                        education, or adult education provided 
                        as part of an Even Start program or 
                        another family literacy program;
          [(6) include special training of staff, including 
        child-care staff, to develop the skills necessary to 
        work with parents and young children in the full range 
        of instructional services offered through this subpart;
          [(7) provide and monitor integrated instructional 
        services to participating parents and children through 
        home-based programs;
          [(8) operate on a year-round basis, including the 
        provision of some program services, including 
        instructional and enrichment services, during the 
        summer months;
          [(9) be coordinated with--
                  [(A) other programs assisted under this Act;
                  [(B) any relevant programs under the Adult 
                Education and Family Literacy Act, the 
                Individuals with Disabilities Education Act, 
                and title I of the Workforce Investment Act of 
                1998; and
                  [(C) the Head Start program, volunteer 
                literacy programs, and other relevant programs;
          [(10) use instructional programs based on 
        scientifically based reading research for children and 
        adults, to the extent that research is available;
          [(11) encourage participating families to attend 
        regularly and to remain in the program a sufficient 
        time to meet their program goals;
          [(12) include reading-readiness activities for 
        preschool children based on scientifically based 
        reading research, to the extent available, to ensure 
        that children enter school ready to learn to read;
          [(13) if applicable, promote the continuity of family 
        literacy to ensure that individuals retain and improve 
        their educational outcomes;
          [(14) ensure that the programs will serve those 
        families most in need of the activities and services 
        provided by this subpart; and
          [(15) provide for an independent evaluation of the 
        program, to be used for program improvement.

[SEC. 1236. ELIGIBLE PARTICIPANTS.

  [(a) In General.--Except as provided in subsection (b), 
eligible participants in an Even Start program are--
          [(1) a parent or parents--
                  [(A) who are eligible for participation in 
                adult education and literacy activities under 
                the Adult Education and Family Literacy Act; or
                  [(B) who are within the State's compulsory 
                school attendance age range, so long as a local 
                educational agency provides (or ensures the 
                availability of) the basic education component 
                required under this subpart, or who are 
                attending secondary school; and
          [(2) the child or children, from birth through age 7, 
        of any individual described in paragraph (1).
  [(b) Eligibility for Certain Other Participants.--
          [(1) In general.--Family members of eligible 
        participants described in subsection (a) may 
        participate in activities and services provided under 
        this subpart, when appropriate to serve the purpose of 
        this subpart.
          [(2) Special rule.--Any family participating in a 
        program assisted under this subpart that becomes 
        ineligible to participate as a result of one or more 
        members of the family becoming ineligible to 
        participate may continue to participate in the program 
        until all members of the family become ineligible to 
        participate, which--
                  [(A) in the case of a family in which 
                ineligibility was due to the child or children 
                of the family attaining the age of 8, shall be 
                in 2 years or when the parent or parents become 
                ineligible due to educational advancement, 
                whichever occurs first; and
                  [(B) in the case of a family in which 
                ineligibility was due to the educational 
                advancement of the parent or parents of the 
                family, shall be when all children in the 
                family attain the age of 8.
          [(3) Children 8 years of age or older.--If an Even 
        Start program assisted under this subpart collaborates 
        with a program under part A, and funds received under 
        the part A program contribute to paying the cost of 
        providing programs under this subpart to children 8 
        years of age or older, the Even Start program may, 
        notwithstanding subsection (a)(2), permit the 
        participation of children 8 years of age or older if 
        the focus of the program continues to remain on 
        families with young children.

[SEC. 1237. APPLICATIONS.

  [(a) Submission.--To be eligible to receive a subgrant under 
this subpart, an eligible entity shall submit an application to 
the State educational agency in such form and containing or 
accompanied by such information as the State educational agency 
shall require.
  [(b) Required Documentation.--Each application shall include 
documentation, satisfactory to the State educational agency, 
that the eligible entity has the qualified personnel needed--
          [(1) to develop, administer, and implement an Even 
        Start program under this subpart; and
          [(2) to provide access to the special training 
        necessary to prepare staff for the program, which may 
        be offered by an eligible organization.
  [(c) Plan.--
          [(1) In general.--The application shall also include 
        a plan of operation and continuous improvement for the 
        program, that includes--
                  [(A) a description of the program objectives, 
                strategies to meet those objectives, and how 
                those strategies and objectives are consistent 
                with the program indicators established by the 
                State;
                  [(B) a description of the activities and 
                services that will be provided under the 
                program, including a description of how the 
                program will incorporate the program elements 
                required by section 1235;
                  [(C) a description of the population to be 
                served and an estimate of the number of 
                participants to be served;
                  [(D) as appropriate, a description of the 
                applicant's collaborative efforts with 
                institutions of higher education, community-
                based organizations, the State educational 
                agency, private elementary schools, or other 
                eligible organizations in carrying out the 
                program for which assistance is sought;
                  [(E) a statement of the methods that will be 
                used--
                          [(i) to ensure that the programs will 
                        serve families most in need of the 
                        activities and services provided by 
                        this subpart;
                          [(ii) to provide services under this 
                        subpart to individuals with special 
                        needs, such as individuals with limited 
                        English proficiency and individuals 
                        with disabilities; and
                          [(iii) to encourage participants to 
                        remain in the program for a time 
                        sufficient to meet the program's 
                        purpose;
                  [(F) a description of how the plan is 
                integrated with other programs under this Act 
                or other Acts, as appropriate; and
                  [(G) a description of how the plan provides 
                for rigorous and objective evaluation of 
                progress toward the program objectives 
                described in subparagraph (A) and for 
                continuing use of evaluation data for program 
                improvement.
          [(2) Duration of the plan.--Each plan submitted under 
        paragraph (1) shall--
                  [(A) remain in effect for the duration of the 
                eligible entity's participation under this 
                subpart; and
                  [(B) be periodically reviewed and revised by 
                the eligible entity as necessary.
  [(d) Consolidated Application.--The plan described in 
subsection (c)(1) may be submitted as part of a consolidated 
application under section 9305.

[SEC. 1238. AWARD OF SUBGRANTS.

  [(a) Selection Process.--
          [(1) In general.--The State educational agency shall 
        establish a review panel in accordance with paragraph 
        (3) that will approve applications that--
                  [(A) are most likely to be successful in--
                          [(i) meeting the purpose of this 
                        subpart; and
                          [(ii) effectively implementing the 
                        program elements required under section 
                        1235;
                  [(B) demonstrate that the area to be served 
                by the program has a high percentage or a large 
                number of children and families who are in need 
                of those services as indicated by high levels 
                of poverty, illiteracy, unemployment, limited 
                English proficiency, or other need-related 
                indicators, such as a high percentage of 
                children to be served by the program who reside 
                in a school attendance area served by a local 
                educational agency eligible for participation 
                in programs under part A, a high number or 
                percentage of parents who have been victims of 
                domestic violence, or a high number or 
                percentage of parents who are receiving 
                assistance under a State program funded under 
                part A of title IV of the Social Security Act 
                (42 U.S.C. 601 et seq.);
                  [(C) provide services for at least a 3-year 
                age range, which may begin at birth;
                  [(D) demonstrate the greatest possible 
                cooperation and coordination between a variety 
                of relevant service providers in all phases of 
                the program;
                  [(E) include cost-effective budgets, given 
                the scope of the application;
                  [(F) demonstrate the applicant's ability to 
                provide the non-Federal share required by 
                section 1234(b);
                  [(G) are representative of urban and rural 
                regions of the State; and
                  [(H) show the greatest promise for providing 
                models that may be adopted by other family 
                literacy projects and other local educational 
                agencies.
          [(2) Priority for subgrants.--The State educational 
        agency shall give priority for subgrants under this 
        subsection to applications that--
                  [(A) target services primarily to families 
                described in paragraph (1)(B); or
                  [(B) are located in areas designated as 
                empowerment zones or enterprise communities.
          [(3) Review panel.--A review panel shall consist of 
        at least three members, including one early childhood 
        professional, one adult education professional, and one 
        individual with expertise in family literacy programs, 
        and may include other individuals, such as one or more 
        of the following:
                  [(A) A representative of a parent-child 
                education organization.
                  [(B) A representative of a community-based 
                literacy organization.
                  [(C) A member of a local board of education.
                  [(D) A representative of business and 
                industry with a commitment to education.
                  [(E) An individual who has been involved in 
                the implementation of programs under this title 
                in the State.
  [(b) Duration.--
          [(1) In general.--Subgrants under this subpart may be 
        awarded for a period not to exceed 4 years.
          [(2) Startup period.--The State educational agency 
        may provide subgrant funds to an eligible recipient, at 
        the recipient's request, for a 3- to 6-month start-up 
        period during the first year of the 4-year grant 
        period, which may include staff recruitment and 
        training, and the coordination of services, before 
        requiring full implementation of the program.
          [(3) Continuing eligibility.--In awarding subgrant 
        funds to continue a program under this subpart after 
        the first year, the State educational agency shall 
        review the progress of each eligible entity in meeting 
        the objectives of the program referred to in section 
        1237(c)(1)(A) and shall evaluate the program based on 
        the indicators of program quality developed by the 
        State under section 1240.
          [(4) Insufficient progress.--The State educational 
        agency may refuse to award subgrant funds to an 
        eligible entity if the agency finds that the eligible 
        entity has not sufficiently improved the performance of 
        the program, as evaluated based on the indicators of 
        program quality developed by the State under section 
        1240, after--
                  [(A) providing technical assistance to the 
                eligible entity; and
                  [(B) affording the eligible entity notice and 
                an opportunity for a hearing.
          [(5) Grant renewal.--(A) An eligible entity that has 
        previously received a subgrant under this subpart may 
        reapply under this subpart for additional subgrants.
          [(B) The Federal share of any subgrant renewed under 
        subparagraph (A) shall be limited in accordance with 
        section 1234(b).

[SEC. 1239. EVALUATION.

   [From funds reserved under section 1232(b)(1), the Secretary 
shall provide for an independent evaluation of programs 
assisted under this subpart--
          [(1) to determine the performance and effectiveness 
        of programs assisted under this subpart;
          [(2) to identify effective Even Start programs 
        assisted under this subpart that can be duplicated and 
        used in providing technical assistance to Federal, 
        State, and local programs; and
          [(3) to provide State educational agencies and 
        eligible entities receiving a subgrant under this 
        subpart, directly or through a grant or contract with 
        an organization with experience in the development and 
        operation of successful family literacy services, 
        technical assistance to ensure that local evaluations 
        undertaken under section 1235(15) provide accurate 
        information on the effectiveness of programs assisted 
        under this subpart.

[SEC. 1240. INDICATORS OF PROGRAM QUALITY.

   [Each State educational agency receiving funds under this 
subpart shall develop, based on the best available research and 
evaluation data, indicators of program quality for programs 
assisted under this subpart. The indicators shall be used to 
monitor, evaluate, and improve those programs within the State. 
The indicators shall include the following:
          [(1) With respect to eligible participants in a 
        program who are adults--
                  [(A) achievement in the areas of reading, 
                writing, English-language acquisition, problem 
                solving, and numeracy;
                  [(B) receipt of a secondary school diploma or 
                a general equivalency diploma (GED);
                  [(C) entry into a postsecondary school, job 
                retraining program, or employment or career 
                advancement, including the military; and
                  [(D) such other indicators as the State may 
                develop.
          [(2) With respect to eligible participants in a 
        program who are children--
                  [(A) improvement in ability to read on grade 
                level or reading readiness;
                  [(B) school attendance;
                  [(C) grade retention and promotion; and
                  [(D) such other indicators as the State may 
                develop.

[SEC. 1241. RESEARCH.

  [(a) In General.--The Secretary shall carry out, through 
grant or contract, research into the components of successful 
family literacy services, in order to--
          [(1) improve the quality of existing programs 
        assisted under this subpart or other family literacy 
        programs carried out under this Act or the Adult 
        Education and Family Literacy Act; and
          [(2) develop models for new programs to be carried 
        out under this Act or the Adult Education and Family 
        Literacy Act.
  [(b) Scientifically Based Research on Family Literacy.--
          [(1) In general.--From amounts reserved under section 
        1232(b)(2), the National Institute for Literacy, in 
        consultation with the Secretary, shall carry out 
        research that--
                  [(A) is scientifically based reading 
                research; and
                  [(B) determines--
                          [(i) the most effective ways of 
                        improving the literacy skills of adults 
                        with reading difficulties; and
                          [(ii) how family literacy services 
                        can best provide parents with the 
                        knowledge and skills the parents need 
                        to support their children's literacy 
                        development.
          [(2) Use of expert entity.--The National Institute 
        for Literacy, in consultation with the Secretary, shall 
        carry out the research under paragraph (1) through an 
        entity, including a Federal agency, that has expertise 
        in carrying out longitudinal studies of the development 
        of literacy skills in children and has developed 
        effective interventions to help children with reading 
        difficulties.
  [(c) Dissemination.--The National Institute for Literacy 
shall disseminate, pursuant to section 1207, the results of the 
research described in subsections (a) and (b) to State 
educational agencies and recipients of subgrants under this 
subpart.

[SEC. 1242. CONSTRUCTION.

  [Nothing in this subpart shall be construed to prohibit a 
recipient of funds under this subpart from serving students 
participating in Even Start simultaneously with students with 
similar educational needs, in the same educational settings 
where appropriate.

        [Subpart 4--Improving Literacy Through School Libraries

[SEC. 1251. IMPROVING LITERACY THROUGH SCHOOL LIBRARIES.

  [(a) Purposes.--The purpose of this subpart is to improve 
literacy skills and academic achievement of students by 
providing students with increased access to up-to-date school 
library materials, a well-equipped, technologically advanced 
school library media center, and well-trained, professionally 
certified school library media specialists.
  [(b) Reservation.--From the funds appropriated under section 
1002(b)(4) for a fiscal year, the Secretary shall reserve--
          [(1) one-half of 1 percent to award assistance under 
        this section to the Bureau of Indian Affairs to carry 
        out activities consistent with the purpose of this 
        subpart; and
          [(2) one-half of 1 percent to award assistance under 
        this section to the outlying areas according to their 
        respective needs for assistance under this subpart.
  [(c) Grants.--
          [(1) Competitive grants to eligible local educational 
        agencies.--If the amount of funds appropriated under 
        section 1002(b)(4) for a fiscal year is less than 
        $100,000,000, then the Secretary shall award grants, on 
        a competitive basis, to eligible local educational 
        agencies under subsection (e).
          [(2) Formula grants to states.--If the amount of 
        funds appropriated under section 1002(b)(4) for a 
        fiscal year equals or exceeds $100,000,000, then the 
        Secretary shall award grants to State educational 
        agencies from allotments under subsection (d).
          [(3) Definition of eligible local educational 
        agency.--In this section the term ``eligible local 
        educational agency'' means--
                  [(A) in the case of a local educational 
                agency receiving assistance made available 
                under paragraph (1), a local educational agency 
                in which 20 percent of the students served by 
                the local educational agency are from families 
                with incomes below the poverty line; and
                  [(B) in the case of a local educational 
                agency receiving assistance from State 
                allocations made available under paragraph (2), 
                a local educational agency in which--
                          [(i) 15 percent of the students who 
                        are served by the local educational 
                        agency are from such families; or
                          [(ii) the percentage of students from 
                        such families who are served by the 
                        local educational agency is greater 
                        than the statewide percentage of 
                        children from such families.
  [(d) State Grants.--
          [(1) Allotments.--From funds made available under 
        subsection (c)(2) and not reserved under subsections 
        (b) and (j) for a fiscal year, the Secretary shall 
        allot to each State educational agency having an 
        application approved under subsection (f)(1) an amount 
        that bears the same relation to the funds as the amount 
        the State educational agency received under part A for 
        the preceding fiscal year bears to the amount all such 
        State educational agencies received under part A for 
        the preceding fiscal year, to increase literacy and 
        reading skills by improving school libraries.
          [(2) Competitive grants to eligible local educational 
        agencies.--Each State educational agency receiving an 
        allotment under paragraph (1) for a fiscal year--
                  [(A) may reserve not more than 3 percent of 
                the allotted funds to provide technical 
                assistance, disseminate information about 
                school library media programs that are 
                effective and based on scientifically based 
                research, and pay administrative costs related 
                to activities under this section; and
                  [(B) shall use the allotted funds that remain 
                after making the reservation under subparagraph 
                (A) to award grants, for a period of 1 year, on 
                a competitive basis, to eligible local 
                educational agencies in the State that have an 
                application approved under subsection (f)(2) 
                for activities described in subsection (g).
          [(3) Reallotment.--If a State educational agency does 
        not apply for an allotment under this section for any 
        fiscal year, or if the State educational agency's 
        application is not approved, the Secretary shall 
        reallot the amount of the State educational agency's 
        allotment to the remaining State educational agencies 
        in accordance with paragraph (1).
  [(e) Direct Competitive Grants to Eligible Local Educational 
Agencies.--
          [(1) In general.--From amounts made available under 
        subsection (c)(1) and not reserved under subsections 
        (b) and (j) for a fiscal year, the Secretary shall 
        award grants, on a competitive basis, to eligible local 
        educational agencies that have applications approved 
        under subsection (f)(2) for activities described in 
        subsection (g).
          [(2) Duration.--The Secretary shall award grants 
        under this subsection for a period of 1 year.
          [(3) Distribution.--The Secretary shall ensure that 
        grants under this subsection are equitably distributed 
        among the different geographic regions of the United 
        States, and among local educational agencies serving 
        urban and rural areas.
  [(f) Applications.--
          [(1) State educational agency.--Each State 
        educational agency desiring assistance under this 
        section shall submit to the Secretary an application at 
        such time, in such manner, and containing such 
        information as the Secretary shall require. The 
        application shall contain a description of--
                  [(A) how the State educational agency will 
                assist eligible local educational agencies in 
                meeting the requirements of this section and in 
                using scientifically based research to 
                implement effective school library media 
                programs; and
                  [(B) the standards and techniques the State 
                educational agency will use to evaluate the 
                quality and impact of activities carried out 
                under this section by eligible local 
                educational agencies to determine the need for 
                technical assistance and whether to continue to 
                provide additional funding to the agencies 
                under this section.
          [(2) Eligible local educational agency.--Each 
        eligible local educational agency desiring assistance 
        under this section shall submit to the Secretary or 
        State educational agency, as appropriate, an 
        application at such time, in such manner, and 
        containing such information as the Secretary or State 
        educational agency, respectively, shall require. The 
        application shall contain a description of--
                  [(A) a needs assessment relating to the need 
                for school library media improvement, based on 
                the age and condition of school library media 
                resources, including book collections, access 
                of school library media centers to advanced 
                technology, and the availability of well-
                trained, professionally certified school 
                library media specialists, in schools served by 
                the eligible local educational agency;
                  [(B) the manner in which the eligible local 
                educational agency will use the funds made 
                available through the grant to carry out the 
                activities described in subsection (g);
                  [(C) how the eligible local educational 
                agency will extensively involve school library 
                media specialists, teachers, administrators, 
                and parents in the activities assisted under 
                this section, and the manner in which the 
                eligible local educational agency will carry 
                out the activities described in subsection (g) 
                using programs and materials that are grounded 
                in scientifically based research;
                  [(D) the manner in which the eligible local 
                educational agency will effectively coordinate 
                the funds and activities provided under this 
                section with Federal, State, and local funds 
                and activities under this subpart and other 
                literacy, library, technology, and professional 
                development funds and activities; and
                  [(E) the manner in which the eligible local 
                educational agency will collect and analyze 
                data on the quality and impact of activities 
                carried out under this section by schools 
                served by the eligible local educational 
                agency.
  [(g) Local Activities.--Funds under this section may be used 
to--
          [(1) acquire up-to-date school library media 
        resources, including books;
          [(2) acquire and use advanced technology, 
        incorporated into the curricula of the school, to 
        develop and enhance the information literacy, 
        information retrieval, and critical thinking skills of 
        students;
          [(3) facilitate Internet links and other resource-
        sharing networks among schools and school library media 
        centers, and public and academic libraries, where 
        possible;
          [(4) provide professional development described in 
        section 1222(d)(2) for school library media 
        specialists, and activities that foster increased 
        collaboration between school library media specialists, 
        teachers, and administrators; and
          [(5) provide students with access to school libraries 
        during nonschool hours, including the hours before and 
        after school, during weekends, and during summer 
        vacation periods.
  [(h) Accountability and Reporting.--
          [(1) Local reports.--Each eligible local educational 
        agency that receives funds under this section for a 
        fiscal year shall report to the Secretary or State 
        educational agency, as appropriate, on how the funding 
        was used and the extent to which the availability of, 
        the access to, and the use of, up-to-date school 
        library media resources in the elementary schools and 
        secondary schools served by the eligible local 
        educational agency was increased.
          [(2) State report.--Each State educational agency 
        that receives funds under this section shall compile 
        the reports received under paragraph (1) and submit the 
        compiled reports to the Secretary.
  [(i) Supplement, Not Supplant.--Funds made available under 
this section shall be used to supplement, and not supplant, 
other Federal, State, and local funds expended to carry out 
activities relating to library, technology, or professional 
development activities.
  [(j) National Activities.--
          [(1) Evaluations.--From the funds appropriated under 
        section 1002(b)(4) for each fiscal year, the Secretary 
        shall reserve not more than 1 percent for annual, 
        independent, national evaluations of the activities 
        assisted under this section and their impact on 
        improving the reading skills of students. The 
        evaluations shall be conducted not later than 3 years 
        after the date of enactment of the No Child Left Behind 
        Act of 2001, and biennially thereafter.
          [(2) Report to congress.--The Secretary shall 
        transmit the State reports received under subsection 
        (h)(2) and the evaluations conducted under paragraph 
        (1) to the Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and 
        Pensions of the Senate and the Committee on Education 
        and the Workforce of the House of Representatives.

                [PART C--EDUCATION OF MIGRATORY CHILDREN

[SEC. 1301. PROGRAM PURPOSE.

   [It is the purpose of this part to assist States to--
          [(1) support high-quality and comprehensive 
        educational programs for migratory children to help 
        reduce the educational disruptions and other problems 
        that result from repeated moves;
          [(2) ensure that migratory children who move among 
        the States are not penalized in any manner by 
        disparities among the States in curriculum, graduation 
        requirements, and State academic content and student 
        academic achievement standards;
          [(3) ensure that migratory children are provided with 
        appropriate educational services (including supportive 
        services) that address their special needs in a 
        coordinated and efficient manner;
          [(4) ensure that migratory children receive full and 
        appropriate opportunities to meet the same challenging 
        State academic content and student academic achievement 
        standards that all children are expected to meet;
          [(5) design programs to help migratory children 
        overcome educational disruption, cultural and language 
        barriers, social isolation, various health-related 
        problems, and other factors that inhibit the ability of 
        such children to do well in school, and to prepare such 
        children to make a successful transition to 
        postsecondary education or employment; and
          [(6) ensure that migratory children benefit from 
        State and local systemic reforms.

[SEC. 1302. PROGRAM AUTHORIZED.

  [In order to carry out the purpose of this part, the 
Secretary shall make grants to State educational agencies, or 
combinations of such agencies, to establish or improve, 
directly or through local operating agencies, programs of 
education for migratory children in accordance with this part.

[SEC. 1303. STATE ALLOCATIONS.

  [(a) State Allocations.--
          [(1) Fiscal year 2002.--For fiscal year 2002, each 
        State (other than the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico) is 
        entitled to receive under this part an amount equal 
        to--
                  [(A) the sum of the estimated number of 
                migratory children aged 3 through 21 who reside 
                in the State full time and the full-time 
                equivalent of the estimated number of migratory 
                children aged 3 through 21 who reside in the 
                State part time, as determined in accordance 
                with subsection (e); multiplied by
                  [(B) 40 percent of the average per-pupil 
                expenditure in the State, except that the 
                amount determined under this paragraph shall 
                not be less than 32 percent, nor more than 48 
                percent, of the average per-pupil expenditure 
                in the United States.
          [(2) Subsequent years.--
                  [(A) Base amount.--
                          [(i) In general.--Except as provided 
                        in subsection (b) and clause (ii), each 
                        State (other than the Commonwealth of 
                        Puerto Rico) is entitled to receive 
                        under this part, for fiscal year 2003 
                        and succeeding fiscal years, an amount 
                        equal to--
                                  [(I) the amount that such 
                                State received under this part 
                                for fiscal year 2002; plus
                                  [(II) the amount allocated to 
                                the State under subparagraph 
                                (B).
                          [(ii) Nonparticipating states.--In 
                        the case of a State (other than the 
                        Commonwealth of Puerto Rico) that did 
                        not receive any funds for fiscal year 
                        2002 under this part, the State shall 
                        receive, for fiscal year 2003 and 
                        succeeding fiscal years, an amount 
                        equal to--
                                  [(I) the amount that such 
                                State would have received under 
                                this part for fiscal year 2002 
                                if its application under 
                                section 1304 for the year had 
                                been approved; plus
                                  [(II) the amount allocated to 
                                the State under subparagraph 
                                (B).
                  [(B) Allocation of additional amount.--For 
                fiscal year 2003 and succeeding fiscal years, 
                the amount (if any) by which the funds 
                appropriated to carry out this part for the 
                year exceed such funds for fiscal year 2002 
                shall be allocated to a State (other than the 
                Commonwealth of Puerto Rico) so that the State 
                receives an amount equal to--
                          [(i) the sum of--
                                  [(I) the number of identified 
                                eligible migratory children, 
                                aged 3 through 21, residing in 
                                the State during the previous 
                                year; and
                                  [(II) the number of 
                                identified eligible migratory 
                                children, aged 3 through 21, 
                                who received services under 
                                this part in summer or 
                                intersession programs provided 
                                by the State during such year; 
                                multiplied by
                          [(ii) 40 percent of the average per-
                        pupil expenditure in the State, except 
                        that the amount determined under this 
                        clause may not be less than 32 percent, 
                        or more than 48 percent, of the average 
                        per-pupil expenditure in the United 
                        States.
  [(b) Allocation to Puerto Rico.--
          [(1) In general.--For each fiscal year, the grant 
        which the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico shall be eligible 
        to receive under this part shall be the amount 
        determined by multiplying the number of children who 
        would be counted under subsection (a)(1)(A) if such 
        subsection applied to the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico 
        by the product of--
                  [(A) the percentage which the average per-
                pupil expenditure in the Commonwealth of Puerto 
                Rico is of the lowest average per-pupil 
                expenditure of any of the 50 States; and
                  [(B) 32 percent of the average per-pupil 
                expenditure in the United States.
          [(2) Minimum percentage.--The percentage in paragraph 
        (1)(A) shall not be less than--
                  [(A) for fiscal year 2002, 77.5 percent;
                  [(B) for fiscal year 2003, 80.0 percent;
                  [(C) for fiscal year 2004, 82.5 percent; and
                  [(D) for fiscal year 2005 and succeeding 
                fiscal years, 85.0 percent.
          [(3) Limitation.--If the application of paragraph (2) 
        for any fiscal year would result in any of the 50 
        States or the District of Columbia receiving less under 
        this part than it received under this part for the 
        preceding fiscal year, then the percentage described in 
        paragraph (1)(A) that is used for the Commonwealth of 
        Puerto Rico for the fiscal year for which the 
        determination is made shall be the greater of the 
        percentage in paragraph (1)(A) for such fiscal year or 
        the percentage used for the preceding fiscal year.
  [(c) Ratable Reductions; Reallocations.--
          [(1) In general.--(A) If, after the Secretary 
        reserves funds under section 1308(c), the amount 
        appropriated to carry out this part for any fiscal year 
        is insufficient to pay in full the amounts for which 
        all States are eligible, the Secretary shall ratably 
        reduce each such amount.
          [(B) If additional funds become available for making 
        such payments for any fiscal year, the Secretary shall 
        allocate such funds to States in amounts that the 
        Secretary determines will best carry out the purpose of 
        this part.
          [(2) Special rule.--(A) The Secretary shall further 
        reduce the amount of any grant to a State under this 
        part for any fiscal year if the Secretary determines, 
        based on available information on the numbers and needs 
        of migratory children in the State and the program 
        proposed by the State to address such needs, that such 
        amount exceeds the amount required under section 1304.
          [(B) The Secretary shall reallocate such excess funds 
        to other States whose grants under this part would 
        otherwise be insufficient to provide an appropriate 
        level of services to migratory children, in such 
        amounts as the Secretary determines are appropriate.
  [(d) Consortium Arrangements.--
          [(1) In general.--In the case of a State that 
        receives a grant of $1,000,000 or less under this 
        section, the Secretary shall consult with the State 
        educational agency to determine whether consortium 
        arrangements with another State or other appropriate 
        entity would result in delivery of services in a more 
        effective and efficient manner.
          [(2) Proposals.--Any State, regardless of the amount 
        of such State's allocation, may submit a consortium 
        arrangement to the Secretary for approval.
          [(3) Approval.--The Secretary shall approve a 
        consortium arrangement under paragraph (1) or (2) if 
        the proposal demonstrates that the arrangement will--
                  [(A) reduce administrative costs or program 
                function costs for State programs; and
                  [(B) make more funds available for direct 
                services to add substantially to the welfare or 
                educational attainment of children to be served 
                under this part.
  [(e) Determining Numbers of Eligible Children.--In order to 
determine the estimated number of migratory children residing 
in each State for purposes of this section, the Secretary 
shall--
          [(1) use such information as the Secretary finds most 
        accurately reflects the actual number of migratory 
        children;
          [(2) develop and implement a procedure for more 
        accurately reflecting cost factors for different types 
        of summer and intersession program designs;
          [(3) adjust the full-time equivalent number of 
        migratory children who reside in each State to take 
        into account--
                  [(A) the special needs of those children 
                participating in special programs provided 
                under this part that operate during the summer 
                and intersession periods; and
                  [(B) the additional costs of operating such 
                programs; and
          [(4) conduct an analysis of the options for adjusting 
        the formula so as to better direct services to the 
        child whose education has been interrupted.

[SEC. 1304. STATE APPLICATIONS; SERVICES.

  [(a) Application Required.--Any State desiring to receive a 
grant under this part for any fiscal year shall submit an 
application to the Secretary at such time and in such manner as 
the Secretary may require.
  [(b) Program Information.--Each such application shall 
include--
          [(1) a description of how, in planning, implementing, 
        and evaluating programs and projects assisted under 
        this part, the State and its local operating agencies 
        will ensure that the special educational needs of 
        migratory children, including preschool migratory 
        children, are identified and addressed through--
                  [(A) the full range of services that are 
                available for migratory children from 
                appropriate local, State, and Federal 
                educational programs;
                  [(B) joint planning among local, State, and 
                Federal educational programs serving migrant 
                children, including language instruction 
                educational programs under part A or B of title 
                III;
                  [(C) the integration of services available 
                under this part with services provided by those 
                other programs; and
                  [(D) measurable program goals and outcomes;
          [(2) a description of the steps the State is taking 
        to provide all migratory students with the opportunity 
        to meet the same challenging State academic content 
        standards and challenging State student academic 
        achievement standards that all children are expected to 
        meet;
          [(3) a description of how the State will use funds 
        received under this part to promote interstate and 
        intrastate coordination of services for migratory 
        children, including how, consistent with procedures the 
        Secretary may require, the State will provide for 
        educational continuity through the timely transfer of 
        pertinent school records, including information on 
        health, when children move from one school to another, 
        whether or not such move occurs during the regular 
        school year;
          [(4) a description of the State's priorities for the 
        use of funds received under this part, and how such 
        priorities relate to the State's assessment of needs 
        for services in the State;
          [(5) a description of how the State will determine 
        the amount of any subgrants the State will award to 
        local operating agencies, taking into account the 
        numbers and needs of migratory children, the 
        requirements of subsection (d), and the availability of 
        funds from other Federal, State, and local programs;
          [(6) such budgetary and other information as the 
        Secretary may require; and
          [(7) a description of how the State will encourage 
        programs and projects assisted under this part to offer 
        family literacy services if the program or project 
        serves a substantial number of migratory children who 
        have parents who do not have a high school diploma or 
        its recognized equivalent or who have low levels of 
        literacy.
  [(c) Assurances.--Each such application shall also include 
assurances, satisfactory to the Secretary, that--
          [(1) funds received under this part will be used 
        only--
                  [(A) for programs and projects, including the 
                acquisition of equipment, in accordance with 
                section 1306; and
                  [(B) to coordinate such programs and projects 
                with similar programs and projects within the 
                State and in other States, as well as with 
                other Federal programs that can benefit 
                migratory children and their families;
          [(2) such programs and projects will be carried out 
        in a manner consistent with the objectives of section 
        1114, subsections (b) and (d) of section 1115, 
        subsections (b) and (c) of section 1120A, and part I;
          [(3) in the planning and operation of programs and 
        projects at both the State and local agency operating 
        level, there is consultation with parent advisory 
        councils for programs of 1 school year in duration, and 
        that all such programs and projects are carried out--
                  [(A) in a manner that provides for the same 
                parental involvement as is required for 
                programs and projects under section 1118, 
                unless extraordinary circumstances make such 
                provision impractical; and
                  [(B) in a format and language understandable 
                to the parents;
          [(4) in planning and carrying out such programs and 
        projects, there has been, and will be, adequate 
        provision for addressing the unmet education needs of 
        preschool migratory children;
          [(5) the effectiveness of such programs and projects 
        will be determined, where feasible, using the same 
        approaches and standards that will be used to assess 
        the performance of students, schools, and local 
        educational agencies under part A;
          [(6) to the extent feasible, such programs and 
        projects will provide for--
                  [(A) advocacy and outreach activities for 
                migratory children and their families, 
                including informing such children and families 
                of, or helping such children and families gain 
                access to, other education, health, nutrition, 
                and social services;
                  [(B) professional development programs, 
                including mentoring, for teachers and other 
                program personnel;
                  [(C) family literacy programs, including such 
                programs that use models developed under Even 
                Start;
                  [(D) the integration of information 
                technology into educational and related 
                programs; and
                  [(E) programs to facilitate the transition of 
                secondary school students to postsecondary 
                education or employment; and
          [(7) the State will assist the Secretary in 
        determining the number of migratory children under 
        paragraphs (1)(A) and (2)(B)(i) of section 1303(a), 
        through such procedures as the Secretary may require.
  [(d) Priority for Services.--In providing services with funds 
received under this part, each recipient of such funds shall 
give priority to migratory children who are failing, or most at 
risk of failing, to meet the State's challenging State academic 
content standards and challenging State student academic 
achievement standards, and whose education has been interrupted 
during the regular school year.
  [(e) Continuation of Services.--Notwithstanding any other 
provision of this part--
          [(1) a child who ceases to be a migratory child 
        during a school term shall be eligible for services 
        until the end of such term;
          [(2) a child who is no longer a migratory child may 
        continue to receive services for 1 additional school 
        year, but only if comparable services are not available 
        through other programs; and
          [(3) secondary school students who were eligible for 
        services in secondary school may continue to be served 
        through credit accrual programs until graduation.

[SEC. 1305. SECRETARIAL APPROVAL; PEER REVIEW.

  [(a) Secretarial Approval.--The Secretary shall approve each 
State application that meets the requirements of this part.
  [(b) Peer Review.--The Secretary may review any such 
application with the assistance and advice of State officials 
and other individuals with relevant expertise.

[SEC. 1306. COMPREHENSIVE NEEDS ASSESSMENT AND SERVICE-DELIVERY PLAN; 
                    AUTHORIZED ACTIVITIES.

  [(a) Comprehensive Plan.--
          [(1) In general.--Each State that receives assistance 
        under this part shall ensure that the State and its 
        local operating agencies identify and address the 
        special educational needs of migratory children in 
        accordance with a comprehensive State plan that--
                  [(A) is integrated with other programs under 
                this Act or other Acts, as appropriate;
                  [(B) may be submitted as a part of a 
                consolidated application under section 9302, 
                if--
                          [(i) the special needs of migratory 
                        children are specifically addressed in 
                        the comprehensive State plan;
                          [(ii) the comprehensive State plan is 
                        developed in collaboration with parents 
                        of migratory children; and
                          [(iii) the comprehensive State plan 
                        is not used to supplant State efforts 
                        regarding, or administrative funding 
                        for, this part;
                  [(C) provides that migratory children will 
                have an opportunity to meet the same 
                challenging State academic content standards 
                and challenging State student academic 
                achievement standards that all children are 
                expected to meet;
                  [(D) specifies measurable program goals and 
                outcomes;
                  [(E) encompasses the full range of services 
                that are available for migratory children from 
                appropriate local, State, and Federal 
                educational programs;
                  [(F) is the product of joint planning among 
                such local, State, and Federal programs, 
                including programs under part A, early 
                childhood programs, and language instruction 
                educational programs under part A or B of title 
                III; and
                  [(G) provides for the integration of services 
                available under this part with services 
                provided by such other programs.
          [(2) Duration of the plan.--Each such comprehensive 
        State plan shall--
                  [(A) remain in effect for the duration of the 
                State's participation under this part; and
                  [(B) be periodically reviewed and revised by 
                the State, as necessary, to reflect changes in 
                the State's strategies and programs under this 
                part.
  [(b) Authorized Activities.--
          [(1) Flexibility.--In implementing the comprehensive 
        plan described in subsection (a), each State 
        educational agency, where applicable through its local 
        educational agencies, shall have the flexibility to 
        determine the activities to be provided with funds made 
        available under this part, except that such funds first 
        shall be used to meet the identified needs of migratory 
        children that result from their migratory lifestyle, 
        and to permit these children to participate effectively 
        in school.
          [(2) Unaddressed needs.--Funds provided under this 
        part shall be used to address the needs of migratory 
        children that are not addressed by services available 
        from other Federal or non-Federal programs, except that 
        migratory children who are eligible to receive services 
        under part A may receive those services through funds 
        provided under that part, or through funds under this 
        part that remain after the agency addresses the needs 
        described in paragraph (1).
          [(3) Construction.--Nothing in this part shall be 
        construed to prohibit a local educational agency from 
        serving migratory children simultaneously with students 
        with similar educational needs in the same educational 
        settings, where appropriate.
          [(4) Special rule.--Notwithstanding section 1114, a 
        school that receives funds under this part shall 
        continue to address the identified needs described in 
        paragraph (1), and shall meet the special educational 
        needs of migratory children before using funds under 
        this part for schoolwide programs under section 1114.

[SEC. 1307. BYPASS.

   [The Secretary may use all or part of any State's allocation 
under this part to make arrangements with any public or private 
nonprofit agency to carry out the purpose of this part in such 
State if the Secretary determines that--
          [(1) the State is unable or unwilling to conduct 
        educational programs for migratory children;
          [(2) such arrangements would result in more efficient 
        and economic administration of such programs; or
          [(3) such arrangements would add substantially to the 
        welfare or educational attainment of such children.

[SEC. 1308. COORDINATION OF MIGRANT EDUCATION ACTIVITIES.

  [(a) Improvement of Coordination.--
          [(1) In general.--The Secretary, in consultation with 
        the States, may make grants to, or enter into contracts 
        with, State educational agencies, local educational 
        agencies, institutions of higher education, and other 
        public and private nonprofit entities to improve the 
        interstate and intrastate coordination among such 
        agencies' educational programs, including the 
        establishment or improvement of programs for credit 
        accrual and exchange, available to migratory students.
          [(2) Duration.--Grants under this subsection may be 
        awarded for not more than 5 years.
  [(b) Student Records.--
          [(1) Assistance.--The Secretary shall assist States 
        in developing effective methods for the electronic 
        transfer of student records and in determining the 
        number of migratory children in each State.
          [(2) Information system.--
                  [(A) In general.--The Secretary, in 
                consultation with the States, shall ensure the 
                linkage of migrant student record systems for 
                the purpose of electronically exchanging, among 
                the States, health and educational information 
                regarding all migratory students. The Secretary 
                shall ensure such linkage occurs in a cost-
                effective manner, utilizing systems used by the 
                States prior to, or developed after, the date 
                of enactment of the No Child Left Behind Act of 
                2001, and shall determine the minimum data 
                elements that each State receiving funds under 
                this part shall collect and maintain. Such 
                elements may include--
                          [(i) immunization records and other 
                        health information;
                          [(ii) elementary and secondary 
                        academic history (including partial 
                        credit), credit accrual, and results 
                        from State assessments required under 
                        section 1111(b);
                          [(iii) other academic information 
                        essential to ensuring that migratory 
                        children achieve to high standards; and
                          [(iv) eligibility for services under 
                        the Individuals with Disabilities 
                        Education Act.
                  [(B) Notice and comment.--After consulting 
                with the States under subparagraph (A), the 
                Secretary shall publish a notice in the Federal 
                Register seeking public comment on the proposed 
                data elements that each State receiving funds 
                under this part shall be required to collect 
                for purposes of electronic transfer of 
                migratory student information and the 
                requirements that States shall meet for 
                immediate electronic access to such 
                information. Such publication shall occur not 
                later than 120 days after the date of enactment 
                of the No Child Left Behind Act of 2001.
          [(3) No cost for certain transfers.--A State 
        educational agency or local educational agency 
        receiving assistance under this part shall make student 
        records available to another State educational agency 
        or local educational agency that requests the records 
        at no cost to the requesting agency, if the request is 
        made in order to meet the needs of a migratory child.
          [(4) Report to congress.--
                  [(A) In general.--Not later than April 30, 
                2003, the Secretary shall report to the 
                Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and 
                Pensions of the Senate and the Committee on 
                Education and the Workforce of the House of 
                Representatives the Secretary's findings and 
                recommendations regarding the maintenance and 
                transfer of health and educational information 
                for migratory students by the States.
                  [(B) Required contents.--The Secretary shall 
                include in such report--
                          [(i) a review of the progress of 
                        States in developing and linking 
                        electronic records transfer systems;
                          [(ii) recommendations for the 
                        development and linkage of such 
                        systems; and
                          [(iii) recommendations for measures 
                        that may be taken to ensure the 
                        continuity of services provided for 
                        migratory students.
  [(c) Availability of Funds.--For the purpose of carrying out 
this section in any fiscal year, the Secretary shall reserve 
not more than $10,000,000 of the amount appropriated to carry 
out this part for such year.
  [(d) Incentive Grants.--From the amounts made available to 
carry out this section for any fiscal year, the Secretary may 
reserve not more than $3,000,000 to award grants of not more 
than $250,000 on a competitive basis to State educational 
agencies that propose a consortium arrangement with another 
State or other appropriate entity that the Secretary 
determines, pursuant to criteria that the Secretary shall 
establish, will improve the delivery of services to migratory 
children whose education is interrupted.
  [(e) Data Collection.--The Secretary shall direct the 
National Center for Education Statistics to collect data on 
migratory children.

[SEC. 1309. DEFINITIONS.

   [As used in this part:
          [(1) Local operating agency.--The term ``local 
        operating agency'' means--
                  [(A) a local educational agency to which a 
                State educational agency makes a subgrant under 
                this part;
                  [(B) a public or nonprofit private agency 
                with which a State educational agency or the 
                Secretary makes an arrangement to carry out a 
                project under this part; or
                  [(C) a State educational agency, if the State 
                educational agency operates the State's migrant 
                education program or projects directly.
          [(2) Migratory child.--The term ``migratory child'' 
        means a child who is, or whose parent or spouse is, a 
        migratory agricultural worker, including a migratory 
        dairy worker, or a migratory fisher, and who, in the 
        preceding 36 months, in order to obtain, or accompany 
        such parent or spouse, in order to obtain, temporary or 
        seasonal employment in agricultural or fishing work--
                  [(A) has moved from one school district to 
                another;
                  [(B) in a State that is comprised of a single 
                school district, has moved from one 
                administrative area to another within such 
                district; or
                  [(C) resides in a school district of more 
                than 15,000 square miles, and migrates a 
                distance of 20 miles or more to a temporary 
                residence to engage in a fishing activity.

 [PART D--PREVENTION AND INTERVENTION PROGRAMS FOR CHILDREN AND YOUTH 
               WHO ARE NEGLECTED, DELINQUENT, OR AT-RISK

[SEC. 1401. PURPOSE AND PROGRAM AUTHORIZATION.

  [(a) Purpose.--It is the purpose of this part--
          [(1) to improve educational services for children and 
        youth in local and State institutions for neglected or 
        delinquent children and youth so that such children and 
        youth have the opportunity to meet the same challenging 
        State academic content standards and challenging State 
        student academic achievement standards that all 
        children in the State are expected to meet;
          [(2) to provide such children and youth with the 
        services needed to make a successful transition from 
        institutionalization to further schooling or 
        employment; and
          [(3) to prevent at-risk youth from dropping out of 
        school, and to provide dropouts, and children and youth 
        returning from correctional facilities or institutions 
        for neglected or delinquent children and youth, with a 
        support system to ensure their continued education.
  [(b) Program Authorized.--In order to carry out the purpose 
of this part and from amounts appropriated under section 
1002(d), the Secretary shall make grants to State educational 
agencies to enable such agencies to award subgrants to State 
agencies and local educational agencies to establish or improve 
programs of education for neglected, delinquent, or at-risk 
children and youth.

[SEC. 1402. PAYMENTS FOR PROGRAMS UNDER THIS PART.

  [(a) Agency Subgrants.--Based on the allocation amount 
computed under section 1412, the Secretary shall allocate to 
each State educational agency an amount necessary to make 
subgrants to State agencies under subpart 1.
  [(b) Local Subgrants.--Each State shall retain, for the 
purpose of carrying out subpart 2, funds generated throughout 
the State under part A of this title based on children and 
youth residing in local correctional facilities, or attending 
community day programs for delinquent children and youth.

                   [Subpart 1--State Agency Programs

[SEC. 1411. ELIGIBILITY.

   [A State agency is eligible for assistance under this 
subpart if such State agency is responsible for providing free 
public education for children and youth--
          [(1) in institutions for neglected or delinquent 
        children and youth;
          [(2) attending community day programs for neglected 
        or delinquent children and youth; or
          [(3) in adult correctional institutions.

[SEC. 1412. ALLOCATION OF FUNDS.

  [(a) Subgrants to State Agencies.--
          [(1) In general.--Each State agency described in 
        section 1411 (other than an agency in the Commonwealth 
        of Puerto Rico) is eligible to receive a subgrant under 
        this subpart, for each fiscal year, in an amount equal 
        to the product of--
                  [(A) the number of neglected or delinquent 
                children and youth described in section 1411 
                who--
                          [(i) are enrolled for at least 15 
                        hours per week in education programs in 
                        adult correctional institutions; and
                          [(ii) are enrolled for at least 20 
                        hours per week--
                                  [(I) in education programs in 
                                institutions for neglected or 
                                delinquent children and youth; 
                                or
                                  [(II) in community day 
                                programs for neglected or 
                                delinquent children and youth; 
                                and
                  [(B) 40 percent of the average per-pupil 
                expenditure in the State, except that the 
                amount determined under this subparagraph shall 
                not be less than 32 percent, nor more than 48 
                percent, of the average per-pupil expenditure 
                in the United States.
          [(2) Special rule.--The number of neglected or 
        delinquent children and youth determined under 
        paragraph (1) shall--
                  [(A) be determined by the State agency by a 
                deadline set by the Secretary, except that no 
                State agency shall be required to determine the 
                number of such children and youth on a specific 
                date set by the Secretary; and
                  [(B) be adjusted, as the Secretary determines 
                is appropriate, to reflect the relative length 
                of such agency's annual programs.
  [(b) Subgrants to State Agencies in Puerto Rico.--
          [(1) In general.--For each fiscal year, the amount of 
        the subgrant which a State agency in the Commonwealth 
        of Puerto Rico shall be eligible to receive under this 
        subpart shall be the amount determined by multiplying 
        the number of children counted under subsection 
        (a)(1)(A) for the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico by the 
        product of--
                  [(A) the percentage which the average per-
                pupil expenditure in the Commonwealth of Puerto 
                Rico is of the lowest average per-pupil 
                expenditure of any of the 50 States; and
                  [(B) 32 percent of the average per-pupil 
                expenditure in the United States.
          [(2) Minimum percentage.--The percentage in paragraph 
        (1)(A) shall not be less than--
                  [(A) for fiscal year 2002, 77.5 percent;
                  [(B) for fiscal year 2003, 80.0 percent;
                  [(C) for fiscal year 2004, 82.5 percent; and
                  [(D) for fiscal year 2005 and succeeding 
                fiscal years, 85.0 percent.
          [(3) Limitation.--If the application of paragraph (2) 
        would result in any of the 50 States or the District of 
        Columbia receiving less under this subpart than it 
        received under this subpart for the preceding fiscal 
        year, then the percentage described in paragraph (1)(A) 
        that is used for the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico for 
        the fiscal year for which the determination is made 
        shall be the greater of--
                  [(A) the percentage in paragraph (1)(A) for 
                such fiscal year; or
                  [(B) the percentage used for the preceding 
                fiscal year.
  [(c) Ratable Reductions in Case of Insufficient 
Appropriations.--If the amount appropriated for any fiscal year 
for subgrants under subsections (a) and (b) is insufficient to 
pay the full amount for which all State agencies are eligible 
under such subsections, the Secretary shall ratably reduce each 
such amount.

[SEC. 1413. STATE REALLOCATION OF FUNDS.

  [If a State educational agency determines that a State agency 
does not need the full amount of the subgrant for which such 
State agency is eligible under this subpart for any fiscal 
year, the State educational agency may reallocate the amount 
that will not be needed to other eligible State agencies that 
need additional funds to carry out the purpose of this part, in 
such amounts as the State educational agency shall determine.

[SEC. 1414. STATE PLAN AND STATE AGENCY APPLICATIONS.

  [(a) State Plan.--
          [(1) In general.--Each State educational agency that 
        desires to receive a grant under this subpart shall 
        submit, for approval by the Secretary, a plan--
                  [(A) for meeting the educational needs of 
                neglected, delinquent, and at-risk children and 
                youth;
                  [(B) for assisting in the transition of 
                children and youth from correctional facilities 
                to locally operated programs; and
                  [(C) that is integrated with other programs 
                under this Act or other Acts, as appropriate.
          [(2) Contents.--Each such State plan shall--
                  [(A) describe the program goals, objectives, 
                and performance measures established by the 
                State that will be used to assess the 
                effectiveness of the program in improving the 
                academic, vocational, and technical skills of 
                children in the program;
                  [(B) provide that, to the extent feasible, 
                such children will have the same opportunities 
                to achieve as such children would have if such 
                children were in the schools of local 
                educational agencies in the State; and
                  [(C) contain an assurance that the State 
                educational agency will--
                          [(i) ensure that programs assisted 
                        under this subpart will be carried out 
                        in accordance with the State plan 
                        described in this subsection;
                          [(ii) carry out the evaluation 
                        requirements of section 1431;
                          [(iii) ensure that the State agencies 
                        receiving subgrants under this subpart 
                        comply with all applicable statutory 
                        and regulatory requirements; and
                          [(iv) provide such other information 
                        as the Secretary may reasonably 
                        require.
          [(3) Duration of the plan.--Each such State plan 
        shall--
                  [(A) remain in effect for the duration of the 
                State's participation under this part; and
                  [(B) be periodically reviewed and revised by 
                the State, as necessary, to reflect changes in 
                the State's strategies and programs under this 
                part.
  [(b) Secretarial Approval and Peer Review.--
          [(1) Secretarial approval.--The Secretary shall 
        approve each State plan that meets the requirements of 
        this subpart.
          [(2) Peer review.--The Secretary may review any State 
        plan with the assistance and advice of individuals with 
        relevant expertise.
  [(c) State Agency Applications.--Any State agency that 
desires to receive funds to carry out a program under this 
subpart shall submit an application to the State educational 
agency that--
          [(1) describes the procedures to be used, consistent 
        with the State plan under section 1111, to assess the 
        educational needs of the children to be served under 
        this subpart;
          [(2) provide an assurance that in making services 
        available to children and youth in adult correctional 
        institutions, priority will be given to such children 
        and youth who are likely to complete incarceration 
        within a 2-year period;
          [(3) describes the program, including a budget for 
        the first year of the program, with annual updates to 
        be provided to the State educational agency;
          [(4) describes how the program will meet the goals 
        and objectives of the State plan;
          [(5) describes how the State agency will consult with 
        experts and provide the necessary training for 
        appropriate staff, to ensure that the planning and 
        operation of institution-wide projects under section 
        1416 are of high quality;
          [(6) describes how the State agency will carry out 
        the evaluation requirements of section 9601 and how the 
        results of the most recent evaluation will be used to 
        plan and improve the program;
          [(7) includes data showing that the State agency has 
        maintained the fiscal effort required of a local 
        educational agency, in accordance with section 9521;
          [(8) describes how the programs will be coordinated 
        with other appropriate State and Federal programs, such 
        as programs under title I of Public Law 105-220, 
        vocational and technical education programs, State and 
        local dropout prevention programs, and special 
        education programs;
          [(9) describes how the State agency will encourage 
        correctional facilities receiving funds under this 
        subpart to coordinate with local educational agencies 
        or alternative education programs attended by 
        incarcerated children and youth prior to their 
        incarceration to ensure that student assessments and 
        appropriate academic records are shared jointly between 
        the correctional facility and the local educational 
        agency or alternative education program;
          [(10) describes how appropriate professional 
        development will be provided to teachers and other 
        staff;
          [(11) designates an individual in each affected 
        correctional facility or institution for neglected or 
        delinquent children and youth to be responsible for 
        issues relating to the transition of children and youth 
        from such facility or institution to locally operated 
        programs;
          [(12) describes how the State agency will endeavor to 
        coordinate with businesses for training and mentoring 
        for participating children and youth;
          [(13) provides an assurance that the State agency 
        will assist in locating alternative programs through 
        which students can continue their education if the 
        students are not returning to school after leaving the 
        correctional facility or institution for neglected or 
        delinquent children and youth;
          [(14) provides assurances that the State agency will 
        work with parents to secure parents' assistance in 
        improving the educational achievement of their children 
        and youth, and preventing their children's and youth's 
        further involvement in delinquent activities;
          [(15) provides an assurance that the State agency 
        will work with children and youth with disabilities in 
        order to meet an existing individualized education 
        program and an assurance that the agency will notify 
        the child's or youth's local school if the child or 
        youth--
                  [(A) is identified as in need of special 
                education services while the child or youth is 
                in the correctional facility or institution for 
                neglected or delinquent children and youth; and
                  [(B) intends to return to the local school;
          [(16) provides an assurance that the State agency 
        will work with children and youth who dropped out of 
        school before entering the correctional facility or 
        institution for neglected or delinquent children and 
        youth to encourage the children and youth to reenter 
        school once the term of the incarceration is completed 
        or provide the child or youth with the skills necessary 
        to gain employment, continue the education of the child 
        or youth, or achieve a secondary school diploma or its 
        recognized equivalent if the child or youth does not 
        intend to return to school;
          [(17) provides an assurance that teachers and other 
        qualified staff are trained to work with children and 
        youth with disabilities and other students with special 
        needs taking into consideration the unique needs of 
        such students;
          [(18) describes any additional services to be 
        provided to children and youth, such as career 
        counseling, distance learning, and assistance in 
        securing student loans and grants; and
          [(19) provides an assurance that the program under 
        this subpart will be coordinated with any programs 
        operated under the Juvenile Justice and Delinquency 
        Prevention Act of 1974 (42 U.S.C. 5601 et seq.) or 
        other comparable programs, if applicable.

[SEC. 1415. USE OF FUNDS.

  [(a) Uses.--
          [(1) In general.--A State agency shall use funds 
        received under this subpart only for programs and 
        projects that--
                  [(A) are consistent with the State plan under 
                section 1414(a); and
                  [(B) concentrate on providing participants 
                with the knowledge and skills needed to make a 
                successful transition to secondary school 
                completion, vocational or technical training, 
                further education, or employment.
          [(2) Programs and projects.--Such programs and 
        projects--
                  [(A) may include the acquisition of 
                equipment;
                  [(B) shall be designed to support educational 
                services that--
                          [(i) except for institution-wide 
                        projects under section 1416, are 
                        provided to children and youth 
                        identified by the State agency as 
                        failing, or most at-risk of failing, to 
                        meet the State's challenging academic 
                        content standards and student academic 
                        achievement standards;
                          [(ii) supplement and improve the 
                        quality of the educational services 
                        provided to such children and youth by 
                        the State agency; and
                          [(iii) afford such children and youth 
                        an opportunity to meet challenging 
                        State academic achievement standards;
                  [(C) shall be carried out in a manner 
                consistent with section 1120A and part I (as 
                applied to programs and projects under this 
                part); and
                  [(D) may include the costs of meeting the 
                evaluation requirements of section 9601.
  [(b) Supplement, Not Supplant.--A program under this subpart 
that supplements the number of hours of instruction students 
receive from State and local sources shall be considered to 
comply with the supplement, not supplant requirement of section 
1120A (as applied to this part) without regard to the subject 
areas in which instruction is given during those hours.

[SEC. 1416. INSTITUTION-WIDE PROJECTS.

   [A State agency that provides free public education for 
children and youth in an institution for neglected or 
delinquent children and youth (other than an adult correctional 
institution) or attending a community-day program for such 
children and youth may use funds received under this subpart to 
serve all children in, and upgrade the entire educational 
effort of, that institution or program if the State agency has 
developed, and the State educational agency has approved, a 
comprehensive plan for that institution or program that--
          [(1) provides for a comprehensive assessment of the 
        educational needs of all children and youth in the 
        institution or program serving juveniles;
          [(2) provides for a comprehensive assessment of the 
        educational needs of youth aged 20 and younger in adult 
        facilities who are expected to complete incarceration 
        within a 2-year period;
          [(3) describes the steps the State agency has taken, 
        or will take, to provide all children and youth under 
        age 21 with the opportunity to meet challenging State 
        academic content standards and student academic 
        achievement standards in order to improve the 
        likelihood that the children and youth will complete 
        secondary school, attain a secondary diploma or its 
        recognized equivalent, or find employment after leaving 
        the institution;
          [(4) describes the instructional program, pupil 
        services, and procedures that will be used to meet the 
        needs described in paragraph (1), including, to the 
        extent feasible, the provision of mentors for the 
        children and youth described in paragraph (1);
          [(5) specifically describes how such funds will be 
        used;
          [(6) describes the measures and procedures that will 
        be used to assess student progress;
          [(7) describes how the agency has planned, and will 
        implement and evaluate, the institution-wide or 
        program-wide project in consultation with personnel 
        providing direct instructional services and support 
        services in institutions or community-day programs for 
        neglected or delinquent children and youth, and with 
        personnel from the State educational agency; and
          [(8) includes an assurance that the State agency has 
        provided for appropriate training for teachers and 
        other instructional and administrative personnel to 
        enable such teachers and personnel to carry out the 
        project effectively.

[SEC. 1417. THREE-YEAR PROGRAMS OR PROJECTS.

  [If a State agency operates a program or project under this 
subpart in which individual children or youth are likely to 
participate for more than 1 year, the State educational agency 
may approve the State agency's application for a subgrant under 
this subpart for a period of not more than 3 years.

[SEC. 1418. TRANSITION SERVICES.

  [(a) Transition Services.--Each State agency shall reserve 
not less than 15 percent and not more than 30 percent of the 
amount such agency receives under this subpart for any fiscal 
year to support--
          [(1) projects that facilitate the transition of 
        children and youth from State-operated institutions to 
        schools served by local educational agencies; or
          [(2) the successful reentry of youth offenders, who 
        are age 20 or younger and have received a secondary 
        school diploma or its recognized equivalent, into 
        postsecondary education, or vocational and technical 
        training programs, through strategies designed to 
        expose the youth to, and prepare the youth for, 
        postsecondary education, or vocational and technical 
        training programs, such as--
                  [(A) preplacement programs that allow 
                adjudicated or incarcerated youth to audit or 
                attend courses on college, university, or 
                community college campuses, or through programs 
                provided in institutional settings;
                  [(B) worksite schools, in which institutions 
                of higher education and private or public 
                employers partner to create programs to help 
                students make a successful transition to 
                postsecondary education and employment; and
                  [(C) essential support services to ensure the 
                success of the youth, such as--
                          [(i) personal, vocational and 
                        technical, and academic, counseling;
                          [(ii) placement services designed to 
                        place the youth in a university, 
                        college, or junior college program;
                          [(iii) information concerning, and 
                        assistance in obtaining, available 
                        student financial aid;
                          [(iv) counseling services; and
                          [(v) job placement services.
  [(b) Conduct of Projects.--A project supported under this 
section may be conducted directly by the State agency, or 
through a contract or other arrangement with one or more local 
educational agencies, other public agencies, or private 
nonprofit organizations.
  [(c) Rule of Construction.--Nothing in this section shall be 
construed to prohibit a school that receives funds under 
subsection (a) from serving neglected and delinquent children 
and youth simultaneously with students with similar educational 
needs, in the same educational settings where appropriate.

[SEC. 1419. EVALUATION; TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE; ANNUAL MODEL PROGRAM.

   [The Secretary may reserve not more than 2.5 percent of the 
amount made available to carry out this subpart for a fiscal 
year--
          [(1) to develop a uniform model to evaluate the 
        effectiveness of programs assisted under this subpart; 
        and
          [(2) to provide technical assistance to and support 
        the capacity building of State agency programs assisted 
        under this subpart.

                   [Subpart 2--Local Agency Programs

[SEC. 1421. PURPOSE.

   [The purpose of this subpart is to support the operation of 
local educational agency programs that involve collaboration 
with locally operated correctional facilities--
          [(1) to carry out high quality education programs to 
        prepare children and youth for secondary school 
        completion, training, employment, or further education;
          [(2) to provide activities to facilitate the 
        transition of such children and youth from the 
        correctional program to further education or 
        employment; and
          [(3) to operate programs in local schools for 
        children and youth returning from correctional 
        facilities, and programs which may serve at-risk 
        children and youth.

[SEC. 1422. PROGRAMS OPERATED BY LOCAL EDUCATIONAL AGENCIES.

  [(a) Local Subgrants.--With funds made available under 
section 1402(b), the State educational agency shall award 
subgrants to local educational agencies with high numbers or 
percentages of children and youth residing in locally operated 
(including county operated) correctional facilities for 
children and youth (including facilities involved in community 
day programs).
  [(b) Special Rule.--A local educational agency that serves a 
school operated by a correctional facility is not required to 
operate a program of support for children and youth returning 
from such school to a school that is not operated by a 
correctional agency but served by such local educational 
agency, if more than 30 percent of the children and youth 
attending the school operated by the correctional facility will 
reside outside the boundaries served by the local educational 
agency after leaving such facility.
  [(c) Notification.--A State educational agency shall notify 
local educational agencies within the State of the eligibility 
of such agencies to receive a subgrant under this subpart.
  [(d) Transitional and Academic Services.--Transitional and 
supportive programs operated in local educational agencies 
under this subpart shall be designed primarily to meet the 
transitional and academic needs of students returning to local 
educational agencies or alternative education programs from 
correctional facilities. Services to students at-risk of 
dropping out of school shall not have a negative impact on 
meeting the transitional and academic needs of the students 
returning from correctional facilities.

[SEC. 1423. LOCAL EDUCATIONAL AGENCY APPLICATIONS.

   [Each local educational agency desiring assistance under 
this subpart shall submit an application to the State 
educational agency that contains such information as the State 
educational agency may require. Each such application shall 
include--
          [(1) a description of the program to be assisted;
          [(2) a description of formal agreements, regarding 
        the program to be assisted, between--
                  [(A) the local educational agency; and
                  [(B) correctional facilities and alternative 
                school programs serving children and youth 
                involved with the juvenile justice system;
          [(3) as appropriate, a description of how 
        participating schools will coordinate with facilities 
        working with delinquent children and youth to ensure 
        that such children and youth are participating in an 
        education program comparable to one operating in the 
        local school such youth would attend;
          [(4) a description of the program operated by 
        participating schools for children and youth returning 
        from correctional facilities and, as appropriate, the 
        types of services that such schools will provide such 
        children and youth and other at-risk children and 
        youth;
          [(5) a description of the characteristics (including 
        learning difficulties, substance abuse problems, and 
        other special needs) of the children and youth who will 
        be returning from correctional facilities and, as 
        appropriate, other at-risk children and youth expected 
        to be served by the program, and a description of how 
        the school will coordinate existing educational 
        programs to meet the unique educational needs of such 
        children and youth;
          [(6) as appropriate, a description of how schools 
        will coordinate with existing social, health, and other 
        services to meet the needs of students returning from 
        correctional facilities, at-risk children or youth, and 
        other participating children or youth, including 
        prenatal health care and nutrition services related to 
        the health of the parent and the child or youth, 
        parenting and child development classes, child care, 
        targeted reentry and outreach programs, referrals to 
        community resources, and scheduling flexibility;
          [(7) as appropriate, a description of any 
        partnerships with local businesses to develop training, 
        curriculum-based youth entrepreneurship education, and 
        mentoring services for participating students;
          [(8) as appropriate, a description of how the program 
        will involve parents in efforts to improve the 
        educational achievement of their children, assist in 
        dropout prevention activities, and prevent the 
        involvement of their children in delinquent activities;
          [(9) a description of how the program under this 
        subpart will be coordinated with other Federal, State, 
        and local programs, such as programs under title I of 
        Public Law 105-220 and vocational and technical 
        education programs serving at-risk children and youth;
          [(10) a description of how the program will be 
        coordinated with programs operated under the Juvenile 
        Justice and Delinquency Prevention Act of 1974 and 
        other comparable programs, if applicable;
          [(11) as appropriate, a description of how schools 
        will work with probation officers to assist in meeting 
        the needs of children and youth returning from 
        correctional facilities;
          [(12) a description of the efforts participating 
        schools will make to ensure correctional facilities 
        working with children and youth are aware of a child's 
        or youth's existing individualized education program; 
        and
          [(13) as appropriate, a description of the steps 
        participating schools will take to find alternative 
        placements for children and youth interested in 
        continuing their education but unable to participate in 
        a regular public school program.

[SEC. 1424. USES OF FUNDS.

   [Funds provided to local educational agencies under this 
subpart may be used, as appropriate, for--
          [(1) programs that serve children and youth returning 
        to local schools from correctional facilities, to 
        assist in the transition of such children and youth to 
        the school environment and help them remain in school 
        in order to complete their education;
          [(2) dropout prevention programs which serve at-risk 
        children and youth, including pregnant and parenting 
        teens, children and youth who have come in contact with 
        the juvenile justice system, children and youth at 
        least 1 year behind their expected grade level, migrant 
        youth, immigrant youth, students with limited English 
        proficiency, and gang members;
          [(3) the coordination of health and social services 
        for such individuals if there is a likelihood that the 
        provision of such services, including day care, drug 
        and alcohol counseling, and mental health services, 
        will improve the likelihood such individuals will 
        complete their education;
          [(4) special programs to meet the unique academic 
        needs of participating children and youth, including 
        vocational and technical education, special education, 
        career counseling, curriculum-based youth 
        entrepreneurship education, and assistance in securing 
        student loans or grants for postsecondary education; 
        and
          [(5) programs providing mentoring and peer mediation.

[SEC. 1425. PROGRAM REQUIREMENTS FOR CORRECTIONAL FACILITIES RECEIVING 
                    FUNDS UNDER THIS SECTION.

   [Each correctional facility entering into an agreement with 
a local educational agency under section 1423(2) to provide 
services to children and youth under this subpart shall--
          [(1) where feasible, ensure that educational programs 
        in the correctional facility are coordinated with the 
        student's home school, particularly with respect to a 
        student with an individualized education program under 
        part B of the Individuals with Disabilities Education 
        Act;
          [(2) if the child or youth is identified as in need 
        of special education services while in the correctional 
        facility, notify the local school of the child or youth 
        of such need;
          [(3) where feasible, provide transition assistance to 
        help the child or youth stay in school, including 
        coordination of services for the family, counseling, 
        assistance in accessing drug and alcohol abuse 
        prevention programs, tutoring, and family counseling;
          [(4) provide support programs that encourage children 
        and youth who have dropped out of school to reenter 
        school once their term at the correctional facility has 
        been completed, or provide such children and youth with 
        the skills necessary to gain employment or seek a 
        secondary school diploma or its recognized equivalent;
          [(5) work to ensure that the correctional facility is 
        staffed with teachers and other qualified staff who are 
        trained to work with children and youth with 
        disabilities taking into consideration the unique needs 
        of such children and youth;
          [(6) ensure that educational programs in the 
        correctional facility are related to assisting students 
        to meet high academic achievement standards;
          [(7) to the extent possible, use technology to assist 
        in coordinating educational programs between the 
        correctional facility and the community school;
          [(8) where feasible, involve parents in efforts to 
        improve the educational achievement of their children 
        and prevent the further involvement of such children in 
        delinquent activities;
          [(9) coordinate funds received under this subpart 
        with other local, State, and Federal funds available to 
        provide services to participating children and youth, 
        such as funds made available under title I of Public 
        Law 105-220, and vocational and technical education 
        funds;
          [(10) coordinate programs operated under this subpart 
        with activities funded under the Juvenile Justice and 
        Delinquency Prevention Act of 1974 and other comparable 
        programs, if applicable; and
          [(11) if appropriate, work with local businesses to 
        develop training, curriculum-based youth 
        entrepreneurship education, and mentoring programs for 
        children and youth.

[SEC. 1426. ACCOUNTABILITY.

   [The State educational agency may--
          [(1) reduce or terminate funding for projects under 
        this subpart if a local educational agency does not 
        show progress in reducing dropout rates for male 
        students and for female students over a 3-year period; 
        and
          [(2) require correctional facilities or institutions 
        for neglected or delinquent children and youth to 
        demonstrate, after receiving assistance under this 
        subpart for 3 years, that there has been an increase in 
        the number of children and youth returning to school, 
        obtaining a secondary school diploma or its recognized 
        equivalent, or obtaining employment after such children 
        and youth are released.

                     [Subpart 3--General Provisions

[SEC. 1431. PROGRAM EVALUATIONS.

  [(a) Scope of Evaluation.--Each State agency or local 
educational agency that conducts a program under subpart 1 or 2 
shall evaluate the program, disaggregating data on 
participation by gender, race, ethnicity, and age, not less 
than once every 3 years, to determine the program's impact on 
the ability of participants--
          [(1) to maintain and improve educational achievement;
          [(2) to accrue school credits that meet State 
        requirements for grade promotion and secondary school 
        graduation;
          [(3) to make the transition to a regular program or 
        other education program operated by a local educational 
        agency;
          [(4) to complete secondary school (or secondary 
        school equivalency requirements) and obtain employment 
        after leaving the correctional facility or institution 
        for neglected or delinquent children and youth; and
          [(5) as appropriate, to participate in postsecondary 
        education and job training programs.
  [(b) Exception.--The disaggregation required under subsection 
(a) shall not be required in a case in which the number of 
students in a category is insufficient to yield statistically 
reliable information or the results would reveal personally 
identifiable information about an individual student.
  [(c) Evaluation Measures.--In conducting each evaluation 
under subsection (a), a State agency or local educational 
agency shall use multiple and appropriate measures of student 
progress.
  [(d) Evaluation Results.--Each State agency and local 
educational agency shall--
          [(1) submit evaluation results to the State 
        educational agency and the Secretary; and
          [(2) use the results of evaluations under this 
        section to plan and improve subsequent programs for 
        participating children and youth.

[SEC. 1432. DEFINITIONS.

   [In this part:
          [(1) Adult correctional institution.--The term 
        ``adult correctional institution'' means a facility in 
        which persons (including persons under 21 years of age) 
        are confined as a result of a conviction for a criminal 
        offense.
          [(2) At-risk.--The term ``at-risk'', when used with 
        respect to a child, youth, or student, means a school 
        aged individual who is at-risk of academic failure, has 
        a drug or alcohol problem, is pregnant or is a parent, 
        has come into contact with the juvenile justice system 
        in the past, is at least 1 year behind the expected 
        grade level for the age of the individual, has limited 
        English proficiency, is a gang member, has dropped out 
        of school in the past, or has a high absenteeism rate 
        at school.
          [(3) Community day program.--The term ``community day 
        program'' means a regular program of instruction 
        provided by a State agency at a community day school 
        operated specifically for neglected or delinquent 
        children and youth.
          [(4) Institution for neglected or delinquent children 
        and youth.--The term ``institution for neglected or 
        delinquent children and youth'' means--
                  [(A) a public or private residential 
                facility, other than a foster home, that is 
                operated for the care of children who have been 
                committed to the institution or voluntarily 
                placed in the institution under applicable 
                State law, due to abandonment, neglect, or 
                death of their parents or guardians; or
                  [(B) a public or private residential facility 
                for the care of children who have been 
                adjudicated to be delinquent or in need of 
                supervision.]

               PART [E] B--NATIONAL ASSESSMENT OF TITLE I

SEC. [1501.]  1301. EVALUATIONS.

  (a) National Assessment of Title I.--
          (1) In general.--The Secretary, acting through the 
        Director of the Institute of Education Sciences (in 
        this section and section 1302 referred to as the 
        ``Director''), shall conduct a national assessment of 
        the programs assisted under this title and the impact 
        of this title on States, local educational agencies, 
        schools, and students.
          (2) Issues to be examined.--In conducting the 
        assessment under this subsection, the [Secretary] 
        Director shall examine, at a minimum, the following:
                  (A) The implementation of programs assisted 
                under this title and the impact of such 
                implementation on increasing student academic 
                achievement (particularly in schools with high 
                concentrations of children living in poverty), 
                relative to the goal of all students [reaching 
                the proficient level of achievement based on 
                State academic assessments, challenging State 
                academic content standards, and challenging 
                State student academic achievement standards 
                under section 1111.] graduating high school 
                prepared for postsecondary education or the 
                workforce.
                  (B) The types of programs and services that 
                have demonstrated the greatest likelihood of 
                helping students [reach the proficient and 
                advanced levels of achievement based on State 
                student academic achievement standards and 
                State academic content standards.] meet State 
                academic standards.
                  (C) The implementation of State academic 
                standards, assessments, and accountability 
                systems developed under this title, including--
                          (i) the time and cost required for 
                        the development of academic assessments 
                        for students in grades 3 through 8;
                          (ii) how well such State assessments 
                        meet the requirements for assessments 
                        described in this title; and
                          (iii) the impact of such standards, 
                        assessments, and accountability systems 
                        on educational programs and instruction 
                        at the local level.
                  [(D) Each State's definition of adequate 
                yearly progress, including--
                          [(i) the impact of applying this 
                        definition to schools, local 
                        educational agencies, and the State;
                          [(ii) the number of schools and local 
                        educational agencies not meeting this 
                        definition; and
                          [(iii) the changes in the 
                        identification of schools in need of 
                        improvement as a result of such 
                        definition.]
                  [(E)] (D) How schools, local educational 
                agencies, and States have--
                          (i) publicized and disseminated the 
                        local educational agency report cards 
                        required under section 1111(h)(2) to 
                        teachers, school staff, students, 
                        parents, and the community;
                          (ii) used funds made available under 
                        this title to provide preschool and 
                        family literacy services and the impact 
                        of these services on students' school 
                        readiness;
                          (iii) implemented the provisions of 
                        section 1118 and afforded parents 
                        meaningful opportunities to be involved 
                        in the education of their children;
                          (iv) used Federal, State, and local 
                        educational agency funds and resources 
                        to support schools and provide 
                        technical assistance to improve the 
                        achievement of students in low-
                        performing schools, including the 
                        impact of the technical assistance on 
                        such achievement; and
                          (v) used State educational agency and 
                        local educational agency funds and 
                        resources to help schools in which 50 
                        percent or more of the students are 
                        from families with incomes below the 
                        poverty line meet the requirement 
                        described in section 1119 of having all 
                        teachers highly qualified not later 
                        than the end of the 2005-2006 school 
                        year.
                  [(F)] (E) The implementation of schoolwide 
                programs and targeted assistance programs under 
                this title and the impact of such programs on 
                improving student academic achievement, 
                including the extent to which schools meet the 
                requirements of such programs.
                  [(G) The extent to which varying models of 
                comprehensive school reform are funded and 
                implemented under this title, and the effect of 
                the implementation of such models on improving 
                achievement of disadvantaged students.]
                  [(H)] (F) The costs as compared to the 
                benefits of the activities assisted under this 
                title.
                  [(I)] (G) The extent to which actions 
                authorized under [section 1116] section 
                1111(b)(3)(B)(iii) are implemented by State 
                educational agencies and local educational 
                agencies to improve the academic achievement of 
                students in low-performing schools, and the 
                effectiveness of the implementation of such 
                actions[, including the following:].
                          [(i) The number of schools identified 
                        for school improvement and how many 
                        years the schools remain in this 
                        status.
                          [(ii) The types of support provided 
                        by the State educational agencies and 
                        local educational agencies to schools 
                        and local educational agencies 
                        respectively identified as in need of 
                        improvement, and the impact of such 
                        support on student achievement.
                          [(iii) The number of parents who take 
                        advantage of the public school choice 
                        provisions of this title, the costs 
                        (including transportation costs) 
                        associated with implementing these 
                        provisions, the implementation of these 
                        provisions, and the impact of these 
                        provisions (including the impact of 
                        attending another school) on student 
                        achievement.
                          [(iv) The number of parents who 
                        choose to take advantage of the 
                        supplemental educational services 
                        option, the criteria used by the States 
                        to determine the quality of providers, 
                        the kinds of services that are 
                        available and utilized, the costs 
                        associated with implementing this 
                        option, and the impact of receiving 
                        supplemental educational services on 
                        student achievement.
                          [(v) The implementation and impact of 
                        actions that are taken with regard to 
                        schools and local educational agencies 
                        identified for corrective action and 
                        restructuring.]
                  [(J)] (H) The extent to which State and local 
                fiscal accounting requirements under this title 
                affect the flexibility of schoolwide programs.
                  [(K)] (I) The implementation and impact of 
                the professional development activities 
                assisted under this title and title II on 
                instruction, student academic achievement, and 
                teacher [qualifications] effectiveness.
                  [(L)] (J) The extent to which the assistance 
                made available under this title[, including 
                funds under section 1002,] is targeted to 
                disadvantaged students, schools, and local 
                educational agencies with the greatest need.
                  [(M)] (K) The effectiveness of Federal 
                administration assistance made available under 
                this title, including monitoring and technical 
                assistance.
                  [(N)] (L) The academic achievement of the 
                groups of students described in [section 
                1111(b)(2)(C)(v)(II)] section 
                1111(b)(3)(B)(ii)(II).
                  [(O)] (M) Such other issues as the 
                [Secretary] Director considers appropriate.
          (3) Sources of information.--In conducting the 
        assessment under this subsection, the [Secretary] 
        Director shall use information from a variety of 
        sources, including the National Assessment of 
        Educational Progress (carried out under section 303 of 
        the National Assessment of Educational Progress 
        Authorization Act), State evaluations, and other 
        research studies.
          (4) Coordination.--In carrying out this subsection, 
        the [Secretary] Director shall--
                  (A) coordinate the national assessment under 
                this subsection with the longitudinal study 
                described in subsection (c); and
                  (B) ensure that the independent review panel 
                described in subsection (d) participates in 
                conducting the national assessment under this 
                subsection, including planning for and 
                reviewing the assessment.
          (5) Developmentally appropriate measures.--In 
        conducting the national assessment under this 
        subsection, the [Secretary] Director shall use 
        developmentally appropriate measures to assess student 
        academic achievement.
          (6) Reports.--
                  (A) Interim report.--Not later than 3 years 
                after the date of enactment of the [No Child 
                Left Behind Act of 2001] Student Success Act, 
                the [Secretary] Director shall transmit to the 
                President, the Committee on Education and the 
                Workforce of the House of Representatives, and 
                the Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and 
                Pensions of the Senate an interim report on the 
                national assessment conducted under this 
                subsection.
                  (B) Final report.--Not later than 5 years 
                after the date of enactment of the [No Child 
                Left Behind Act of 2001] Student Success Act, 
                the [Secretary] Director shall transmit to the 
                President, the Committee on Education and the 
                Workforce of the House of Representatives, and 
                the Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and 
                Pensions of the Senate a final report on the 
                national assessment conducted under this 
                subsection.
  (b) Studies and Data Collection.--
          (1) In general.--In addition to other activities 
        described in this section, the [Secretary] Director 
        may, directly or through awarding grants to or entering 
        into contracts with appropriate entities--
                  (A) assess the implementation and 
                effectiveness of programs under this title;
                  (B) collect the data necessary to comply with 
                the Government Performance and Results Act of 
                1993; and
                  (C) provide guidance and technical assistance 
                to State educational agencies and local 
                educational agencies in developing and 
                maintaining management information systems 
                through which such agencies may develop program 
                performance indicators to improve services and 
                performance.
          (2) Minimum information.--In carrying out this 
        subsection, the [Secretary] Director shall collect, at 
        a minimum, trend information on the effect of each 
        program authorized under this title, which shall 
        complement the data collected and reported under 
        subsections (a) and (c).
  (c) National Longitudinal Study.--
          (1) In general.--The [Secretary] Director shall 
        conduct a longitudinal study of schools receiving 
        assistance under [part A] subpart 1 of part A.
          (2) Issues to be examined.--In carrying out this 
        subsection, the [Secretary] Director shall ensure that 
        the study referred to in paragraph (1) provides 
        Congress and educators with each of the following:
                  (A) An accurate description and analysis of 
                the short- and long-term effect of the 
                assistance made available under this title on 
                academic achievement.
                  (B) Information that can be used to improve 
                the effectiveness of the assistance made 
                available under this title in enabling students 
                to meet [challenging academic achievement 
                standards] State academic standards.
                  (C) An analysis of educational practices or 
                model programs that are effective in improving 
                the achievement of disadvantaged children.
                  (D) An analysis of the costs as compared to 
                the benefits of the assistance made available 
                under this title in improving the achievement 
                of disadvantaged children.
                  (E) An analysis of the [effects of the 
                availability of school choice options under 
                section 1116 on the academic achievement of 
                disadvantaged students, on schools in school 
                improvement, and on schools from which students 
                have transferred under such options.] extent to 
                which actions authorized under section 
                1111(b)(3)(B)(iii) improve the academic 
                achievement of disadvantaged students and low-
                performing schools.
                  (F) Such other information as the [Secretary] 
                Director considers appropriate.
          (3) Scope.--In conducting the study referred to in 
        paragraph (1), the [Secretary] Director shall ensure 
        that the study--
                  (A) bases its analysis on a nationally 
                representative sample of schools participating 
                in programs under this title;
                  (B) to the extent practicable, includes in 
                its analysis students who transfer to different 
                schools during the course of the study; and
                  [(C) analyzes varying models or strategies 
                for delivering school services, including--
                          [(i) schoolwide and targeted 
                        services; and
                          [(ii) comprehensive school reform 
                        models.]
                  (C) analyzes varying models or strategies for 
                delivering school services, including 
                schoolwide and targeted services.
  (d) Independent Review Panel.--
          (1) In general.--The [Secretary] Director shall 
        establish an independent review panel (in this 
        subsection referred to as the ``Review Panel'') to 
        advise the [Secretary] Director on methodological and 
        other issues that arise in carrying out subsections (a) 
        and (c).
          (2) Appointment of members.--
                  (A) In general.--Subject to subparagraph (B), 
                the [Secretary] Director shall appoint members 
                of the Review Panel from among qualified 
                individuals who are--
                          (i) specialists in statistics, 
                        evaluation, research, and assessment;
                          (ii) education practitioners, 
                        including teachers, principals, and 
                        local and State superintendents;
                          (iii) parents and members of local 
                        school boards or other organizations 
                        involved with the implementation and 
                        operation of programs under this title; 
                        and
                          (iv) other individuals with technical 
                        expertise who will contribute to the 
                        overall rigor and quality of the 
                        program evaluation.
                  (B) Limitations.--In appointing members of 
                the Review Panel, the [Secretary] Director 
                shall ensure that--
                          (i) in order to ensure diversity, the 
                        Review Panel includes individuals 
                        appointed under subparagraph (A)(i) who 
                        represent disciplines or programs 
                        outside the field of education; and
                          (ii) the total number of the 
                        individuals appointed under 
                        subparagraph (A)(ii) or (A)(iv) does 
                        not exceed one-fourth of the total 
                        number of the individuals appointed 
                        under this paragraph.
          (3) Functions.--The Review Panel shall consult with 
        and advise the [Secretary] Director--
                  (A) to ensure that the assessment conducted 
                under subsection (a) and the study conducted 
                under subsection (c)--
                          (i) adhere to the highest possible 
                        standards of quality with respect to 
                        research design, statistical analysis, 
                        and the dissemination of findings; and
                          (ii) use valid and reliable measures 
                        to document program implementation and 
                        impacts; and
                  (B) to ensure--
                          (i) that the final report described 
                        in subsection (a)(6)(B) is reviewed not 
                        later than 120 days after its 
                        completion by not less than two 
                        independent experts in program 
                        evaluation (who may be from among the 
                        members of the Review Panel appointed 
                        under paragraph (2));
                          (ii) that such experts evaluate and 
                        comment on the degree to which the 
                        report complies with subsection (a); 
                        and
                          (iii) that the comments of such 
                        experts are transmitted with the report 
                        under subsection (a)(6)(B).

[SEC. 1502. DEMONSTRATIONS OF INNOVATIVE PRACTICES.

  [(a) In General.--From the funds appropriated for any fiscal 
year under section 1002(e)(1), the Secretary may award grants 
to State educational agencies, local educational agencies, 
other public agencies, nonprofit organizations, public or 
private partnerships involving business and industry 
organizations, and consortia of such entities to carry out 
demonstration projects that show the most promise of enabling 
children served under this title to meet challenging State 
academic content standards and challenging State student 
academic achievement standards.
  [(b) Evaluation.--The Secretary shall evaluate the 
demonstration projects supported under this title, using 
rigorous methodological designs and techniques, including 
control groups and random assignment, to the extent feasible, 
to produce reliable evidence of effectiveness.
  [(c) Partnerships.--From funds appropriated under section 
1002(e)(1) for any fiscal year, the Secretary may, directly or 
through grants or contracts, work in partnership with State 
educational agencies, local educational agencies, other public 
agencies, and nonprofit organizations to disseminate and use 
the highest quality research and knowledge about effective 
practices to improve the quality of teaching and learning in 
schools assisted under this title.]

SEC. [1503.]  1302. ASSESSMENT EVALUATION.

  (a) In General.--The [Secretary] Director shall conduct an 
independent study of assessments used for State accountability 
purposes [and for making decisions about the promotion and 
graduation of students]. Such research shall be conducted over 
a period not to exceed 5 years and shall address the components 
described in subsection (d).
  (b) Contract Authorized.--The [Secretary] Director is 
authorized to award a contract, through a peer review 
[process,] process consistent with section 1111(e)(1), to an 
organization or entity capable of conducting rigorous, 
independent research. The [Assistant Secretary of Educational 
Research and Improvement] Director shall appoint peer reviewers 
to evaluate the applications for this contract.
  (c) Study.--The study shall--
          (1) synthesize and analyze existing research that 
        meets standards of quality and scientific rigor; and
          (2) evaluate academic assessment and accountability 
        systems in State educational agencies, local 
        educational agencies, and schools; and
          (3) make recommendations to the Department and to the 
        Committee on Education and the Workforce of the United 
        States House of Representatives and the Committee on 
        Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions of the United 
        States Senate, based on the findings of the study.
  (d) Components of the Research Program.--The study described 
in subsection (a) shall examine--
          (1) the effect of the assessment and accountability 
        systems described in section (c) on students, teachers, 
        parents, families, schools, school districts, and 
        States, including correlations between such systems 
        and--
                  (A) student academic achievement, progress 
                [to the State-defined level of proficiency] 
                toward meeting the State academic standards, 
                and progress toward closing achievement gaps, 
                based on independent measures;
                  (B) changes in course offerings, teaching 
                practices, course content, and instructional 
                material;
                  (C) changes in turnover rates among teachers, 
                principals, and [pupil-services] specialized 
                instructional support services personnel;
                  (D) changes in dropout, grade-retention, and 
                graduation rates for students; and
                  (E) such other effects as may be appropriate;
          (2) the effect of the academic assessments on 
        students with disabilities;
          (3) the effect of the academic assessments on low, 
        middle, and high socioeconomic status students, 
        [limited and nonlimited English proficient students] 
        English learners and non-English learners, racial and 
        ethnic minority students, and nonracial or nonethnic 
        minority students;
          (4) guidelines for assessing the validity, 
        reliability, and consistency of those systems using 
        nationally recognized professional and technical 
        standards;
          (5) the relationship between accountability systems 
        and the inclusion or exclusion of students from the 
        assessment system; and
          (6) such other factors as the [Secretary] Director 
        finds appropriate.
  (e) Reporting.--Not later than 3 years after the contract 
described in subsection (b) is awarded, the organization or 
entity conducting the study shall submit an interim report to 
the Committee on Education and the Workforce of the United 
States House of Representatives and the Committee on Health, 
Education, Labor and Pensions of the United States Senate, and 
to the President and the States, and shall make the report 
widely available to the public. The organization or entity 
shall submit a final report to the same recipients as soon as 
possible after the completion of the study. Additional reports 
may be periodically prepared and released as necessary.
  (f) Reservation of Funds.--The [Secretary] Director may 
reserve up to 15 percent of the funds [authorized to be 
appropriated for this part] appropriated under section 3(a)(2) 
to carry out the study, except such reservation of funds shall 
not exceed $1,500,000.

[SEC. 1504. CLOSE UP FELLOWSHIP PROGRAM.

  [(a) Program for Middle School and Secondary School 
Students.--
          [(1) Establishment.--
                  [(A) General authority.--In accordance with 
                this subsection, the Secretary may make grants 
                to the Close Up Foundation of Washington, 
                District of Columbia, a nonpartisan, nonprofit 
                foundation, for the purpose of assisting the 
                Close Up Foundation in carrying out its 
                programs of increasing civic responsibility and 
                understanding of the Federal Government among 
                middle school and secondary school students.
                  [(B) Use of funds.--Grants under this 
                subsection shall be used only to provide 
                financial assistance to economically 
                disadvantaged students who participate in the 
                programs described in subparagraph (A).
                  [(C) Name of fellowships.--Financial 
                assistance received by students pursuant to 
                this subsection shall be known as Close Up 
                fellowships.
          [(2) Applications.--
                  [(A) Application required.--No grant under 
                this subsection may be made except upon an 
                application at such time, in such manner, and 
                accompanied by such information as the 
                Secretary may reasonably require.
                  [(B) Contents of application.--Each 
                application submitted under this paragraph 
                shall contain assurances that--
                          [(i) Close Up fellowships provided 
                        under this subsection shall be made to 
                        economically disadvantaged middle 
                        school and secondary school students;
                          [(ii) every effort shall be made to 
                        ensure the participation of students 
                        from rural, small town, and urban 
                        areas;
                          [(iii) in awarding the fellowships to 
                        economically disadvantaged students, 
                        special consideration shall be given to 
                        the participation of those students 
                        with special educational needs, 
                        including students with disabilities, 
                        ethnic minority students, and students 
                        with migrant parents; and
                          [(iv) the funds received under this 
                        subsection shall be properly disbursed.
  [(b) Program for Middle School and Secondary School 
Teachers.--
          [(1) Establishment.--
                  [(A) General authority.--In accordance with 
                this subsection, the Secretary may make grants 
                to the Close Up Foundation of Washington, 
                District of Columbia, a nonpartisan, nonprofit 
                foundation, for the purpose of assisting the 
                Close Up Foundation in carrying out its 
                programs of professional development for middle 
                school and secondary school teachers and its 
                programs to increase civic responsibility and 
                understanding of the Federal Government among 
                the teachers' students.
                  [(B) Use of funds.--Grants under this 
                subsection shall be used only to provide 
                financial assistance to teachers who 
                participate in the programs described in 
                subparagraph (A).
                  [(C) Name of fellowships.--Financial 
                assistance received by teachers pursuant to 
                this subsection shall be known as Close Up 
                fellowships.
          [(2) Applications.--
                  [(A) Application required.--No grant under 
                this subsection may be made except upon an 
                application at such time, in such manner, and 
                accompanied by such information as the 
                Secretary may reasonably require.
                  [(B) Contents of application.--Each 
                application submitted under this paragraph 
                shall contain assurances that--
                          [(i) Close Up fellowships provided 
                        under this subsection shall be made 
                        only to a teacher who has worked with 
                        at least one student from such 
                        teacher's school who participates in a 
                        program described in subsection 
                        (a)(1)(A);
                          [(ii) no teacher shall receive more 
                        than one such fellowship in any fiscal 
                        year; and
                          [(iii) the funds received under this 
                        subsection shall be properly disbursed.
  [(c) Programs for New Americans.--
          [(1) Establishment.--
                  [(A) General authority.--In accordance with 
                this subsection, the Secretary may make grants 
                to the Close Up Foundation of Washington, 
                District of Columbia, a nonpartisan, nonprofit 
                foundation, for the purpose of assisting the 
                Close Up Foundation in carrying out its 
                programs of increasing civic responsibility and 
                understanding of the Federal Government among 
                economically disadvantaged middle school and 
                secondary school recent immigrant students.
                  [(B) Definition.--In this subsection, the 
                term ``recent immigrant student'' means a 
                student who is a member of a family that 
                immigrated to the United States within 5 years 
                of the student's participation in such a 
                program.
                  [(C) Use of funds.--Grants under this 
                subsection shall be used only to provide 
                financial assistance to economically 
                disadvantaged recent immigrant students and 
                their teachers who participate in the programs 
                described in subparagraph (A).
                  [(D) Name of fellowships.--Financial 
                assistance received by students and teachers 
                pursuant to this subsection shall be known as 
                Close Up Fellowships for New Americans.
          [(2) Applications.--
                  [(A) Application required.--No grant under 
                this subsection may be made except upon an 
                application at such time, in such manner, and 
                accompanied by such information as the 
                Secretary may reasonably require.
                  [(B) Contents of application.--Each 
                application submitted under this paragraph 
                shall contain assurances that--
                          [(i) Close Up Fellowships for New 
                        Americans shall be made to economically 
                        disadvantaged middle school and 
                        secondary school recent immigrant 
                        students;
                          [(ii) every effort shall be made to 
                        ensure the participation of recent 
                        immigrant students from rural, small 
                        town, and urban areas;
                          [(iii) in awarding the fellowships to 
                        economically disadvantaged recent 
                        immigrant students, special 
                        consideration shall be given to the 
                        participation of those students with 
                        special educational needs, including 
                        students with disabilities, students 
                        with migrant parents, and ethnic 
                        minority students;
                          [(iv) fully describe the activities 
                        to be carried out with the proceeds of 
                        the grant made under paragraph (1); and
                          [(v) the funds received under this 
                        subsection shall be properly disbursed.
  [(d) General Provisions.--
          [(1) Administrative provisions.--
                  [(A) Accountability.--In consultation with 
                the Secretary, the Close Up Foundation shall 
                devise and implement procedures to measure the 
                efficacy of the programs authorized in 
                subsections (a), (b), and (c) in attaining 
                objectives that include the following:
                          [(i) Providing young people with an 
                        increased understanding of the Federal 
                        Government.
                          [(ii) Heightening a sense of civic 
                        responsibility among young people.
                          [(iii) Enhancing the skills of 
                        educators in teaching young people 
                        about civic responsibility, the Federal 
                        Government, and attaining citizenship 
                        competencies.
                  [(B) General rule.--Payments under this 
                section may be made in installments, in 
                advance, or by way of reimbursement, with 
                necessary adjustments on account of 
                underpayments or overpayments.
                  [(C) Audit rule.--The Comptroller General of 
                the United States or any of the Comptroller 
                General's duly authorized representatives shall 
                have access for the purpose of audit and 
                examination to any books, documents, papers, 
                and records that are pertinent to any grant 
                under this section.
          [(2) Continuation of awards.--Notwithstanding any 
        other provision of this Act, any person or entity that 
        was awarded a grant under part G of title X before the 
        date of enactment of the No Child Left Behind Act of 
        2001 shall continue to receive funds in accordance with 
        the terms of such award until the date on which the 
        award period terminates under such terms.]

                  [PART F--COMPREHENSIVE SCHOOL REFORM

[SEC. 1601. PURPOSE.

  [The purpose of this part is to provide financial incentives 
for schools to develop comprehensive school reforms, based upon 
scientifically based research and effective practices that 
include an emphasis on basic academics and parental involvement 
so that all children can meet challenging State academic 
content and academic achievement standards.

[SEC. 1602. PROGRAM AUTHORIZATION.

  [(a) Program Authorized.--
          [(1) In general.--The Secretary is authorized to 
        award grants to State educational agencies, from 
        allotments under paragraph (2), to enable the State 
        educational agencies to award subgrants to local 
        educational agencies to carry out the purpose described 
        in section 1601.
          [(2) Allotments.--
                  [(A) Reservations.--Of the amount 
                appropriated under section 1002(f), the 
                Secretary may reserve--
                          [(i) not more than 1 percent for each 
                        fiscal year to provide assistance to 
                        schools supported by the Bureau of 
                        Indian Affairs and in the United States 
                        Virgin Islands, Guam, American Samoa, 
                        and the Commonwealth of the Northern 
                        Mariana Islands according to their 
                        respective needs for assistance under 
                        this part;
                          [(ii) not more than 1 percent for 
                        each fiscal year to conduct national 
                        evaluation activities described in 
                        section 1607; and
                          [(iii) not more than 3 percent of the 
                        amount appropriated in fiscal year 2002 
                        to carry out this part, for quality 
                        initiatives described in section 1608.
                  [(B) In general.--Of the amount appropriated 
                under section 1002(f) that remains after making 
                the reservation under subparagraph (A) for a 
                fiscal year, the Secretary shall allot to each 
                State for the fiscal year an amount that bears 
                the same ratio to the remainder for that fiscal 
                year as the amount made available under section 
                1124 to the State for the preceding fiscal year 
                bears to the total amount made available under 
                section 1124 to all States for that year.
                  [(C) Reallotment.--If a State does not apply 
                for funds under this section, the Secretary 
                shall reallot such funds to other States that 
                do apply in proportion to the amount allotted 
                to such other States under subparagraph (B).

[SEC. 1603. STATE APPLICATIONS.

  [(a) In General.--Each State educational agency that desires 
to receive a grant under this part shall submit an application 
to the Secretary at such time, in such manner, and containing 
such information as the Secretary may reasonably require.
  [(b) Contents.--Each such application shall describe--
          [(1) the process and selection criteria by which the 
        State educational agency, using expert review, will 
        select local educational agencies to receive subgrants 
        under this part;
          [(2) how the State educational agency will ensure 
        that funds under this part are limited to comprehensive 
        school reform programs that--
                  [(A) include each of the components described 
                in section 1606(a);
                  [(B) have the capacity to improve the 
                academic achievement of all students in core 
                academic subjects within participating schools; 
                and
                  [(C) are supported by technical assistance 
                providers that have a successful track record, 
                financial stability, and the capacity to 
                deliver high quality materials, professional 
                development for school personnel, and on-site 
                support during the full implementation period 
                of the reforms;
          [(3) how the State educational agency will 
        disseminate materials and information on comprehensive 
        school reforms that are based on scientifically based 
        research and effective practices;
          [(4) how the State educational agency will evaluate 
        annually the implementation of such reforms and measure 
        the extent to which the reforms have resulted in 
        increased student academic achievement; and
          [(5) how the State educational agency will provide 
        technical assistance to the local educational agency or 
        consortia of local educational agencies, and to 
        participating schools, in evaluating, developing, and 
        implementing comprehensive school reform.

[SEC. 1604. STATE USE OF FUNDS.

  [(a) In General.--Except as provided in subsection (e), a 
State educational agency that receives a grant under this part 
shall use the grant funds to award subgrants, on a competitive 
basis, to local educational agencies or consortia of local 
educational agencies in the State that receive funds under part 
A, to support comprehensive school reforms in schools that are 
eligible for funds under part A.
  [(b) Subgrant Requirements.--A subgrant to a local 
educational agency or consortium shall be--
          [(1) of sufficient size and scope to support the 
        initial costs of comprehensive school reforms selected 
        or designed by each school identified in the 
        application of the local educational agency or 
        consortium;
          [(2) in an amount not less than $50,000--
                  [(A) for each participating school; or
                  [(B) for each participating consortium of 
                small schools (which for purposes of this 
                subparagraph means a consortium of small 
                schools serving a total of not more than 500 
                students); and
          [(3) renewable for two additional 1-year subgrant 
        periods after the initial 1-year subgrant is made if 
        the school is or the schools are making substantial 
        progress in the implementation of reforms.
  [(c) Priority.--A State educational agency, in awarding 
subgrants under this part, shall give priority to local 
educational agencies or consortia that--
          [(1) plan to use the funds in schools identified as 
        being in need of improvement or corrective action under 
        section 1116(c); and
          [(2) demonstrate a commitment to assist schools with 
        budget allocation, professional development, and other 
        strategies necessary to ensure the comprehensive school 
        reforms are properly implemented and are sustained in 
        the future.
  [(d) Grant Consideration.--In awarding subgrants under this 
part, the State educational agency shall take into 
consideration the equitable distribution of subgrants to 
different geographic regions within the State, including urban 
and rural areas, and to schools serving elementary and 
secondary students.
  [(e) Administrative Costs.--A State educational agency that 
receives a grant under this part may reserve not more than 5 
percent of the grant funds for administrative, evaluation, and 
technical assistance expenses.
  [(f) Supplement.--Funds made available under this part shall 
be used to supplement, and not supplant, any other Federal, 
State, or local funds that would otherwise be available to 
carry out the activities assisted under this part.
  [(g) Reporting.--Each State educational agency that receives 
a grant under this part shall provide to the Secretary such 
information as the Secretary may require, including the names 
of local educational agencies and schools receiving assistance 
under this part, the amount of the assistance, a description of 
the comprehensive school reforms selected and used, and a copy 
of the State's annual evaluation of the implementation of 
comprehensive school reforms supported under this part and the 
student achievement results.

[SEC. 1605. LOCAL APPLICATIONS.

  [(a) In General.--Each local educational agency or consortium 
of local educational agencies desiring a subgrant under this 
part shall submit an application to the State educational 
agency at such time, in such manner, and containing such 
information as the State educational agency may reasonably 
require.
  [(b) Contents.--Each such application shall--
          [(1) identify the schools that are eligible for 
        assistance under part A and plan to implement a 
        comprehensive school reform program, including the 
        projected costs of such a program;
          [(2) describe the comprehensive school reforms based 
        on scientifically based research and effective 
        practices that such schools will implement;
          [(3) describe how the local educational agency or 
        consortium will provide technical assistance and 
        support for the effective implementation of the 
        comprehensive school reforms based on scientifically 
        based research and effective practices selected by such 
        schools; and
          [(4) describe how the local educational agency or 
        consortium will evaluate the implementation of such 
        comprehensive school reforms and measure the results 
        achieved in improving student academic achievement.

[SEC. 1606. LOCAL USE OF FUNDS.

  [(a) Uses of Funds.--A local educational agency or consortium 
that receives a subgrant under this part shall provide the 
subgrant funds to schools that are eligible for assistance 
under part A and served by the agency, to enable the schools to 
implement a comprehensive school reform program that--
          [(1) employs proven strategies and proven methods for 
        student learning, teaching, and school management that 
        are based on scientifically based research and 
        effective practices and have been replicated 
        successfully in schools;
          [(2) integrates a comprehensive design for effective 
        school functioning, including instruction, assessment, 
        classroom management, professional development, 
        parental involvement, and school management, that 
        aligns the school's curriculum, technology, and 
        professional development into a comprehensive school 
        reform plan for schoolwide change designed to enable 
        all students to meet challenging State content and 
        student academic achievement standards and addresses 
        needs identified through a school needs assessment;
          [(3) provides high quality and continuous teacher and 
        staff professional development;
          [(4) includes measurable goals for student academic 
        achievement and benchmarks for meeting such goals;
          [(5) is supported by teachers, principals, 
        administrators, school personnel staff, and other 
        professional staff;
          [(6) provides support for teachers, principals, 
        administrators, and other school staff;
          [(7) provides for the meaningful involvement of 
        parents and the local community in planning, 
        implementing, and evaluating school improvement 
        activities consistent with section 1118;
          [(8) uses high quality external technical support and 
        assistance from an entity that has experience and 
        expertise in schoolwide reform and improvement, which 
        may include an institution of higher education;
          [(9) includes a plan for the annual evaluation of the 
        implementation of school reforms and the student 
        results achieved;
          [(10) identifies other resources, including Federal, 
        State, local, and private resources, that shall be used 
        to coordinate services that will support and sustain 
        the comprehensive school reform effort; and
          [(11)(A) has been found, through scientifically based 
        research to significantly improve the academic 
        achievement of students participating in such program 
        as compared to students in schools who have not 
        participated in such program; or
          [(B) has been found to have strong evidence that such 
        program will significantly improve the academic 
        achievement of participating children.
  [(b) Special Rule.--A school that receives funds to develop a 
comprehensive school reform program shall not be limited to 
using nationally available approaches, but may develop the 
school's own comprehensive school reform program for schoolwide 
change as described in subsection (a).

[SEC. 1607. EVALUATION AND REPORTS.

  [(a) In General.--The Secretary shall develop a plan for a 
national evaluation of the programs assisted under this part.
  [(b) Evaluation.--The national evaluation shall--
          [(1) evaluate the implementation and results achieved 
        by schools after 3 years of implementing comprehensive 
        school reforms; and
          [(2) assess the effectiveness of comprehensive school 
        reforms in schools with diverse characteristics.
  [(c) Reports.--The Secretary shall submit a report describing 
the results of the evaluation under subsection (b) for the 
Comprehensive School Reform Program to the Committee on 
Education and the Workforce, and the Committee on 
Appropriations of the House of Representatives, and the 
Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions, and the 
Committee on Appropriations of the Senate.

[SEC. 1608. QUALITY INITIATIVES.

   [The Secretary, through grants or contracts, shall provide 
funds for--
          [(1) a public-private effort, in which funds are 
        matched by private organizations, to assist States, 
        local educational agencies, and schools, in making 
        informed decisions regarding approving or selecting 
        providers of comprehensive school reform, consistent 
        with the requirements described in section 1606(a); and
          [(2) activities to foster the development of 
        comprehensive school reform models and to provide 
        effective capacity building for comprehensive school 
        reform providers to expand their work in more schools, 
        assure quality, and promote financial stability.

                  [PART G--ADVANCED PLACEMENT PROGRAMS

[SEC. 1701. SHORT TITLE.

  [This part may be cited as the ``Access to High Standards 
Act''.

[SEC. 1702. PURPOSES.

   [The purposes of this part are--
          [(1) to support State and local efforts to raise 
        academic standards through advanced placement programs, 
        and thus further increase the number of students who 
        participate and succeed in advanced placement programs;
          [(2) to encourage more of the 600,000 students who 
        take advanced placement courses each year but do not 
        take advanced placement exams each year, to demonstrate 
        their achievements through taking the exams;
          [(3) to build on the many benefits of advanced 
        placement programs for students, which benefits may 
        include the acquisition of skills that are important to 
        many employers, Scholastic Aptitude Test (SAT) scores 
        that are 100 points above the national averages, and 
        the achievement of better grades in secondary school 
        and in college than the grades of students who have not 
        participated in the programs;
          [(4) to increase the availability and broaden the 
        range of schools, including middle schools, that have 
        advanced placement and pre-advanced placement programs;
          [(5) to demonstrate that larger and more diverse 
        groups of students can participate and succeed in 
        advanced placement programs;
          [(6) to provide greater access to advanced placement 
        and pre-advanced placement courses and highly trained 
        teachers for low-income and other disadvantaged 
        students;
          [(7) to provide access to advanced placement courses 
        for secondary school students at schools that do not 
        offer advanced placement programs, increase the rate at 
        which secondary school students participate in advanced 
        placement courses, and increase the numbers of students 
        who receive advanced placement test scores for which 
        college academic credit is awarded;
          [(8) to increase the participation of low-income 
        individuals in taking advanced placement tests through 
        the payment or partial payment of the costs of the 
        advanced placement test fees; and
          [(9) to increase the number of individuals that 
        achieve a baccalaureate or advanced degree, and to 
        decrease the amount of time such individuals require to 
        attain such degrees.

[SEC. 1703. FUNDING DISTRIBUTION RULE.

  [From amounts appropriated under section 1002(g) for a fiscal 
year, the Secretary shall give priority to funding activities 
under section 1704 and shall distribute any remaining funds 
under section 1705.

[SEC. 1704. ADVANCED PLACEMENT TEST FEE PROGRAM.

  [(a) Grants Authorized.--From amounts made available under 
section 1703 for a fiscal year, the Secretary shall award 
grants to State educational agencies having applications 
approved under this section to enable the State educational 
agencies to reimburse low-income individuals to cover part or 
all of the costs of advanced placement test fees, if the low-
income individuals--
          [(1) are enrolled in an advanced placement course; 
        and
          [(2) plan to take an advanced placement test.
  [(b) Award Basis.--In determining the amount of the grant 
awarded to a State educational agency under this section for a 
fiscal year, the Secretary shall consider the number of 
children eligible to be counted under section 1124(c) in the 
State in relation to the number of such children so counted in 
all the States.
  [(c) Information Dissemination.--A State educational agency 
awarded a grant under this section shall disseminate 
information regarding the availability of advanced placement 
test fee payments under this section to eligible individuals 
through secondary school teachers and guidance counselors.
  [(d) Applications.--Each State educational agency desiring to 
receive a grant under this section shall submit an application 
to the Secretary at such time, in such manner, and accompanied 
by such information as the Secretary may require. At a minimum, 
each State educational agency application shall--
          [(1) describe the advanced placement test fees the 
        State educational agency will pay on behalf of low-
        income individuals in the State from grant funds 
        awarded under this section;
          [(2) provide an assurance that any grant funds 
        awarded under this section shall be used only to pay 
        for advanced placement test fees; and
          [(3) contain such information as the Secretary may 
        require to demonstrate that the State educational 
        agency will ensure that a student is eligible for 
        payments authorized under this section, including 
        documentation required under chapter 1 of subpart 2 of 
        part A of title IV of the Higher Education Act of 1965.
  [(e) Regulations.--The Secretary shall prescribe such 
regulations as are necessary to carry out this section.
  [(f) Report.--
          [(1) In general.--Each State educational agency 
        awarded a grant under this section shall, with respect 
        to each advanced placement subject, annually report to 
        the Secretary on--
                  [(A) the number of students in the State who 
                are taking an advanced placement course in that 
                subject;
                  [(B) the number of advanced placement tests 
                taken by students in the State who have taken 
                an advanced placement course in that subject;
                  [(C) the number of students in the State 
                scoring at different levels on advanced 
                placement tests in that subject; and
                  [(D) demographic information regarding 
                individuals in the State taking advanced 
                placement courses and tests in that subject 
                disaggregated by race, ethnicity, sex, English 
                proficiency status, and socioeconomic status.
          [(2) Report to congress.--The Secretary shall 
        annually compile the information received from each 
        State educational agency under paragraph (1) and report 
        to the appropriate committees of Congress regarding the 
        information.
  [(g) BIA as SEA.--For purposes of this section the Bureau of 
Indian Affairs shall be treated as a State educational agency.

[SEC. 1705. ADVANCED PLACEMENT INCENTIVE PROGRAM GRANTS.

  [(a) Grants Authorized.--
          [(1) In general.--From amounts made available under 
        section 1703 for a fiscal year, the Secretary shall 
        award grants, on a competitive basis, to eligible 
        entities to enable those entities to carry out the 
        authorized activities described in subsection (d).
          [(2) Duration and payments.--
                  [(A) Duration.--The Secretary shall award a 
                grant under this section for a period of not 
                more than 3 years.
                  [(B) Payments.--The Secretary shall make 
                grant payments under this section on an annual 
                basis.
          [(3) Definition of eligible entity.--In this section, 
        the term ``eligible entity'' means a State educational 
        agency, local educational agency, or national nonprofit 
        educational entity with expertise in advanced placement 
        services.
  [(b) Application.--Each eligible entity desiring a grant 
under this section shall submit an application to the Secretary 
at such time, in such manner, and accompanied by such 
information as the Secretary may require.
  [(c) Priority.--In awarding grants under this section, the 
Secretary shall give priority to an eligible entity that 
submits an application under subsection (b) that--
          [(1) demonstrates a pervasive need for access to 
        advanced placement incentive programs;
          [(2) provides for the involvement of business and 
        community organizations in the activities to be 
        assisted;
          [(3) assures the availability of matching funds from 
        State, local, or other sources to pay for the cost of 
        activities to be assisted;
          [(4) demonstrates a focus on developing or expanding 
        advanced placement programs and participation in the 
        core academic areas of English, mathematics, and 
        science;
          [(5) demonstrates an intent to carry out activities 
        that target--
                  [(A) local educational agencies serving 
                schools with a high concentration of low-income 
                students; or
                  [(B) schools with a high concentration of 
                low-income students; and
          [(6) in the case of a local educational agency, 
        assures that the local educational agency serves 
        schools with a high concentration of low-income 
        students; or
          [(7) demonstrates an intent to carry out activities 
        to increase the availability of, and participation in, 
        on-line advanced placement courses.
  [(d) Authorized Activities.--
          [(1) In general.--Subject to paragraph (2), an 
        eligible entity shall use grant funds made available 
        under this section to expand access for low-income 
        individuals to advanced placement incentive programs 
        that involve--
                  [(A) teacher training;
                  [(B) pre-advanced placement course 
                development;
                  [(C) coordination and articulation between 
                grade levels to prepare students for academic 
                achievement in advanced placement courses;
                  [(D) books and supplies; or
                  [(E) activities to increase the availability 
                of, and participation in, on-line advanced 
                placement courses; or
                  [(F) any other activity directly related to 
                expanding access to and participation in 
                advanced placement incentive programs, 
                particularly for low-income individuals.
          [(2) State educational agency.--In the case of an 
        eligible entity that is a State educational agency, the 
        entity may use grant funds made available under this 
        section to award subgrants to local educational 
        agencies to enable the local educational agencies to 
        carry out the activities under paragraph (1).
  [(e) Contracts.--An eligible entity awarded a grant to 
provide online advanced placement courses under this part may 
enter into a contract with a nonprofit or for profit 
organization to provide the online advanced placement courses, 
including contracting for necessary support services.
  [(f) Data Collection and Reporting.--
          [(1) Data collection.--Each eligible entity awarded a 
        grant under this section shall, with respect to each 
        advanced placement subject, annually report to the 
        Secretary on--
                  [(A) the number of students served by the 
                eligible entity who are taking an advanced 
                placement course in that subject;
                  [(B) the number of advanced placement tests 
                taken by students served by the eligible entity 
                in that subject;
                  [(C) the number of students served by the 
                eligible entity scoring at different levels on 
                advanced placement tests in that subject; and
                  [(D) demographic information regarding 
                individuals served by such agency who taking 
                advanced placement courses and tests in that 
                subject disaggregated by race, ethnicity, sex, 
                English proficiency status, and socioeconomic 
                status.
          [(2) Report.--The Secretary shall annually compile 
        the information received from each eligible entity 
        under paragraph (1) and report to the appropriate 
        committees of Congress regarding the information.

[SEC. 1706. SUPPLEMENT, NOT SUPPLANT.

  [Grant funds provided under this part shall supplement, and 
not supplant, other non-Federal funds that are available to 
assist low-income individuals to pay for the cost of advanced 
placement test fees or to expand access to advanced placement 
and pre-advanced placement courses.

[SEC. 1707. DEFINITIONS.

   [In this part:
          [(1) Advanced placement test.--The term ``advanced 
        placement test'' means an advanced placement test 
        administered by the College Board or approved by the 
        Secretary.
          [(2) High concentration of low-income students.--The 
        term ``high concentration of low-income students'', 
        used with respect to a school, means a school that 
        serves a student population 40 percent or more of whom 
        are low-income individuals.
          [(3) Low-income individual.--The term ``low-income 
        individual'' means an individual who is determined by a 
        State educational agency or local educational agency to 
        be a child, ages 5 through 19, from a low-income 
        family, on the basis of data used by the Secretary to 
        determine allocations under section 1124 of this Act, 
        data on children eligible for free or reduced-price 
        lunches under the National School Lunch Act, data on 
        children in families receiving assistance under part A 
        of title IV of the Social Security Act, or data on 
        children eligible to receive medical assistance under 
        the medicaid program under title XIX of the Social 
        Security Act, or through an alternate method that 
        combines or extrapolates from those data.

                   [PART H--SCHOOL DROPOUT PREVENTION

[SEC. 1801. SHORT TITLE.

  [This part may be cited as the ``Dropout Prevention Act''.

[SEC. 1802. PURPOSE.

   [The purpose of this part is to provide for school dropout 
prevention and reentry and to raise academic achievement levels 
by providing grants that--
          [(1) challenge all children to attain their highest 
        academic potential; and
          [(2) ensure that all students have substantial and 
        ongoing opportunities to attain their highest academic 
        potential through schoolwide programs proven effective 
        in school dropout prevention and reentry.

[SEC. 1803. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS.

   [For the purpose of carrying out this part, there are 
authorized to be appropriated $125,000,000 for fiscal year 2002 
and such sums as may be necessary for each of the 5 succeeding 
fiscal years, of which--
          [(1) 10 percent shall be available to carry out 
        subpart 1 for each fiscal year; and
          [(2) 90 percent shall be available to carry out 
        subpart 2 for each fiscal year.

               [Subpart 1--Coordinated National Strategy

[SEC. 1811. NATIONAL ACTIVITIES.

  [(a) In General.--The Secretary is authorized--
          [(1) to collect systematic data on the effectiveness 
        of the programs assisted under this part in reducing 
        school dropout rates and increasing school reentry and 
        secondary school graduation rates;
          [(2) to establish a national clearinghouse of 
        information on effective school dropout prevention and 
        reentry programs that shall disseminate to State 
        educational agencies, local educational agencies, and 
        schools--
                  [(A) the results of research on school 
                dropout prevention and reentry; and
                  [(B) information on effective programs, best 
                practices, and Federal resources to--
                          [(i) reduce annual school dropout 
                        rates;
                          [(ii) increase school reentry; and
                          [(iii) increase secondary school 
                        graduation rates;
          [(3) to provide technical assistance to State 
        educational agencies, local educational agencies, and 
        schools in designing and implementing programs and 
        securing resources to implement effective school 
        dropout prevention and reentry programs;
          [(4) to establish and consult with an interagency 
        working group that shall--
                  [(A) address inter- and intra-agency program 
                coordination issues at the Federal level with 
                respect to school dropout prevention and 
                reentry, and assess the targeting of existing 
                Federal services to students who are most at 
                risk of dropping out of school, and the cost-
                effectiveness of various programs and 
                approaches used to address school dropout 
                prevention and reentry;
                  [(B) describe the ways in which State 
                educational agencies and local educational 
                agencies can implement effective school dropout 
                prevention and reentry programs using funds 
                from a variety of Federal programs, including 
                the programs under this part; and
                  [(C) examine Federal programs that may have a 
                positive impact on secondary school graduation 
                or school reentry;
          [(5) to carry out a national recognition program in 
        accordance with subsection (b) that recognizes schools 
        that have made extraordinary progress in lowering 
        school dropout rates; and
          [(6) to use funds made available for this subpart to 
        carry out the evaluation required under section 
        1830(c).
  [(b) Recognition Program.--
          [(1) Establishment.--The Secretary shall--
                  [(A) establish a national recognition 
                program; and
                  [(B) develop uniform national guidelines for 
                the recognition program that shall be used to 
                recognize eligible schools from nominations 
                submitted by State educational agencies.
          [(2) Recognition.--The Secretary shall recognize, 
        under the recognition program established under 
        paragraph (1), eligible schools.
          [(3) Support.--The Secretary may make monetary awards 
        to an eligible school recognized under this subsection 
        in amounts determined appropriate by the Secretary that 
        shall be used for dissemination activities within the 
        eligible school district or nationally.
          [(4) Definition of eligible school.--In this 
        subsection, the term ``eligible school'' means a public 
        middle school or secondary school, including a charter 
        school, that has implemented comprehensive reforms that 
        have been effective in lowering school dropout rates 
        for all students--
                  [(A) in that secondary school or charter 
                school; or
                  [(B) in the case of a middle school, in the 
                secondary school that the middle school feeds 
                students into.
  [(c) Capacity Building.--
          [(1) In general.--The Secretary, through a contract 
        with one or more non-Federal entities, may conduct a 
        capacity building and design initiative in order to 
        increase the types of proven strategies for school 
        dropout prevention and reentry that address the needs 
        of an entire school population rather than a subset of 
        students.
          [(2) Number and duration.--
                  [(A) Number.--The Secretary may award not 
                more than five contracts under this subsection.
                  [(B) Duration.--The Secretary may award a 
                contract under this subsection for a period of 
                not more than 5 years.
  [(d) Support for Existing Reform Networks.--
          [(1) In general.--The Secretary may provide 
        appropriate support to eligible entities to enable the 
        eligible entities to provide training, materials, 
        development, and staff assistance to schools assisted 
        under this part.
          [(2) Definition of eligible entity.--In this 
        subsection, the term ``eligible entity'' means an 
        entity that, prior to the date of enactment of the 
        Dropout Prevention Act--
                  [(A) provided training, technical assistance, 
                and materials related to school dropout 
                prevention or reentry to 100 or more elementary 
                schools or secondary schools; and
                  [(B) developed and published a specific 
                educational program or design related to school 
                dropout prevention or reentry for use by the 
                schools.

            [Subpart 2--School Dropout Prevention Initiative

[SEC. 1821. DEFINITIONS.

   [In this subpart:
          [(1) Low-income student.--The term ``low-income 
        student'' means a student who is determined by a local 
        educational agency to be from a low-income family using 
        the measures described in section 1113(c).
          [(2) State.--The term ``State'' means each of the 
        several States of the United States, the District of 
        Columbia, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the United 
        States Virgin Islands, Guam, American Samoa, the 
        Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, and the 
        Bureau of Indian Affairs for purposes of serving 
        schools funded by the Bureau.

[SEC. 1822. PROGRAM AUTHORIZED.

  [(a) Grants to State Educational Agencies and Local 
Educational Agencies.--
          [(1) Amount less than $75,000,000.--
                  [(A) In general.--If the amount appropriated 
                under section 1803 for a fiscal year equals or 
                is less than $75,000,000, then the Secretary 
                shall use such amount to award grants, on a 
                competitive basis, to--
                          [(i) State educational agencies to 
                        support activities--
                                  [(I) in schools that--
                                          [(aa) serve students 
                                        in grades 6 through 12; 
                                        and
                                          [(bb) have annual 
                                        school dropout rates 
                                        that are above the 
                                        State average annual 
                                        school dropout rate; or
                                  [(II) in the middle schools 
                                that feed students into the 
                                schools described in subclause 
                                (I); or
                          [(ii) local educational agencies that 
                        operate--
                                  [(I) schools that--
                                          [(aa) serve students 
                                        in grades 6 through 12; 
                                        and
                                          [(bb) have annual 
                                        school dropout rates 
                                        that are above the 
                                        State average annual 
                                        school dropout rate; or
                                  [(II) middle schools that 
                                feed students into the schools 
                                described in subclause (I).
                  [(B) Use of grant funds.--Grant funds awarded 
                under this paragraph shall be used to fund 
                effective, sustainable, and coordinated school 
                dropout prevention and reentry programs that 
                may include the activities described in 
                subsection (b)(2), in--
                          [(i) schools serving students in 
                        grades 6 through 12 that have annual 
                        school dropout rates that are above the 
                        State average annual school dropout 
                        rate; or
                          [(ii) the middle schools that feed 
                        students into the schools described in 
                        clause (i).
          [(2) Amount less than $250,000,000 but more than 
        $75,000,000.--If the amount appropriated under section 
        1803 for a fiscal year is less than $250,000,000 but 
        more than $75,000,000, then the Secretary shall use 
        such amount to award grants, on a competitive basis, to 
        State educational agencies to enable the State 
        educational agencies to award subgrants under 
        subsection (b).
          [(3) Amount equal to or exceeds $250,000,000.--If the 
        amount appropriated under section 1803 for a fiscal 
        year equals or exceeds $250,000,000, then the Secretary 
        shall use such amount to award a grant to each State 
        educational agency in an amount that bears the same 
        relation to such appropriated amount as the amount the 
        State educational agency received under part A for the 
        preceding fiscal year bears to the amount received by 
        all State educational agencies under such part for the 
        preceding fiscal year, to enable the State educational 
        agency to award subgrants under subsection (b).
  [(b) Subgrants to Local Educational Agencies.--
          [(1) In general.--From amounts made available to a 
        State educational agency under paragraph (2) or (3) of 
        subsection (a), the State educational agency shall 
        award subgrants, on a competitive basis, to local 
        educational agencies that operate public schools that 
        serve students in grades 6 through 12 and that have 
        annual school dropout rates that are above the State 
        average annual school dropout rate, to enable those 
        schools, or the middle schools that feed students into 
        those schools, to implement effective, sustainable, and 
        coordinated school dropout prevention and reentry 
        programs that involve activities such as--
                  [(A) professional development;
                  [(B) obtaining curricular materials;
                  [(C) release time for professional staff to 
                obtain professional development;
                  [(D) planning and research;
                  [(E) remedial education;
                  [(F) reduction in pupil-to-teacher ratios;
                  [(G) efforts to meet State student academic 
                achievement standards;
                  [(H) counseling and mentoring for at-risk 
                students;
                  [(I) implementing comprehensive school reform 
                models, such as creating smaller learning 
                communities; and
                  [(J) school reentry activities.
          [(2) Amount.--Subject to paragraph (3), a subgrant 
        under this subpart shall be awarded--
                  [(A) in the first year that a local 
                educational agency receives a subgrant payment 
                under this subpart, in an amount that is based 
                on factors such as--
                          [(i) the size of schools operated by 
                        the local educational agency;
                          [(ii) costs of the model or set of 
                        prevention and reentry strategies being 
                        implemented; and
                          [(iii) local cost factors such as 
                        poverty rates;
                  [(B) in the second year, in an amount that is 
                not less than 75 percent of the amount the 
                local educational agency received under this 
                subpart in the first such year;
                  [(C) in the third year, in an amount that is 
                not less than 50 percent of the amount the 
                local educational agency received under this 
                subpart in the first such year; and
                  [(D) in each succeeding year, in an amount 
                that is not less than 30 percent of the amount 
                the local educational agency received under 
                this subpart in the first year.
          [(3) Duration.--A subgrant under this subpart shall 
        be awarded for a period of 3 years, and may be 
        continued for a period of 2 additional years if the 
        State educational agency determines, based on the 
        annual reports described in section 1830(a), that 
        significant progress has been made in lowering the 
        annual school dropout rate for secondary schools 
        participating in the program assisted under this 
        subpart.

[SEC. 1823. APPLICATIONS.

  [(a) In General.--To receive--
          [(1) a grant under this subpart, a State educational 
        agency or local educational agency shall submit an 
        application and plan to the Secretary at such time, in 
        such manner, and accompanied by such information as the 
        Secretary may reasonably require; and
          [(2) a subgrant under this subpart, a local 
        educational agency shall submit an application and plan 
        to the State educational agency at such time, in such 
        manner, and accompanied by such information as the 
        State educational agency may reasonably require.
  [(b) Contents.--
          [(1) State educational agency and local educational 
        agency.--Each application and plan submitted under 
        subsection (a) shall--
                  [(A) include an outline--
                          [(i) of the State educational 
                        agency's or local educational agency's 
                        strategy for reducing the State 
                        educational agency or local educational 
                        agency's annual school dropout rate;
                          [(ii) for targeting secondary 
                        schools, and the middle schools that 
                        feed students into those secondary 
                        schools, that have the highest annual 
                        school dropout rates; and
                          [(iii) for assessing the 
                        effectiveness of the efforts described 
                        in the plan;
                  [(B) contain an identification of the schools 
                in the State or operated by the local 
                educational agency that have annual school 
                dropout rates that are greater than the average 
                annual school dropout rate for the State;
                  [(C) describe the instructional strategies to 
                be implemented, how the strategies will serve 
                all students, and the effectiveness of the 
                strategies;
                  [(D) describe a budget and timeline for 
                implementing the strategies;
                  [(E) contain evidence of coordination with 
                existing resources;
                  [(F) provide an assurance that funds provided 
                under this subpart will supplement, and not 
                supplant, other State and local funds available 
                for school dropout prevention and reentry 
                programs; and
                  [(G) describe how the activities to be 
                assisted conform with research knowledge about 
                school dropout prevention and reentry.
          [(2) Local educational agency.--Each application and 
        plan submitted under subsection (a) by a local 
        educational agency shall contain, in addition to the 
        requirements of paragraph (1)--
                  [(A) an assurance that the local educational 
                agency is committed to providing ongoing 
                operational support for such schools to address 
                the problem of school dropouts for a period of 
                5 years; and
                  [(B) an assurance that the local educational 
                agency will support the plan, including--
                          [(i) provision of release time for 
                        teacher training;
                          [(ii) efforts to coordinate 
                        activities for secondary schools and 
                        the middle schools that feed students 
                        into those secondary schools; and
                          [(iii) encouraging other schools 
                        served by the local educational agency 
                        to participate in the plan.

[SEC. 1824. STATE RESERVATION.

  [A State educational agency that receives a grant under 
paragraph (2) or (3) of section 1822(a) may reserve not more 
than 5 percent of the grant funds for administrative costs and 
State activities related to school dropout prevention and 
reentry activities, of which not more than 2 percent of the 
grant funds may be used for administrative costs.

[SEC. 1825. STRATEGIES AND CAPACITY BUILDING.

   [Each local educational agency receiving a grant or subgrant 
under this subpart and each State educational agency receiving 
a grant under this subpart shall implement scientifically 
based, sustainable, and widely replicated strategies for school 
dropout prevention and reentry. The strategies may include--
          [(1) specific strategies for targeted purposes, such 
        as--
                  [(A) effective early intervention programs 
                designed to identify at-risk students;
                  [(B) effective programs serving at-risk 
                students, including racial and ethnic 
                minorities and pregnant and parenting 
                teenagers, designed to prevent such students 
                from dropping out of school; and
                  [(C) effective programs to identify and 
                encourage youth who have already dropped out of 
                school to reenter school and complete their 
                secondary education; and
          [(2) approaches such as breaking larger schools down 
        into smaller learning communities and other 
        comprehensive reform approaches, creating alternative 
        school programs, and developing clear linkages to 
        career skills and employment.

[SEC. 1826. SELECTION OF LOCAL EDUCATIONAL AGENCIES FOR SUBGRANTS.

  [(a) State Educational Agency Review and Award.--The State 
educational agency shall review applications submitted under 
section 1823(a)(2) and award subgrants to local educational 
agencies with the assistance and advice of a panel of experts 
on school dropout prevention and reentry.
  [(b) Eligibility.--A local educational agency is eligible to 
receive a subgrant under this subpart if the local educational 
agency operates a public school (including a public alternative 
school)--
          [(1) that is eligible to receive assistance under 
        part A; and
          [(2)(A) that serves students 50 percent or more of 
        whom are low-income students; or
          [(B) in which a majority of the students come from 
        feeder schools that serve students 50 percent or more 
        of whom are low-income students.

[SEC. 1827. COMMUNITY BASED ORGANIZATIONS.

  [A local educational agency that receives a grant or subgrant 
under this subpart and a State educational agency that receives 
a grant under this subpart may use the funds to secure 
necessary services from a community-based organization or other 
government agency if the funds are used to provide school 
dropout prevention and reentry activities related to schoolwide 
efforts.

[SEC. 1828. TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE.

  [Notwithstanding any other provision of law, each local 
educational agency that receives funds under this subpart shall 
use the funds to provide technical assistance to secondary 
schools served by the agency that have not made progress toward 
lowering annual school dropout rates after receiving assistance 
under this subpart for 2 fiscal years.

[SEC. 1829. SCHOOL DROPOUT RATE CALCULATION.

  [For purposes of calculating an annual school dropout rate 
under this subpart, a school shall use the annual event school 
dropout rate for students leaving a school in a single year 
determined in accordance with the National Center for Education 
Statistics' Common Core of Data.

[SEC. 1830. REPORTING AND ACCOUNTABILITY.

  [(a) Local Educational Agency Reports.--
          [(1) In general.--To receive funds under this subpart 
        for a fiscal year after the first fiscal year that a 
        local educational agency receives funds under this 
        subpart, the local educational agency shall provide, on 
        an annual basis, a report regarding the status of the 
        implementation of activities funded under this subpart, 
        and the dropout data for students at schools assisted 
        under this subpart, disaggregated by race and 
        ethnicity, to the--
                  [(A) Secretary, if the local educational 
                agency receives a grant under section 
                1822(a)(1); or
                  [(B) State educational agency, if the local 
                educational agency receives a subgrant under 
                paragraph (2) or (3) of section 1822(a).
          [(2) Dropout data.--The dropout data under paragraph 
        (1) shall include annual school dropout rates for each 
        fiscal year, starting with the 2 fiscal years before 
        the local educational agency received funds under this 
        subpart.
  [(b) State Report on Program Activities.--Each State 
educational agency receiving funds under this subpart shall 
provide to the Secretary, at such time and in such format as 
the Secretary may require, information on the status of the 
implementation of activities funded under this subpart and 
outcome data for students in schools assisted under this 
subpart.
  [(c) Accountability.--The Secretary shall evaluate the effect 
of the activities assisted under this subpart on school dropout 
prevention compared, if feasible, to a control group using 
control procedures. The Secretary may use funds appropriated 
for subpart 1 to carry out this evaluation.

                      [PART I--GENERAL PROVISIONS

[SEC. 1901. FEDERAL REGULATIONS.

  [(a) In General.--The Secretary may issue such regulations as 
are necessary to reasonably ensure that there is compliance 
with this title.
  [(b) Negotiated Rulemaking Process.--
          [(1) In general.--Before publishing in the Federal 
        Register proposed regulations to carry out this title, 
        the Secretary shall obtain the advice and 
        recommendations of representatives of Federal, State, 
        and local administrators, parents, teachers, 
        paraprofessionals, and members of local school boards 
        and other organizations involved with the 
        implementation and operation of programs under this 
        title.
          [(2) Meetings and electronic exchange.--Such advice 
        and recommendations may be obtained through such 
        mechanisms as regional meetings and electronic 
        exchanges of information.
          [(3) Proposed regulations.--After obtaining such 
        advice and recommendations, and before publishing 
        proposed regulations, the Secretary shall--
                  [(A) establish a negotiated rulemaking 
                process on, at a minimum, standards and 
                assessments;
                  [(B) select individuals to participate in 
                such process from among individuals or groups 
                that provided advice and recommendations, 
                including representation from all geographic 
                regions of the United States, in such numbers 
                as will provide an equitable balance between 
                representatives of parents and students and 
                representatives of educators and education 
                officials; and
                  [(C) prepare a draft of proposed policy 
                options that shall be provided to the 
                individuals selected by the Secretary under 
                subparagraph (B) not less than 15 days before 
                the first meeting under such process.
          [(4) Process.--Such process--
                  [(A) shall be conducted in a timely manner to 
                ensure that final regulations are issued by the 
                Secretary not later than 1 year after the date 
                of enactment of the No Child Left Behind Act of 
                2001; and
                  [(B) shall not be subject to the Federal 
                Advisory Committee Act, but shall otherwise 
                follow the provisions of the Negotiated 
                Rulemaking Act of 1990 (5 U.S.C. 561 et seq.).
          [(5) Emergency situation.--In an emergency situation 
        in which regulations to carry out this title must be 
        issued within a very limited time to assist State 
        educational agencies and local educational agencies 
        with the operation of a program under this title, the 
        Secretary may issue proposed regulations without 
        following such process but shall, immediately 
        thereafter and before issuing final regulations, 
        conduct regional meetings to review such proposed 
        regulations.
  [(c) Limitation.--Regulations to carry out this part may not 
require local programs to follow a particular instructional 
model, such as the provision of services outside the regular 
classroom or school program.

[SEC. 1902. AGREEMENTS AND RECORDS.

  [(a) Agreements.--All published proposed regulations shall 
conform to agreements that result from negotiated rulemaking 
described in section 1901 unless the Secretary reopens the 
negotiated rulemaking process or provides a written explanation 
to the participants involved in the process explaining why the 
Secretary decided to depart from, and not adhere to, such 
agreements.
  [(b) Records.--The Secretary shall ensure that an accurate 
and reliable record of agreements reached during the 
negotiations process is maintained.

[SEC. 1903. STATE ADMINISTRATION.

  [(a) Rulemaking.--
          [(1) In general.--Each State that receives funds 
        under this title shall--
                  [(A) ensure that any State rules, 
                regulations, and policies relating to this 
                title conform to the purposes of this title and 
                provide any such proposed rules, regulations, 
                and policies to the committee of practitioners 
                created under subsection (b) for review and 
                comment;
                  [(B) minimize such rules, regulations, and 
                policies to which the State's local educational 
                agencies and schools are subject;
                  [(C) eliminate or modify State and local 
                fiscal accounting requirements in order to 
                facilitate the ability of schools to 
                consolidate funds under schoolwide programs; 
                and
                  [(D) identify any such rule, regulation, or 
                policy as a State-imposed requirement.
          [(2) Support and facilitation.--State rules, 
        regulations, and policies under this title shall 
        support and facilitate local educational agency and 
        school-level systemic reform designed to enable all 
        children to meet the challenging State student academic 
        achievement standards.
  [(b) Committee of Practitioners.--
          [(1) In general.--Each State educational agency that 
        receives funds under this title shall create a State 
        committee of practitioners to advise the State in 
        carrying out its responsibilities under this title.
          [(2) Membership.--Each such committee shall include--
                  [(A) as a majority of its members, 
                representatives from local educational 
                agencies;
                  [(B) administrators, including the 
                administrators of programs described in other 
                parts of this title;
                  [(C) teachers, including vocational 
                educators;
                  [(D) parents;
                  [(E) members of local school boards;
                  [(F) representatives of private school 
                children; and
                  [(G) pupil services personnel.
          [(3) Duties.--The duties of such committee shall 
        include a review, before publication, of any proposed 
        or final State rule or regulation pursuant to this 
        title. In an emergency situation where such rule or 
        regulation must be issued within a very limited time to 
        assist local educational agencies with the operation of 
        the program under this title, the State educational 
        agency may issue a regulation without prior 
        consultation, but shall immediately thereafter convene 
        the State committee of practitioners to review the 
        emergency regulation before issuance in final form.

[SEC. 1905. PROHIBITION AGAINST FEDERAL MANDATES, DIRECTION, OR 
                    CONTROL.

  [Nothing in this title shall be construed to authorize an 
officer or employee of the Federal Government to mandate, 
direct, or control a State, local educational agency, or 
school's specific instructional content, academic achievement 
standards and assessments, curriculum, or program of 
instruction.

[SEC. 1906. RULE OF CONSTRUCTION ON EQUALIZED SPENDING.

  [Nothing in this title shall be construed to mandate 
equalized spending per pupil for a State, local educational 
agency, or school.

[SEC. 1907. STATE REPORT ON DROPOUT DATA.

  [Not later than 1 year after a State educational agency 
receives funds under this title, the agency shall report to the 
Secretary and statewide, all school district data regarding 
annual school dropout rates in the State disaggregated by race 
and ethnicity according to procedures that conform with the 
National Center for Education Statistics' Common Core of Data.

[SEC. 1908. REGULATIONS FOR SECTIONS 1111 AND 1116.

  [The Secretary shall issue regulations for sections 1111 and 
1116 not later than 6 months after the date of enactment of the 
No Child Left Behind Act of 2001.]

                       PART C--GENERAL PROVISIONS

SEC. 1401. FEDERAL REGULATIONS.

  (a) In General.--The Secretary may, in accordance with 
subsections (b) through (d), issue such regulations as are 
necessary to reasonably ensure there is compliance with this 
title.
  (b) Negotiated Rulemaking Process.--
          (1) In general.--Before publishing in the Federal 
        Register proposed regulations to carry out this title, 
        the Secretary shall obtain the advice and 
        recommendations of representatives of Federal, State, 
        and local administrators, parents, teachers, and 
        members of local school boards and other organizations 
        involved with the implementation and operation of 
        programs under this title, including those 
        representatives and members nominated by local and 
        national stakeholder representatives.
          (2) Meetings and electronic exchange.--Such advice 
        and recommendations may be obtained through such 
        mechanisms as regional meetings and electronic 
        exchanges of information. Such regional meetings and 
        electronic exchanges of information shall be public and 
        notice of such meetings and exchanges shall be provided 
        to interested stakeholders.
          (3) Proposed regulations.--After obtaining such 
        advice and recommendations, and before publishing 
        proposed regulations, the Secretary shall--
                  (A) establish a negotiated rulemaking 
                process;
                  (B) select individuals to participate in such 
                process from among individuals or groups that 
                provided advice and recommendations, including 
                representation from all geographic regions of 
                the United States, in such numbers as will 
                provide an equitable balance between 
                representatives of parents and students and 
                representatives of educators and education 
                officials; and
                  (C) prepare a draft of proposed policy 
                options that shall be provided to the 
                individuals selected by the Secretary under 
                subparagraph (B) not less than 15 days before 
                the first meeting under such process.
  (c) Proposed Rulemaking.--If the Secretary determines that a 
negotiated rulemaking process is unnecessary or the individuals 
selected to participate in the process under paragraph (3)(B) 
fail to reach unanimous agreement, the Secretary may propose 
regulations under the following procedure:
          (1) Not less than 30 days prior to beginning a 
        rulemaking process, the Secretary shall provide to 
        Congress, including the Committee on Education and the 
        Workforce of the House of Representatives and the 
        Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions of 
        the Senate, notice that shall include--
                  (A) a copy of the proposed regulations;
                  (B) the need to issue regulations;
                  (C) the anticipated burden, including the 
                time, cost, and paperwork burden, the 
                regulations will have on State educational 
                agencies, local educational agencies, schools, 
                and other entities that may be impacted by the 
                regulations; and
                  (D) any regulations that will be repealed 
                when the new regulations are issued.
          (2) 30 days after giving notice of the proposed rule 
        to Congress, the Secretary may proceed with the 
        rulemaking process after all comments received from the 
        Congress have been addressed and publishing how such 
        comments are addressed with the proposed rule.
          (3) The comment and review period for any proposed 
        regulation shall be 90 days unless an emergency 
        requires a shorter period, in which case such period 
        shall be not less than 45 days and the Secretary 
        shall--
                  (A) designate the proposed regulation as an 
                emergency with an explanation of the emergency 
                in the notice and report to Congress under 
                paragraph (1); and
                  (B) publish the length of the comment and 
                review period in such notice and in the Federal 
                Register.
          (4) No regulation shall be made final after the 
        comment and review period until the Secretary has 
        published in the Federal Register an independent 
        assessment (which shall include a representative 
        sampling of local educational agencies based on local 
        educational agency enrollment, urban, suburban, or 
        rural character, and other factors impacted by the 
        proposed regulation) of--
                  (A) the burden, including the time, cost, and 
                paperwork burden, the regulation will impose on 
                State educational agencies, local educational 
                agencies, schools and other entities that may 
                be impacted by the regulation;
                  (B) an explanation of how the entities 
                described in subparagraph (A) may cover the 
                cost of the burden assessed under subparagraph 
                (A); and
                  (C) the proposed regulation, which thoroughly 
                addresses, based on the comments received 
                during the comment and review period under 
                paragraph (3), whether the rule is financially, 
                operationally, and educationally viable at the 
                local level.
  (d) Limitation.--Regulations to carry out this title may not 
require local programs to follow a particular instructional 
model, such as the provision of services outside the regular 
classroom or school program.

SEC. 1402. AGREEMENTS AND RECORDS.

  (a) Agreements.--In the case in which a negotiated rule 
making process is established under subsection (b) of section 
1401, all published proposed regulations shall conform to 
agreements that result from the rulemaking described in section 
1401 unless the Secretary reopens the negotiated rulemaking 
process.
  (b) Records.--The Secretary shall ensure that an accurate and 
reliable record of agreements reached during the negotiations 
process is maintained.

SEC. 1403. STATE ADMINISTRATION.

  (a) Rulemaking.--
          (1) In general.--Each State that receives funds under 
        this title shall--
                  (A) ensure that any State rules, regulations, 
                and policies relating to this title conform to 
                the purposes of this title and provide any such 
                proposed rules, regulations, and policies to 
                the committee of practitioners created under 
                subsection (b) for review and comment;
                  (B) minimize such rules, regulations, and 
                policies to which the State's local educational 
                agencies and schools are subject;
                  (C) eliminate or modify State and local 
                fiscal accounting requirements in order to 
                facilitate the ability of schools to 
                consolidate funds under schoolwide programs;
                  (D) identify any such rule, regulation, or 
                policy as a State-imposed requirement; and
                  (E)(i) identify any duplicative or 
                contrasting requirements between the State and 
                Federal rules or regulations;
                  (ii) eliminate the rules and regulations that 
                are duplicative of Federal requirements; and
                  (iii) report any conflicting requirements to 
                the Secretary and determine which Federal or 
                State rule or regulation shall be followed.
          (2) Support and facilitation.--State rules, 
        regulations, and policies under this title shall 
        support and facilitate local educational agency and 
        school-level systemic reform designed to enable all 
        children to meet the State academic standards.
  (b) Committee of Practitioners.--
          (1) In general.--Each State educational agency that 
        receives funds under this title shall create a State 
        committee of practitioners to advise the State in 
        carrying out its responsibilities under this title.
          (2) Membership.--Each such committee shall include--
                  (A) as a majority of its members, 
                representatives from local educational 
                agencies;
                  (B) administrators, including the 
                administrators of programs described in other 
                parts of this title;
                  (C) teachers from public charter schools, 
                traditional public schools, and career and 
                technical educators;
                  (D) parents;
                  (E) members of local school boards;
                  (F) representatives of public charter school 
                authorizers;
                  (G) public charter school leaders;
                  (H) representatives of private school 
                children; and
                  (I) specialized instructional support 
                personnel.
          (3) Duties.--The duties of such committee shall 
        include a review, before publication, of any proposed 
        or final State rule or regulation pursuant to this 
        title. In an emergency situation where such rule or 
        regulation must be issued within a very limited time to 
        assist local educational agencies with the operation of 
        the program under this title, the State educational 
        agency may issue a regulation without prior 
        consultation, but shall immediately thereafter convene 
        the State committee of practitioners to review the 
        emergency regulation before issuance in final form.

SEC. 1404. RULE OF CONSTRUCTION ON EQUALIZED SPENDING.

  Nothing in this title shall be construed to mandate or 
prohibit equalized spending per pupil for a State, local 
educational agency, or school.

 [TITLE II--PREPARING, TRAINING, AND RECRUITING HIGH QUALITY TEACHERS 
                            AND PRINCIPALS]

            TITLE II--TEACHER PREPARATION AND EFFECTIVENESS

      [PART A--TEACHER AND PRINCIPAL TRAINING AND RECRUITING FUND

[SEC. 2101. PURPOSE.

   [The purpose of this part is to provide grants to State 
educational agencies, local educational agencies, State 
agencies for higher education, and eligible partnerships in 
order to--
          [(1) increase student academic achievement through 
        strategies such as improving teacher and principal 
        quality and increasing the number of highly qualified 
        teachers in the classroom and highly qualified 
        principals and assistant principals in schools; and
          [(2) hold local educational agencies and schools 
        accountable for improvements in student academic 
        achievement.

[SEC. 2102. DEFINITIONS.

   [In this part:
          [(1) Arts and sciences.--The term ``arts and 
        sciences'' means--
                  [(A) when referring to an organizational unit 
                of an institution of higher education, any 
                academic unit that offers one or more academic 
                majors in disciplines or content areas 
                corresponding to the academic subjects in which 
                teachers teach; and
                  [(B) when referring to a specific academic 
                subject, the disciplines or content areas in 
                which an academic major is offered by an 
                organizational unit described in subparagraph 
                (A).
          [(2) Charter school.--The term ``charter school'' has 
        the meaning given the term in section 5210.
          [(3) High-need local educational agency.--The term 
        ``high-need local educational agency'' means a local 
        educational agency--
                  [(A)(i) that serves not fewer than 10,000 
                children from families with incomes below the 
                poverty line; or
                  [(ii) for which not less than 20 percent of 
                the children served by the agency are from 
                families with incomes below the poverty line; 
                and
                  [(B)(i) for which there is a high percentage 
                of teachers not teaching in the academic 
                subjects or grade levels that the teachers were 
                trained to teach; or
                  [(ii) for which there is a high percentage of 
                teachers with emergency, provisional, or 
                temporary certification or licensing.
          [(4) Highly qualified paraprofessional.--The term 
        ``highly qualified paraprofessional'' means a 
        paraprofessional who has not less than 2 years of--
                  [(A) experience in a classroom; and
                  [(B) postsecondary education or demonstrated 
                competence in a field or academic subject for 
                which there is a significant shortage of 
                qualified teachers.
          [(5) Out-of-field teacher.--The term ``out-of-field 
        teacher'' means a teacher who is teaching an academic 
        subject or a grade level for which the teacher is not 
        highly qualified.
          [(6) Principal.--The term ``principal'' includes an 
        assistant principal.

[SEC. 2103. AUTHORIZATIONS OF APPROPRIATIONS.

  [(a) Grants to States, Local Educational Agencies, and 
Eligible Partnerships.--There are authorized to be appropriated 
to carry out this part (other than subpart 5) $3,175,000,000 
for fiscal year 2002 and such sums as may be necessary for each 
of the 5 succeeding fiscal years.
  [(b) National Programs.--There are authorized to be 
appropriated to carry out subpart 5 such sums as may be 
necessary for fiscal year 2002 and each of the 5 succeeding 
fiscal years.

                      [Subpart 1--Grants to States

[SEC. 2111. ALLOTMENTS TO STATES.

  [(a) In General.--The Secretary shall make grants to States 
with applications approved under section 2112 to pay for the 
Federal share of the cost of carrying out the activities 
specified in section 2113. Each grant shall consist of the 
allotment determined for a State under subsection (b).
  [(b) Determination of Allotments.--
          [(1) Reservation of funds.--
                  [(A) In general.--From the total amount 
                appropriated under section 2103(a) for a fiscal 
                year, the Secretary shall reserve--
                          [(i) one-half of 1 percent for 
                        allotments for the United States Virgin 
                        Islands, Guam, American Samoa, and the 
                        Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana 
                        Islands, to be distributed among those 
                        outlying areas on the basis of their 
                        relative need, as determined by the 
                        Secretary, in accordance with the 
                        purpose of this part; and
                          [(ii) one-half of 1 percent for the 
                        Secretary of the Interior for programs 
                        under this part in schools operated or 
                        funded by the Bureau of Indian Affairs.
          [(2) State allotments.--
                  [(A) Hold harmless.--
                          [(i) In general.--Subject to 
                        subparagraph (B), from the funds 
                        appropriated under section 2103(a) for 
                        any fiscal year and not reserved under 
                        paragraph (1), the Secretary shall 
                        allot to each of the 50 States, the 
                        District of Columbia, and the 
                        Commonwealth of Puerto Rico an amount 
                        equal to the total amount that such 
                        State received for fiscal year 2001 
                        under--
                                  [(I) section 2202(b) of this 
                                Act (as in effect on the day 
                                before the date of enactment of 
                                the No Child Left Behind Act of 
                                2001); and
                                  [(II) section 306 of the 
                                Department of Education 
                                Appropriations Act, 2001 (as 
                                enacted into law by section 
                                1(a)(1) of Public Law 106-554).
                          [(ii) Ratable reduction.--If the 
                        funds described in clause (i) are 
                        insufficient to pay the full amounts 
                        that all States are eligible to receive 
                        under clause (i) for any fiscal year, 
                        the Secretary shall ratably reduce 
                        those amounts for the fiscal year.
                  [(B) Allotment of additional funds.--
                          [(i) In general.--Subject to clause 
                        (ii), for any fiscal year for which the 
                        funds appropriated under section 
                        2103(a) and not reserved under 
                        paragraph (1) exceed the total amount 
                        required to make allotments under 
                        subparagraph (A), the Secretary shall 
                        allot to each of the States described 
                        in subparagraph (A) the sum of--
                                  [(I) an amount that bears the 
                                same relationship to 35 percent 
                                of the excess amount as the 
                                number of individuals age 5 
                                through 17 in the State, as 
                                determined by the Secretary on 
                                the basis of the most recent 
                                satisfactory data, bears to the 
                                number of those individuals in 
                                all such States, as so 
                                determined; and
                                  [(II) an amount that bears 
                                the same relationship to 65 
                                percent of the excess amount as 
                                the number of individuals age 5 
                                through 17 from families with 
                                incomes below the poverty line, 
                                in the State, as determined by 
                                the Secretary on the basis of 
                                the most recent satisfactory 
                                data, bears to the number of 
                                those individuals in all such 
                                States, as so determined.
                          [(ii) Exception.--No State receiving 
                        an allotment under clause (i) may 
                        receive less than one-half of 1 percent 
                        of the total excess amount allotted 
                        under such clause for a fiscal year.
          [(3) Reallotment.--If any State does not apply for an 
        allotment under this subsection for any fiscal year, 
        the Secretary shall reallot the amount of the allotment 
        to the remaining States in accordance with this 
        subsection.

[SEC. 2112. STATE APPLICATIONS.

  [(a) In General.--For a State to be eligible to receive a 
grant under this part, the State educational agency shall 
submit an application to the Secretary at such time, in such 
manner, and containing such information as the Secretary may 
reasonably require.
  [(b) Contents.--Each application submitted under this section 
shall include the following:
          [(1) A description of how the activities to be 
        carried out by the State educational agency under this 
        subpart will be based on a review of scientifically 
        based research and an explanation of why the activities 
        are expected to improve student academic achievement.
          [(2) A description of how the State educational 
        agency will ensure that a local educational agency 
        receiving a subgrant to carry out subpart 2 will comply 
        with the requirements of such subpart.
          [(3) A description of how the State educational 
        agency will ensure that activities assisted under this 
        subpart are aligned with challenging State academic 
        content and student academic achievement standards, 
        State assessments, and State and local curricula.
          [(4) A description of how the State educational 
        agency will use funds under this part to improve the 
        quality of the State's teachers and principals.
          [(5)(A) A description of how the State educational 
        agency will coordinate professional development 
        activities authorized under this part with professional 
        development activities provided under other Federal, 
        State, and local programs.
          [(B) A description of the comprehensive strategy that 
        the State educational agency will use, as part of such 
        coordination effort, to ensure that teachers are 
        trained in the use of technology so that technology and 
        applications of technology are effectively used in the 
        classroom to improve teaching and learning in all 
        curricula and academic subjects, as appropriate.
          [(6) A description of how the State educational 
        agency will encourage the development of proven, 
        innovative strategies to deliver intensive professional 
        development programs that are both cost-effective and 
        easily accessible, such as strategies that involve 
        delivery through the use of technology, peer networks, 
        and distance learning.
          [(7)(A) A description of how the State educational 
        agency will ensure compliance with the requirements for 
        professional development activities described in 
        section 9101 and how the activities to be carried out 
        under the grant will be developed collaboratively and 
        based on the input of teachers, principals, parents, 
        administrators, paraprofessionals, and other school 
        personnel.
          [(B) In the case of a State in which the State 
        educational agency is not the entity responsible for 
        teacher professional standards, certification, and 
        licensing, an assurance that the State activities 
        carried out under this subpart are carried out in 
        conjunction with the entity responsible for such 
        standards, certification, and licensing under State 
        law.
          [(8) A description of how the State educational 
        agency will ensure that the professional development 
        (including teacher mentoring) needs of teachers will be 
        met using funds under this subpart and subpart 2.
          [(9) A description of the State educational agency's 
        annual measurable objectives under section 1119(a)(2).
          [(10) A description of how the State educational 
        agency will use funds under this part to meet the 
        teacher and paraprofessional requirements of section 
        1119 and how the State educational agency will hold 
        local educational agencies accountable for meeting the 
        annual measurable objectives described in section 
        1119(a)(2).
          [(11) In the case of a State that has a charter 
        school law that exempts teachers from State 
        certification and licensing requirements, the specific 
        portion of the State law that provides for the 
        exemption.
          [(12) An assurance that the State educational agency 
        will comply with section 9501 (regarding participation 
        by private school children and teachers).
  [(c) Deemed Approval.--An application submitted by a State 
educational agency pursuant to subsection (a) shall be deemed 
to be approved by the Secretary unless the Secretary makes a 
written determination, prior to the expiration of the 120-day 
period beginning on the date on which the Secretary received 
the application, that the application is not in compliance with 
this subpart.
  [(d) Disapproval.--The Secretary shall not finally disapprove 
the application, except after giving the State educational 
agency notice and an opportunity for a hearing.
  [(e) Notification.--If the Secretary finds that the 
application is not in compliance, in whole or in part, with 
this subpart, the Secretary shall--
          [(1) give the State educational agency notice and an 
        opportunity for a hearing; and
          [(2) notify the State educational agency of the 
        finding of noncompliance and, in such notification, 
        shall--
                  [(A) cite the specific provisions in the 
                application that are not in compliance; and
                  [(B) request additional information, only as 
                to the noncompliant provisions, needed to make 
                the application compliant.
  [(f) Response.--If the State educational agency responds to 
the Secretary's notification described in subsection (e)(2) 
during the 45-day period beginning on the date on which the 
agency received the notification, and resubmits the application 
with the requested information described in subsection 
(e)(2)(B), the Secretary shall approve or disapprove such 
application prior to the later of--
          [(1) the expiration of the 45-day period beginning on 
        the date on which the application is resubmitted; or
          [(2) the expiration of the 120-day period described 
        in subsection (c).
  [(g) Failure To Respond.--If the State educational agency 
does not respond to the Secretary's notification described in 
subsection (e)(2) during the 45-day period beginning on the 
date on which the agency received the notification, such 
application shall be deemed to be disapproved.

[SEC. 2113. STATE USE OF FUNDS.

  [(a) In General.--A State that receives a grant under section 
2111 shall--
          [(1) reserve 95 percent of the funds made available 
        through the grant to make subgrants to local 
        educational agencies as described in subpart 2;
          [(2) reserve 2.5 percent (or, for a fiscal year 
        described in subsection (b), the percentage determined 
        under subsection (b)) of the funds to make subgrants to 
        local partnerships as described in subpart 3; and
          [(3) use the remainder of the funds for State 
        activities described in subsection (c).
  [(b) Special Rule.--For any fiscal year for which the total 
amount that would be reserved by all States under subsection 
(a)(2), if the States applied a 2.5 percentage rate, exceeds 
$125,000,000, the Secretary shall determine an alternative 
percentage that the States shall apply for that fiscal year 
under subsection (a)(2) so that the total amount reserved by 
all States under subsection (a)(2) equals $125,000,000.
  [(c) State Activities.--The State educational agency for a 
State that receives a grant under section 2111 shall use the 
funds described in subsection (a)(3) to carry out one or more 
of the following activities, which may be carried out through a 
grant or contract with a for-profit or nonprofit entity:
          [(1) Reforming teacher and principal certification 
        (including recertification) or licensing requirements 
        to ensure that--
                  [(A)(i) teachers have the necessary subject 
                matter knowledge and teaching skills in the 
                academic subjects that the teachers teach; and
                  [(ii) principals have the instructional 
                leadership skills to help teachers teach and 
                students learn;
                  [(B) teacher certification (including 
                recertification) or licensing requirements are 
                aligned with challenging State academic content 
                standards; and
                  [(C) teachers have the subject matter 
                knowledge and teaching skills, including 
                technology literacy, and principals have the 
                instructional leadership skills, necessary to 
                help students meet challenging State student 
                academic achievement standards.
          [(2) Carrying out programs that provide support to 
        teachers or principals, including support for teachers 
        and principals new to their profession, such as 
        programs that--
                  [(A) provide teacher mentoring, team 
                teaching, reduced class schedules, and 
                intensive professional development; and
                  [(B) use standards or assessments for guiding 
                beginning teachers that are consistent with 
                challenging State student academic achievement 
                standards and with the requirements for 
                professional development activities described 
                in section 9101.
          [(3) Carrying out programs that establish, expand, or 
        improve alternative routes for State certification of 
        teachers and principals, especially in the areas of 
        mathematics and science, for highly qualified 
        individuals with a baccalaureate or master's degree, 
        including mid-career professionals from other 
        occupations, paraprofessionals, former military 
        personnel, and recent college or university graduates 
        with records of academic distinction who demonstrate 
        the potential to become highly effective teachers or 
        principals.
          [(4) Developing and implementing mechanisms to assist 
        local educational agencies and schools in effectively 
        recruiting and retaining highly qualified teachers, 
        including specialists in core academic subjects, 
        principals, and pupil services personnel, except that 
        funds made available under this paragraph may be used 
        for pupil services personnel only--
                  [(A) if the State educational agency is 
                making progress toward meeting the annual 
                measurable objectives described in section 
                1119(a)(2); and
                  [(B) in a manner consistent with mechanisms 
                to assist local educational agencies and 
                schools in effectively recruiting and retaining 
                highly qualified teachers and principals.
          [(5) Reforming tenure systems, implementing teacher 
        testing for subject matter knowledge, and implementing 
        teacher testing for State certification or licensing, 
        consistent with title II of the Higher Education Act of 
        1965.
          [(6) Providing professional development for teachers 
        and principals and, in cases in which a State 
        educational agency determines support to be 
        appropriate, supporting the participation of pupil 
        services personnel in the same type of professional 
        development activities as are made available to 
        teachers and principals.
          [(7) Developing systems to measure the effectiveness 
        of specific professional development programs and 
        strategies to document gains in student academic 
        achievement or increases in teacher mastery of the 
        academic subjects the teachers teach.
          [(8) Fulfilling the State educational agency's 
        responsibilities concerning proper and efficient 
        administration of the programs carried out under this 
        part, including provision of technical assistance to 
        local educational agencies.
          [(9) Funding projects to promote reciprocity of 
        teacher and principal certification or licensing 
        between or among States, except that no reciprocity 
        agreement developed under this paragraph or developed 
        using funds provided under this part may lead to the 
        weakening of any State teaching certification or 
        licensing requirement.
          [(10) Developing or assisting local educational 
        agencies in the development and use of proven, 
        innovative strategies to deliver intensive professional 
        development programs that are both cost-effective and 
        easily accessible, such as strategies that involve 
        delivery through the use of technology, peer networks, 
        and distance learning.
          [(11) Encouraging and supporting the training of 
        teachers and administrators to effectively integrate 
        technology into curricula and instruction, including 
        training to improve the ability to collect, manage, and 
        analyze data to improve teaching, decisionmaking, 
        school improvement efforts, and accountability.
          [(12) Developing, or assisting local educational 
        agencies in developing, merit-based performance 
        systems, and strategies that provide differential and 
        bonus pay for teachers in high-need academic subjects 
        such as reading, mathematics, and science and teachers 
        in high-poverty schools and districts.
          [(13) Providing assistance to local educational 
        agencies for the development and implementation of 
        professional development programs for principals that 
        enable the principals to be effective school leaders 
        and prepare all students to meet challenging State 
        academic content and student academic achievement 
        standards, and the development and support of school 
        leadership academies to help exceptionally talented 
        aspiring or current principals and superintendents 
        become outstanding managers and educational leaders.
          [(14) Developing, or assisting local educational 
        agencies in developing, teacher advancement initiatives 
        that promote professional growth and emphasize multiple 
        career paths (such as paths to becoming a career 
        teacher, mentor teacher, or exemplary teacher) and pay 
        differentiation.
          [(15) Providing assistance to teachers to enable them 
        to meet certification, licensing, or other requirements 
        needed to become highly qualified by the end of the 
        fourth year for which the State receives funds under 
        this part (as amended by the No Child Left Behind Act 
        of 2001).
          [(16) Supporting activities that ensure that teachers 
        are able to use challenging State academic content 
        standards and student academic achievement standards, 
        and State assessments, to improve instructional 
        practices and improve student academic achievement.
          [(17) Funding projects and carrying out programs to 
        encourage men to become elementary school teachers.
          [(18) Establishing and operating a center that--
                  [(A) serves as a statewide clearinghouse for 
                the recruitment and placement of kindergarten, 
                elementary school, and secondary school 
                teachers; and
                  [(B) establishes and carries out programs to 
                improve teacher recruitment and retention 
                within the State.
  [(d) Administrative Costs.--A State educational agency or 
State agency for higher education receiving a grant under this 
part may use not more than 1 percent of the grant funds for 
planning and administration related to carrying out activities 
under subsection (c) and subpart 3.
  [(e) Coordination.--A State that receives a grant to carry 
out this subpart and a grant under section 202 of the Higher 
Education Act of 1965 shall coordinate the activities carried 
out under this subpart and the activities carried out under 
that section.
  [(f) Supplement, Not Supplant.--Funds received under this 
subpart shall be used to supplement, and not supplant, non-
Federal funds that would otherwise be used for activities 
authorized under this subpart.

          [Subpart 2--Subgrants to Local Educational Agencies

[SEC. 2121. ALLOCATIONS TO LOCAL EDUCATIONAL AGENCIES.

  [(a) Subgrants to Local Educational Agencies.--
          [(1) In general.--The Secretary may make a grant to a 
        State under subpart 1 only if the State educational 
        agency agrees to distribute the funds described in this 
        subsection as subgrants to local educational agencies 
        under this subpart.
          [(2) Hold harmless.--
                  [(A) In general.--From the funds reserved by 
                a State under section 2113(a)(1), the State 
                educational agency shall allocate to each local 
                educational agency in the State an amount equal 
                to the total amount that such agency received 
                for fiscal year 2001 under--
                          [(i) section 2203(1)(B) of this Act 
                        (as in effect on the day before the 
                        date of enactment of the No Child Left 
                        Behind Act of 2001); and
                          [(ii) section 306 of the Department 
                        of Education Appropriations Act, 2001 
                        (as enacted into law by section 1(a)(1) 
                        of Public Law 106-554).
                  [(B) Nonparticipating agencies.--In the case 
                of a local educational agency that did not 
                receive any funds for fiscal year 2001 under 
                one or both of the provisions referred to in 
                clauses (i) and (ii) of subparagraph (A), the 
                amount allocated to the agency under such 
                subparagraph shall be the total amount that the 
                agency would have received for fiscal year 2001 
                if the agency had elected to participate in all 
                of the programs for which the agency was 
                eligible under each of the provisions referred 
                to in those clauses.
                  [(C) Ratable reduction.--If the funds 
                described in subparagraph (A) are insufficient 
                to pay the full amounts that all local 
                educational agencies in the State are eligible 
                to receive under subparagraph (A) for any 
                fiscal year, the State educational agency shall 
                ratably reduce such amounts for the fiscal 
                year.
          [(3) Allocation of additional funds.--For any fiscal 
        year for which the funds reserved by a State under 
        section 2113(a)(1) exceed the total amount required to 
        make allocations under paragraph (2), the State 
        educational agency shall allocate to each of the 
        eligible local educational agencies in the State the 
        sum of--
                  [(A) an amount that bears the same 
                relationship to 20 percent of the excess amount 
                as the number of individuals age 5 through 17 
                in the geographic area served by the agency, as 
                determined by the Secretary on the basis of the 
                most recent satisfactory data, bears to the 
                number of those individuals in the geographic 
                areas served by all the local educational 
                agencies in the State, as so determined; and
                  [(B) an amount that bears the same 
                relationship to 80 percent of the excess amount 
                as the number of individuals age 5 through 17 
                from families with incomes below the poverty 
                line in the geographic area served by the 
                agency, as determined by the Secretary on the 
                basis of the most recent satisfactory data, 
                bears to the number of those individuals in the 
                geographic areas served by all the local 
                educational agencies in the State, as so 
                determined.

[SEC. 2122. LOCAL APPLICATIONS AND NEEDS ASSESSMENT.

  [(a) In General.--To be eligible to receive a subgrant under 
this subpart, a local educational agency shall submit an 
application to the State educational agency at such time, in 
such manner, and containing such information as the State 
educational agency may reasonably require.
  [(b) Contents.--Each application submitted under this section 
shall be based on the needs assessment required in subsection 
(c) and shall include the following:
          [(1)(A) A description of the activities to be carried 
        out by the local educational agency under this subpart 
        and how these activities will be aligned with--
                  [(i) challenging State academic content 
                standards and student academic achievement 
                standards, and State assessments; and
                  [(ii) the curricula and programs tied to the 
                standards described in clause (i).
          [(B) A description of how the activities will be 
        based on a review of scientifically based research and 
        an explanation of why the activities are expected to 
        improve student academic achievement.
          [(2) A description of how the activities will have a 
        substantial, measurable, and positive impact on student 
        academic achievement and how the activities will be 
        used as part of a broader strategy to eliminate the 
        achievement gap that separates low-income and minority 
        students from other students.
          [(3) An assurance that the local educational agency 
        will target funds to schools within the jurisdiction of 
        the local educational agency that--
                  [(A) have the lowest proportion of highly 
                qualified teachers;
                  [(B) have the largest average class size; or
                  [(C) are identified for school improvement 
                under section 1116(b).
          [(4) A description of how the local educational 
        agency will coordinate professional development 
        activities authorized under this subpart with 
        professional development activities provided through 
        other Federal, State, and local programs.
          [(5) A description of the professional development 
        activities that will be made available to teachers and 
        principals under this subpart and how the local 
        educational agency will ensure that the professional 
        development (which may include teacher mentoring) needs 
        of teachers and principals will be met using funds 
        under this subpart.
          [(6) A description of how the local educational 
        agency will integrate funds under this subpart with 
        funds received under part D that are used for 
        professional development to train teachers to integrate 
        technology into curricula and instruction to improve 
        teaching, learning, and technology literacy.
          [(7) A description of how the local educational 
        agency, teachers, paraprofessionals, principals, other 
        relevant school personnel, and parents have 
        collaborated in the planning of activities to be 
        carried out under this subpart and in the preparation 
        of the application.
          [(8) A description of the results of the needs 
        assessment described in subsection (c).
          [(9) A description of how the local educational 
        agency will provide training to enable teachers to--
                  [(A) teach and address the needs of students 
                with different learning styles, particularly 
                students with disabilities, students with 
                special learning needs (including students who 
                are gifted and talented), and students with 
                limited English proficiency;
                  [(B) improve student behavior in the 
                classroom and identify early and appropriate 
                interventions to help students described in 
                subparagraph (A) learn;
                  [(C) involve parents in their child's 
                education; and
                  [(D) understand and use data and assessments 
                to improve classroom practice and student 
                learning.
          [(10) A description of how the local educational 
        agency will use funds under this subpart to meet the 
        requirements of section 1119.
          [(11) An assurance that the local educational agency 
        will comply with section 9501 (regarding participation 
        by private school children and teachers).
  [(c) Needs Assessment.--
          [(1) In general.--To be eligible to receive a 
        subgrant under this subpart, a local educational agency 
        shall conduct an assessment of local needs for 
        professional development and hiring, as identified by 
        the local educational agency and school staff.
          [(2) Requirements.--Such needs assessment shall be 
        conducted with the involvement of teachers, including 
        teachers participating in programs under part A of 
        title I, and shall take into account the activities 
        that need to be conducted in order to give teachers the 
        means, including subject matter knowledge and teaching 
        skills, and to give principals the instructional 
        leadership skills to help teachers, to provide students 
        with the opportunity to meet challenging State and 
        local student academic achievement standards.

[SEC. 2123. LOCAL USE OF FUNDS.

  [(a) In General.--A local educational agency that receives a 
subgrant under section 2121 shall use the funds made available 
through the subgrant to carry out one or more of the following 
activities, including carrying out the activities through a 
grant or contract with a for-profit or nonprofit entity:
          [(1) Developing and implementing mechanisms to assist 
        schools in effectively recruiting and retaining highly 
        qualified teachers, including specialists in core 
        academic subjects, principals, and pupil services 
        personnel, except that funds made available under this 
        paragraph may be used for pupil services personnel 
        only--
                  [(A) if the local educational agency is 
                making progress toward meeting the annual 
                measurable objectives described in section 
                1119(a)(2); and
                  [(B) in a manner consistent with mechanisms 
                to assist schools in effectively recruiting and 
                retaining highly qualified teachers and 
                principals.
          [(2) Developing and implementing initiatives to 
        assist in recruiting highly qualified teachers 
        (particularly initiatives that have proven effective in 
        retaining highly qualified teachers), and hiring highly 
        qualified teachers, who will be assigned teaching 
        positions within their fields, including--
                  [(A) providing scholarships, signing bonuses, 
                or other financial incentives, such as 
                differential pay, for teachers to teach--
                          [(i) in academic subjects in which 
                        there exists a shortage of highly 
                        qualified teachers within a school or 
                        within the local educational agency; 
                        and
                          [(ii) in schools in which there 
                        exists a shortage of highly qualified 
                        teachers;
                  [(B) recruiting and hiring highly qualified 
                teachers to reduce class size, particularly in 
                the early grades; and
                  [(C) establishing programs that--
                          [(i) train and hire regular and 
                        special education teachers (which may 
                        include hiring special education 
                        teachers to team-teach in classrooms 
                        that contain both children with 
                        disabilities and nondisabled children);
                          [(ii) train and hire highly qualified 
                        teachers of special needs children, as 
                        well as teaching specialists in core 
                        academic subjects who will provide 
                        increased individualized instruction to 
                        students;
                          [(iii) recruit qualified 
                        professionals from other fields, 
                        including highly qualified 
                        paraprofessionals, and provide such 
                        professionals with alternative routes 
                        to teacher certification, including 
                        developing and implementing hiring 
                        policies that ensure comprehensive 
                        recruitment efforts as a way to expand 
                        the applicant pool, such as through 
                        identifying teachers certified through 
                        alternative routes, and using a system 
                        of intensive screening designed to hire 
                        the most qualified applicants; and
                          [(iv) provide increased opportunities 
                        for minorities, individuals with 
                        disabilities, and other individuals 
                        underrepresented in the teaching 
                        profession.
          [(3) Providing professional development activities--
                  [(A) that improve the knowledge of teachers 
                and principals and, in appropriate cases, 
                paraprofessionals, concerning--
                          [(i) one or more of the core academic 
                        subjects that the teachers teach; and
                          [(ii) effective instructional 
                        strategies, methods, and skills, and 
                        use of challenging State academic 
                        content standards and student academic 
                        achievement standards, and State 
                        assessments, to improve teaching 
                        practices and student academic 
                        achievement; and
                  [(B) that improve the knowledge of teachers 
                and principals and, in appropriate cases, 
                paraprofessionals, concerning effective 
                instructional practices and that--
                          [(i) involve collaborative groups of 
                        teachers and administrators;
                          [(ii) provide training in how to 
                        teach and address the needs of students 
                        with different learning styles, 
                        particularly students with 
                        disabilities, students with special 
                        learning needs (including students who 
                        are gifted and talented), and students 
                        with limited English proficiency;
                          [(iii) provide training in methods 
                        of--
                                  [(I) improving student 
                                behavior in the classroom; and
                                  [(II) identifying early and 
                                appropriate interventions to 
                                help students described in 
                                clause (ii) learn;
                          [(iv) provide training to enable 
                        teachers and principals to involve 
                        parents in their child's education, 
                        especially parents of limited English 
                        proficient and immigrant children; and
                          [(v) provide training on how to 
                        understand and use data and assessments 
                        to improve classroom practice and 
                        student learning.
          [(4) Developing and implementing initiatives to 
        promote retention of highly qualified teachers and 
        principals, particularly within elementary schools and 
        secondary schools with a high percentage of low-
        achieving students, including programs that provide--
                  [(A) teacher mentoring from exemplary 
                teachers, principals, or superintendents;
                  [(B) induction and support for teachers and 
                principals during their first 3 years of 
                employment as teachers or principals, 
                respectively;
                  [(C) incentives, including financial 
                incentives, to retain teachers who have a 
                record of success in helping low-achieving 
                students improve their academic achievement; or
                  [(D) incentives, including financial 
                incentives, to principals who have a record of 
                improving the academic achievement of all 
                students, but particularly students from 
                economically disadvantaged families, students 
                from racial and ethnic minority groups, and 
                students with disabilities.
          [(5) Carrying out programs and activities that are 
        designed to improve the quality of the teacher force, 
        such as--
                  [(A) innovative professional development 
                programs (which may be provided through 
                partnerships including institutions of higher 
                education), including programs that train 
                teachers and principals to integrate technology 
                into curricula and instruction to improve 
                teaching, learning, and technology literacy, 
                are consistent with the requirements of section 
                9101, and are coordinated with activities 
                carried out under part D;
                  [(B) development and use of proven, cost-
                effective strategies for the implementation of 
                professional development activities, such as 
                through the use of technology and distance 
                learning;
                  [(C) tenure reform;
                  [(D) merit pay programs; and
                  [(E) testing of elementary school and 
                secondary school teachers in the academic 
                subjects that the teachers teach.
          [(6) Carrying out professional development activities 
        designed to improve the quality of principals and 
        superintendents, including the development and support 
        of academies to help talented aspiring or current 
        principals and superintendents become outstanding 
        managers and educational leaders.
          [(7) Hiring highly qualified teachers, including 
        teachers who become highly qualified through State and 
        local alternative routes to certification, and special 
        education teachers, in order to reduce class size, 
        particularly in the early grades.
          [(8) Carrying out teacher advancement initiatives 
        that promote professional growth and emphasize multiple 
        career paths (such as paths to becoming a career 
        teacher, mentor teacher, or exemplary teacher) and pay 
        differentiation.
          [(10) Carrying out programs and activities related to 
        exemplary teachers.
  [(b) Supplement, Not Supplant.--Funds received under this 
subpart shall be used to supplement, and not supplant, non-
Federal funds that would otherwise be used for activities 
authorized under this subpart.

             [Subpart 3--Subgrants to Eligible Partnerships

[SEC. 2131. DEFINITIONS.

   [In this subpart:
          [(1) Eligible partnership.--The term ``eligible 
        partnership'' means an entity that--
                  [(A) shall include--
                          [(i) a private or State institution 
                        of higher education and the division of 
                        the institution that prepares teachers 
                        and principals;
                          [(ii) a school of arts and sciences; 
                        and
                          [(iii) a high-need local educational 
                        agency; and
                  [(B) may include another local educational 
                agency, a public charter school, an elementary 
                school or secondary school, an educational 
                service agency, a nonprofit educational 
                organization, another institution of higher 
                education, a school of arts and sciences within 
                such an institution, the division of such an 
                institution that prepares teachers and 
                principals, a nonprofit cultural organization, 
                an entity carrying out a prekindergarten 
                program, a teacher organization, a principal 
                organization, or a business.
          [(2) Low-performing school.--The term ``low-
        performing school'' means an elementary school or 
        secondary school that is identified under section 1116.

[SEC. 2132. SUBGRANTS.

  [(a) In General.--The State agency for higher education for a 
State that receives a grant under section 2111, working in 
conjunction with the State educational agency (if such agencies 
are separate), shall use the funds reserved under section 
2113(a)(2) to make subgrants, on a competitive basis, to 
eligible partnerships to enable such partnerships to carry out 
the activities described in section 2134.
  [(b) Distribution.--The State agency for higher education 
shall ensure that--
          [(1) such subgrants are equitably distributed by 
        geographic area within a State; or
          [(2) eligible partnerships in all geographic areas 
        within the State are served through the subgrants.
  [(c) Special Rule.--No single participant in an eligible 
partnership may use more than 50 percent of the funds made 
available to the partnership under this section.

[SEC. 2133. APPLICATIONS.

  [To be eligible to receive a subgrant under this subpart, an 
eligible partnership shall submit an application to the State 
agency for higher education at such time, in such manner, and 
containing such information as the agency may require.

[SEC. 2134. USE OF FUNDS.

  [(a) In General.--An eligible partnership that receives a 
subgrant under section 2132 shall use the subgrant funds for--
          [(1) professional development activities in core 
        academic subjects to ensure that--
                  [(A) teachers and highly qualified 
                paraprofessionals, and, if appropriate, 
                principals have subject matter knowledge in the 
                academic subjects that the teachers teach, 
                including the use of computer related 
                technology to enhance student learning; and
                  [(B) principals have the instructional 
                leadership skills that will help such 
                principals work most effectively with teachers 
                to help students master core academic subjects; 
                and
          [(2) developing and providing assistance to local 
        educational agencies and individuals who are teachers, 
        highly qualified paraprofessionals, or principals of 
        schools served by such agencies, for sustained, high-
        quality professional development activities that--
                  [(A) ensure that the individuals are able to 
                use challenging State academic content 
                standards and student academic achievement 
                standards, and State assessments, to improve 
                instructional practices and improve student 
                academic achievement;
                  [(B) may include intensive programs designed 
                to prepare such individuals who will return to 
                a school to provide instruction related to the 
                professional development described in 
                subparagraph (A) to other such individuals 
                within such school; and
                  [(C) may include activities of partnerships 
                between one or more local educational agencies, 
                one or more schools served by such local 
                educational agencies, and one or more 
                institutions of higher education for the 
                purpose of improving teaching and learning at 
                low-performing schools.
  [(b) Coordination.--An eligible partnership that receives a 
subgrant to carry out this subpart and a grant under section 
203 of the Higher Education Act of 1965 shall coordinate the 
activities carried out under this subpart and the activities 
carried out under that section 203.

                       [Subpart 4--Accountability

[SEC. 2141. TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE AND ACCOUNTABILITY.

  [(a) Improvement Plan.--After the second year of the plan 
described in section 1119(a)(2), if a State educational agency 
determines, based on the reports described in section 
1119(b)(1), that a local educational agency in the State has 
failed to make progress toward meeting the annual measurable 
objectives described in section 1119(a)(2), for 2 consecutive 
years, such local educational agency shall develop an 
improvement plan that will enable the agency to meet such 
annual measurable objectives and that specifically addresses 
issues that prevented the agency from meeting such annual 
measurable objectives.
  [(b) Technical Assistance.--During the development of the 
improvement plan described in subsection (a) and throughout 
implementation of the plan, the State educational agency 
shall--
          [(1) provide technical assistance to the local 
        educational agency; and
          [(2) provide technical assistance, if applicable, to 
        schools served by the local educational agency that 
        need assistance to enable the local educational agency 
        to meet the annual measurable objectives described in 
        section 1119(a)(2).
  [(c) Accountability.--After the third year of the plan 
described in section 1119(a)(2), if the State educational 
agency determines, based on the reports described in section 
1119(b)(1), that the local educational agency has failed to 
make progress toward meeting the annual measurable objectives 
described in section 1119(a)(2), and has failed to make 
adequate yearly progress as described under section 
1111(b)(2)(B), for 3 consecutive years, the State educational 
agency shall enter into an agreement with such local 
educational agency on the use of that agency's funds under this 
part. As part of this agreement, the State educational agency--
          [(1) shall develop, in conjunction with the local 
        educational agency, teachers, and principals, 
        professional development strategies and activities, 
        based on scientifically based research, that the local 
        educational agency will use to meet the annual 
        measurable objectives described in section 1119(a)(2) 
        and require such agency to utilize such strategies and 
        activities; and
          [(2)(A) except as provided in subparagraphs (B) and 
        (C), shall prohibit the use of funds received under 
        part A of title I to fund any paraprofessional hired 
        after the date such determination is made;
          [(B) shall allow the use of such funds to fund a 
        paraprofessional hired after that date if the local 
        educational agency can demonstrate that the hiring is 
        to fill a vacancy created by the departure of another 
        paraprofessional funded under title I and such new 
        paraprofessional satisfies the requirements of section 
        1119(c); and
          [(C) may allow the use of such funds to fund a 
        paraprofessional hired after that date if the local 
        educational agency can demonstrate--
                  [(i) that a significant influx of population 
                has substantially increased student enrollment; 
                or
                  [(ii) that there is an increased need for 
                translators or assistance with parental 
                involvement activities.
  [(d) Special Rule.--During the development of the strategies 
and activities described in subsection (c)(1), the State 
educational agency shall, in conjunction with the local 
educational agency, provide from funds allocated to such local 
educational agency under subpart 2 directly to one or more 
schools served by such local educational agency, to enable 
teachers at the schools to choose, with continuing consultation 
with the principal involved, professional development 
activities that--
          [(1) meet the requirements for professional 
        development activities described in section 9101; and
          [(2) are coordinated with other reform efforts at the 
        schools.

                    [Subpart 5--National Activities

[SEC. 2151. NATIONAL ACTIVITIES OF DEMONSTRATED EFFECTIVENESS.

  [(a) National Teacher Recruitment Campaign.--The Secretary is 
authorized to establish and carry out a national teacher 
recruitment campaign, which may include activities carried out 
through the National Teacher Recruitment Clearinghouse, to 
assist high-need local educational agencies in recruiting 
teachers (particularly those activities that are effective in 
retaining new teachers) and training teachers and to conduct a 
national public service campaign concerning the resources for, 
and the routes to, entering the field of teaching. In carrying 
out the campaign, the Secretary may promote and link the 
activities of the campaign to the information and referral 
activities of the National Teacher Recruitment Clearinghouse. 
The Secretary shall coordinate activities under this subsection 
with State and regional recruitment activities.
  [(b) School Leadership.--
          [(1) In general.--The Secretary is authorized to 
        establish and carry out a national principal 
        recruitment program to assist high-need local 
        educational agencies in recruiting and training 
        principals (including assistant principals) through 
        such activities as--
                  [(A) providing financial incentives to 
                aspiring new principals;
                  [(B) providing stipends to principals who 
                mentor new principals;
                  [(C) carrying out professional development 
                programs in instructional leadership and 
                management; and
                  [(D) providing incentives that are 
                appropriate for teachers or individuals from 
                other fields who want to become principals and 
                that are effective in retaining new principals.
          [(2) Grants.--If the Secretary uses sums made 
        available under section 2103(b) to carry out paragraph 
        (1), the Secretary shall carry out such paragraph by 
        making grants, on a competitive basis, to--
                  [(A) high-need local educational agencies;
                  [(B) consortia of high-need local educational 
                agencies; and
                  [(C) partnerships of high-need local 
                educational agencies, nonprofit organizations, 
                and institutions of higher education.
  [(c) Advanced Certification or Advanced Credentialing.--
          [(1) In general.--The Secretary is authorized to 
        support activities to encourage and support teachers 
        seeking advanced certification or advanced 
        credentialing through high quality professional teacher 
        enhancement programs designed to improve teaching and 
        learning.
          [(2) Implementation.--In carrying out paragraph (1), 
        the Secretary shall make grants to eligible entities 
        to--
                  [(A) develop teacher standards that include 
                measures tied to increased student academic 
                achievement; and
                  [(B) promote outreach, teacher recruitment, 
                teacher subsidy, or teacher support programs, 
                related to teacher certification or 
                credentialing by the National Board for 
                Professional Teaching Standards, the National 
                Council on Teacher Quality, or other nationally 
                recognized certification or credentialing 
                organizations.
          [(3) Eligible entities.--In this subsection, the term 
        ``eligible entity'' includes--
                  [(A) a State educational agency;
                  [(B) a local educational agency;
                  [(C) the National Board for Professional 
                Teaching Standards, in partnership with a high-
                need local educational agency or a State 
                educational agency;
                  [(D) the National Council on Teacher Quality, 
                in partnership with a high-need local 
                educational agency or a State educational 
                agency; or
                  [(E) another recognized entity, including 
                another recognized certification or 
                credentialing organization, in partnership with 
                a high-need local educational agency or a State 
                educational agency.
  [(d) Special Education Teacher Training.--The Secretary is 
authorized to award a grant to the University of Northern 
Colorado to enable such university to provide, to other 
institutions of higher education, assistance in training 
special education teachers.
  [(e) Early Childhood Educator Professional Development.--
          [(1) Purpose.--The purpose of this subsection is to 
        enhance the school readiness of young children, 
        particularly disadvantaged young children, and to 
        prevent young children from encountering difficulties 
        once the children enter school, by improving the 
        knowledge and skills of early childhood educators who 
        work in communities that have high concentrations of 
        children living in poverty.
          [(2) Program authorized.--
                  [(A) Grants to partnerships.--The Secretary 
                is authorized to carry out the purpose of this 
                subsection by awarding grants, on a competitive 
                basis, to partnerships consisting of--
                          [(i)(I) one or more institutions of 
                        higher education that provide 
                        professional development for early 
                        childhood educators who work with 
                        children from low-income families in 
                        high-need communities; or
                          [(II) another public or private 
                        entity that provides such professional 
                        development;
                          [(ii) one or more public agencies 
                        (including local educational agencies, 
                        State educational agencies, State human 
                        services agencies, and State and local 
                        agencies administering programs under 
                        the Child Care and Development Block 
                        Grant Act of 1990 (42 U.S.C. 9858 et 
                        seq.), Head Start agencies, or private 
                        organizations; and
                          [(iii) to the extent feasible, an 
                        entity with demonstrated experience in 
                        providing training to educators in 
                        early childhood education programs 
                        concerning identifying and preventing 
                        behavior problems or working with 
                        children identified as or suspected to 
                        be victims of abuse.
                  [(B) Duration and number of grants.--
                          [(i) Duration.--The Secretary shall 
                        award grants under this subsection for 
                        periods of not more than 4 years.
                          [(ii) Number.--No partnership may 
                        receive more than one grant under this 
                        subsection.
          [(3) Applications.--
                  [(A) Applications required.--Any partnership 
                that desires to receive a grant under this 
                subsection shall submit an application to the 
                Secretary at such time, in such manner, and 
                containing such information as the Secretary 
                may require.
                  [(B) Contents.--Each such application shall 
                include--
                          [(i) a description of the high-need 
                        community to be served by the project 
                        proposed to be carried out through the 
                        grant, including such demographic and 
                        socioeconomic information as the 
                        Secretary may request;
                          [(ii) information on the quality of 
                        the early childhood educator 
                        professional development program 
                        currently conducted (as of the date of 
                        the submission of the application) by 
                        the institution of higher education or 
                        another provider in the partnership;
                          [(iii) the results of a needs 
                        assessment that the entities in the 
                        partnership have undertaken to 
                        determine the most critical 
                        professional development needs of the 
                        early childhood educators to be served 
                        by the partnership and in the broader 
                        community, and a description of how the 
                        proposed project will address those 
                        needs;
                          [(iv) a description of how the 
                        proposed project will be carried out, 
                        including a description of--
                                  [(I) how individuals will be 
                                selected to participate;
                                  [(II) the types of 
                                professional development 
                                activities, based on 
                                scientifically based research, 
                                that will be carried out;
                                  [(III) how research on 
                                effective professional 
                                development and on adult 
                                learning will be used to design 
                                and deliver project activities;
                                  [(IV) how the project will be 
                                coordinated with and build on, 
                                and will not supplant or 
                                duplicate, early childhood 
                                education professional 
                                development activities in the 
                                high-need community;
                                  [(V) how the project will 
                                train early childhood educators 
                                to provide developmentally 
                                appropriate school-readiness 
                                services that are based on the 
                                best available research on 
                                early childhood pedagogy and 
                                child development and learning 
                                domains;
                                  [(VI) how the project will 
                                train early childhood educators 
                                to meet the diverse educational 
                                needs of children in the 
                                community, including children 
                                who have limited English 
                                proficiency, children with 
                                disabilities, or children with 
                                other special needs; and
                                  [(VII) how the project will 
                                train early childhood educators 
                                in identifying and preventing 
                                behavioral problems in children 
                                or working with children 
                                identified as or suspected to 
                                be victims of abuse;
                          [(v) a description of--
                                  [(I) the specific objectives 
                                that the partnership will seek 
                                to attain through the project, 
                                and the methods that the 
                                partnership will use to measure 
                                progress toward attainment of 
                                those objectives; and
                                  [(II) how the objectives and 
                                the measurement methods align 
                                with the achievement indicators 
                                established by the Secretary 
                                under paragraph (6)(A);
                          [(vi) a description of the 
                        partnership's plan for continuing the 
                        activities carried out under the 
                        project after Federal funding ceases;
                          [(vii) an assurance that, where 
                        applicable, the project will provide 
                        appropriate professional development to 
                        volunteers working directly with young 
                        children, as well as to paid staff; and
                          [(viii) an assurance that, in 
                        developing the application and in 
                        carrying out the project, the 
                        partnership has consulted with, and 
                        will consult with, relevant agencies, 
                        early childhood educator organizations, 
                        and early childhood providers that are 
                        not members of the partnership.
          [(4) Selection of grant recipients.--
                  [(A) Criteria.--The Secretary shall select 
                partnerships to receive grants under this 
                subsection on the basis of the degree to which 
                the communities proposed to be served require 
                assistance and the quality of the applications 
                submitted under paragraph (3).
                  [(B) Geographic distribution.--In selecting 
                partnerships to receive grants under this 
                subsection, the Secretary shall seek to ensure 
                that communities in different regions of the 
                Nation, as well as both urban and rural 
                communities, are served.
          [(5) Uses of funds.--
                  [(A) In general.--Each partnership receiving 
                a grant under this subsection shall use the 
                grant funds to carry out activities that will 
                improve the knowledge and skills of early 
                childhood educators who are working in early 
                childhood programs that are located in high-
                need communities and serve concentrations of 
                children from low-income families.
                  [(B) Allowable activities.--Such activities 
                may include--
                          [(i) professional development for 
                        early childhood educators, particularly 
                        to familiarize those educators with the 
                        application of recent research on 
                        child, language, and literacy 
                        development and on early childhood 
                        pedagogy;
                          [(ii) professional development for 
                        early childhood educators in working 
                        with parents, so that the educators and 
                        parents can work together to provide 
                        and support developmentally appropriate 
                        school-readiness services that are 
                        based on scientifically based research 
                        on early childhood pedagogy and child 
                        development and learning domains;
                          [(iii) professional development for 
                        early childhood educators to work with 
                        children who have limited English 
                        proficiency, children with 
                        disabilities, and children with other 
                        special needs;
                          [(iv) professional development to 
                        train early childhood educators in 
                        identifying and preventing behavioral 
                        problems in children or working with 
                        children identified as or suspected to 
                        be victims of abuse;
                          [(v) activities that assist and 
                        support early childhood educators 
                        during their first 3 years in the 
                        field;
                          [(vi) development and implementation 
                        of early childhood educator 
                        professional development programs that 
                        make use of distance learning and other 
                        technologies;
                          [(vii) professional development 
                        activities related to the selection and 
                        use of screening and diagnostic 
                        assessments to improve teaching and 
                        learning; and
                          [(viii) data collection, evaluation, 
                        and reporting needed to meet the 
                        requirements of paragraph (6) relating 
                        to accountability.
          [(6) Accountability.--
                  [(A) Achievement indicators.--On the date on 
                which the Secretary first issues a notice 
                soliciting applications for grants under this 
                subsection, the Secretary shall announce 
                achievement indicators for this subsection, 
                which shall be designed--
                          [(i) to measure the quality and 
                        accessibility of the professional 
                        development provided;
                          [(ii) to measure the impact of that 
                        professional development on the early 
                        childhood education provided by the 
                        individuals who receive the 
                        professional development; and
                          [(iii) to provide such other measures 
                        of program impact as the Secretary 
                        determines to be appropriate.
                  [(B) Annual reports; termination.--
                          [(i) Annual reports.--Each 
                        partnership receiving a grant under 
                        this subsection shall report annually 
                        to the Secretary on the partnership's 
                        progress toward attaining the 
                        achievement indicators.
                          [(ii) Termination.--The Secretary may 
                        terminate a grant under this subsection 
                        at any time if the Secretary determines 
                        that the partnership receiving the 
                        grant is not making satisfactory 
                        progress toward attaining the 
                        achievement indicators.
          [(7) Cost-sharing.--
                  [(A) In general.--Each partnership carrying 
                out a project through a grant awarded under 
                this subsection shall provide, from sources 
                other than the program carried out under this 
                subsection, which may include Federal sources--
                          [(i) at least 50 percent of the total 
                        cost of the project for the grant 
                        period; and
                          [(ii) at least 20 percent of the 
                        project cost for each year.
                  [(B) Acceptable contributions.--A partnership 
                may meet the requirements of subparagraph (A) 
                by providing contributions in cash or in kind, 
                fairly evaluated, including plant, equipment, 
                and services.
                  [(C) Waivers.--The Secretary may waive or 
                modify the requirements of subparagraph (A) for 
                partnerships in cases of demonstrated financial 
                hardship.
          [(8) Federal coordination.--The Secretary and the 
        Secretary of Health and Human Services shall coordinate 
        activities carried out through programs under this 
        subsection with activities carried out through other 
        early childhood programs administered by the Secretary 
        or the Secretary of Health and Human Services.
          [(9) Definitions.--In this subsection:
                  [(A) Early childhood educator.--The term 
                ``early childhood educator'' means a person 
                providing, or employed by a provider of, 
                nonresidential child care services (including 
                center-based, family-based, and in-home child 
                care services) that is legally operating under 
                State law, and that complies with applicable 
                State and local requirements for the provision 
                of child care services to children at any age 
                from birth through the age at which a child may 
                start kindergarten in that State.
                  [(B) High-need community.--
                          [(i) In general.--The term ``high-
                        need community'' means--
                                  [(I) a political subdivision 
                                of a State, or a portion of a 
                                political subdivision of a 
                                State, in which at least 50 
                                percent of the children are 
                                from low-income families; or
                                  [(II) a political subdivision 
                                of a State that is among the 10 
                                percent of political 
                                subdivisions of the State 
                                having the greatest numbers of 
                                such children.
                          [(ii) Determination.--In determining 
                        which communities are described in 
                        clause (i), the Secretary shall use 
                        such data as the Secretary determines 
                        are most accurate and appropriate.
                  [(C) Low-income family.--The term ``low-
                income family'' means a family with an income 
                below the poverty line for the most recent 
                fiscal year for which satisfactory data are 
                available.
  [(f) Teacher Mobility.--
          [(1) Establishment.--The Secretary is authorized to 
        establish a panel to be known as the National Panel on 
        Teacher Mobility (referred to in this subsection as the 
        ``panel'').
          [(2) Membership.--The panel shall be composed of 12 
        members appointed by the Secretary. The Secretary shall 
        appoint the members from among practitioners and 
        experts with experience relating to teacher mobility, 
        such as teachers, members of teacher certification or 
        licensing bodies, faculty of institutions of higher 
        education that prepare teachers, and State policymakers 
        with such experience.
          [(3) Period of appointment; vacancies.--Members shall 
        be appointed for the life of the panel. Any vacancy in 
        the panel shall not affect the powers of the panel, but 
        shall be filled in the same manner as the original 
        appointment.
          [(4) Duties.--
                  [(A) Study.--
                          [(i) In general.--The panel shall 
                        study strategies for increasing 
                        mobility and employment opportunities 
                        for highly qualified teachers, 
                        especially for States with teacher 
                        shortages and States with school 
                        districts or schools that are difficult 
                        to staff.
                          [(ii) Data and analysis.--As part of 
                        the study, the panel shall evaluate the 
                        desirability and feasibility of State 
                        initiatives that support teacher 
                        mobility by collecting data and 
                        conducting effective analysis 
                        concerning--
                                  [(I) teacher supply and 
                                demand;
                                  [(II) the development of 
                                recruitment and hiring 
                                strategies that support 
                                teachers; and
                                  [(III) increasing reciprocity 
                                of certification and licensing 
                                across States.
                  [(B) Report.--Not later than 1 year after the 
                date on which all members of the panel have 
                been appointed, the panel shall submit to the 
                Secretary and to the appropriate committees of 
                Congress a report containing the results of the 
                study.
          [(5) Powers.--
                  [(A) Hearings.--The panel may hold such 
                hearings, sit and act at such times and places, 
                take such testimony, and receive such evidence 
                as the panel considers advisable to carry out 
                the objectives of this subsection.
                  [(B) Information from federal agencies.--The 
                panel may secure directly from any Federal 
                department or agency such information as the 
                panel considers necessary to carry out the 
                provisions of this subsection. Upon request of 
                a majority of the members of the panel, the 
                head of such department or agency shall furnish 
                such information to the panel.
                  [(C) Postal services.--The panel may use the 
                United States mails in the same manner and 
                under the same conditions as other departments 
                and agencies of the Federal Government.
          [(6) Personnel.--
                  [(A) Travel expenses.--The members of the 
                panel shall not receive compensation for the 
                performance of services for the panel, but 
                shall be allowed travel expenses, including per 
                diem in lieu of subsistence, at rates 
                authorized for employees of agencies under 
                subchapter I of chapter 57 of title 5, United 
                States Code, while away from their homes or 
                regular places of business in the performance 
                of services for the panel. Notwithstanding 
                section 1342 of title 31, United States Code, 
                the Secretary may accept the voluntary and 
                uncompensated services of members of the panel.
                  [(B) Detail of government employees.--Any 
                Federal Government employee may be detailed to 
                the panel without reimbursement, and such 
                detail shall be without interruption or loss of 
                civil service status or privilege.
          [(7) Permanent committee.--Section 14 of the Federal 
        Advisory Committee Act (5 U.S.C. App.) shall not apply 
        to the panel.

             [PART B--MATHEMATICS AND SCIENCE PARTNERSHIPS

[SEC. 2201. PURPOSE; DEFINITIONS.

  [(a) Purpose.--The purpose of this part is to improve the 
academic achievement of students in the areas of mathematics 
and science by encouraging State educational agencies, 
institutions of higher education, local educational agencies, 
elementary schools, and secondary schools to participate in 
programs that--
          [(1) improve and upgrade the status and stature of 
        mathematics and science teaching by encouraging 
        institutions of higher education to assume greater 
        responsibility for improving mathematics and science 
        teacher education through the establishment of a 
        comprehensive, integrated system of recruiting, 
        training, and advising mathematics and science 
        teachers;
          [(2) focus on the education of mathematics and 
        science teachers as a career-long process that 
        continuously stimulates teachers' intellectual growth 
        and upgrades teachers' knowledge and skills;
          [(3) bring mathematics and science teachers in 
        elementary schools and secondary schools together with 
        scientists, mathematicians, and engineers to increase 
        the subject matter knowledge of mathematics and science 
        teachers and improve such teachers' teaching skills 
        through the use of sophisticated laboratory equipment 
        and work space, computing facilities, libraries, and 
        other resources that institutions of higher education 
        are better able to provide than the elementary schools 
        and secondary schools;
          [(4) develop more rigorous mathematics and science 
        curricula that are aligned with challenging State and 
        local academic content standards and with the standards 
        expected for postsecondary study in engineering, 
        mathematics, and science; and
          [(5) improve and expand training of mathematics and 
        science teachers, including training such teachers in 
        the effective integration of technology into curricula 
        and instruction.
  [(b) Definitions.--In this part:
          [(1) Eligible partnership.--The term ``eligible 
        partnership'' means a partnership that--
                  [(A) shall include--
                          [(i) if grants are awarded under 
                        section 2202(a)(1), a State educational 
                        agency;
                          [(ii) an engineering, mathematics, or 
                        science department of an institution of 
                        higher education; and
                          [(iii) a high-need local educational 
                        agency; and
                  [(B) may include--
                          [(i) another engineering, 
                        mathematics, science, or teacher 
                        training department of an institution 
                        of higher education;
                          [(ii) additional local educational 
                        agencies, public charter schools, 
                        public or private elementary schools or 
                        secondary schools, or a consortium of 
                        such schools;
                          [(iii) a business; or
                          [(iv) a nonprofit or for-profit 
                        organization of demonstrated 
                        effectiveness in improving the quality 
                        of mathematics and science teachers.
          [(2) Summer workshop or institute.--The term ``summer 
        workshop or institute'' means a workshop or institute, 
        conducted during the summer, that--
                  [(A) is conducted for a period of not less 
                than 2 weeks;
                  [(B) includes, as a component, a program that 
                provides direct interaction between students 
                and faculty; and
                  [(C) provides for followup training during 
                the academic year that is conducted in the 
                classroom for a period of not less than three 
                consecutive or nonconsecutive days, except 
                that--
                          [(i) if the workshop or institute is 
                        conducted during a 2-week period, the 
                        followup training shall be conducted 
                        for a period of not less than 4 days; 
                        and
                          [(ii) if the followup training is for 
                        teachers in rural school districts, the 
                        followup training may be conducted 
                        through distance learning.

[SEC. 2202. GRANTS FOR MATHEMATICS AND SCIENCE PARTNERSHIPS.

  [(a) Grants Authorized.--
          [(1) Grants to partnerships.--For any fiscal year for 
        which the funds appropriated under section 2203 are 
        less than $100,000,000, the Secretary is authorized to 
        award grants, on a competitive basis, to eligible 
        partnerships to carry out the authorized activities 
        described in subsection (c).
          [(2) Grants to state educational agencies.--
                  [(A) In general.--For any fiscal year for 
                which the funds appropriated under section 2203 
                equal or exceed $100,000,000--
                          [(i) if an eligible partnership in 
                        the State was previously awarded a 
                        grant under paragraph (1), and the 
                        grant period has not ended, the 
                        Secretary shall reserve funds in a 
                        sufficient amount to make payments to 
                        the partnership in accordance with the 
                        terms of the grant; and
                          [(ii) the Secretary is authorized to 
                        award grants to State educational 
                        agencies to enable such agencies to 
                        award subgrants, on a competitive 
                        basis, to eligible partnerships to 
                        carry out the authorized activities 
                        described in subsection (c).
                  [(B) Allotment.--The Secretary shall allot 
                the amount made available under this part for a 
                fiscal year and not reserved under subparagraph 
                (A)(i) among the State educational agencies in 
                proportion to the number of children, aged 5 to 
                17, who are from families with incomes below 
                the poverty line and reside in a State for the 
                most recent fiscal year for which satisfactory 
                data are available, as compared to the number 
                of such children who reside in all such States 
                for such year.
                  [(C) Minimum allotment.--The amount of any 
                State educational agency's allotment under 
                subparagraph (B) for any fiscal year may not be 
                less than one-half of 1 percent of the amount 
                made available under this part for such year.
          [(3) Duration.--The Secretary shall award grants 
        under this part for a period of 3 years.
          [(4) Supplement, not supplant.--Funds received under 
        this part shall be used to supplement, and not 
        supplant, funds that would otherwise be used for 
        activities authorized under this part.
  [(b) Application Requirements.--
          [(1) In general.--Each eligible partnership desiring 
        a grant or subgrant under this part shall submit an 
        application--
                  [(A) in the case of grants awarded pursuant 
                to subsection (a)(1), to the Secretary, at such 
                time, in such manner, and accompanied by such 
                information as the Secretary may require; or
                  [(B) in the case of subgrants awarded 
                pursuant to subsection (a)(2), to the State 
                educational agency, at such time, in such 
                manner, and accompanied by such information as 
                the State educational agency may require.
          [(2) Contents.--Each application submitted pursuant 
        to paragraph (1) shall include--
                  [(A) the results of a comprehensive 
                assessment of the teacher quality and 
                professional development needs of any schools, 
                local educational agencies, and State 
                educational agencies that comprise the eligible 
                partnership with respect to the teaching and 
                learning of mathematics and science;
                  [(B) a description of how the activities to 
                be carried out by the eligible partnership will 
                be aligned with challenging State academic 
                content and student academic achievement 
                standards in mathematics and science and with 
                other educational reform activities that 
                promote student academic achievement in 
                mathematics and science;
                  [(C) a description of how the activities to 
                be carried out by the eligible partnership will 
                be based on a review of scientifically based 
                research, and an explanation of how the 
                activities are expected to improve student 
                academic achievement and strengthen the quality 
                of mathematics and science instruction;
                  [(D) a description of--
                          [(i) how the eligible partnership 
                        will carry out the authorized 
                        activities described in subsection (c); 
                        and
                          [(ii) the eligible partnership's 
                        evaluation and accountability plan 
                        described in subsection (e); and
                  [(E) a description of how the eligible 
                partnership will continue the activities funded 
                under this part after the original grant or 
                subgrant period has expired.
  [(c) Authorized Activities.--An eligible partnership shall 
use funds provided under this part for one or more of the 
following activities related to elementary schools or secondary 
schools:
          [(1) Creating opportunities for enhanced and ongoing 
        professional development of mathematics and science 
        teachers that improves the subject matter knowledge of 
        such teachers.
          [(2) Promoting strong teaching skills for mathematics 
        and science teachers and teacher educators, including 
        integrating reliable scientifically based research 
        teaching methods and technology-based teaching methods 
        into the curriculum.
          [(3) Establishing and operating mathematics and 
        science summer workshops or institutes, including 
        followup training, for elementary school and secondary 
        school mathematics and science teachers that--
                  [(A) shall--
                          [(i) directly relate to the 
                        curriculum and academic areas in which 
                        the teacher provides instruction, and 
                        focus only secondarily on pedagogy;
                          [(ii) enhance the ability of the 
                        teacher to understand and use the 
                        challenging State academic content 
                        standards for mathematics and science 
                        and to select appropriate curricula; 
                        and
                          [(iii) train teachers to use 
                        curricula that are--
                                  [(I) based on scientific 
                                research;
                                  [(II) aligned with 
                                challenging State academic 
                                content standards; and
                                  [(III) object-centered, 
                                experiment-oriented, and 
                                concept- and content-based; and
                  [(B) may include--
                          [(i) programs that provide teachers 
                        and prospective teachers with 
                        opportunities to work under the 
                        guidance of experienced teachers and 
                        college faculty;
                          [(ii) instruction in the use of data 
                        and assessments to inform and instruct 
                        classroom practice; and
                          [(iii) professional development 
                        activities, including supplemental and 
                        followup activities, such as curriculum 
                        alignment, distance learning, and 
                        activities that train teachers to 
                        utilize technology in the classroom.
          [(4) Recruiting mathematics, engineering, and science 
        majors to teaching through the use of--
                  [(A) signing and performance incentives that 
                are linked to activities proven effective in 
                retaining teachers, for individuals with 
                demonstrated professional experience in 
                mathematics, engineering, or science;
                  [(B) stipends provided to mathematics and 
                science teachers for certification through 
                alternative routes;
                  [(C) scholarships for teachers to pursue 
                advanced course work in mathematics, 
                engineering, or science; and
                  [(D) other programs that the State 
                educational agency determines to be effective 
                in recruiting and retaining individuals with 
                strong mathematics, engineering, or science 
                backgrounds.
          [(5) Developing or redesigning more rigorous 
        mathematics and science curricula that are aligned with 
        challenging State and local academic content standards 
        and with the standards expected for postsecondary study 
        in mathematics and science.
          [(6) Establishing distance learning programs for 
        mathematics and science teachers using curricula that 
        are innovative, content-based, and based on 
        scientifically based research that is current as of the 
        date of the program involved.
          [(7) Designing programs to prepare a mathematics or 
        science teacher at a school to provide professional 
        development to other mathematics or science teachers at 
        the school and to assist beginning and other teachers 
        at the school, including (if applicable) a mechanism to 
        integrate the teacher's experiences from a summer 
        workshop or institute into the provision of 
        professional development and assistance.
          [(8) Establishing and operating programs to bring 
        mathematics and science teachers into contact with 
        working scientists, mathematicians, and engineers, to 
        expand such teachers' subject matter knowledge of and 
        research in science and mathematics.
          [(9) Designing programs to identify and develop 
        exemplary mathematics and science teachers in the 
        kindergarten through grade 8 classrooms.
          [(10) Training mathematics and science teachers and 
        developing programs to encourage young women and other 
        underrepresented individuals in mathematics and science 
        careers (including engineering and technology) to 
        pursue postsecondary degrees in majors leading to such 
        careers.
  [(d) Coordination and Consultation.--
          [(1) Partnership grants.--An eligible partnership 
        receiving a grant under section 203 of the Higher 
        Education Act of 1965 shall coordinate the use of such 
        funds with any related activities carried out by such 
        partnership with funds made available under this part.
          [(2) National science foundation.--In carrying out 
        the activities authorized by this part, the Secretary 
        shall consult and coordinate with the Director of the 
        National Science Foundation, particularly with respect 
        to the appropriate roles for the Department and the 
        Foundation in the conduct of summer workshops, 
        institutes, or partnerships to improve mathematics and 
        science teaching in elementary schools and secondary 
        schools.
  [(e) Evaluation and Accountability Plan.--
          [(1) In general.--Each eligible partnership receiving 
        a grant or subgrant under this part shall develop an 
        evaluation and accountability plan for activities 
        assisted under this part that includes rigorous 
        objectives that measure the impact of activities funded 
        under this part.
          [(2) Contents.--The plan developed pursuant to 
        paragraph (1)--
                  [(A) shall include measurable objectives to 
                increase the number of mathematics and science 
                teachers who participate in content-based 
                professional development activities;
                  [(B) shall include measurable objectives for 
                improved student academic achievement on State 
                mathematics and science assessments or, where 
                applicable, an International Mathematics and 
                Science Study assessment; and
                  [(C) may include objectives and measures 
                for--
                          [(i) increased participation by 
                        students in advanced courses in 
                        mathematics and science;
                          [(ii) increased percentages of 
                        elementary school teachers with 
                        academic majors or minors, or group 
                        majors or minors, in mathematics, 
                        engineering, or the sciences; and
                          [(iii) increased percentages of 
                        secondary school classes in mathematics 
                        and science taught by teachers with 
                        academic majors in mathematics, 
                        engineering, and science.
  [(f) Report.--Each eligible partnership receiving a grant or 
subgrant under this part shall report annually to the Secretary 
regarding the eligible partnership's progress in meeting the 
objectives described in the accountability plan of the 
partnership under subsection (e).

[SEC. 2203. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS.

  [There are authorized to be appropriated to carry out this 
part $450,000,000 for fiscal year 2002 and such sums as may be 
necessary for each of the 5 succeeding fiscal years.]

                PART A--SUPPORTING EFFECTIVE INSTRUCTION

SEC. 2101. PURPOSE.

  The purpose of this part is to provide grants to State 
educational agencies and subgrants to local educational 
agencies to--
          (1) increase student achievement consistent with 
        State academic standards under section 1111(b)(1);
          (2) improve teacher and school leader effectiveness 
        in classrooms and schools, respectively;
          (3) provide evidence-based, job-embedded, continuous 
        professional development; and
          (4) if a State educational agency or local 
        educational agency so chooses, develop and implement 
        teacher evaluation systems that use, in part, student 
        achievement data to determine teacher effectiveness.

                      Subpart 1--Grants to States

SEC. 2111. ALLOTMENTS TO STATES.

  (a) In General.--Of the amounts appropriated under section 
3(b), the Secretary shall reserve 75 percent to make grants to 
States with applications approved under section 2112 to pay for 
the Federal share of the cost of carrying out the activities 
specified in section 2113. Each grant shall consist of the 
allotment determined for a State under subsection (b).
  (b) Determination of Allotments.--
          (1) Reservation of funds.--Of the amount reserved 
        under subsection (a) for a fiscal year, the Secretary 
        shall reserve--
                  (A) not more than 1 percent to carry out 
                national activities under section 2132;
                  (B) one-half of 1 percent for allotments to 
                outlying areas on the basis of their relative 
                need, as determined by the Secretary, in 
                accordance with the purpose of this part; and
                  (C) one-half of 1 percent for the Secretary 
                of the Interior for programs under this part in 
                schools operated or funded by the Bureau of 
                Indian Education.
          (2) State allotments.--
                  (A) In general.--Subject to subparagraph (B), 
                from the funds reserved under subsection (a) 
                for any fiscal year and not reserved under 
                paragraph (1), the Secretary shall allot to 
                each State the sum of--
                          (i) an amount that bears the same 
                        relationship to 50 percent of the funds 
                        as the number of individuals age 5 
                        through 17 in the State, as determined 
                        by the Secretary on the basis of the 
                        most recent satisfactory data, bears to 
                        the number of those individuals in all 
                        such States, as so determined; and
                          (ii) an amount that bears the same 
                        relationship to 50 percent of the funds 
                        as the number of individuals age 5 
                        through 17 from families with incomes 
                        below the poverty line in the State, as 
                        determined by the Secretary on the 
                        basis of the most recent satisfactory 
                        data, bears to the number of those 
                        individuals in all such States, as so 
                        determined.
                  (B) Small state minimum.--No State receiving 
                an allotment under subparagraph (A) may receive 
                less than one-half of 1 percent of the total 
                amount of funds allotted under such 
                subparagraph for a fiscal year.
                  (C) Applicability.--
                          (i) In general.--Subparagraph (A) 
                        shall not apply with respect to a 
                        fiscal year unless the Secretary 
                        certifies in writing to Congress for 
                        that fiscal year that the amount of 
                        funds allotted under subparagraph (A) 
                        to local educational agencies that 
                        serve a high percentage of students 
                        from families with incomes below the 
                        poverty line is not less than the 
                        amount allotted to such local 
                        educational agencies for fiscal year 
                        2015.
                          (ii) Special rule.--For a fiscal year 
                        for which subparagraph (A) does not 
                        apply, the Secretary shall allocate to 
                        each State the funds described in 
                        subparagraph (A) according to the 
                        formula set forth in subsection 
                        (b)(2)(B)(i) of this section as in 
                        effect on the day before the date of 
                        the enactment of the Student Success 
                        Act.
  (c) Reallotment.--If a State does not apply for an allotment 
under this section for any fiscal year or only a portion of the 
State's allotment is allotted under subsection (b)(2), the 
Secretary shall reallot the State's entire allotment or the 
remaining portion of its allotment, as the case may be, to the 
remaining States in accordance with subsection (b).

SEC. 2112. STATE APPLICATION.

  (a) In General.--For a State to be eligible to receive a 
grant under this subpart, the State educational agency shall 
submit an application to the Secretary at such time and in such 
a manner as the Secretary may reasonably require, which shall 
include the following:
          (1) A description of how the State educational agency 
        will meet the requirements of this subpart.
          (2) A description of how the State educational agency 
        will use a grant received under section 2111, including 
        the grant funds the State will reserve for State-level 
        activities under section 2113(a)(2).
          (3) A description of how the State educational agency 
        will facilitate the sharing of evidence-based and other 
        effective strategies among local educational agencies.
          (4) A description of how, and under what timeline, 
        the State educational agency will allocate subgrants 
        under subpart 2 to local educational agencies.
          (5) If applicable, a description of how the State 
        educational agency will work with local educational 
        agencies in the State to develop or implement a teacher 
        or school leader evaluation system.
          (6) An assurance that the State educational agency 
        will comply with section 6501 (regarding participation 
        by private school children and teachers).
  (b) Deemed Approval.--An application submitted by a State 
educational agency under subsection (a) shall be deemed to be 
approved by the Secretary unless the Secretary makes a written 
determination, prior to the expiration of the 120-day period 
beginning on the date on which the Secretary received the 
application, that the application is not in compliance with 
this subpart.
  (c) Disapproval.--The Secretary shall not finally disapprove 
an application, except after giving the State educational 
agency notice and an opportunity for a hearing.
  (d) Notification.--If the Secretary finds that an application 
is not in compliance, in whole or in part, with this subpart, 
the Secretary shall--
          (1) give the State educational agency notice and an 
        opportunity for a hearing; and
          (2) notify the State educational agency of the 
        finding of noncompliance and, in such notification, 
        shall--
                  (A) cite the specific provisions in the 
                application that are not in compliance; and
                  (B) request additional information, only as 
                to the noncompliant provisions, needed to make 
                the application compliant.
  (e) Response.--If a State educational agency responds to a 
notification from the Secretary under subsection (d)(2) during 
the 45-day period beginning on the date on which the agency 
received the notification, and resubmits the application with 
the requested information described in subsection (d)(2)(B), 
the Secretary shall approve or disapprove such application 
prior to the later of--
          (1) the expiration of the 45-day period beginning on 
        the date on which the application is resubmitted; or
          (2) the expiration of the 120-day period described in 
        subsection (b).
  (f) Failure to Respond.--If a State educational agency does 
not respond to a notification from the Secretary under 
subsection (d)(2) during the 45-day period beginning on the 
date on which the agency received the notification, such 
application shall be deemed to be disapproved.

SEC. 2113. STATE USE OF FUNDS.

  (a) In General.--A State educational agency that receives a 
grant under section 2111 shall--
          (1) reserve 95 percent of the grant funds to make 
        subgrants to local educational agencies under subpart 
        2; and
          (2) use the remainder of the funds, after reserving 
        funds under paragraph (1), for the State activities 
        described in subsection (b), except that the State may 
        reserve not more than 1 percent of the grant funds for 
        planning and administration related to carrying out 
        activities described in subsection (b).
  (b) State-level Activities.--A State educational agency that 
receives a grant under section 2111--
          (1) shall use the amount described in subsection 
        (a)(2) to fulfill the State educational agency's 
        responsibilities with respect to the proper and 
        efficient administration of the subgrant program 
        carried out under this part; and
          (2) may use the amount described in subsection (a)(2) 
        to--
                  (A) provide training and technical assistance 
                to local educational agencies on--
                          (i) in the case of a State 
                        educational agency not implementing a 
                        statewide teacher evaluation system--
                                  (I) the development and 
                                implementation of a teacher 
                                evaluation system; and
                                  (II) training school leaders 
                                in using such evaluation 
                                system; or
                          (ii) in the case of a State 
                        educational agency implementing a 
                        statewide teacher evaluation system, 
                        implementing such evaluation system;
                  (B) disseminate and share evidence-based and 
                other effective practices, including practices 
                consistent with the principles of effectiveness 
                described in section 2222(b), related to 
                teacher and school leader effectiveness and 
                professional development;
                  (C) provide professional development for 
                teachers and school leaders in the State 
                consistent with section 2123(6);
                  (D) provide training and technical assistance 
                to local educational agencies on--
                          (i) in the case of a State 
                        educational agency not implementing a 
                        statewide school leader evaluation 
                        system, the development and 
                        implementation of a school leader 
                        evaluation system; and
                          (ii) in the case of a State 
                        educational agency implementing a 
                        statewide school leader evaluation 
                        system, implementing such evaluation 
                        system; and
                  (E) develop and implement policies in the 
                State to address any teacher workforce 
                shortages in high-need subjects, including in 
                science, technology, engineering, math, 
                computer science, and foreign languages.

           Subpart 2--Subgrants to Local Educational Agencies

SEC. 2121. ALLOCATIONS TO LOCAL EDUCATIONAL AGENCIES.

  (a) In General.--Each State receiving a grant under section 
2111 shall use the funds reserved under section 2113(a)(1) to 
award subgrants to local educational agencies under this 
section.
  (b) Allocation of Funds.--From the funds reserved by a State 
under section 2113(a)(1), the State educational agency shall 
allocate to each local educational agency in the State the sum 
of--
          (1) an amount that bears the same relationship to 50 
        percent of the funds as the number of individuals age 5 
        through 17 in the geographic area served by the local 
        educational agency, as determined by the State on the 
        basis of the most recent satisfactory data, bears to 
        the number of those individuals in the geographic areas 
        served by all the local educational agencies in the 
        State, as so determined; and
          (2) an amount that bears the same relationship to 50 
        percent of the funds as the number of individuals age 5 
        through 17 from families with incomes below the poverty 
        line in the geographic area served by the local 
        educational agency, as determined by the State on the 
        basis of the most recent satisfactory data, bears to 
        the number of those individuals in the geographic areas 
        served by all the local educational agencies in the 
        State, as so determined.

SEC. 2122. LOCAL APPLICATIONS.

  To be eligible to receive a subgrant under this subpart, a 
local educational agency shall submit an application to the 
State educational agency involved at such time, in such a 
manner, and containing such information as the State 
educational agency may reasonably require that, at a minimum, 
shall include the following:
          (1) A description of--
                  (A) how the local educational agency will 
                meet the requirements of this subpart;
                  (B) how the activities to be carried out by 
                the local educational agency under this subpart 
                will be evidence-based, improve student 
                academic achievement, and improve teacher and 
                school leader effectiveness; and
                  (C) if applicable, how, the local educational 
                agency will work with parents, teachers, school 
                leaders, and other staff of the schools served 
                by the local educational agency in developing 
                and implementing a teacher evaluation system.
          (2) If applicable, a description of how the local 
        educational agency will develop and implement a teacher 
        or school leader evaluation system.
          (3) An assurance that the local educational agency 
        will comply with section 6501 (regarding participation 
        by private school children and teachers).

SEC. 2123. LOCAL USE OF FUNDS.

  A local educational agency receiving a subgrant under this 
subpart may use such funds for--
          (1) the development and implementation of a teacher 
        evaluation system, administered through school leaders 
        based on input from stakeholders listed in subparagraph 
        (E), that may--
                  (A) use student achievement data derived from 
                a variety of sources as a significant factor in 
                determining a teacher's evaluation, with the 
                weight given to such data defined by the local 
                educational agency;
                  (B) use multiple measures of evaluation for 
                evaluating teachers;
                  (C) have more than 2 categories for rating 
                the performance of teachers;
                  (D) be used to make personnel decisions, as 
                determined by the local educational agency; and
                  (E) be based on input from parents, school 
                leaders, teachers, and other staff of schools 
                served by the local educational agency;
          (2) in the case of a local educational agency located 
        in a State implementing a statewide teacher evaluation 
        system, implementing such evaluation system;
          (3) the training of school leaders or other 
        individuals for the purpose of evaluating teachers or 
        school leaders under a teacher or school leader 
        evaluation system, as appropriate;
          (4) in the case of a local educational agency located 
        in a State implementing a statewide school leader 
        evaluation system, to implement such evaluation system;
          (5) in the case of a local educational agency located 
        in a State not implementing a statewide school leader 
        evaluation system, the development and implementation 
        of a school leader evaluation system;
          (6) professional development for teachers and school 
        leaders that is evidence-based, job-embedded, and 
        continuous, such as--
                  (A) subject-based professional development 
                for teachers, including for teachers of civic 
                education, arts education, and computer science 
                and other science, technology, engineering, and 
                mathematics subjects;
                  (B) professional development aligned with the 
                State's academic standards;
                  (C) professional development to assist 
                teachers in meeting the needs of students with 
                different learning styles, particularly 
                students with disabilities, English learners, 
                and gifted and talented students;
                  (D) professional development for teachers or 
                school leaders identified as in need of 
                additional support through data provided by a 
                teacher or school leader evaluation system, as 
                appropriate;
                  (E) professional development based on the 
                current science of learning, which includes 
                research on positive brain change and cognitive 
                skill development;
                  (F) professional development for school 
                leaders, including evidence-based mentorship 
                programs for such leaders;
                  (G) professional development on integrated, 
                interdisciplinary, and project-based teaching 
                strategies, including for career and technical 
                education teachers and teachers of computer 
                science and other science, technology, 
                engineering, and mathematics subjects; or
                  (H) professional development on teaching dual 
                credit, dual enrollment, Advanced Placement, or 
                International Baccalaureate postsecondary-level 
                courses to secondary school students;
          (7) partnering with a public or private organization 
        or a consortium of such organizations to develop and 
        implement a teacher evaluation system described in 
        subparagraph (A) or (B) of paragraph (1), or to 
        administer professional development, as appropriate;
          (8) any activities authorized under section 2222(a); 
        or
          (9) class size reduction, except that the local 
        educational agency may use not more than 10 percent of 
        such funds for this purpose.

                     Subpart 3--General Provisions

SEC. 2131. REPORTING REQUIREMENTS.

  (a) Local Educational Agencies.--Each local educational 
agency receiving a subgrant under subpart 2 shall submit to the 
State educational agency involved, on an annual basis until the 
last year in which the local educational agency receives such 
subgrant funds, a report on--
          (1) how the local educational agency is meeting the 
        purposes of this part described in section 2101;
          (2) how the local educational agency is using such 
        subgrant funds;
          (3) in the case of a local educational agency 
        implementing a teacher or school leader evaluation 
        system, the results of such evaluation system, except 
        that such report shall not reveal personally 
        identifiable information about an individual teacher or 
        school leader; and
          (4) any such other information as the State 
        educational agency may require, as long as student and 
        teacher privacy is maintained.
  (b) State Educational Agencies.--Each State educational 
agency receiving a grant under subpart 1 shall submit to the 
Secretary a report, on an annual basis until the last year in 
which the State educational agency receives such grant funds, 
on--
          (1) how the State educational agency is meeting the 
        purposes of this part described in section 2101; and
          (2) how the State educational agency is using such 
        grant funds.

SEC. 2132. NATIONAL ACTIVITIES.

  From the funds reserved by the Secretary under section 
2111(b)(1)(A), the Secretary shall, directly or through grants 
and contracts--
          (1) provide technical assistance to States and local 
        educational agencies in carrying out activities under 
        this part; and
          (2) acting through the Institute of Education 
        Sciences, conduct national evaluations of activities 
        carried out by State educational agencies and local 
        educational agencies under this part.

SEC. 2133. STATE DEFINED.

  In this part, the term ``State'' means each of the 50 States, 
the District of Columbia, and the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico.

            PART B--TEACHER AND SCHOOL LEADER FLEXIBLE GRANT

SEC. 2201. PURPOSE.

  The purpose of this part is to improve student academic 
achievement by--
          (1) supporting all State educational agencies, local 
        educational agencies, schools, teachers, and school 
        leaders to pursue innovative and evidence-based 
        practices to help all students meet the State's 
        academic standards; and
          (2) increasing the number of teachers and school 
        leaders who are effective in increasing student 
        academic achievement.

                  Subpart 1--Formula Grants to States

SEC. 2211. STATE ALLOTMENTS.

  (a) Reservations.--From the amount appropriated under section 
3(b) for any fiscal year, the Secretary--
          (1) shall reserve 25 percent to award grants to 
        States under this subpart; and
          (2) of the amount reserved under paragraph (1), shall 
        reserve--
                  (A) not more than 1 percent for national 
                activities described in section 2233;
                  (B) one-half of 1 percent for allotments to 
                outlying areas on the basis of their relative 
                need, as determined by the Secretary, in 
                accordance with the purpose of this part; and
                  (C) one-half of 1 percent for the Secretary 
                of the Interior for programs under this part in 
                schools operated or funded by the Bureau of 
                Indian Education.
  (b) State Allotments.--
          (1) In general.--From the total amount reserved under 
        subsection (a)(1) for each fiscal year and not reserved 
        under subparagraphs (A) through (C) of subsection 
        (a)(2), the Secretary shall allot, and make available 
        in accordance with this section, to each State an 
        amount that bears the same ratio to such sums as the 
        school-age population of the State bears to the school-
        age population of all States.
          (2) Small state minimum.--No State receiving an 
        allotment under paragraph (1) may receive less than 
        one-half of 1 percent of the total amount allotted 
        under such paragraph.
          (3) Reallotment.--If a State does not receive an 
        allotment under this subpart for a fiscal year, the 
        Secretary shall reallot the amount of the State's 
        allotment to the remaining States in accordance with 
        this section.
  (c) State Application.--In order to receive an allotment 
under this section for any fiscal year, a State shall submit an 
application to the Secretary, at such time and in such manner 
as the Secretary may reasonably require. Such application 
shall--
          (1) designate the State educational agency as the 
        agency responsible for the administration and 
        supervision of programs assisted under this part;
          (2) describe how the State educational agency will 
        use funds received under this section for State level 
        activities described in subsection (d)(3);
          (3) describe the procedures and criteria the State 
        educational agency will use for reviewing applications 
        and awarding subgrants in a timely manner to eligible 
        entities under section 2221 on a competitive basis;
          (4) describe how the State educational agency will 
        ensure that subgrants made under section 2221 are of 
        sufficient size and scope to support effective programs 
        that will help increase academic achievement in the 
        classroom and are consistent with the purposes of this 
        part;
          (5) describe the steps the State educational agency 
        will take to ensure that eligible entities use 
        subgrants received under section 2221 to carry out 
        programs that implement effective strategies, including 
        by providing ongoing technical assistance and training, 
        and disseminating evidence-based and other effective 
        strategies to such eligible entities;
          (6) describe how programs under this part will be 
        coordinated with other programs under this Act; and
          (7) include an assurance that, other than providing 
        technical and advisory assistance and monitoring 
        compliance with this part, the State educational agency 
        has not exercised, and will not exercise, any influence 
        in the decisionmaking processes of eligible entities as 
        to the expenditure of funds made pursuant to an 
        application submitted under section 2221(b).
  (d) State Use of Funds.--
          (1) In general.--Each State that receives an 
        allotment under this section shall reserve not less 
        than 92 percent of the amount allotted to such State 
        under subsection (b), for each fiscal year, for 
        subgrants to eligible entities under subpart 2.
          (2) State administration.--A State educational agency 
        may reserve not more than 1 percent of the amount made 
        available to the State under subsection (b) for the 
        administrative costs of carrying out such State 
        educational agency's responsibilities under this 
        subpart.
          (3) State-level activities.--
                  (A) Innovative teacher and school leader 
                activities.--A State educational agency shall 
                reserve not more than 4 percent of the amount 
                made available to the State under subsection 
                (b) to carry out, solely, or in partnership 
                with State agencies of higher education, 1 or 
                more of the following activities:
                          (i) Reforming teacher and school 
                        leader certification, recertification, 
                        licensing, and tenure systems to ensure 
                        that such systems are rigorous and 
                        that--
                                  (I) each teacher has the 
                                subject matter knowledge and 
                                teaching skills necessary to 
                                help students meet the State's 
                                academic standards; and
                                  (II) school leaders have the 
                                instructional leadership skills 
                                to help teachers instruct and 
                                students learn.
                          (ii) Improving the quality of teacher 
                        preparation programs within the State, 
                        including through the use of 
                        appropriate student achievement data 
                        and other factors to evaluate the 
                        quality of teacher preparation programs 
                        within the State.
                          (iii) Carrying out programs that 
                        establish, expand, or improve 
                        alternative routes for State 
                        certification or licensure of teachers 
                        and school leaders, including such 
                        programs for--
                                  (I) mid-career professionals 
                                from other occupations, 
                                including computer science and 
                                other science, technology, 
                                engineering, and math fields;
                                  (II) former military 
                                personnel; and
                                  (III) recent graduates of an 
                                institution of higher 
                                education, with a record of 
                                academic distinction, who 
                                demonstrate the potential to 
                                become effective teachers or 
                                school leaders.
                          (iv) Developing, or assisting 
                        eligible entities in developing--
                                  (I) performance-based pay 
                                systems for teachers and school 
                                leaders;
                                  (II) strategies that provide 
                                differential, incentive, or 
                                bonus pay for teachers and 
                                school leaders; or
                                  (III) teacher and school 
                                leader advancement initiatives 
                                that promote professional 
                                growth and emphasize multiple 
                                career paths and pay 
                                differentiation.
                          (v) Developing, or assisting eligible 
                        entities in developing, new, evidence-
                        based teacher and school leader 
                        induction and mentoring programs that 
                        are designed to--
                                  (I) improve instruction and 
                                student academic achievement; 
                                and
                                  (II) increase the retention 
                                of effective teachers and 
                                school leaders.
                          (vi) Providing professional 
                        development for teachers and school 
                        leaders that is focused on improving 
                        teaching and student academic 
                        achievement, including for students 
                        with different learning styles, 
                        particularly students with 
                        disabilities, English learners, gifted 
                        and talented students, and other 
                        special populations.
                          (vii) Providing training and 
                        technical assistance to eligible 
                        entities that receive a subgrant under 
                        section 2221.
                          (viii) Other activities identified by 
                        the State educational agency that meet 
                        the purposes of this part, including 
                        those activities authorized under 
                        subparagraph (B).
                  (B) Teacher or school leader preparation 
                academies.--
                          (i) In general.--In the case of a 
                        State in which teacher or school leader 
                        preparation academies are allowable 
                        under State law, a State educational 
                        agency may reserve not more than 3 
                        percent of the amount made available to 
                        the State under subsection (b) to 
                        support the establishment or expansion 
                        of one or more teacher or school leader 
                        preparation academies and, subject to 
                        the limitation under clause (iii), to 
                        support State authorizers for such 
                        academies.
                          (ii) Matching requirement.--A State 
                        educational agency shall not provide 
                        funds under this subparagraph to 
                        support the establishment or expansion 
                        of a teacher or school leader 
                        preparation academy unless the academy 
                        agrees to provide, either directly or 
                        through private contributions, non-
                        Federal matching funds equal to not 
                        less than 10 percent of the amount of 
                        the funds the academy will receive 
                        under this subparagraph.
                          (iii) Funding for state 
                        authorizers.--Not more than 5 percent 
                        of funds provided to a teacher or 
                        school leader preparation academy under 
                        this subparagraph may be used to 
                        support activities of State authorizers 
                        for such academy.

SEC. 2212. APPROVAL AND DISAPPROVAL OF STATE APPLICATIONS.

  (a) Deemed Approval.--An application submitted by a State 
pursuant to section 2211(c) shall be deemed to be approved by 
the Secretary unless the Secretary makes a written 
determination, prior to the expiration of the 120-day period 
beginning on the date on which the Secretary received the 
application, that the application is not in compliance with 
section 2211(c).
  (b) Disapproval Process.--
          (1) In general.--The Secretary shall not finally 
        disapprove an application submitted under section 
        2211(c), except after giving the State educational 
        agency notice and an opportunity for a hearing.
          (2) Notification.--If the Secretary finds that an 
        application is not in compliance, in whole or in part, 
        with section 2211(c) the Secretary shall--
                  (A) give the State educational agency notice 
                and an opportunity for a hearing; and
                  (B) notify the State educational agency of 
                the finding of noncompliance and, in such 
                notification, shall--
                          (i) cite the specific provisions in 
                        the application that are not in 
                        compliance; and
                          (ii) request additional information, 
                        only as to the noncompliant provisions, 
                        needed to make the application 
                        compliant.
          (3) Response.--If a State educational agency responds 
        to a notification from the Secretary under paragraph 
        (2)(B) during the 45-day period beginning on the date 
        on which the State educational agency received the 
        notification, and resubmits the application with the 
        requested information described in paragraph 
        (2)(B)(ii), the Secretary shall approve or disapprove 
        such application prior to the later of--
                  (A) the expiration of the 45-day period 
                beginning on the date on which the application 
                is resubmitted; or
                  (B) the expiration of the 120-day period 
                described in subsection (a).
          (4) Failure to respond.--If the State educational 
        agency does not respond to a notification from the 
        Secretary under paragraph (2)(B) during the 45-day 
        period beginning on the date on which the State 
        educational agency received the notification, such 
        application shall be deemed to be disapproved.

               Subpart 2--Local Competitive Grant Program

SEC. 2221. LOCAL COMPETITIVE GRANT PROGRAM.

  (a) In General.--A State that receives an allotment under 
section 2211(b) for a fiscal year shall use the amount reserved 
under section 2211(d)(1) to award subgrants, on a competitive 
basis, to eligible entities in accordance with this section to 
enable such entities to carry out the programs and activities 
described in section 2222.
  (b) Application.--
          (1) In general.--To be eligible to receive a subgrant 
        under this section, an eligible entity shall submit an 
        application to the State educational agency at such 
        time, in such manner, and including such information as 
        the State educational agency may reasonably require.
          (2) Contents.--Each application submitted under 
        paragraph (1) shall include--
                  (A) a description of the programs and 
                activities to be funded and how they are 
                consistent with the purposes of this part; and
                  (B) an assurance that the eligible entity 
                will comply with section 6501 (regarding 
                participation by private school children and 
                teachers).
  (c) Peer Review.--In reviewing applications under this 
section, a State educational agency shall use a peer review 
process or other methods of assuring the quality of such 
applications but the review shall only judge the likelihood of 
the activity to increase student academic achievement. The 
reviewers shall not make a determination based on the policy of 
the proposed activity.
  (d) Geographic Diversity.--A State educational agency shall 
distribute funds under this section equitably among geographic 
areas within the State, including rural, suburban, and urban 
communities.
  (e) Duration of Awards.--A State educational agency may award 
subgrants under this section for a period of not more than 5 
years.
  (f) Matching.--An eligible entity receiving a subgrant under 
this section shall provide, either directly or through private 
contributions, non-Federal matching funds equal to not less 
than 10 percent of the amount of the subgrant.

SEC. 2222. LOCAL AUTHORIZED ACTIVITIES.

  (a) In General.--Each eligible entity receiving a subgrant 
under section 2221 shall use such subgrant funds to develop, 
implement, and evaluate comprehensive programs and activities, 
that are in accordance with the purpose of this part and--
          (1) are consistent with the principles of 
        effectiveness described in subsection (b); and
          (2) may include, among other programs and 
        activities--
                  (A) developing and implementing initiatives 
                to assist in recruiting, hiring, and retaining 
                highly effective teachers and school leaders, 
                including initiatives that provide--
                          (i) differential, incentive, or bonus 
                        pay for teachers and school leaders;
                          (ii) performance-based pay systems 
                        for teachers and school leaders;
                          (iii) teacher and school leader 
                        advancement initiatives that promote 
                        professional growth and emphasize 
                        multiple career paths and pay 
                        differentiation;
                          (iv) new teacher and school leader 
                        induction and mentoring programs that 
                        are designed to improve instruction, 
                        student academic achievement, and to 
                        increase teacher and school leader 
                        retention; and
                          (v) teacher residency programs, and 
                        school leader residency programs, 
                        designed to develop and support new 
                        teachers or new school leaders, 
                        respectively;
                  (B) supporting the establishment or expansion 
                of teacher or school leader preparation 
                academies under section 2211(d)(3)(B);
                  (C) recruiting qualified individuals from 
                other fields, including individuals from 
                computer science and other science, technology, 
                engineering, and math fields, mid-career 
                professionals from other occupations, and 
                former military personnel;
                  (D) establishing, improving, or expanding 
                model instructional programs to ensure that all 
                children meet the State's academic standards;
                  (E) providing evidence-based, job embedded, 
                continuous professional development for 
                teachers and school leaders focused on 
                improving teaching and student academic 
                achievement;
                  (F) implementing programs based on the 
                current science of learning, which includes 
                research on positive brain change and cognitive 
                skill development;
                  (G) recruiting and training teachers to teach 
                dual credit, dual enrollment, Advanced 
                Placement, or International Baccalaureate 
                postsecondary-level courses to secondary school 
                students; and
                  (H) other activities and programs identified 
                as necessary by the local educational agency 
                that meet the purpose of this part.
  (b) Principles of Effectiveness.--For a program or activity 
developed pursuant to this section to meet the principles of 
effectiveness, such program or activity shall--
          (1) be based upon an assessment of objective data 
        regarding the need for programs and activities in the 
        elementary schools and secondary schools served to 
        increase the number of teachers and school leaders who 
        are effective in improving student academic 
        achievement;
          (2) reflect evidence-based research, or in the 
        absence of a strong research base, reflect effective 
        strategies in the field, that provide evidence that the 
        program or activity will improve student academic 
        achievement; and
          (3) include meaningful and ongoing consultation with, 
        and input from, teachers, school leaders, and parents, 
        in the development of the application and 
        administration of the program or activity.

                     Subpart 3--General Provisions

SEC. 2231. PERIODIC EVALUATION.

  (a) In General.--Each eligible entity and each teacher or 
school leader preparation academy that receives funds under 
this part shall undergo a periodic evaluation by the State 
educational agency involved to assess such entity's or such 
academy's progress toward achieving the purposes of this part.
  (b) Use of Results.--The results of an evaluation described 
in subsection (a) of an eligible entity or academy shall be--
          (1) used to refine, improve, and strengthen such 
        eligible entity or such academy, respectively; and
          (2) made available to the public upon request, with 
        public notice of such availability provided.

SEC. 2232. REPORTING REQUIREMENTS.

  (a) Eligible Entities and Academies.--Each eligible entity 
and each teacher or school leader preparation academy that 
receives funds from a State educational agency under this part 
shall prepare and submit annually to such State educational 
agency a report that includes--
          (1) a description of the progress of the eligible 
        entity or teacher or school leader preparation academy, 
        respectively, in meeting the purposes of this part;
          (2) a description of the programs and activities 
        conducted by the eligible entity or teacher or school 
        leader preparation academy, respectively, with funds 
        received under this part;
          (3) how the eligible entity or teacher or school 
        leader preparation academy, respectively, is using such 
        funds; and
          (4) any such other information as the State 
        educational agency may reasonably require.
  (b) State Educational Agencies.--Each State educational 
agency that receives a grant under this part shall prepare and 
submit, annually, to the Secretary a report that includes--
          (1) a description of the programs and activities 
        conducted by the State educational agency with grant 
        funds received under this part;
          (2) a description of the progress of the State 
        educational agency in meeting the purposes of this part 
        described in section 2201;
          (3) how the State educational agency is using grant 
        funds received under this part;
          (4) the methods and criteria the State educational 
        agency used to award subgrants in a timely manner to 
        eligible entities under section 2221 and, if 
        applicable, funds in a timely manner to teacher or 
        school leader academies under section 2211(d)(3)(B); 
        and
          (5) the results of the periodic evaluations conducted 
        under section 2231.

SEC. 2233. NATIONAL ACTIVITIES.

  From the funds reserved by the Secretary under section 
2211(a)(2)(A), the Secretary shall, directly or through grants 
and contracts--
          (1) provide technical assistance to States and 
        eligible entities in carrying out activities under this 
        part; and
          (2) acting through the Institute of Education 
        Sciences, conduct national evaluations of activities 
        carried out by States and eligible entities under this 
        part.

SEC. 2234. DEFINITIONS.

  In this part:
          (1) Eligible entity.--The term ``eligible entity'' 
        means--
                  (A) a local educational agency or consortium 
                of local educational agencies;
                  (B) an institution of higher education or 
                consortium of such institutions in partnership 
                with a local educational agency or consortium 
                of local educational agencies;
                  (C) a for-profit organization, a nonprofit 
                organization, or a consortium of for-profit or 
                nonprofit organizations in partnership with a 
                local educational agency or consortium of local 
                educational agencies; or
                  (D) a consortium of the entities described in 
                subparagraphs (B) and (C).
          (2) State.--The term ``State'' means each of the 50 
        States, the District of Columbia, and the Commonwealth 
        of Puerto Rico.
          (3) State authorizer.--The term ``State authorizer'' 
        means an entity designated by the Governor of a State 
        to authorize teacher or school leader preparation 
        academies within the State that--
                  (A) enters into an agreement with a teacher 
                or school leader preparation academy that--
                          (i) specifies the goals expected of 
                        the academy, which, at a minimum, 
                        include the goals described in 
                        paragraph (4); and
                          (ii) does not reauthorize the academy 
                        if such goals are not met; and
                  (B) may be a nonprofit organization, a State 
                educational agency, or other public entity, or 
                consortium of such entities (including a 
                consortium of State educational agencies).
          (4) Teacher or school leader preparation academy.--
        The term ``teacher or school leader preparation 
        academy'' means a public or private entity, or a 
        nonprofit or for-profit organization, which may be an 
        institution of higher education or an organization 
        affiliated with an institution of higher education, 
        that will prepare teachers or school leaders to serve 
        in schools, and that--
                  (A) enters into an agreement with a State 
                authorizer that specifies the goals expected of 
                the academy, including--
                          (i) a requirement that prospective 
                        teachers or school leaders who are 
                        enrolled in a teacher or school leader 
                        preparation academy receive a 
                        significant part of their training 
                        through clinical preparation that 
                        partners the prospective candidate with 
                        an effective teacher or school leader, 
                        respectively, with a demonstrated 
                        record of increasing or producing high 
                        student achievement, while also 
                        receiving concurrent instruction from 
                        the academy in the content area (or 
                        areas) in which the prospective teacher 
                        or school leader will become certified 
                        or licensed;
                          (ii) the number of effective teachers 
                        or school leaders, respectively, who 
                        will demonstrate success in increasing 
                        or producing high student achievement 
                        that the academy will produce; and
                          (iii) a requirement that a teacher or 
                        school leader preparation academy will 
                        only award a certificate of completion 
                        after the graduate demonstrates that 
                        the graduate is an effective teacher or 
                        school leader, respectively, with a 
                        demonstrated record of increasing or 
                        producing high student achievement, 
                        except that an academy may award a 
                        provisional certificate for the period 
                        necessary to allow the graduate to 
                        demonstrate such effectiveness;
                  (B) does not have restrictions on the methods 
                the academy will use to train prospective 
                teacher or school leader candidates, 
                including--
                          (i) obligating (or prohibiting) the 
                        academy's faculty to hold advanced 
                        degrees or conduct academic research;
                          (ii) restrictions related to the 
                        academy's physical infrastructure;
                          (iii) restrictions related to the 
                        number of course credits required as 
                        part of the program of study;
                          (iv) restrictions related to the 
                        undergraduate coursework completed by 
                        teachers teaching or working on 
                        alternative certificates, licenses, or 
                        credentials, as long as such teachers 
                        have successfully passed all relevant 
                        State-approved content area 
                        examinations; or
                          (v) restrictions related to obtaining 
                        accreditation from an accrediting body 
                        for purposes of becoming an academy;
                  (C) limits admission to its program to 
                prospective teacher or school leader candidates 
                who demonstrate strong potential to improve 
                student achievement, based on a rigorous 
                selection process that reviews a candidate's 
                prior academic achievement or record of 
                professional accomplishment; and
                  (D) results in a certificate of completion 
                that the State may recognize as at least the 
                equivalent of a master's degree in education 
                for the purposes of hiring, retention, 
                compensation, and promotion in the State.
          (5) Teacher residency program.--The term ``teacher 
        residency program'' means a school-based teacher 
        preparation program in which a prospective teacher--
                  (A) for one academic year, teaches alongside 
                an effective teacher, as determined by a 
                teacher evaluation system implemented under 
                part A, who is the teacher of record;
                  (B) receives concurrent instruction during 
                the year described in subparagraph (A) from the 
                partner institution (as defined in section 200 
                of the Higher Education Act of 1965 (20 U.S.C. 
                1021)), which courses may be taught by local 
                educational agency personnel or residency 
                program faculty, in the teaching of the content 
                area in which the teacher will become certified 
                or licensed; and
                  (C) acquires effective teaching skills.

                 PART C--INNOVATION FOR TEACHER QUALITY

                  [Subpart 1--Transitions to Teaching

               [CHAPTER B--TRANSITION TO TEACHING PROGRAM

[SEC. 2311. PURPOSES.

   [The purposes of this chapter are--
          [(1) to establish a program to recruit and retain 
        highly qualified mid-career professionals (including 
        highly qualified paraprofessionals), and recent 
        graduates of an institution of higher education, as 
        teachers in high-need schools, including recruiting 
        teachers through alternative routes to certification; 
        and
          [(2) to encourage the development and expansion of 
        alternative routes to certification under State-
        approved programs that enable individuals to be 
        eligible for teacher certification within a reduced 
        period of time, relying on the experience, expertise, 
        and academic qualifications of an individual, or other 
        factors in lieu of traditional course work in the field 
        of education.

[SEC. 2312. DEFINITIONS.

   [In this chapter:
          [(1) Eligible participant.--The term ``eligible 
        participant'' means--
                  [(A) an individual with substantial, 
                demonstrable career experience, including a 
                highly qualified paraprofessional; or
                  [(B) an individual who is a graduate of an 
                institution of higher education who--
                          [(i) has graduated not more than 3 
                        years before applying to an eligible 
                        entity to teach under this chapter; and
                          [(ii) in the case of an individual 
                        wishing to teach in a secondary school, 
                        has completed an academic major (or 
                        courses totaling an equivalent number 
                        of credit hours) in the academic 
                        subject that the individual will teach.
          [(2) High-need local educational agency.--The term 
        ``high-need local educational agency'' has the meaning 
        given the term in section 2102.
          [(3) High-need school.--The term ``high-need school'' 
        means a school that--
                  [(A) is located in an area in which the 
                percentage of students from families with 
                incomes below the poverty line is 30 percent or 
                more; or
                  [(B)(i) is located in an area with a high 
                percentage of out-of-field teachers, as defined 
                in section 2102;
                  [(ii) is within the top quartile of 
                elementary schools and secondary schools 
                statewide, as ranked by the number of unfilled, 
                available teacher positions at the schools;
                  [(iii) is located in an area in which there 
                is a high teacher turnover rate; or
                  [(iv) is located in an area in which there is 
                a high percentage of teachers who are not 
                certified or licensed.

[SEC. 2313. GRANT PROGRAM.

  [(a) In General.--The Secretary may establish a program to 
make grants on a competitive basis to eligible entities to 
develop State and local teacher corps or other programs to 
establish, expand, or enhance teacher recruitment and retention 
efforts.
  [(b) Eligible Entity.--To be eligible to receive a grant 
under this section, an entity shall be--
          [(1) a State educational agency;
          [(2) a high-need local educational agency;
          [(3) a for-profit or nonprofit organization that has 
        a proven record of effectively recruiting and retaining 
        highly qualified teachers, in a partnership with a 
        high-need local educational agency or with a State 
        educational agency;
          [(4) an institution of higher education, in a 
        partnership with a high-need local educational agency 
        or with a State educational agency;
          [(5) a regional consortium of State educational 
        agencies; or
          [(6) a consortium of high-need local educational 
        agencies.
  [(c) Priority.--In making such a grant, the Secretary shall 
give priority to a partnership or consortium that includes a 
high-need State educational agency or local educational agency.
  [(d) Application.--
          [(1) In general.--To be eligible to receive a grant 
        under this section, an entity described in subsection 
        (b) shall submit an application to the Secretary at 
        such time, in such manner, and containing such 
        information as the Secretary may require.
          [(2) Contents.--The application shall describe--
                  [(A) one or more target recruitment groups on 
                which the applicant will focus its recruitment 
                efforts;
                  [(B) the characteristics of each such target 
                group that--
                          [(i) show the knowledge and 
                        experience of the group's members; and
                          [(ii) demonstrate that the members 
                        are eligible to achieve the objectives 
                        of this section;
                  [(C) describe how the applicant will use 
                funds received under this section to develop a 
                teacher corps or other program to recruit and 
                retain highly qualified midcareer professionals 
                (which may include highly qualified 
                paraprofessionals), recent college graduates, 
                and recent graduate school graduates, as highly 
                qualified teachers in high-need schools 
                operated by high-need local educational 
                agencies;
                  [(D) explain how the program carried out 
                under the grant will meet the relevant State 
                laws (including regulations) related to teacher 
                certification or licensing and facilitate the 
                certification or licensing of such teachers;
                  [(E) describe how the grant will increase the 
                number of highly qualified teachers, in high-
                need schools operated by high-need local 
                educational agencies (in urban or rural school 
                districts), and in high-need academic subjects, 
                in the jurisdiction served by the applicant; 
                and
                  [(F) describe how the applicant will 
                collaborate, as needed, with other 
                institutions, agencies, or organizations to 
                recruit (particularly through activities that 
                have proven effective in retaining highly 
                qualified teachers), train, place, support, and 
                provide teacher induction programs to program 
                participants under this chapter, including 
                providing evidence of the commitment of the 
                institutions, agencies, or organizations to the 
                applicant's programs.
  [(e) Duration of Grants.--The Secretary may make grants under 
this section for periods of 5 years. At the end of the 5-year 
period for such a grant, the grant recipient may apply for an 
additional grant under this section.
  [(f) Equitable Distribution.--To the extent practicable, the 
Secretary shall ensure an equitable geographic distribution of 
grants under this section among the regions of the United 
States.
  [(g) Uses of Funds.--
          [(1) In general.--An entity that receives a grant 
        under this section shall use the funds made available 
        through the grant to develop a teacher corps or other 
        program in order to establish, expand, or enhance a 
        teacher recruitment and retention program for highly 
        qualified mid-career professionals (including highly 
        qualified paraprofessionals), and recent graduates of 
        an institution of higher education, who are eligible 
        participants, including activities that provide 
        alternative routes to teacher certification.
          [(2) Authorized activities.--The entity shall use the 
        funds to carry out a program that includes two or more 
        of the following activities:
                  [(A) Providing scholarships, stipends, 
                bonuses, and other financial incentives, that 
                are linked to participation in activities that 
                have proven effective in retaining teachers in 
                high-need schools operated by high-need local 
                educational agencies, to all eligible 
                participants, in an amount not to exceed $5,000 
                per participant.
                  [(B) Carrying out pre- and post-placement 
                induction or support activities that have 
                proven effective in recruiting and retaining 
                teachers, such as--
                          [(i) teacher mentoring;
                          [(ii) providing internships;
                          [(iii) providing high-quality, 
                        preservice coursework; and
                          [(iv) providing high-quality, 
                        sustained inservice professional 
                        development.
                  [(C) Carrying out placement and ongoing 
                activities to ensure that teachers are placed 
                in fields in which the teachers are highly 
                qualified to teach and are placed in high-need 
                schools.
                  [(D) Making payments to pay for costs 
                associated with accepting teachers recruited 
                under this section from among eligible 
                participants or provide financial incentives to 
                prospective teachers who are eligible 
                participants.
                  [(E) Collaborating with institutions of 
                higher education in developing and implementing 
                programs to facilitate teacher recruitment 
                (including teacher credentialing) and teacher 
                retention programs.
                  [(F) Carrying out other programs, projects, 
                and activities that are designed and have 
                proven to be effective in recruiting and 
                retaining teachers, and that the Secretary 
                determines to be appropriate.
                  [(G) Developing long-term recruitment and 
                retention strategies including developing--
                          [(i) a statewide or regionwide 
                        clearinghouse for the recruitment and 
                        placement of teachers;
                          [(ii) administrative structures to 
                        develop and implement programs to 
                        provide alternative routes to 
                        certification;
                          [(iii) reciprocity agreements between 
                        or among States for the certification 
                        or licensing of teachers; or
                          [(iv) other long-term teacher 
                        recruitment and retention strategies.
          [(3) Effective programs.--The entity shall use the 
        funds only for programs that have proven to be 
        effective in both recruiting and retaining teachers.
  [(h) Requirements.--
          [(1) Targeting.--An entity that receives a grant 
        under this section to carry out a program shall ensure 
        that participants in the program recruited with funds 
        made available under this section are placed in high-
        need schools operated by high-need local educational 
        agencies. In placing the participants in the schools, 
        the entity shall give priority to the schools that are 
        located in areas with the highest percentages of 
        students from families with incomes below the poverty 
        line.
          [(2) Supplement, not supplant.--Funds made available 
        under this section shall be used to supplement, and not 
        supplant, State and local public funds expended for 
        teacher recruitment and retention programs, including 
        programs to recruit the teachers through alternative 
        routes to certification.
          [(3) Partnerships and consortia of local educational 
        agencies.--In the case of a partnership established by 
        a local educational agency to carry out a program under 
        this chapter, or a consortium of such agencies 
        established to carry out a program under this chapter, 
        the local educational agency or consortium shall not be 
        eligible to receive funds through a State program under 
        this chapter.
  [(i) Period of Service.--A program participant in a program 
under this chapter who receives training through the program 
shall serve a high-need school operated by a high-need local 
educational agency for at least 3 years.
  [(j) Repayment.--The Secretary shall establish such 
requirements as the Secretary determines to be appropriate to 
ensure that program participants who receive a stipend or other 
financial incentive under subsection (g)(2)(A), but fail to 
complete their service obligation under subsection (i), repay 
all or a portion of such stipend or other incentive.
  [(k) Administrative Funds.--No entity that receives a grant 
under this section shall use more than 5 percent of the funds 
made available through the grant for the administration of a 
program under this chapter carried out under the grant.

[SEC. 2314. EVALUATION AND ACCOUNTABILITY FOR RECRUITING AND RETAINING 
                    TEACHERS.

  [(a) Evaluation.--Each entity that receives a grant under 
this chapter shall conduct--
          [(1) an interim evaluation of the program funded 
        under the grant at the end of the third year of the 
        grant period; and
          [(2) a final evaluation of the program at the end of 
        the fifth year of the grant period.
  [(b) Contents.--In conducting the evaluation, the entity 
shall describe the extent to which local educational agencies 
that received funds through the grant have met the goals 
relating to teacher recruitment and retention described in the 
application.
  [(c) Reports.--The entity shall prepare and submit to the 
Secretary and to Congress interim and final reports containing 
the results of the interim and final evaluations, respectively.
  [(d) Revocation.--If the Secretary determines that the 
recipient of a grant under this chapter has not made 
substantial progress in meeting such goals and the objectives 
of the grant by the end of the third year of the grant period, 
the Secretary--
          [(1) shall revoke the payment made for the fourth 
        year of the grant period; and
          [(2) shall not make a payment for the fifth year of 
        the grant period.

                     [CHAPTER C--GENERAL PROVISIONS

[SEC. 2321. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS.

  [(a) In General.--There are authorized to be appropriated to 
carry out this subpart $150,000,000 for fiscal year 2002 and 
such sums as may be necessary for each of the 5 succeeding 
fiscal years.
  [(b) Reservation.--From the funds appropriated to carry out 
this subpart for fiscal year 2002, the Secretary shall reserve 
not more than $30,000,000 to carry out chapter A.

                  [Subpart 2--National Writing Project

[SEC. 2331. PURPOSES.

   [The purposes of this subpart are--
          [(1) to support and promote the expansion of the 
        National Writing Project network of sites so that 
        teachers in every region of the United States will have 
        access to a National Writing Project program;
          [(2) to ensure the consistent high quality of the 
        sites through ongoing review, evaluation, and technical 
        assistance;
          [(3) to support and promote the establishment of 
        programs to disseminate effective practices and 
        research findings about the teaching of writing; and
          [(4) to coordinate activities assisted under this 
        subpart with activities assisted under this Act.

[SEC. 2332. NATIONAL WRITING PROJECT.

  [(a) Authorization.--The Secretary is authorized to award a 
grant to the National Writing Project, a nonprofit educational 
organization that has as its primary purpose the improvement of 
the quality of student writing and learning (hereafter in this 
section referred to as the ``grantee'') to improve the teaching 
of writing and the use of writing as a part of the learning 
process in our Nation's classrooms.
  [(b) Requirements of Grant.--The grant shall provide that--
          [(1) the grantee will enter into contracts with 
        institutions of higher education or other nonprofit 
        educational providers (hereafter in this section 
        referred to as ``contractors'') under which the 
        contractors will agree to establish, operate, and 
        provide the non-Federal share of the cost of teacher 
        training programs in effective approaches and processes 
        for the teaching of writing;
          [(2) funds made available by the Secretary to the 
        grantee pursuant to any contract entered into under 
        this section will be used to pay the Federal share of 
        the cost of establishing and operating teacher training 
        programs as provided in paragraph (1); and
          [(3) the grantee will meet such other conditions and 
        standards as the Secretary determines to be necessary 
        to assure compliance with the provisions of this 
        section and will provide such technical assistance as 
        may be necessary to carry out the provisions of this 
        section.
  [(c) Teacher Training Programs.--The teacher training 
programs authorized in subsection (a) shall--
          [(1) be conducted during the school year and during 
        the summer months;
          [(2) train teachers who teach grades kindergarten 
        through college;
          [(3) select teachers to become members of a National 
        Writing Project teacher network whose members will 
        conduct writing workshops for other teachers in the 
        area served by each National Writing Project site; and
          [(4) encourage teachers from all disciplines to 
        participate in such teacher training programs.
  [(d) Federal Share.--
          [(1) In general.--Except as provided in paragraph (2) 
        or (3) and for purposes of subsection (a), the term 
        ``Federal share'' means, with respect to the costs of 
        teacher training programs authorized in subsection (a), 
        50 percent of such costs to the contractor.
          [(2) Waiver.--The Secretary may waive the provisions 
        of paragraph (1) on a case-by-case basis if the 
        National Advisory Board described in subsection (e) 
        determines, on the basis of financial need, that such 
        waiver is necessary.
          [(3) Maximum.--The Federal share of the costs of 
        teacher training programs conducted pursuant to 
        subsection (a) may not exceed $100,000 for any one 
        contractor, or $200,000 for a statewide program 
        administered by any one contractor in at least five 
        sites throughout the State.
  [(e) National Advisory Board.--
          [(1) Establishment.--The National Writing Project 
        shall establish and operate a National Advisory Board.
          [(2) Composition.--The National Advisory Board 
        established pursuant to paragraph (1) shall consist 
        of--
                  [(A) national educational leaders;
                  [(B) leaders in the field of writing; and
                  [(C) such other individuals as the National 
                Writing Project determines necessary.
          [(3) Duties.--The National Advisory Board established 
        pursuant to paragraph (1) shall--
                  [(A) advise the National Writing Project on 
                national issues related to student writing and 
                the teaching of writing;
                  [(B) review the activities and programs of 
                the National Writing Project; and
                  [(C) support the continued development of the 
                National Writing Project.
  [(f) Evaluation.--
          [(1) In general.--The Secretary shall conduct an 
        independent evaluation by grant or contract of the 
        teacher training programs administered pursuant to this 
        subpart. Such evaluation shall specify the amount of 
        funds expended by the National Writing Project and each 
        contractor receiving assistance under this section for 
        administrative costs. The results of such evaluation 
        shall be made available to the appropriate committees 
        of Congress.
          [(2) Funding limitation.--The Secretary shall reserve 
        not more than $150,000 from the total amount 
        appropriated pursuant to the authority of subsection 
        (h) for fiscal year 2002 and each of the 5 succeeding 
        fiscal years to conduct the evaluation described in 
        paragraph (1).
  [(g) Application Review.--
          [(1) Review board.--The National Writing Project 
        shall establish and operate a National Review Board 
        that shall consist of--
                  [(A) leaders in the field of research in 
                writing; and
                  [(B) such other individuals as the National 
                Writing Project deems necessary.
          [(2) Duties.--The National Review Board shall--
                  [(A) review all applications for assistance 
                under this subsection; and
                  [(B) recommend applications for assistance 
                under this subsection for funding by the 
                National Writing Project.
  [(h) Authorization of Appropriations.--There are authorized 
to be appropriated to carry out this subpart $15,000,000 as may 
be necessary for fiscal year 2002 and each of the 5 succeeding 
fiscal years.

                      [Subpart 3--Civic Education

[SEC. 2341. SHORT TITLE.

  [This subpart may be cited as the ``Education for Democracy 
Act''.

[SEC. 2342. PURPOSE.

   [It is the purpose of this subpart--
          [(1) to improve the quality of civics and government 
        education by educating students about the history and 
        principles of the Constitution of the United States, 
        including the Bill of Rights;
          [(2) to foster civic competence and responsibility; 
        and
          [(3) to improve the quality of civic education and 
        economic education through cooperative civic education 
        and economic education exchange programs with emerging 
        democracies.

[SEC. 2343. GENERAL AUTHORITY.

  [(a) Authority.--The Secretary is authorized to award grants 
to, or enter into contracts with--
          [(1) the Center for Civic Education, to carry out 
        civic education activities under sections 2344 and 
        2345;
          [(2) the National Council on Economic Education, to 
        carry out economic education activities under section 
        2345; and
          [(3) organizations experienced in the development of 
        curricula and programs in civics and government 
        education and economic education for students in 
        elementary schools and secondary schools in countries 
        other than the United States, to carry out civic 
        education activities under section 2345.
  [(b) Distribution for Cooperative Civic Education and 
Economic Education Exchange Programs.--
          [(1) Limitation.--Not more than 40 percent of the 
        amount appropriated under section 2346 for a fiscal 
        year shall be used to carry out section 2345.
          [(2) Distribution.--Of the amount used to carry out 
        section 2345 for a fiscal year (consistent with 
        paragraph (1)), the Secretary shall use--
                  [(A) 37.5 percent for a grant or contract for 
                the Center for Civic Education;
                  [(B) 37.5 percent for a grant or contract for 
                the National Council on Economic Education; and
                  [(C) 25 percent for not less than 1, but not 
                more than 3, grants or contracts for 
                organizations described in subsection (a)(3).

[SEC. 2344. WE THE PEOPLE PROGRAM.

  [(a) The Citizen and the Constitution.--
          [(1) Educational activities.--The Center for Civic 
        Education--
                  [(A) shall use funds made available under 
                grants or contracts under section 2343(a)(1)--
                          [(i) to continue and expand the 
                        educational activities of the program 
                        entitled the ``We the People... The 
                        Citizen and the Constitution'' program 
                        administered by such center;
                          [(ii) to carry out activities to 
                        enhance student attainment of 
                        challenging academic content standards 
                        in civics and government;
                          [(iii) to provide a course of 
                        instruction on the basic principles of 
                        the Nation's constitutional democracy 
                        and the history of the Constitution of 
                        the United States, including the Bill 
                        of Rights;
                          [(iv) to provide, at the request of a 
                        participating school, school and 
                        community simulated congressional 
                        hearings following the course of 
                        instruction described in clause (iii); 
                        and
                          [(v) to provide an annual national 
                        competition of simulated congressional 
                        hearings for secondary school students 
                        who wish to participate in such a 
                        program; and
                  [(B) may use funds made available under 
                grants or contracts under section 2343(a)(1)--
                          [(i) to provide advanced, sustained, 
                        and ongoing training of teachers about 
                        the Constitution of the United States 
                        and the political system of the United 
                        States;
                          [(ii) to provide materials and 
                        methods of instruction, including 
                        teacher training, that utilize the 
                        latest advancements in educational 
                        technology; and
                          [(iii) to provide civic education 
                        materials and services to address 
                        specific problems such as the 
                        prevention of school violence and the 
                        abuse of drugs and alcohol.
          [(2) Availability of program.--The education program 
        authorized under this subsection shall be made 
        available to public and private elementary schools and 
        secondary schools, including Bureau funded schools, in 
        the 435 congressional districts, and in the District of 
        Columbia, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the United 
        States Virgin Islands, Guam, American Samoa, and the 
        Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands.
  [(b) Project Citizen.--
          [(1) Educational activities.--The Center for Civic 
        Education--
                  [(A) shall use funds made available under 
                grants or contracts under section 2343(a)(1)--
                          [(i) to continue and expand the 
                        educational activities of the program 
                        entitled the ``We the People... Project 
                        Citizen'' program administered by the 
                        Center;
                          [(ii) to carry out activities to 
                        enhance student attainment of 
                        challenging academic content standards 
                        in civics and government;
                          [(iii) to provide a course of 
                        instruction at the middle school level 
                        on the roles of State and local 
                        governments in the Federal system 
                        established by the Constitution of the 
                        United States; and
                          [(iv) to provide an annual national 
                        showcase or competition; and
                  [(B) may use funds made available under 
                grants or contracts under section 2343(a)(1)--
                          [(i) to provide optional school and 
                        community simulated State legislative 
                        hearings;
                          [(ii) to provide advanced, sustained, 
                        and ongoing training of teachers on the 
                        roles of State and local governments in 
                        the Federal system established by the 
                        Constitution of the United States;
                          [(iii) to provide materials and 
                        methods of instruction, including 
                        teacher training, that utilize the 
                        latest advancements in educational 
                        technology; and
                          [(iv) to provide civic education 
                        materials and services to address 
                        specific problems such as the 
                        prevention of school violence and the 
                        abuse of drugs and alcohol.
          [(2) Availability of program.--The education program 
        authorized under this subsection shall be made 
        available to public and private middle schools, 
        including Bureau funded schools, in the 50 States of 
        the United States, the District of Columbia, the 
        Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the United States Virgin 
        Islands, Guam, American Samoa, and the Commonwealth of 
        the Northern Mariana Islands.
  [(c) Bureau-Funded School Defined.--In this section, the term 
``Bureau-funded school'' has the meaning given such term in 
section 1146 of the Education Amendments of 1978 (25 U.S.C. 
2026).

[SEC. 2345. COOPERATIVE CIVIC EDUCATION AND ECONOMIC EDUCATION EXCHANGE 
                    PROGRAMS.

  [(a) Cooperative Education Exchange Programs.--The Center for 
Civic Education, the National Council on Economic Education, 
and organizations described in section 2343(a)(3) shall use 
funds made available under grants or contracts under section 
2343 to carry out cooperative education exchange programs in 
accordance with this section.
  [(b) Purpose.--The purpose of the cooperative education 
exchange programs carried out under this section shall be--
          [(1) to make available to educators from eligible 
        countries exemplary curriculum and teacher training 
        programs in civics and government education, and 
        economics education, developed in the United States;
          [(2) to assist eligible countries in the adaptation, 
        implementation, and institutionalization of such 
        programs;
          [(3) to create and implement civics and government 
        education, and economic education, programs for 
        students that draw upon the experiences of the 
        participating eligible countries;
          [(4) to provide a means for the exchange of ideas and 
        experiences in civics and government education, and 
        economic education, among political, educational, 
        governmental, and private sector leaders of 
        participating eligible countries; and
          [(5) to provide support for--
                  [(A) independent research and evaluation to 
                determine the effects of educational programs 
                on students' development of the knowledge, 
                skills, and traits of character essential for 
                the preservation and improvement of 
                constitutional democracy; and
                  [(B) effective participation in, and the 
                preservation and improvement of, an efficient 
                market economy.
  [(c) Activities.--In carrying out the cooperative education 
exchange programs assisted under this section, the Center for 
Civic Education, the National Council on Economic Education, 
and organizations described in section 2343(a)(3) shall--
          [(1) provide to the participants from eligible 
        countries--
                  [(A) seminars on the basic principles of 
                United States constitutional democracy and 
                economic system, including seminars on the 
                major governmental and economic institutions 
                and systems in the United States, and visits to 
                such institutions;
                  [(B) visits to school systems, institutions 
                of higher education, and nonprofit 
                organizations conducting exemplary programs in 
                civics and government education, and economic 
                education, in the United States;
                  [(C) translations and adaptations with 
                respect to United States civics and government 
                education, and economic education, curricular 
                programs for students and teachers, and in the 
                case of training programs for teachers, 
                translations and adaptations into forms useful 
                in schools in eligible countries, and joint 
                research projects in such areas; and
                  [(D) independent research and evaluation 
                assistance--
                          [(i) to determine the effects of the 
                        cooperative education exchange programs 
                        on students' development of the 
                        knowledge, skills, and traits of 
                        character essential for the 
                        preservation and improvement of 
                        constitutional democracy; and
                          [(ii) to identify effective 
                        participation in, and the preservation 
                        and improvement of, an efficient market 
                        economy;
          [(2) provide to the participants from the United 
        States--
                  [(A) seminars on the histories, economies, 
                and systems of government of eligible 
                countries;
                  [(B) visits to school systems, institutions 
                of higher education, and organizations 
                conducting exemplary programs in civics and 
                government education, and economic education, 
                located in eligible countries;
                  [(C) assistance from educators and scholars 
                in eligible countries in the development of 
                curricular materials on the history, 
                government, and economy of such countries that 
                are useful in United States classrooms;
                  [(D) opportunities to provide onsite 
                demonstrations of United States curricula and 
                pedagogy for educational leaders in eligible 
                countries; and
                  [(E) independent research and evaluation 
                assistance to determine--
                          [(i) the effects of the cooperative 
                        education exchange programs assisted 
                        under this section on students' 
                        development of the knowledge, skills, 
                        and traits of character essential for 
                        the preservation and improvement of 
                        constitutional democracy; and
                          [(ii) effective participation in, and 
                        improvement of, an efficient market 
                        economy; and
          [(3) assist participants from eligible countries and 
        the United States to participate in international 
        conferences on civics and government education, and 
        economic education, for educational leaders, teacher 
        trainers, scholars in related disciplines, and 
        educational policymakers.
  [(d) Participants.--The primary participants in the 
cooperative education exchange programs assisted under this 
section shall be educational leaders in the areas of civics and 
government education, and economic education, including 
teachers, curriculum and teacher training specialists, scholars 
in relevant disciplines, and educational policymakers, and 
government and private sector leaders from the United States 
and eligible countries.
  [(e) Consultation.--The Secretary may award a grant to, or 
enter into a contract with, the entities described in section 
2343 to carry out programs assisted under this section only if 
the Secretary of State concurs with the Secretary that such 
grant, or contract, respectively, is consistent with the 
foreign policy of the United States.
  [(f) Avoidance of Duplication.--With the concurrence of the 
Secretary of State, the Secretary shall ensure that--
          [(1) the activities carried out under the programs 
        assisted under this section are not duplicative of 
        other activities conducted in eligible countries; and
          [(2) any institutions in eligible countries, with 
        which the Center for Civic Education, the National 
        Council on Economic Education, or organizations 
        described in section 2343(a)(3) may work in conducting 
        such activities, are creditable.
  [(g) Eligible Country Defined.--In this section, the term 
``eligible country'' means a Central European country, an 
Eastern European country, Lithuania, Latvia, Estonia, the 
independent states of the former Soviet Union as defined in 
section 3 of the FREEDOM Support Act (22 U.S.C. 5801), the 
Republic of Ireland, the province of Northern Ireland in the 
United Kingdom, and any developing country (as such term is 
defined in section 209(d) of the Education for the Deaf Act) if 
the Secretary, with the concurrence of the Secretary of State, 
determines that such developing country has a democratic form 
of government.

[SEC. 2346. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS.

  [There are authorized to be appropriated to carry out this 
subpart $30,000,000 for fiscal year 2002 and such sums as may 
be necessary for each of the 5 succeeding fiscal years.

          [Subpart 4--Teaching of Traditional American History

[SEC. 2351. ESTABLISHMENT OF PROGRAM.

  [(a) In General.--The Secretary may establish and implement a 
program to be known as the ``Teaching American History Grant 
Program'', under which the Secretary shall award grants on a 
competitive basis to local educational agencies--
          [(1) to carry out activities to promote the teaching 
        of traditional American history in elementary schools 
        and secondary schools as a separate academic subject 
        (not as a component of social studies); and
          [(2) for the development, implementation, and 
        strengthening of programs to teach traditional American 
        history as a separate academic subject (not as a 
        component of social studies) within elementary school 
        and secondary school curricula, including the 
        implementation of activities--
                  [(A) to improve the quality of instruction; 
                and
                  [(B) to provide professional development and 
                teacher education activities with respect to 
                American history.
  [(b) Required Partnership.--A local educational agency that 
receives a grant under subsection (a) shall carry out 
activities under the grant in partnership with one or more of 
the following:
          [(1) An institution of higher education.
          [(2) A nonprofit history or humanities organization.
          [(3) A library or museum.
  [(c) Application.--To be eligible to receive an grant under 
this section, a local educational agency shall submit an 
application to the Secretary at such time, in such manner, and 
containing such information as the Secretary may require.

[SEC. 2352. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS.

  [There are authorized to be appropriated to carry out this 
subpart such sums as may be necessary for fiscal year 2002 and 
each of the 5 succeeding fiscal years.]

               [Subpart 5--Teacher Liability Protection]

[SEC. 2361. SHORT TITLE.

  [This subpart may be cited as the ``Paul D. Coverdell Teacher 
Protection Act of 2001''.]

SEC. [2362.]  2361. PURPOSE.

  The purpose of this subpart is to provide teachers, 
[principals] school leaders, and other school professionals the 
tools they need to undertake reasonable actions to maintain 
order, discipline, and an appropriate educational environment.

SEC. [2364.]  2362. APPLICABILITY.

  This subpart shall only apply to States that receive funds 
under this Act, and shall apply to such a State as a condition 
of receiving such funds.

SEC. [2365.]  2363. PREEMPTION AND ELECTION OF STATE NONAPPLICABILITY.

  (a) Preemption.--This subpart preempts the laws of any State 
to the extent that such laws are inconsistent with this 
subpart, except that this subpart shall not preempt any State 
law that provides additional protection from liability relating 
to teachers.
  (b) Election of State Regarding Nonapplicability.--This 
subpart shall not apply to any civil action in a State court 
against a teacher with respect to claims arising within that 
State if such State enacts a statute in accordance with State 
requirements for enacting legislation--
          (1) citing the authority of this subsection;
          (2) declaring the election of such State that this 
        subpart shall not apply, as of a date certain, to such 
        civil action in the State; and
          (3) containing no other provisions.

SEC. [2366.]  2364. LIMITATION ON LIABILITY FOR TEACHERS.

  (a) Liability Protection for Teachers.--Except as provided in 
subsection (b), no teacher in a school shall be liable for harm 
caused by an act or omission of the teacher on behalf of the 
school if--
          (1) the teacher was acting within the scope of the 
        teacher's employment or responsibilities to a school or 
        governmental entity;
          (2) the actions of the teacher were carried out in 
        conformity with Federal, State, and local laws 
        (including rules and regulations) in furtherance of 
        efforts to control, discipline, expel, or suspend a 
        student or maintain order or control in the classroom 
        or school;
          (3) if appropriate or required, the teacher was 
        properly licensed, certified, or authorized by the 
        appropriate authorities for the activities or practice 
        involved in the State in which the harm occurred, where 
        the activities were or practice was undertaken within 
        the scope of the teacher's responsibilities;
          (4) the harm was not caused by willful or criminal 
        misconduct, gross negligence, reckless misconduct, or a 
        conscious, flagrant indifference to the rights or 
        safety of the individual harmed by the teacher; and
          (5) the harm was not caused by the teacher operating 
        a motor vehicle, vessel, aircraft, or other vehicle for 
        which the State requires the operator or the owner of 
        the vehicle, craft, or vessel to--
                  (A) possess an operator's license; or
                  (B) maintain insurance.
  (b) Exceptions to Teacher Liability Protection.--If the laws 
of a State limit teacher liability subject to one or more of 
the following conditions, such conditions shall not be 
construed as inconsistent with this section:
          (1) A State law that requires a school or 
        governmental entity to adhere to risk management 
        procedures, including mandatory training of teachers.
          (2) A State law that makes the school or governmental 
        entity liable for the acts or omissions of its teachers 
        to the same extent as an employer is liable for the 
        acts or omissions of its employees.
           [ate law] (3) A State law that makes a limitation of 
        liability inapplicable if the civil action was brought 
        by an officer of a State or local government pursuant 
        to State or local law.
  (c) Limitation on Punitive Damages Based on the Actions of 
Teachers.--
          (1) General rule.--Punitive damages may not be 
        awarded against a teacher in an action brought for harm 
        based on the act or omission of a teacher acting within 
        the scope of the teacher's employment or 
        responsibilities to a school or governmental entity 
        unless the claimant establishes by clear and convincing 
        evidence that the harm was proximately caused by an act 
        or omission of such teacher that constitutes willful or 
        criminal misconduct, or a conscious, flagrant 
        indifference to the rights or safety of the individual 
        harmed.
          (2) Construction.--Paragraph (1) does not create a 
        cause of action for punitive damages and does not 
        preempt or supersede any Federal or State law to the 
        extent that such law would further limit the award of 
        punitive damages.
  (d) Exceptions to Limitations on Liability.--
          (1) In general.--The limitations on the liability of 
        a teacher under this subpart shall not apply to any 
        misconduct that--
                  (A) constitutes a crime of violence (as that 
                term is defined in section 16 of title 18, 
                United States Code) or act of international 
                terrorism (as that term is defined in section 
                2331 of title 18, United States Code) for which 
                the defendant has been convicted in any court;
                  (B) involves a sexual offense, as defined by 
                applicable State law, for which the defendant 
                has been convicted in any court;
                  (C) involves misconduct for which the 
                defendant has been found to have violated a 
                Federal or State civil rights law; or
                  (D) where the defendant was under the 
                influence (as determined pursuant to applicable 
                State law) of intoxicating alcohol or any drug 
                at the time of the misconduct.
          (2) Hiring.--The limitations on the liability of a 
        teacher under this subpart shall not apply to 
        misconduct during background investigations, or during 
        other actions, involved in the hiring of a teacher.
  (e) Rules of Construction.--
          (1) Concerning responsibility of teachers to schools 
        and governmental entities.--Nothing in this section 
        shall be construed to affect any civil action brought 
        by any school or any governmental entity against any 
        teacher of such school.
          (2) Concerning corporal punishment.--Nothing in this 
        subpart shall be construed to affect any State or local 
        law (including a rule or regulation) or policy 
        pertaining to the use of corporal punishment.

SEC. [2367.]  2365. ALLOCATION OF RESPONSIBILITY FOR NONECONOMIC LOSS.

  (a) General Rule.--In any civil action against a teacher, 
based on an act or omission of a teacher acting within the 
scope of the teacher's employment or responsibilities to a 
school or governmental entity, the liability of the teacher for 
noneconomic loss shall be determined in accordance with 
subsection (b).
  (b) Amount of Liability.--
          (1) In general.--
                  (A) Liability.--Each defendant who is a 
                teacher shall be liable only for the amount of 
                noneconomic loss allocated to that defendant in 
                direct proportion to the percentage of 
                responsibility of that defendant (determined in 
                accordance with paragraph (2)) for the harm to 
                the claimant with respect to which that 
                defendant is liable.
                  (B) Separate judgment.--The court shall 
                render a separate judgment against each 
                defendant in an amount determined pursuant to 
                subparagraph (A).
          (2) Percentage of responsibility.--For purposes of 
        determining the amount of noneconomic loss allocated to 
        a defendant who is a teacher under this section, the 
        trier of fact shall determine the percentage of 
        responsibility of each person responsible for the 
        claimant's harm, whether or not such person is a party 
        to the action.
  (c) Rule of Construction.--Nothing in this section shall be 
construed to preempt or supersede any Federal or State law that 
further limits the application of joint liability in a civil 
action described in subsection (a), beyond the limitations 
established in this section.

SEC. [2363.]  2366. DEFINITIONS.

   For purposes of this subpart:
          (1) Economic loss.--The term ``economic loss'' means 
        any pecuniary loss resulting from harm (including the 
        loss of earnings or other benefits related to 
        employment, medical expense loss, replacement services 
        loss, loss due to death, burial costs, and loss of 
        business or employment opportunities) to the extent 
        recovery for such loss is allowed under applicable 
        State law.
          (2) Harm.--The term ``harm'' includes physical, 
        nonphysical, economic, and noneconomic losses.
          (3) Noneconomic loss.--The term ``noneconomic loss'' 
        means loss for physical or emotional pain, suffering, 
        inconvenience, physical impairment, mental anguish, 
        disfigurement, loss of enjoyment of life, loss of 
        society or companionship, loss of consortium (other 
        than loss of domestic service), hedonic damages, injury 
        to reputation, or any other nonpecuniary loss of any 
        kind or nature.
          (4) School.--The term ``school'' means a public or 
        private kindergarten, a public or private elementary 
        school or secondary school, or a home school.
          (5) State.--The term ``State'' means each of the 
        several States of the United States, the District of 
        Columbia, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the United 
        States Virgin Islands, Guam, American Samoa, the 
        Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, any other 
        territory or possession of the United States, or any 
        political subdivision of any such State, territory, or 
        possession.
          (6) Teacher.--The term ``teacher'' means--
                  (A) a teacher, instructor, [principal] school 
                leader, or administrator;
                  (B) another educational professional who 
                works in a school;
                  (C) a professional or nonprofessional 
                employee who--
                          (i) works in a school; and
                          (ii)(I) in the employee's job, 
                        maintains discipline or ensures safety; 
                        or
                          (II) in an emergency, is called on to 
                        maintain discipline or ensure safety; 
                        or
                  (D) an individual member of a school board 
                (as distinct from the board).

[SEC. 2368. EFFECTIVE DATE.

  [(a) In General.--This subpart shall take effect 90 days 
after the date of enactment of the No Child Left Behind Act of 
2001.
  [(b) Application.--This subpart applies to any claim for harm 
caused by an act or omission of a teacher if that claim is 
filed on or after the effective date of the No Child Left 
Behind Act of 2001 without regard to whether the harm that is 
the subject of the claim or the conduct that caused the harm 
occurred before such effective date.]

            [PART D--ENHANCING EDUCATION THROUGH TECHNOLOGY

[SEC. 2401. SHORT TITLE.

  [This part may be cited as the ``Enhancing Education Through 
Technology Act of 2001''.

[SEC. 2402. PURPOSES AND GOALS.

  [(a) Purposes.--The purposes of this part are the following:
          [(1) To provide assistance to States and localities 
        for the implementation and support of a comprehensive 
        system that effectively uses technology in elementary 
        schools and secondary schools to improve student 
        academic achievement.
          [(2) To encourage the establishment or expansion of 
        initiatives, including initiatives involving public-
        private partnerships, designed to increase access to 
        technology, particularly in schools served by high-need 
        local educational agencies.
          [(3) To assist States and localities in the 
        acquisition, development, interconnection, 
        implementation, improvement, and maintenance of an 
        effective educational technology infrastructure in a 
        manner that expands access to technology for students 
        (particularly for disadvantaged students) and teachers.
          [(4) To promote initiatives that provide school 
        teachers, principals, and administrators with the 
        capacity to integrate technology effectively into 
        curricula and instruction that are aligned with 
        challenging State academic content and student academic 
        achievement standards, through such means as high-
        quality professional development programs.
          [(5) To enhance the ongoing professional development 
        of teachers, principals, and administrators by 
        providing constant access to training and updated 
        research in teaching and learning through electronic 
        means.
          [(6) To support the development and utilization of 
        electronic networks and other innovative methods, such 
        as distance learning, of delivering specialized or 
        rigorous academic courses and curricula for students in 
        areas that would not otherwise have access to such 
        courses and curricula, particularly in geographically 
        isolated regions.
          [(7) To support the rigorous evaluation of programs 
        funded under this part, particularly regarding the 
        impact of such programs on student academic 
        achievement, and ensure that timely information on the 
        results of such evaluations is widely accessible 
        through electronic means.
          [(8) To support local efforts using technology to 
        promote parent and family involvement in education and 
        communication among students, parents, teachers, 
        principals, and administrators.
  [(b) Goals.--
          [(1) Primary goal.--The primary goal of this part is 
        to improve student academic achievement through the use 
        of technology in elementary schools and secondary 
        schools.
          [(2) Additional goals.--The additional goals of this 
        part are the following:
                  [(A) To assist every student in crossing the 
                digital divide by ensuring that every student 
                is technologically literate by the time the 
                student finishes the eighth grade, regardless 
                of the student's race, ethnicity, gender, 
                family income, geographic location, or 
                disability.
                  [(B) To encourage the effective integration 
                of technology resources and systems with 
                teacher training and curriculum development to 
                establish research-based instructional methods 
                that can be widely implemented as best 
                practices by State educational agencies and 
                local educational agencies.

[SEC. 2403. DEFINITIONS.

   [In this part:
          [(1) Eligible local entity.--The term ``eligible 
        local entity'' means--
                  [(A) a high-need local educational agency; or
                  [(B) an eligible local partnership.
          [(2) Eligible local partnership.--The term ``eligible 
        local partnership'' means a partnership that--
                  [(A) shall include at least one high-need 
                local educational agency and at least one--
                          [(i) local educational agency that 
                        can demonstrate that teachers in 
                        schools served by the agency are 
                        effectively integrating technology and 
                        proven teaching practices into 
                        instruction, based on a review of 
                        relevant research, and that the 
                        integration results in improvement in--
                                  [(I) classroom instruction in 
                                the core academic subjects; and
                                  [(II) the preparation of 
                                students to meet challenging 
                                State academic content and 
                                student academic achievement 
                                standards;
                          [(ii) institution of higher education 
                        that is in full compliance with the 
                        reporting requirements of section 
                        207(f) of the Higher Education Act of 
                        1965 and that has not been identified 
                        by its State as low-performing under 
                        section 208 of such Act;
                          [(iii) for-profit business or 
                        organization that develops, designs, 
                        manufactures, or produces technology 
                        products or services, or has 
                        substantial expertise in the 
                        application of technology in 
                        instruction; or
                          [(iv) public or private nonprofit 
                        organization with demonstrated 
                        experience in the application of 
                        educational technology to instruction; 
                        and
                  [(B) may include other local educational 
                agencies, educational service agencies, 
                libraries, or other educational entities 
                appropriate to provide local programs.
          [(3) High-need local educational agency.--The term 
        ``high-need local educational agency'' means a local 
        educational agency that--
                  [(A) is among the local educational agencies 
                in a State with the highest numbers or 
                percentages of children from families with 
                incomes below the poverty line; and
                  [(B)(i) operates one or more schools 
                identified under section 1116; or
                  [(ii) has a substantial need for assistance 
                in acquiring and using technology.

[SEC. 2404. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS.

  [(a) In General.--There are authorized to be appropriated to 
carry out subparts 1 and 2, $1,000,000,000 for fiscal year 
2002, and such sums as may be necessary for each of the 5 
succeeding fiscal years.
  [(b) Allocation of Funds Between State and Local and National 
Initiatives.--The amount of funds made available under 
subsection (a) for a fiscal year shall be allocated so that--
          [(1) not less than 98 percent is made available to 
        carry out subpart 1; and
          [(2) not more than 2 percent is made available to 
        carry out subpart 2.
  [(c) Allocation of Funds for Study.--Of the total amount of 
funds allocated under subsection (b)(2) for fiscal years 2002 
through 2007, not more than $15,000,000 may be used to carry 
out section 2421(a).
  [(d) Limitation.--Of the amount of funds made available to a 
recipient of funds under this part for a fiscal year, not more 
than 5 percent may be used by the recipient for administrative 
costs or technical assistance, of which not more than 60 
percent may be used by the recipient for administrative costs.

             [Subpart 1--State and Local Technology Grants

[SEC. 2411. ALLOTMENT AND REALLOTMENT.

  [(a) Reservations and Allotment.--From the amount made 
available to carry out this subpart under section 2404(b)(1) 
for a fiscal year--
          [(1) the Secretary shall reserve--
                  [(A) three-fourths of 1 percent for the 
                Secretary of the Interior for programs under 
                this subpart for schools operated or funded by 
                the Bureau of Indian Affairs;
                  [(B) one-half of 1 percent to provide 
                assistance under this subpart to the outlying 
                areas; and
                  [(C) such sums as may be necessary for 
                continuation awards on grants awarded under 
                section 3136 prior to the date of enactment of 
                the No Child Left Behind Act of 2001; and
          [(2) from the remainder of such amount and subject to 
        subsection (b), the Secretary shall make grants by 
        allotting to each eligible State educational agency 
        under this subpart an amount that bears the same 
        relationship to such remainder for such year as the 
        amount received under part A of title I for such year 
        by such State educational agency bears to the amount 
        received under such part for such year by all State 
        educational agencies.
  [(b) Minimum Allotment.--The amount of any State educational 
agency's allotment under subsection (a)(2) for any fiscal year 
may not be less than one-half of 1 percent of the amount made 
available for allotments to States under this part for such 
year.
  [(c) Reallotment of Unused Funds.--If any State educational 
agency does not apply for an allotment under this subpart for a 
fiscal year, or does not use its entire allotment under this 
subpart for that fiscal year, the Secretary shall reallot the 
amount of the State educational agency's allotment, or the 
unused portion of the allotment, to the remaining State 
educational agencies that use their entire allotments under 
this subpart in accordance with this section.
  [(d) State Educational Agency Defined.--In this section, the 
term ``State educational agency'' does not include an agency of 
an outlying area or the Bureau of Indian Affairs.

[SEC. 2412. USE OF ALLOTMENT BY STATE.

  [(a) In General.--Of the amount provided to a State 
educational agency (from the agency's allotment under section 
2411(a)(2)) for a fiscal year--
          [(1) the State educational agency may use not more 
        than 5 percent to carry out activities under section 
        2415; and
          [(2) the State educational agency shall distribute 
        the remainder as follows:
                  [(A) From 50 percent of the remainder, the 
                State educational agency shall award subgrants 
                by allocating to each eligible local 
                educational agency that has submitted an 
                application to the State educational agency 
                under section 2414, for the activities 
                described in section 2416, an amount that bears 
                the same relationship to 50 percent of the 
                remainder for such year as the amount received 
                under part A of title I for such year by such 
                local educational agency bears to the amount 
                received under such part for such year by all 
                local educational agencies within the State.
                  [(B) From 50 percent of the remainder and 
                subject to subsection (b), the State 
                educational agency shall award subgrants, 
                through a State-determined competitive process, 
                to eligible local entities that have submitted 
                applications to the State educational agency 
                under section 2414, for the activities 
                described in section 2416.
  [(b) Sufficient Amounts.--
          [(1) Special rule.--In awarding a subgrant under 
        subsection (a)(2)(B), the State educational agency 
        shall--
                  [(A) determine the local educational agencies 
                that--
                          [(i) received allocations under 
                        subsection (a)(2)(A) that are not of 
                        sufficient size to be effective, 
                        consistent with the purposes of this 
                        part; and
                          [(ii) are eligible local entities;
                  [(B) give priority to applications submitted 
                by eligible local educational agencies 
                described in subparagraph (A); and
                  [(C) determine the minimum amount for awards 
                under subsection (a)(2)(B) to ensure that 
                subgrants awarded under that subsection are of 
                sufficient size to be effective.
          [(2) Sufficiency.--In awarding subgrants under 
        subsection (a)(2)(B), each State educational agency 
        shall ensure that each subgrant is of sufficient size 
        and duration, and that the program funded by the 
        subgrant is of sufficient scope and quality, to carry 
        out the purposes of this part effectively.
          [(3) Distribution.--In awarding subgrants under 
        subsection (a)(2)(B), each State educational agency 
        shall ensure an equitable distribution of assistance 
        under this subpart among urban and rural areas of the 
        State, according to the demonstrated need of those 
        local educational agencies serving the areas.
  [(c) Fiscal Agent.--If an eligible local partnership receives 
a subgrant under subsection (a)(2)(B), a local educational 
agency in the partnership shall serve as the fiscal agent for 
the partnership.
  [(d) Technical Assistance.--Each State educational agency 
receiving a grant under section 2411(a) shall--
          [(1) identify the local educational agencies served 
        by the State educational agency that--
                  [(A) have the highest numbers or percentages 
                of children from families with incomes below 
                the poverty line; and
                  [(B) demonstrate to such State educational 
                agency the greatest need for technical 
                assistance in developing an application under 
                section 2414; and
          [(2) offer the technical assistance described in 
        paragraph (1)(B) to those local educational agencies.

[SEC. 2413. STATE APPLICATIONS.

  [(a) In General.--To be eligible to receive a grant under 
this subpart, a State educational agency shall submit to the 
Secretary, at such time and in such manner as the Secretary may 
specify, an application containing a new or updated statewide 
long-range strategic educational technology plan (which shall 
address the educational technology needs of local educational 
agencies) and such other information as the Secretary may 
reasonably require.
  [(b) Contents.--Each State application submitted under 
subsection (a) shall include each of the following:
          [(1) An outline of the State educational agency's 
        long-term strategies for improving student academic 
        achievement, including technology literacy, through the 
        effective use of technology in classrooms throughout 
        the State, including through improving the capacity of 
        teachers to integrate technology effectively into 
        curricula and instruction.
          [(2) A description of the State educational agency's 
        goals for using advanced technology to improve student 
        academic achievement, and how those goals are aligned 
        with challenging State academic content and student 
        academic achievement standards.
          [(3) A description of how the State educational 
        agency will take steps to ensure that all students and 
        teachers in the State, particularly students and 
        teachers in districts served by high-need local 
        educational agencies, have increased access to 
        technology.
          [(4) A description of the process and accountability 
        measures that the State educational agency will use to 
        evaluate the extent to which activities funded under 
        this subpart are effective in integrating technology 
        into curricula and instruction.
          [(5) A description of how the State educational 
        agency will encourage the development and utilization 
        of innovative strategies for the delivery of 
        specialized or rigorous academic courses and curricula 
        through the use of technology, including distance 
        learning technologies, particularly for those areas of 
        the State that would not otherwise have access to such 
        courses and curricula due to geographical isolation or 
        insufficient resources.
          [(6) An assurance that financial assistance provided 
        under this subpart will supplement, and not supplant, 
        State and local funds.
          [(7) A description of how the plan incorporates 
        teacher education, professional development, and 
        curriculum development, and how the State educational 
        agency will work to ensure that teachers and principals 
        in a State receiving funds under this part are 
        technologically literate.
          [(8) A description of--
                  [(A) how the State educational agency will 
                provide technical assistance to applicants 
                under section 2414, especially to those 
                applicants serving the highest numbers or 
                percentages of children in poverty or with the 
                greatest need for technical assistance; and
                  [(B) the capacity of the State educational 
                agency to provide such assistance.
          [(9) A description of technology resources and 
        systems that the State will provide for the purpose of 
        establishing best practices that can be widely 
        replicated by State educational agencies and local 
        educational agencies in the State and in other States.
          [(10) A description of the State's long-term 
        strategies for financing technology to ensure that all 
        students, teachers, and classrooms have access to 
        technology.
          [(11) A description of the State's strategies for 
        using technology to increase parental involvement.
          [(12) A description of how the State educational 
        agency will ensure that each subgrant awarded under 
        section 2412(a)(2)(B) is of sufficient size and 
        duration, and that the program funded by the subgrant 
        is of sufficient scope and quality, to carry out the 
        purposes of this part effectively.
          [(13) A description of how the State educational 
        agency will ensure ongoing integration of technology 
        into school curricula and instructional strategies in 
        all schools in the State, so that technology will be 
        fully integrated into the curricula and instruction of 
        the schools by December 31, 2006.
          [(14) A description of how the local educational 
        agencies in the State will provide incentives to 
        teachers who are technologically literate and teaching 
        in rural or urban areas, to encourage such teachers to 
        remain in those areas.
          [(15) A description of how public and private 
        entities will participate in the implementation and 
        support of the plan.
  [(c) Deemed Approval.--An application submitted by a State 
educational agency pursuant to subsection (a) shall be deemed 
to be approved by the Secretary unless the Secretary makes a 
written determination, prior to the expiration of the 120-day 
period beginning on the date on which the Secretary received 
the application, that the application is not in compliance with 
this part.
  [(d) Disapproval.--The Secretary shall not finally disapprove 
the application, except after giving the State educational 
agency notice and an opportunity for a hearing.
  [(e) Notification.--If the Secretary finds that the 
application is not in compliance, in whole or in part, with 
this part, the Secretary shall--
          [(1) give the State educational agency notice and an 
        opportunity for a hearing; and
          [(2) notify the State educational agency of the 
        finding of noncompliance and, in such notification, 
        shall--
                  [(A) cite the specific provisions in the 
                application that are not in compliance; and
                  [(B) request additional information, only as 
                to the noncompliant provisions, needed to make 
                the application compliant.
  [(f) Response.--If the State educational agency responds to 
the Secretary's notification described in subsection (e)(2) 
during the 45-day period beginning on the date on which the 
agency received the notification, and resubmits the application 
with the requested information described in subsection 
(e)(2)(B), the Secretary shall approve or disapprove such 
application prior to the later of--
          [(1) the expiration of the 45-day period beginning on 
        the date on which the application is resubmitted; or
          [(2) the expiration of the 120-day period described 
        in subsection (c).
  [(g) Failure to Respond.--If the State educational agency 
does not respond to the Secretary's notification described in 
subsection (e)(2) during the 45-day period beginning on the 
date on which the agency received the notification, such 
application shall be deemed to be disapproved.

[SEC. 2414. LOCAL APPLICATIONS.

  [(a) In General.--To be eligible to receive a subgrant from a 
State educational agency under this subpart, a local 
educational agency or eligible local entity shall submit to the 
State educational agency an application containing a new or 
updated local long-range strategic educational technology plan 
that is consistent with the objectives of the statewide 
educational technology plan described in section 2413(a), and 
such other information as the State educational agency may 
reasonably require, at such time and in such manner as the 
State educational agency may require.
  [(b) Contents.--The application shall include each of the 
following:
          [(1) A description of how the applicant will use 
        Federal funds under this subpart to improve the student 
        academic achievement, including technology literacy, of 
        all students attending schools served by the local 
        educational agency and to improve the capacity of all 
        teachers teaching in schools served by the local 
        educational agency to integrate technology effectively 
        into curricula and instruction.
          [(2) A description of the applicant's specific goals 
        for using advanced technology to improve student 
        academic achievement, aligned with challenging State 
        academic content and student academic achievement 
        standards.
          [(3) A description of the steps the applicant will 
        take to ensure that all students and teachers in 
        schools served by the local educational agency involved 
        have increased access to educational technology, 
        including how the agency would use funds under this 
        subpart (such as combining the funds with funds from 
        other sources), to help ensure that--
                  [(A) students in high-poverty and high-needs 
                schools, or schools identified under section 
                1116, have access to technology; and
                  [(B) teachers are prepared to integrate 
                technology effectively into curricula and 
                instruction.
          [(4) A description of how the applicant will--
                  [(A) identify and promote curricula and 
                teaching strategies that integrate technology 
                effectively into curricula and instruction, 
                based on a review of relevant research, leading 
                to improvements in student academic 
                achievement, as measured by challenging State 
                academic content and student academic 
                achievement standards; and
                  [(B) provide ongoing, sustained professional 
                development for teachers, principals, 
                administrators, and school library media 
                personnel serving the local educational agency, 
                to further the effective use of technology in 
                the classroom or library media center, 
                including, if applicable, a list of the 
                entities that will be partners with the local 
                educational agency involved in providing the 
                ongoing, sustained professional development.
          [(5) A description of the type and costs of 
        technologies to be acquired under this subpart, 
        including services, software, and digital curricula, 
        and including specific provisions for interoperability 
        among components of such technologies.
          [(6) A description of how the applicant will 
        coordinate activities carried out with funds provided 
        under this subpart with technology-related activities 
        carried out with funds available from other Federal, 
        State, and local sources.
          [(7) A description of how the applicant will 
        integrate technology (including software and other 
        electronically delivered learning materials) into 
        curricula and instruction, and a timeline for such 
        integration.
          [(8) A description of how the applicant will 
        encourage the development and utilization of innovative 
        strategies for the delivery of specialized or rigorous 
        academic courses and curricula through the use of 
        technology, including distance learning technologies, 
        particularly for those areas that would not otherwise 
        have access to such courses and curricula due to 
        geographical isolation or insufficient resources.
          [(9) A description of how the applicant will ensure 
        the effective use of technology to promote parental 
        involvement and increase communication with parents, 
        including a description of how parents will be informed 
        of the technology being applied in their child's 
        education so that the parents are able to reinforce at 
        home the instruction their child receives at school.
          [(10) A description of how programs will be 
        developed, where applicable, in collaboration with 
        adult literacy service providers, to maximize the use 
        of technology.
          [(11) A description of the process and accountability 
        measures that the applicant will use to evaluate the 
        extent to which activities funded under this subpart 
        are effective in integrating technology into curricula 
        and instruction, increasing the ability of teachers to 
        teach, and enabling students to meet challenging State 
        academic content and student academic achievement 
        standards.
          [(12) A description of the supporting resources (such 
        as services, software, other electronically delivered 
        learning materials, and print resources) that will be 
        acquired to ensure successful and effective uses of 
        technology.
  [(c) Combined Applications.--A local educational agency that 
is an eligible local entity and submits an application to the 
State educational agency under this section for funds awarded 
under section 2412(a)(2)(A) may combine the agency's 
application for funds awarded under that section with an 
application for funds awarded under section 2412(a)(2)(B).
  [(d) Special Rule.--
          [(1) Consortium applications.--
                  [(A) In general.--For any fiscal year, a 
                local educational agency applying for financial 
                assistance described in section 2412(a)(2)(A) 
                may apply as part of a consortium that includes 
                other local educational agencies, institutions 
                of higher education, educational service 
                agencies, libraries, or other educational 
                entities appropriate to provide local programs.
                  [(B) Fiscal agent.--If a local educational 
                agency applies for and receives financial 
                assistance described in section 2412(a)(2)(A) 
                as part of a consortium, the local educational 
                agency shall serve as the fiscal agent for the 
                consortium.
          [(2) State educational agency assistance.--At the 
        request of a local educational agency, a State 
        educational agency may assist the local educational 
        agency in the formation of a consortium described in 
        paragraph (1) to provide services for the teachers and 
        students served by the local educational agency.

[SEC. 2415. STATE ACTIVITIES.

   [From funds made available under section 2412(a)(1), a State 
educational agency shall carry out activities and assist local 
efforts to carry out the purposes of this part, which may 
include the following activities:
          [(1) Developing, or assisting applicants or 
        recipients of funds under this subpart in the 
        development and utilization of, innovative strategies 
        for the delivery of specialized or rigorous academic 
        courses and curricula through the use of technology, 
        including distance learning technologies, and providing 
        other technical assistance to such applicants or 
        recipients throughout the State, with priority given to 
        high-need local educational agencies.
          [(2) Establishing or supporting public-private 
        initiatives (such as interest-free or reduced-cost 
        loans) for the acquisition of educational technology 
        for high-need local educational agencies and students 
        attending schools served by such agencies.
          [(3) Assisting recipients of funds under this subpart 
        in providing sustained and intensive, high-quality 
        professional development based on a review of relevant 
        research in the integration of advanced technologies, 
        including emerging technologies, into curricula and 
        instruction and in using those technologies to create 
        new learning environments, including training in the 
        use of technology to--
                  [(A) access data and resources to develop 
                curricula and instructional materials;
                  [(B) enable teachers--
                          [(i) to use the Internet and other 
                        technology to communicate with parents, 
                        other teachers, principals, and 
                        administrators; and
                          [(ii) to retrieve Internet-based 
                        learning resources; and
                  [(C) lead to improvements in classroom 
                instruction in the core academic subjects, that 
                effectively prepare students to meet 
                challenging State academic content standards 
                and student academic achievement standards.
          [(4) Assisting recipients of funds under this subpart 
        in providing all students (including students with 
        disabilities and students with limited English 
        proficiency) and teachers with access to educational 
        technology.
          [(5) Developing performance measurement systems to 
        determine the effectiveness of educational technology 
        programs funded under this subpart, particularly in 
        determining the extent to which activities funded under 
        this subpart are effective in integrating technology 
        into curricula and instruction, increasing the ability 
        of teachers to teach, and enabling students to meet 
        challenging State academic content and student academic 
        achievement standards.
          [(6) Collaborating with other State educational 
        agencies on distance learning, including making 
        specialized or rigorous academic courses and curricula 
        available to students in areas that would not otherwise 
        have access to such courses and curricula.

[SEC. 2416. LOCAL ACTIVITIES.

  [(a) Professional Development.--
          [(1) In general.--A recipient of funds made available 
        under section 2412(a)(2) shall use not less than 25 
        percent of such funds to provide ongoing, sustained, 
        and intensive, high-quality professional development. 
        The recipient shall provide professional development in 
        the integration of advanced technologies, including 
        emerging technologies, into curricula and instruction 
        and in using those technologies to create new learning 
        environments, such as professional development in the 
        use of technology--
                  [(A) to access data and resources to develop 
                curricula and instructional materials;
                  [(B) to enable teachers--
                          [(i) to use the Internet and other 
                        technology to communicate with parents, 
                        other teachers, principals, and 
                        administrators; and
                          [(ii) to retrieve Internet-based 
                        learning resources; and
                  [(C) to lead to improvements in classroom 
                instruction in the core academic subjects, that 
                effectively prepare students to meet 
                challenging State academic content standards, 
                including increasing student technology 
                literacy, and student academic achievement 
                standards.
          [(2) Waivers.--Paragraph (1) shall not apply to a 
        recipient of funds made available under section 
        2412(a)(2) that demonstrates, to the satisfaction of 
        the State educational agency involved, that the 
        recipient already provides ongoing, sustained, and 
        intensive, high-quality professional development that 
        is based on a review of relevant research, to all 
        teachers in core academic subjects in the integration 
        of advanced technologies, including emerging 
        technologies, into curricula and instruction.
  [(b) Other Activities.--In addition to the activities 
described in subsection (a), a recipient of funds made 
available by a State educational agency under section 
2412(a)(2) shall use such funds to carry out other activities 
consistent with this subpart, which may include the following:
          [(1) Establishing or expanding initiatives, 
        particularly initiatives involving public-private 
        partnerships, designed to increase access to technology 
        for students and teachers, with special emphasis on the 
        access of high-need schools to technology.
          [(2) Adapting or expanding existing and new 
        applications of technology to enable teachers to 
        increase student academic achievement, including 
        technology literacy--
                  [(A) through the use of teaching practices 
                that are based on a review of relevant research 
                and are designed to prepare students to meet 
                challenging State academic content and student 
                academic achievement standards; and
                  [(B) by the development and utilization of 
                innovative distance learning strategies to 
                deliver specialized or rigorous academic 
                courses and curricula to areas that would not 
                otherwise have access to such courses and 
                curricula.
          [(3) Acquiring proven and effective courses and 
        curricula that include integrated technology and are 
        designed to help students meet challenging State 
        academic content and student academic achievement 
        standards.
          [(4) Utilizing technology to develop or expand 
        efforts to connect schools and teachers with parents 
        and students to promote meaningful parental 
        involvement, to foster increased communication about 
        curricula, assignments, and assessments between 
        students, parents, and teachers, and to assist parents 
        to understand the technology being applied in their 
        child's education, so that parents are able to 
        reinforce at home the instruction their child receives 
        at school.
          [(5) Preparing one or more teachers in elementary 
        schools and secondary schools as technology leaders who 
        are provided with the means to serve as experts and 
        train other teachers in the effective use of 
        technology, and providing bonus payments to the 
        technology leaders.
          [(6) Acquiring, adapting, expanding, implementing, 
        repairing, and maintaining existing and new 
        applications of technology, to support the school 
        reform effort and to improve student academic 
        achievement, including technology literacy.
          [(7) Acquiring connectivity linkages, resources, and 
        services (including the acquisition of hardware and 
        software and other electronically delivered learning 
        materials) for use by teachers, students, academic 
        counselors, and school library media personnel in the 
        classroom, in academic and college counseling centers, 
        or in school library media centers, in order to improve 
        student academic achievement.
          [(8) Using technology to collect, manage, and analyze 
        data to inform and enhance teaching and school 
        improvement efforts.
          [(9) Implementing performance measurement systems to 
        determine the effectiveness of education technology 
        programs funded under this subpart, particularly in 
        determining the extent to which activities funded under 
        this subpart are effective in integrating technology 
        into curricula and instruction, increasing the ability 
        of teachers to teach, and enabling students to meet 
        challenging State academic content and student academic 
        achievement standards.
          [(10) Developing, enhancing, or implementing 
        information technology courses.

               [Subpart 2--National Technology Activities

[SEC. 2421. NATIONAL ACTIVITIES.

  [(a) Study.--Using funds made available under section 
2404(b)(2), the Secretary--
          [(1) shall conduct an independent, long-term study, 
        utilizing scientifically based research methods and 
        control groups or control conditions--
                  [(A) on the conditions and practices under 
                which educational technology is effective in 
                increasing student academic achievement; and
                  [(B) on the conditions and practices that 
                increase the ability of teachers to integrate 
                technology effectively into curricula and 
                instruction, that enhance the learning 
                environment and opportunities, and that 
                increase student academic achievement, 
                including technology literacy;
          [(2) shall establish an independent review panel to 
        advise the Secretary on methodological and other issues 
        that arise in conducting the long-term study;
          [(3) shall consult with other interested Federal 
        departments or agencies, State and local educational 
        practitioners and policymakers (including teachers, 
        principals, and superintendents), and experts in 
        technology, regarding the study; and
          [(4) shall submit to Congress interim reports, when 
        appropriate, and a final report, to be submitted not 
        later than April 1, 2006, on the findings of the study.
  [(b) Dissemination.--Using funds made available under section 
2404(b)(2), the Secretary shall make widely available, 
including through dissemination on the Internet and to all 
State educational agencies and other recipients of funds under 
this part, findings identified through activities carried out 
under this section regarding the conditions and practices under 
which educational technology is effective in increasing student 
academic achievement.
  [(c) Technical Assistance.--Using funds made available under 
section 2404(b)(2), the Secretary may provide technical 
assistance (directly or through the competitive award of grants 
or contracts) to State educational agencies, local educational 
agencies, and other recipients of funds, particularly in rural 
areas, under this part, in order to assist such State 
educational agencies, local educational agencies, and other 
recipients to achieve the purposes of this part.

[SEC. 2422. NATIONAL EDUCATION TECHNOLOGY PLAN.

  [(a) In General.--Based on the Nation's progress and an 
assessment by the Secretary of the continuing and future needs 
of the Nation's schools in effectively using technology to 
provide all students the opportunity to meet challenging State 
academic content and student academic achievement standards, 
the Secretary shall update and publish, in a form readily 
accessible to the public, a national long-range technology 
plan, by not later than 12 months after the date of enactment 
of the No Child Left Behind Act of 2001.
  [(b) Contents.--The plan referred to in subsection (a) shall 
include each of the following:
          [(1) A description of the manner in which the 
        Secretary will promote--
                  [(A) higher student academic achievement 
                through the integration of advanced 
                technologies, including emerging technologies, 
                into curricula and instruction;
                  [(B) increased access to technology for 
                teaching and learning for schools with a high 
                number or percentage of children from families 
                with incomes below the poverty line; and
                  [(C) the use of technology to assist in the 
                implementation of State systemic reform 
                strategies.
          [(2) A description of joint activities of the 
        Department of Education and other Federal departments 
        or agencies that will promote the use of technology in 
        education.

                 [Subpart 3--Ready-to-Learn Television

[SEC. 2431. READY-TO-LEARN TELEVISION.

  [(a) Program Authorized.--
          [(1) In general.--The Secretary is authorized to 
        award grants to, or enter into contracts or cooperative 
        agreements with, eligible entities described in 
        paragraph (3) to enable such entities--
                  [(A) to develop, produce, and distribute 
                educational and instructional video programming 
                for preschool and elementary school children 
                and their parents in order to facilitate 
                student academic achievement;
                  [(B) to facilitate the development, directly 
                or through contracts with producers of children 
                and family educational television programming, 
                of educational programming for preschool and 
                elementary school children, and the 
                accompanying support materials and services 
                that promote the effective use of such 
                programming;
                  [(C) to facilitate the development of 
                programming and digital content containing 
                Ready-to-Learn-based children's programming and 
                resources for parents and caregivers that is 
                specially designed for nationwide distribution 
                over public television stations' digital 
                broadcasting channels and the Internet;
                  [(D) to contract with entities (such as 
                public telecommunications entities) so that 
                programs developed under this section are 
                disseminated and distributed to the widest 
                possible audience appropriate to be served by 
                the programming, and through the use of the 
                most appropriate distribution technologies; and
                  [(E) to develop and disseminate education and 
                training materials, including interactive 
                programs and programs adaptable to distance 
                learning technologies, that are designed--
                          [(i) to promote school readiness; and
                          [(ii) to promote the effective use of 
                        materials developed under subparagraphs 
                        (B) and (C) among parents, teachers, 
                        Head Start providers, Even Start 
                        providers, providers of family literacy 
                        services, child care providers, early 
                        childhood development personnel, 
                        elementary school teachers, public 
                        libraries, and after-school program 
                        personnel caring for preschool and 
                        elementary school children.
          [(2) Availability.--In awarding grants, contracts, or 
        cooperative agreements under this section, the 
        Secretary shall ensure that eligible entities make 
        programming widely available, with support materials as 
        appropriate, to young children, parents, child care 
        workers, Head Start providers, Even Start providers, 
        and providers of family literacy services to increase 
        the effective use of such programming.
          [(3) Eligible entities.--To be eligible to receive a 
        grant, contract, or cooperative agreements under this 
        section, an entity shall be a public telecommunications 
        entity that is able to demonstrate each of the 
        following:
                  [(A) A capacity for the development and 
                national distribution of educational and 
                instructional television programming of high 
                quality that is accessible by a large majority 
                of disadvantaged preschool and elementary 
                school children.
                  [(B) A capacity to contract with the 
                producers of children's television programming 
                for the purpose of developing educational 
                television programming of high quality.
                  [(C) A capacity, consistent with the entity's 
                mission and nonprofit nature, to negotiate such 
                contracts in a manner that returns to the 
                entity an appropriate share of any ancillary 
                income from sales of any program-related 
                products.
                  [(D) A capacity to localize programming and 
                materials to meet specific State and local 
                needs and to provide educational outreach at 
                the local level.
          [(4) Coordination of activities.--An entity receiving 
        a grant, contract, or cooperative agreement under this 
        section shall consult with the Secretary and the 
        Secretary of Health and Human Services--
                  [(A) to maximize the utilization of quality 
                educational programming by preschool and 
                elementary school children, and make such 
                programming widely available to federally 
                funded programs serving such populations; and
                  [(B) to coordinate activities with Federal 
                programs that have major training components 
                for early childhood development, including 
                programs under the Head Start Act (42 U.S.C. 
                9831 et seq.) and Even Start, and State 
                training activities funded under the Child Care 
                and Development Block Grant Act of 1990 (42 
                U.S.C. 9858 et seq.), regarding the 
                availability and utilization of materials 
                developed under paragraph (1)(E) to enhance 
                parent and child care provider skills in early 
                childhood development and education.
  [(b) Applications.--To be eligible to receive a grant, 
contract, or cooperative agreement under subsection (a), an 
entity shall submit to the Secretary an application at such 
time, in such manner, and containing such information as the 
Secretary may reasonably require.
  [(c) Reports and Evaluations.--
          [(1) Annual report to the secretary.--An entity 
        receiving a grant, contract, or cooperative agreement 
        under this section shall prepare and submit to the 
        Secretary an annual report that contains such 
        information as the Secretary may require. At a minimum, 
        the report shall describe the program activities 
        undertaken with funds received under the grant, 
        contract, or cooperative agreement, including each of 
        the following:
                  [(A) The programming that has been developed, 
                directly or indirectly, by the eligible entity, 
                and the target population of the programs 
                developed.
                  [(B) The support and training materials that 
                have been developed to accompany the 
                programming, and the method by which the 
                materials are distributed to consumers and 
                users of the programming.
                  [(C) The means by which programming developed 
                under this section has been distributed, 
                including the distance learning technologies 
                that have been utilized to make programming 
                available, and the geographic distribution 
                achieved through such technologies.
                  [(D) The initiatives undertaken by the entity 
                to develop public-private partnerships to 
                secure non-Federal support for the development, 
                distribution, and broadcast of educational and 
                instructional programming.
          [(2) Report to congress.--The Secretary shall prepare 
        and submit to the relevant committees of Congress a 
        biannual report that includes the following:
                  [(A) A summary of the activities assisted 
                under subsection (a).
                  [(B) A description of the education and 
                training materials made available under 
                subsection (a)(1)(E), the manner in which 
                outreach has been conducted to inform parents 
                and child care providers of the availability of 
                such materials, and the manner in which such 
                materials have been distributed in accordance 
                with such subsection.
  [(d) Administrative Costs.--An entity that receives a grant, 
contract, or cooperative agreement under this section may use 
up to 5 percent of the amount received under the grant, 
contract, or agreement for the normal and customary expenses of 
administering the grant, contract, or agreement.
  [(e) Authorization of Appropriations.--
          [(1) In general.--There are authorized to be 
        appropriated to carry out this section such sums as may 
        be necessary for fiscal year 2002, and for each of the 
        5 succeeding fiscal years.
          [(2) Funding rule.--Not less than 60 percent of the 
        amount appropriated under paragraph (1) for each fiscal 
        year shall be used to carry out activities under 
        subparagraphs (B) through (D) of subsection (a)(1).

  [Subpart 4--Limitation on Availability of Certain Funds for Schools

[SEC. 2441. INTERNET SAFETY.

  [(a) In General.--No funds made available under this part to 
a local educational agency for an elementary school or 
secondary school that does not receive services at discount 
rates under section 254(h)(5) of the Communications Act of 1934 
(47 U.S.C. 254(h)(5)) may be used to purchase computers used to 
access the Internet, or to pay for direct costs associated with 
accessing the Internet, for such school unless the school, 
school board, local educational agency, or other authority with 
responsibility for administration of such school both--
          [(1)(A) has in place a policy of Internet safety for 
        minors that includes the operation of a technology 
        protection measure with respect to any of its computers 
        with Internet access that protects against access 
        through such computers to visual depictions that are--
                  [(i) obscene;
                  [(ii) child pornography; or
                  [(iii) harmful to minors; and
          [(B) is enforcing the operation of such technology 
        protection measure during any use of such computers by 
        minors; and
          [(2)(A) has in place a policy of Internet safety that 
        includes the operation of a technology protection 
        measure with respect to any of its computers with 
        Internet access that protects against access through 
        such computers to visual depictions that are--
                  [(i) obscene; or
                  [(ii) child pornography; and
          [(B) is enforcing the operation of such technology 
        protection measure during any use of such computers.
  [(b) Timing and Applicability of Implementation.--
          [(1) In general.--The local educational agency with 
        responsibility for a school covered by subsection (a) 
        shall certify the compliance of such school with the 
        requirements of subsection (a) as part of the 
        application process for the next program funding year 
        under this Act following December 21, 2000, and for 
        each subsequent program funding year thereafter.
          [(2) Process.--
                  [(A) Schools with internet safety policies 
                and technology protection measures in place.--A 
                local educational agency with responsibility 
                for a school covered by subsection (a) that has 
                in place an Internet safety policy meeting the 
                requirements of subsection (a) shall certify 
                its compliance with subsection (a) during each 
                annual program application cycle under this 
                Act.
                  [(B) Schools without internet safety policies 
                and technology protection measures in place.--
                          [(i) Certification.--A local 
                        educational agency with responsibility 
                        for a school covered by subsection (a) 
                        that does not have in place an Internet 
                        safety policy meeting the requirements 
                        of subsection (a)--
                                  [(I) for the first program 
                                year after December 21, 2000, 
                                in which the local educational 
                                agency is applying for funds 
                                for such school under this Act, 
                                shall certify that it is 
                                undertaking such actions, 
                                including any necessary 
                                procurement procedures, to put 
                                in place an Internet safety 
                                policy that meets such 
                                requirements; and
                                  [(II) for the second program 
                                year after December 21, 2000, 
                                in which the local educational 
                                agency is applying for funds 
                                for such school under this Act, 
                                shall certify that such school 
                                is in compliance with such 
                                requirements.
                          [(ii) Ineligibility.--Any school 
                        covered by subsection (a) for which the 
                        local educational agency concerned is 
                        unable to certify compliance with such 
                        requirements in such second program 
                        year shall be ineligible for all 
                        funding under this part for such second 
                        program year and all subsequent program 
                        years until such time as such school 
                        comes into compliance with such 
                        requirements.
                  [(C) Waivers.--Any school subject to a 
                certification under subparagraph (B)(i)(II) for 
                which the local educational agency concerned 
                cannot make the certification otherwise 
                required by that subparagraph may seek a waiver 
                of that subparagraph if State or local 
                procurement rules or regulations or competitive 
                bidding requirements prevent the making of the 
                certification otherwise required by that 
                subparagraph. The local educational agency 
                concerned shall notify the Secretary of the 
                applicability of that subparagraph to the 
                school. Such notice shall certify that the 
                school will be brought into compliance with the 
                requirements in subsection (a) before the start 
                of the third program year after December 21, 
                2000, in which the school is applying for funds 
                under this part.
  [(c) Disabling During Certain Use.--An administrator, 
supervisor, or person authorized by the responsible authority 
under subsection (a) may disable the technology protection 
measure concerned to enable access for bona fide research or 
other lawful purposes.
  [(d) Noncompliance.--
          [(1) Use of general education provisions act 
        remedies.--Whenever the Secretary has reason to believe 
        that any recipient of funds under this part is failing 
        to comply substantially with the requirements of this 
        section, the Secretary may--
                  [(A) withhold further payments to the 
                recipient under this part;
                  [(B) issue a complaint to compel compliance 
                of the recipient through a cease and desist 
                order; or
                  [(C) enter into a compliance agreement with a 
                recipient to bring it into compliance with such 
                requirements,
        in same manner as the Secretary is authorized to take 
        such actions under sections 455, 456, and 457, 
        respectively, of the General Education Provisions Act.
          [(2) Recovery of funds prohibited.--The actions 
        authorized by paragraph (1) are the exclusive remedies 
        available with respect to the failure of a school to 
        comply substantially with a provision of this section, 
        and the Secretary shall not seek a recovery of funds 
        from the recipient for such failure.
          [(3) Recommencement of payments.--Whenever the 
        Secretary determines (whether by certification or other 
        appropriate evidence) that a recipient of funds who is 
        subject to the withholding of payments under paragraph 
        (1)(A) has cured the failure providing the basis for 
        the withholding of payments, the Secretary shall cease 
        the withholding of payments to the recipient under that 
        paragraph.
  [(e) Definitions.--In this subpart:
          [(1) Computer.--The term ``computer'' includes any 
        hardware, software, or other technology attached or 
        connected to, installed in, or otherwise used in 
        connection with a computer.
          [(2) Access to internet.--A computer shall be 
        considered to have access to the Internet if such 
        computer is equipped with a modem or is connected to a 
        computer network that has access to the Internet.
          [(3) Acquisition or operation.--An elementary school 
        or secondary school shall be considered to have 
        received funds under this part for the acquisition or 
        operation of any computer if such funds are used in any 
        manner, directly or indirectly--
                  [(A) to purchase, lease, or otherwise acquire 
                or obtain the use of such computer; or
                  [(B) to obtain services, supplies, software, 
                or other actions or materials to support, or in 
                connection with, the operation of such 
                computer.
          [(4) Minor.--The term ``minor'' means an individual 
        who has not attained the age of 17.
          [(5) Child pornography.--The term ``child 
        pornography'' has the meaning given that term in 
        section 2256 of title 18, United States Code.
          [(6) Harmful to minors.--The term ``harmful to 
        minors'' means any picture, image, graphic image file, 
        or other visual depiction that--
                  [(A) taken as a whole and with respect to 
                minors, appeals to a prurient interest in 
                nudity, sex, or excretion;
                  [(B) depicts, describes, or represents, in a 
                patently offensive way with respect to what is 
                suitable for minors, an actual or simulated 
                sexual act or sexual contact, actual or 
                simulated normal or perverted sexual acts, or a 
                lewd exhibition of the genitals; and
                  [(C) taken as a whole, lacks serious 
                literary, artistic, political, or scientific 
                value as to minors.
          [(7) Obscene.--The term ``obscene'' has the meaning 
        applicable to that term under section 1460 of title 18, 
        United States Code.
          [(8) Sexual act and sexual contact.--The terms 
        ``sexual act'' and ``sexual contact'' have the meanings 
        given those terms in section 2246 of title 18, United 
        States Code.
  [(f) Severability.--If any provision of this section is held 
invalid, the remainder of this section shall not be affected 
thereby.]

                       PART D--GENERAL PROVISIONS

SEC. 2401. INCLUSION OF CHARTER SCHOOLS.

  In this title, the term ``local educational agency'' includes 
a charter school (as defined in section 6101) that, in the 
absence of this section, would not have received funds under 
this title.

SEC. 2402. PARENTS' RIGHT TO KNOW.

  At the beginning of each school year, a local educational 
agency that receives funds under this title shall notify the 
parents of each student attending any school receiving funds 
under this title that the parents may request, and the agency 
will provide the parents on request (and in a timely manner), 
information regarding the professional qualifications of the 
student's classroom teachers.

SEC. 2403. SUPPLEMENT, NOT SUPPLANT.

  Funds received under this title shall be used to supplement, 
and not supplant, non-Federal funds that would otherwise be 
used for activities authorized under this title.

  [TITLE III--LANGUAGE INSTRUCTION FOR LIMITED ENGLISH PROFICIENT AND 
                           IMMIGRANT STUDENTS

[SEC. 3001. AUTHORIZATIONS OF APPROPRIATIONS; CONDITION ON 
                    EFFECTIVENESS OF PARTS.

  [(a) Authorizations of Appropriations.--
          [(1) In general.--Subject to subsection (b), there 
        are authorized to be appropriated to carry out this 
        title, except for subpart 4 of part B, $750,000,000 for 
        fiscal year 2002 and such sums as may be necessary for 
        each of the 5 succeeding fiscal years.
          [(2) Emergency immigrant education program.--There 
        are authorized to be appropriated to carry out subpart 
        4 of part B (when such part is in effect) such sums as 
        may be necessary for fiscal year 2002 and each of the 5 
        succeeding fiscal years.
  [(b) Conditions on Effectiveness of Parts A and B.--
          [(1) Part a.--Part A shall be in effect for any 
        fiscal year for which the amount appropriated under 
        paragraphs (1) and (2) of subsection (a) equals or 
        exceeds $650,000,000.
          [(2) Part b.--Part B shall be in effect only for a 
        fiscal year for which part A is not in effect.
  [(c) References.--In any fiscal year for which part A is in 
effect, references in Federal law (other than this title) to 
part B shall be considered to be references to part A. In any 
fiscal year for which part B is in effect, references in 
Federal law (other than this title) to part A shall be 
considered to be references to part B.

   [PART A--ENGLISH LANGUAGE ACQUISITION, LANGUAGE ENHANCEMENT, AND 
                        ACADEMIC ACHIEVEMENT ACT

[SEC. 3101. SHORT TITLE.

  [This part may be cited as the ``English Language 
Acquisition, Language Enhancement, and Academic Achievement 
Act''.

[SEC. 3102. PURPOSES.

   [The purposes of this part are--
          [(1) to help ensure that children who are limited 
        English proficient, including immigrant children and 
        youth, attain English proficiency, develop high levels 
        of academic attainment in English, and meet the same 
        challenging State academic content and student academic 
        achievement standards as all children are expected to 
        meet;
          [(2) to assist all limited English proficient 
        children, including immigrant children and youth, to 
        achieve at high levels in the core academic subjects so 
        that those children can meet the same challenging State 
        academic content and student academic achievement 
        standards as all children are expected to meet, 
        consistent with section 1111(b)(1);
          [(3) to develop high-quality language instruction 
        educational programs designed to assist State 
        educational agencies, local educational agencies, and 
        schools in teaching limited English proficient children 
        and serving immigrant children and youth;
          [(4) to assist State educational agencies and local 
        educational agencies to develop and enhance their 
        capacity to provide high-quality instructional programs 
        designed to prepare limited English proficient 
        children, including immigrant children and youth, to 
        enter all-English instruction settings;
          [(5) to assist State educational agencies, local 
        educational agencies, and schools to build their 
        capacity to establish, implement, and sustain language 
        instruction educational programs and programs of 
        English language development for limited English 
        proficient children;
          [(6) to promote parental and community participation 
        in language instruction educational programs for the 
        parents and communities of limited English proficient 
        children;
          [(7) to streamline language instruction educational 
        programs into a program carried out through formula 
        grants to State educational agencies and local 
        educational agencies to help limited English proficient 
        children, including immigrant children and youth, 
        develop proficiency in English, while meeting 
        challenging State academic content and student academic 
        achievement standards;
          [(8) to hold State educational agencies, local 
        educational agencies, and schools accountable for 
        increases in English proficiency and core academic 
        content knowledge of limited English proficient 
        children by requiring--
                  [(A) demonstrated improvements in the English 
                proficiency of limited English proficient 
                children each fiscal year; and
                  [(B) adequate yearly progress for limited 
                English proficient children, including 
                immigrant children and youth, as described in 
                section 1111(b)(2)(B); and
          [(9) to provide State educational agencies and local 
        educational agencies with the flexibility to implement 
        language instruction educational programs, based on 
        scientifically based research on teaching limited 
        English proficient children, that the agencies believe 
        to be the most effective for teaching English.

 [Subpart 1--Grants and Subgrants for English Language Acquisition and 
                          Language Enhancement

[SEC. 3111. FORMULA GRANTS TO STATES.

  [(a) In General.--In the case of each State educational 
agency having a plan approved by the Secretary for a fiscal 
year under section 3113, the Secretary shall make a grant for 
the year to the agency for the purposes specified in subsection 
(b). The grant shall consist of the allotment determined for 
the State educational agency under subsection (c).
  [(b) Use of Funds.--
          [(1) Subgrants to eligible entities.--The Secretary 
        may make a grant under subsection (a) only if the State 
        educational agency involved agrees to expend at least 
        95 percent of the State educational agency's allotment 
        under subsection (c) for a fiscal year--
                  [(A) to award subgrants, from allocations 
                under section 3114, to eligible entities to 
                carry out the activities described in section 
                3115 (other than subsection (e)); and
                  [(B) to award subgrants under section 
                3114(d)(1) to eligible entities that are 
                described in that section to carry out the 
                activities described in section 3115(e).
          [(2) State activities.--Subject to paragraph (3), 
        each State educational agency receiving a grant under 
        subsection (a) may reserve not more than 5 percent of 
        the agency's allotment under subsection (c) to carry 
        out one or more of the following activities:
                  [(A) Professional development activities, and 
                other activities, that assist personnel in 
                meeting State and local certification and 
                licensing requirements for teaching limited 
                English proficient children.
                  [(B) Planning, evaluation, administration, 
                and interagency coordination related to the 
                subgrants referred to in paragraph (1).
                  [(C) Providing technical assistance and other 
                forms of assistance to eligible entities that 
                are receiving subgrants from a State 
                educational agency under this subpart, 
                including assistance in--
                          [(i) identifying and implementing 
                        language instruction educational 
                        programs and curricula that are based 
                        on scientifically based research on 
                        teaching limited English proficient 
                        children;
                          [(ii) helping limited English 
                        proficient children meet the same 
                        challenging State academic content and 
                        student academic achievement standards 
                        as all children are expected to meet;
                          [(iii) identifying or developing, and 
                        implementing, measures of English 
                        proficiency; and
                          [(iv) promoting parental and 
                        community participation in programs 
                        that serve limited English proficient 
                        children.
                  [(D) Providing recognition, which may include 
                providing financial awards, to subgrantees that 
                have exceeded their annual measurable 
                achievement objectives pursuant to section 
                3122.
          [(3) Administrative expenses.--From the amount 
        reserved under paragraph (2), a State educational 
        agency may use not more than 60 percent of such amount 
        or $175,000, whichever is greater, for the planning and 
        administrative costs of carrying out paragraphs (1) and 
        (2).
  [(c) Reservations and Allotments.--
          [(1) Reservations.--From the amount appropriated 
        under section 3001(a) for each fiscal year, the 
        Secretary shall reserve--
                  [(A) 0.5 percent or $5,000,000 of such 
                amount, whichever is greater, for payments to 
                eligible entities that are defined under 
                section 3112(a) for activities, approved by the 
                Secretary, consistent with this subpart;
                  [(B) 0.5 percent of such amount for payments 
                to outlying areas, to be allotted in accordance 
                with their respective needs for assistance 
                under this subpart, as determined by the 
                Secretary, for activities, approved by the 
                Secretary, consistent with this subpart;
                  [(C) 6.5 percent of such amount for national 
                activities under sections 3131 and 3303, except 
                that not more than 0.5 percent of such amount 
                shall be reserved for evaluation activities 
                conducted by the Secretary and not more than 
                $2,000,000 of such amount may be reserved for 
                the National Clearinghouse for English Language 
                Acquisition and Language Instruction 
                Educational Programs described in section 3303; 
                and
                  [(D) such sums as may be necessary to make 
                continuation awards under paragraph (2).
          [(2) Continuation awards.--
                  [(A) In general.--Before making allotments to 
                State educational agencies under paragraph (3) 
                for any fiscal year, the Secretary shall use 
                the sums reserved under paragraph (1)(D) to 
                make continuation awards to recipients who 
                received grants or fellowships for the fiscal 
                year preceding any fiscal year described in 
                section 3001(b)(1)(A) under--
                          [(i) subparts 1 and 3 of part A of 
                        title VII (as in effect on the day 
                        before the date of enactment of the No 
                        Child Left Behind Act of 2001); or
                          [(ii) subparts 1 and 3 of part B of 
                        this title.
                  [(B) Use of funds.--The Secretary shall make 
                the awards in order to allow such recipients to 
                receive awards for the complete period of their 
                grants or fellowships under the appropriate 
                subparts.
          [(3) State allotments.--
                  [(A) In general.--Except as provided in 
                subparagraph (B), from the amount appropriated 
                under section 3001(a) for each fiscal year that 
                remains after making the reservations under 
                paragraph (1), the Secretary shall allot to 
                each State educational agency having a plan 
                approved under section 3113(c)--
                          [(i) an amount that bears the same 
                        relationship to 80 percent of the 
                        remainder as the number of limited 
                        English proficient children in the 
                        State bears to the number of such 
                        children in all States; and
                          [(ii) an amount that bears the same 
                        relationship to 20 percent of the 
                        remainder as the number of immigrant 
                        children and youth in the State bears 
                        to the number of such children and 
                        youth in all States.
                  [(B) Minimum allotments.--No State 
                educational agency shall receive an allotment 
                under this paragraph that is less than 
                $500,000.
                  [(C) Reallotment.--If any State educational 
                agency described in subparagraph (A) does not 
                submit a plan to the Secretary for a fiscal 
                year, or submits a plan (or any amendment to a 
                plan) that the Secretary, after reasonable 
                notice and opportunity for a hearing, 
                determines does not satisfy the requirements of 
                this subpart, the Secretary--
                          [(i) shall endeavor to make the 
                        State's allotment available on a 
                        competitive basis to specially 
                        qualified agencies within the State to 
                        satisfy the requirements of section 
                        3115 (and any additional requirements 
                        that the Secretary may impose), 
                        consistent with the purposes of such 
                        section, and to carry out required and 
                        authorized activities under such 
                        section; and
                          [(ii) shall reallot any portion of 
                        such allotment remaining after the 
                        application of clause (i) to the 
                        remaining State educational agencies in 
                        accordance with subparagraph (A).
                  [(D) Special rule for puerto rico.--The total 
                amount allotted to Puerto Rico for any fiscal 
                year under subparagraph (A) shall not exceed 
                0.5 percent of the total amount allotted to all 
                States for that fiscal year.
          [(4) Use of data for determinations.--
                  [(A) In general.--In making State allotments 
                under paragraph (3), for the purpose of 
                determining the number of limited English 
                proficient children in a State and in all 
                States, and the number of immigrant children 
                and youth in a State and in all States, for 
                each fiscal year, the Secretary shall use data 
                that will yield the most accurate, up-to-date 
                numbers of such children and youth.
                  [(B) Special rule.--
                          [(i) First 2 years.--In making 
                        determinations under subparagraph (A) 
                        for the 2 fiscal years following the 
                        date of enactment of the No Child Left 
                        Behind Act of 2001, the Secretary shall 
                        determine the number of limited English 
                        proficient children in a State and in 
                        all States, and the number of immigrant 
                        children and youth in a State and in 
                        all States, using data available from 
                        the Bureau of Census or submitted by 
                        the States to the Secretary.
                          [(ii) Subsequent years.--For 
                        subsequent fiscal years, the Secretary 
                        shall determine the number of limited 
                        English proficient children in a State 
                        and in all States, and the number of 
                        immigrant children and youth in a State 
                        and in all States, using the more 
                        accurate of--
                                  [(I) the data available from 
                                the American Community Survey 
                                available from the Department 
                                of Commerce; or
                                  [(II) the number of children 
                                being assessed for English 
                                proficiency in a State as 
                                required under section 
                                1111(b)(7).

[SEC. 3112. NATIVE AMERICAN AND ALASKA NATIVE CHILDREN IN SCHOOL.

  [(a) Eligible Entities.--For the purpose of carrying out 
programs under this part for individuals served by elementary 
schools, secondary schools, and postsecondary schools operated 
predominately for Native American children (including Alaska 
Native children), the following shall be considered to be an 
eligible entity:
          [(1) An Indian tribe.
          [(2) A tribally sanctioned educational authority.
          [(3) A Native Hawaiian or Native American Pacific 
        Islander native language educational organization.
          [(4) An elementary school or secondary school that is 
        operated or funded by the Bureau of Indian Affairs, or 
        a consortium of such schools.
          [(5) An elementary school or secondary school 
        operated under a contract with or grant from the Bureau 
        of Indian Affairs, in consortium with another such 
        school or a tribal or community organization.
          [(6) An elementary school or secondary school 
        operated by the Bureau of Indian Affairs and an 
        institution of higher education, in consortium with an 
        elementary school or secondary school operated under a 
        contract with or grant from the Bureau of Indian 
        Affairs or a tribal or community organization.
  [(b) Submission of Applications for Assistance.--
Notwithstanding any other provision of this part, an entity 
that is considered to be an eligible entity under subsection 
(a), and that desires to receive Federal financial assistance 
under this subpart, shall submit an application to the 
Secretary.
  [(c) Special Rule.--An eligible entity described in 
subsection (a) that receives Federal financial assistance 
pursuant to this section shall not be eligible to receive a 
subgrant under section 3114.

[SEC. 3113. STATE AND SPECIALLY QUALIFIED AGENCY PLANS.

  [(a) Plan Required.--Each State educational agency and 
specially qualified agency desiring a grant under this subpart 
shall submit a plan to the Secretary at such time, in such 
manner, and containing such information as the Secretary may 
require.
  [(b) Contents.--Each plan submitted under subsection (a) 
shall--
          [(1) describe the process that the agency will use in 
        making subgrants to eligible entities under section 
        3114(d)(1);
          [(2) describe how the agency will establish standards 
        and objectives for raising the level of English 
        proficiency that are derived from the four recognized 
        domains of speaking, listening, reading, and writing, 
        and that are aligned with achievement of the 
        challenging State academic content and student academic 
        achievement standards described in section 1111(b)(1);
          [(3) contain an assurance that--
                  [(A) in the case of a State educational 
                agency, the agency consulted with local 
                educational agencies, education-related 
                community groups and nonprofit organizations, 
                parents, teachers, school administrators, and 
                researchers, in developing the annual 
                measurable achievement objectives described in 
                section 3122;
                  [(B) in the case of a specially qualified 
                agency, the agency consulted with education-
                related community groups and nonprofit 
                organizations, parents, teachers, and 
                researchers, in developing the annual 
                measurable achievement objectives described in 
                section 3122;
                  [(C) the agency will ensure that eligible 
                entities receiving a subgrant under this 
                subpart comply with the requirement in section 
                1111(b)(7) to annually assess in English 
                children who have been in the United States for 
                3 or more consecutive years;
                  [(D) the agency will ensure that eligible 
                entities receiving a subgrant under this 
                subpart annually assess the English proficiency 
                of all limited English proficient children 
                participating in a program funded under this 
                subpart, consistent with section 1111(b)(7);
                  [(E) in awarding subgrants under section 
                3114, the agency will address the needs of 
                school systems of all sizes and in all 
                geographic areas, including school systems with 
                rural and urban schools;
                  [(F) subgrants to eligible entities under 
                section 3114(d)(1) will be of sufficient size 
                and scope to allow such entities to carry out 
                high-quality language instruction educational 
                programs for limited English proficient 
                children; and
                  [(G) the agency will require an eligible 
                entity receiving a subgrant under this subpart 
                to use the subgrant in ways that will build 
                such recipient's capacity to continue to offer 
                high-quality language instruction educational 
                programs that assist limited English proficient 
                children in meeting challenging State academic 
                content and student academic achievement 
                standards once assistance under this subpart is 
                no longer available;
          [(4) describe how the agency will coordinate its 
        programs and activities under this subpart with its 
        other programs and activities under this Act and other 
        Acts, as appropriate;
          [(5) describe how the agency will hold local 
        educational agencies, eligible entities, elementary 
        schools, and secondary schools accountable for--
                  [(A) meeting all annual measurable 
                achievement objectives described in section 
                3122;
                  [(B) making adequate yearly progress for 
                limited English proficient children, as 
                described in section 1111(b)(2)(B); and
                  [(C) achieving the purposes of this part; and
          [(6) describe how eligible entities in the State will 
        be given the flexibility to teach limited English 
        proficient children--
                  [(A) using a language instruction curriculum 
                that is tied to scientifically based research 
                on teaching limited English proficient children 
                and that has been demonstrated to be effective; 
                and
                  [(B) in the manner the eligible entities 
                determine to be the most effective.
  [(c) Approval.--The Secretary, after using a peer review 
process, shall approve a plan submitted under subsection (a) if 
the plan meets the requirements of this section.
  [(d) Duration of Plan.--
          [(1) In general.--Each plan submitted by a State 
        educational agency or specially qualified agency and 
        approved under subsection (c) shall--
                  [(A) remain in effect for the duration of the 
                agency's participation under this part; and
                  [(B) be periodically reviewed and revised by 
                the agency, as necessary, to reflect changes to 
                the agency's strategies and programs carried 
                out under this part.
          [(2) Additional information.--
                  [(A) Amendments.--If the State educational 
                agency or specially qualified agency amends the 
                plan, the agency shall submit such amendment to 
                the Secretary.
                  [(B) Approval.--The Secretary shall approve 
                such amendment to an approved plan, unless the 
                Secretary determines that the amendment will 
                result in the agency not meeting the 
                requirements, or fulfilling the purposes, of 
                this part.
  [(e) Consolidated Plan.--A plan submitted under subsection 
(a) may be submitted as part of a consolidated plan under 
section 9302.
  [(f) Secretary Assistance.--The Secretary shall provide 
technical assistance, if requested, in the development of 
English proficiency standards, objectives, and assessments.

[SEC. 3114. WITHIN-STATE ALLOCATIONS.

  [(a) In General.--After making the reservation required under 
subsection (d)(1), each State educational agency receiving a 
grant under section 3111(c)(3) shall award subgrants for a 
fiscal year by allocating to each eligible entity in the State 
having a plan approved under section 3116 an amount that bears 
the same relationship to the amount received under the grant 
and remaining after making such reservation as the population 
of limited English proficient children in schools served by the 
eligible entity bears to the population of limited English 
proficient children in schools served by all eligible entities 
in the State.
  [(b) Limitation.--A State educational agency shall not award 
a subgrant from an allocation made under subsection (a) if the 
amount of such subgrant would be less than $10,000.
  [(c) Reallocation.--Whenever a State educational agency 
determines that an amount from an allocation made to an 
eligible entity under subsection (a) for a fiscal year will not 
be used by the entity for the purpose for which the allocation 
was made, the agency shall, in accordance with such rules as it 
determines to be appropriate, reallocate such amount, 
consistent with such subsection, to other eligible entities in 
the State that the agency determines will use the amount to 
carry out that purpose.
  [(d) Required Reservation.--A State educational agency 
receiving a grant under this subpart for a fiscal year--
          [(1) shall reserve not more than 15 percent of the 
        agency's allotment under section 3111(c)(3) to award 
        subgrants to eligible entities in the State that have 
        experienced a significant increase, as compared to the 
        average of the 2 preceding fiscal years, in the 
        percentage or number of immigrant children and youth, 
        who have enrolled, during the fiscal year preceding the 
        fiscal year for which the subgrant is made, in public 
        and nonpublic elementary schools and secondary schools 
        in the geographic areas under the jurisdiction of, or 
        served by, such entities; and
          [(2) in awarding subgrants under paragraph (1)--
                  [(A) shall equally consider eligible entities 
                that satisfy the requirement of such paragraph 
                but have limited or no experience in serving 
                immigrant children and youth; and
                  [(B) shall consider the quality of each local 
                plan under section 3116 and ensure that each 
                subgrant is of sufficient size and scope to 
                meet the purposes of this part.

[SEC. 3115. SUBGRANTS TO ELIGIBLE ENTITIES.

  [(a) Purposes of Subgrants.--A State educational agency may 
make a subgrant to an eligible entity from funds received by 
the agency under this subpart only if the entity agrees to 
expend the funds to improve the education of limited English 
proficient children, by assisting the children to learn English 
and meet challenging State academic content and student 
academic achievement standards. In carrying out activities with 
such funds, the entity shall use approaches and methodologies 
based on scientifically based research on teaching limited 
English proficient children and immigrant children and youth 
for the following purposes:
          [(1) Developing and implementing new language 
        instruction educational programs and academic content 
        instruction programs for such children, and such 
        children and youth, including programs of early 
        childhood education, elementary school programs, and 
        secondary school programs.
          [(2) Carrying out highly focused, innovative, locally 
        designed activities to expand or enhance existing 
        language instruction educational programs and academic 
        content instruction programs for such children, and 
        such children and youth.
          [(3) Implementing, within an individual school, 
        schoolwide programs for restructuring, reforming, and 
        upgrading all relevant programs, activities, and 
        operations relating to language instruction educational 
        programs and academic content instruction for such 
        children, and such children and youth.
          [(4) Implementing, within the entire jurisdiction of 
        a local educational agency, agencywide programs for 
        restructuring, reforming, and upgrading all relevant 
        programs, activities, and operations relating to 
        language instruction educational programs and academic 
        content instruction for such children, and such 
        children and youth.
  [(b) Administrative Expenses.--Each eligible entity receiving 
funds under section 3114(a) for a fiscal year may use not more 
than 2 percent of such funds for the cost of administering this 
subpart.
  [(c) Required Subgrantee Activities.--An eligible entity 
receiving funds under section 3114(a) shall use the funds--
          [(1) to increase the English proficiency of limited 
        English proficient children by providing high-quality 
        language instruction educational programs that are 
        based on scientifically based research demonstrating 
        the effectiveness of the programs in increasing--
                  [(A) English proficiency; and
                  [(B) student academic achievement in the core 
                academic subjects; and
          [(2) to provide high-quality professional development 
        to classroom teachers (including teachers in classroom 
        settings that are not the settings of language 
        instruction educational programs), principals, 
        administrators, and other school or community-based 
        organizational personnel, that is--
                  [(A) designed to improve the instruction and 
                assessment of limited English proficient 
                children;
                  [(B) designed to enhance the ability of such 
                teachers to understand and use curricula, 
                assessment measures, and instruction strategies 
                for limited English proficient children;
                  [(C) based on scientifically based research 
                demonstrating the effectiveness of the 
                professional development in increasing 
                children's English proficiency or substantially 
                increasing the subject matter knowledge, 
                teaching knowledge, and teaching skills of such 
                teachers; and
                  [(D) of sufficient intensity and duration 
                (which shall not include activities such as 
                one-day or short-term workshops and 
                conferences) to have a positive and lasting 
                impact on the teachers' performance in the 
                classroom, except that this subparagraph shall 
                not apply to an activity that is one component 
                of a long-term, comprehensive professional 
                development plan established by a teacher and 
                the teacher's supervisor based on an assessment 
                of the needs of the teacher, the supervisor, 
                the students of the teacher, and any local 
                educational agency employing the teacher.
  [(d) Authorized Subgrantee Activities.--Subject to subsection 
(c), an eligible entity receiving funds under section 3114(a) 
may use the funds to achieve one of the purposes described in 
subsection (a) by undertaking one or more of the following 
activities:
          [(1) Upgrading program objectives and effective 
        instruction strategies.
          [(2) Improving the instruction program for limited 
        English proficient children by identifying, acquiring, 
        and upgrading curricula, instruction materials, 
        educational software, and assessment procedures.
          [(3) Providing--
                  [(A) tutorials and academic or vocational 
                education for limited English proficient 
                children; and
                  [(B) intensified instruction.
          [(4) Developing and implementing elementary school or 
        secondary school language instruction educational 
        programs that are coordinated with other relevant 
        programs and services.
          [(5) Improving the English proficiency and academic 
        achievement of limited English proficient children.
          [(6) Providing community participation programs, 
        family literacy services, and parent outreach and 
        training activities to limited English proficient 
        children and their families--
                  [(A) to improve the English language skills 
                of limited English proficient children; and
                  [(B) to assist parents in helping their 
                children to improve their academic achievement 
                and becoming active participants in the 
                education of their children.
          [(7) Improving the instruction of limited English 
        proficient children by providing for--
                  [(A) the acquisition or development of 
                educational technology or instructional 
                materials;
                  [(B) access to, and participation in, 
                electronic networks for materials, training, 
                and communication; and
                  [(C) incorporation of the resources described 
                in subparagraphs (A) and (B) into curricula and 
                programs, such as those funded under this 
                subpart.
          [(8) Carrying out other activities that are 
        consistent with the purposes of this section.
  [(e) Activities by Agencies Experiencing Substantial 
Increases in Immigrant Children and Youth.--
          [(1) In general.--An eligible entity receiving funds 
        under section 3114(d)(1) shall use the funds to pay for 
        activities that provide enhanced instructional 
        opportunities for immigrant children and youth, which 
        may include--
                  [(A) family literacy, parent outreach, and 
                training activities designed to assist parents 
                to become active participants in the education 
                of their children;
                  [(B) support for personnel, including teacher 
                aides who have been specifically trained, or 
                are being trained, to provide services to 
                immigrant children and youth;
                  [(C) provision of tutorials, mentoring, and 
                academic or career counseling for immigrant 
                children and youth;
                  [(D) identification and acquisition of 
                curricular materials, educational software, and 
                technologies to be used in the program carried 
                out with funds;
                  [(E) basic instruction services that are 
                directly attributable to the presence in the 
                school district involved of immigrant children 
                and youth, including the payment of costs of 
                providing additional classroom supplies, costs 
                of transportation, or such other costs as are 
                directly attributable to such additional basic 
                instruction services;
                  [(F) other instruction services that are 
                designed to assist immigrant children and youth 
                to achieve in elementary schools and secondary 
                schools in the United States, such as programs 
                of introduction to the educational system and 
                civics education; and
                  [(G) activities, coordinated with community-
                based organizations, institutions of higher 
                education, private sector entities, or other 
                entities with expertise in working with 
                immigrants, to assist parents of immigrant 
                children and youth by offering comprehensive 
                community services.
          [(2) Duration of subgrants.--The duration of a 
        subgrant made by a State educational agency under 
        section 3114(d)(1) shall be determined by the agency in 
        its discretion.
  [(f) Selection of Method of Instruction.--
          [(1) In general.--To receive a subgrant from a State 
        educational agency under this subpart, an eligible 
        entity shall select one or more methods or forms of 
        instruction to be used in the programs and activities 
        undertaken by the entity to assist limited English 
        proficient children to attain English proficiency and 
        meet challenging State academic content and student 
        academic achievement standards.
          [(2) Consistency.--Such selection shall be consistent 
        with sections 3125 through 3127.
  [(g) Supplement, Not Supplant.--Federal funds made available 
under this subpart shall be used so as to supplement the level 
of Federal, State, and local public funds that, in the absence 
of such availability, would have been expended for programs for 
limited English proficient children and immigrant children and 
youth and in no case to supplant such Federal, State, and local 
public funds.

[SEC. 3116. LOCAL PLANS.

  [(a) Plan Required.--Each eligible entity desiring a subgrant 
from the State educational agency under section 3114 shall 
submit a plan to the State educational agency at such time, in 
such manner, and containing such information as the State 
educational agency may require.
  [(b) Contents.--Each plan submitted under subsection (a) 
shall--
          [(1) describe the programs and activities proposed to 
        be developed, implemented, and administered under the 
        subgrant;
          [(2) describe how the eligible entity will use the 
        subgrant funds to meet all annual measurable 
        achievement objectives described in section 3122;
          [(3) describe how the eligible entity will hold 
        elementary schools and secondary schools receiving 
        funds under this subpart accountable for--
                  [(A) meeting the annual measurable 
                achievement objectives described in section 
                3122;
                  [(B) making adequate yearly progress for 
                limited English proficient children, as 
                described in section 1111(b)(2)(B); and
                  [(C) annually measuring the English 
                proficiency of limited English proficient 
                children, so that such children served by the 
                programs carried out under this part develop 
                proficiency in English while meeting State 
                academic content and student academic 
                achievement standards as required by section 
                1111(b)(1);
          [(4) describe how the eligible entity will promote 
        parental and community participation in programs for 
        limited English proficient children;
          [(5) contain an assurance that the eligible entity 
        consulted with teachers, researchers, school 
        administrators, and parents, and, if appropriate, with 
        education-related community groups and nonprofit 
        organizations, and institutions of higher education, in 
        developing such plan; and
          [(6) describe how language instruction educational 
        programs carried out under the subgrant will ensure 
        that limited English proficient children being served 
        by the programs develop English proficiency.
  [(c) Teacher English Fluency.--Each eligible entity receiving 
a subgrant under section 3114 shall include in its plan a 
certification that all teachers in any language instruction 
educational program for limited English proficient children 
that is, or will be, funded under this part are fluent in 
English and any other language used for instruction, including 
having written and oral communications skills.
  [(d) Other Requirements for Approval.--Each local plan shall 
also contain assurances that--
          [(1) each local educational agency that is included 
        in the eligible entity is complying with section 3302 
        prior to, and throughout, each school year;
          [(2) the eligible entity annually will assess the 
        English proficiency of all children with limited 
        English proficiency participating in programs funded 
        under this part;
          [(3) the eligible entity has based its proposed plan 
        on scientifically based research on teaching limited 
        English proficient children;
          [(4) the eligible entity will ensure that the 
        programs will enable children to speak, read, write, 
        and comprehend the English language and meet 
        challenging State academic content and student academic 
        achievement standards; and
          [(5) the eligible entity is not in violation of any 
        State law, including State constitutional law, 
        regarding the education of limited English proficient 
        children, consistent with sections 3126 and 3127.

             [Subpart 2--Accountability and Administration

[SEC. 3121. EVALUATIONS.

  [(a) In General.--Each eligible entity that receives a 
subgrant from a State educational agency under subpart 1 shall 
provide such agency, at the conclusion of every second fiscal 
year during which the subgrant is received, with an evaluation, 
in a form prescribed by the agency, that includes--
          [(1) a description of the programs and activities 
        conducted by the entity with funds received under 
        subpart 1 during the two immediately preceding fiscal 
        years;
          [(2) a description of the progress made by children 
        in learning the English language and meeting 
        challenging State academic content and student academic 
        achievement standards;
          [(3) the number and percentage of children in the 
        programs and activities attaining English proficiency 
        by the end of each school year, as determined by a 
        valid and reliable assessment of English proficiency; 
        and
          [(4) a description of the progress made by children 
        in meeting challenging State academic content and 
        student academic achievement standards for each of the 
        2 years after such children are no longer receiving 
        services under this part.
  [(b) Use of Evaluation.--An evaluation provided by an 
eligible entity under subsection (a) shall be used by the 
entity and the State educational agency--
          [(1) for improvement of programs and activities;
          [(2) to determine the effectiveness of programs and 
        activities in assisting children who are limited 
        English proficient to attain English proficiency (as 
        measured consistent with subsection (d)) and meet 
        challenging State academic content and student academic 
        achievement standards; and
          [(3) in determining whether or not to continue 
        funding for specific programs or activities.
  [(c) Evaluation Components.--An evaluation provided by an 
eligible entity under subsection (a) shall--
          [(1) provide an evaluation of children enrolled in a 
        program or activity conducted by the entity using funds 
        under subpart 1 (including the percentage of children) 
        who--
                  [(A) are making progress in attaining English 
                proficiency, including the percentage of 
                children who have achieved English proficiency;
                  [(B) have transitioned into classrooms not 
                tailored to limited English proficient 
                children, and have a sufficient level of 
                English proficiency to permit them to achieve 
                in English and transition into classrooms not 
                tailored to limited English proficient 
                children;
                  [(C) are meeting the same challenging State 
                academic content and student academic 
                achievement standards as all children are 
                expected to meet; and
                  [(D) are not receiving waivers for the 
                reading or language arts assessments under 
                section 1111(b)(3)(C); and
          [(2) include such other information as the State 
        educational agency may require.
  [(d) Evaluation Measures.--A State shall approve evaluation 
measures for use under subsection (c) that are designed to 
assess--
          [(1) the progress of children in attaining English 
        proficiency, including a child's level of 
        comprehension, speaking, listening, reading, and 
        writing skills in English;
          [(2) student attainment of challenging State student 
        academic achievement standards on assessments described 
        in section 1111(b)(3); and
          [(3) progress in meeting the annual measurable 
        achievement objectives described in section 3122.
  [(e) Special Rule for Specially Qualified Agencies.--Each 
specially qualified agency receiving a grant under this part 
shall provide the evaluations described in subsection (a) to 
the Secretary subject to the same requirements as apply to 
eligible entities providing such evaluations to State 
educational agencies under such subsection.

[SEC. 3122. ACHIEVEMENT OBJECTIVES AND ACCOUNTABILITY.

  [(a) Achievement Objectives.--
          [(1) In general.--Each State educational agency or 
        specially qualified agency receiving a grant under 
        subpart 1 shall develop annual measurable achievement 
        objectives for limited English proficient children 
        served under this part that relate to such children's 
        development and attainment of English proficiency while 
        meeting challenging State academic content and student 
        academic achievement standards as required by section 
        1111(b)(1).
          [(2) Development of objectives.--Such annual 
        measurable achievement objectives shall be developed in 
        a manner that--
                  [(A) reflects the amount of time an 
                individual child has been enrolled in a 
                language instruction educational program; and
                  [(B) uses consistent methods and measurements 
                to reflect the increases described in 
                subparagraphs (A)(i), (A)(ii), and (B) of 
                paragraph (3).
          [(3) Contents.--Such annual measurable achievement 
        objectives--
                  [(A) shall include--
                          [(i) at a minimum, annual increases 
                        in the number or percentage of children 
                        making progress in learning English;
                          [(ii) at a minimum, annual increases 
                        in the number or percentage of children 
                        attaining English proficiency by the 
                        end of each school year, as determined 
                        by a valid and reliable assessment of 
                        English proficiency consistent with 
                        section 1111(b)(7); and
                          [(iii) making adequate yearly 
                        progress for limited English proficient 
                        children as described in section 
                        1111(b)(2)(B); and
                  [(B) at the discretion of the agency, may 
                include the number or percentage of children 
                not receiving waivers for reading or language 
                arts assessments under section 1111(b)(3)(C), 
                but this achievement objective shall not be 
                applied to an eligible entity that, in a given 
                school year--
                          [(i) has experienced a large increase 
                        in limited English proficient children 
                        or immigrant children and youth;
                          [(ii) enrolls a statistically 
                        significant number of immigrant 
                        children and youth from countries where 
                        such children and youth had little or 
                        no access to formal education; or
                          [(iii) has a statistically 
                        significant number of immigrant 
                        children and youth who have fled from 
                        war or natural disaster.
  [(b) Accountability.--
          [(1) For states.--Each State educational agency 
        receiving a grant under subpart 1 shall hold eligible 
        entities receiving a subgrant under such subpart 
        accountable for meeting the annual measurable 
        achievement objectives under subsection (a), including 
        making adequate yearly progress for limited English 
        proficient children.
          [(2) Improvement plan.--If a State educational agency 
        determines, based on the annual measurable achievement 
        objectives described in subsection (a), that an 
        eligible entity has failed to make progress toward 
        meeting such objectives for 2 consecutive years, the 
        agency shall require the entity to develop an 
        improvement plan that will ensure that the entity meets 
        such objectives. The improvement plan shall 
        specifically address the factors that prevented the 
        entity from achieving such objectives.
          [(3) Technical assistance.--During the development of 
        the improvement plan described in paragraph (2), and 
        throughout its implementation, the State educational 
        agency shall--
                  [(A) provide technical assistance to the 
                eligible entity;
                  [(B) provide technical assistance, if 
                applicable, to schools served by such entity 
                under subpart 1 that need assistance to enable 
                the schools to meet the annual measurable 
                achievement objectives described in subsection 
                (a);
                  [(C) develop, in consultation with the 
                entity, professional development strategies and 
                activities, based on scientifically based 
                research, that the agency will use to meet such 
                objectives;
                  [(D) require such entity to utilize such 
                strategies and activities; and
                  [(E) develop, in consultation with the 
                entity, a plan to incorporate strategies and 
                methodologies, based on scientifically based 
                research, to improve the specific program or 
                method of instruction provided to limited 
                English proficient children.
          [(4) Accountability.--If a State educational agency 
        determines that an eligible entity has failed to meet 
        the annual measurable achievement objectives described 
        in subsection (a) for 4 consecutive years, the agency 
        shall--
                  [(A) require such entity to modify the 
                entity's curriculum, program, and method of 
                instruction; or
                  [(B)(i) make a determination whether the 
                entity shall continue to receive funds related 
                to the entity's failure to meet such 
                objectives; and
                  [(ii) require such entity to replace 
                educational personnel relevant to the entity's 
                failure to meet such objectives.
  [(c) Special Rule for Specially Qualified Agencies.--The 
Secretary shall hold specially qualified agencies receiving a 
grant under this subpart accountable for meeting the annual 
measurable achievement objectives described in subsection (a) 
in the same manner as State educational agencies hold eligible 
entities accountable under subsection (b).

[SEC. 3123. REPORTING REQUIREMENTS.

  [(a) States.--Based upon the evaluations provided to a State 
educational agency under section 3121, each such agency that 
receives a grant under this part shall prepare and submit every 
second year to the Secretary a report on programs and 
activities carried out by the State educational agency under 
this part and the effectiveness of such programs and activities 
in improving the education provided to children who are limited 
English proficient.
  [(b) Secretary.--Every second year, the Secretary shall 
prepare and submit to the Committee on Education and the 
Workforce of the House of Representatives and the Committee on 
Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions of the Senate a report--
          [(1) on programs and activities carried out to serve 
        limited English proficient children under this part, 
        and the effectiveness of such programs and activities 
        in improving the academic achievement and English 
        proficiency of children who are limited English 
        proficient;
          [(2) on the types of language instruction educational 
        programs used by local educational agencies or eligible 
        entities receiving funding under this part to teach 
        limited English proficient children;
          [(3) containing a critical synthesis of data reported 
        by eligible entities to States under section 3121(a);
          [(4) containing a description of technical assistance 
        and other assistance provided by State educational 
        agencies under section 3111(b)(2)(C);
          [(5) containing an estimate of the number of 
        certified or licensed teachers working in language 
        instruction educational programs and educating limited 
        English proficient children, and an estimate of the 
        number of such teachers that will be needed for the 
        succeeding 5 fiscal years;
          [(6) containing the major findings of scientifically 
        based research carried out under this part;
          [(7) containing the number of programs or activities, 
        if any, that were terminated because the entities 
        carrying out the programs or activities were not able 
        to reach program goals;
          [(8) containing the number of limited English 
        proficient children served by eligible entities 
        receiving funding under this part who were transitioned 
        out of language instruction educational programs funded 
        under this part into classrooms where instruction is 
        not tailored for limited English proficient children; 
        and
          [(9) containing other information gathered from the 
        evaluations from specially qualified agencies and other 
        reports submitted to the Secretary under this title 
        when applicable.

[SEC. 3124. COORDINATION WITH RELATED PROGRAMS.

  [In order to maximize Federal efforts aimed at serving the 
educational needs of children of limited English proficiency, 
the Secretary shall coordinate and ensure close cooperation 
with other entities carrying out programs serving language-
minority and limited English proficient children that are 
administered by the Department and other agencies.

[SEC. 3125. RULES OF CONSTRUCTION.

   [Nothing in this part shall be construed--
          [(1) to prohibit a local educational agency from 
        serving limited English proficient children 
        simultaneously with children with similar educational 
        needs, in the same educational settings where 
        appropriate;
          [(2) to require a State or a local educational agency 
        to establish, continue, or eliminate any particular 
        type of instructional program for limited English 
        proficient children; or
          [(3) to limit the preservation or use of Native 
        American languages.

[SEC. 3126. LEGAL AUTHORITY UNDER STATE LAW.

  [Nothing in this part shall be construed to negate or 
supersede State law, or the legal authority under State law of 
any State agency, State entity, or State public official, over 
programs that are under the jurisdiction of the State agency, 
entity, or official.

[SEC. 3127. CIVIL RIGHTS.

  [Nothing in this part shall be construed in a manner 
inconsistent with any Federal law guaranteeing a civil right.

[SEC. 3128. PROGRAMS FOR NATIVE AMERICANS AND PUERTO RICO.

  [Notwithstanding any other provision of this part, programs 
authorized under this part that serve Native American 
(including Native American Pacific Islander) children and 
children in the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico may include 
programs of instruction, teacher training, curriculum 
development, evaluation, and assessment designed for Native 
American children learning and studying Native American 
languages and children of limited Spanish proficiency, except 
that an outcome of programs serving such children shall be 
increased English proficiency among such children.

[SEC. 3129. PROHIBITION.

  [In carrying out this part, the Secretary shall neither 
mandate nor preclude the use of a particular curricular or 
pedagogical approach to educating limited English proficient 
children.

                    [Subpart 3--National Activities

[SEC. 3131. NATIONAL PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT PROJECT.

   [The Secretary shall use funds made available under section 
3111(c)(1)(C) to award grants on a competitive basis, for a 
period of not more than 5 years, to institutions of higher 
education (in consortia with State educational agencies or 
local educational agencies) to provide for professional 
development activities that will improve classroom instruction 
for limited English proficient children and assist educational 
personnel working with such children to meet high professional 
standards, including standards for certification and licensure 
as teachers who work in language instruction educational 
programs or serve limited English proficient children. Grants 
awarded under this subsection may be used--
          [(1) for preservice professional development programs 
        that will assist local schools and institutions of 
        higher education to upgrade the qualifications and 
        skills of educational personnel who are not certified 
        or licensed, especially educational paraprofessionals;
          [(2) for the development of curricula appropriate to 
        the needs of the consortia participants involved; and
          [(3) in conjunction with other Federal need-based 
        student financial assistance programs, for financial 
        assistance, and costs related to tuition, fees, and 
        books for enrolling in courses required to complete the 
        degree involved, to meet certification or licensing 
        requirements for teachers who work in language 
        instruction educational programs or serve limited 
        English proficient children.

                        [Subpart 4--Definitions

[SEC. 3141. ELIGIBLE ENTITY.

   [In this part, the term ``eligible entity'' means--
          [(1) one or more local educational agencies; or
          [(2) one or more local educational agencies, in 
        collaboration with an institution of higher education, 
        community-based organization, or State educational 
        agency.

      [PART B--IMPROVING LANGUAGE INSTRUCTION EDUCATIONAL PROGRAMS

[SEC. 3201. SHORT TITLE.

  [This part may be cited as the ``Improving Language 
Instruction Educational Programs For Academic Achievement 
Act''.

[SEC. 3202. PURPOSE.

   [The purpose of this part is to help ensure that limited 
English proficient children master English and meet the same 
rigorous standards for academic achievement as all children are 
expected to meet, including meeting challenging State academic 
content and student academic achievement standards by--
          [(1) promoting systemic improvement and reform of, 
        and developing accountability systems for, educational 
        programs serving limited English proficient children;
          [(2) developing language skills and multicultural 
        understanding;
          [(3) developing the English proficiency of limited 
        English proficient children and, to the extent 
        possible, the native language skills of such children;
          [(4) providing similar assistance to Native Americans 
        with certain modifications relative to the unique 
        status of Native American languages under Federal law;
          [(5) developing data collection and dissemination, 
        research, materials, and technical assistance that are 
        focused on school improvement for limited English 
        proficient children; and
          [(6) developing programs that strengthen and improve 
        the professional training of educational personnel who 
        work with limited English proficient children.

[SEC. 3203. NATIVE AMERICAN CHILDREN IN SCHOOL.

  [(a) Eligible Entities.--For the purpose of carrying out 
programs under this part for individuals served by elementary 
schools, secondary schools, and postsecondary schools operated 
predominately for Native American (including Alaska Native) 
children and youth, an Indian tribe, a tribally sanctioned 
educational authority, a Native Hawaiian or Native American 
Pacific Islander native language education organization, or an 
elementary school or secondary school that is operated or 
funded by the Bureau of Indian Affairs shall be considered to 
be a local educational agency.
  [(b) Application.--Notwithstanding any other provision of 
this part, each tribe, authority, organization, or school 
described in subsection (a) shall submit any application for 
assistance under this part directly to the Secretary along with 
timely comments on the need for the program proposed in the 
application.

[SEC. 3204. RESIDENTS OF THE TERRITORIES AND FREELY ASSOCIATED STATES.

  [For the purpose of carrying out programs under this part in 
the outlying areas, the term ``local educational agency'' 
includes public institutions or agencies whose mission is the 
preservation and maintenance of native languages.

            [Subpart 1--Program Development and Enhancement

[SEC. 3211. FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE FOR LANGUAGE INSTRUCTION EDUCATIONAL 
                    PROGRAMS.

   [The purpose of this subpart is to assist local educational 
agencies, institutions of higher education, and community-based 
organizations, through the grants authorized under sections 
3212 and 3213--
          [(1) to develop and enhance their capacity to provide 
        high-quality instruction through language instruction 
        educational programs or special alternative instruction 
        programs to limited English proficient children; and
          [(2) to help such children--
                  [(A) develop English proficiency and, to the 
                extent possible, proficiency in their native 
                language; and
                  [(B) meet the same challenging State academic 
                content and student academic achievement 
                standards as all children are expected to meet 
                under section 1111(b)(1).

[SEC. 3212. PROGRAM ENHANCEMENT ACTIVITIES.

  [(a) Program Authorized.--
          [(1) Authority.--
                  [(A) In general.--The Secretary is authorized 
                to award grants to eligible entities having 
                applications approved under section 3214 to 
                enable such entities to provide innovative, 
                locally designed, high-quality instruction to 
                limited English proficient children, by 
                expanding, developing, or strengthening 
                language instruction educational programs or 
                special alternative instruction programs.
                  [(B) Period.--Each grant awarded under this 
                section shall be awarded for a period of 3 
                years.
          [(2) Authorized activities.--
                  [(A) Mandatory activities.--Grants awarded 
                under this section shall be used for--
                          [(i) developing, implementing, 
                        expanding, or enhancing comprehensive 
                        preschool, elementary, or secondary 
                        education programs for limited English 
                        proficient children, that are--
                                  [(I) aligned with State and 
                                local academic content and 
                                student academic achievement 
                                standards, and local school 
                                reform efforts; and
                                  [(II) coordinated with 
                                related academic services for 
                                children;
                          [(ii) providing high-quality 
                        professional development to classroom 
                        teachers, administrators, and other 
                        school or community-based organization 
                        personnel to improve the instruction 
                        and assessment of limited English 
                        proficient children; and
                          [(iii) annually assessing the English 
                        proficiency of all limited English 
                        proficient children served by 
                        activities carried out under this 
                        section.
                  [(B) Permissible activities.--Grants awarded 
                under this section may be used for--
                          [(i) implementing programs to upgrade 
                        the reading and other academic skills 
                        of limited English proficient children;
                          [(ii) developing accountability 
                        systems to monitor the academic 
                        progress of limited English proficient 
                        and formerly limited English proficient 
                        children;
                          [(iii) implementing family education 
                        programs and parent outreach and 
                        training activities designed to assist 
                        parents to become active participants 
                        in the education of their children;
                          [(iv) improving the instruction 
                        programs for limited English proficient 
                        children by identifying, acquiring, and 
                        applying effective curricula, 
                        instruction materials (including 
                        materials provided through technology), 
                        and assessments that are all aligned 
                        with State and local standards;
                          [(v) providing intensified 
                        instruction, including tutorials and 
                        academic, or vocational and technical, 
                        training, for limited English 
                        proficient children;
                          [(vi) adapting best practice models 
                        for meeting the needs of limited 
                        English proficient children;
                          [(vii) assisting limited English 
                        proficient children with disabilities;
                          [(viii) implementing applied learning 
                        activities such as service learning to 
                        enhance and support comprehensive 
                        elementary and secondary language 
                        instruction educational programs;
                          [(ix) acquiring or developing 
                        education technology or instruction 
                        materials for limited English 
                        proficient children, including 
                        materials in languages other than 
                        English;
                          [(x) participating in electronic 
                        networks for materials, training, and 
                        communication, and incorporating 
                        information derived from such 
                        participation in curricula and 
                        programs; and
                          [(xi) carrying out such other 
                        activities related to the purpose of 
                        this part as the Secretary may approve.
  [(b) Priority.--In awarding grants under this section, the 
Secretary may give priority to an entity that--
          [(1) serves a school district--
                  [(A) that has a total district enrollment 
                that is less than 10,000 students; or
                  [(B) with a large percentage or number of 
                limited English proficient children; and
          [(2) has limited or no experience in serving limited 
        English proficient children.
  [(c) Eligible Entity.--In this section, the term ``eligible 
entity'' means--
          [(1) one or more local educational agencies;
          [(2) one or more local educational agencies in 
        collaboration with an institution of higher education, 
        community-based organization, or State educational 
        agency; or
          [(3) a community-based organization or an institution 
        of higher education that has an application approved by 
        the local educational agency to participate in programs 
        carried out under this subpart by enhancing early 
        childhood education or family education programs or 
        conducting instruction programs that supplement the 
        educational services provided by a local educational 
        agency.

[SEC. 3213. COMPREHENSIVE SCHOOL AND SYSTEMWIDE IMPROVEMENT ACTIVITIES.

  [(a) Program Authorized.--
          [(1) Authority.--The Secretary is authorized to award 
        grants to eligible entities having applications 
        approved under section 3214 to enable such entities to 
        develop and implement language instruction educational 
        programs, and improve, reform, or upgrade programs or 
        operations that serve significant percentages or 
        numbers of limited English proficient children.
          [(2) Mandatory activities.--Grants awarded under this 
        section shall be used for--
                  [(A) improving instruction programs for 
                limited English proficient children by 
                acquiring and upgrading curricula and related 
                instruction materials;
                  [(B) aligning the activities carried out 
                under this section with State and local school 
                reform efforts;
                  [(C) providing training, aligned with State 
                and local standards, to school personnel and 
                participating community-based organization 
                personnel to improve the instruction and 
                assessment of limited English proficient 
                children;
                  [(D) developing and implementing plans, 
                coordinated with plans for programs carried out 
                under title II of the Higher Education Act of 
                1965 (where applicable), and title II of this 
                Act (where applicable), to recruit teachers 
                trained to serve limited English proficient 
                children;
                  [(E) implementing culturally and 
                linguistically appropriate family education 
                programs, or parent outreach and training 
                activities, that are designed to assist parents 
                of limited English proficient children to 
                become active participants in the education of 
                their children;
                  [(F) coordinating the activities carried out 
                under this section with other programs, such as 
                programs carried out under this title;
                  [(G) providing services to meet the full 
                range of the educational needs of limited 
                English proficient children;
                  [(H) annually assessing the English 
                proficiency of all limited English proficient 
                children served by the activities carried out 
                under this section; and
                  [(I) developing or improving accountability 
                systems to monitor the academic progress of 
                limited English proficient children.
          [(3) Permissible activities.--Grants awarded under 
        this section may be used for--
                  [(A) implementing programs to upgrade reading 
                and other academic skills of limited English 
                proficient children;
                  [(B) developing and using educational 
                technology to improve learning, assessments, 
                and accountability to meet the needs of limited 
                English proficient children;
                  [(C) implementing scientifically based 
                research programs to meet the needs of limited 
                English proficient children;
                  [(D) providing tutorials and academic, or 
                vocational and technical, training for limited 
                English proficient children;
                  [(E) developing and implementing State and 
                local academic content and student academic 
                achievement standards for learning English as a 
                second language, as well as for learning other 
                languages;
                  [(F) developing and implementing programs for 
                limited English proficient children to meet the 
                needs of changing populations of such children;
                  [(G) implementing policies to ensure that 
                limited English proficient children have access 
                to other education programs (other than 
                programs designed to address limited English 
                proficiency);
                  [(H) assisting limited English proficient 
                children with disabilities;
                  [(I) developing and implementing programs to 
                help children become proficient in English and 
                other languages;
                  [(J) acquiring or developing education 
                technology or instruction materials for limited 
                English proficient children, including 
                materials in languages other than English;
                  [(K) participating in electronic networks for 
                materials, training, and communication and 
                incorporating information derived from such 
                participation in curricula and programs; and
                  [(L) carrying out such other activities 
                related to the purpose of this part as the 
                Secretary may approve.
          [(4) Special rule.--
                  [(A) Planning.--A recipient of a grant under 
                this section, before carrying out activities 
                under this section, shall plan, train 
                personnel, develop curricula, and acquire or 
                develop materials, but shall not use funds made 
                available under this section for planning 
                purposes for more than 45 days.
                  [(B) Commencement of activities.--The 
                recipient shall commence carrying out 
                activities under this section not later than 
                the later of--
                          [(i) the beginning of the first 
                        school year that begins after the grant 
                        is received; or
                          [(ii) 30 days after the date of 
                        receipt of the grant.
  [(b) Availability of Appropriations.--
          [(1) Reservation of funds for continued payments.--
                  [(A) Covered grant.--In this paragraph, the 
                term ``covered grant'' means a grant--
                          [(i) that was awarded under section 
                        7112, 7113, 7114, or 7115 (as such 
                        sections were in effect on the day 
                        before the date of enactment of the No 
                        Child Left Behind Act of 2001); and
                          [(ii) for which the grant period has 
                        not ended.
                  [(B) Reservation.--For any fiscal year that 
                is part of the grant period of a covered grant, 
                the Secretary shall reserve funds for the 
                payments described in subparagraph (C) from the 
                amount appropriated for the fiscal year under 
                section 3001(a) and made available for carrying 
                out this section.
                  [(C) Payments.--The Secretary shall continue 
                to make grant payments to each entity that 
                received a covered grant, in accordance with 
                the terms of that grant, for the duration of 
                the grant period of the grant, to carry out 
                activities in accordance with the appropriate 
                section described in subparagraph (A)(i).
          [(2) Availability.--Of the amount appropriated for a 
        fiscal year under section 3001(a) that is made 
        available to carry out this section, and that remains 
        after the Secretary reserves funds for payments under 
        paragraph (1)--
                  [(A) not less than one-third of the remainder 
                shall be used to award grants to eligible 
                entities for activities carried out within an 
                entire school district; and
                  [(B) not less than two-thirds of the 
                remainder shall be used to award grants to 
                eligible entities for activities carried out 
                within individual schools.
  [(c) Priority.--In awarding grants under this section, the 
Secretary shall give priority to an applicant that--
          [(1) experiences a significant increase in the number 
        or percentage of limited English proficient children 
        enrolled in the applicant's programs and has limited or 
        no experience in serving limited English proficient 
        children;
          [(2) is a local educational agency that serves a 
        school district that has a total district enrollment 
        that is less than 10,000 students;
          [(3) demonstrates that the applicant has a proven 
        track record of success in helping limited English 
        proficient children learn English and meet high 
        academic standards; or
          [(4) serves a school district with a large number or 
        percentage of limited English proficient children.
  [(d) Eligible Entities.--In this section, the term ``eligible 
entity'' means--
          [(1) one or more local educational agencies; or
          [(2) one or more local educational agencies, in 
        collaboration with an institution of higher education, 
        community-based organization, or State educational 
        agency.

[SEC. 3214. APPLICATIONS.

  [(a) In General.--
          [(1) Secretary.--To receive a grant under this 
        subpart, an eligible entity described in section 3212 
        or 3213 shall submit an application to the Secretary at 
        such time, in such form, and containing such 
        information as the Secretary may require.
          [(2) State educational agency.--The eligible entity, 
        with the exception of schools funded by the Bureau of 
        Indian Affairs, shall submit a copy of the application 
        submitted by the entity under this section to the State 
        educational agency.
  [(b) State Review and Comments.--
          [(1) Deadline.--The State educational agency, not 
        later than 45 days after receipt of an application 
        under this section, shall review the application and 
        submit the written comments of the agency regarding the 
        application to the Secretary.
          [(2) Comments.--
                  [(A) Submission of comments.--Regarding 
                applications submitted under this subpart, the 
                State educational agency shall--
                          [(i) submit to the Secretary written 
                        comments regarding all such 
                        applications; and
                          [(ii) submit to each eligible entity 
                        the comments that pertain to such 
                        entity.
                  [(B) Subject.--For purposes of this subpart, 
                such comments shall address--
                          [(i) how the activities to be carried 
                        out under the grant will further the 
                        academic achievement and English 
                        proficiency of limited English 
                        proficient children served under the 
                        grant; and
                          [(ii) how the grant application is 
                        consistent with the State plan required 
                        under section 1111.
  [(c) Eligible Entity Comments.--An eligible entity may submit 
to the Secretary comments that address the comments submitted 
by the State educational agency.
  [(d) Comment Consideration.--In making grants under this 
subpart, the Secretary shall take into consideration comments 
made by State educational agencies.
  [(e) Waiver.--Notwithstanding subsection (b), the Secretary 
is authorized to waive the review requirement specified in 
subsection (b) if a State educational agency can demonstrate 
that such review requirement may impede such agency's ability 
to fulfill the requirements of participation in the program 
authorized in section 3224, particularly such agency's ability 
to carry out data collection efforts and such agency's ability 
to provide technical assistance to local educational agencies 
not receiving funds under this subpart.
  [(f) Required Documentation.--Such application shall include 
documentation that--
          [(1) the applicant has the qualified personnel 
        required to develop, administer, and implement the 
        program proposed in the application; and
          [(2) the leadership personnel of each school 
        participating in the program have been involved in the 
        development and planning of the program in the school.
  [(g) Contents.--
          [(1) In general.--An application for a grant under 
        this subpart shall contain the following:
                  [(A) A description of the need for the 
                proposed program, including--
                          [(i) data on the number of limited 
                        English proficient children in the 
                        school or school district to be served;
                          [(ii) information on the 
                        characteristics of the children, 
                        including--
                                  [(I) the native languages of 
                                the children;
                                  [(II) the proficiency of the 
                                children in English and their 
                                native language;
                                  [(III) achievement data 
                                (current as of the date of 
                                submission of the application) 
                                for the limited English 
                                proficient children in--
                                          [(aa) reading or 
                                        language arts (in 
                                        English and in the 
                                        native language, if 
                                        applicable); and
                                          [(bb) mathematics;
                                  [(IV) a comparison of that 
                                data for the children with that 
                                data for the English proficient 
                                peers of the children; and
                                  [(V) the previous schooling 
                                experiences of the children;
                          [(iii) the professional development 
                        needs of the instruction personnel who 
                        will provide services for the limited 
                        English proficient children under the 
                        proposed program; and
                          [(iv) how the services provided 
                        through the grant will supplement the 
                        basic services provided to limited 
                        English proficient children.
                  [(B) A description of the program to be 
                implemented and how such program's design--
                          [(i) relates to the linguistic and 
                        academic needs of the limited English 
                        proficient children to be served;
                          [(ii) will ensure that the services 
                        provided through the program will 
                        supplement the basic services the 
                        applicant provides to limited English 
                        proficient children;
                          [(iii) will ensure that the program 
                        is coordinated with other programs 
                        under this Act and other Acts;
                          [(iv) involves the parents of the 
                        limited English proficient children to 
                        be served;
                          [(v) ensures accountability in 
                        achieving high academic standards; and
                          [(vi) promotes coordination of 
                        services for the limited English 
                        proficient children to be served and 
                        their families.
                  [(C) A description, if appropriate, of the 
                applicant's collaborative activities with 
                institutions of higher education, community-
                based organizations, local educational agencies 
                or State educational agencies, private schools, 
                nonprofit organizations, or businesses in 
                carrying out the proposed program.
                  [(D) An assurance that the applicant will not 
                reduce the level of State and local funds that 
                the applicant expends for language instruction 
                educational programs or special alternative 
                instruction programs if the applicant receives 
                an award under this subpart.
                  [(E) An assurance that the applicant will 
                employ teachers in the proposed program who, 
                individually or in combination, are proficient 
                in--
                          [(i) English, with respect to 
                        written, as well as oral, communication 
                        skills; and
                          [(ii) the native language of the 
                        majority of the children who the 
                        teachers teach, if instruction in the 
                        program is in the native language as 
                        well as English.
                  [(F) A budget for the grant funds.
          [(2) Additional information.--Each application for a 
        grant under section 3213 shall--
                  [(A) describe--
                          [(i) current services (as of the date 
                        of submission of the application) the 
                        applicant provides to limited English 
                        proficient children;
                          [(ii) what services limited English 
                        proficient children will receive under 
                        the grant that such children will not 
                        otherwise receive;
                          [(iii) how funds received under this 
                        subpart will be integrated with all 
                        other Federal, State, local, and 
                        private resources that may be used to 
                        serve limited English proficient 
                        children;
                          [(iv) specific achievement and school 
                        retention goals for the children to be 
                        served by the proposed program and how 
                        progress toward achieving such goals 
                        will be measured; and
                          [(v) the current family education 
                        programs (as of the date of submission 
                        of the application) of the eligible 
                        entity, if applicable; and
                  [(B) provide assurances that--
                          [(i) the program funded with the 
                        grant will be integrated with the 
                        overall educational program of the 
                        children served through the proposed 
                        program; and
                          [(ii) the application has been 
                        developed in consultation with parents 
                        and other representatives of the 
                        children to be served in such program.
  [(h) Approval of Applications.--An application for a grant 
under this subpart may be approved only if the Secretary 
determines that--
          [(1) the program proposed in the application will use 
        qualified personnel, including personnel who are 
        proficient in the language or languages used for 
        instruction;
          [(2) in designing the program, the eligible entity 
        has, after consultation with appropriate private school 
        officials--
                  [(A) taken into account the needs of children 
                in nonprofit private elementary schools and 
                secondary schools; and
                  [(B) in a manner consistent with the number 
                of such children enrolled in such schools in 
                the area to be served, whose educational needs 
                are of the type and whose language, and grade 
                levels are of a similar type to the needs, 
                language, and grade levels that the program is 
                intended to address, provided for the 
                participation of such children on a basis 
                comparable to the basis on which public school 
                children participate;
          [(3)(A) student evaluation and assessment procedures 
        in the program are valid and reliable for limited 
        English proficient children; and
          [(B) limited English proficient children with 
        disabilities will be identified and served through the 
        program in accordance with the requirements of the 
        Individuals with Disabilities Education Act;
          [(4) Federal funds made available for the program 
        will be used to supplement the State and local funds 
        that, in the absence of such Federal funds, would be 
        expended for special programs for children of limited 
        English proficient individuals, and in no case to 
        supplant such State and local funds, except that 
        nothing in this paragraph shall be construed to 
        preclude a local educational agency from using funds 
        made available under this subpart--
                  [(A) for activities carried out under an 
                order of a Federal or State court respecting 
                services to be provided to such children; or
                  [(B) to carry out a plan approved by the 
                Secretary as adequate under title VI of the 
                Civil Rights Act of 1964 with respect to 
                services to be provided to such children;
          [(5)(A) the assistance provided through the grant 
        will contribute toward building the capacity of the 
        eligible entity to provide a program on a regular 
        basis, similar to the proposed program, that will be of 
        sufficient size, scope, and quality to promise 
        significant improvement in the education of limited 
        English proficient children; and
          [(B) the eligible entity will have the resources and 
        commitment to continue the program of sufficient size, 
        scope, and quality when assistance under this subpart 
        is reduced or no longer available; and
          [(6) the eligible entity will use State and national 
        dissemination sources for program design and 
        dissemination of results and products.
  [(i) Consideration.--In determining whether to approve an 
application under this subpart, the Secretary shall give 
consideration to--
          [(1) the degree to which the program for which 
        assistance is sought involves the collaborative efforts 
        of institutions of higher education, community-based 
        organizations, the appropriate local educational agency 
        and State educational agency, or businesses; and
          [(2) whether the application provides for training 
        for personnel participating in, or preparing to 
        participate in, a program that will assist such 
        personnel in meeting State and local certification 
        requirements.

[SEC. 3215. CAPACITY BUILDING.

  [Each recipient of a grant under this subpart shall use the 
grant in ways that will build such recipient's capacity to 
continue to offer high-quality language instruction educational 
programs and special alternative instruction programs to 
limited English proficient children after Federal assistance is 
reduced or eliminated.

[SEC. 3216. PROGRAMS FOR NATIVE AMERICANS AND PUERTO RICO.

  [Notwithstanding any other provision of this part, programs 
authorized under this subpart that serve Native American 
(including Native American Pacific Islander) children and 
children in the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico may include 
programs of instruction, teacher training, curriculum 
development, evaluation, and assessment designed for Native 
American children learning and studying Native American 
languages and children of limited Spanish proficiency, except 
that an outcome of programs serving such children shall be 
increased English proficiency among such children.

[SEC. 3217. EVALUATIONS.

  [(a) Evaluation.--Each recipient of funds under this subpart 
for a program shall annually conduct an evaluation of the 
program and submit to the Secretary a report concerning the 
evaluation, in the form prescribed by the Secretary.
  [(b) Use of Evaluation.--Such evaluation shall be used by the 
grant recipient--
          [(1) for program improvement;
          [(2) to further define the program's goals and 
        objectives; and
          [(3) to determine program effectiveness.
  [(c) Evaluation Report Components.--In preparing the 
evaluation reports, the recipient shall--
          [(1) use the data provided in the application 
        submitted by the recipient under section 3214 as 
        baseline data against which to report academic 
        achievement and gains in English proficiency for 
        children in the program;
          [(2) disaggregate the results of the evaluation by 
        gender, native languages spoken by children, 
        socioeconomic status, and whether the children have 
        disabilities;
          [(3) include data on the progress of the recipient in 
        achieving the objectives of the program, including data 
        demonstrating the extent to which children served by 
        the program are meeting the challenging State academic 
        content and student academic achievement standards, and 
        including data comparing limited English proficient 
        children with English proficient children with regard 
        to school retention and academic achievement 
        concerning--
                  [(A) reading and language arts;
                  [(B) English proficiency;
                  [(C) mathematics; and
                  [(D) the native language of the children, if 
                the program develops native language 
                proficiency;
          [(4) include information on the extent that 
        professional development activities carried out through 
        the program have resulted in improved classroom 
        practices and improved student academic 
        achievement;lude a description of how the activities 
        carried out through the program are coordinated and 
        integrated with the other Federal, State, or local 
        programs serving limited English proficient children; 
        and
          [(6) include such other information as the Secretary 
        may require.

[SEC. 3218. CONSTRUCTION.

  [Nothing in this subpart shall be construed to prohibit a 
local educational agency from serving limited English 
proficient children simultaneously with children with similar 
educational needs, in the same educational settings where 
appropriate.

          [Subpart 2--Research, Evaluation, and Dissemination

[SEC. 3221. AUTHORITY.

  [(a) In General.--The Secretary is authorized to conduct data 
collection, dissemination, research, and ongoing program 
evaluation activities in accordance with the provisions of this 
subpart for the purpose of improving language instruction 
educational programs and special alternative instruction 
programs for limited English proficient children.
  [(b) Competitive Awards.--Research and program evaluation 
activities carried out under this subpart shall be supported 
through competitive grants, contracts, and cooperative 
agreements awarded to institutions of higher education, 
nonprofit organizations, State educational agencies, and local 
educational agencies.
  [(c) Administration.--The Secretary shall conduct data 
collection, dissemination, and ongoing program evaluation 
activities authorized by this subpart through the Office of 
English Language Acquisition, Language Enhancement, and 
Academic Achievement for Limited English Proficient Students.

[SEC. 3222. RESEARCH.

  [(a) Administration.--The Secretary shall conduct research 
activities authorized by this subpart through the Institute of 
Education Sciences in coordination and collaboration with the 
Office of English Language Acquisition, Language Enhancement, 
and Academic Achievement for Limited English Proficient 
Students.
  [(b) Requirements.--Such research activities--
          [(1) shall have a practical application to teachers, 
        counselors, paraprofessionals, school administrators, 
        parents, and others involved in improving the education 
        of limited English proficient children and their 
        families;
          [(2) may include research on effective instruction 
        practices for multilingual classes, and on effective 
        instruction strategies to be used by a teacher or other 
        staff member who does not know the native language of a 
        limited English proficient child in the teacher's or 
        staff member's classroom;
          [(3) may include establishing (through the National 
        Center for Education Statistics in consultation with 
        experts in second language acquisition and 
        scientifically based research on teaching limited 
        English proficient children) a common definition of 
        ``limited English proficient child'' for purposes of 
        national data collection; and
          [(4) shall be administered by individuals with 
        expertise in second language acquisition, 
        scientifically based research on teaching limited 
        English proficient children, and the needs of limited 
        English proficient children and their families.
  [(c) Field-Initiated Research.--
          [(1) In general.--The Secretary shall reserve not 
        less than 5 percent of the funds made available to 
        carry out this section for field-initiated research 
        conducted by recipients of grants under subpart 1 or 
        this subpart who have received such grants within the 
        previous 5 years. Such research may provide for 
        longitudinal studies of limited English proficient 
        children or teachers who serve such children, 
        monitoring the education of such children from entry 
        into language instruction educational programs through 
        secondary school completion.
          [(2) Applications.--An applicant for assistance under 
        this subsection may submit an application for such 
        assistance to the Secretary at the same time as the 
        applicant submits another application under subpart 1 
        or this subpart. The Secretary shall complete a review 
        of such applications on a timely basis to allow the 
        activities carried out under research and program 
        grants to be coordinated when recipients are awarded 
        two or more of such grants.
  [(d) Consultation.--The Secretary shall consult with 
agencies, organizations, and individuals that are engaged in 
research and practice on the education of limited English 
proficient children, language instruction educational programs, 
or related research, to identify areas of study and activities 
to be funded under this section.
  [(e) Data Collection.--The Secretary shall provide for the 
collection of data on limited English proficient children as 
part of the data systems operated by the Department.

[SEC. 3223. ACADEMIC EXCELLENCE AWARDS.

  [(a) Authority.--The Secretary may make grants to State 
educational agencies to assist the agencies in recognizing 
local educational agencies and other public and nonprofit 
entities whose programs have--
          [(1) demonstrated significant progress in assisting 
        limited English proficient children to learn English 
        according to age appropriate and developmentally 
        appropriate standards; and
          [(2) demonstrated significant progress in assisting 
        limited English proficient children to meet, according 
        to age appropriate and developmentally appropriate 
        standards, the same challenging State academic content 
        and student academic achievement standards as all 
        children are expected to meet.
  [(b) Applications.--A State educational agency desiring a 
grant under this section shall include an application for such 
grant in the application submitted by the agency under section 
3224(e).

[SEC. 3224. STATE GRANT PROGRAM.

  [(a) State Grant Program.--The Secretary is authorized to 
make an award to a State educational agency that demonstrates, 
to the satisfaction of the Secretary, that such agency, through 
such agency's programs and other Federal education programs, 
effectively provides for the education of limited English 
proficient children within the State.
  [(b) Payments.--The amount paid to a State educational agency 
under subsection (a) shall not exceed 5 percent of the total 
amount awarded to local educational agencies and entities 
within the State under subpart 1 for the previous fiscal year, 
except that in no case shall the amount paid by the Secretary 
to any State educational agency under this subsection for any 
fiscal year be less than $100,000.
  [(c) Use of Funds.--
          [(1) In general.--A State educational agency shall 
        use funds awarded under this section--
                  [(A) to assist local educational agencies in 
                the State with activities that--
                          [(i) consist of program design, 
                        capacity building, assessment of 
                        student academic achievement, program 
                        evaluation, and development of data 
                        collection and accountability systems 
                        for limited English proficient 
                        children; and
                          [(ii) are aligned with State reform 
                        efforts; and
                  [(B) to collect data on the State's limited 
                English proficient populations and document the 
                services available to all such populations.
          [(2) Training.--The State educational agency may also 
        use funds provided under this section for the training 
        of State educational agency personnel in educational 
        issues affecting limited English proficient children.
          [(3) Special rule.--Recipients of funds under this 
        section shall not restrict the provision of services 
        under this section to federally funded programs.
  [(d) State Consultation.--A State educational agency 
receiving funds under this section shall consult with 
recipients of grants under this subpart and other individuals 
or organizations involved in the development or operation of 
programs serving limited English proficient children to ensure 
that such funds are used in a manner consistent with the 
requirements of this subpart.
  [(e) Applications.--A State educational agency desiring to 
receive funds under this section shall submit an application to 
the Secretary at such time, in such form, and containing such 
information and assurances as the Secretary may require.
  [(f) Supplement, Not Supplant.--Federal funds made available 
under this section for any fiscal year shall be used by the 
State educational agency to supplement and, to the extent 
practical, to increase the State funds that, in the absence of 
such Federal funds, would be made available for the purposes 
described in this section, and in no case to supplant such 
State funds.
  [(g) Report to the Secretary.--A State educational agency 
receiving an award under this section shall provide for the 
annual submission of a summary report to the Secretary 
describing such State's use of the funds made available through 
the award.

[SEC. 3225. INSTRUCTION MATERIALS DEVELOPMENT.

  [(a) In General.--The Secretary may make grants for the 
development, publication, and dissemination of high-quality 
instruction materials--
          [(1) in Native American languages (including Native 
        Hawaiian languages and the language of Native American 
        Pacific Islanders), and the language of natives of the 
        outlying areas, for which instruction materials are not 
        readily available; and
          [(2) in other low-incidence languages in the United 
        States for which instruction materials are not readily 
        available.
  [(b) Priority.--In making the grants, the Secretary shall 
give priority to applicants for the grants who propose--
          [(1) to develop instruction materials in languages 
        indigenous to the United States or the outlying areas; 
        and
          [(2) to develop and evaluate materials, in 
        collaboration with entities carrying out activities 
        assisted under subpart 1 and this subpart, that are 
        consistent with challenging State academic content and 
        student academic achievement standards.

                  [Subpart 3--Professional Development

[SEC. 3231. PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT GRANTS.

  [(a) Purpose.--The purpose of this section is to provide 
assistance to prepare educators to improve educational services 
for limited English proficient children by--
          [(1) supporting professional development programs and 
        activities to prepare teachers, pupil service 
        personnel, administrators, and other educational 
        personnel working in language instruction educational 
        programs to provide effective services to limited 
        English proficient children;
          [(2) incorporating curricula and resources concerning 
        appropriate and effective instruction and assessment 
        methodologies specific to limited English proficient 
        children into preservice and inservice professional 
        development programs;
          [(3) upgrading the qualifications and skills of non-
        certified educational personnel, including 
        paraprofessionals, to enable such personnel to meet 
        high professional standards for educating limited 
        English proficient children;
          [(4) improving the quality of professional 
        development programs in schools or departments of 
        education at institutions of higher education, for 
        educational personnel serving, or preparing to serve, 
        limited English proficient children; and
          [(5) supporting the recruitment and training of 
        prospective educational personnel to serve limited 
        English proficient children by providing fellowships 
        for undergraduate, graduate, doctoral, and post-
        doctoral study related to the instruction of such 
        children.
  [(b) Authorization.--
          [(1) In general.--The Secretary is authorized to 
        award grants under this section to--
                  [(A) State educational agencies;
                  [(B) local educational agencies;
                  [(C) institutions of higher education; or
                  [(D) consortia of one or more local 
                educational agencies, State educational 
                agencies, institutions of higher education, 
                for-profit organizations, or nonprofit 
                organizations.
          [(2) Duration.--Each grant awarded under this section 
        shall be awarded for a period of not more than 4 years.
  [(c) Authorized Activities.--Grants awarded under this 
section shall be used to conduct high-quality professional 
development programs and effective activities to improve the 
quality of instruction and services provided to limited English 
proficient children, including--
          [(1) implementing preservice and inservice 
        professional development programs for teachers who 
        serve limited English proficient children, 
        administrators, and other educational personnel who are 
        preparing to provide educational services for limited 
        English proficient children, including professional 
        development programs that assist limited English 
        proficient children to attain English proficiency;
          [(2) implementing school-based collaborative efforts 
        among teachers to improve instruction in core academic 
        subjects, especially reading, for limited English 
        proficient children;
          [(3) developing and implementing programs to assist 
        beginning teachers who serve limited English proficient 
        children with transitioning to the teaching profession, 
        including programs that provide mentoring and team 
        teaching with trained and experienced teachers;
          [(4) implementing programs that support effective 
        teacher use of education technologies to improve 
        instruction and assessment;
          [(5) developing curricular materials and assessments 
        for teachers that are appropriate to the needs of 
        limited English proficient children, and that are 
        aligned with challenging State academic content and 
        student academic achievement standards, including 
        materials and assessments that ensure limited English 
        proficient children attain English proficiency;
          [(6) integrating and coordinating activities with 
        entities carrying out other programs consistent with 
        the purpose of this section and supported under this 
        Act, or other Acts as appropriate;
          [(7) developing and implementing career ladder 
        programs to upgrade the qualifications and skills of 
        non-certified educational personnel working in, or 
        preparing to work in, language instruction educational 
        programs to enable such personnel to meet high 
        professional standards, including standards for 
        certification and licensure as teachers;
          [(8) developing and implementing activities to help 
        recruit and train secondary school students as teachers 
        who serve limited English proficient children;
          [(9) providing fellowships and assistance for costs 
        related to enrollment in a course of study at an 
        institution of higher education that addresses the 
        instruction of limited English proficient children in 
        such areas as teacher training, program administration, 
        research, evaluation, and curriculum development, and 
        for the support of dissertation research related to 
        such study, except that any person receiving such a 
        fellowship or assistance shall agree to--
                  [(A) work in an activity related to improving 
                the educational services for limited English 
                proficient children authorized under this 
                subpart, including work as a teacher that 
                serves limited English proficient children, for 
                a period of time equivalent to the period of 
                time during which such person receives 
                assistance under this paragraph; or
                  [(B) repay such assistance; and
          [(10) carrying out such other activities as are 
        consistent with the purpose of this section.
  [(d) Application.--
          [(1) In general.--Each eligible entity desiring a 
        grant under this section shall submit an application to 
        the Secretary at such time, in such form, and 
        containing such information as the Secretary may 
        require.
          [(2) Contents.--Each application shall--
                  [(A) describe the programs and activities 
                proposed to be developed, implemented, and 
                administered under the award;
                  [(B) describe how the applicant has consulted 
                with, and assessed the needs of, public and 
                private schools serving limited English 
                proficient children to determine such schools' 
                need for, and the design of, the program for 
                which funds are sought; and
                  [(C) describe how the programs and activities 
                to be carried out under the award will be used 
                to ensure that limited English proficient 
                children meet challenging State academic 
                content and student academic achievement 
                standards and attain English proficiency.
          [(3) Special rule.--An eligible entity that proposes 
        to conduct a master's-level or doctoral-level program 
        with funds received under this section shall include in 
        the entity's application an assurance that such program 
        will include a training practicum in a local elementary 
        school or secondary school program serving limited 
        English proficient children.
          [(4) Outreach and technical assistance.--The 
        Secretary shall provide for outreach and technical 
        assistance to institutions of higher education eligible 
        for assistance under title III of the Higher Education 
        Act of 1965, and institutions of higher education that 
        are operated or funded by the Bureau of Indian Affairs, 
        to facilitate the participation of such institutions in 
        programs and activities under this section.
          [(5) Distribution rule.--In making awards under this 
        section, the Secretary shall ensure adequate 
        representation of Hispanic-serving institutions that 
        demonstrate competence and experience in carrying out 
        the programs and activities authorized under this 
        section and that are otherwise qualified.
  [(e) Priorities in Awarding Grants.--
          [(1) Grants to agencies.--In awarding grants to State 
        educational agencies and local educational agencies 
        under this section, the Secretary shall give priority 
        to agencies that propose programs and activities 
        designed to implement professional development programs 
        for teachers and educational personnel who are 
        providing or preparing to provide educational services 
        for limited English proficient children, including 
        services provided through language instruction 
        educational programs, that ensure such children attain 
        English proficiency and meet challenging State academic 
        content and student academic achievement standards.
          [(2) Grants to institutions of higher education.--In 
        awarding grants to institutions of higher education 
        under this section, the Secretary shall give priority 
        to institutions that propose programs and activities to 
        recruit and upgrade the qualifications and skills of 
        certified and non-certified educational personnel by 
        offering degree programs that prepare beginning 
        teachers to serve limited English proficient children.
  [(f) Program Evaluations.--Each recipient of an award under 
this section for a program or activity shall annually conduct 
an independent evaluation of the program or activity and submit 
to the Secretary a report containing such evaluation. Such 
report shall include information on--
          [(1) the program or activity conducted by the 
        recipient to provide high-quality professional 
        development to participants in such program or 
        activity;
          [(2) the number of participants served through the 
        program or activity, the number of participants who 
        completed the requirements of the program or activity, 
        and the number of participants who took positions in an 
        instruction setting with limited English proficient 
        children;
          [(3) the effectiveness of the program or activity in 
        imparting the professional skills necessary for 
        participants to achieve the objectives of the program 
        or activity; and
          [(4) the teaching effectiveness of graduates of the 
        program or activity or other participants who have 
        completed the program or activity.

           [Subpart 4--Emergency Immigrant Education Program

[SEC. 3241. PURPOSE.

   [The purpose of this subpart is to assist eligible local 
educational agencies that experience unexpectedly large 
increases in their student population due to immigration--
          [(1) to provide high-quality instruction to immigrant 
        children and youth; and
          [(2) to help such children and youth--
                  [(A) with their transition into American 
                society; and
                  [(B) meet the same challenging State academic 
                content and student academic achievement 
                standards as all children are expected to meet.

[SEC. 3242. STATE ADMINISTRATIVE COSTS.

  [For any fiscal year, a State educational agency may reserve 
not more than 1.5 percent (2 percent if the State educational 
agency distributes funds received under this subpart to local 
educational agencies on a competitive basis) of the amount 
allotted to such agency under section 3244 to pay the costs of 
performing such agency's administrative functions under this 
subpart.

[SEC. 3243. WITHHOLDING.

  [Whenever the Secretary, after providing reasonable notice 
and opportunity for a hearing to any State educational agency, 
finds that there is a failure to comply with a requirement of 
any provision of this subpart, the Secretary shall notify that 
agency that further payments will not be made to the agency 
under this subpart or, in the discretion of the Secretary, that 
the State educational agency shall not make further payments 
under this subpart to specified local educational agencies 
whose actions cause or are involved in such failure until the 
Secretary is satisfied that there is no longer any such failure 
to comply. Until the Secretary is so satisfied, no further 
payments shall be made to the State educational agency under 
this subpart, or payments by the State educational agency under 
this subpart shall be limited to local educational agencies 
whose actions did not cause or were not involved in the 
failure, as the case may be.

[SEC. 3244. STATE ALLOTMENTS.

  [(a) Payments.--The Secretary shall, in accordance with the 
provisions of this section, make payments to State educational 
agencies for each of the fiscal years 2002 through 2008 for the 
purpose set forth in section 3241.
  [(b) Allotments.--
          [(1) In general.--Except as provided in subsections 
        (c) and (d), of the amount appropriated for each fiscal 
        year for this subpart, each State participating in the 
        program assisted under this subpart shall receive an 
        allotment equal to the proportion of the number of 
        immigrant children and youth who are enrolled in public 
        elementary schools or secondary schools under the 
        jurisdiction of each local educational agency described 
        in paragraph (2), and in nonpublic elementary schools 
        or secondary schools within the district served by each 
        such local educational agency within such State, 
        relative to the total number of immigrant children and 
        youth so enrolled in all the States participating in 
        the program assisted under this subpart.
          [(2) Eligible local educational agencies.--A local 
        educational agency referred to in paragraph (1) is a 
        local educational agency for which the sum of the 
        number of immigrant children and youth who are enrolled 
        in public elementary schools or secondary schools under 
        the jurisdiction of such agency, and in nonpublic 
        elementary schools or secondary schools within the 
        district served by such agency, during the fiscal year 
        for which the payments are to be made under this 
        subpart, is equal to at least--
                  [(A) 500; or
                  [(B) 3 percent of the total number of 
                children enrolled in such public or nonpublic 
                schools during such fiscal year,
        whichever is less.
  [(c) Determinations of Number of Children and Youth.--
          [(1) In general.--Determinations by the Secretary 
        under this section for any period with respect to the 
        number of immigrant children and youth shall be made on 
        the basis of data or estimates provided to the 
        Secretary by each State educational agency in 
        accordance with criteria established by the Secretary, 
        unless the Secretary determines, after notice and 
        opportunity for a hearing to the affected State 
        educational agency, that such data or estimates are 
        clearly erroneous.
          [(2) Special rule.--No such determination with 
        respect to the number of immigrant children and youth 
        shall operate because of an underestimate or 
        overestimate to deprive any State educational agency of 
        the allotment under this section that such State would 
        otherwise have received had such determination been 
        made on the basis of accurate data.
  [(d) Reallotment.--
          [(1) In general.--Whenever the Secretary determines 
        that any amount of a payment made to a State under this 
        subpart for a fiscal year will not be used by such 
        State for carrying out the purpose for which the 
        payment was made, the Secretary shall make such amount 
        available for carrying out such purpose to one or more 
        other States to the extent the Secretary determines 
        that such other States will be able to use such 
        additional amount for carrying out such purpose.
          [(2) Fiscal year.--Any amount made available to a 
        State from any appropriation for a fiscal year in 
        accordance with paragraph (1) shall, for purposes of 
        this subpart, be regarded as part of such State's 
        payment (as determined under subsection (b)) for such 
        year, but shall remain available until the end of the 
        succeeding fiscal year.
  [(e) Reservation of Funds.--
          [(1) In general.--Notwithstanding any other provision 
        of this subpart, if the amount appropriated to carry 
        out this subpart exceeds $50,000,000 for a fiscal year, 
        a State educational agency may reserve not more than 20 
        percent of such agency's payment under this subpart for 
        such year to award grants, on a competitive basis, to 
        local educational agencies within the State as follows:
                  [(A) Agencies with immigrant children and 
                youth.--At least \1/2\ of the funds reserved 
                under this paragraph shall be made available to 
                eligible local educational agencies (as 
                described in subsection (b)(2)) within the 
                State with the highest numbers and percentages 
                of immigrant children and youth.
                  [(B) Agencies with a sudden influx of 
                children and youth.--Funds reserved under this 
                paragraph and not made available under 
                subparagraph (A) may be distributed to local 
                educational agencies within the State that are 
                experiencing a sudden influx of immigrant 
                children and youth and that are otherwise not 
                eligible for assistance under this subpart.
          [(2) Use of grant funds.--Each local educational 
        agency receiving a grant under paragraph (1) shall use 
        such grant funds to carry out the activities described 
        in section 3247.
          [(3) Information.--Local educational agencies 
        receiving funds under paragraph (1) with the highest 
        number of immigrant children and youth may make 
        information available on serving immigrant children and 
        youth to local educational agencies in the State with 
        sparse numbers of such children and youth.

[SEC. 3245. STATE APPLICATIONS.

  [(a) Submission.--No State educational agency shall receive 
any payment under this subpart for any fiscal year unless such 
agency submits an application to the Secretary at such time, in 
such manner, and containing or accompanied by such information, 
as the Secretary may reasonably require. Each such application 
shall--
          [(1) provide that the educational programs, services, 
        and activities for which payments under this subpart 
        are made will be administered by or under the 
        supervision of the agency;
          [(2) provide assurances that payments under this 
        subpart will be used for purposes set forth in sections 
        3241 and 3247, including a description of how local 
        educational agencies receiving funds under this subpart 
        will use such funds to meet such purposes and will 
        coordinate with entities carrying out other programs 
        and activities assisted under this Act, and other Acts 
        as appropriate;
          [(3) provide an assurance that local educational 
        agencies receiving funds under this subpart will 
        coordinate the use of such funds with entities carrying 
        out programs and activities assisted under part A of 
        title I;
          [(4) provide assurances that such payments, with the 
        exception of payments reserved under section 3244(e), 
        will be distributed among local educational agencies 
        within that State on the basis of the number of 
        immigrant children and youth counted with respect to 
        each such local educational agency under section 
        3244(b)(1);
          [(5) provide assurances that the State educational 
        agency will not finally disapprove in whole or in part 
        any application for funds received under this subpart 
        without first affording the local educational agency 
        submitting an application for such funds reasonable 
        notice and opportunity for a hearing;
          [(6) provide for making such reports as the Secretary 
        may reasonably require to perform the Secretary's 
        functions under this subpart;
          [(7) provide assurances--
                  [(A) that to the extent consistent with the 
                number of immigrant children and youth enrolled 
                in the nonpublic elementary schools or 
                secondary schools within the district served by 
                a local educational agency, such agency, after 
                consultation with appropriate officials of such 
                schools, shall provide for the benefit of such 
                children and youth secular, neutral, and 
                nonideological services, materials, and 
                equipment necessary for the education of such 
                children and youth;
                  [(B) that the control of funds provided under 
                this subpart for any materials or equipment, or 
                property repaired, remodeled, or constructed 
                with those funds shall be in a public agency 
                for the uses and purpose provided in this 
                subpart, and a public agency shall administer 
                such funds and property; and
                  [(C) that the provision of services pursuant 
                to this paragraph shall be provided by 
                employees of a public agency or through 
                contract by such public agency with a person, 
                association, agency, or corporation who or 
                which, in the provision of such services, is 
                independent of such nonpublic elementary school 
                or secondary school and of any religious 
                organization, and such employment or contract 
                shall be under the control and supervision of 
                such public agency, and the funds provided 
                under this paragraph shall not be commingled 
                with State or local funds;
          [(8) provide that funds reserved under section 
        3244(e) be awarded on a competitive basis based on 
        merit and need in accordance with such section; and
          [(9) provide an assurance that the State educational 
        agency and local educational agencies in the State 
        receiving funds under this subpart will comply with the 
        requirements of section 1120(b).
  [(b) Application Review.--
          [(1) In general.--The Secretary shall review all 
        applications submitted pursuant to this section by 
        State educational agencies.
          [(2) Approval.--The Secretary shall approve any 
        application submitted by a State educational agency 
        that meets the requirements of this section.
          [(3) Disapproval.--The Secretary shall disapprove any 
        application submitted by a State educational agency 
        that does not meet the requirements of this section, 
        but shall not finally disapprove an application except 
        after providing reasonable notice, technical 
        assistance, and an opportunity for a hearing to the 
        State educational agency.

[SEC. 3246. ADMINISTRATIVE PROVISIONS.

  [(a) Notification of Amount.--The Secretary, not later than 
June 1 of each year, shall notify each State educational agency 
that has an application approved under section 3245 of the 
amount of such agency's allotment under section 3244 for the 
succeeding year.
  [(b) Services to Immigrant Children and Youth Enrolled in 
Nonpublic Schools.--If by reason of any provision of law a 
local educational agency is prohibited from providing 
educational services for immigrant children and youth enrolled 
in nonpublic elementary schools and secondary schools, as 
required by section 3245(a)(7), or if the Secretary determines 
that a local educational agency has substantially failed or is 
unwilling to provide for the participation on an equitable 
basis of such children and youth enrolled in such schools, the 
Secretary may waive such requirement and shall arrange for the 
provision of services, subject to the requirements of this 
subpart, to such children and youth. Such waivers shall be 
subject to consultation, withholding, notice, and judicial 
review requirements in accordance with the provisions of title 
I.

[SEC. 3247. USES OF FUNDS.

  [(a) Use of Funds.--Funds awarded under this subpart shall be 
used to pay for enhanced instructional opportunities for 
immigrant children and youth, which may include--
          [(1) family literacy, parent outreach, and training 
        activities designed to assist parents to become active 
        participants in the education of their children;
          [(2) support of personnel, including teacher aides 
        who have been specifically trained, or are being 
        trained, to provide services to immigrant children and 
        youth;
          [(3) tutorials, mentoring, and academic or career 
        counseling for immigrant children and youth;
          [(4) identification and acquisition of curricular 
        materials, educational software, and technologies;
          [(5) the provision of basic instruction services that 
        are directly attributable to the presence in the school 
        district of immigrant children and youth, including 
        payment of costs of providing additional classroom 
        supplies, costs of transportation, or such other costs 
        as are directly attributable to such additional basic 
        instruction services; and
          [(6) such other activities, related to the purpose of 
        this subpart, as the Secretary may authorize.
  [(b) Consortia.--A local educational agency that receives a 
grant under this subpart may collaborate or form a consortium 
with one or more local educational agencies, institutions of 
higher education, and nonprofit organizations to carry out a 
program described in an application approved under this 
subpart.
  [(c) Subgrants.--A local educational agency that receives a 
grant under this subpart may, with the approval of the 
Secretary, make a subgrant to, or enter into a contract with, 
an institution of higher education, a nonprofit organization, 
or a consortium of such institutions or organizations to carry 
out a program described in an application approved under this 
subpart, including a program to serve out-of-school youth.
  [(d) Construction.--Nothing in this subpart shall be 
construed to prohibit a local educational agency from serving 
immigrant children and youth simultaneously with children and 
youth with similar educational needs, in the same educational 
settings where appropriate.

[SEC. 3248. REPORTS.

  [(a) Biennial Report.--Each State educational agency 
receiving funds under this subpart shall submit, once every 2 
years, a report to the Secretary concerning the expenditure of 
funds by local educational agencies under this subpart. Each 
local educational agency receiving funds under this subpart 
shall submit to the State educational agency such information 
as may be necessary for such report.
  [(b) Report to Congress.--The Secretary shall submit, once 
every 2 years, a report to the appropriate committees of 
Congress concerning programs assisted under this subpart.

                       [Subpart 5--Administration

[SEC. 3251. RELEASE TIME.

  [The Secretary shall allow entities carrying out professional 
development programs funded under this part to use funds 
provided under this part for professional release time to 
enable individuals to participate in programs assisted under 
this part.

[SEC. 3252. NOTIFICATION.

  [A State educational agency, and when applicable, the State 
board for postsecondary education, shall be notified within 3 
working days after the date an award under this part is made to 
an eligible entity within the State.

[SEC. 3253. COORDINATION AND REPORTING REQUIREMENTS.

  [(a) Coordination With Related Programs.--In order to 
maximize Federal efforts aimed at serving the educational needs 
of children and youth of limited English proficiency, the 
Secretary shall coordinate and ensure close cooperation with 
other programs serving language-minority and limited English 
proficient children that are administered by the Department and 
other agencies. The Secretary shall consult with the Secretary 
of Labor, the Secretary of Health and Human Services, the 
Secretary of Agriculture, the Attorney General, and the heads 
of other relevant agencies to identify and eliminate barriers 
to appropriate coordination of programs that affect language-
minority and limited English proficient children and their 
families. The Secretary shall provide for continuing 
consultation and collaboration, between the Office of English 
Language Acquisition, Language Enhancement, and Academic 
Achievement for Limited English Proficient Students and 
relevant programs operated by the Department, including 
programs under this part and other programs under this Act, in 
planning, contracts, providing joint technical assistance, 
providing joint field monitoring activities and in other 
relevant activities to ensure effective program coordination to 
provide high-quality educational opportunities to all language-
minority and limited English proficient children.
  [(b) Data.--The Secretary shall, to the extent feasible, 
ensure that all data collected by the Department shall include 
the collection and reporting of data on limited English 
proficient children.
  [(c) Publication of Proposals.--The Secretary shall publish 
and disseminate all requests for proposals for programs funded 
under this part.
  [(d) Report.--The Director shall prepare and, not later than 
February 1 of every other year, shall submit to the Secretary, 
the Committee on Education and the Workforce of the House of 
Representatives, and the Committee on Health, Education, Labor, 
and Pensions of the Senate a report--
          [(1) on programs and activities carried out to serve 
        limited English proficient children under this part, 
        and the effectiveness of such programs and activities 
        in improving the academic achievement and English 
        proficiency of children who are limited English 
        proficient;
          [(2) containing a critical synthesis of data reported 
        by States under section 3224, when applicable;
          [(3) containing an estimate of the number of 
        certified or licensed teachers working in language 
        instruction educational programs and educating limited 
        English proficient children, and an estimate of the 
        number of such teachers that will be needed for the 
        succeeding 5 fiscal years;
          [(4) containing the major findings of scientifically 
        based research carried out under this part; and
          [(5) containing other information gathered from the 
        reports submitted to the Secretary under this title 
        when applicable.

                      [PART C--GENERAL PROVISIONS

[SEC. 3301. DEFINITIONS.

   [Except as otherwise provided, in this title:
          [(1) Child.--The term ``child'' means any individual 
        aged 3 through 21.
          [(2) Community-based organization.--The term 
        ``community-based organization'' means a private 
        nonprofit organization of demonstrated effectiveness, 
        Indian tribe, or tribally sanctioned educational 
        authority, that is representative of a community or 
        significant segments of a community and that provides 
        educational or related services to individuals in the 
        community. Such term includes a Native Hawaiian or 
        Native American Pacific Islander native language 
        educational organization.
          [(3) Community college.--The term ``community 
        college'' means an institution of higher education as 
        defined in section 101 of the Higher Education Act of 
        1965 that provides not less than a 2-year program that 
        is acceptable for full credit toward a bachelor's 
        degree, including institutions receiving assistance 
        under the Tribally Controlled Colleges and Universities 
        Assistance Act of 1978.
          [(4) Director.--The term ``Director'' means the 
        Director of the Office of English Language Acquisition, 
        Language Enhancement, and Academic Achievement for 
        Limited English Proficient Students established under 
        section 209 of the Department of Education Organization 
        Act.
          [(5) Family education program.--The term ``family 
        education program'' means a language instruction 
        educational program or special alternative instruction 
        program that--
                  [(A) is designed--
                          [(i) to help limited English 
                        proficient adults and out-of-school 
                        youths achieve English proficiency; and
                          [(ii) to provide instruction on how 
                        parents and family members can 
                        facilitate the educational achievement 
                        of their children;
                  [(B) when feasible, uses instructional 
                programs based on models developed under the 
                Even Start Family Literacy Programs, which 
                promote adult literacy and train parents to 
                support the educational growth of their 
                children, the Parents as Teachers Program, and 
                the Home Instruction Program for Preschool 
                Youngsters; and
                  [(C) gives preference to participation by 
                parents and immediate family members of 
                children attending school.
          [(6) Immigrant children and youth.--The term 
        ``immigrant children and youth'' means individuals 
        who--
                  [(A) are aged 3 through 21;
                  [(B) were not born in any State; and
                  [(C) have not been attending one or more 
                schools in any one or more States for more than 
                3 full academic years.
          [(7) Indian tribe.--The term ``Indian tribe'' means 
        any Indian tribe, band, nation, or other organized 
        group or community, including any Native village or 
        Regional Corporation or Village Corporation as defined 
        in or established pursuant to the Alaska Native Claims 
        Settlement Act, that is recognized as eligible for the 
        special programs and services provided by the United 
        States to Indians because of their status as Indians.
          [(8) Language instruction educational program.--The 
        term ``language instruction educational program'' means 
        an instruction course--
                  [(A) in which a limited English proficient 
                child is placed for the purpose of developing 
                and attaining English proficiency, while 
                meeting challenging State academic content and 
                student academic achievement standards, as 
                required by section 1111(b)(1); and
                  [(B) that may make instructional use of both 
                English and a child's native language to enable 
                the child to develop and attain English 
                proficiency, and may include the participation 
                of English proficient children if such course 
                is designed to enable all participating 
                children to become proficient in English and a 
                second language.
          [(9) Native american and native american language.--
        The terms ``Native American'' and ``Native American 
        language'' shall have the meanings given such terms in 
        section 103 of the Native American Languages Act.
          [(10) Native hawaiian or native american pacific 
        islander native language educational organization.--The 
        term ``Native Hawaiian or Native American Pacific 
        Islander native language educational organization'' 
        means a nonprofit organization with--
                  [(A) a majority of its governing board and 
                employees consisting of fluent speakers of the 
                traditional Native American languages used in 
                the organization's educational programs; and
                  [(B) not less than 5 years successful 
                experience in providing educational services in 
                traditional Native American languages.
          [(11) Native language.--The term ``native language'', 
        when used with reference to an individual of limited 
        English proficiency, means--
                  [(A) the language normally used by such 
                individual; or
                  [(B) in the case of a child or youth, the 
                language normally used by the parents of the 
                child or youth.
          [(12) Paraprofessional.--The term 
        ``paraprofessional'' means an individual who is 
        employed in a preschool, elementary school, or 
        secondary school under the supervision of a certified 
        or licensed teacher, including individuals employed in 
        language instruction educational programs, special 
        education, and migrant education.
          [(13) Specially qualified agency.--The term 
        ``specially qualified agency'' means an eligible 
        entity, as defined in section 3141, in a State whose 
        State educational agency--
                  [(A) does not participate in a program under 
                subpart 1 of part A for a fiscal year; or
                  [(B) submits a plan (or any amendment to a 
                plan) that the Secretary, after reasonable 
                notice and opportunity for a hearing, 
                determines does not satisfy the requirements of 
                such subpart.
          [(14) State.--The term ``State'' means each of the 50 
        States, the District of Columbia, and the Commonwealth 
        of Puerto Rico.
          [(15) Tribally sanctioned educational authority.--The 
        term ``tribally sanctioned educational authority'' 
        means--
                  [(A) any department or division of education 
                operating within the administrative structure 
                of the duly constituted governing body of an 
                Indian tribe; and
                  [(B) any nonprofit institution or 
                organization that is--
                          [(i) chartered by the governing body 
                        of an Indian tribe to operate a school 
                        described in section 3112(a) or 
                        otherwise to oversee the delivery of 
                        educational services to members of the 
                        tribe; and
                          [(ii) approved by the Secretary for 
                        the purpose of carrying out programs 
                        under subpart 1 of part A for 
                        individuals served by a school 
                        described in section 3112(a).

[SEC. 3302. PARENTAL NOTIFICATION.

  [(a) In General.--Each eligible entity using funds provided 
under this title to provide a language instruction educational 
program shall, not later than 30 days after the beginning of 
the school year, inform a parent or the parents of a limited 
English proficient child identified for participation in, or 
participating in, such program of--
          [(1) the reasons for the identification of their 
        child as limited English proficient and in need of 
        placement in a language instruction educational 
        program;
          [(2) the child's level of English proficiency, how 
        such level was assessed, and the status of the child's 
        academic achievement;
          [(3) the method of instruction used in the program in 
        which their child is, or will be, participating, and 
        the methods of instruction used in other available 
        programs, including how such programs differ in 
        content, instruction goals, and use of English and a 
        native language in instruction;
          [(4) how the program in which their child is, or will 
        be participating will meet the educational strengths 
        and needs of the child;
          [(5) how such program will specifically help their 
        child learn English, and meet age appropriate academic 
        achievement standards for grade promotion and 
        graduation;
          [(6) the specific exit requirements for such program, 
        the expected rate of transition from such program into 
        classrooms that are not tailored for limited English 
        proficient children, and the expected rate of 
        graduation from secondary school for such program if 
        funds under this title are used for children in 
        secondary schools;
          [(7) in the case of a child with a disability, how 
        such program meets the objectives of the individualized 
        education program of the child; and
          [(8) information pertaining to parental rights that 
        includes written guidance--
                  [(A) detailing--
                          [(i) the right that parents have to 
                        have their child immediately removed 
                        from such program upon their request; 
                        and
                          [(ii) the options that parents have 
                        to decline to enroll their child in 
                        such program or to choose another 
                        program or method of instruction, if 
                        available; and
                  [(B) assisting parents in selecting among 
                various programs and methods of instruction, if 
                more than one program or method is offered by 
                the eligible entity.
  [(b) Separate Notification.--In addition to providing the 
information required to be provided under subsection (a), each 
eligible entity that is using funds provided under this title 
to provide a language instruction educational program, and that 
has failed to make progress on the annual measurable 
achievement objectives described in section 3122 for any fiscal 
year for which part A is in effect, shall separately inform a 
parent or the parents of a child identified for participation 
in such program, or participating in such program, of such 
failure not later than 30 days after such failure occurs.
  [(c) Receipt of Information.--The information required to be 
provided under subsections (a) and (b) to a parent shall be 
provided in an understandable and uniform format and, to the 
extent practicable, in a language that the parent can 
understand.
  [(d) Special Rule Applicable During School Year.--For a child 
who has not been identified for participation in a language 
instruction educational program prior to the beginning of the 
school year, the eligible entity shall carry out subsections 
(a) through (c) with respect to the parents of the child within 
2 weeks of the child being placed in such a program.
  [(e) Parental Participation.--
          [(1) In General.--Each eligible entity using funds 
        provided under this title to provide a language 
        instruction educational program shall implement an 
        effective means of outreach to parents of limited 
        English proficient children to inform such parents of 
        how they can--
                  [(A) be involved in the education of their 
                children; and
                  [(B) be active participants in assisting 
                their children--
                          [(i) to learn English;
                          [(ii) to achieve at high levels in 
                        core academic subjects; and
                          [(iii) to meet the same challenging 
                        State academic content and student 
                        academic achievement standards as all 
                        children are expected to meet.
          [(2) Receipt of recommendations.--The outreach 
        described in paragraph (1) shall include holding, and 
        sending notice of opportunities for, regular meetings 
        for the purpose of formulating and responding to 
        recommendations from parents described in such 
        paragraph.
  [(f) Basis for Admission or Exclusion.--A child shall not be 
admitted to, or excluded from, any federally assisted education 
program on the basis of a surname or language-minority status.

[SEC. 3303. NATIONAL CLEARINGHOUSE.

   [The Secretary shall establish and support the operation of 
a National Clearinghouse for English Language Acquisition and 
Language Instruction Educational Programs, which shall collect, 
analyze, synthesize, and disseminate information about language 
instruction educational programs for limited English proficient 
children, and related programs. The National Clearinghouse 
shall--
          [(1) be administered as an adjunct clearinghouse of 
        the Educational Resources Information Center 
        Clearinghouses system supported by the Institute of 
        Education Sciences;
          [(2) coordinate activities with Federal data and 
        information clearinghouses and entities operating 
        Federal dissemination networks and systems;
          [(3) develop a system for improving the operation and 
        effectiveness of federally funded language instruction 
        educational programs;
          [(4) collect and disseminate information on--
                  [(A) educational research and processes 
                related to the education of limited English 
                proficient children; and
                  [(B) accountability systems that monitor the 
                academic progress of limited English proficient 
                children in language instruction educational 
                programs, including information on academic 
                content and English proficiency assessments for 
                language instruction educational programs; and
          [(5) publish, on an annual basis, a list of grant 
        recipients under this title.

[SEC. 3304. REGULATIONS.

  [In developing regulations under this title, the Secretary 
shall consult with State educational agencies and local 
educational agencies, organizations representing limited 
English proficient individuals, and organizations representing 
teachers and other personnel involved in the education of 
limited English proficient children.

                    [TITLE IV--21ST CENTURY SCHOOLS

          [PART A--SAFE AND DRUG-FREE SCHOOLS AND COMMUNITIES

[SEC. 4001. SHORT TITLE.

  [This part may be cited as the ``Safe and Drug-Free Schools 
and Communities Act''.

[SEC. 4002. PURPOSE.

   [The purpose of this part is to support programs that 
prevent violence in and around schools; that prevent the 
illegal use of alcohol, tobacco, and drugs; that involve 
parents and communities; and that are coordinated with related 
Federal, State, school, and community efforts and resources to 
foster a safe and drug-free learning environment that supports 
student academic achievement, through the provision of Federal 
assistance to--
          [(1) States for grants to local educational agencies 
        and consortia of such agencies to establish, operate, 
        and improve local programs of school drug and violence 
        prevention and early intervention;
          [(2) States for grants to, and contracts with, 
        community-based organizations and public and private 
        entities for programs of drug and violence prevention 
        and early intervention, including community-wide drug 
        and violence prevention planning and organizing 
        activities;
          [(3) States for development, training, technical 
        assistance, and coordination activities; and
          [(4) public and private entities to provide technical 
        assistance; conduct training, demonstrations, and 
        evaluation; and to provide supplementary services and 
        community-wide drug and violence prevention planning 
        and organizing activities for the prevention of drug 
        use and violence among students and youth.

[SEC. 4003. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS.

   [There are authorized to be appropriated--
          [(1) $650,000,000 for fiscal year 2002, and such sums 
        as may be necessary for each of the 5 succeeding fiscal 
        years, for State grants under subpart 1; and
          [(2) such sums for fiscal year 2002, and for each of 
        the 5 succeeding fiscal years, for national programs 
        under subpart 2.

                        [Subpart 1--State Grants

[SEC. 4111. RESERVATIONS AND ALLOTMENTS.

  [(a) Reservations.--
          [(1) In general.--From the amount made available 
        under section 4003(1) to carry out this subpart for 
        each fiscal year, the Secretary--
                  [(A) shall reserve 1 percent or $4,750,000 
                (whichever is greater) of such amount for 
                grants to Guam, American Samoa, the United 
                States Virgin Islands, and the Commonwealth of 
                the Northern Mariana Islands, to be allotted in 
                accordance with the Secretary's determination 
                of their respective needs and to carry out 
                programs described in this subpart;
                  [(B) shall reserve 1 percent or $4,750,000 
                (whichever is greater) of such amount for the 
                Secretary of the Interior to carry out programs 
                described in this subpart for Indian youth; and
                  [(C) shall reserve 0.2 percent of such amount 
                for Native Hawaiians to be used under section 
                4117 to carry out programs described in this 
                subpart.
          [(2) Other reservations.--From the amount made 
        available under section 4003(2) to carry out subpart 2 
        for each fiscal year, the Secretary--
                  [(A) may reserve not more than $2,000,000 for 
                the national impact evaluation required by 
                section 4122(a);
                  [(B) notwithstanding section 3 of the No 
                Child Left Behind Act of 2001, shall reserve an 
                amount necessary to make continuation grants to 
                grantees under the Safe Schools/Healthy 
                Students initiative (under the same terms and 
                conditions as provided for in the grants 
                involved).
  [(b) State Allotments.--
          [(1) In general.--Except as provided in paragraph 
        (2), the Secretary shall, for each fiscal year, allot 
        among the States--
                  [(A) one-half of the remainder not reserved 
                under subsection (a) according to the ratio 
                between the school-aged population of each 
                State and the school-aged population of all the 
                States; and
                  [(B) one-half of such remainder according to 
                the ratio between the amount each State 
                received under section 1124A for the preceding 
                year and the sum of such amounts received by 
                all the States.
          [(2) Minimum.--For any fiscal year, no State shall be 
        allotted under this subsection an amount that is less 
        than the greater of--
                  [(A) one-half of 1 percent of the total 
                amount allotted to all the States under this 
                subsection; or
                  [(B) the amount such State received for 
                fiscal year 2001 under section 4111 as such 
                section was in effect the day preceding the 
                date of enactment of the No Child Left Behind 
                Act of 2001.
          [(3) Reallotment.--
                  [(A) Reallotment for failure to apply.--If 
                any State does not apply for an allotment under 
                this subpart for a fiscal year, the Secretary 
                shall reallot the amount of the State's 
                allotment to the remaining States in accordance 
                with this section.
                  [(B) Reallotment of unused funds.--The 
                Secretary may reallot any amount of any 
                allotment to a State if the Secretary 
                determines that the State will be unable to use 
                such amount within 2 years of such allotment. 
                Such reallotments shall be made on the same 
                basis as allotments are made under paragraph 
                (1).
          [(4) Definition.--In this section the term ``State'' 
        means each of the 50 States, the District of Columbia, 
        and the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico.
  [(c) Limitation.--Amounts appropriated under section 4003(2) 
for a fiscal year may not be increased above the amounts 
appropriated under such section for the previous fiscal year 
unless the amounts appropriated under section 4003(1) for the 
fiscal year involved are at least 10 percent greater that the 
amounts appropriated under such section 4003(1) for the 
previous fiscal year.

[SEC. 4112. RESERVATION OF STATE FUNDS FOR SAFE AND DRUG-FREE SCHOOLS.

  [(a) State Reservation for the Chief Executive Officer of a 
State.--
          [(1) In general.--The chief executive officer of a 
        State may reserve not more than 20 percent of the total 
        amount allocated to a State under section 4111(b) for 
        each fiscal year to award competitive grants and 
        contracts to local educational agencies, community-
        based organizations (including community anti-drug 
        coalitions) other public entities and private 
        organizations, and consortia thereof. Such grants and 
        contracts shall be used to carry out the comprehensive 
        State plan described in section 4113(a) through 
        programs or activities that complement and support 
        activities of local educational agencies described in 
        section 4115(b). Such officer shall award grants based 
        on--
                  [(A) the quality of the program or activity 
                proposed; and
                  [(B) how the program or activity meets the 
                principles of effectiveness described in 
                section 4115(a).
          [(2) Priority.--In making such grants and contracts 
        under this section, a chief executive officer shall 
        give priority to programs and activities that prevent 
        illegal drug use and violence for--
                  [(A) children and youth who are not normally 
                served by State educational agencies or local 
                educational agencies; or
                  [(B) populations that need special services 
                or additional resources (such as youth in 
                juvenile detention facilities, runaway or 
                homeless children and youth, pregnant and 
                parenting teenagers, and school dropouts).
          [(3) Special consideration.--In awarding funds under 
        paragraph (1), a chief executive officer shall give 
        special consideration to grantees that pursue a 
        comprehensive approach to drug and violence prevention 
        that includes providing and incorporating mental health 
        services related to drug and violence prevention in 
        their program.
          [(4) Peer review.--Grants or contracts awarded under 
        this section shall be subject to a peer review process.
          [(5) Use of funds.--Grants and contracts under this 
        section shall be used to implement drug and violence 
        prevention activities, including--
                  [(A) activities that complement and support 
                local educational agency activities under 
                section 4115, including developing and 
                implementing activities to prevent and reduce 
                violence associated with prejudice and 
                intolerance;
                  [(B) dissemination of information about drug 
                and violence prevention; and
                  [(C) development and implementation of 
                community-wide drug and violence prevention 
                planning and organizing.
          [(6) Administrative costs.--The chief executive 
        officer of a State may use not more than 3 percent of 
        the amount described in paragraph (1) for the 
        administrative costs incurred in carrying out the 
        duties of such officer under this section.
  [(b) In State Distribution.--
          [(1) In general.--A State educational agency shall 
        distribute not less than 93 percent of the amount made 
        available to the State under section 4111(b), less the 
        amount reserved under subsection (a) of this section, 
        to its local educational agencies.
          [(2) State administration costs.--
                  [(A) In general.--A State educational agency 
                may use not more than 3 percent of the amount 
                made available to the State under section 
                4111(b) for each fiscal year less the amount 
                reserved under subsection (a) of this section, 
                for State educational agency administrative 
                costs, including the implementation of the 
                uniform management information and reporting 
                system as provided for under subsection (c)(3).
                  [(B) Additional amounts for the uniform 
                management information system.--In the case of 
                fiscal year 2002, a State educational agency 
                may, in addition to amounts provided for in 
                subparagraph (A), use 1 percent of the amount 
                made available to the State educational agency 
                under section 4111(b) for each fiscal year less 
                the amount reserved under subsection (a) of 
                this section, for implementation of the uniform 
                management information and reporting system as 
                provided for under subsection (c)(3).
  [(c) State Activities.--
          [(1) In general.--A State educational agency may use 
        not more than 5 percent of the amount made available to 
        the State under section 4111(b) for each fiscal year 
        less the amount reserved under subsection (a) of this 
        section, for activities described in this subsection.
          [(2) Activities.--A State educational agency shall 
        use the amounts described in paragraph (1), either 
        directly, or through grants and contracts, to plan, 
        develop, and implement capacity building, technical 
        assistance and training, evaluation, program 
        improvement services, and coordination activities for 
        local educational agencies, community-based 
        organizations, and other public and private entities. 
        Such uses--
                  [(A) shall meet the principles of 
                effectiveness described in section 4115(a);
                  [(B) shall complement and support local uses 
                of funds under section 4115(b);
                  [(C) shall be in accordance with the purposes 
                of this part; and
                  [(D) may include, among others activities--
                          [(i) identification, development, 
                        evaluation, and dissemination of drug 
                        and violence prevention strategies, 
                        programs, activities, and other 
                        information;
                          [(ii) training, technical assistance, 
                        and demonstration projects to address 
                        violence that is associated with 
                        prejudice and intolerance; and
                          [(iii) financial assistance to 
                        enhance drug and violence prevention 
                        resources available in areas that serve 
                        large numbers of low-income children, 
                        are sparsely populated, or have other 
                        special needs.
          [(3) Uniform management information and reporting 
        system.--
                  [(A) Information and statistics.--A State 
                shall establish a uniform management 
                information and reporting system.
                  [(B) Uses of funds.--A State may use funds 
                described in subparagraphs (A) and (B) of 
                subsection (b)(2), either directly or through 
                grants and contracts, to implement the uniform 
                management information and reporting system 
                described in subparagraph (A), for the 
                collection of information on--
                          [(i) truancy rates;
                          [(ii) the frequency, seriousness, and 
                        incidence of violence and drug-related 
                        offenses resulting in suspensions and 
                        expulsions in elementary schools and 
                        secondary schools in the State;
                          [(iii) the types of curricula, 
                        programs, and services provided by the 
                        chief executive officer, the State 
                        educational agency, local educational 
                        agencies, and other recipients of funds 
                        under this subpart; and
                          [(iv) the incidence and prevalence, 
                        age of onset, perception of health 
                        risk, and perception of social 
                        disapproval of drug use and violence by 
                        youth in schools and communities.
                  [(C) Compilation of statistics.--In compiling 
                the statistics required for the uniform 
                management information and reporting system, 
                the offenses described in subparagraph (B)(ii) 
                shall be defined pursuant to the State's 
                criminal code, but shall not identify victims 
                of crimes or persons accused of crimes. The 
                collected data shall include incident reports 
                by school officials, anonymous student surveys, 
                and anonymous teacher surveys.
                  [(D) Reporting.--The information described 
                under subparagraph (B) shall be reported to the 
                public and the data referenced in clauses (i) 
                and (ii) of such subparagraph shall be reported 
                to the State on a school-by-school basis.
                  [(E) Limitation.--Nothing in this subsection 
                shall be construed to authorize the Secretary 
                to require particular policies, procedures, or 
                practices with respect to crimes committed on 
                school property or school security.

[SEC. 4113. STATE APPLICATION.

  [(a) In General.--In order to receive an allotment under 
section 4111(b) for any fiscal year, a State shall submit to 
the Secretary, at such time as the Secretary may require, an 
application that--
          [(1) contains a comprehensive plan for the use of 
        funds by the State educational agency and the chief 
        executive officer of the State to provide safe, 
        orderly, and drug-free schools and communities through 
        programs and activities that complement and support 
        activities of local educational agencies under section 
        4115(b), that comply with the principles of 
        effectiveness under section 4115(a), and that otherwise 
        are in accordance with the purpose of this part;
          [(2) describes how activities funded under this 
        subpart will foster a safe and drug-free learning 
        environment that supports academic achievement;
          [(3) provides an assurance that the application was 
        developed in consultation and coordination with 
        appropriate State officials and others, including the 
        chief executive officer, the chief State school 
        officer, the head of the State alcohol and drug abuse 
        agency, the heads of the State health and mental health 
        agencies, the head of the State criminal justice 
        planning agency, the head of the State child welfare 
        agency, the head of the State board of education, or 
        their designees, and representatives of parents, 
        students, and community-based organizations;
          [(4) describes how the State educational agency will 
        coordinate such agency's activities under this subpart 
        with the chief executive officer's drug and violence 
        prevention programs under this subpart and with the 
        prevention efforts of other State agencies and other 
        programs, as appropriate, in accordance with the 
        provisions in section 9306;
          [(5) provides an assurance that funds reserved under 
        section 4112(a) will not duplicate the efforts of the 
        State educational agency and local educational agencies 
        with regard to the provision of school-based drug and 
        violence prevention activities and that those funds 
        will be used to serve populations not normally served 
        by the State educational agencies and local educational 
        agencies and populations that need special services, 
        such as school dropouts, suspended and expelled 
        students, youth in detention centers, runaway or 
        homeless children and youth, and pregnant and parenting 
        youth;
          [(6) provides an assurance that the State will 
        cooperate with, and assist, the Secretary in conducting 
        data collection as required by section 4122;
          [(7) provides an assurance that the local educational 
        agencies in the State will comply with the provisions 
        of section 9501 pertaining to the participation of 
        private school children and teachers in the programs 
        and activities under this subpart;
          [(8) provides an assurance that funds under this 
        subpart will be used to increase the level of State, 
        local, and other non-Federal funds that would, in the 
        absence of funds under this subpart, be made available 
        for programs and activities authorized under this 
        subpart, and in no case supplant such State, local, and 
        other non-Federal funds;
          [(9) contains the results of a needs assessment 
        conducted by the State for drug and violence prevention 
        programs, which shall be based on ongoing State 
        evaluation activities, including data on--
                  [(A) the incidence and prevalence of illegal 
                drug use and violence among youth in schools 
                and communities, including the age of onset, 
                the perception of health risks, and the 
                perception of social disapproval among such 
                youth;
                  [(B) the prevalence of risk factors, 
                including high or increasing rates of reported 
                cases of child abuse or domestic violence;
                  [(C) the prevalence of protective factors, 
                buffers, or assets; and
                  [(D) other variables in the school and 
                community identified through scientifically 
                based research;
          [(10) provides a statement of the State's performance 
        measures for drug and violence prevention programs and 
        activities to be funded under this subpart that will be 
        focused on student behavior and attitudes, derived from 
        the needs assessment described in paragraph (9), and be 
        developed in consultation between the State and local 
        officials, and that consist of--
                  [(A) performance indicators for drug and 
                violence prevention programs and activities; 
                and
                  [(B) levels of performance for each 
                performance indicator;
          [(11) describes the procedures the State will use for 
        assessing and publicly reporting progress toward 
        meeting the performance measures described in paragraph 
        (10);
          [(12) provides an assurance that the State 
        application will be available for public review after 
        submission of the application;
          [(13) describes the special outreach activities that 
        will be carried out by the State educational agency and 
        the chief executive officer of the State to maximize 
        the participation of community-based organizations of 
        demonstrated effectiveness that provide services such 
        as mentoring programs in low-income communities;
          [(14) describes how funds will be used by the State 
        educational agency and the chief executive officer of 
        the State to support, develop, and implement community-
        wide comprehensive drug and violence prevention 
        planning and organizing activities;
          [(15) describes how input from parents will be sought 
        regarding the use of funds by the State educational 
        agency and the chief executive officer of the State;
          [(16) describes how the State educational agency will 
        review applications from local educational agencies, 
        including how the agency will receive input from 
        parents in such review;
          [(17) describes how the State educational agency will 
        monitor the implementation of activities under this 
        subpart, and provide technical assistance for local 
        educational agencies, community-based organizations, 
        other public entities, and private organizations;
          [(18) describes how the chief executive officer of 
        the State will award funds under section 4112(a) and 
        implement a plan for monitoring the performance of, and 
        providing technical assistance to, recipients of such 
        funds; and
          [(19) includes any other information the Secretary 
        may require.
  [(b) Interim Application.--
          [(1) Authority.--Notwithstanding any other provision 
        of this section, a State may submit for fiscal year 
        2002 a 1-year interim application and plan for the use 
        of funds under this subpart that is consistent with the 
        requirements of this section and contains such 
        information as the Secretary may specify in 
        regulations.
          [(2) Purpose.--The purpose of such interim 
        application and plan shall be to afford the State the 
        opportunity to fully develop and review such State's 
        application and comprehensive plan otherwise required 
        by this section.
          [(3) Exception.--A State may not receive a grant 
        under this subpart for a fiscal year after fiscal year 
        2002 unless the Secretary has approved such State's 
        application and comprehensive plan as described in 
        subsection (a).
  [(c) Approval Process.--
          [(1) Deemed approval.--An application submitted by a 
        State pursuant to this section shall undergo peer 
        review by the Secretary and shall be deemed to be 
        approved by the Secretary unless the Secretary makes a 
        written determination, prior to the expiration of the 
        120-day period beginning on the date on which the 
        Secretary received the application, that the 
        application is not in compliance with this subpart.
          [(2) Disapproval.--The Secretary shall not finally 
        disapprove the application, except after giving the 
        State educational agency and the chief executive 
        officer of the State notice and an opportunity for a 
        hearing.
          [(3) Notification.--If the Secretary finds that the 
        application is not in compliance, in whole or in part, 
        with this subpart, the Secretary shall--
                  [(A) give the State educational agency and 
                the chief executive officer of the State notice 
                and an opportunity for a hearing; and
                  [(B) notify the State educational agency and 
                the chief executive officer of the State of the 
                finding of noncompliance, and in such 
                notification, shall--
                          [(i) cite the specific provisions in 
                        the application that are not in 
                        compliance; and
                          [(ii) request additional information, 
                        only as to the noncompliant provisions, 
                        needed to make the application 
                        compliant.
          [(4) Response.--If the State educational agency and 
        the chief executive officer of the State respond to the 
        Secretary's notification described in paragraph (3)(B) 
        during the 45-day period beginning on the date on which 
        the agency received the notification, and resubmit the 
        application with the requested information described in 
        paragraph (3)(B)(ii), the Secretary shall approve or 
        disapprove such application prior to the later of--
                  [(A) the expiration of the 45-day period 
                beginning on the date on which the application 
                is resubmitted; or
                  [(B) the expiration of the 120-day period 
                described in paragraph (1).
          [(5) Failure to respond.--If the State educational 
        agency and the chief executive officer of the State do 
        not respond to the Secretary's notification described 
        in paragraph (3)(B) during the 45-day period beginning 
        on the date on which the agency received the 
        notification, such application shall be deemed to be 
        disapproved.

[SEC. 4114. LOCAL EDUCATIONAL AGENCY PROGRAM.

  [(a) In General.--
          [(1) Funds to local educational agencies.--A State 
        shall provide the amount made available to the State 
        under this subpart, less the amounts reserved under 
        section 4112 to local educational agencies for drug and 
        violence prevention and education programs and 
        activities as follows:
                  [(A) 60 percent of such amount based on the 
                relative amount such agencies received under 
                part A of title I for the preceding fiscal 
                year.
                  [(B) 40 percent of such amount based on the 
                relative enrollments in public and private 
                nonprofit elementary schools and secondary 
                schools within the boundaries of such agencies.
          [(2) Administrative costs.--Of the amount received 
        under paragraph (1), a local educational agency may use 
        not more than 2 percent for the administrative costs of 
        carrying out its responsibilities under this subpart.
          [(3) Return of funds to state; reallocation.--
                  [(A) Return.--Except as provided in 
                subparagraph (B), upon the expiration of the 1-
                year period beginning on the date on which a 
                local educational agency receives its 
                allocation under this subpart--
                          [(i) such agency shall return to the 
                        State educational agency any funds from 
                        such allocation that remain 
                        unobligated; and
                          [(ii) the State educational agency 
                        shall reallocate any such amount to 
                        local educational agencies that have 
                        submitted plans for using such amount 
                        for programs or activities on a timely 
                        basis.
                  [(B) Carryover.--In any fiscal year, a local 
                educational agency, may retain for obligation 
                in the succeeding fiscal year--
                          [(i) an amount equal to not more than 
                        25 percent of the allocation it 
                        received under this subpart for such 
                        fiscal year; or
                          [(ii) upon a demonstration of good 
                        cause by such agency and approval by 
                        the State educational agency, an amount 
                        that exceeds 25 percent of such 
                        allocation.
                  [(C) Reallocation.--If a local educational 
                agency chooses not to apply to receive the 
                amount allocated to such agency under this 
                subsection, or if such agency's application 
                under subsection (d) is disapproved by the 
                State educational agency, the State educational 
                agency shall reallocate such amount to one or 
                more of its other local educational agencies.
  [(b) Eligibility.--To be eligible to receive a subgrant under 
this subpart, a local educational agency desiring a subgrant 
shall submit an application to the State educational agency in 
accordance with subsection (d). Such an application shall be 
amended, as necessary, to reflect changes in the activities and 
programs of the local educational agency.
  [(c) Development.--
          [(1) Consultation.--
                  [(A) In general.--A local educational agency 
                shall develop its application through timely 
                and meaningful consultation with State and 
                local government representatives, 
                representatives of schools to be served 
                (including private schools), teachers and other 
                staff, parents, students, community-based 
                organizations, and others with relevant and 
                demonstrated expertise in drug and violence 
                prevention activities (such as medical, mental 
                health, and law enforcement professionals).
                  [(B) Continued consultation.--On an ongoing 
                basis, the local educational agency shall 
                consult with such representatives and 
                organizations in order to seek advice regarding 
                how best to coordinate such agency's activities 
                under this subpart with other related 
                strategies, programs, and activities being 
                conducted in the community.
          [(2) Design and development.--To ensure timely and 
        meaningful consultation under paragraph (1), a local 
        educational agency at the initial stages of design and 
        development of a program or activity shall consult, in 
        accordance with this subsection, with appropriate 
        entities and persons on issues regarding the design and 
        development of the program or activity, including 
        efforts to meet the principles of effectiveness 
        described in section 4115(a).
  [(d) Contents of Applications.--An application submitted by a 
local educational agency under this section shall contain--
          [(1) an assurance that the activities or programs to 
        be funded comply with the principles of effectiveness 
        described in section 4115(a) and foster a safe and 
        drug-free learning environment that supports academic 
        achievement;
          [(2) a detailed explanation of the local educational 
        agency's comprehensive plan for drug and violence 
        prevention, including a description of--
                  [(A) how the plan will be coordinated with 
                programs under this Act, and other Federal, 
                State, and local programs for drug and violence 
                prevention, in accordance with section 9306;
                  [(B) the local educational agency's 
                performance measures for drug and violence 
                prevention programs and activities, that shall 
                consist of--
                          [(i) performance indicators for drug 
                        and violence prevention programs and 
                        activities; including--
                                  [(I) specific reductions in 
                                the prevalence of identified 
                                risk factors; and
                                  [(II) specific increases in 
                                the prevalence of protective 
                                factors, buffers, or assets if 
                                any have been identified; and
                          [(ii) levels of performance for each 
                        performance indicator;
                  [(C) how such agency will assess and publicly 
                report progress toward attaining its 
                performance measures;
                  [(D) the drug and violence prevention 
                activity or program to be funded, including how 
                the activity or program will meet the 
                principles of effectiveness described in 
                section 4115(a), and the means of evaluating 
                such activity or program; and
                  [(E) how the services will be targeted to 
                schools and students with the greatest need;
          [(3) a description for how the results of the 
        evaluations of the effectiveness of the program will be 
        used to refine, improve, and strengthen the program;
          [(4) an assurance that funds under this subpart will 
        be used to increase the level of State, local, and 
        other non-Federal funds that would, in the absence of 
        funds under this subpart, be made available for 
        programs and activities authorized under this subpart, 
        and in no case supplant such State, local, and other 
        non-Federal funds;
          [(5) a description of the mechanisms used to provide 
        effective notice to the community of an intention to 
        submit an application under this subpart;
          [(6) an assurance that drug and violence prevention 
        programs supported under this subpart convey a clear 
        and consistent message that acts of violence and the 
        illegal use of drugs are wrong and harmful;
          [(7) an assurance that the applicant has, or the 
        schools to be served have, a plan for keeping schools 
        safe and drug-free that includes--
                  [(A) appropriate and effective school 
                discipline policies that prohibit disorderly 
                conduct, the illegal possession of weapons, and 
                the illegal use, possession, distribution, and 
                sale of tobacco, alcohol, and other drugs by 
                students;
                  [(B) security procedures at school and while 
                students are on the way to and from school;
                  [(C) prevention activities that are designed 
                to create and maintain safe, disciplined, and 
                drug-free environments;
                  [(D) a crisis management plan for responding 
                to violent or traumatic incidents on school 
                grounds; and
                  [(E) a code of conduct policy for all 
                students that clearly states the 
                responsibilities of students, teachers, and 
                administrators in maintaining a classroom 
                environment that--
                          [(i) allows a teacher to communicate 
                        effectively with all students in the 
                        class;
                          [(ii) allows all students in the 
                        class to learn;
                          [(iii) has consequences that are 
                        fair, and developmentally appropriate;
                          [(iv) considers the student and the 
                        circumstances of the situation; and
                          [(v) is enforced accordingly;
          [(8) an assurance that the application and any waiver 
        request under section 4115(a)(3) will be available for 
        public review after submission of the application; and
          [(9) such other assurances, goals, and objectives 
        identified through scientifically based research that 
        the State may reasonably require in accordance with the 
        purpose of this part.
  [(e) Review of Application.--
          [(1) In general.--In reviewing local applications 
        under this section, a State educational agency shall 
        use a peer review process or other methods of assuring 
        the quality of such applications.
          [(2) Considerations.--In determining whether to 
        approve the application of a local educational agency 
        under this section, a State educational agency shall 
        consider the quality of application and the extent to 
        which the application meets the principles of 
        effectiveness described in section 4115(a).
  [(f) Approval Process.--
          [(1) Deemed approval.--An application submitted by a 
        local educational agency pursuant to this section shall 
        be deemed to be approved by the State educational 
        agency unless the State educational agency makes a 
        written determination, prior to the expiration of the 
        120-day period beginning on the date on which the State 
        educational agency received the application, that the 
        application is not in compliance with this subpart.
          [(2) Disapproval.--The State educational agency shall 
        not finally disapprove the application, except after 
        giving the local educational agency notice and 
        opportunity for a hearing.
          [(3) Notification.--If the State educational agency 
        finds that the application is not in compliance, in 
        whole or in part, with this subpart, the State 
        educational agency shall--
                  [(A) give the local educational agency notice 
                and an opportunity for a hearing; and
                  [(B) notify the local educational agency of 
                the finding of noncompliance, and in such 
                notification, shall--
                          [(i) cite the specific provisions in 
                        the application that are not in 
                        compliance; and
                          [(ii) request additional information, 
                        only as to the noncompliant provisions, 
                        needed to make the application 
                        compliant.
          [(4) Response.--If the local educational agency 
        responds to the State educational agency's notification 
        described in paragraph (3)(B) during the 45-day period 
        beginning on the date on which the agency received the 
        notification, and resubmits the application with the 
        requested information described in paragraph 
        (3)(B)(ii), the State educational agency shall approve 
        or disapprove such application prior to the later of--
                  [(A) the expiration of the 45-day period 
                beginning on the date on which the application 
                is resubmitted; or
                  [(B) the expiration of the 120-day period 
                described in paragraph (1).
          [(5) Failure to respond.--If the local educational 
        agency does not respond to the State educational 
        agency's notification described in paragraph (3)(B) 
        during the 45-day period beginning on the date on which 
        the agency received the notification, such application 
        shall be deemed to be disapproved.

[SEC. 4115. AUTHORIZED ACTIVITIES.

  [(a) Principles of Effectiveness.--
          [(1) In general.--For a program or activity developed 
        pursuant to this subpart to meet the principles of 
        effectiveness, such program or activity shall--
                  [(A) be based on an assessment of objective 
                data regarding the incidence of violence and 
                illegal drug use in the elementary schools and 
                secondary schools and communities to be served, 
                including an objective analysis of the current 
                conditions and consequences regarding violence 
                and illegal drug use, including delinquency and 
                serious discipline problems, among students who 
                attend such schools (including private school 
                students who participate in the drug and 
                violence prevention program) that is based on 
                ongoing local assessment or evaluation 
                activities;
                  [(B) be based on an established set of 
                performance measures aimed at ensuring that the 
                elementary schools and secondary schools and 
                communities to be served by the program have a 
                safe, orderly, and drug-free learning 
                environment;
                  [(C) be based on scientifically based 
                research that provides evidence that the 
                program to be used will reduce violence and 
                illegal drug use;
                  [(D) be based on an analysis of the data 
                reasonably available at the time, of the 
                prevalence of risk factors, including high or 
                increasing rates of reported cases of child 
                abuse and domestic violence; protective 
                factors, buffers, assets; or other variables in 
                schools and communities in the State identified 
                through scientifically based research; and
                  [(E) include meaningful and ongoing 
                consultation with and input from parents in the 
                development of the application and 
                administration of the program or activity.
          [(2) Periodic evaluation.--
                  [(A) Requirement.--The program or activity 
                shall undergo a periodic evaluation to assess 
                its progress toward reducing violence and 
                illegal drug use in schools to be served based 
                on performance measures described in section 
                4114(d)(2)(B).
                  [(B) Use of results.--The results shall be 
                used to refine, improve, and strengthen the 
                program, and to refine the performance 
                measures, and shall also be made available to 
                the public upon request, with public notice of 
                such availability provided.
          [(3) Waiver.--A local educational agency may apply to 
        the State for a waiver of the requirement of subsection 
        (a)(1)(C) to allow innovative activities or programs 
        that demonstrate substantial likelihood of success.
  [(b) Local Educational Agency Activities.--
          [(1) Program requirements.--A local educational 
        agency shall use funds made available under section 
        4114 to develop, implement, and evaluate comprehensive 
        programs and activities, which are coordinated with 
        other school and community-based services and programs, 
        that shall--
                  [(A) foster a safe and drug-free learning 
                environment that supports academic achievement;
                  [(B) be consistent with the principles of 
                effectiveness described in subsection (a)(1);
                  [(C) be designed to--
                          [(i) prevent or reduce violence; the 
                        use, possession and distribution of 
                        illegal drugs; and delinquency; and
                          [(ii) create a well disciplined 
                        environment conducive to learning, 
                        which includes consultation between 
                        teachers, principals, and other school 
                        personnel to identify early warning 
                        signs of drug use and violence and to 
                        provide behavioral interventions as 
                        part of classroom management efforts; 
                        and
                  [(D) include activities to--
                          [(i) promote the involvement of 
                        parents in the activity or program;
                          [(ii) promote coordination with 
                        community groups and coalitions, and 
                        government agencies; and
                          [(iii) distribute information about 
                        the local educational agency's needs, 
                        goals, and programs under this subpart.
          [(2) Authorized activities.--Each local educational 
        agency, or consortium of such agencies, that receives a 
        subgrant under this subpart may use such funds to carry 
        out activities that comply with the principles of 
        effectiveness described in subsection (a), such as the 
        following:
                  [(A) Age appropriate and developmentally 
                based activities that--
                          [(i) address the consequences of 
                        violence and the illegal use of drugs, 
                        as appropriate;
                          [(ii) promote a sense of individual 
                        responsibility;
                          [(iii) teach students that most 
                        people do not illegally use drugs;
                          [(iv) teach students to recognize 
                        social and peer pressure to use drugs 
                        illegally and the skills for resisting 
                        illegal drug use;
                          [(v) teach students about the dangers 
                        of emerging drugs;
                          [(vi) engage students in the learning 
                        process; and
                          [(vii) incorporate activities in 
                        secondary schools that reinforce 
                        prevention activities implemented in 
                        elementary schools.
                  [(B) Activities that involve families, 
                community sectors (which may include 
                appropriately trained seniors), and a variety 
                of drug and violence prevention providers in 
                setting clear expectations against violence and 
                illegal use of drugs and appropriate 
                consequences for violence and illegal use of 
                drugs.
                  [(C) Dissemination of drug and violence 
                prevention information to schools and the 
                community.
                  [(D) Professional development and training 
                for, and involvement of, school personnel, 
                pupil services personnel, parents, and 
                interested community members in prevention, 
                education, early identification and 
                intervention, mentoring, or rehabilitation 
                referral, as related to drug and violence 
                prevention.
                  [(E) Drug and violence prevention activities 
                that may include the following:
                          [(i) Community-wide planning and 
                        organizing activities to reduce 
                        violence and illegal drug use, which 
                        may include gang activity prevention.
                          [(ii) Acquiring and installing metal 
                        detectors, electronic locks, 
                        surveillance cameras, or other related 
                        equipment and technologies.
                          [(iii) Reporting criminal offenses 
                        committed on school property.
                          [(iv) Developing and implementing 
                        comprehensive school security plans or 
                        obtaining technical assistance 
                        concerning such plans, which may 
                        include obtaining a security assessment 
                        or assistance from the School Security 
                        and Technology Resource Center at the 
                        Sandia National Laboratory located in 
                        Albuquerque, New Mexico.
                          [(v) Supporting safe zones of passage 
                        activities that ensure that students 
                        travel safely to and from school, which 
                        may include bicycle and pedestrian 
                        safety programs.
                          [(vi) The hiring and mandatory 
                        training, based on scientific research, 
                        of school security personnel (including 
                        school resource officers) who interact 
                        with students in support of youth drug 
                        and violence prevention activities 
                        under this part that are implemented in 
                        the school.
                          [(vii) Expanded and improved school-
                        based mental health services related to 
                        illegal drug use and violence, 
                        including early identification of 
                        violence and illegal drug use, 
                        assessment, and direct or group 
                        counseling services provided to 
                        students, parents, families, and school 
                        personnel by qualified school-based 
                        mental health service providers.
                          [(viii) Conflict resolution programs, 
                        including peer mediation programs that 
                        educate and train peer mediators and a 
                        designated faculty supervisor, and 
                        youth anti-crime and anti-drug councils 
                        and activities.
                          [(ix) Alternative education programs 
                        or services for violent or drug abusing 
                        students that reduce the need for 
                        suspension or expulsion or that serve 
                        students who have been suspended or 
                        expelled from the regular educational 
                        settings, including programs or 
                        services to assist students to make 
                        continued progress toward meeting the 
                        State academic achievement standards 
                        and to reenter the regular education 
                        setting.
                          [(x) Counseling, mentoring, referral 
                        services, and other student assistance 
                        practices and programs, including 
                        assistance provided by qualified 
                        school-based mental health services 
                        providers and the training of teachers 
                        by school-based mental health services 
                        providers in appropriate identification 
                        and intervention techniques for 
                        students at risk of violent behavior 
                        and illegal use of drugs.
                          [(xi) Programs that encourage 
                        students to seek advice from, and to 
                        confide in, a trusted adult regarding 
                        concerns about violence and illegal 
                        drug use.
                          [(xii) Drug and violence prevention 
                        activities designed to reduce truancy.
                          [(xiii) Age-appropriate, 
                        developmentally-based violence 
                        prevention and education programs that 
                        address victimization associated with 
                        prejudice and intolerance, and that 
                        include activities designed to help 
                        students develop a sense of individual 
                        responsibility and respect for the 
                        rights of others, and to resolve 
                        conflicts without violence.
                          [(xiv) Consistent with the fourth 
                        amendment to the Constitution of the 
                        United States, the testing of a student 
                        for illegal drug use or the inspecting 
                        of a student's locker for weapons or 
                        illegal drugs or drug paraphernalia, 
                        including at the request of or with the 
                        consent of a parent or legal guardian 
                        of the student, if the local 
                        educational agency elects to so test or 
                        inspect.
                          [(xv) Emergency intervention services 
                        following traumatic crisis events, such 
                        as a shooting, major accident, or a 
                        drug-related incident that have 
                        disrupted the learning environment.
                          [(xvi) Establishing or implementing a 
                        system for transferring suspension and 
                        expulsion records, consistent with 
                        section 444 of the General Education 
                        Provisions Act (20 U.S.C. 1232g), by a 
                        local educational agency to any public 
                        or private elementary school or 
                        secondary school.
                          [(xvii) Developing and implementing 
                        character education programs, as a 
                        component of drug and violence 
                        prevention programs, that take into 
                        account the views of parents of the 
                        students for whom the program is 
                        intended and such students, such as a 
                        program described in subpart 3 of part 
                        D of title V.
                          [(xviii) Establishing and maintaining 
                        a school safety hotline.
                          [(xix) Community service, including 
                        community service performed by expelled 
                        students, and service-learning 
                        projects.
                          [(xx) Conducting a nationwide 
                        background check of each local 
                        educational agency employee, regardless 
                        of when hired, and prospective 
                        employees for the purpose of 
                        determining whether the employee or 
                        prospective employee has been convicted 
                        of a crime that bears upon the 
                        employee's fitness--
                                  [(I) to be responsible for 
                                the safety or well-being of 
                                children;
                                  [(II) to serve in the 
                                particular capacity in which 
                                the employee or prospective 
                                employee is or will be 
                                employed; or
                                  [(III) to otherwise be 
                                employed by the local 
                                educational agency.
                          [(xxi) Programs to train school 
                        personnel to identify warning signs of 
                        youth suicide and to create an action 
                        plan to help youth at risk of suicide.
                          [(xxii) Programs that respond to the 
                        needs of students who are faced with 
                        domestic violence or child abuse.
                  [(F) The evaluation of any of the activities 
                authorized under this subsection and the 
                collection of objective data used to assess 
                program needs, program implementation, or 
                program success in achieving program goals and 
                objectives.
  [(c) Limitation.--
          [(1) In general.--Except as provided in paragraph 
        (2), not more than 40 percent of the funds available to 
        a local educational agency under this subpart may be 
        used to carry out the activities described in clauses 
        (ii) through (vi) of subsection (b)(2)(E), of which not 
        more than 50 percent of such amount may be used to 
        carry out the activities described in clauses (ii) 
        through (v) of such subsection.
          [(2) Exception.--A local educational agency may use 
        funds under this subpart for activities described in 
        clauses (ii) through (v) of subsection (b)(2)(E) only 
        if funding for these activities is not received from 
        other Federal agencies.
  [(d) Rule of Construction.--Nothing in this section shall be 
construed to prohibit the use of funds under this subpart by 
any local educational agency or school for the establishment or 
implementation of a school uniform policy if such policy is 
part of the overall comprehensive drug and violence prevention 
plan of the State involved and is supported by the State's 
needs assessment and other scientifically based research 
information.

[SEC. 4116. REPORTING.

  [(a) State Report.--
          [(1) In general.--By December 1, 2003, and every 2 
        years thereafter, the chief executive officer of the 
        State, in cooperation with the State educational 
        agency, shall submit to the Secretary a report--
                  [(A) on the implementation and outcomes of 
                State programs under section 4112(a)(1) and 
                section 4112(c) and local educational agency 
                programs under section 4115(b), as well as an 
                assessment of their effectiveness;
                  [(B) on the State's progress toward attaining 
                its performance measures for drug and violence 
                prevention under section 4113(a)(10); and
                  [(C) on the State's efforts to inform parents 
                of, and include parents in, violence and drug 
                prevention efforts.
          [(2) Special rule.--The report required by this 
        subsection shall be--
                  [(A) in the form specified by the Secretary;
                  [(B) based on the State's ongoing evaluation 
                activities, and shall include data on the 
                incidence and prevalence, age of onset, 
                perception of health risk, and perception of 
                social disapproval of drug use and violence by 
                youth in schools and communities; and
                  [(C) made readily available to the public.
  [(b) Local Educational Agency Report.--
          [(1) In general.--Each local educational agency 
        receiving funds under this subpart shall submit to the 
        State educational agency such information that the 
        State requires to complete the State report required by 
        subsection (a), including a description of how parents 
        were informed of, and participated in, violence and 
        drug prevention efforts.
          [(2) Availability.--Information under paragraph (1) 
        shall be made readily available to the public.
          [(3) Provision of documentation.--Not later than 
        January 1 of each year that a State is required to 
        report under subsection (a), the Secretary shall 
        provide to the State educational agency all of the 
        necessary documentation required for compliance with 
        this section.

[SEC. 4117. PROGRAMS FOR NATIVE HAWAIIANS.

  [(a) General Authority.--From the funds made available 
pursuant to section 4111(a)(1)(C) to carry out this section, 
the Secretary shall make grants to or enter into cooperative 
agreements or contracts with organizations primarily serving 
and representing Native Hawaiians for the benefit of Native 
Hawaiians to plan, conduct, and administer programs, or 
portions thereof, that are authorized by and consistent with 
the provisions of this subpart.
  [(b) Definition of Native Hawaiian.--For the purposes of this 
section, the term ``Native Hawaiian'' means any individual any 
of whose ancestors were natives, prior to 1778, of the area 
which now comprises the State of Hawaii.

                     [Subpart 2--National Programs

[SEC. 4121. FEDERAL ACTIVITIES.

  [(a) Program Authorized.--From funds made available to carry 
out this subpart under section 4003(2), the Secretary, in 
consultation with the Secretary of Health and Human Services, 
the Director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy, and 
the Attorney General, shall carry out programs to prevent the 
illegal use of drugs and violence among, and promote safety and 
discipline for, students. The Secretary shall carry out such 
programs directly, or through grants, contracts, or cooperative 
agreements with public and private entities and individuals, or 
through agreements with other Federal agencies, and shall 
coordinate such programs with other appropriate Federal 
activities. Such programs may include--
          [(1) the development and demonstration of innovative 
        strategies for the training of school personnel, 
        parents, and members of the community for drug and 
        violence prevention activities based on State and local 
        needs;
          [(2) the development, demonstration, scientifically 
        based evaluation, and dissemination of innovative and 
        high quality drug and violence prevention programs and 
        activities, based on State and local needs, which may 
        include--
                  [(A) alternative education models, either 
                established within a school or separate and 
                apart from an existing school, that are 
                designed to promote drug and violence 
                prevention, reduce disruptive behavior, reduce 
                the need for repeat suspensions and expulsions, 
                enable students to meet challenging State 
                academic standards, and enable students to 
                return to the regular classroom as soon as 
                possible;
                  [(B) community service and service-learning 
                projects, designed to rebuild safe and healthy 
                neighborhoods and increase students' sense of 
                individual responsibility;
                  [(C) video-based projects developed by 
                noncommercial telecommunications entities that 
                provide young people with models for conflict 
                resolution and responsible decisionmaking; and
                  [(D) child abuse education and prevention 
                programs for elementary and secondary students;
          [(3) the provision of information on drug abuse 
        education and prevention to the Secretary of Health and 
        Human Services for dissemination;
          [(4) the provision of information on violence 
        prevention and education and school safety to the 
        Department of Justice for dissemination;
          [(5) technical assistance to chief executive 
        officers, State agencies, local educational agencies, 
        and other recipients of funding under this part to 
        build capacity to develop and implement high-quality, 
        effective drug and violence prevention programs 
        consistent with the principles of effectiveness in 
        section 4115(a);
          [(6) assistance to school systems that have 
        particularly severe drug and violence problems, 
        including hiring drug prevention and school safety 
        coordinators, or assistance to support appropriate 
        response efforts to crisis situations;
          [(7) the development of education and training 
        programs, curricula, instructional materials, and 
        professional training and development for preventing 
        and reducing the incidence of crimes and conflicts 
        motivated by hate in localities most directly affected 
        by hate crimes;
          [(8) activities in communities designated as 
        empowerment zones or enterprise communities that will 
        connect schools to community-wide efforts to reduce 
        drug and violence problems; and
          [(9) other activities in accordance with the purpose 
        of this part, based on State and local needs.
  [(b) Peer Review.--The Secretary shall use a peer review 
process in reviewing applications for funds under this section.

[SEC. 4122. IMPACT EVALUATION.

  [(a) Biennial Evaluation.--The Secretary, in consultation 
with the Safe and Drug-Free Schools and Communities Advisory 
Committee described in section 4124, shall conduct an 
independent biennial evaluation of the impact of programs 
assisted under this subpart and of other recent and new 
initiatives to combat violence and illegal drug use in schools. 
The evaluation shall report on whether community and local 
educational agency programs funded under this subpart--
          [(1) comply with the principles of effectiveness 
        described in section 4115(a);
          [(2) have appreciably reduced the level of illegal 
        drug, alcohol, and tobacco use, and school violence and 
        the illegal presence of weapons at schools; and
          [(3) have conducted effective parent involvement and 
        training programs.
  [(b) Data Collection.--The National Center for Education 
Statistics shall collect data, that is subject to independent 
review, to determine the incidence and prevalence of illegal 
drug use and violence in elementary schools and secondary 
schools in the States. The collected data shall include 
incident reports by schools officials, anonymous student 
surveys, and anonymous teacher surveys.
  [(c) Biennial Report.--Not later than January 1, 2003, and 
every 2 years thereafter, the Secretary shall submit to the 
President and Congress a report on the findings of the 
evaluation conducted under subsection (a) together with the 
data collected under subsection (b) and data available from 
other sources on the incidence and prevalence, age of onset, 
perception of health risk, and perception of social disapproval 
of drug use and violence in elementary schools and secondary 
schools in the States. The Secretary shall include data 
submitted by the States pursuant to subsection 4116(a).

[SEC. 4123. HATE CRIME PREVENTION.

  [(a) Grant Authorization.--From funds made available to carry 
out this subpart under section 4003(2) the Secretary may make 
grants to local educational agencies and community-based 
organizations for the purpose of providing assistance to 
localities most directly affected by hate crimes.
  [(b) Use of Funds.--
          [(1) Program development.--Grants under this section 
        may be used to improve elementary and secondary 
        educational efforts, including--
                  [(A) development of education and training 
                programs designed to prevent and to reduce the 
                incidence of crimes and conflicts motivated by 
                hate;
                  [(B) development of curricula for the purpose 
                of improving conflict or dispute resolution 
                skills of students, teachers, and 
                administrators;
                  [(C) development and acquisition of equipment 
                and instructional materials to meet the needs 
                of, or otherwise be part of, hate crime or 
                conflict programs; and
                  [(D) professional training and development 
                for teachers and administrators on the causes, 
                effects, and resolutions of hate crimes or 
                hate-based conflicts.
          [(2) Application.--In order to be eligible to receive 
        a grant under this section for any fiscal year, a local 
        educational agency, or a local educational agency in 
        conjunction with a community-based organization, shall 
        submit an application to the Secretary in such form and 
        containing such information as the Secretary may 
        reasonably require.
          [(3) Requirements.--Each application under paragraph 
        (2) shall include--
                  [(A) a request for funds for the purpose 
                described in this section;
                  [(B) a description of the schools and 
                communities to be served by the grants; and
                  [(C) assurances that Federal funds received 
                under this section shall be used to supplement, 
                and not supplant, non-Federal funds.
          [(4) Comprehensive plan.--Each application shall 
        include a comprehensive plan that contains--
                  [(A) a description of the hate crime or 
                conflict problems within the schools or the 
                community targeted for assistance;
                  [(B) a description of the program to be 
                developed or augmented by such Federal and 
                matching funds;
                  [(C) assurances that such program or activity 
                shall be administered by or under the 
                supervision of the applicant;
                  [(D) procedures for the proper and efficient 
                administration of such program; and
                  [(E) fiscal control and fund accounting 
                procedures as may be necessary to ensure 
                prudent use, proper disbursement, and accurate 
                accounting of funds received under this 
                section.
  [(c) Award of Grants.--
          [(1) Selection of recipients.--The Secretary shall 
        consider the incidence of crimes and conflicts 
        motivated by bias in the targeted schools and 
        communities in awarding grants under this section.
          [(2) Geographic distribution.--The Secretary shall 
        attempt, to the extent practicable, to achieve an 
        equitable geographic distribution of grant awards.
          [(3) Dissemination of information.--The Secretary 
        shall attempt, to the extent practicable, to make 
        available information regarding successful hate crime 
        prevention programs, including programs established or 
        expanded with grants under this section.
  [(d) Reports.--The Secretary shall submit to Congress a 
report every 2 years that shall contain a detailed statement 
regarding grants and awards, activities of grant recipients, 
and an evaluation of programs established under this section.

[SEC. 4124. SAFE AND DRUG-FREE SCHOOLS AND COMMUNITIES ADVISORY 
                    COMMITTEE.

  [(a) Establishment.--
          [(1) In general.--There is hereby established an 
        advisory committee to be known as the ``Safe and Drug 
        Free Schools and Communities Advisory Committee'' 
        (referred to in this section as the ``Advisory 
        Committee'') to--
                  [(A) consult with the Secretary under 
                subsection (b);
                  [(B) coordinate Federal school- and 
                community-based substance abuse and violence 
                prevention programs and reduce duplicative 
                research or services;
                  [(C) develop core data sets and evaluation 
                protocols for safe and drug-free school- and 
                community-based programs;
                  [(D) provide technical assistance and 
                training for safe and drug-free school- and 
                community-based programs;
                  [(E) provide for the diffusion of 
                scientifically based research to safe and drug-
                free school- and community-based programs; and
                  [(F) review other regulations and standards 
                developed under this title.
          [(2) Composition.--The Advisory Committee shall be 
        composed of representatives from--
                  [(A) the Department of Education;
                  [(B) the Centers for Disease Control and 
                Prevention;
                  [(C) the National Institute on Drug Abuse;
                  [(D) the National Institute on Alcoholism and 
                Alcohol Abuse;
                  [(E) the Center for Substance Abuse 
                Prevention;
                  [(F) the Center for Mental Health Services;
                  [(G) the Office of Juvenile Justice and 
                Delinquency Prevention;
                  [(H) the Office of National Drug Control 
                Policy;
                  [(I) State and local governments, including 
                education agencies; and
                  [(J) researchers and expert practitioners.
          [(3) Consultation.--In carrying out its duties under 
        this section, the Advisory Committee shall annually 
        consult with interested State and local coordinators of 
        school- and community-based substance abuse and 
        violence prevention programs and other interested 
        groups.
  [(b) Programs.--
          [(1) In general.--From amounts made available under 
        section 4003(2) to carry out this subpart, the 
        Secretary, in consultation with the Advisory Committee, 
        shall carry out scientifically based research programs 
        to strengthen the accountability and effectiveness of 
        the State, chief executive officer's, and national 
        programs under this part.
          [(2) Grants, contracts or cooperative agreements.--
        The Secretary shall carry out paragraph (1) directly or 
        through grants, contracts, or cooperative agreements 
        with public and private entities and individuals or 
        through agreements with other Federal agencies.
          [(3) Coordination.--The Secretary shall coordinate 
        programs under this section with other appropriate 
        Federal activities.
          [(4) Activities.--Activities that may be carried out 
        under programs funded under this section may include--
                  [(A) the provision of technical assistance 
                and training, in collaboration with other 
                Federal agencies utilizing their expertise and 
                national and regional training systems, for 
                Governors, State educational agencies and local 
                educational agencies to support high quality, 
                effective programs that--
                          [(i) provide a thorough assessment of 
                        the substance abuse and violence 
                        problem;
                          [(ii) utilize objective data and the 
                        knowledge of a wide range of community 
                        members;
                          [(iii) develop measurable goals and 
                        objectives; and
                          [(iv) implement scientifically based 
                        research activities that have been 
                        shown to be effective and that meet 
                        identified needs;
                  [(B) the provision of technical assistance 
                and training to foster program accountability;
                  [(C) the diffusion and dissemination of best 
                practices and programs;
                  [(D) the development of core data sets and 
                evaluation tools;
                  [(E) program evaluations;
                  [(F) the provision of information on drug 
                abuse education and prevention to the Secretary 
                of Health and Human Services for dissemination 
                by the clearinghouse for alcohol and drug abuse 
                information established under section 
                501(d)(16) of the Public Health Service Act; 
                and
                  [(G) other activities that meet unmet needs 
                related to the purpose of this part and that 
                are undertaken in consultation with the 
                Advisory Committee.

[SEC. 4125. NATIONAL COORDINATOR PROGRAM.

  [(a) In General.--From funds made available to carry out this 
subpart under section 4003(2), the Secretary may provide for 
the establishment of a National Coordinator Program under which 
the Secretary shall award grants to local educational agencies 
for the hiring of drug prevention and school safety program 
coordinators.
  [(b) Use of Funds.--Amounts received under a grant under 
subsection (a) shall be used by local educational agencies to 
recruit, hire, and train individuals to serve as drug 
prevention and school safety program coordinators in schools 
with significant drug and school safety problems. Such 
coordinators shall be responsible for developing, conducting, 
and analyzing assessments of drug and crime problems at their 
schools, and administering the safe and drug-free grant program 
at such schools.

[SEC. 4126. COMMUNITY SERVICE GRANT PROGRAM.

  [(a) In General.--From funds made available to carry out this 
subpart under section 4003(2), the Secretary may make grants to 
States to carry out programs under which students expelled or 
suspended from school are required to perform community 
service.
  [(b) Allocation.--From the amount described in subsection 
(a), the Secretary shall allocate among the States--
          [(1) one-half according to the ratio between the 
        school-aged population of each State and the school-
        aged population of all the States; and
          [(2) one-half according to the ratio between the 
        amount each State received under section 1124A for the 
        preceding year and the sum of such amounts received by 
        all the States.
  [(c) Minimum.--For any fiscal year, no State shall be 
allotted under this section an amount that is less than one-
half of 1 percent of the total amount allotted to all the 
States under this section.
  [(d) Reallotment.--The Secretary may reallot any amount of 
any allotment to a State if the Secretary determines that the 
State will be unable to use such amount within 2 years of such 
allotment. Such reallotments shall be made on the same basis as 
allotments are made under subsection (b).
  [(e) Definition.--In this section, the term ``State'' means 
each of the 50 States, the District of Columbia, and the 
Commonwealth of Puerto Rico.

[SEC. 4127. SCHOOL SECURITY TECHNOLOGY AND RESOURCE CENTER.

  [(a) Center.--From funds made available to carry out this 
subpart under section 4003(2), the Secretary, the Attorney 
General, and the Secretary of Energy may enter into an 
agreement for the establishment at the Sandia National 
Laboratories, in partnership with the National Law Enforcement 
and Corrections Technology Center--Southeast and the National 
Center for Rural Law Enforcement in Little Rock, Arkansas, of a 
center to be known as the ``School Security Technology and 
Resource Center'' (hereafter in this section ``the Center'').
  [(b) Administration.--The Center established under subsection 
(a) shall be administered by the Attorney General.
  [(c) Functions.--The center established under subsection (a) 
shall be a resource to local educational agencies for school 
security assessments, security technology development, 
evaluation and implementation, and technical assistance 
relating to improving school security. The Center will also 
conduct and publish school violence research, coalesce data 
from victim communities, and monitor and report on schools that 
implement school security strategies.

[SEC. 4128. NATIONAL CENTER FOR SCHOOL AND YOUTH SAFETY.

  [(a) Establishment.--From funds made available to carry out 
this subpart under section 4003(2), the Secretary of Education 
and the Attorney General may jointly establish a National 
Center for School and Youth Safety (in this section referred to 
as the ``Center''). The Secretary of Education and the Attorney 
General may establish the Center at an existing facility, if 
the facility has a history of performing two or more of the 
duties described in subsection (b). The Secretary of Education 
and the Attorney General shall jointly appoint a Director of 
the Center to oversee the operation of the Center.
  [(b) Duties.--The Center shall carry out emergency response, 
anonymous student hotline, consultation, and information and 
outreach activities with respect to elementary and secondary 
school safety, including the following:
          [(1) Emergency response.--The staff of the Center, 
        and such temporary contract employees as the Director 
        of the Center shall determine necessary, shall offer 
        emergency assistance to local communities to respond to 
        school safety crises. Such assistance shall include 
        counseling for victims and the community, assistance to 
        law enforcement to address short-term security 
        concerns, and advice on how to enhance school safety, 
        prevent future incidents, and respond to future 
        incidents.
          [(2) Anonymous student hotline.--The Center shall 
        establish a toll-free telephone number for students to 
        report criminal activity, threats of criminal activity, 
        and other high-risk behaviors such as substance abuse, 
        gang or cult affiliation, depression, or other warning 
        signs of potentially violent behavior. The Center shall 
        relay the reports, without attribution, to local law 
        enforcement or appropriate school hotlines. The 
        Director of the Center shall work with the Attorney 
        General to establish guidelines for Center staff to 
        work with law enforcement around the Nation to relay 
        information reported through the hotline.
          [(3) Consultation.--The Center shall establish a 
        toll-free number for the public to contact staff of the 
        Center for consultation regarding school safety. The 
        Director of the Center shall hire administrative staff 
        and individuals with expertise in enhancing school 
        safety, including individuals with backgrounds in 
        counseling and psychology, education, law enforcement 
        and criminal justice, and community development to 
        assist in the consultation.
          [(4) Information and outreach.--The Center shall 
        compile information about the best practices in school 
        violence prevention, intervention, and crisis 
        management, and shall serve as a clearinghouse for 
        model school safety program information. The staff of 
        the Center shall work to ensure local governments, 
        school officials, parents, students, and law 
        enforcement officials and agencies are aware of the 
        resources, grants, and expertise available to enhance 
        school safety and prevent school crime. The staff of 
        the Center shall give special attention to providing 
        outreach to rural and impoverished communities.

[SEC. 4129. GRANTS TO REDUCE ALCOHOL ABUSE.

  [(a) In General.--The Secretary, in consultation with the 
Administrator of the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services 
Administration, may award grants from funds made available to 
carry out this subpart under section 4003(2), on a competitive 
basis, to local educational agencies to enable such agencies to 
develop and implement innovative and effective programs to 
reduce alcohol abuse in secondary schools.
  [(b) Eligibility.--To be eligible to receive a grant under 
subsection (a), a local educational agency shall prepare and 
submit to the Secretary an application at such time, in such 
manner, and containing such information as the Secretary may 
require, including--
          [(1) a description of the activities to be carried 
        out under the grant;
          [(2) an assurance that such activities will include 
        one or more of the proven strategies for reducing 
        underage alcohol abuse as determined by the Substance 
        Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration;
          [(3) an explanation of how activities to be carried 
        out under the grant that are not described in paragraph 
        (2) will be effective in reducing underage alcohol 
        abuse, including references to the past effectiveness 
        of such activities;
          [(4) an assurance that the applicant will submit to 
        the Secretary an annual report concerning the 
        effectiveness of the programs and activities funded 
        under the grant; and
          [(5) such other information as the Secretary 
        determines appropriate.
  [(c) Streamlining of Process for Low-Income and Rural LEAs.--
The Secretary, in consultation with the Administrator of the 
Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, 
shall develop procedures to make the application process for 
grants under this section more user-friendly, particularly for 
low-income and rural local educational agencies.
  [(d) Reservations.--
          [(1) SAMHSA.--The Secretary may reserve 20 percent of 
        any amount used to carry out this section to enable the 
        Administrator of the Substance Abuse and Mental Health 
        Services Administration to provide alcohol abuse 
        resources and start-up assistance to local educational 
        agencies receiving grants under this section.
          [(2) Low-income and rural areas.--The Secretary may 
        reserve 25 percent of any amount used to carry out this 
        section to award grants to low-income and rural local 
        educational agencies.

[SEC. 4130. MENTORING PROGRAMS.

  [(a) Purpose; Definitions.--
          [(1) Purpose.--The purpose of this section is to make 
        assistance available to promote mentoring programs for 
        children with greatest need--
                  [(A) to assist such children in receiving 
                support and guidance from a mentor;
                  [(B) to improve the academic achievement of 
                such children;
                  [(C) to improve interpersonal relationships 
                between such children and their peers, 
                teachers, other adults, and family members;
                  [(D) to reduce the dropout rate of such 
                children; and
                  [(E) to reduce juvenile delinquency and 
                involvement in gangs by such children.
          [(2) Definitions.--In this part:
                  [(A) Child with greatest need.--The term 
                ``child with greatest need'' means a child who 
                is at risk of educational failure, dropping out 
                of school, or involvement in criminal or 
                delinquent activities, or who lacks strong 
                positive role models.
                  [(B) Eligible entity.--The term ``eligible 
                entity'' means--
                          [(i) a local educational agency;
                          [(ii) a nonprofit, community-based 
                        organization; or
                          [(iii) a partnership between a local 
                        educational agency and a nonprofit, 
                        community-based organization.
                  [(C) Mentor.--The term ``mentor'' means a 
                responsible adult, a postsecondary school 
                student, or a secondary school student who 
                works with a child--
                          [(i) to provide a positive role model 
                        for the child;
                          [(ii) to establish a supportive 
                        relationship with the child; and
                          [(iii) to provide the child with 
                        academic assistance and exposure to new 
                        experiences and examples of opportunity 
                        that enhance the ability of the child 
                        to become a responsible adult.
                  [(D) State.--The term ``State'' means each of 
                the several States, the District of Columbia, 
                the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the United 
                States Virgin Islands, Guam, American Samoa, 
                and the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana 
                Islands.
  [(b) Grant Program.--
          [(1) In general.--The Secretary may award grants from 
        funds made available to carry out this subpart under 
        section 4003(2) to eligible entities to assist such 
        entities in establishing and supporting mentoring 
        programs and activities for children with greatest need 
        that--
                  [(A) are designed to link such children 
                (particularly children living in rural areas, 
                high-crime areas, or troubled home 
                environments, or children experiencing 
                educational failure) with mentors who--
                          [(i) have received training and 
                        support in mentoring;
                          [(ii) have been screened using 
                        appropriate reference checks, child and 
                        domestic abuse record checks, and 
                        criminal background checks; and
                          [(iii) are interested in working with 
                        children with greatest need; and
                  [(B) are intended to achieve one or more of 
                the following goals with respect to children 
                with greatest need:
                          [(i) Provide general guidance.
                          [(ii) Promote personal and social 
                        responsibility.
                          [(iii) Increase participation in, and 
                        enhance the ability to benefit from, 
                        elementary and secondary education.
                          [(iv) Discourage illegal use of drugs 
                        and alcohol, violence, use of dangerous 
                        weapons, promiscuous behavior, and 
                        other criminal, harmful, or potentially 
                        harmful activity.
                          [(v) Encourage participation in 
                        community service and community 
                        activities.
                          [(vi) Encourage setting goals and 
                        planning for the future, including 
                        encouragement of graduation from 
                        secondary school and planning for 
                        postsecondary education or training.
                          [(viii) Discourage involvement in 
                        gangs.
          [(2) Use of funds.--
                  [(A) In general.--Each eligible entity 
                awarded a grant under this subsection shall use 
                the grant funds for activities that establish 
                or implement a mentoring program, that may 
                include--
                          [(i) hiring of mentoring coordinators 
                        and support staff;
                          [(ii) providing for the professional 
                        development of mentoring coordinators 
                        and support staff;
                          [(iii) recruitment, screening, and 
                        training of mentors;
                          [(iv) reimbursement to schools, if 
                        appropriate, for the use of school 
                        materials or supplies in carrying out 
                        the mentoring program;
                          [(v) dissemination of outreach 
                        materials;
                          [(vi) evaluation of the mentoring 
                        program using scientifically based 
                        methods; and
                          [(vii) such other activities as the 
                        Secretary may reasonably prescribe by 
                        rule.
                  [(B) Prohibited uses.--Notwithstanding 
                subparagraph (A), an eligible entity awarded a 
                grant under this section may not use the grant 
                funds--
                          [(i) to directly compensate mentors;
                          [(ii) to obtain educational or other 
                        materials or equipment that would 
                        otherwise be used in the ordinary 
                        course of the eligible entity's 
                        operations;
                          [(iii) to support litigation of any 
                        kind; or
                          [(iv) for any other purpose 
                        reasonably prohibited by the Secretary 
                        by rule.
          [(3) Availability of funds.--Funds made available 
        through a grant under this section shall be available 
        for obligation for a period not to exceed 3 years.
          [(4) Application.--Each eligible entity seeking a 
        grant under this section shall submit to the Secretary 
        an application that includes--
                  [(A) a description of the plan for the 
                mentoring program the eligible entity proposes 
                to carry out with such grant;
                  [(B) information on the children expected to 
                be served by the mentoring program for which 
                such grant is sought;
                  [(C) a description of the mechanism the 
                eligible entity will use to match children with 
                mentors based on the needs of the children;
                  [(D) an assurance that no mentor will be 
                assigned to mentor so many children that the 
                assignment will undermine the mentor's ability 
                to be an effective mentor or the mentor's 
                ability to establish a close relationship (a 
                one-to-one relationship, where practicable) 
                with each mentored child;
                  [(E) an assurance that the mentoring program 
                will provide children with a variety of 
                experiences and support, including--
                          [(i) emotional support;
                          [(ii) academic assistance; and
                          [(iii) exposure to experiences that 
                        the children might not otherwise 
                        encounter on their own;
                  [(F) an assurance that the mentoring program 
                will be monitored to ensure that each child 
                assigned a mentor benefits from that assignment 
                and that the child will be assigned a new 
                mentor if the relationship between the original 
                mentor and the child is not beneficial to the 
                child;
                  [(G) information regarding how mentors and 
                children will be recruited to the mentoring 
                program;
                  [(H) information regarding how prospective 
                mentors will be screened;
                  [(I) information on the training that will be 
                provided to mentors; and
                  [(J) information on the system that the 
                eligible entity will use to manage and monitor 
                information relating to the mentoring 
                program's--
                          [(i) reference checks;
                          [(ii) child and domestic abuse record 
                        checks;
                          [(iii) criminal background checks; 
                        and
                          [(iv) procedure for matching children 
                        with mentors.
          [(5) Selection.--
                  [(A) Competitive basis.--In accordance with 
                this subsection, the Secretary shall award 
                grants to eligible entities on a competitive 
                basis.
                  [(B) Priority.--In awarding grants under 
                subparagraph (A), the Secretary shall give 
                priority to each eligible entity that--
                          [(i) serves children with greatest 
                        need living in rural areas, high-crime 
                        areas, or troubled home environments, 
                        or who attend schools with violence 
                        problems;
                          [(ii) provides high quality 
                        background screening of mentors, 
                        training of mentors, and technical 
                        assistance in carrying out mentoring 
                        programs; or
                          [(iii) proposes a school-based 
                        mentoring program.
                  [(C) Other considerations.--In awarding 
                grants under subparagraph (A), the Secretary 
                shall also consider--
                          [(i) the degree to which the location 
                        of the mentoring program proposed by 
                        each eligible entity contributes to a 
                        fair distribution of mentoring programs 
                        with respect to urban and rural 
                        locations;
                          [(ii) the quality of the mentoring 
                        program proposed by each eligible 
                        entity, including--
                                  [(I) the resources, if any, 
                                the eligible entity will 
                                dedicate to providing children 
                                with opportunities for job 
                                training or postsecondary 
                                education;
                                  [(II) the degree to which 
                                parents, teachers, community-
                                based organizations, and the 
                                local community have 
                                participated, or will 
                                participate, in the design and 
                                implementation of the proposed 
                                mentoring program;
                                  [(III) the degree to which 
                                the eligible entity can ensure 
                                that mentors will develop 
                                longstanding relationships with 
                                the children they mentor;
                                  [(IV) the degree to which the 
                                mentoring program will serve 
                                children with greatest need in 
                                the 4th through 8th grades; and
                                  [(V) the degree to which the 
                                mentoring program will continue 
                                to serve children from the 9th 
                                grade through graduation from 
                                secondary school, as needed; 
                                and
                          [(iii) the capability of each 
                        eligible entity to effectively 
                        implement its mentoring program.
                  [(D) Grant to each state.--Notwithstanding 
                any other provision of this subsection, in 
                awarding grants under subparagraph (A), the 
                Secretary shall select not less than one grant 
                recipient from each State for which there is an 
                eligible entity that submits an application of 
                sufficient quality pursuant to paragraph (4).
          [(6) Model screening guidelines.--
                  [(A) In general.--Based on model screening 
                guidelines developed by the Office of Juvenile 
                Programs of the Department of Justice, the 
                Secretary shall develop and distribute to each 
                eligible entity awarded a grant under this 
                section specific model guidelines for the 
                screening of mentors who seek to participate in 
                mentoring programs assisted under this section.
                  [(B) Background checks.--The guidelines 
                developed under this subsection shall include, 
                at a minimum, a requirement that potential 
                mentors be subject to reference checks, child 
                and domestic abuse record checks, and criminal 
                background checks.

                       [Subpart 3--Gun Possession

                     [Subpart 4--General Provisions

[SEC. 4151. DEFINITIONS.

   [In this part:
          [(1) Controlled substance.--The term ``controlled 
        substance'' means a drug or other substance identified 
        under Schedule I, II, III, IV, or V in section 202(c) 
        of the Controlled Substances Act (21 U.S.C. 812(c)).
          [(2) Drug.--The term ``drug'' includes controlled 
        substances; the illegal use of alcohol and tobacco; and 
        the harmful, abusive, or addictive use of substances, 
        including inhalants and anabolic steroids.
          [(3) Drug and violence prevention.--The term ``drug 
        and violence prevention'' means--
                  [(A) with respect to drugs, prevention, early 
                intervention, rehabilitation referral, or 
                education related to the illegal use of drugs;
                  [(B) with respect to violence, the promotion 
                of school safety, such that students and school 
                personnel are free from violent and disruptive 
                acts, including sexual harassment and abuse, 
                and victimization associated with prejudice and 
                intolerance, on school premises, going to and 
                from school, and at school-sponsored 
                activities, through the creation and 
                maintenance of a school environment that is 
                free of weapons and fosters individual 
                responsibility and respect for the rights of 
                others.
          [(4) Hate crime.--The term ``hate crime'' means a 
        crime as described in section 1(b) of the Hate Crime 
        Statistics Act of 1990.
          [(5) Nonprofit.--The term ``nonprofit'', as applied 
        to a school, agency, organization, or institution means 
        a school, agency, organization, or institution owned 
        and operated by one or more nonprofit corporations or 
        associations, no part of the net earnings of which 
        inures, or may lawfully inure, to the benefit of any 
        private shareholder or individual.
          [(6) Protective factor, buffer, or asset.--The terms 
        ``protective factor'', ``buffer'', and ``asset'' mean 
        any one of a number of the community, school, family, 
        or peer-individual domains that are known, through 
        prospective, longitudinal research efforts, or which 
        are grounded in a well-established theoretical model of 
        prevention, and have been shown to prevent alcohol, 
        tobacco, or illegal drug use, as well as violent 
        behavior, by youth in the community, and which promote 
        positive youth development.
          [(7) Risk factor.--The term ``risk factor'' means any 
        one of a number of characteristics of the community, 
        school, family, or peer-individual domains that are 
        known, through prospective, longitudinal research 
        efforts, to be predictive of alcohol, tobacco, and 
        illegal drug use, as well as violent behavior, by youth 
        in the school and community.
          [(8) School-aged population.--The term ``school-aged 
        population'' means the population aged five through 17, 
        as determined by the Secretary on the basis of the most 
        recent satisfactory data available from the Department 
        of Commerce.
          [(9) School based mental health services provider.--
        The term ``school based mental health services 
        provider'' includes a State licensed or State certified 
        school counselor, school psychologist, school social 
        worker, or other State licensed or certified mental 
        health professional qualified under State law to 
        provide such services to children and adolescents.
          [(10) School personnel.--The term ``school 
        personnel'' includes teachers, principals, 
        administrators, counselors, social workers, 
        psychologists, nurses, librarians, and other support 
        staff who are employed by a school or who perform 
        services for the school on a contractual basis.
          [(11) School resource officer.--The term ``school 
        resource officer'' means a career law enforcement 
        officer, with sworn authority, deployed in community 
        oriented policing, and assigned by the employing police 
        department to a local educational agency to work in 
        collaboration with schools and community based 
        organizations to--
                  [(A) educate students in crime and illegal 
                drug use prevention and safety;
                  [(B) develop or expand community justice 
                initiatives for students; and
                  [(C) train students in conflict resolution, 
                restorative justice, and crime and illegal drug 
                use awareness.

[SEC. 4152. MESSAGE AND MATERIALS.

  [(a) ``Wrong and Harmful'' Message.--Drug and violence 
prevention programs supported under this part shall convey a 
clear and consistent message that the illegal use of drugs and 
acts of violence are wrong and harmful.
  [(b) Curriculum.--The Secretary shall not prescribe the use 
of specific curricula for programs supported under this part.

[SEC. 4153. PARENTAL CONSENT.

  [Upon receipt of written notification from the parents or 
legal guardians of a student, the local educational agency 
shall withdraw such student from any program or activity funded 
under this part. The local educational agency shall make 
reasonable efforts to inform parents or legal guardians of the 
content of such programs or activities funded under this part, 
other than classroom instruction.

[SEC. 4154. PROHIBITED USES OF FUNDS.

   [No funds under this part may be used for--
          [(1) construction (except for minor remodeling needed 
        to accomplish the purposes of this part); or
          [(2) medical services, drug treatment or 
        rehabilitation, except for pupil services or referral 
        to treatment for students who are victims of, or 
        witnesses to, crime or who illegally use drugs.

            [PART B--21ST CENTURY COMMUNITY LEARNING CENTERS

[SEC. 4201. PURPOSE; DEFINITIONS.

  [(a) Purpose.--The purpose of this part is to provide 
opportunities for communities to establish or expand activities 
in community learning centers that--
          [(1) provide opportunities for academic enrichment, 
        including providing tutorial services to help students, 
        particularly students who attend low-performing 
        schools, to meet State and local student academic 
        achievement standards in core academic subjects, such 
        as reading and mathematics;
          [(2) offer students a broad array of additional 
        services, programs, and activities, such as youth 
        development activities, drug and violence prevention 
        programs, counseling programs, art, music, and 
        recreation programs, technology education programs, and 
        character education programs, that are designed to 
        reinforce and complement the regular academic program 
        of participating students; and
          [(3) offer families of students served by community 
        learning centers opportunities for literacy and related 
        educational development.
  [(b) Definitions.--In this part:
          [(1) Community learning center.--The term ``community 
        learning center'' means an entity that--
                  [(A) assists students in meeting State and 
                local academic achievement standards in core 
                academic subjects, such as reading and 
                mathematics, by providing the students with 
                opportunities for academic enrichment 
                activities and a broad array of other 
                activities (such as drug and violence 
                prevention, counseling, art, music, recreation, 
                technology, and character education programs) 
                during nonschool hours or periods when school 
                is not in session (such as before and after 
                school or during summer recess) that reinforce 
                and complement the regular academic programs of 
                the schools attended by the students served; 
                and
                  [(B) offers families of students served by 
                such center opportunities for literacy and 
                related educational development.
          [(2) Covered program.--The term ``covered program'' 
        means a program for which--
                  [(A) the Secretary made a grant under part I 
                of title X (as such part was in effect on the 
                day before the date of enactment of the No 
                Child Left Behind Act of 2001); and
                  [(B) the grant period had not ended on that 
                date of enactment.
          [(3) Eligible entity.--The term ``eligible entity'' 
        means a local educational agency, community-based 
        organization, another public or private entity, or a 
        consortium of two or more of such agencies, 
        organizations, or entities.
          [(4) State.--The term ``State'' means each of the 50 
        States, the District of Columbia, and the Commonwealth 
        of Puerto Rico.

[SEC. 4202. ALLOTMENTS TO STATES.

  [(a) Reservation.--From the funds appropriated under section 
4206 for any fiscal year, the Secretary shall reserve--
          [(1) such amount as may be necessary to make 
        continuation awards to grant recipients under covered 
        programs (under the terms of those grants);
          [(2) not more than 1 percent for national activities, 
        which the Secretary may carry out directly or through 
        grants and contracts, such as providing technical 
        assistance to eligible entities carrying out programs 
        under this part or conducting a national evaluation; 
        and
          [(3) not more than 1 percent for payments to the 
        outlying areas and the Bureau of Indian Affairs, to be 
        allotted in accordance with their respective needs for 
        assistance under this part, as determined by the 
        Secretary, to enable the outlying areas and the Bureau 
        to carry out the purpose of this part.
  [(b) State Allotments.--
          [(1) Determination.--From the funds appropriated 
        under section 4206 for any fiscal year and remaining 
        after the Secretary makes reservations under subsection 
        (a), the Secretary shall allot to each State for the 
        fiscal year an amount that bears the same relationship 
        to the remainder as the amount the State received under 
        subpart 2 of part A of title I for the preceding fiscal 
        year bears to the amount all States received under that 
        subpart for the preceding fiscal year, except that no 
        State shall receive less than an amount equal to one-
        half of 1 percent of the total amount made available to 
        all States under this subsection.
          [(2) Reallotment of unused funds.--If a State does 
        not receive an allotment under this part for a fiscal 
        year, the Secretary shall reallot the amount of the 
        State's allotment to the remaining States in accordance 
        with this section.
  [(c) State Use of Funds.--
          [(1) In general.--Each State that receives an 
        allotment under this part shall reserve not less than 
        95 percent of the amount allotted to such State under 
        subsection (b), for each fiscal year for awards to 
        eligible entities under section 4204.
          [(2) State administration.--A State educational 
        agency may use not more than 2 percent of the amount 
        made available to the State under subsection (b) for--
                  [(A) the administrative costs of carrying out 
                its responsibilities under this part;
                  [(B) establishing and implementing a peer 
                review process for grant applications described 
                in section 4204(b) (including consultation with 
                the Governor and other State agencies 
                responsible for administering youth development 
                programs and adult learning activities); 
                andsupervising the awarding of funds to 
                eligible entities (in consultation with the 
                Governor and other State agencies responsible 
                for administering youth development programs 
                and adult learning activities).
          [(3) State activities.--A State educational agency 
        may use not more than 3 percent of the amount made 
        available to the State under subsection (b) for the 
        following activities:
                  [(A) Monitoring and evaluation of programs 
                and activities assisted under this part.
                  [(B) Providing capacity building, training, 
                and technical assistance under this part.
                  [(C) Comprehensive evaluation (directly, or 
                through a grant or contract) of the 
                effectiveness of programs and activities 
                assisted under this part.
                  [(D) Providing training and technical 
                assistance to eligible entities who are 
                applicants for or recipients of awards under 
                this part.

[SEC. 4203. STATE APPLICATION.

  [(a) In General.--In order to receive an allotment under 
section 4202 for any fiscal year, a State shall submit to the 
Secretary, at such time as the Secretary may require, an 
application that--
          [(1) designates the State educational agency as the 
        agency responsible for the administration and 
        supervision of programs assisted under this part;
          [(2) describes how the State educational agency will 
        use funds received under this part, including funds 
        reserved for State-level activities;
          [(3) contains an assurance that the State educational 
        agency will make awards under this part only to 
        eligible entities that propose to serve--
                  [(A) students who primarily attend--
                          [(i) schools eligible for schoolwide 
                        programs under section 1114; or
                          [(ii) schools that serve a high 
                        percentage of students from low-income 
                        families; and
                  [(B) the families of students described in 
                subparagraph (A);
          [(4) describes the procedures and criteria the State 
        educational agency will use for reviewing applications 
        and awarding funds to eligible entities on a 
        competitive basis, which shall include procedures and 
        criteria that take into consideration the likelihood 
        that a proposed community learning center will help 
        participating students meet local content and student 
        academic achievement standards;
          [(5) describes how the State educational agency will 
        ensure that awards made under this part are--
                  [(A) of sufficient size and scope to support 
                high-quality, effective programs that are 
                consistent with the purpose of this part; and
                  [(B) in amounts that are consistent with 
                section 4204(h);
          [(6) describes the steps the State educational agency 
        will take to ensure that programs implement effective 
        strategies, including providing ongoing technical 
        assistance and training, evaluation, and dissemination 
        of promising practices;
          [(7) describes how programs under this part will be 
        coordinated with programs under this Act, and other 
        programs as appropriate;
          [(8) contains an assurance that the State educational 
        agency--
                  [(A) will make awards for programs for a 
                period of not less than 3 years and not more 
                than 5 years; and
                  [(B) will require each eligible entity 
                seeking such an award to submit a plan 
                describing how the community learning center to 
                be funded through the award will continue after 
                funding under this part ends;
          [(9) contains an assurance that funds appropriated to 
        carry out this part will be used to supplement, and not 
        supplant, other Federal, State, and local public funds 
        expended to provide programs and activities authorized 
        under this part and other similar programs;
          [(10) contains an assurance that the State 
        educational agency will require eligible entities to 
        describe in their applications under section 4204(b) 
        how the transportation needs of participating students 
        will be addressed;
          [(11) provides an assurance that the application was 
        developed in consultation and coordination with 
        appropriate State officials, including the chief State 
        school officer, and other State agencies administering 
        before and after school (or summer school) programs, 
        the heads of the State health and mental health 
        agencies or their designees, and representatives of 
        teachers, parents, students, the business community, 
        and community-based organizations;
          [(12) describes the results of the State's needs and 
        resources assessment for before and after school 
        activities, which shall be based on the results of on-
        going State evaluation activities;
          [(13) describes how the State educational agency will 
        evaluate the effectiveness of programs and activities 
        carried out under this part, which shall include, at a 
        minimum--
                  [(A) a description of the performance 
                indicators and performance measures that will 
                be used to evaluate programs and activities; 
                and
                  [(B) public dissemination of the evaluations 
                of programs and activities carried out under 
                this part; and
          [(14) provides for timely public notice of intent to 
        file an application and an assurance that the 
        application will be available for public review after 
        submission.
  [(b) Deemed Approval.--An application submitted by a State 
educational agency pursuant to subsection (a) shall be deemed 
to be approved by the Secretary unless the Secretary makes a 
written determination, prior to the expiration of the 120-day 
period beginning on the date on which the Secretary received 
the application, that the application is not in compliance with 
this part.
  [(c) Disapproval.--The Secretary shall not finally disapprove 
the application, except after giving the State educational 
agency notice and opportunity for a hearing.
  [(d) Notification.--If the Secretary finds that the 
application is not in compliance, in whole or in part, with 
this part, the Secretary shall--
          [(1) give the State educational agency notice and an 
        opportunity for a hearing; and
          [(2) notify the State educational agency of the 
        finding of noncompliance, and, in such notification, 
        shall--
                  [(A) cite the specific provisions in the 
                application that are not in compliance; and
                  [(B) request additional information, only as 
                to the noncompliant provisions, needed to make 
                the application compliant.
  [(e) Response.--If the State educational agency responds to 
the Secretary's notification described in subsection (d)(2) 
during the 45-day period beginning on the date on which the 
agency received the notification, and resubmits the application 
with the requested information described in subsection 
(d)(2)(B), the Secretary shall approve or disapprove such 
application prior to the later of--
          [(1) the expiration of the 45-day period beginning on 
        the date on which the application is resubmitted; or
          [(2) the expiration of the 120-day period described 
        in subsection (b).
  [(f) Failure To Respond.--If the State educational agency 
does not respond to the Secretary's notification described in 
subsection (d)(2) during the 45-day period beginning on the 
date on which the agency received the notification, such 
application shall be deemed to be disapproved.

[SEC. 4204. LOCAL COMPETITIVE GRANT PROGRAM.

  [(a) In General.--A State that receives funds under this part 
for a fiscal year shall provide the amount made available under 
section 4202(c)(1) to eligible entities for community learning 
centers in accordance with this part.
  [(b) Application.--
          [(1) In general.--To be eligible to receive an award 
        under this part, an eligible entity shall submit an 
        application to the State educational agency at such 
        time, in such manner, and including such information as 
        the State educational agency may reasonably require.
          [(2) Contents.--Each application submitted under 
        paragraph (1) shall include--
                  [(A) a description of the before and after 
                school or summer recess activities to be 
                funded, including--
                          [(i) an assurance that the program 
                        will take place in a safe and easily 
                        accessible facility;
                          [(ii) a description of how students 
                        participating in the program carried 
                        out by the community learning center 
                        will travel safely to and from the 
                        center and home; and
                          [(iii) a description of how the 
                        eligible entity will disseminate 
                        information about the community 
                        learning center (including its 
                        location) to the community in a manner 
                        that is understandable and accessible;
                  [(B) a description of how the activity is 
                expected to improve student academic 
                achievement;
                  [(C) an identification of Federal, State, and 
                local programs that will be combined or 
                coordinated with the proposed program to make 
                the most effective use of public resources;
                  [(D) an assurance that the proposed program 
                was developed, and will be carried out, in 
                active collaboration with the schools the 
                students attend;
                  [(E) a description of how the activities will 
                meet the principles of effectiveness described 
                in section 4205(b);
                  [(F) an assurance that the program will 
                primarily target students who attend schools 
                eligible for schoolwide programs under section 
                1114 and the families of such students;
                  [(G) an assurance that funds under this part 
                will be used to increase the level of State, 
                local, and other non-Federal funds that would, 
                in the absence of funds under this part, be 
                made available for programs and activities 
                authorized under this part, and in no case 
                supplant Federal, State, local, or non-Federal 
                funds;
                  [(H) a description of the partnership between 
                a local educational agency, a community-based 
                organization, and another public entity or 
                private entity, if appropriate;
                  [(I) an evaluation of the community needs and 
                available resources for the community learning 
                center and a description of how the program 
                proposed to be carried out in the center will 
                address those needs (including the needs of 
                working families);
                  [(J) a demonstration that the eligible entity 
                has experience, or promise of success, in 
                providing educational and related activities 
                that will complement and enhance the academic 
                performance, achievement, and positive youth 
                development of the students;
                  [(K) a description of a preliminary plan for 
                how the community learning center will continue 
                after funding under this part ends;
                  [(L) an assurance that the community will be 
                given notice of an intent to submit an 
                application and that the application and any 
                waiver request will be available for public 
                review after submission of the application;
                  [(M) if the eligible entity plans to use 
                senior volunteers in activities carried out 
                through the community learning center, a 
                description of how the eligible entity will 
                encourage and use appropriately qualified 
                seniors to serve as the volunteers; and
                  [(N) such other information and assurances as 
                the State educational agency may reasonably 
                require.
  [(c) Approval of Certain Applications.--The State educational 
agency may approve an application under this part for a program 
to be located in a facility other than an elementary school or 
secondary school only if the program will be at least as 
available and accessible to the students to be served as if the 
program were located in an elementary school or secondary 
school.
  [(d) Permissive Local Match.--
          [(1) In general.--A State educational agency may 
        require an eligible entity to match funds awarded under 
        this part, except that such match may not exceed the 
        amount of the grant award and may not be derived from 
        other Federal or State funds.
          [(2) Sliding scale.--The amount of a match under 
        paragraph (1) shall be established based on a sliding 
        fee scale that takes into account--
                  [(A) the relative poverty of the population 
                to be targeted by the eligible entity; and
                  [(B) the ability of the eligible entity to 
                obtain such matching funds.
          [(3) In-kind contributions.--Each State educational 
        agency that requires an eligible entity to match funds 
        under this subsection shall permit the eligible entity 
        to provide all or any portion of such match in the form 
        of in-kind contributions.
          [(4) Consideration.--Notwithstanding this subsection, 
        a State educational agency shall not consider an 
        eligible entity's ability to match funds when 
        determining which eligible entities will receive awards 
        under this part.
  [(e) Peer Review.--In reviewing local applications under this 
section, a State educational agency shall use a peer review 
process or other methods of assuring the quality of such 
applications.
  [(f) Geographic Diversity.--To the extent practicable, a 
State educational agency shall distribute funds under this part 
equitably among geographic areas within the State, including 
urban and rural communities.
  [(g) Duration of Awards.--Grants under this part may be 
awarded for a period of not less than 3 years and not more than 
5 years.
  [(h) Amount of Awards.--A grant awarded under this part may 
not be made in an amount that is less than $50,000.
  [(i) Priority.--
          [(1) In general.--In awarding grants under this part, 
        a State educational agency shall give priority to 
        applications--
                  [(A) proposing to target services to students 
                who attend schools that have been identified as 
                in need of improvement under section 1116; and
                  [(B) submitted jointly by eligible entities 
                consisting of not less than 1--
                          [(i) local educational agency 
                        receiving funds under part A of title 
                        I; and
                          [(ii) community-based organization or 
                        other public or private entity.
          [(2) Special rule.--The State educational agency 
        shall provide the same priority under paragraph (1) to 
        an application submitted by a local educational agency 
        if the local educational agency demonstrates that it is 
        unable to partner with a community-based organization 
        in reasonable geographic proximity and of sufficient 
        quality to meet the requirements of this part.

[SEC. 4205. LOCAL ACTIVITIES.

  [(a) Authorized Activities.--Each eligible entity that 
receives an award under this part may use the award funds to 
carry out a broad array of before and after school activities 
(including during summer recess periods) that advance student 
academic achievement, including--
          [(1) remedial education activities and academic 
        enrichment learning programs, including providing 
        additional assistance to students to allow the students 
        to improve their academic achievement;
          [(2) mathematics and science education activities;
          [(3) arts and music education activities;
          [(4) entrepreneurial education programs;
          [(5) tutoring services (including those provided by 
        senior citizen volunteers) and mentoring programs;
          [(6) programs that provide after school activities 
        for limited English proficient students that emphasize 
        language skills and academic achievement;
          [(7) recreational activities;
          [(8) telecommunications and technology education 
        programs;
          [(9) expanded library service hours;
          [(10) programs that promote parental involvement and 
        family literacy;
          [(11) programs that provide assistance to students 
        who have been truant, suspended, or expelled to allow 
        the students to improve their academic achievement; and
          [(12) drug and violence prevention programs, 
        counseling programs, and character education programs.
  [(b) Principles of Effectiveness.--
          [(1) In general.--For a program or activity developed 
        pursuant to this part to meet the principles of 
        effectiveness, such program or activity shall--
                  [(A) be based upon an assessment of objective 
                data regarding the need for before and after 
                school programs (including during summer recess 
                periods) and activities in the schools and 
                communities;
                  [(B) be based upon an established set of 
                performance measures aimed at ensuring the 
                availability of high quality academic 
                enrichment opportunities; and
                  [(C) if appropriate, be based upon 
                scientifically based research that provides 
                evidence that the program or activity will help 
                students meet the State and local student 
                academic achievement standards.
          [(2) Periodic evaluation.--
                  [(A) In general.--The program or activity 
                shall undergo a periodic evaluation to assess 
                its progress toward achieving its goal of 
                providing high quality opportunities for 
                academic enrichment.
                  [(B) Use of results.--The results of 
                evaluations under subparagraph (A) shall be--
                          [(i) used to refine, improve, and 
                        strengthen the program or activity, and 
                        to refine the performance measures; and
                          [(ii) made available to the public 
                        upon request, with public notice of 
                        such availability provided.

[SEC. 4206. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS.

   [There are authorized to be appropriated--
          [(1) $1,250,000,000 for fiscal year 2002;
          [(2) $1,500,000,000 for fiscal year 2003;
          [(3) $1,750,000,000 for fiscal year 2004;
          [(4) $2,000,000,000 for fiscal year 2005;
          [(5) $2,250,000,000 for fiscal year 2006; and
          [(6) $2,500,000,000 for fiscal year 2007.

                  [PART C--ENVIRONMENTAL TOBACCO SMOKE

[SEC. 4301. SHORT TITLE.

  [This part may be cited as the ``Pro-Children Act of 2001''.

[SEC. 4302. DEFINITIONS.

   [As used in this part:
          [(1) Children.--The term ``children'' means 
        individuals who have not attained the age of 18.
          [(2) Children's services.--The term ``children's 
        services'' means the provision on a routine or regular 
        basis of health, day care, education, or library 
        services--
                  [(A) that are funded, after the date of 
                enactment of the No Child Left Behind Act of 
                2001, directly by the Federal Government or 
                through State or local governments, by Federal 
                grant, loan, loan guarantee, or contract 
                programs--
                          [(i) administered by either the 
                        Secretary of Health and Human Services 
                        or the Secretary of Education (other 
                        than services provided and funded 
                        solely under titles XVIII and XIX of 
                        the Social Security Act); or
                          [(ii) administered by the Secretary 
                        of Agriculture in the case of a clinic 
                        (as defined in part 246.2 of title 7, 
                        Code of Federal Regulations (or any 
                        corresponding similar regulation or 
                        ruling)) under section 17(b)(6) of the 
                        Child Nutrition Act of 1966; or
                  [(B) that are provided in indoor facilities 
                that are constructed, operated, or maintained 
                with such Federal funds, as determined by the 
                appropriate head of a Federal agency in any 
                enforcement action carried out under this part,
        except that nothing in clause (ii) of subparagraph (A) 
        is intended to include facilities (other than clinics) 
        where coupons are redeemed under the Child Nutrition 
        Act of 1966.
          [(3) Indoor facility.--The term ``indoor facility'' 
        means a building that is enclosed.
          [(4) Person.--The term ``person'' means any State or 
        local subdivision of a State, agency of such State or 
        subdivision, corporation, or partnership that owns or 
        operates or otherwise controls and provides children's 
        services or any individual who owns or operates or 
        otherwise controls and provides such services.
          [(5) Secretary.--The term ``Secretary'' means the 
        Secretary of Health and Human Services.

[SEC. 4303. NONSMOKING POLICY FOR CHILDREN'S SERVICES.

  [(a) Prohibition.--After the date of enactment of the No 
Child Left Behind Act of 2001, no person shall permit smoking 
within any indoor facility owned or leased or contracted for, 
and utilized, by such person for provision of routine or 
regular kindergarten, elementary, or secondary education or 
library services to children.
  [(b) Additional Prohibition.--
          [(1) In general.--After the date of enactment of the 
        No Child Left Behind Act of 2001, no person shall 
        permit smoking within any indoor facility (or portion 
        of such a facility) owned or leased or contracted for, 
        and utilized by, such person for the provision of 
        regular or routine health care or day care or early 
        childhood development (Head Start) services.
          [(2) Exception.--Paragraph (1) shall not apply to--
                  [(A) any portion of such facility that is 
                used for inpatient hospital treatment of 
                individuals dependent on, or addicted to, drugs 
                or alcohol; and
                  [(B) any private residence.
  [(c) Federal Agencies.--
          [(1) Kindergarten, elementary, or secondary education 
        or library services.--After the date of enactment of 
        the No Child Left Behind Act of 2001, no Federal agency 
        shall permit smoking within any indoor facility in the 
        United States operated by such agency, directly or by 
        contract, to provide routine or regular kindergarten, 
        elementary, or secondary education or library services 
        to children.
          [(2) Health or day care or early childhood 
        development services.--
                  [(A) In general.--After the date of enactment 
                of the No Child Left Behind Act of 2001, no 
                Federal agency shall permit smoking within any 
                indoor facility (or portion of such facility) 
                operated by such agency, directly or by 
                contract, to provide routine or regular health 
                or day care or early childhood development 
                (Head Start) services to children.
                  [(B) Exception.--Subparagraph (A) shall not 
                apply to--
                          [(i) any portion of such facility 
                        that is used for inpatient hospital 
                        treatment of individuals dependent on, 
                        or addicted to, drugs or alcohol; and
                          [(ii) any private residence.
          [(3) Application of provisions.--The provisions of 
        paragraph (2) shall also apply to the provision of such 
        routine or regular kindergarten, elementary or 
        secondary education or library services in the 
        facilities described in paragraph (2) not subject to 
        paragraph (1).
  [(d) Notice.--The prohibitions in subsections (a) through (c) 
shall be published in a notice in the Federal Register by the 
Secretary (in consultation with the heads of other affected 
agencies) and by such agency heads in funding arrangements 
involving the provision of children's services administered by 
such heads. Such prohibitions shall be effective 90 days after 
such notice is published, or 270 days after the date of 
enactment of the No Child Left Behind Act of 2001, whichever 
occurs first.
  [(e) Civil Penalties.--
          [(1) In general.--Any failure to comply with a 
        prohibition in this section shall be considered to be a 
        violation of this section and any person subject to 
        such prohibition who commits such violation may be 
        liable to the United States for a civil penalty in an 
        amount not to exceed $1,000 for each violation, or may 
        be subject to an administrative compliance order, or 
        both, as determined by the Secretary. Each day a 
        violation continues shall constitute a separate 
        violation. In the case of any civil penalty assessed 
        under this section, the total amount shall not exceed 
        50 percent of the amount of Federal funds received 
        under any title of this Act by such person for the 
        fiscal year in which the continuing violation occurred. 
        For the purpose of the prohibition in subsection (c), 
        the term ``person'', as used in this paragraph, shall 
        mean the head of the applicable Federal agency or the 
        contractor of such agency providing the services to 
        children.
          [(2) Administrative proceeding.--A civil penalty may 
        be assessed in a written notice, or an administrative 
        compliance order may be issued under paragraph (1), by 
        the Secretary only after an opportunity for a hearing 
        in accordance with section 554 of title 5, United 
        States Code. Before making such assessment or issuing 
        such order, or both, the Secretary shall give written 
        notice of the assessment or order to such person by 
        certified mail with return receipt and provide 
        information in the notice of an opportunity to request 
        in writing, not later than 30 days after the date of 
        receipt of such notice, such hearing. The notice shall 
        reasonably describe the violation and be accompanied 
        with the procedures for such hearing and a simple form 
        that may be used to request such hearing if such person 
        desires to use such form. If a hearing is requested, 
        the Secretary shall establish by such certified notice 
        the time and place for such hearing, which shall be 
        located, to the greatest extent possible, at a location 
        convenient to such person. The Secretary (or the 
        Secretary's designee) and such person may consult to 
        arrange a suitable date and location where appropriate.
          [(3) Circumstances affecting penalty or order.--In 
        determining the amount of the civil penalty or the 
        nature of the administrative compliance order, the 
        Secretary shall take into account, as appropriate--
                  [(A) the nature, circumstances, extent, and 
                gravity of the violation;
                  [(B) with respect to the violator, any good 
                faith efforts to comply, the importance of 
                achieving early and permanent compliance, the 
                ability to pay or comply, the effect of the 
                penalty or order on the ability to continue 
                operation, any prior history of the same kind 
                of violation, the degree of culpability, and 
                any demonstration of willingness to comply with 
                the prohibitions of this section in a timely 
                manner; andC) such other matters as justice may 
                require.
          [(4) Modification.--The Secretary may, as 
        appropriate, compromise, modify, or remit, with or 
        without conditions, any civil penalty or administrative 
        compliance order. In the case of a civil penalty, the 
        amount, as finally determined by the Secretary or 
        agreed upon in compromise, may be deducted from any 
        sums that the United States or the agencies or 
        instrumentalities of the United States owe to the 
        person against whom the penalty is assessed.
          [(5) Petition for review.--Any person aggrieved by a 
        penalty assessed or an order issued, or both, by the 
        Secretary under this section may file a petition for 
        judicial review of the order with the United States 
        Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit 
        or for any other circuit in which the person resides or 
        transacts business. Such person shall provide a copy of 
        the petition to the Secretary or the Secretary's 
        designee. The petition shall be filed within 30 days 
        after the Secretary's assessment or order, or both, are 
        final and have been provided to such person by 
        certified mail. The Secretary shall promptly provide to 
        the court a certified copy of the transcript of any 
        hearing held under this section and a copy of the 
        notice or order.
          [(6) Failure to comply.--If a person fails to pay an 
        assessment of a civil penalty or comply with an order, 
        after the assessment or order, or both, are final under 
        this section, or after a court has entered a final 
        judgment under paragraph (5) in favor of the Secretary, 
        the Attorney General, at the request of the Secretary, 
        shall recover the amount of the civil penalty (plus 
        interest at prevailing rates from the day the 
        assessment or order, or both, are final) or enforce the 
        order in an action brought in the appropriate district 
        court of the United States. In such action, the 
        validity and appropriateness of the penalty or order or 
        the amount of the penalty shall not be subject to 
        review.

[SEC. 4304. PREEMPTION.

  [Nothing in this part is intended to preempt any provision of 
law of a State or political subdivision of a State that is more 
restrictive than a provision of this part.

  [TITLE V--PROMOTING INFORMED PARENTAL CHOICE AND INNOVATIVE PROGRAMS

                      [PART A--INNOVATIVE PROGRAMS

[SEC. 5101. PURPOSES, STATE AND LOCAL RESPONSIBILITY.

  [(a) Purposes.--The purposes of this part are the following:
          [(1) To support local education reform efforts that 
        are consistent with and support statewide education 
        reform efforts.
          [(2) To provide funding to enable State educational 
        agencies and local educational agencies to implement 
        promising educational reform programs and school 
        improvement programs based on scientifically based 
        research.
          [(3) To provide a continuing source of innovation and 
        educational improvement, including support programs to 
        provide library services and instructional and media 
        materials.
          [(4) To meet the educational needs of all students, 
        including at-risk youth.
          [(5) To develop and implement education programs to 
        improve school, student, and teacher performance, 
        including professional development activities and class 
        size reduction programs.
  [(b) State and Local Responsibility.--The State educational 
agency shall bear the basic responsibility for the 
administration of funds made available under this part, but it 
is the intent of Congress that the responsibility be carried 
out with a minimum of paperwork and that the responsibility for 
the design and implementation of programs assisted under this 
part be mainly that of local educational agencies, school 
superintendents and principals, and classroom teachers and 
supporting personnel, because local educational agencies and 
individuals have the most direct contact with students and are 
most likely to be able to design programs to meet the 
educational needs of students in their own school districts.

                  [Subpart 1--State and Local Programs

[SEC. 5111. ALLOTMENT TO STATES.

  [(a) In General.--From the sums appropriated to carry out 
this part for each fiscal year and not reserved under 
subsection (b), the Secretary shall allot, and make available 
in accordance with this part, to each State educational agency 
an amount that bears the same ratio to such sums as the school-
age population of the State bears to the school-age population 
of all States, except that no State shall receive less than an 
amount equal to one-half of 1 percent of such sums.
  [(b) Reservation.--From the sums appropriated to carry out 
this part for each fiscal year, the Secretary shall reserve not 
more than 1 percent for payments to the outlying areas, to be 
allotted in accordance with their respective needs for 
assistance under this part.

[SEC. 5112. ALLOCATION TO LOCAL EDUCATIONAL AGENCIES.

  [(a) Distribution Rule.--
          [(1) Allocation of base amounts.--From the amount 
        made available to a State educational agency under this 
        part for a fiscal year, the State educational agency 
        shall distribute, to local educational agencies within 
        the State, an amount that is not less than 85 percent 
        of the amount made available to the State educational 
        agency under this part for fiscal year 2002, according 
        to the relative enrollments in public and in private 
        nonprofit schools within the jurisdictions of such 
        local educational agencies, adjusted, in accordance 
        with criteria approved by the Secretary, to provide 
        higher per-pupil allocations to local educational 
        agencies that have the greatest numbers or percentages 
        of children whose education imposes a higher-than-
        average cost per child, such as--
                  [(A) children living in areas with high 
                concentrations of economically disadvantaged 
                families;
                  [(B) children from economically disadvantaged 
                families; and
                  [(C) children living in sparsely populated 
                areas.
          [(2) Allocation of increased amounts.--From the 
        amount made available to a State educational agency 
        under this part for a fiscal year that exceeds the 
        amount made available to the agency under this part for 
        fiscal year 2002, the State educational agency shall 
        distribute 100 percent (or, in the case of a State 
        educational agency receiving a minimum allotment under 
        section 5111(a), not less than 50 percent, 
        notwithstanding subsection (b)) to local educational 
        agencies within the State, on the same basis as the 
        State educational agency distributes amounts under 
        paragraph (1).
  [(b) Limitations and Requirements.--Not more than 15 percent 
of funds made available under section 5111 for State programs 
under this part for any fiscal year may be used for State 
administration under section 5121.
  [(c) Calculation of Enrollments.--
          [(1) In general.--The calculation of relative 
        enrollments under subsection (a)(1) shall be on the 
        basis of the total of--
                  [(A) the number of children enrolled in 
                public schools; and
                  [(B) the number of children enrolled in 
                private nonprofit schools that participated in 
                programs assisted under this part, for the 
                fiscal year preceding the fiscal year for which 
                the determination is made.
          [(2) Rule of construction.--Nothing in this 
        subsection shall diminish the responsibility of each 
        local educational agency to contact, on an annual 
        basis, appropriate officials from private nonprofit 
        schools within the areas served by such agencies in 
        order to determine whether such schools desire that 
        their children participate in programs assisted under 
        this part.
          [(3) Adjustments.--
                  [(A) State criteria.--Relative enrollments 
                calculated under subsection (a)(1) shall be 
                adjusted, in accordance with criteria approved 
                by the Secretary under subparagraph (B), to 
                provide higher per-pupil allocations only to 
                local educational agencies that serve the 
                greatest numbers or percentages of--
                          [(i) children living in areas with 
                        high concentrations of economically 
                        disadvantaged families;
                          [(ii) children from economically 
                        disadvantaged families; or
                          [(iii) children living in sparsely 
                        populated areas.
                  [(B) Review of criteria.--The Secretary shall 
                review criteria submitted by a State 
                educational agency for adjusting allocations 
                under paragraph (1) and shall approve such 
                criteria only if the Secretary determines that 
                such criteria are reasonably calculated to 
                produce an adjusted allocation that reflects 
                the relative needs of the State's local 
                educational agencies based on the factors set 
                forth in subparagraph (A).
  [(d) Payment of Allocations.--
          [(1) Distribution.--From the funds paid to a State 
        educational agency under this subpart for a fiscal 
        year, the State educational agency shall distribute to 
        each eligible local educational agency that has 
        submitted an application as required by section 5133 
        the amount of such local educational agency's 
        allocation, as determined under subsection (a).
          [(2) Additional funds.--
                  [(A) Use.--Additional funds resulting from 
                higher per-pupil allocations provided to a 
                local educational agency on the basis of 
                adjusted enrollments of children described in 
                subsection (a)(1) may, in the discretion of the 
                local educational agency, be allocated for 
                expenditures to provide services for children 
                enrolled in public schools and private 
                nonprofit schools in direct proportion to the 
                number of children described in subsection 
                (a)(1) and enrolled in such schools within the 
                area served by the local educational agency.
                  [(B) Allocation.--In any fiscal year, any 
                local educational agency that elects to 
                allocate such additional funds in the manner 
                described in subparagraph (A) shall allocate 
                all additional funds to schools within the area 
                served by the local educational agency in such 
                manner.
                  [(C) Rule of construction.--Subparagraphs (A) 
                and (B) may not be construed to require any 
                school to limit the use of the additional funds 
                described in subparagraph (A) to the provision 
                of services to specific students or categories 
                of students.

                       [Subpart 2--State Programs

[SEC. 5121. STATE USES OF FUNDS.

   [A State educational agency may use funds made available for 
State use under section 5112(b) only for one or more of the 
following:
          [(1) State administration of programs under this 
        part, including--
                  [(A) allocating funds to local educational 
                agencies;
                  [(B) planning, supervising, and processing 
                State educational agency funds; and
                  [(C) monitoring and evaluating programs under 
                this part.
          [(2) Support for the planning, design, and initial 
        implementation of charter schools as described in part 
        B.
          [(3) Statewide education reform, school improvement 
        programs and technical assistance and direct grants to 
        local educational agencies, which assist such agencies 
        under section 5131.
          [(4) Support for the design and implementation of 
        high-quality yearly student assessments.
          [(5) Support for implementation of challenging State 
        and local academic achievement standards.
          [(6) Support for arrangements that provide for 
        independent analysis to measure and report on school 
        district achievement.
          [(7) Support for the program described in section 321 
        of the Departments of Labor, Health and Human Services, 
        and Education, and Related Agencies Appropriations Act, 
        2001 (as enacted into law by section 1(a)(1) of Public 
        Law 106-554).
          [(8) Support for programs to assist in the 
        implementation of the policy described in section 9507 
        which may include payment of reasonable transportation 
        costs and tuition costs for such students.

[SEC. 5122. STATE APPLICATIONS.

  [(a) Application Requirements.--Any State that desires to 
receive assistance under this part shall submit to the 
Secretary an application that includes each of the following:
          [(1) Designation of the State educational agency as 
        the State agency responsible for administration and 
        supervision of programs assisted under this part.
          [(2) Provision for an annual statewide summary of how 
        assistance under this part is contributing toward 
        improving student academic achievement or improving the 
        quality of education for students.
          [(3) Information setting forth the allocation of 
        funds required to implement section 5142.
          [(4) A provision that the State educational agency 
        will keep such records, and provide such information to 
        the Secretary, as may be required for fiscal audit and 
        program evaluation (consistent with the 
        responsibilities of the Secretary under this section).
          [(5) An assurance that, apart from providing 
        technical and advisory assistance and monitoring 
        compliance with this part, the State educational agency 
        has not exercised, and will not exercise, any influence 
        in the decisionmaking processes of local educational 
        agencies as to the expenditure made pursuant to an 
        application submitted under section 5133.
          [(6) An assurance that there is compliance with the 
        specific requirements of this part.
          [(7) Provision for timely public notice and public 
        dissemination of the information provided under 
        paragraph (3).
  [(b) Statewide Summary.--The statewide summary referred to in 
subsection (a)(2) shall be submitted annually to the Secretary 
and shall be derived from the evaluation information submitted 
by local educational agencies to the State educational agency 
under section 5133(b)(8). The State educational agency shall 
determine the format and content of such summary and may 
include in the summary statistical measures, such as the number 
of students served by each type of innovative assistance 
program described in section 5131 and the number of teachers 
trained.
  [(c) Period of Application.--An application submitted by the 
State educational agency under subsection (a) shall be for a 
period not to exceed 3 years. The agency may amend the 
application annually, as may be necessary to reflect changes, 
without filing a new application.
  [(d) Audit Rule.--A local educational agency that receives 
less than an average of $10,000 under this part for any 3 
consecutive fiscal years shall not be audited more frequently 
than once every 5 years.

            [Subpart 3--Local Innovative Education Programs

[SEC. 5131. LOCAL USES OF FUNDS.

  [(a) Innovative Assistance Programs.--Funds made available to 
local educational agencies under section 5112 shall be used for 
innovative assistance programs, which may include any of the 
following:
          [(1) Programs to recruit, train, and hire highly 
        qualified teachers to reduce class size, especially in 
        the early grades, and professional development 
        activities carried out in accordance with title II, 
        that give teachers, principals, and administrators the 
        knowledge and skills to provide students with the 
        opportunity to meet challenging State or local academic 
        content standards and student academic achievement 
        standards.
          [(2) Technology activities related to the 
        implementation of school-based reform efforts, 
        including professional development to assist teachers 
        and other school personnel (including school library 
        media personnel) regarding how to use technology 
        effectively in the classrooms and the school library 
        media centers involved.
          [(3) Programs for the development or acquisition and 
        use of instructional and educational materials, 
        including library services and materials (including 
        media materials), academic assessments, reference 
        materials, computer software and hardware for 
        instructional use, and other curricular materials that 
        are tied to high academic standards, that will be used 
        to improve student academic achievement, and that are 
        part of an overall education reform program.
          [(4) Promising education reform projects, including 
        magnet schools.
          [(5) Programs to improve the academic achievement of 
        educationally disadvantaged elementary school and 
        secondary school students, including activities to 
        prevent students from dropping out of school.
          [(6) Programs to improve the literacy skills of 
        adults, especially the parents of children served by 
        the local educational agency, including adult education 
        and family literacy programs.
          [(7) Programs to provide for the educational needs of 
        gifted and talented children.
          [(8) The planning, design, and initial implementation 
        of charter schools as described in part B.
          [(9) School improvement programs or activities under 
        sections 1116 and 1117.
          [(10) Community service programs that use qualified 
        school personnel to train and mobilize young people to 
        measurably strengthen their communities through 
        nonviolence, responsibility, compassion, respect, and 
        moral courage.
          [(11) Activities to promote consumer, economic, and 
        personal finance education, such as disseminating 
        information on and encouraging use of the best 
        practices for teaching the basic principles of 
        economics and promoting the concept of achieving 
        financial literacy through the teaching of personal 
        financial management skills (including the basic 
        principles involved with earning, spending, saving, and 
        investing).
          [(12) Activities to promote, implement, or expand 
        public school choice.
          [(13) Programs to hire and support school nurses.
          [(14) Expansion and improvement of school-based 
        mental health services, including early identification 
        of drug use and violence, assessment, and direct 
        individual or group counseling services provided to 
        students, parents, and school personnel by qualified 
        school-based mental health services personnel.
          [(15) Alternative educational programs for those 
        students who have been expelled or suspended from their 
        regular educational setting, including programs to 
        assist students to reenter the regular educational 
        setting upon return from treatment or alternative 
        educational programs.
          [(16) Programs to establish or enhance 
        prekindergarten programs for children.
          [(17) Academic intervention programs that are 
        operated jointly with community-based organizations and 
        that support academic enrichment, and counseling 
        programs conducted during the school day (including 
        during extended school day or extended school year 
        programs), for students most at risk of not meeting 
        challenging State academic achievement standards or not 
        completing secondary school.
          [(18) Programs for cardiopulmonary resuscitation 
        (CPR) training in schools.
          [(19) Programs to establish smaller learning 
        communities.
          [(20) Activities that encourage and expand 
        improvements throughout the area served by the local 
        educational agency that are designed to advance student 
        academic achievement.
          [(21) Initiatives to generate, maintain, and 
        strengthen parental and community involvement.
          [(22) Programs and activities that expand learning 
        opportunities through best-practice models designed to 
        improve classroom learning and teaching.
          [(23) Programs to provide same-gender schools and 
        classrooms (consistent with applicable law).
          [(24) Service learning activities.
          [(25) School safety programs, including programs to 
        implement the policy described in section 9507 and 
        which may include payment of reasonable transportation 
        costs and tuition costs for such students.
          [(26) Programs that employ research-based cognitive 
        and perceptual development approaches and rely on a 
        diagnostic-prescriptive model to improve students' 
        learning of academic content at the preschool, 
        elementary, and secondary levels.
          [(27) Supplemental educational services, as defined 
        in section 1116(e).
  [(b) Requirements.--The innovative assistance programs 
described in subsection (a) shall be--
          [(1) tied to promoting challenging academic 
        achievement standards;
          [(2) used to improve student academic achievement; 
        and
          [(3) part of an overall education reform strategy.
  [(c) Guidelines.--Not later than 120 days after the date of 
enactment of the No Child Left Behind Act of 2001, the 
Secretary shall issue guidelines for local educational agencies 
seeking funding for programs described in subsection (a)(23).

[SEC. 5132. ADMINISTRATIVE AUTHORITY.

  [In order to conduct the programs authorized by this part, 
each State educational agency or local educational agency may 
use funds made available under this part to make grants to, and 
to enter into contracts with, local educational agencies, 
institutions of higher education, libraries, museums, and other 
public and private nonprofit agencies, organizations, and 
institutions.

[SEC. 5133. LOCAL APPLICATIONS.

  [(a) Submission of Application.--A local educational agency 
may receive an allocation of funds under this part for any year 
for which the agency submits an application under this section 
that the State educational agency certifies under subsection 
(b).
  [(b) Certification and Contents of Application.--The State 
educational agency shall certify each application submitted 
under subsection (a) that includes each of the following:
          [(1) A description of locally identified needs 
        relative to the purposes of this part and to the 
        innovative assistance programs described in section 
        5131.
          [(2) A statement that sets forth the planned 
        allocation of funds, based on the needs identified in 
        subparagraph (A), among innovative assistance programs 
        described in section 5131, a description of the 
        programs that the local educational agency intends to 
        support, and a description of the reasons for the 
        selection of such programs.
          [(3) Information setting forth the allocation of such 
        funds required to implement section 5142.
          [(4) A description of how assistance under this part 
        will contribute to improving student academic 
        achievement or improving the quality of education for 
        students.
          [(5) An assurance that the local educational agency 
        will comply with this part, including the provisions of 
        section 5142 concerning the participation of children 
        enrolled in private nonprofit schools.
          [(6) An assurance that the local educational agency 
        will keep such records, and provide such information to 
        the State educational agency, as may be reasonably 
        required for fiscal audit and program evaluation 
        (consistent with the responsibilities of the State 
        educational agency under this part).
          [(7) Provision, in the allocation of funds for the 
        assistance authorized by this part and in the planning, 
        design, and implementation of such innovative 
        assistance programs, for systematic consultation with 
        parents of children attending elementary schools and 
        secondary schools in the area served by the local 
        educational agency, with teachers and administrative 
        personnel in such schools, and with such other groups 
        involved in the implementation of this part (such as 
        librarians, school counselors, and other pupil services 
        personnel) as may be considered appropriate by the 
        local educational agency.
          [(8) An assurance that--
                  [(A) programs carried out under this part 
                will be evaluated annually;
                  [(B) the evaluation will be used to make 
                decisions about appropriate changes in programs 
                for the subsequent year;
                  [(C) the evaluation will describe how 
                assistance under this part affected student 
                academic achievement and will include, at a 
                minimum, information and data on the use of 
                funds, the types of services furnished, and the 
                students served under this part; and
                  [(D) the evaluation will be submitted to the 
                State educational agency at the time and in the 
                manner requested by the State educational 
                agency.
          [(9) If the local educational agency seeks funds 
        under section 5131(a)(23), a description of how the 
        agency will comply with the guidelines issued by the 
        Secretary regarding same-gender schools and classrooms 
        under section 5131(c).
  [(c) Period of Application.--An application submitted by a 
local educational agency under subsection (a) may seek 
allocations under this part for a period not to exceed 3 fiscal 
years. The agency may amend the application annually, as may be 
necessary to reflect changes, without the filing of a new 
application.
  [(d) Local Educational Agency Discretion.--
          [(1) In general.--Subject to the limitations and 
        requirements of this part, a local educational agency 
        shall have complete discretion in determining how funds 
        made available to carry out this subpart will be 
        divided among programs described in section 5131.
          [(2) Limitation.--In exercising the discretion 
        described in paragraph (1), a local educational agency 
        shall ensure that expenditures under this subpart carry 
        out the purposes of this part and are used to meet the 
        educational needs within the schools served by the 
        local educational agency.

                     [Subpart 4--General Provisions

[SEC. 5141. MAINTENANCE OF EFFORT.

  [(a) In general.--Except as provided in subsection (b), a 
State educational agency is entitled to receive its full 
allotment of funds under this part for any fiscal year only if 
the Secretary determines that either the combined fiscal effort 
per student or the aggregate expenditures within the State, 
with respect to the provision of free public education for the 
fiscal year preceding the fiscal year for which the 
determination is made, was not less than 90 percent of such 
combined fiscal effort or aggregate expenditures for the second 
fiscal year preceding the fiscal year for which the 
determination is made.
  [(b) Reduction of Funds.--The Secretary shall reduce the 
amount of the allotment of funds under this part in any fiscal 
year in the exact proportion by which the State educational 
agency fails to meet the requirements of subsection (a) by 
falling below 90 percent of the fiscal effort per student or 
aggregate expenditures (using the measure most favorable to the 
State educational agency), and no such lesser amount shall be 
used for computing the effort or expenditures required under 
paragraph (1) for subsequent years.
  [(c) Waiver.--The Secretary may waive, for 1 fiscal year 
only, the requirements of this section, if the Secretary 
determines that such a waiver would be equitable due to 
exceptional or uncontrollable circumstances, such as a natural 
disaster or a precipitous and unforeseen decline in the 
financial resources of the State educational agency.

[SEC. 5142. PARTICIPATION OF CHILDREN ENROLLED IN PRIVATE SCHOOLS.

  [(a) Participation on Equitable Basis.--
          [(1) In general.--To the extent consistent with the 
        number of children in the school district of a local 
        educational agency that is eligible to receive funds 
        under this part, or that serves the area in which a 
        program assisted under this part is located, who are 
        enrolled in private nonprofit elementary schools and 
        secondary schools, or, with respect to instructional or 
        personnel training programs funded by the State 
        educational agency from funds made available for State 
        educational agency use, the local educational agency, 
        after consultation with appropriate private school 
        officials--
                  [(A) shall provide, as may be necessary, for 
                the benefit of such children in such schools--
                          [(i) secular, neutral, and 
                        nonideological services, materials, and 
                        equipment, including the participation 
                        of the teachers of such children (and 
                        other educational personnel serving 
                        such children) in training programs; 
                        and
                          [(ii) the repair, minor remodeling, 
                        or construction of public facilities 
                        (consistent with subsection (c)); or
                  [(B) if such services, materials, and 
                equipment are not feasible or necessary in one 
                or more such private schools, as determined by 
                the local educational agency after consultation 
                with the appropriate private school officials, 
                shall provide such other arrangements as will 
                assure equitable participation of such children 
                in the purposes and benefits of this part.
          [(2) Other provisions for services.--If no program is 
        carried out under paragraph (1) in the school district 
        of a local educational agency, the State educational 
        agency shall make arrangements, such as through 
        contracts with nonprofit agencies or organizations, 
        under which children in private schools in the district 
        are provided with services and materials to the same 
        extent as would have occurred if the local educational 
        agency had received funds under this part.
          [(3) Application of requirements.--The requirements 
        of this section relating to the participation of 
        children, teachers, and other personnel serving such 
        children shall apply to programs carried out under this 
        part by a State educational agency or local educational 
        agency, whether directly or through grants to, or 
        contracts with, other public or private agencies, 
        institutions, or organizations.
  [(b) Equal Expenditures.--
          [(1) In general.--Expenditures for programs under 
        subsection (a) shall be equal (consistent with the 
        number of children to be served) to expenditures for 
        programs under this part for children enrolled in the 
        public schools of the local educational agency.
          [(2) Concentrated programs.--Taking into account the 
        needs of the individual children and other factors that 
        relate to the expenditures referred to in paragraph 
        (1), and when funds available to a local educational 
        agency under this part are used to concentrate programs 
        on a particular group, attendance area, or grade or age 
        level, children enrolled in private schools who are 
        included within the group, attendance area, or grade or 
        age level selected for such concentration shall, after 
        consultation with the appropriate private school 
        officials, be assured equitable participation in the 
        purposes and benefits of such programs.
  [(c) Administrative Requirements.--
          [(1) Funds and property.--The control of funds 
        provided under this part, and title to materials, 
        equipment, and property repaired, remodeled, or 
        constructed with such funds, shall be in a public 
        agency for the uses and purposes provided in this part, 
        and a public agency shall administer such funds and 
        property.
          [(2) Provision of services.--Services provided under 
        this part shall be provided by employees of a public 
        agency or through contract by such a public agency with 
        a person, association, agency, or corporation that, in 
        the provision of such services, is independent of the 
        private school and of any religious organizations, and 
        such employment or contract shall be under the control 
        and supervision of such a public agency. The funds 
        provided under this part shall not be commingled with 
        State or local funds.
  [(d) Waiver.--
          [(1) State prohibition.--If a State educational 
        agency or local educational agency is prohibited, by 
        reason of any provision of law, from providing for the 
        participation in programs of children enrolled in 
        private elementary schools and secondary schools as 
        required by subsections (a) through (c), the Secretary 
        shall waive such requirements for the agency involved 
        and shall arrange for the provision of services to such 
        children through arrangements that shall be subject to 
        the requirements of this section.
          [(2) Failure to comply.--If the Secretary determines 
        that a State educational agency or a local educational 
        agency has substantially failed, or is unwilling, to 
        provide for the participation on an equitable basis of 
        children enrolled in private elementary schools and 
        secondary schools as required by subsections (a) 
        through (c), the Secretary may waive such requirements 
        and shall arrange for the provision of services to such 
        children through arrangements that shall be subject to 
        the requirements of this section.
  [(e) Withholding of Allotment or Allocation.--Pending final 
resolution of any investigation or complaint that could result 
in a waiver under subsection (d)(1) or (d)(2), the Secretary 
may withhold from the allotment or allocation of the affected 
State educational agency or local educational agency the amount 
estimated by the Secretary to be necessary to pay the cost of 
services to be provided by the Secretary under such subsection.
  [(f) Duration of Determination.--Any determination by the 
Secretary under this section shall continue in effect until the 
Secretary determines that there will no longer be any failure 
or inability on the part of the State educational agency or 
local educational agency to meet the requirements of 
subsections (a) through (c).
  [(g) Payment From State Allotment.--When the Secretary 
arranges for services under subsection (d), the Secretary 
shall, after consultation with the appropriate public school 
and private school officials, pay the cost of such services, 
including the administrative costs of arranging for those 
services, from the appropriate allotment of the State 
educational agency under this part.
  [(h) Review of Determination.--
          [(1) Written objections.--The Secretary shall not 
        take any final action under this section until the 
        State educational agency and the local educational 
        agency affected by such action have had an opportunity, 
        for not less than 45 days after receiving written 
        notice thereof, to submit written objections and to 
        appear before the Secretary or the Secretary's designee 
        to show cause why that action should not be taken.
          [(2) Court action.--If a State educational agency or 
        local educational agency is dissatisfied with the 
        Secretary's final action after a proceeding under 
        paragraph (1), such agency may, not later than 60 days 
        after notice of such action, file with the United 
        States court of appeals for the circuit in which such 
        State is located a petition for review of that action. 
        A copy of the petition shall be transmitted by the 
        clerk of the court to the Secretary. The Secretary 
        thereupon shall file in the court the record of the 
        proceedings on which the Secretary based the action, as 
        provided in section 2112 of title 28, United States 
        Code.
          [(3) Remand to secretary.--The findings of fact by 
        the Secretary with respect to a proceeding under 
        paragraph (1), if supported by substantial evidence, 
        shall be conclusive. The court, for good cause shown, 
        may remand the case to the Secretary to take further 
        evidence and the Secretary may make new or modified 
        findings of fact and may modify the Secretary's 
        previous action, and shall file in the court the record 
        of the further proceedings. Such new or modified 
        findings of fact shall likewise be conclusive, if 
        supported by substantial evidence.
          [(4) Court review.--Upon the filing of a petition 
        under paragraph (2), the court shall have jurisdiction 
        to affirm the action of the Secretary or to set such 
        action aside, in whole or in part. The judgment of the 
        court shall be subject to review by the Supreme Court 
        upon certiorari or certification, as provided in 
        section 1254 of title 28, United States Code.
  [(i) Prior Determination.--Any bypass determination by the 
Secretary under title VI (as such title was in effect on the 
day preceding the date of enactment of the No Child Left Behind 
Act of 2001) shall, to the extent consistent with the purposes 
of this part, apply to programs under this part.

[SEC. 5143. FEDERAL ADMINISTRATION.

  [(a) Technical Assistance.--The Secretary, upon request, 
shall provide technical assistance to State educational 
agencies and local educational agencies under this part.
  [(b) Rulemaking.--The Secretary shall issue regulations under 
this part only to the extent that such regulations are 
necessary to ensure that there is compliance with the specific 
requirements and assurances required by this part.
  [(c) Availability of Appropriations.--Notwithstanding any 
other provision of law, unless expressly in limitation of this 
subsection, funds appropriated in any fiscal year to carry out 
programs under this part shall become available for obligation 
on July 1 of such fiscal year and shall remain available for 
obligation until the end of the subsequent fiscal year.

[SEC. 5144. SUPPLEMENT, NOT SUPPLANT.

  [Funds made available under this part shall be used to 
supplement, and not supplant, any other Federal, State, or 
local education funds.

[SEC. 5145. DEFINITIONS.

   [In this part:
          [(1) Local educational agency.--The term ``local 
        educational agency'' means a local educational agency 
        or a consortium of such agencies.
          [(2) Public school.--The term ``public school'' means 
        a public elementary school or a public secondary 
        school.
          [(3) School-age population.--The term ``school-age 
        population'' means the population aged 5 through 17.
          [(4) State.--The term ``State'' means each of the 50 
        States, the District of Columbia, and the Commonwealth 
        of Puerto Rico.

[SEC. 5146. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS.

   [There are authorized to be appropriated to carry out this 
part--
          [(1) $450,000,000 for fiscal year 2002;
          [(2) $475,000,000 for fiscal year 2003;
          [(3) $500,000,000 for fiscal year 2004;
          [(4) $525,000,000 for fiscal year 2005;
          [(5) $550,000,000 for fiscal year 2006; and
          [(6) $600,000,000 for fiscal year 2007.

                    [PART B--PUBLIC CHARTER SCHOOLS

                  [Subpart 1--Charter School Programs

[SEC. 5201. PURPOSE.

   [It is the purpose of this subpart to increase national 
understanding of the charter schools model by--
          [(1) providing financial assistance for the planning, 
        program design, and initial implementation of charter 
        schools;
          [(2) evaluating the effects of such schools, 
        including the effects on students, student academic 
        achievement, staff, and parents;
          [(3) expanding the number of high-quality charter 
        schools available to students across the Nation; and
          [(4) encouraging the States to provide support to 
        charter schools for facilities financing in an amount 
        more nearly commensurate to the amount the States have 
        typically provided for traditional public schools.

[SEC. 5202. PROGRAM AUTHORIZED.

  [(a) In General.--The Secretary may award grants to State 
educational agencies having applications approved pursuant to 
section 5203 to enable such agencies to conduct a charter 
school grant program in accordance with this subpart.
  [(b) Special Rule.--If a State educational agency elects not 
to participate in the program authorized by this subpart or 
does not have an application approved under section 5203, the 
Secretary may award a grant to an eligible applicant that 
serves such State and has an application approved pursuant to 
section 5203(c).
  [(c) Program Periods.--
          [(1) Grants to states.--Grants awarded to State 
        educational agencies under this subpart shall be for a 
        period of not more than 3 years.
          [(2) Grants to eligible applicants.--Grants awarded 
        by the Secretary to eligible applicants or subgrants 
        awarded by State educational agencies to eligible 
        applicants under this subpart shall be for a period of 
        not more than 3 years, of which the eligible applicant 
        may use--
                  [(A) not more than 18 months for planning and 
                program design;
                  [(B) not more than 2 years for the initial 
                implementation of a charter school; and
                  [(C) not more than 2 years to carry out 
                dissemination activities described in section 
                5204(f)(6)(B).
  [(d) Limitation.--A charter school may not receive--
          [(1) more than one grant for activities described in 
        subparagraphs (A) and (B) of subsection (c)(2); or
          [(2) more than one grant for activities under 
        subparagraph (C) of subsection (c)(2).
  [(e) Priority Treatment.--
          [(1) In general.--In awarding grants under this 
        subpart for fiscal year 2002 or any succeeding fiscal 
        year from any funds appropriated under section 5211 
        (other than funds reserved to carry out section 
        5205(b)), the Secretary shall give priority to States 
        to the extent that the States meet the criteria 
        described in paragraph (2) and one or more of the 
        criteria described in subparagraph (A), (B), or (C) of 
        paragraph (3).
          [(2) Review and evaluation priority criteria.--The 
        criteria referred to in paragraph (1) are that the 
        State provides for periodic review and evaluation by 
        the authorized public chartering agency of each charter 
        school, at least once every 5 years unless required 
        more frequently by State law, to determine whether the 
        charter school is meeting the terms of the school's 
        charter, and is meeting or exceeding the student 
        academic achievement requirements and goals for charter 
        schools as set forth under State law or the school's 
        charter.
          [(3) Priority criteria.--The criteria referred to in 
        paragraph (1) are the following:
                  [(A) The State has demonstrated progress, in 
                increasing the number of high-quality charter 
                schools that are held accountable in the terms 
                of the schools' charters for meeting clear and 
                measurable objectives for the educational 
                progress of the students attending the schools, 
                in the period prior to the period for which a 
                State educational agency or eligible applicant 
                applies for a grant under this subpart.
                  [(B) The State--
                          [(i) provides for one authorized 
                        public chartering agency that is not a 
                        local educational agency, such as a 
                        State chartering board, for each 
                        individual or entity seeking to operate 
                        a charter school pursuant to such State 
                        law; or
                          [(ii) in the case of a State in which 
                        local educational agencies are the only 
                        authorized public chartering agencies, 
                        allows for an appeals process for the 
                        denial of an application for a charter 
                        school.
                  [(C) The State ensures that each charter 
                school has a high degree of autonomy over the 
                charter school's budgets and expenditures.
  [(f) Amount Criteria.--In determining the amount of a grant 
to be awarded under this subpart to a State educational agency, 
the Secretary shall take into consideration the number of 
charter schools that are operating, or are approved to open, in 
the State.

[SEC. 5203. APPLICATIONS.

  [(a) Applications From State Agencies.--Each State 
educational agency desiring a grant from the Secretary under 
this subpart shall submit to the Secretary an application at 
such time, in such manner, and containing or accompanied by 
such information as the Secretary may require.
  [(b) Contents of a State Educational Agency Application.--
Each application submitted pursuant to subsection (a) shall--
          [(1) describe the objectives of the State educational 
        agency's charter school grant program and a description 
        of how such objectives will be fulfilled, including 
        steps taken by the State educational agency to inform 
        teachers, parents, and communities of the State 
        educational agency's charter school grant program; and
          [(2) describe how the State educational agency--
                  [(A) will inform each charter school in the 
                State regarding--
                          [(i) Federal funds that the charter 
                        school is eligible to receive; and
                          [(ii) Federal programs in which the 
                        charter school may participate;
                  [(B) will ensure that each charter school in 
                the State receives the charter school's 
                commensurate share of Federal education funds 
                that are allocated by formula each year, 
                including during the first year of operation of 
                the charter school; and
                  [(C) will disseminate best or promising 
                practices of charter schools to each local 
                educational agency in the State; and
          [(3) contain assurances that the State educational 
        agency will require each eligible applicant desiring to 
        receive a subgrant to submit an application to the 
        State educational agency containing--
                  [(A) a description of the educational program 
                to be implemented by the proposed charter 
                school, including--
                          [(i) how the program will enable all 
                        students to meet challenging State 
                        student academic achievement standards;
                          [(ii) the grade levels or ages of 
                        children to be served; and
                          [(iii) the curriculum and 
                        instructional practices to be used;
                  [(B) a description of how the charter school 
                will be managed;
                  [(C) a description of--
                          [(i) the objectives of the charter 
                        school; and
                          [(ii) the methods by which the 
                        charter school will determine its 
                        progress toward achieving those 
                        objectives;
                  [(D) a description of the administrative 
                relationship between the charter school and the 
                authorized public chartering agency;
                  [(E) a description of how parents and other 
                members of the community will be involved in 
                the planning, program design, and 
                implementation of the charter school;
                  [(F) a description of how the authorized 
                public chartering agency will provide for 
                continued operation of the school once the 
                Federal grant has expired, if such agency 
                determines that the school has met the 
                objectives described in subparagraph (C)(i);
                  [(G) a request and justification for waivers 
                of any Federal statutory or regulatory 
                provisions that the eligible applicant believes 
                are necessary for the successful operation of 
                the charter school, and a description of any 
                State or local rules, generally applicable to 
                public schools, that will be waived for, or 
                otherwise not apply to, the school;
                  [(H) a description of how the subgrant funds 
                or grant funds, as appropriate, will be used, 
                including a description of how such funds will 
                be used in conjunction with other Federal 
                programs administered by the Secretary;
                  [(I) a description of how students in the 
                community will be--
                          [(i) informed about the charter 
                        school; and
                          [(ii) given an equal opportunity to 
                        attend the charter school;
                  [(J) an assurance that the eligible applicant 
                will annually provide the Secretary and the 
                State educational agency such information as 
                may be required to determine if the charter 
                school is making satisfactory progress toward 
                achieving the objectives described in 
                subparagraph (C)(i);
                  [(K) an assurance that the eligible applicant 
                will cooperate with the Secretary and the State 
                educational agency in evaluating the program 
                assisted under this subpart;
                  [(L) a description of how a charter school 
                that is considered a local educational agency 
                under State law, or a local educational agency 
                in which a charter school is located, will 
                comply with sections 613(a)(5) and 613(e)(1)(B) 
                of the Individuals with Disabilities Education 
                Act;
                  [(M) if the eligible applicant desires to use 
                subgrant funds for dissemination activities 
                under section 5202(c)(2)(C), a description of 
                those activities and how those activities will 
                involve charter schools and other public 
                schools, local educational agencies, 
                developers, and potential developers; and
                  [(N) such other information and assurances as 
                the Secretary and the State educational agency 
                may require.
  [(c) Eligible Applicant Application.--Each eligible applicant 
desiring a grant pursuant to section 5202(b) shall submit an 
application to the Secretary at such time, in such manner, and 
accompanied by such information as the Secretary may reasonably 
require.
  [(d) Contents of Eligible Applicant Application.--Each 
application submitted pursuant to subsection (c) shall 
contain--
          [(1) the information and assurances described in 
        subparagraphs (A) through (N) of subsection (b)(3), 
        except that for purposes of this subsection 
        subparagraphs (J), (K), and (N) of such subsection 
        shall be applied by striking ``and the State 
        educational agency'' each place such term appears;
          [(2) assurances that the State educational agency--
                  [(A) will grant, or will obtain, waivers of 
                State statutory or regulatory requirements; and
                  [(B) will assist each subgrantee in the State 
                in receiving a waiver under section 5204(e); 
                and
          [(3) assurances that the eligible applicant has 
        provided its authorized public chartering authority 
        timely notice, and a copy, of the application, except 
        that the State educational agency (or the Secretary, in 
        the case of an application submitted to the Secretary) 
        may waive the requirement of this paragraph in the case 
        of an application for a precharter planning grant or 
        subgrant if the authorized public chartering authority 
        to which a charter school proposal will be submitted 
        has not been determined at the time the grant or 
        subgrant application is submitted.

[SEC. 5204. ADMINISTRATION.

  [(a) Selection Criteria for State Educational Agencies.--The 
Secretary shall award grants to State educational agencies 
under this subpart on the basis of the quality of the 
applications submitted under section 5203(b), after taking into 
consideration such factors as--
          [(1) the contribution that the charter schools grant 
        program will make to assisting educationally 
        disadvantaged and other students in meeting State 
        academic content standards and State student academic 
        achievement standards;
          [(2) the degree of flexibility afforded by the State 
        educational agency to charter schools under the State's 
        charter schools law;
          [(3) the ambitiousness of the objectives for the 
        State charter school grant program;
          [(4) the quality of the strategy for assessing 
        achievement of those objectives;
          [(5) the likelihood that the charter school grant 
        program will meet those objectives and improve 
        educational results for students;
          [(6) the number of high-quality charter schools 
        created under this subpart in the State; and
          [(7) in the case of State educational agencies that 
        propose to use grant funds to support dissemination 
        activities under subsection (f)(6)(B), the quality of 
        those activities and the likelihood that those 
        activities will improve student academic achievement.
  [(b) Selection Criteria for Eligible Applicants.--The 
Secretary shall award grants to eligible applicants under this 
subpart on the basis of the quality of the applications 
submitted under section 5203(c), after taking into 
consideration such factors as--
          [(1) the quality of the proposed curriculum and 
        instructional practices;
          [(2) the degree of flexibility afforded by the State 
        educational agency and, if applicable, the local 
        educational agency to the charter school;
          [(3) the extent of community support for the 
        application;
          [(4) the ambitiousness of the objectives for the 
        charter school;
          [(5) the quality of the strategy for assessing 
        achievement of those objectives;
          [(6) the likelihood that the charter school will meet 
        those objectives and improve educational results for 
        students; and
          [(7) in the case of an eligible applicant that 
        proposes to use grant funds to support dissemination 
        activities under subsection (f)(6)(B), the quality of 
        those activities and the likelihood that those 
        activities will improve student achievement.
  [(c) Peer Review.--The Secretary, and each State educational 
agency receiving a grant under this subpart, shall use a peer 
review process to review applications for assistance under this 
subpart.
  [(d) Diversity of Projects.--The Secretary and each State 
educational agency receiving a grant under this subpart, shall 
award grants and subgrants under this subpart in a manner that, 
to the extent possible, ensures that such grants and 
subgrants--
          [(1) are distributed throughout different areas of 
        the Nation and each State, including urban and rural 
        areas; and
          [(2) will assist charter schools representing a 
        variety of educational approaches, such as approaches 
        designed to reduce school size.
  [(e) Waivers.--The Secretary may waive any statutory or 
regulatory requirement over which the Secretary exercises 
administrative authority except any such requirement relating 
to the elements of a charter school described in section 
5210(1), if--
          [(1) the waiver is requested in an approved 
        application under this subpart; and
          [(2) the Secretary determines that granting such a 
        waiver will promote the purpose of this subpart.
  [(f) Use of Funds.--
          [(1) State educational agencies.--Each State 
        educational agency receiving a grant under this subpart 
        shall use such grant funds to award subgrants to one or 
        more eligible applicants in the State to enable such 
        applicant to plan and implement a charter school in 
        accordance with this subpart, except that the State 
        educational agency may reserve not more than 10 percent 
        of the grant funds to support dissemination activities 
        described in paragraph (6).
          [(2) Eligible applicants.--Each eligible applicant 
        receiving funds from the Secretary or a State 
        educational agency shall use such funds to plan and 
        implement a charter school, or to disseminate 
        information about the charter school and successful 
        practices in the charter school, in accordance with 
        this subpart.
          [(3) Allowable activities.--An eligible applicant 
        receiving a grant or subgrant under this subpart may 
        use the grant or subgrant funds only for--
                  [(A) post-award planning and design of the 
                educational program, which may include--
                          [(i) refinement of the desired 
                        educational results and of the methods 
                        for measuring progress toward achieving 
                        those results; and
                          [(ii) professional development of 
                        teachers and other staff who will work 
                        in the charter school; and
                  [(B) initial implementation of the charter 
                school, which may include--
                          [(i) informing the community about 
                        the school;
                          [(ii) acquiring necessary equipment 
                        and educational materials and supplies;
                          [(iii) acquiring or developing 
                        curriculum materials; and
                          [(iv) other initial operational costs 
                        that cannot be met from State or local 
                        sources.
          [(4) Administrative expenses.--
                  [(A) State educational agency administrative 
                expenses.--Each State educational agency 
                receiving a grant pursuant to this subpart may 
                reserve not more than 5 percent of such grant 
                funds for administrative expenses associated 
                with the charter school grant program assisted 
                under this subpart.
                  [(B) Local administrative expenses.--A local 
                educational agency may not deduct funds for 
                administrative fees or expenses from a subgrant 
                awarded to an eligible applicant, unless the 
                eligible applicant enters voluntarily into a 
                mutually agreed upon arrangement for 
                administrative services with the relevant local 
                educational agency. Absent such approval, the 
                local educational agency shall distribute all 
                such subgrant funds to the eligible applicant 
                without delay.
          [(5) Revolving loan funds.--Each State educational 
        agency receiving a grant pursuant to this subpart may 
        reserve not more than 10 percent of the grant funds for 
        the establishment of a revolving loan fund. Such fund 
        may be used to make loans to eligible applicants that 
        have received a subgrant under this subpart, under such 
        terms as may be determined by the State educational 
        agency, for the initial operation of the charter school 
        grant program of the eligible applicant until such time 
        as the recipient begins receiving ongoing operational 
        support from State or local financing sources.
          [(6) Dissemination.--
                  [(A) In general.--A charter school may apply 
                for funds under this subpart, whether or not 
                the charter school has applied for or received 
                funds under this subpart for planning, program 
                design, or implementation, to carry out the 
                activities described in subparagraph (B) if the 
                charter school has been in operation for at 
                least 3 consecutive years and has demonstrated 
                overall success, including--
                          [(i) substantial progress in 
                        improving student academic achievement;
                          [(ii) high levels of parent 
                        satisfaction; and
                          [(iii) the management and leadership 
                        necessary to overcome initial start-up 
                        problems and establish a thriving, 
                        financially viable charter school.
                  [(B) Activities.--A charter school described 
                in subparagraph (A) may use funds reserved 
                under paragraph (1) to assist other schools in 
                adapting the charter school's program (or 
                certain aspects of the charter school's 
                program), or to disseminate information about 
                the charter school, through such activities 
                as--
                          [(i) assisting other individuals with 
                        the planning and start-up of one or 
                        more new public schools, including 
                        charter schools, that are independent 
                        of the assisting charter school and the 
                        assisting charter school's developers, 
                        and that agree to be held to at least 
                        as high a level of accountability as 
                        the assisting charter school;
                          [(ii) developing partnerships with 
                        other public schools, including charter 
                        schools, designed to improve student 
                        academic achievement in each of the 
                        schools participating in the 
                        partnership;
                          [(iii) developing curriculum 
                        materials, assessments, and other 
                        materials that promote increased 
                        student achievement and are based on 
                        successful practices within the 
                        assisting charter school; and
                          [(iv) conducting evaluations and 
                        developing materials that document the 
                        successful practices of the assisting 
                        charter school and that are designed to 
                        improve student performance in other 
                        schools.
  [(g) Tribally Controlled Schools.--Each State that receives a 
grant under this subpart and designates a tribally controlled 
school as a charter school shall not consider payments to a 
school under the Tribally Controlled Schools Act of 1988 (25 
U.S.C. 2507) in determining--
          [(1) the eligibility of the school to receive any 
        other Federal, State, or local aid; or
          [(2) the amount of such aid.

[SEC. 5205. NATIONAL ACTIVITIES.

  [(a) In General.--The Secretary shall reserve for each fiscal 
year the greater of 5 percent or $5,000,000 of the amount 
appropriated to carry out this subpart, except that in no 
fiscal year shall the total amount so reserved exceed 
$8,000,000, to carry out the following activities:
          [(1) To provide charter schools, either directly or 
        through State educational agencies, with--
                  [(A) information regarding--
                          [(i) Federal funds that charter 
                        schools are eligible to receive; and
                          [(ii) other Federal programs in which 
                        charter schools may participate; and
                  [(B) assistance in applying for Federal 
                education funds that are allocated by formula, 
                including assistance with filing deadlines and 
                submission of applications.
          [(2) To provide for other evaluations or studies that 
        include the evaluation of the impact of charter schools 
        on student academic achievement, including information 
        regarding--
                  [(A) students attending charter schools 
                reported on the basis of race, age, disability, 
                gender, limited English proficiency, and 
                previous enrollment in public school; and
                  [(B) the professional qualifications of 
                teachers within a charter school and the 
                turnover of the teaching force.
          [(3) To provide--
                  [(A) information to applicants for assistance 
                under this subpart;
                  [(B) assistance to applicants for assistance 
                under this subpart with the preparation of 
                applications under section 5203;
                  [(C) assistance in the planning and startup 
                of charter schools;
                  [(D) training and technical assistance to 
                existing charter schools; and
                  [(E) for the dissemination to other public 
                schools of best or promising practices in 
                charter schools.
          [(4) To provide (including through the use of one or 
        more contracts that use a competitive bidding process) 
        for the collection of information regarding the 
        financial resources available to charter schools, 
        including access to private capital, and to widely 
        disseminate to charter schools any such relevant 
        information and model descriptions of successful 
        programs.
          [(5) To carry out evaluations of, technical 
        assistance for, and information dissemination 
        regarding, the per-pupil facilities aid programs. In 
        carrying out the evaluations, the Secretary may carry 
        out one or more evaluations of State programs assisted 
        under this subsection, which shall, at a minimum, 
        address--
                  [(A) how, and the extent to which, the 
                programs promote educational equity and 
                excellence; and
                  [(B) the extent to which charter schools 
                supported through the programs are--
                          [(i) held accountable to the public;
                          [(ii) effective in improving public 
                        education; and
                          [(iii) open and accessible to all 
                        students.
  [(b) Per-Pupil Facilities Aid Programs.--
          [(1) Definition of per-pupil facilities aid 
        program.--In this subsection, the term ``per-pupil 
        facilities aid program'' means a program in which a 
        State makes payments, on a per-pupil basis, to charter 
        schools to provide the schools with financing--
                  [(A) that is dedicated solely for funding 
                charter school facilities; or
                  [(B) a portion of which is dedicated for 
                funding charter school facilities.
          [(2) Grants.--
                  [(A) In general.--From the amount made 
                available to carry out this subsection under 
                paragraphs (2) and (3)(B) of section 5211(b) 
                for any fiscal year, the Secretary shall make 
                grants, on a competitive basis, to States to 
                pay for the Federal share of the cost of 
                establishing or enhancing, and administering 
                per-pupil facilities aid programs.
                  [(B) Period.--The Secretary shall award 
                grants under this subsection for periods of not 
                more than 5 years.
                  [(C) Federal share.--The Federal share of the 
                cost described in subparagraph (A) for a per-
                pupil facilities aid program shall be not more 
                than--
                          [(i) 90 percent of the cost, for the 
                        first fiscal year for which the program 
                        receives assistance under this 
                        subsection;
                          [(ii) 80 percent in the second such 
                        year;
                          [(iii) 60 percent in the third such 
                        year;
                          [(iv) 40 percent in the fourth such 
                        year; and
                          [(v) 20 percent in the fifth such 
                        year.
          [(3) Use of funds.--
                  [(A) In general.--A State that receives a 
                grant under this subsection shall use the funds 
                made available through the grant to establish 
                or enhance, and administer, a per-pupil 
                facilities aid program for charter schools in 
                the State.
                  [(B) Evaluations; technical assistance; 
                dissemination.--From the amount made available 
                to a State through a grant under this 
                subsection for a fiscal year, the State may 
                reserve not more than 5 percent to carry out 
                evaluations, to provide technical assistance, 
                and to disseminate information.
                  [(C) Supplement, not supplant.--Funds made 
                available under this subsection shall be used 
                to supplement, and not supplant, State and 
                local public funds expended to provide per 
                pupil facilities aid programs, operations 
                financing programs, or other programs, for 
                charter schools.
          [(4) Requirements.--
                  [(A) Voluntary participation.--No State may 
                be required to participate in a program carried 
                out under this subsection.
                  [(B) State law.--To be eligible to receive a 
                grant under this subsection, a State shall 
                establish or enhance, and administer, a per-
                pupil facilities aid program for charter 
                schools in the State, that--
                          [(i) is specified in State law; and
                          [(ii) provides annual financing, on a 
                        per-pupil basis, for charter school 
                        facilities.
          [(5) Applications.--To be eligible to receive a grant 
        under this subsection, a State shall submit an 
        application to the Secretary at such time, in such 
        manner, and containing such information as the 
        Secretary may require.
          [(6) Priorities.--In making grants under this 
        subsection, the Secretary shall give priority to States 
        that meet the criteria described in paragraph (2), and 
        subparagraphs (A), (B), and (C) of paragraph (3), of 
        section 5202(e).
  [(c) Rule of Construction.--Nothing in this section shall be 
construed to require charter schools to collect any data 
described in subsection (a).

[SEC. 5206. FEDERAL FORMULA ALLOCATION DURING FIRST YEAR AND FOR 
                    SUCCESSIVE ENROLLMENT EXPANSIONS.

  [(a) In General.--For purposes of the allocation to schools 
by the States or their agencies of funds under part A of title 
I, and any other Federal funds which the Secretary allocates to 
States on a formula basis, the Secretary and each State 
educational agency shall take such measures as are necessary to 
ensure that every charter school receives the Federal funding 
for which the charter school is eligible not later than 5 
months after the charter school first opens, notwithstanding 
the fact that the identity and characteristics of the students 
enrolling in that charter school are not fully and completely 
determined until that charter school actually opens. The 
measures similarly shall ensure that every charter school 
expanding its enrollment in any subsequent year of operation 
receives the Federal funding for which the charter school is 
eligible not later than 5 months after such expansion.
  [(b) Adjustment and Late Openings.--
          [(1) In general.--The measures described in 
        subsection (a) shall include provision for appropriate 
        adjustments, through recovery of funds or reduction of 
        payments for the succeeding year, in cases where 
        payments made to a charter school on the basis of 
        estimated or projected enrollment data exceed the 
        amounts that the school is eligible to receive on the 
        basis of actual or final enrollment data.
          [(2) Rule.--For charter schools that first open after 
        November 1 of any academic year, the State, in 
        accordance with guidance provided by the Secretary and 
        applicable Federal statutes and regulations, shall 
        ensure that such charter schools that are eligible for 
        the funds described in subsection (a) for such academic 
        year have a full and fair opportunity to receive those 
        funds during the charter schools' first year of 
        operation.

[SEC. 5207. SOLICITATION OF INPUT FROM CHARTER SCHOOL OPERATORS.

  [To the extent practicable, the Secretary shall ensure that 
administrators, teachers, and other individuals directly 
involved in the operation of charter schools are consulted in 
the development of any rules or regulations required to 
implement this subpart, as well as in the development of any 
rules or regulations relevant to charter schools that are 
required to implement part A of title I, the Individuals with 
Disabilities Education Act, or any other program administered 
by the Secretary that provides education funds to charter 
schools or regulates the activities of charter schools.

[SEC. 5208. RECORDS TRANSFER.

  [State educational agencies and local educational agencies, 
to the extent practicable, shall ensure that a student's 
records and, if applicable, a student's individualized 
education program as defined in section 602 of the Individuals 
with Disabilities Education Act, are transferred to a charter 
school upon the transfer of the student to the charter school, 
and to another public school upon the transfer of the student 
from a charter school to another public school, in accordance 
with applicable State law.

[SEC. 5209. PAPERWORK REDUCTION.

  [To the extent practicable, the Secretary and each authorized 
public chartering agency shall ensure that implementation of 
this subpart results in a minimum of paperwork for any eligible 
applicant or charter school.

[SEC. 5210. DEFINITIONS.

   [In this subpart:
          [(1) Charter school.--The term ``charter school'' 
        means a public school that--
                  [(A) in accordance with a specific State 
                statute authorizing the granting of charters to 
                schools, is exempt from significant State or 
                local rules that inhibit the flexible operation 
                and management of public schools, but not from 
                any rules relating to the other requirements of 
                this paragraph;
                  [(B) is created by a developer as a public 
                school, or is adapted by a developer from an 
                existing public school, and is operated under 
                public supervision and direction;
                  [(C) operates in pursuit of a specific set of 
                educational objectives determined by the 
                school's developer and agreed to by the 
                authorized public chartering agency;
                  [(D) provides a program of elementary or 
                secondary education, or both;
                  [(E) is nonsectarian in its programs, 
                admissions policies, employment practices, and 
                all other operations, and is not affiliated 
                with a sectarian school or religious 
                institution;
                  [(F) does not charge tuition;
                  [(G) complies with the Age Discrimination Act 
                of 1975, title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 
                1964, title IX of the Education Amendments of 
                1972, section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 
                1973, and part B of the Individuals with 
                Disabilities Education Act;
                  [(H) is a school to which parents choose to 
                send their children, and that admits students 
                on the basis of a lottery, if more students 
                apply for admission than can be accommodated;
                  [(I) agrees to comply with the same Federal 
                and State audit requirements as do other 
                elementary schools and secondary schools in the 
                State, unless such requirements are 
                specifically waived for the purpose of this 
                program;
                  [(J) meets all applicable Federal, State, and 
                local health and safety requirements;
                  [(K) operates in accordance with State law; 
                and
                  [(L) has a written performance contract with 
                the authorized public chartering agency in the 
                State that includes a description of how 
                student performance will be measured in charter 
                schools pursuant to State assessments that are 
                required of other schools and pursuant to any 
                other assessments mutually agreeable to the 
                authorized public chartering agency and the 
                charter school.
          [(2) Developer.--The term ``developer'' means an 
        individual or group of individuals (including a public 
        or private nonprofit organization), which may include 
        teachers, administrators and other school staff, 
        parents, or other members of the local community in 
        which a charter school project will be carried out.
          [(3) Eligible applicant.--The term ``eligible 
        applicant'' means a developer that has--
                  [(A) applied to an authorized public 
                chartering authority to operate a charter 
                school; and
                  [(B) provided adequate and timely notice to 
                that authority under section 5203(d)(3).
          [(4) Authorized public chartering agency.--The term 
        ``authorized public chartering agency'' means a State 
        educational agency, local educational agency, or other 
        public entity that has the authority pursuant to State 
        law and approved by the Secretary to authorize or 
        approve a charter school.

[SEC. 5211. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS.

  [(a) In General.--There are authorized to be appropriated to 
carry out this subpart $300,000,000 for fiscal year 2002 and 
such sums as may be necessary for each of the 5 succeeding 
fiscal years.
  [(b) Reservation.--From the amount appropriated under 
subsection (a) for each fiscal year, the Secretary shall 
reserve--
          [(1) $200,000,000 to carry out this subpart, other 
        than section 5205(b); and
          [(2) any funds in excess of $200,000,000, that do not 
        exceed $300,000,000, to carry out section 5205(b); and
          [(3)(A) 50 percent of any funds in excess of 
        $300,000,000 to carry out this subpart, other than 
        section 5205(b); and
          [(B) 50 percent of any funds in excess of 
        $300,000,000 to carry out section 5205(b).

  [Subpart 2--Credit Enhancement Initiatives To Assist Charter School 
           Facility Acquisition, Construction, and Renovation

[SEC. 5221. PURPOSE.

  [The purpose of this subpart is to provide grants to eligible 
entities to permit the eligible entities to demonstrate 
innovative credit enhancement initiatives that assist charter 
schools to address the cost of acquiring, constructing, and 
renovating facilities.

[SEC. 5222. GRANTS TO ELIGIBLE ENTITIES.

  [(a) Grants.--The Secretary shall use 100 percent of the 
amount available to carry out this subpart to award not less 
than three grants to eligible entities that have applications 
approved under this subpart to demonstrate innovative methods 
of assisting charter schools to address the cost of acquiring, 
constructing, and renovating facilities by enhancing the 
availability of loans or bond financing.
  [(b) Grantee Selection.--
          [(1) Evaluation of application.--The Secretary shall 
        evaluate each application submitted under section 5223, 
        and shall determine whether the application is 
        sufficient to merit approval.
          [(2) Distribution of grants.--The Secretary shall 
        award at least one grant to an eligible entity 
        described in section 5230(2)(A), at least one grant to 
        an eligible entity described in section 5230(2)(B), and 
        at least one grant to an eligible entity described in 
        section 5230(2)(C), if applications are submitted that 
        permit the Secretary to do so without approving an 
        application that is not of sufficient quality to merit 
        approval.
  [(c) Grant Characteristics.--Grants under this subpart shall 
be of a sufficient size, scope, and quality so as to ensure an 
effective demonstration of an innovative means of enhancing 
credit for the financing of charter school acquisition, 
construction, or renovation.
  [(d) Special Rule.--In the event the Secretary determines 
that the funds made available under this subpart are 
insufficient to permit the Secretary to award not less than 
three grants in accordance with subsections (a) through (c), 
such three-grant minimum and subsection (b)(2) shall not apply, 
and the Secretary may determine the appropriate number of 
grants to be awarded in accordance with subsection (c).

[SEC. 5223. APPLICATIONS.

  [(a) In General.--To receive a grant under this subpart, an 
eligible entity shall submit to the Secretary an application in 
such form as the Secretary may reasonably require.
  [(b) Contents.--An application submitted under subsection (a) 
shall contain--
          [(1) a statement identifying the activities proposed 
        to be undertaken with funds received under this 
        subpart, including how the eligible entity will 
        determine which charter schools will receive 
        assistance, and how much and what types of assistance 
        charter schools will receive;
          [(2) a description of the involvement of charter 
        schools in the application's development and the design 
        of the proposed activities;
          [(3) a description of the eligible entity's expertise 
        in capital market financing;
          [(4) a description of how the proposed activities 
        will leverage the maximum amount of private-sector 
        financing capital relative to the amount of government 
        funding used and otherwise enhance credit available to 
        charter schools;
          [(5) a description of how the eligible entity 
        possesses sufficient expertise in education to evaluate 
        the likelihood of success of a charter school program 
        for which facilities financing is sought;
          [(6) in the case of an application submitted by a 
        State governmental entity, a description of the actions 
        that the entity has taken, or will take, to ensure that 
        charter schools within the State receive the funding 
        the charter schools need to have adequate facilities; 
        and
          [(7) such other information as the Secretary may 
        reasonably require.

[SEC. 5224. CHARTER SCHOOL OBJECTIVES.

   [An eligible entity receiving a grant under this subpart 
shall use the funds deposited in the reserve account 
established under section 5225(a) to assist one or more charter 
schools to access private sector capital to accomplish one or 
both of the following objectives:
          [(1) The acquisition (by purchase, lease, donation, 
        or otherwise) of an interest (including an interest 
        held by a third party for the benefit of a charter 
        school) in improved or unimproved real property that is 
        necessary to commence or continue the operation of a 
        charter school.
          [(2) The construction of new facilities, or the 
        renovation, repair, or alteration of existing 
        facilities, necessary to commence or continue the 
        operation of a charter school.

[SEC. 5225. RESERVE ACCOUNT.

  [(a) Use of Funds.--To assist charter schools to accomplish 
the objectives described in section 5224, an eligible entity 
receiving a grant under this subpart shall, in accordance with 
State and local law, directly or indirectly, alone or in 
collaboration with others, deposit the funds received under 
this subpart (other than funds used for administrative costs in 
accordance with section 5226) in a reserve account established 
and maintained by the eligible entity for this purpose. Amounts 
deposited in such account shall be used by the eligible entity 
for one or more of the following purposes:
          [(1) Guaranteeing, insuring, and reinsuring bonds, 
        notes, evidences of debt, loans, and interests therein, 
        the proceeds of which are used for an objective 
        described in section 5224.
          [(2) Guaranteeing and insuring leases of personal and 
        real property for an objective described in section 
        5224.
          [(3) Facilitating financing by identifying potential 
        lending sources, encouraging private lending, and other 
        similar activities that directly promote lending to, or 
        for the benefit of, charter schools.
          [(4) Facilitating the issuance of bonds by charter 
        schools, or by other public entities for the benefit of 
        charter schools, by providing technical, 
        administrative, and other appropriate assistance 
        (including the recruitment of bond counsel, 
        underwriters, and potential investors and the 
        consolidation of multiple charter school projects 
        within a single bond issue).
  [(b) Investment.--Funds received under this subpart and 
deposited in the reserve account established under subsection 
(a) shall be invested in obligations issued or guaranteed by 
the United States or a State, or in other similarly low-risk 
securities.
  [(c) Reinvestment of Earnings.--Any earnings on funds 
received under this subpart shall be deposited in the reserve 
account established under subsection (a) and used in accordance 
with such subsection.

[SEC. 5226. LIMITATION ON ADMINISTRATIVE COSTS.

  [An eligible entity may use not more than 0.25 percent of the 
funds received under this subpart for the administrative costs 
of carrying out its responsibilities under this subpart.

[SEC. 5227. AUDITS AND REPORTS.

  [(a) Financial Record Maintenance and Audit.--The financial 
records of each eligible entity receiving a grant under this 
subpart shall be maintained in accordance with generally 
accepted accounting principles and shall be subject to an 
annual audit by an independent public accountant.
  [(b) Reports.--
          [(1) Grantee annual reports.--Each eligible entity 
        receiving a grant under this subpart annually shall 
        submit to the Secretary a report of its operations and 
        activities under this subpart.
          [(2) Contents.--Each annual report submitted under 
        paragraph (1) shall include--
                  [(A) a copy of the most recent financial 
                statements, and any accompanying opinion on 
                such statements, prepared by the independent 
                public accountant reviewing the financial 
                records of the eligible entity;
                  [(B) a copy of any report made on an audit of 
                the financial records of the eligible entity 
                that was conducted under subsection (a) during 
                the reporting period;
                  [(C) an evaluation by the eligible entity of 
                the effectiveness of its use of the Federal 
                funds provided under this subpart in leveraging 
                private funds;
                  [(D) a listing and description of the charter 
                schools served during the reporting period;
                  [(E) a description of the activities carried 
                out by the eligible entity to assist charter 
                schools in meeting the objectives set forth in 
                section 5224; and
                  [(F) a description of the characteristics of 
                lenders and other financial institutions 
                participating in the activities undertaken by 
                the eligible entity under this subpart during 
                the reporting period.
          [(3) Secretarial report.--The Secretary shall review 
        the reports submitted under paragraph (1) and shall 
        provide a comprehensive annual report to Congress on 
        the activities conducted under this subpart.

[SEC. 5228. NO FULL FAITH AND CREDIT FOR GRANTEE OBLIGATIONS.

  [No financial obligation of an eligible entity entered into 
pursuant to this subpart (such as an obligation under a 
guarantee, bond, note, evidence of debt, or loan) shall be an 
obligation of, or guaranteed in any respect by, the United 
States. The full faith and credit of the United States is not 
pledged to the payment of funds which may be required to be 
paid under any obligation made by an eligible entity pursuant 
to any provision of this subpart.

[SEC. 5229. RECOVERY OF FUNDS.

  [(a) In General.--The Secretary, in accordance with chapter 
37 of title 31, United States Code, shall collect--
          [(1) all of the funds in a reserve account 
        established by an eligible entity under section 5225(a) 
        if the Secretary determines, not earlier than 2 years 
        after the date on which the eligible entity first 
        received funds under this subpart, that the eligible 
        entity has failed to make substantial progress in 
        carrying out the purposes described in section 5225(a); 
        or
          [(2) all or a portion of the funds in a reserve 
        account established by an eligible entity under section 
        5225(a) if the Secretary determines that the eligible 
        entity has permanently ceased to use all or a portion 
        of the funds in such account to accomplish any purpose 
        described in section 5225(a).
  [(b) Exercise of Authority.--The Secretary shall not exercise 
the authority provided in subsection (a) to collect from any 
eligible entity any funds that are being properly used to 
achieve one or more of the purposes described in section 
5225(a).
  [(c) Procedures.--The provisions of sections 451, 452, and 
458 of the General Education Provisions Act shall apply to the 
recovery of funds under subsection (a).
  [(d) Construction.--This section shall not be construed to 
impair or affect the authority of the Secretary to recover 
funds under part D of the General Education Provisions Act.

[SEC. 5230. DEFINITIONS.

   [In this subpart:
          [(1) Charter school.--The term ``charter school'' has 
        the meaning given such term in section 5210.
          [(2) Eligible entity.--The term ``eligible entity'' 
        means--
                  [(A) a public entity, such as a State or 
                local governmental entity;
                  [(B) a private nonprofit entity; or
                  [(C) a consortium of entities described in 
                subparagraphs (A) and (B).

[SEC. 5231. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS.

  [For the purpose of carrying out this subpart, there are 
authorized to be appropriated $150,000,000 for fiscal year 2002 
and such sums as may be necessary for fiscal year 2003.

          [Subpart 3--Voluntary Public School Choice Programs

[SEC. 5241. GRANTS.

  [(a) Authorization.--From funds made available under section 
5248 to carry out this subpart, the Secretary shall award 
grants, on a competitive basis, to eligible entities to enable 
the entities to establish or expand a program of public school 
choice (referred to in this subpart as a ``program'') in 
accordance with this subpart.
  [(b) Duration.--Grants awarded under subsection (a) may be 
awarded for a period of not more than 5 years.

[SEC. 5242. USES OF FUNDS.

  [(a) Required Use of Funds.--An eligible entity that receives 
a grant under this subpart shall use the grant funds to provide 
students selected to participate in the program with 
transportation services or the cost of transportation to and 
from the public elementary schools and secondary schools, 
including charter schools, that the students choose to attend 
under the program.
  [(b) Permissible Uses of Funds.--An eligible entity that 
receives a grant under this subpart may use the grant funds 
for--
          [(1) planning or designing a program (for not more 
        than 1 year);
          [(2) the cost of making tuition transfer payments to 
        public elementary schools or secondary schools to which 
        students transfer under the program;
          [(3) the cost of capacity-enhancing activities that 
        enable high-demand public elementary schools or 
        secondary schools to accommodate transfer requests 
        under the program;
          [(4) the cost of carrying out public education 
        campaigns to inform students and parents about the 
        program; and
          [(5) other costs reasonably necessary to implement 
        the program.
  [(c) Nonpermissible Uses of Funds.--An eligible entity that 
receives a grant under this subpart may not use the grant funds 
for school construction.
  [(d) Administrative Expenses.--The eligible entity may use 
not more than 5 percent of the funds made available through the 
grant for any fiscal year for administrative expenses.

[SEC. 5243. APPLICATIONS.

  [(a) Submission.--An eligible entity that desires a grant 
under this subpart shall submit an application to the Secretary 
at such time, in such manner, and containing such information 
as the Secretary may require.
  [(b) Contents.--An application submitted under subsection (a) 
shall include--
          [(1) a description of the program for which the 
        eligible entity seeks funds and the goals for such 
        program;
          [(2) a description of how and when parents of 
        students will be given the notice required under 
        section 5245(a)(2);
          [(3) a description of how students will be selected 
        for the program;
          [(4) a description of how the program will be 
        coordinated with, and will complement and enhance, 
        other related Federal and non-Federal projects;
          [(5) if the program is to be carried out by a 
        partnership, the name of each partner and a description 
        of the partner's responsibilities; and
          [(6) such other information as the Secretary may 
        require.

[SEC. 5244. PRIORITIES.

   [In awarding grants under this subpart, the Secretary shall 
give priority to an eligible entity--
          [(1) whose program would provide the widest variety 
        of choices to all students in participating schools;
          [(2) whose program would, through various choice 
        options, have the most impact in allowing students in 
        low-performing schools to attend higher-performing 
        schools; and
          [(3) that is a partnership that seeks to implement an 
        interdistrict approach to carrying out a program.

[SEC. 5245. REQUIREMENTS AND VOLUNTARY PARTICIPATION.

  [(a) Parent and Community Involvement and Notice.--In 
carrying out a program under this subpart, an eligible entity 
shall--
          [(1) develop the program with--
                  [(A) the involvement of parents and others in 
                the community to be served; and
                  [(B) individuals who will carry out the 
                program, including administrators, teachers, 
                principals, and other staff; and
          [(2) provide to parents of students in the area to be 
        served by the program with prompt notice of--
                  [(A) the existence of the program;
                  [(B) the program's availability; and
                  [(C) a clear explanation of how the program 
                will operate.
  [(b) Selection of Students.--An eligible entity that receives 
a grant under this subpart shall select students to participate 
in a program on the basis of a lottery, if more students apply 
for admission to the program than can be accommodated.
  [(c) Voluntary Participation.--Student participation in a 
program funded under this subpart shall be voluntary.

[SEC. 5246. EVALUATIONS.

  [(a) In General.--From the amount made available to carry out 
this subpart for any fiscal year, the Secretary may reserve not 
more than 5 percent--
          [(1) to carry out evaluations;
          [(2) to provide technical assistance; and
          [(3) to disseminate information.
  [(b) Evaluations.--In carrying out the evaluations under 
subsection (a), the Secretary shall, at a minimum, address--
          [(1) how, and the extent to which, the programs 
        promote educational equity and excellence;
          [(2) the characteristics of the students 
        participating in the programs; and
          [(3) the effect of the programs on the academic 
        achievement of students participating in the programs, 
        particularly students who move from schools identified 
        under section 1116 to schools not so identified, and on 
        the overall quality of participating schools and 
        districts.

[SEC. 5247. DEFINITIONS.

   [In this subpart:
          [(1) Charter school.--The term ``charter school'' has 
        the meaning given such term in section 5210.
          [(2) Eligible entity.--The term ``eligible entity'' 
        means--
                  [(A) one or more State educational agencies;
                  [(B) one or more local educational agencies; 
                or
                  [(C) a partnership of--
                          [(i) one or more--
                                  [(I) State educational 
                                agencies; and
                                  [(II) local educational 
                                agencies or other public, for-
                                profit, or nonprofit entities; 
                                or
                          [(ii) one or more--
                                  [(I) local educational 
                                agencies; and
                                  [(II) public, for-profit, or 
                                nonprofit entities.
          [(3) Low-performing school.--The term ``low-
        performing school'' means a public elementary school or 
        secondary school that has failed to make adequate 
        yearly progress, as described in section 1111(b), for 
        two or more consecutive years.

[SEC. 5248. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS.

  [There are authorized to be appropriated to carry out this 
subpart $100,000,000 for fiscal year 2002 and each of the 5 
succeeding fiscal years.

                   [PART C--MAGNET SCHOOLS ASSISTANCE

[SEC. 5301. FINDINGS AND PURPOSE.

  [(a) Findings.--Congress makes the following findings:
          [(1) Magnet schools are a significant part of the 
        Nation's effort to achieve voluntary desegregation in 
        our Nation's schools.
          [(2) The use of magnet schools has increased 
        dramatically since the inception of the magnet schools 
        assistance program under this Act, with approximately 
        2,000,000 students nationwide attending such schools, 
        of whom more than 65 percent are non-white.
          [(3) Magnet schools offer a wide range of distinctive 
        programs that have served as models for school 
        improvement efforts.
          [(4) It is in the best interests of the United 
        States--
                  [(A) to continue the Federal Government's 
                support of local educational agencies that are 
                implementing court-ordered desegregation plans 
                and local educational agencies that are 
                voluntarily seeking to foster meaningful 
                interaction among students of different racial 
                and ethnic backgrounds, beginning at the 
                earliest stage of such students' education;
                  [(B) to ensure that all students have 
                equitable access to a high quality education 
                that will prepare all students to function well 
                in a technologically oriented and a highly 
                competitive economy comprised of people from 
                many different racial and ethnic backgrounds; 
                and
                  [(C) to continue to desegregate and diversify 
                schools by supporting magnet schools, 
                recognizing that segregation exists between 
                minority and nonminority students as well as 
                among students of different minority groups.
          [(5) Desegregation efforts through magnet school 
        programs are a significant part of our Nation's effort 
        to achieve voluntary desegregation in schools and help 
        to ensure equal educational opportunities for all 
        students.
  [(b) Purpose.--The purpose of this part is to assist in the 
desegregation of schools served by local educational agencies 
by providing financial assistance to eligible local educational 
agencies for--
          [(1) the elimination, reduction, or prevention of 
        minority group isolation in elementary schools and 
        secondary schools with substantial proportions of 
        minority students, which shall include assisting in the 
        efforts of the United States to achieve voluntary 
        desegregation in public schools;
          [(2) the development and implementation of magnet 
        school programs that will assist local educational 
        agencies in achieving systemic reforms and providing 
        all students the opportunity to meet challenging State 
        academic content standards and student academic 
        achievement standards;
          [(3) the development and design of innovative 
        educational methods and practices that promote 
        diversity and increase choices in public elementary 
        schools and public secondary schools and public 
        educational programs;
          [(4) courses of instruction within magnet schools 
        that will substantially strengthen the knowledge of 
        academic subjects and the attainment of tangible and 
        marketable vocational, technological, and professional 
        skills of students attending such schools;
          [(5) improving the capacity of local educational 
        agencies, including through professional development, 
        to continue operating magnet schools at a high 
        performance level after Federal funding for the magnet 
        schools is terminated; and
          [(6) ensuring that all students enrolled in the 
        magnet school programs have equitable access to high 
        quality education that will enable the students to 
        succeed academically and continue with postsecondary 
        education or productive employment.

[SEC. 5302. DEFINITION.

  [For the purpose of this part, the term ``magnet school'' 
means a public elementary school, public secondary school, 
public elementary education center, or public secondary 
education center that offers a special curriculum capable of 
attracting substantial numbers of students of different racial 
backgrounds.

[SEC. 5303. PROGRAM AUTHORIZED.

   [The Secretary, in accordance with this part, is authorized 
to award grants to eligible local educational agencies, and 
consortia of such agencies where appropriate, to carry out the 
purpose of this part for magnet schools that are--
          [(1) part of an approved desegregation plan; and
          [(2) designed to bring students from different 
        social, economic, ethnic, and racial backgrounds 
        together.

[SEC. 5304. ELIGIBILITY.

   [A local educational agency, or consortium of such agencies 
where appropriate, is eligible to receive a grant under this 
part to carry out the purpose of this part if such agency or 
consortium--
          [(1) is implementing a plan undertaken pursuant to a 
        final order issued by a court of the United States, or 
        a court of any State, or any other State agency or 
        official of competent jurisdiction, that requires the 
        desegregation of minority-group-segregated children or 
        faculty in the elementary schools and secondary schools 
        of such agency; or
          [(2) without having been required to do so, has 
        adopted and is implementing, or will, if a grant is 
        awarded to such local educational agency, or consortium 
        of such agencies, under this part, adopt and implement 
        a plan that has been approved by the Secretary as 
        adequate under title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 
        for the desegregation of minority-group-segregated 
        children or faculty in such schools.

[SEC. 5305. APPLICATIONS AND REQUIREMENTS.

  [(a) Applications.--An eligible local educational agency, or 
consortium of such agencies, desiring to receive a grant under 
this part shall submit an application to the Secretary at such 
time, in such manner, and containing such information and 
assurances as the Secretary may reasonably require.
  [(b) Information and Assurances.--Each application submitted 
under subsection (a) shall include--
          [(1) a description of--
                  [(A) how a grant awarded under this part will 
                be used to promote desegregation, including how 
                the proposed magnet school programs will 
                increase interaction among students of 
                different social, economic, ethnic, and racial 
                backgrounds;
                  [(B) the manner and extent to which the 
                magnet school program will increase student 
                academic achievement in the instructional area 
                or areas offered by the school;
                  [(C) how the applicant will continue the 
                magnet school program after assistance under 
                this part is no longer available, and, if 
                applicable, an explanation of why magnet 
                schools established or supported by the 
                applicant with grant funds under this part 
                cannot be continued without the use of grant 
                funds under this part;
                  [(D) how grant funds under this part will be 
                used--
                          [(i) to improve student academic 
                        achievement for all students attending 
                        the magnet school programs; and
                          [(ii) to implement services and 
                        activities that are consistent with 
                        other programs under this Act, and 
                        other Acts, as appropriate; and
                  [(E) the criteria to be used in selecting 
                students to attend the proposed magnet school 
                program; and
          [(2) assurances that the applicant will--
                  [(A) use grant funds under this part for the 
                purposes specified in section 5301(b);
                  [(B) employ highly qualified teachers in the 
                courses of instruction assisted under this 
                part;
                  [(C) not engage in discrimination based on 
                race, religion, color, national origin, sex, or 
                disability in--
                          [(i) the hiring, promotion, or 
                        assignment of employees of the 
                        applicant or other personnel for whom 
                        the applicant has any administrative 
                        responsibility;
                          [(ii) the assignment of students to 
                        schools, or to courses of instruction 
                        within the schools, of such applicant, 
                        except to carry out the approved plan; 
                        and
                          [(iii) designing or operating 
                        extracurricular activities for 
                        students;
                  [(D) carry out a high-quality education 
                program that will encourage greater parental 
                decisionmaking and involvement; and
                  [(E) give students residing in the local 
                attendance area of the proposed magnet school 
                program equitable consideration for placement 
                in the program, consistent with desegregation 
                guidelines and the capacity of the applicant to 
                accommodate the students.
  [(c) Special Rule.--No grant shall be awarded under this part 
unless the Assistant Secretary of Education for Civil Rights 
determines that the assurances described in subsection 
(b)(2)(C) will be met.

[SEC. 5306. PRIORITY.

   [In awarding grants under this part, the Secretary shall 
give priority to applicants that--
          [(1) demonstrate the greatest need for assistance, 
        based on the expense or difficulty of effectively 
        carrying out approved desegregation plans and the 
        magnet school program for which the grant is sought;
          [(2) propose to carry out new magnet school programs, 
        or significantly revise existing magnet school 
        programs; and
          [(3) propose to select students to attend magnet 
        school programs by methods such as lottery, rather than 
        through academic examination.

[SEC. 5307. USE OF FUNDS.

  [(a) In General.--Grant funds made available under this part 
may be used by an eligible local educational agency, or 
consortium of such agencies--
          [(1) for planning and promotional activities directly 
        related to the development, expansion, continuation, or 
        enhancement of academic programs and services offered 
        at magnet schools;
          [(2) for the acquisition of books, materials, and 
        equipment, including computers and the maintenance and 
        operation of materials, equipment, and computers, 
        necessary to conduct programs in magnet schools;
          [(3) for the compensation, or subsidization of the 
        compensation, of elementary school and secondary school 
        teachers who are highly qualified, and instructional 
        staff where applicable, who are necessary to conduct 
        programs in magnet schools;
          [(4) with respect to a magnet school program offered 
        to less than the entire student population of a school, 
        for instructional activities that--
                  [(A) are designed to make available the 
                special curriculum that is offered by the 
                magnet school program to students who are 
                enrolled in the school but who are not enrolled 
                in the magnet school program; and
                  [(B) further the purpose of this part;
          [(5) for activities, which may include professional 
        development, that will build the recipient's capacity 
        to operate magnet school programs once the grant period 
        has ended;
          [(6) to enable the local educational agency, or 
        consortium of such agencies, to have more flexibility 
        in the administration of a magnet school program in 
        order to serve students attending a school who are not 
        enrolled in a magnet school program; and
          [(7) to enable the local educational agency, or 
        consortium of such agencies, to have flexibility in 
        designing magnet schools for students in all grades.
  [(b) Special Rule.--Grant funds under this part may be used 
for activities described in paragraphs (2) and (3) of 
subsection (a) only if the activities are directly related to 
improving student academic achievement based on the State's 
challenging academic content standards and student academic 
achievement standards or directly related to improving student 
reading skills or knowledge of mathematics, science, history, 
geography, English, foreign languages, art, or music, or to 
improving vocational, technological, and professional skills.

[SEC. 5308. PROHIBITION.

  [Grants under this part may not be used for transportation or 
any activity that does not augment academic improvement.

[SEC. 5309. LIMITATIONS.

  [(a) Duration of Awards.--A grant under this part shall be 
awarded for a period that shall not exceed 3 fiscal years.
  [(b) Limitation on Planning Funds.--A local educational 
agency, or consortium of such agencies, may expend for planning 
(professional development shall not be considered to be 
planning for purposes of this subsection) not more than 50 
percent of the grant funds received under this part for the 
first year of the program and not more than 15 percent of such 
funds for each of the second and third such years.
  [(c) Amount.--No local educational agency, or consortium of 
such agencies, awarded a grant under this part shall receive 
more than $4,000,000 under this part for any 1 fiscal year.
  [(d) Timing.--To the extent practicable, the Secretary shall 
award grants for any fiscal year under this part not later than 
July 1 of the applicable fiscal year.

[SEC. 5310. EVALUATIONS.

  [(a) Reservation.--The Secretary may reserve not more than 2 
percent of the funds appropriated under section 5311(a) for any 
fiscal year to carry out evaluations, provide technical 
assistance, and carry out dissemination projects with respect 
to magnet school programs assisted under this part.
  [(b) Contents.--Each evaluation described in subsection (a), 
at a minimum, shall address--
          [(1) how and the extent to which magnet school 
        programs lead to educational quality and improvement;
          [(2) the extent to which magnet school programs 
        enhance student access to a high quality education;
          [(3) the extent to which magnet school programs lead 
        to the elimination, reduction, or prevention of 
        minority group isolation in elementary schools and 
        secondary schools with substantial proportions of 
        minority students; and
          [(4) the extent to which magnet school programs 
        differ from other school programs in terms of the 
        organizational characteristics and resource allocations 
        of such magnet school programs.
  [(c) Dissemination.--The Secretary shall collect and 
disseminate to the general public information on successful 
magnet school programs.

[SEC. 5311. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS; RESERVATION.

  [(a) Authorization.--For the purpose of carrying out this 
part, there are authorized to be appropriated $125,000,000 for 
fiscal year 2002 and such sums as may be necessary for each of 
the 5 succeeding fiscal years.
  [(b) Availability of Funds for Grants to Agencies Not 
Previously Assisted.--In any fiscal year for which the amount 
appropriated pursuant to subsection (a) exceeds $75,000,000, 
the Secretary shall give priority in using such amounts in 
excess of $75,000,000 to awarding grants to local educational 
agencies or consortia of such agencies that did not receive a 
grant under this part in the preceding fiscal year.

             [PART D--FUND FOR THE IMPROVEMENT OF EDUCATION

[SEC. 5401. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS.

   [There are authorized to be appropriated to carry out this 
part the following amounts:
          [(1) $550,000,000 for fiscal year 2002.
          [(2) $575,000,000 for fiscal year 2003.
          [(3) $600,000,000 for fiscal year 2004.
          [(4) $625,000,000 for fiscal year 2005.
          [(5) $650,000,000 for fiscal year 2006.
          [(6) $675,000,000 for fiscal year 2007.

           [Subpart 1--Fund for the Improvement of Education

[SEC. 5411. PROGRAMS AUTHORIZED.

  [(a) Authorization.--The Secretary is authorized to support 
nationally significant programs to improve the quality of 
elementary and secondary education at the State and local 
levels and help all children meet challenging State academic 
content and student academic achievement standards. The 
Secretary may carry out such programs directly, or through 
grants to, or contracts with--
          [(1) States or local educational agencies;
          [(2) institutions of higher education; and
          [(3) other public and private agencies, 
        organizations, and institutions.
  [(b) Uses of Funds.--Funds made available under section 5401 
to carry out this subpart may be used for any of the following 
programs:
          [(1) Activities to promote systemic education reform 
        at the State and local levels, including scientifically 
        based research, development, and evaluation designed to 
        improve--
                  [(A) student academic achievement at the 
                State and local level; and
                  [(B) strategies for effective parent and 
                community involvement.
          [(2) Programs at the State and local levels that are 
        designed to yield significant results, including 
        programs to explore approaches to public school choice 
        and school-based decisionmaking.
          [(3) Recognition programs, which may include 
        financial awards to States, local educational agencies, 
        and schools that have made the greatest progress, based 
        on the Secretary's determination or on a nomination by 
        the State in which the school is located (or in the 
        case of a Bureau funded school, by the Secretary of the 
        Interior) in--
                  [(A) improving the academic achievement of 
                economically disadvantaged students and 
                students from major racial and ethnic minority 
                groups; and
                  [(B) closing the academic achievement gap for 
                those groups of students farthest away from the 
                proficient level on the academic assessments 
                administered by the State under section 1111.
          [(4) Scientifically based studies and evaluations of 
        education reform strategies and innovations, and the 
        dissemination of information on the effectiveness of 
        such strategies and innovations.
          [(5) Identification and recognition of exemplary 
        schools and programs, such as Blue Ribbon Schools, 
        including programs to evaluate the effectiveness of 
        using the best practices of exemplary or Blue Ribbon 
        Schools to improve academic achievement.
          [(6) Activities to support Scholar-Athlete Games 
        programs, including the World Scholar-Athlete Games and 
        the U.S. Scholar-Athlete Games.
          [(7) Programs to promote voter participation in 
        American elections through programs, such as the 
        National Student/Parent Mock Election and Kids Voting 
        USA.
          [(8) Demonstrations relating to the planning and 
        evaluation of the effectiveness of programs under which 
        local educational agencies or schools contract with 
        private management organizations to reform a school or 
        schools.
          [(9) Other programs that meet the purposes of this 
        Act.
  [(c) Basis of Awards.--The Secretary is authorized to--
          [(1) make awards under this subpart on the basis of 
        competitions announced by the Secretary; and
          [(2) support meritorious unsolicited proposals for 
        awards under this subpart.
  [(d) Effectiveness of Programs.--The Secretary shall ensure 
that programs supported under this subpart are designed so that 
their effectiveness is readily ascertainable, and shall ensure 
that such effectiveness is assessed using rigorous, 
scientifically based research and evaluations.

[SEC. 5412. APPLICATIONS.

  [(a) Submission.--To be eligible for an award under this 
subpart, an entity shall submit an application to the 
Secretary, at such time, in such manner, and containing such 
information as the Secretary may require.
  [(b) Contents.--Each application submitted under subsection 
(a) shall--
          [(1) establish clear objectives, which are based on 
        scientifically based research, for the proposed 
        program; and
          [(2) describe the activities the applicant will carry 
        out in order to meet the objectives described in 
        paragraph (1).
  [(c) Peer Review.--The Secretary shall use a peer review 
process in reviewing applications for awards under this subpart 
and in recognizing States, local educational agencies, and 
schools under section 5411(b)(3), only if funds are used for 
such recognition programs. The Secretary may use funds 
appropriated under this subpart for the cost of such peer 
review.

[SEC. 5413. PROGRAM REQUIREMENTS.

  [(a) Evaluations.--A recipient of an award under this subpart 
shall--
          [(1) evaluate the effectiveness of the program funded 
        under the award in achieving the objectives stated in 
        applications submitted under section 5412; and
          [(2) report to the Secretary such information as may 
        be required to determine the effectiveness of such 
        program, including evidence of progress toward meeting 
        such objectives.
  [(b) Dissemination of Evaluation Results.--The Secretary 
shall provide for the dissemination of the evaluations of 
programs funded under this subpart by making the evaluations 
publicly available upon request, and shall provide public 
notice that the evaluations are so available.
  [(c) Matching Funds.--The Secretary may require recipients of 
awards under this subpart to provide matching funds from non-
Federal sources, and shall permit the recipients to match funds 
in whole or in part with in-kind contributions.
  [(d) Special Rule for Recognition Programs.--The application 
requirements of section 5412(b), and the evaluation 
requirements of subsections (a) and (b) of this section, do not 
apply to recognition programs under section 5411(b)(3).

[SEC. 5414. STUDIES OF NATIONAL SIGNIFICANCE.

  [(a) Studies.--The Secretary shall conduct the following 
studies of national significance:
          [(1) Unhealthy public school buildings.--A study 
        regarding the health and learning impacts of 
        environmentally unhealthy public school buildings on 
        students and teachers. The study shall include the 
        following information:
                  [(A) The characteristics of those public 
                elementary school and secondary school 
                buildings that contribute to unhealthy school 
                environments.
                  [(B) The health and learning impacts of 
                environmental unhealthy public school buildings 
                on students that are attending or that have 
                attended such schools.
                  [(C) Recommendations to Congress on how to 
                assist schools that are out of compliance with 
                Federal or State health and safety codes, and a 
                cost estimate of bringing up environmentally 
                unhealthy public school buildings to minimum 
                Federal health and safety building standards.
          [(2) Exposure to violent entertainment.--A study 
        regarding how exposure to violent entertainment (such 
        as in movies, music, television, Internet content, 
        video games, and arcade games) affects children's 
        cognitive development and educational achievement.
          [(3) Sexual abuse in schools.--A study regarding the 
        prevalence of sexual abuse in schools, including 
        recommendations and legislative remedies for addressing 
        the problem of sexual abuse in schools.
  [(b) Completion Date.--The studies under subsection (a) shall 
be completed not later than 18 months after the date of 
enactment of the No Child Left Behind Act of 2001.
  [(c) Public Dissemination.--The Secretary shall make the 
study conducted under subsection (a)(1) available to the public 
through the Educational Resources Information Center National 
Clearinghouse for Educational Facilities of the Department.

    [Subpart 2--Elementary and Secondary School Counseling Programs

[SEC. 5421. ELEMENTARY AND SECONDARY SCHOOL COUNSELING PROGRAMS.

  [(a) Grants Authorized.--
          [(1) In general.--The Secretary is authorized to 
        award grants to local educational agencies to enable 
        such agencies to establish or expand elementary school 
        and secondary school counseling programs that comply 
        with the requirements of subsection (c)(2).
          [(2) Special consideration.--In awarding grants under 
        this section, the Secretary shall give special 
        consideration to applications describing programs 
        that--
                  [(A) demonstrate the greatest need for new or 
                additional counseling services among children 
                in the schools served by the local educational 
                agency, in part by providing information on 
                current ratios of students to school 
                counselors, students to school social workers, 
                and students to school psychologists;
                  [(B) propose the most promising and 
                innovative approaches for initiating or 
                expanding school counseling; and
                  [(C) show the greatest potential for 
                replication and dissemination.
          [(3) Equitable distribution.--In awarding grants 
        under this section, the Secretary shall ensure an 
        equitable geographic distribution among the regions of 
        the United States and among local educational agencies 
        located in urban, rural, and suburban areas.
          [(4) Duration.--A grant under this section shall be 
        awarded for a period not to exceed 3 years.
          [(5) Maximum grant.--A grant awarded under this 
        section shall not exceed $400,000 for any fiscal year.
          [(6) Supplement, not supplant.--Funds made available 
        under this section shall be used to supplement, and not 
        supplant, other Federal, State, or local funds used for 
        providing school-based counseling and mental health 
        services to students.
  [(b) Applications.--
          [(1) In general.--Each local educational agency 
        desiring a grant under this section shall submit an 
        application to the Secretary at such time, in such 
        manner, and accompanied by such information as the 
        Secretary may reasonably require.
          [(2) Contents.--Each application for a grant under 
        this section shall--
                  [(A) describe the school population to be 
                targeted by the program, the particular 
                counseling needs of such population, and the 
                current school counseling resources available 
                for meeting such needs;
                  [(B) describe the activities, services, and 
                training to be provided by the program and the 
                specific approaches to be used to meet the 
                needs described in subparagraph (A);
                  [(C) describe the methods to be used to 
                evaluate the outcomes and effectiveness of the 
                program;
                  [(D) describe how the local educational 
                agency will involve community groups, social 
                service agencies, and other public and private 
                entities in collaborative efforts to enhance 
                the program and promote school-linked services 
                integration;
                  [(E) document that the local educational 
                agency has the personnel qualified to develop, 
                implement, and administer the program;
                  [(F) describe how diverse cultural 
                populations, if applicable, will be served 
                through the program;
                  [(G) assure that the funds made available 
                under this subpart for any fiscal year will be 
                used to supplement, and not supplant, any other 
                Federal, State, or local funds used for 
                providing school-based counseling and mental 
                health services to students; and
                  [(H) assure that the applicant will appoint 
                an advisory board composed of interested 
                parties, including parents, teachers, school 
                administrators, counseling services providers 
                described in subsection (c)(2)(D), and 
                community leaders, to advise the local 
                educational agency on the design and 
                implementation of the program.
  [(c) Use of Funds.--
          [(1) In general.--The Secretary is authorized to 
        award grants to local educational agencies to enable 
        the local educational agencies to initiate or expand 
        elementary school or secondary school counseling 
        programs that comply with the requirements of paragraph 
        (2).
          [(2) Requirements.--Each program funded under this 
        section shall--
                  [(A) be comprehensive in addressing the 
                counseling and educational needs of all 
                students;
                  [(B) use a developmental, preventive approach 
                to counseling;
                  [(C) increase the range, availability, 
                quantity, and quality of counseling services in 
                the elementary schools and secondary schools of 
                the local educational agency;
                  [(D) expand counseling services through 
                qualified school counselors, school social 
                workers, school psychologists, other qualified 
                psychologists, or child and adolescent 
                psychiatrists;
                  [(E) use innovative approaches to increase 
                children's understanding of peer and family 
                relationships, work and self, decisionmaking, 
                or academic and career planning, or to improve 
                peer interaction;
                  [(F) provide counseling services in settings 
                that meet the range of student needs;
                  [(G) include in-service training appropriate 
                to the activities funded under this Act for 
                teachers, instructional staff, and appropriate 
                school personnel, including in-service training 
                in appropriate identification and early 
                intervention techniques by school counselors, 
                school social workers, school psychologists, 
                other qualified psychologists, and child and 
                adolescent psychiatrists;
                  [(H) involve parents of participating 
                students in the design, implementation, and 
                evaluation of the counseling program;
                  [(I) involve community groups, social service 
                agencies, or other public or private entities 
                in collaborative efforts to enhance the program 
                and promote school-linked integration of 
                services;
                  [(J) evaluate annually the effectiveness and 
                outcomes of the counseling services and 
                activities assisted under this section;
                  [(K) ensure a team approach to school 
                counseling in the schools served by the local 
                educational agency by working toward ratios 
                recommended by the American School Health 
                Association of one school counselor to 250 
                students, one school social worker to 800 
                students, and one school psychologist to 1,000 
                students; and
                  [(L) ensure that school counselors, school 
                psychologists, other qualified psychologists, 
                school social workers, or child and adolescent 
                psychiatrists paid from funds made available 
                under this section spend a majority of their 
                time counseling students or in other activities 
                directly related to the counseling process.
  [(d) Limitation on Administrative Costs.--Not more than 4 
percent of the amounts made available under this section for 
any fiscal year may be used for administrative costs to carry 
out this section.
  [(e) Definitions.--For the purpose of this section--
          [(1) the term ``child and adolescent psychiatrist'' 
        means an individual who--
                  [(A) possesses State medical licensure; and
                  [(B) has completed residency training 
                programs in both general psychiatry and child 
                and adolescent psychiatry;
          [(2) the term ``other qualified psychologist'' means 
        an individual who has demonstrated competence in 
        counseling children in a school setting and who--
                  [(A) is licensed in psychology by the State 
                in which the individual works; and
                  [(B) practices in the scope of the 
                individual's education, training, and 
                experience with children in school settings;
          [(3) the term ``school counselor'' means an 
        individual who has documented competence in counseling 
        children and adolescents in a school setting and who--
                  [(A) is licensed by the State or certified by 
                an independent professional regulatory 
                authority;
                  [(B) in the absence of such State licensure 
                or certification, possesses national 
                certification in school counseling or a 
                specialty of counseling granted by an 
                independent professional organization; or
                  [(C) holds a minimum of a master's degree in 
                school counseling from a program accredited by 
                the Council for Accreditation of Counseling and 
                Related Educational Programs or the equivalent;
          [(4) the term ``school psychologist'' means an 
        individual who--
                  [(A) has completed a minimum of 60 graduate 
                semester hours in school psychology from an 
                institution of higher education and has 
                completed 1,200 clock hours in a supervised 
                school psychology internship, of which 600 
                hours are in the school setting;
                  [(B) is licensed or certified in school 
                psychology by the State in which the individual 
                works; or
                  [(C) in the absence of such State licensure 
                or certification, possesses national 
                certification by the National School Psychology 
                Certification Board; and
          [(5) the term ``school social worker'' means an 
        individual who--
                  [(A) holds a master's degree in social work 
                from a program accredited by the Council on 
                Social Work Education; and
                  [(B)(i) is licensed or certified by the State 
                in which services are provided; or
                  [(ii) in the absence of such State licensure 
                or certification, possesses a national 
                credential or certification as a school social 
                work specialist granted by an independent 
                professional organization.
  [(f) Report.--Not later than 2 years after assistance is made 
available to local educational agencies under subsection (c), 
the Secretary shall make publicly available a report--
          [(1) evaluating the programs assisted pursuant to 
        each grant under this subpart; and
          [(2) outlining the information from local educational 
        agencies regarding the ratios of students to--
                  [(A) school counselors;
                  [(B) school social workers; and
                  [(C) school psychologists.
  [(g) Special Rule.--
          [(1) Amount equals or exceeds $40,000,000.--If the 
        amount of funds made available by the Secretary for 
        this subpart equals or exceeds $40,000,000, the 
        Secretary shall award not less than $40,000,000 in 
        grants to local educational agencies to enable the 
        agencies to establish or expand counseling programs in 
        elementary schools.
          [(2) Amount less than $40,000,000.--If the amount of 
        funds made available by the Secretary for this subpart 
        is less than $40,000,000, the Secretary shall award 
        grants to local educational agencies only to establish 
        or expand counseling programs in elementary schools.

            [Subpart 3--Partnerships in Character Education

[SEC. 5431. PARTNERSHIPS IN CHARACTER EDUCATION PROGRAM.

  [(a) Program Authorized.--
          [(1) In general.--The Secretary is authorized to 
        award grants to eligible entities for the design and 
        implementation of character education programs that--
                  [(A) are able to be integrated into classroom 
                instruction and to be consistent with State 
                academic content standards; and
                  [(B) are able to be carried out in 
                conjunction with other educational reform 
                efforts.
          [(2) Eligible entity.--In this section, the term 
        ``eligible entity'' means--
                  [(A) a State educational agency in 
                partnership with--
                          [(i) one or more local educational 
                        agencies; or
                          [(ii) one or more--
                                  [(I) local educational 
                                agencies; and
                                  [(II) nonprofit organizations 
                                or entities, including an 
                                institution of higher 
                                education;
                  [(B) a local educational agency or consortium 
                of local educational agencies; or
                  [(C) a local educational agency in 
                partnership with one or more nonprofit 
                organizations or entities, including an 
                institution of higher education.
          [(3) Duration.--Each grant under this section shall 
        be awarded for a period not to exceed 5 years, of which 
        the eligible entity may not use more than 1 year for 
        planning and program design.
          [(4) Amount of grants for state educational 
        agencies.--Subject to the availability of 
        appropriations, the amount of a grant made by the 
        Secretary to a State educational agency under this 
        section shall not be less than $500,000 if the State 
        educational agency--
                  [(A) is in a partnership described in 
                paragraph (2)(A); and
                  [(B) meets such requirements as the Secretary 
                may establish under this section.
  [(b) Contracts Under Program.--
          [(1) Evaluation.--Each eligible entity awarded a 
        grant under this section may contract with outside 
        sources, including institutions of higher education and 
        private and nonprofit organizations, for the purposes 
        of--
                  [(A) evaluating the program for which the 
                assistance is made available;
                  [(B) measuring the integration of such 
                program into the curriculum and teaching 
                methods of schools where the program is carried 
                out; and
                  [(C) measuring the success of such program in 
                fostering the elements of character selected by 
                the recipient under subsection (c).
          [(2) Materials and program development.--Each 
        eligible entity awarded a grant under this section may 
        contract with outside sources, including institutions 
        of higher education and private and nonprofit 
        organizations, for assistance in--
                  [(A) developing secular curricula, materials, 
                teacher training, and other activities related 
                to character education; and
                  [(B) integrating secular character education 
                into the curricula and teaching methods of 
                schools where the program is carried out.
  [(c) Elements of Character.--
          [(1) Selection.--
                  [(A) In general.--Each eligible entity 
                awarded a grant under this section may select 
                the elements of character that will be taught 
                under the program for which the grant was 
                awarded.
                  [(B) Consideration of views.--In selecting 
                elements of character under subparagraph (A), 
                the eligible entity shall consider the views of 
                the parents of the students to be taught under 
                the program and the views of the students.
          [(2) Example elements.--Elements of character 
        selected under this subsection may include any of the 
        following:
                  [(A) Caring.
                  [(B) Civic virtue and citizenship.
                  [(C) Justice and fairness.
                  [(D) Respect.
                  [(E) Responsibility.
                  [(F) Trustworthiness.
                  [(G) Giving.
                  [(H) Any other elements deemed appropriate by 
                the eligible entity.
  [(d) Use of Funds by State Educational Agency Recipients.--Of 
the total funds received in any fiscal year under this section 
by an eligible entity that is a State educational agency--
          [(1) not more than 3 percent of such funds may be 
        used for administrative purposes; and
          [(2) the remainder of such funds may be used for--
                  [(A) collaborative initiatives with and 
                between local educational agencies and schools;
                  [(B) the preparation or purchase of 
                materials, and teacher training;
                  [(C) providing assistance to local 
                educational agencies, schools, or institutions 
                of higher education; and
                  [(D) technical assistance and evaluation.
  [(e) Application.--
          [(1) In general.--Each eligible entity desiring a 
        grant under this section shall submit an application to 
        the Secretary at such time and in such manner as the 
        Secretary may require.
          [(2) Required information.--Each application for a 
        grant under this section shall include (together with 
        any other information that the Secretary may require) 
        information that--
                  [(A) demonstrates that the program for which 
                the grant is sought has clear objectives that 
                are based on scientifically based research;
                  [(B) describes any partnerships or 
                collaborative efforts among the organizations 
                and entities of the eligible entity;
                  [(C) describes the activities that will be 
                carried out with the grant funds and how such 
                activities will meet the objectives described 
                in subparagraph (A), including--
                          [(i) how parents, students, students 
                        with disabilities (including those with 
                        mental or physical disabilities), and 
                        other members of the community, 
                        including members of private and 
                        nonprofit organizations, will be 
                        involved in the design and 
                        implementation of the program and how 
                        the eligible entity will work with the 
                        larger community to increase the reach 
                        and promise of the program;
                          [(ii) curriculum and instructional 
                        practices that will be used or 
                        developed; and
                          [(iii) methods of teacher training 
                        and parent education that will be used 
                        or developed;
                  [(D) describes how the program for which the 
                grant is sought will be linked to other efforts 
                to improve academic achievement, including--
                          [(i) broader educational reforms that 
                        are being instituted by the eligible 
                        entity or its partners; and
                          [(ii) State academic content 
                        standards;
                  [(E) in the case of an eligible entity that 
                is a State educational agency, describes how 
                the State educational agency--
                          [(i) will provide technical and 
                        professional assistance to its local 
                        educational agency partners in the 
                        development and implementation of 
                        character education programs; and
                          [(ii) will assist other interested 
                        local educational agencies that are not 
                        members of the original partnership in 
                        designing and establishing character 
                        education programs;
                  [(F) describes how the eligible entity will 
                evaluate the success of its program--
                          [(i) based on the objectives 
                        described in subparagraph (A); and
                          [(ii) in cooperation with any 
                        national evaluation conducted pursuant 
                        to subsection (h)(2)(B)(iii); and
                  [(G) assures that the eligible entity 
                annually will provide to the Secretary such 
                information as may be required to determine the 
                effectiveness of the program.
  [(f) Selection of Recipients.--
          [(1) Peer review.--
                  [(A) In general.--In selecting eligible 
                entities to receive grants under this section 
                from among the applicants for such grants, the 
                Secretary shall use a peer review process that 
                includes the participation of experts in the 
                field of character education and development.
                  [(B) Use of funds.--The Secretary may use 
                funds appropriated under this section for the 
                cost of carrying out peer reviews under this 
                paragraph.
          [(2) Selection criteria.--Each selection under 
        paragraph (1) shall be made on the basis of the quality 
        of the application submitted, taking into consideration 
        such factors as--
                  [(A) the extent to which the program fosters 
                character in students and the potential for 
                improved student academic achievement;
                  [(B) the extent and ongoing nature of 
                parental, student, and community involvement;
                  [(C) the quality of the plan for measuring 
                and assessing success; and
                  [(D) the likelihood that the objectives of 
                the program will be achieved.
          [(3) Equitable distribution.--In making selections 
        under this subsection, the Secretary shall ensure, to 
        the extent practicable under paragraph (2), that the 
        programs assisted under this section are equitably 
        distributed among the geographic regions of the United 
        States, and among urban, suburban, and rural areas.
  [(g) Participation by Private School Children and Teachers.--
Each eligible entity that receives a grant under this section 
shall provide, to the extent feasible and appropriate, for the 
participation in programs and activities under this section of 
students and teachers in private elementary schools and 
secondary schools.
  [(h) Evaluation and Program Development.--
          [(1) State and local reporting and evaluation.--Each 
        eligible entity receiving a grant under this section 
        shall submit to the Secretary a comprehensive 
        evaluation of the program assisted under this section, 
        including its impact on students, students with 
        disabilities (including those with mental or physical 
        disabilities), teachers, administrators, parents, and 
        others--
                  [(A) by the end of the second year of the 
                program; and
                  [(B) not later than 1 year after completion 
                of the grant period.
          [(2) National research, dissemination, and 
        evaluation.--
                  [(A) In general.--
                          [(i) Authorization.--The Secretary is 
                        authorized to award grants to, or enter 
                        into contracts or cooperative 
                        agreements with, State educational 
                        agencies or local educational agencies, 
                        institutions of higher education, 
                        tribal organizations, or other public 
                        or private agencies or organizations to 
                        carry out research, development, 
                        dissemination, technical assistance, 
                        and evaluation activities that support 
                        or inform State and local character 
                        education programs.
                          [(ii) Reservation of funds.--The 
                        Secretary shall reserve not more than 5 
                        percent of the funds made available 
                        under this section to carry out this 
                        paragraph.
                  [(B) Uses.--Funds made available under 
                subparagraph (A) may be used for the following:
                          [(i) Conducting research and 
                        development activities that focus on 
                        matters such as--
                                  [(I) the extent to which 
                                schools are undertaking 
                                character education 
                                initiatives;
                                  [(II) the effectiveness of 
                                instructional models for all 
                                students, including students 
                                with disabilities (including 
                                those with mental or physical 
                                disabilities);
                                  [(III) materials and 
                                curricula for use by programs 
                                in character education;
                                  [(IV) models of professional 
                                development in character 
                                education;
                                  [(V) the development of 
                                measures of effectiveness for 
                                character education programs 
                                (which may include the factors 
                                described in paragraph (3)); 
                                and
                                  [(VI) the effectiveness of 
                                State and local programs 
                                receiving funds under this 
                                section.
                          [(ii) Providing technical assistance 
                        to State and local programs, 
                        particularly on matters of program 
                        evaluation.
                          [(iii) Conducting evaluations of 
                        State and local programs receiving 
                        funding under this section, that may be 
                        conducted through a national 
                        clearinghouse under clause (iv).
                          [(iv) Compiling and disseminating, 
                        through a national clearinghouse or 
                        other means--
                                  [(I) information on model 
                                character education programs;
                                  [(II) information about high 
                                quality character education 
                                materials and curricula;
                                  [(III) research findings in 
                                the area of character education 
                                and character development; and
                                  [(IV) any other information 
                                that will be useful to 
                                character education program 
                                participants nationwide, 
                                including educators, parents, 
                                and administrators.
                  [(C) Partnerships.--In carrying out national 
                activities under this paragraph, the Secretary 
                may enter into partnerships with national 
                nonprofit character education organizations and 
                institutions of higher education with expertise 
                and successful experience in implementing--
                          [(i) character education programs 
                        that had an effective impact on 
                        schools, students, students with 
                        disabilities (including those with 
                        mental or physical disabilities), and 
                        teachers; or
                          [(ii) character education program 
                        evaluation and research.
                  [(D) Partnership for activities under 
                subparagraph (B)(iv).--In carrying out national 
                activities under subparagraph (B)(iv), the 
                Secretary may enter into a partnership with a 
                national nonprofit character education 
                organization that will disseminate information 
                to educators, parents, administrators, and 
                others nationwide, including information about 
                the range of model character education 
                programs, materials, and curricula.
                  [(E) Report.--Each entity awarded a grant or 
                entering into a contract or cooperative 
                agreement under this paragraph shall submit an 
                annual report to the Secretary that--
                          [(i) describes the entity's progress 
                        in carrying out research, development, 
                        dissemination, evaluation, and 
                        technical assistance under this 
                        paragraph;
                          [(ii) identifies unmet and future 
                        information needs in the field of 
                        character education; and
                          [(iii) if applicable, describes the 
                        progress of the entity in carrying out 
                        the requirements of subparagraph 
                        (B)(iv), including a listing of--
                                  [(I) the number of requests 
                                for information received by the 
                                entity in the course of 
                                carrying out such requirements;
                                  [(II) the types of 
                                organizations making such 
                                requests; and
                                  [(III) the types of 
                                information requested.
          [(3) Factors.--Factors that may be considered in 
        evaluating the success of programs funded under this 
        section include the following:
                  [(A) Discipline issues.
                  [(B) Student academic achievement.
                  [(C) Participation in extracurricular 
                activities.
                  [(D) Parental and community involvement.
                  [(E) Faculty and administration involvement.
                  [(F) Student and staff morale.
                  [(G) Overall improvements in school climate 
                for all students, including students with 
                disabilities (including those with mental or 
                physical disabilities).
  [(i) Permissive Match.--
          [(1) In general.--The Secretary may require eligible 
        entities to match funds awarded under this section with 
        non-Federal funds, except that the amount of the match 
        may not exceed the amount of the grant award.
          [(2) Sliding scale.--The amount of a match under 
        paragraph (1) shall be established based on a sliding 
        scale that takes into account--
                  [(A) the poverty of the population to be 
                targeted by the eligible entity; and
                  [(B) the ability of the eligible entity to 
                obtain funding for the match.
          [(3) In-kind contributions.--The Secretary shall 
        permit eligible entities to match funds in whole or in 
        part with in-kind contributions.
          [(4) Consideration.--Notwithstanding this subsection, 
        the Secretary in making awards under this section shall 
        not consider the ability of an eligible entity to match 
        funds.

                [Subpart 4--Smaller Learning Communities

[SEC. 5441. SMALLER LEARNING COMMUNITIES.

  [(a) Grant Authority.--The Secretary is authorized to award 
grants to local educational agencies to enable the agencies to 
create a smaller learning community or communities.
  [(b) Application.--Each local educational agency desiring a 
grant under this subpart shall submit an application to the 
Secretary at such time, in such manner, and accompanied by such 
information as the Secretary may require. The application shall 
include descriptions of the following:
          [(1) Strategies and methods the local educational 
        agency will use to create the smaller learning 
        community or communities.
          [(2) Curriculum and instructional practices, 
        including any particular themes or emphases, to be used 
        in the smaller learning environment.
          [(3) The extent of involvement of teachers and other 
        school personnel in investigating, designing, 
        implementing, and sustaining the smaller learning 
        community or communities.
          [(4) The process to be used for involving students, 
        parents, and other stakeholders in the development and 
        implementation of the smaller learning community or 
        communities.
          [(5) Any cooperation or collaboration among community 
        agencies, organizations, businesses, and others to 
        develop or implement a plan to create the smaller 
        learning community or communities.
          [(6) The training and professional development 
        activities that will be offered to teachers and others 
        involved in the activities assisted under this subpart.
          [(7) The objectives of the activities assisted under 
        this subpart, including a description of how such 
        activities will better enable all students to reach 
        challenging State academic content standards and State 
        student academic achievement standards.
          [(8) The methods by which the local educational 
        agency will assess progress in meeting the objectives 
        described in paragraph (7).
          [(9) If the smaller learning community or communities 
        exist as a school-within-a-school, the relationship, 
        including governance and administration, of the smaller 
        learning community to the remainder of the school.
          [(10) The administrative and managerial relationship 
        between the local educational agency and the smaller 
        learning community or communities, including how such 
        agency will demonstrate a commitment to the continuity 
        of the smaller learning community or communities 
        (including the continuity of student and teacher 
        assignment to a particular learning community).
          [(11) How the local educational agency will 
        coordinate or use funds provided under this subpart 
        with other funds provided under this Act or other 
        Federal laws.
          [(12) The grade levels or ages of students who will 
        participate in the smaller learning community or 
        communities.
          [(13) The method of placing students in the smaller 
        learning community or communities, such that students 
        are not placed according to ability or any other 
        measure, but are placed at random or by their own 
        choice, and not pursuant to testing or other judgments.
  [(c) Authorized Activities.--Funds under this section may be 
used for one or more of the following:
          [(1) To study--
                  [(A) the feasibility of creating the smaller 
                learning community or communities; and
                  [(B) effective and innovative organizational 
                and instructional strategies that will be used 
                in the smaller learning community or 
                communities.
          [(2) To research, develop, and implement--
                  [(A) strategies for creating the smaller 
                learning community or communities; and
                  [(B) strategies for effective and innovative 
                changes in curriculum and instruction, geared 
                to challenging State academic content standards 
                and State student academic achievement 
                standards.
          [(3) To provide professional development for school 
        staff in innovative teaching methods that--
                  [(A) challenge and engage students; and
                  [(B) will be used in the smaller learning 
                community or communities.
          [(4) To develop and implement strategies to include 
        parents, business representatives, local institutions 
        of higher education, community-based organizations, and 
        other community members in the smaller learning 
        communities as facilitators of activities that enable 
        teachers to participate in professional development 
        activities and provide links between students and their 
        community.

   [Subpart 5--Reading Is Fundamental--Inexpensive Book Distribution 
                                Program

[SEC. 5451. INEXPENSIVE BOOK DISTRIBUTION PROGRAM FOR READING 
                    MOTIVATION.

  [(a) Purpose.--The purpose of this subpart is to establish 
and implement a model partnership between a governmental entity 
and a private entity, to help prepare young children for 
reading and to motivate older children to read, through the 
distribution of inexpensive books. Local reading motivation 
programs assisted under this section shall use such assistance 
to provide books, training for volunteers, motivational 
activities, and other essential literacy resources and shall 
assign the highest priority to serving the youngest and 
neediest children in the United States.
  [(b) Authorization.--The Secretary is authorized to enter 
into a contract with Reading Is Fundamental (RIF) (hereafter in 
this section referred to as the ``contractor'') to support and 
promote programs, which include the distribution of inexpensive 
books to young and school-age children, that motivate children 
to read.
  [(c) Requirements of Contract.--Any contract entered into 
under subsection (b) shall contain each of the following:
          [(1) A provision that the contractor will enter into 
        subcontracts with local private nonprofit groups or 
        organizations, or with public agencies, under which 
        each subcontractor will agree to establish, operate, 
        and provide the non-Federal share of the cost of 
        reading motivation programs that include the 
        distribution of books, by gift (to the extent feasible) 
        or by loan, to children from birth through secondary 
        school age, including children in family literacy 
        programs.
          [(2) A provision that funds made available to 
        subcontractors will be used only to pay the Federal 
        share of the cost of such programs.
          [(3) A provision that, in selecting subcontractors 
        for initial funding, the contractor will give priority 
        to programs that will serve a substantial number or 
        percentage of children with special needs, such as the 
        following:
                  [(A) Low-income children, particularly in 
                high-poverty areas.
                  [(B) Children at risk of school failure.
                  [(C) Children with disabilities.
                  [(D) Foster children.
                  [(E) Homeless children.
                  [(F) Migrant children.ildren without access 
                to libraries.
                  [(H) Institutionalized or incarcerated 
                children.
                  [(I) Children whose parents are 
                institutionalized or incarcerated.
          [(4) A provision that the contractor will provide 
        such training and technical assistance to 
        subcontractors as may be necessary to carry out the 
        purpose of this subpart.
          [(5) A provision that the contractor will annually 
        report to the Secretary the number, and a description, 
        of programs funded under paragraph (3).
          [(6) Such other terms and conditions as the Secretary 
        determines to be appropriate to ensure the 
        effectiveness of such programs.
  [(d) Restriction on Payments.--The Secretary shall make no 
payment of the Federal share of the cost of acquiring and 
distributing books under any contract under this section unless 
the Secretary determines that the contractor or subcontractor, 
as the case may be, has made arrangements with book publishers 
or distributors to obtain books at discounts at least as 
favorable as discounts that are customarily given by such 
publisher or distributor for book purchases made under similar 
circumstances in the absence of Federal assistance.
  [(e) Special Rules for Certain Subcontractors.--
          [(1) Funds from other federal sources.--
        Subcontractors operating programs under this section in 
        low-income communities with a substantial number or 
        percentage of children with special needs, as described 
        in subsection (c)(3), may use funds from other Federal 
        sources to pay the non-Federal share of the cost of the 
        program, if those funds do not comprise more than 50 
        percent of the non-Federal share of the funds used for 
        the cost of acquiring and distributing books.
          [(2) Waiver authority.--Notwithstanding subsection 
        (c), the contractor may waive, in whole or in part, the 
        requirement in subsection (c)(1) for a subcontractor, 
        if the subcontractor demonstrates that it would 
        otherwise not be able to participate in the program, 
        and enters into an agreement with the contractor with 
        respect to the amount of the non-Federal share to which 
        the waiver will apply. In a case in which such a waiver 
        is granted, the requirement in subsection (c)(2) shall 
        not apply.
  [(f) Multi-Year Contracts.--The contractor may enter into a 
multi-year subcontract under this section, if--
          [(1) the contractor believes that such subcontract 
        will provide the subcontractor with additional leverage 
        in seeking local commitments; and
          [(2) the subcontract does not undermine the finances 
        of the national program.
  [(g) Federal Share Defined.--In this section, the term 
``Federal share'' means, with respect to the cost to a 
subcontractor of purchasing books to be paid for under this 
section, 75 percent of such costs to the subcontractor, except 
that the Federal share for programs serving children of migrant 
or seasonal farmworkers shall be 100 percent of such costs to 
the subcontractor.

                [Subpart 6--Gifted and Talented Students

[SEC. 5461. SHORT TITLE.

  [This subpart may be cited as the ``Jacob K. Javits Gifted 
and Talented Students Education Act of 2001''.

[SEC. 5462. PURPOSE.

  [The purpose of this subpart is to initiate a coordinated 
program of scientifically based research, demonstration 
projects, innovative strategies, and similar activities 
designed to build and enhance the ability of elementary schools 
and secondary schools nationwide to meet the special 
educational needs of gifted and talented students.

[SEC. 5463. RULE OF CONSTRUCTION.

  [Nothing in this subpart shall be construed to prohibit a 
recipient of funds under this subpart from serving gifted and 
talented students simultaneously with students with similar 
educational needs, in the same educational settings, where 
appropriate.

[SEC. 5464. AUTHORIZED PROGRAMS.

  [(a) Establishment of Program.--
          [(1) In general.--The Secretary (after consultation 
        with experts in the field of the education of gifted 
        and talented students) is authorized to make grants to, 
        or enter into contracts with, State educational 
        agencies, local educational agencies, institutions of 
        higher education, other public agencies, and other 
        private agencies and organizations (including Indian 
        tribes and Indian organizations (as such terms are 
        defined in section 4 of the Indian Self-Determination 
        and Education Assistance Act (25 U.S.C. 450b)) and 
        Native Hawaiian organizations) to assist such agencies, 
        institutions, and organizations in carrying out 
        programs or projects authorized by this subpart that 
        are designed to meet the educational needs of gifted 
        and talented students, including the training of 
        personnel in the education of gifted and talented 
        students and in the use, where appropriate, of gifted 
        and talented services, materials, and methods for all 
        students.
          [(2) Application.--Each entity seeking assistance 
        under this subpart shall submit an application to the 
        Secretary at such time, in such manner, and containing 
        such information as the Secretary may reasonably 
        require. Each such application shall describe how--
                  [(A) the proposed gifted and talented 
                services, materials, and methods can be 
                adapted, if appropriate, for use by all 
                students; and
                  [(B) the proposed programs can be evaluated.
  [(b) Use of Funds.--Programs and projects assisted under this 
section may include each of the following:
          [(1) Conducting--
                  [(A) scientifically based research on methods 
                and techniques for identifying and teaching 
                gifted and talented students and for using 
                gifted and talented programs and methods to 
                serve all students; and
                  [(B) program evaluations, surveys, and the 
                collection, analysis, and development of 
                information needed to accomplish the purpose of 
                this subpart.
          [(2) Carrying out professional development (including 
        fellowships) for personnel (including leadership 
        personnel) involved in the education of gifted and 
        talented students.
          [(3) Establishing and operating model projects and 
        exemplary programs for serving gifted and talented 
        students, including innovative methods for identifying 
        and educating students who may not be served by 
        traditional gifted and talented programs (such as 
        summer programs, mentoring programs, service learning 
        programs, and cooperative programs involving business, 
        industry, and education).
          [(4) Implementing innovative strategies, such as 
        cooperative learning, peer tutoring, and service 
        learning.
          [(5) Carrying out programs of technical assistance 
        and information dissemination, including assistance and 
        information with respect to how gifted and talented 
        programs and methods, where appropriate, may be adapted 
        for use by all students.
          [(6) Making materials and services available through 
        State regional educational service centers, 
        institutions of higher education, or other entities.
          [(7) Providing funds for challenging, high-level 
        course work, disseminated through technologies 
        (including distance learning), for individual students 
        or groups of students in schools and local educational 
        agencies that would not otherwise have the resources to 
        provide such course work.
  [(c) Special Rule.--To the extent that funds appropriated to 
carry out this subpart for a fiscal year beginning with fiscal 
year 2002 exceed such funds appropriated for fiscal year 2001, 
the Secretary shall use such excess funds to award grants, on a 
competitive basis, to State educational agencies, local 
educational agencies, or both, to implement activities 
described in subsection (b).
  [(d) Center for Research and Development.--
          [(1) In General.--The Secretary (after consultation 
        with experts in the field of the education of gifted 
        and talented students) shall establish a National 
        Research Center for the Education of Gifted and 
        Talented Children and Youth through grants to, or 
        contracts with, one or more institutions of higher 
        education or State educational agencies, or a 
        combination or consortium of such institutions and 
        agencies and other public or private agencies and 
        organizations, for the purpose of carrying out 
        activities described in subsection (b).
          [(2) Director.--The National Center shall be headed 
        by a Director. The Secretary may authorize the Director 
        to carry out such functions of the National Center as 
        may be agreed upon through arrangements with 
        institutions of higher education, State educational 
        agencies, local educational agencies, or other public 
        or private agencies and organizations.
          [(3) Funding.--The Secretary may use not more than 30 
        percent of the funds made available under this subpart 
        for fiscal year 2001 to carry out this subsection.
  [(e) Coordination.--Scientifically based research activities 
supported under this subpart--
          [(1) shall be carried out in consultation with the 
        Institute of Education Sciences to ensure that such 
        activities are coordinated with and enhance the 
        research and development activities supported by such 
        Institute; and
          [(2) may include collaborative scientifically based 
        research activities which are jointly funded and 
        carried out with such Institute.

[SEC. 5465. PROGRAM PRIORITIES.

  [(a) General Priority.--In carrying out this subpart, the 
Secretary shall give highest priority to programs and projects 
designed to develop new information that--
          [(1) improves the capability of schools to plan, 
        conduct, and improve programs to identify and serve 
        gifted and talented students; and
          [(2) assists schools in the identification of, and 
        provision of services to, gifted and talented students 
        (including economically disadvantaged individuals, 
        individuals with limited English proficiency, and 
        individuals with disabilities) who may not be 
        identified and served through traditional assessment 
        methods.
  [(b) Service Priority.--The Secretary shall ensure that not 
less than 50 percent of the applications approved under section 
5464(a)(2) in a fiscal year address the priority described in 
subsection (a)(2).

[SEC. 5466. GENERAL PROVISIONS.

  [(a) Participation of Private School Children and Teachers.--
In making grants and entering into contracts under this 
subpart, the Secretary shall ensure, where appropriate, that 
provision is made for the equitable participation of students 
and teachers in private nonprofit elementary schools and 
secondary schools, including the participation of teachers and 
other personnel in professional development programs serving 
such students.
  [(b) Review, Dissemination, and Evaluation.--The Secretary 
shall--
          [(1) use a peer review process in reviewing 
        applications under this subpart;
          [(2) ensure that information on the activities and 
        results of programs and projects funded under this 
        subpart is disseminated to appropriate State 
        educational agencies, local educational agencies, and 
        other appropriate organizations, including nonprofit 
        private organizations; and
          [(3) evaluate the effectiveness of programs under 
        this subpart in accordance with section 9601, in terms 
        of the impact on students traditionally served in 
        separate gifted and talented programs and on other 
        students, and submit the results of such evaluation to 
        Congress not later than 2 years after the date of 
        enactment of the No Child Left Behind Act of 2001.
  [(c) Program Operations.--The Secretary shall ensure that the 
programs under this subpart are administered within the 
Department by a person who has recognized professional 
qualifications and experience in the field of the education of 
gifted and talented students and who shall--
          [(1) administer and coordinate the programs 
        authorized under this subpart;
          [(2) serve as a focal point of national leadership 
        and information on the educational needs of gifted and 
        talented students and the availability of educational 
        services and programs designed to meet such needs;
          [(3) assist the Assistant Secretary for Educational 
        Research and Improvement in identifying research 
        priorities that reflect the needs of gifted and 
        talented students; and
          [(4) shall disseminate, and consult on, the 
        information developed under this subpart with other 
        offices within the Department.

                    [Subpart 7--Star Schools Program

[SEC. 5471. SHORT TITLE.

  [This subpart may be cited as the ``Star Schools Act''.

[SEC. 5472. PURPOSES.

   [The purposes of this subpart are the following:
          [(1) To encourage improved instruction in 
        mathematics, science, and foreign languages as well as 
        other subjects (such as literacy skills and vocational 
        education).
          [(2) To serve underserved populations, including 
        disadvantaged, illiterate, limited English proficient 
        populations, and individuals with disabilities through 
        a Star Schools program under which grants are made to 
        eligible telecommunication partnerships to enable such 
        partnerships--
                  [(A) to develop, construct, acquire, 
                maintain, and operate telecommunications audio 
                and visual facilities and equipment;
                  [(B) to develop and acquire educational and 
                instructional programming; and
                  [(C) to obtain technical assistance for the 
                use of such facilities and instructional 
                programming.

[SEC. 5473. GRANT PROGRAM AUTHORIZED.

  [(a) Authorization.--The Secretary, in conjunction with the 
Office of Educational Technology, is authorized to make grants, 
in accordance with the provisions of this subpart, to eligible 
entities to pay the Federal share of the cost of the following:
          [(1) Development, construction, acquisition, 
        maintenance, and operation of telecommunications 
        facilities and equipment.
          [(2) Development and acquisition of live, interactive 
        instructional programming.
          [(3) Development and acquisition of preservice and 
        inservice teacher training programs based on 
        established research regarding teacher-to-teacher 
        mentoring, and ongoing, in-class instruction.
          [(4) Establishment of teleconferencing facilities and 
        resources for making interactive training available to 
        teachers.
          [(5) Obtaining technical assistance.
          [(6) Coordination of the design and connectivity of 
        telecommunications networks to reach the greatest 
        number of schools.
  [(b) Duration and Amount.--
          [(1) In general.--A grant under this section may not 
        exceed--
                  [(A) 5 years in duration (subject to 
                subsection (c)); and
                  [(B) $10,000,000 in any single fiscal year.
  [(c) Renewal.--
          [(1) In general.--Grants awarded under subsection (a) 
        may be renewed for a single additional period of 3 
        years.
          [(2) Continuing Eligibility.--In order to be eligible 
        to receive a grant renewal under this subsection, a 
        grant recipient shall demonstrate, to the satisfaction 
        of the Secretary, in an addendum to its application 
        submitted under section 5474, that the grant recipient 
        will--
                  [(A) continue to provide services in the 
                subject areas and geographic areas assisted 
                with funds received under this subpart for the 
                previous grant period; and
                  [(B) use all grant funds received under this 
                subpart for the 3 year renewal period to 
                provide expanded services by--
                          [(i) increasing the number of 
                        students, schools, or school districts 
                        served by the courses of instruction 
                        assisted under this part in the 
                        previous fiscal year;
                          [(ii) providing new courses of 
                        instruction; and
                          [(iii) serving new populations of 
                        underserved individuals, such as 
                        children or adults who are 
                        disadvantaged, have limited English 
                        proficiency, are individuals with 
                        disabilities, are illiterate, or lack 
                        secondary school diplomas or their 
                        recognized equivalent.
          [(3) Supplement, not supplant.--Grant funds received 
        under this subsection shall be used to supplement, and 
        not supplant, services provided by the grant recipient 
        under this subpart in the previous fiscal year.
  [(d) Reservations.--
          [(1) Instructional programming.--At least 25 percent 
        of the funds made available to the Secretary for any 
        fiscal year under this subpart shall be used for the 
        cost of instructional programming.
          [(2) Local educational agency assistance.--At least 
        50 percent of the funds available in any fiscal year 
        under this subpart shall be used for the cost of 
        facilities, equipment, teacher training or retraining, 
        technical assistance, or programming, for local 
        educational agencies that are eligible to receive 
        assistance under part A of title I.
  [(e) Federal Share.--
          [(1) Amount.--The Federal share of the cost of 
        projects funded under this section shall not exceed the 
        following amounts:
                  [(A) 75 percent for the first and second 
                years for which an eligible telecommunications 
                partnership receives a grant under this 
                subpart.
                  [(B) 60 percent for the third and fourth such 
                years.
                  [(C) 50 percent for the fifth such year.
          [(2) Reduction or waiver.--The Secretary may reduce 
        or waive the corresponding non-Federal share under 
        paragraph (1) upon a showing of financial hardship.
  [(f) Required local educational agency participation.--The 
Secretary is authorized to make a grant under this section to 
any eligible entity, if at least one local educational agency 
is participating in the proposed program.
  [(g) Assistance Obtaining Satellite Time.--The Secretary may 
assist recipients of grants made under this section in 
acquiring satellite time, where appropriate, as economically as 
possible.

[SEC. 5474. APPLICATIONS.

  [(a) Submission.--Each eligible entity that desires to 
receive a grant under section 5473 shall submit an application 
to the Secretary, at such time, in such manner, and containing 
or accompanied by such information as the Secretary may 
reasonably require.
  [(b) Contents.--An application submitted under subsection (a) 
shall include each of the following:
          [(1) A description of how the proposed program will 
        assist all students to have an opportunity to meet 
        challenging State academic achievement standards, how 
        such program will assist State and local educational 
        reform efforts, and how such program will contribute to 
        creating a high-quality system of educational 
        development.
          [(2) A description of the telecommunications 
        facilities and equipment and technical assistance for 
        which assistance is sought, which may include--
                  [(A) the design, development, construction, 
                acquisition, maintenance, and operation of 
                State or multistate educational 
                telecommunications networks and technology 
                resource centers;
                  [(B) microwave, fiber optics, cable, and 
                satellite transmission equipment or any 
                combination thereof;
                  [(C) reception facilities;
                  [(D) satellite time;
                  [(E) production facilities;
                  [(F) other telecommunications equipment 
                capable of serving a wide geographic area;
                  [(G) the provision of training services to 
                instructors who will be using the facilities 
                and equipment for which assistance is sought, 
                including training in using such facilities and 
                equipment and training in integrating programs 
                into the classroom curriculum; and
                  [(H) the development of educational and 
                related programming for use on a 
                telecommunications network.
          [(3) In the case of an application for assistance for 
        instructional programming, a description of the types 
        of programming that will be developed to enhance 
        instruction and training and provide an assurance that 
        such programming will be designed in consultation with 
        professionals (including classroom teachers) who are 
        experts in the applicable subject matter and grade 
        level.
          [(4) A description of how the eligible entity has 
        engaged in sufficient survey and analysis of the area 
        to be served to ensure that the services offered by the 
        eligible entity will increase the availability of 
        courses of instruction in English, mathematics, 
        science, foreign languages, arts, history, geography, 
        or other disciplines.
          [(5) A description of the professional development 
        policies for teachers and other school personnel to be 
        implemented to ensure the effective use of the 
        telecommunications facilities and equipment for which 
        assistance is sought.
          [(6) A description of the manner in which 
        historically underserved students (such as students 
        from low-income families, limited English proficient 
        students, students with disabilities, or students who 
        have low literacy skills) and their families, will 
        participate in the benefits of the telecommunications 
        facilities, equipment, technical assistance, and 
        programming assisted under this subpart.
          [(7) A description of how existing telecommunications 
        equipment, facilities, and services, where available, 
        will be used.
          [(8) An assurance that the financial interest of the 
        United States in the telecommunications facilities and 
        equipment will be protected for the useful life of such 
        facilities and equipment.
          [(9) An assurance that a significant portion of any 
        facilities and equipment, technical assistance, and 
        programming for which assistance is sought for 
        elementary schools and secondary schools will be made 
        available to schools or local educational agencies that 
        have a high number or percentage of children eligible 
        to be counted under part A of title I.
          [(10) An assurance that the applicant will use the 
        funds provided under this subpart to supplement, and 
        not supplant, funds available for the purposes of this 
        subpart.
          [(11) A description of how funds received under this 
        subpart will be coordinated with funds received for 
        educational technology in the classroom.
          [(12) A description of the activities or services for 
        which assistance is sought, such as--
                  [(A) providing facilities, equipment, 
                training services, and technical assistance;
                  [(B) making programs accessible to students 
                with disabilities through mechanisms such as 
                closed captioning and descriptive video 
                services;
                  [(C) linking networks around issues of 
                national importance (such as elections) or to 
                provide information about employment 
                opportunities, job training, or student and 
                other social service programs;
                  [(D) sharing curriculum resources between 
                networks and development of program guides 
                which demonstrate cooperative, cross-network 
                listing of programs for specific curriculum 
                areas;
                  [(E) providing teacher and student support 
                services, including classroom and training 
                support materials which permit student and 
                teacher involvement in the live interactive 
                distance learning telecasts;
                  [(F) incorporating community resources, such 
                as libraries and museums, into instructional 
                programs;
                  [(G) providing professional development for 
                teachers, including, as appropriate, training 
                to early childhood development and Head Start 
                teachers and staff and vocational education 
                teachers and staff, and adult and family 
                educators;
                  [(H) providing programs for adults to 
                maximize the use of telecommunications 
                facilities and equipment;
                  [(I) providing teacher training on proposed 
                or established models of exemplary academic 
                content standards in mathematics and science 
                and other disciplines as such standards are 
                developed; and
                  [(J) providing parent education programs 
                during and after the regular school day which 
                reinforce a student's course of study and 
                actively involve parents in the learning 
                process.
          [(13) A description of how the proposed program as a 
        whole will be financed and how arrangements for future 
        financing will be developed before the program expires.
          [(14) An assurance that a significant portion of any 
        facilities, equipment, technical assistance, and 
        programming for which assistance is sought for 
        elementary schools and secondary schools will be made 
        available to schools in local educational agencies that 
        have a high percentage of children counted for the 
        purpose of part A of title I.
          [(15) An assurance that the applicant will provide 
        such information and cooperate in any evaluation that 
        the Secretary may conduct under this subpart.
          [(16) Such additional assurances as the Secretary may 
        reasonably require.
  [(c) Approval.--In approving applications submitted under 
subsection (a) for grants under section 5473, the Secretary 
shall--
          [(1) to the extent feasible, ensure an equitable 
        geographic distribution of services provided under this 
        subpart.
          [(2) give priority to applications describing 
        programs that--
                  [(A) propose high-quality plans, will provide 
                instruction consistent with State academic 
                content standards, or will otherwise provide 
                significant and specific assistance to States 
                and local educational agencies undertaking 
                systemic education reform;
                  [(B) will provide services to programs 
                serving adults, especially parents, with low 
                levels of literacy;
                  [(C) will serve schools with significant 
                numbers of children counted for the purposes of 
                part A of title I;
                  [(D) ensure that the eligible entity will--
                          [(i) serve the broadest range of 
                        institutions, programs providing 
                        instruction outside of the school 
                        setting, programs serving adults, 
                        especially parents, with low levels of 
                        literacy, institutions of higher 
                        education, teacher training centers, 
                        research institutes, and private 
                        industry;
                          [(ii) have substantial academic and 
                        teaching capabilities, including the 
                        capability of training, retraining, and 
                        inservice upgrading of teaching skills 
                        and the capability to provide 
                        professional development;
                          [(iii) provide a comprehensive range 
                        of courses for educators to teach 
                        instructional strategies for students 
                        with different skill levels;
                          [(iv) provide training to 
                        participating educators in ways to 
                        integrate telecommunications courses 
                        into existing school curriculum;
                          [(v) provide instruction for 
                        students, teachers, and parents;
                          [(vi) serve a multistate area; and
                          [(vii) give priority to the provision 
                        of equipment and linkages to isolated 
                        areas; and
                  [(E) involve a telecommunications entity 
                (such as a satellite, cable, telephone, 
                computer, or public or private television 
                stations) participating in the eligible entity 
                and donating equipment or in-kind services for 
                telecommunications linkages.

[SEC. 5475. OTHER GRANT ASSISTANCE.

  [(a) Special Statewide Network.--
          [(1) In general.--The Secretary, in conjunction with 
        the Office of Educational Technology, may provide 
        assistance to a statewide telecommunications network if 
        such network--
                  [(A) provides 2-way full-motion interactive 
                video and audio communications;
                  [(B) links together public colleges and 
                universities and secondary schools throughout 
                the State; and
                  [(C) meets any other requirements determined 
                appropriate by the Secretary.
          [(2) Matching contribution.--A statewide 
        telecommunications network assisted under paragraph (1) 
        shall contribute, either directly or through private 
        contributions, non-Federal funds equal to not less than 
        50 percent of the cost of such network.
  [(b) Special Local Network.--
          [(1) In general.--The Secretary is authorized to 
        provide assistance, on a competitive basis, to a local 
        educational agency, or a consortium of such agencies, 
        to enable such agency or consortium to establish a 
        high-technology demonstration program.
          [(2) Program requirements.--A high-technology 
        demonstration program assisted under paragraph (1) 
        shall--
                  [(A) include 2-way full-motion interactive 
                video, audio, and text communications;
                  [(B) link together elementary schools and 
                secondary schools, colleges, and universities;
                  [(C) provide parent participation and family 
                programs;
                  [(D) include a staff development program; and
                  [(E) have a significant contribution and 
                participation from business and industry.
          [(3) Matching requirement.--A local educational 
        agency or consortium receiving a grant under paragraph 
        (1) shall provide, either directly or through private 
        contributions, non-Federal matching funds equal to not 
        less than 50 percent of the amount of the grant.
  [(c) Telecommunications Programs for Continuing Education.--
          [(1) Authority.--The Secretary is authorized to award 
        grants, on a competitive basis, to eligible entities to 
        develop and operate one or more programs that provide 
        online access to educational resources in support of 
        continuing education and curriculum requirements 
        relevant to achieving a secondary school diploma or its 
        recognized equivalent. The program authorized by this 
        subsection shall be designed to advance adult literacy, 
        secondary school completion, and the acquisition of 
        specified competency by the end of the 12th grade.
          [(2) Applications.--Each eligible entity desiring a 
        grant under this subsection shall submit an application 
        to the Secretary. The application shall include each of 
        the following:
                  [(A) A demonstration that the applicant will 
                use publicly funded or free public 
                telecommunications infrastructure to deliver 
                video, voice, and data in an integrated service 
                to support and assist in the acquisition of a 
                secondary school diploma or its recognized 
                equivalent.
                  [(B) An assurance that the content of the 
                materials to be delivered is consistent with 
                the accreditation requirements of the State for 
                which such materials are used.
                  [(C) To the extent feasible, materials 
                developed in the Federal departments and 
                agencies and under appropriate federally funded 
                programs.
                  [(D) An assurance that the applicant has the 
                technological and substantive experience to 
                carry out the program.
                  [(E) Such additional assurances as the 
                Secretary may reasonably require.

[SEC. 5476. ADMINISTRATIVE PROVISIONS.

  [(a) Leadership, Evaluation, and Peer Review.--
          [(1) Reservation of funds.--The Secretary may reserve 
        not more than 5 percent of the amount made available to 
        carry out this subpart for a fiscal year for national 
        leadership, evaluation, and peer review activities, 
        which the Secretary may carry out directly or through 
        grants, contracts, and cooperative agreements.
          [(2) Leadership.--Funds reserved for leadership 
        activities under paragraph (1) may be used for--
                  [(A) disseminating information, including 
                lists and descriptions of services available 
                from grant recipients under this subpart; and
                  [(B) other activities designed to enhance the 
                quality of distance learning activities 
                nationwide.
          [(3) Evaluation.--Funds reserved for evaluation 
        activities under paragraph (1) may be used to conduct 
        independent evaluations of the activities assisted 
        under this subpart and of distance learning in general, 
        including--
                  [(A) analyses of distance learning efforts 
                (including such efforts that are, or are not, 
                assisted under this subpart); and
                  [(B) comparisons of the effects (including 
                student outcomes) of different technologies in 
                distance learning efforts.
          [(4) Peer review.--Funds reserved for peer review 
        activities under paragraph (1) may be used for peer 
        review of--
                  [(A) applications for grants under this 
                subpart; and
                  [(B) activities assisted under this subpart.
  [(b) Coordination.--The Department, the National Science 
Foundation, the Department of Agriculture, the Department of 
Commerce, and any other Federal department or agency operating 
a telecommunications network for educational purposes, shall 
coordinate the activities assisted under this subpart with the 
activities of such department or agency relating to a 
telecommunications network for educational purposes.
  [(c) Funds From Other Agencies.--The Secretary may accept 
funds from other Federal departments or agencies to carry out 
the purposes of this subpart, including funds for the purchase 
of equipment.
  [(d) Availability of Funds.--Funds made available to carry 
out this subpart shall remain available until expended.
  [(e) Closed Captioning and Descriptive Video.--The Secretary 
shall encourage each entity receiving funds under this subpart 
to provide--
          [(1) closed captioning of the verbal content of the 
        entity's programming, as appropriate; and
          [(2) descriptive video of the visual content of the 
        entity's programming, as appropriate.

[SEC. 5477. DEFINITIONS.

   [In this subpart:
          [(1) Educational institution.--The term ``educational 
        institution'' means an institution of higher education, 
        a local educational agency, or a State educational 
        agency.
          [(2) Eligible entity.--The term ``eligible entity'' 
        includes any of the following that is organized on a 
        Statewide or multistate basis:
                  [(A) A public agency or corporation 
                established for the purpose of developing and 
                operating telecommunications networks to 
                enhance educational opportunities provided by 
                educational institutions, teacher training 
                centers, and other entities, except that any 
                such agency or corporation shall represent the 
                interests of elementary schools and secondary 
                schools that are eligible to participate in the 
                program under part A of title I.
                  [(B) A partnership that will provide 
                telecommunications services and that includes 
                three or more of the following entities, at 
                least one of which shall be an agency described 
                in clause (i) or (ii):
                          [(i) A local educational agency that 
                        serves a significant number of 
                        elementary schools and secondary 
                        schools that are eligible for 
                        assistance under part A of title I, or 
                        elementary schools and secondary 
                        schools operated or funded for Indian 
                        children by the Department of the 
                        Interior eligible under section 
                        1121(d)(1)(A).
                          [(ii) A State educational agency.
                          [(iii) An adult and family education 
                        program.
                          [(iv) An institution of higher 
                        education or a State higher education 
                        agency (as that term is defined in 
                        section 103 of the Higher Education Act 
                        of 1965 (20 U.S.C. 1003)).
                          [(v) A teacher training center or 
                        academy that--
                                  [(I) provides teacher 
                                preservice and inservice 
                                training; and
                                  [(II) receives Federal 
                                financial assistance or has 
                                been approved by a State 
                                agency;
                          [(vi)(I) A public or private entity 
                        with experience and expertise in the 
                        planning and operation of a 
                        telecommunications network, including 
                        entities involved in telecommunications 
                        through satellite, cable, telephone, or 
                        computer; or
                          [(II) a public broadcasting entity 
                        with such experience.
                          [(vii) A public or private elementary 
                        school or secondary school.
          [(3) Instructional programming.--The term 
        ``instructional programming'' means courses of 
        instruction and training courses for elementary and 
        secondary students, teachers, and others, and materials 
        for use in such instruction and training that have been 
        prepared in audio and visual form on tape, disc, film, 
        or live, and presented by means of telecommunications 
        devices.
          [(4) Public broadcasting entity.--The term ``public 
        broadcasting entity'' has the same meaning given such 
        term in section 397 of the Communications Act of 1934 
        (47 U.S.C. 397).

                       [Subpart 8--Ready to Teach

[SEC. 5481. GRANTS.

  [(a) In General.--The Secretary is authorized to award grants 
to a nonprofit telecommunications entity, or partnership of 
such entities, for the purpose of carrying out a national 
telecommunications-based program to improve teaching in core 
curriculum areas. The program shall be designed to assist 
elementary school and secondary school teachers in preparing 
all students to achieve challenging State academic content and 
student academic achievement standards in core curriculum 
areas.
  [(b) Digital Educational Programming.--The Secretary is 
authorized to award grants, as provided for in section 5484, to 
eligible entities described in subsection (b) of such section, 
to enable such entities to develop, produce, and distribute 
innovative educational and instructional video programming that 
is designed for use by elementary schools and secondary schools 
and based on challenging State academic content and student 
academic achievement standards. In awarding such grants, the 
Secretary shall ensure that eligible entities enter into 
multiyear content development collaborative arrangements with 
State educational agencies, local educational agencies, 
institutions of higher education, businesses, or other agencies 
or organizations.

[SEC. 5482. APPLICATION REQUIRED.

  [(a) General Application.--
          [(1) In general.--To be eligible to receive a grant 
        under section 5481(a), a nonprofit telecommunications 
        entity, or partnership of such entities shall submit an 
        application to the Secretary. Each such application 
        shall--
                  [(A) demonstrate that the applicant will use 
                the public broadcasting infrastructure, the 
                Internet, and school digital networks, where 
                available, to deliver video and data in an 
                integrated service to train teachers in the use 
                of materials and learning technologies for 
                achieving challenging State academic content 
                and student academic achievement standards;
                  [(B) ensure that the project for which 
                assistance is sought will be conducted in 
                cooperation with appropriate State educational 
                agencies, local educational agencies, and State 
                or local nonprofit public telecommunications 
                entities;
                  [(C) ensure that a significant portion of the 
                benefits available for elementary schools and 
                secondary schools from the project for which 
                assistance is sought will be available to 
                schools of local educational agencies that have 
                a high percentage of children counted for the 
                purpose of part A of title I; and
                  [(D) contain such additional assurances as 
                the Secretary may reasonably require.
          [(2) Sites.--In approving applications under 
        paragraph (1), the Secretary shall ensure that the 
        program authorized by section 5481(a) is conducted at 
        elementary school and secondary school sites throughout 
        the United States.
  [(b) Programming Application.--To be eligible to receive a 
grant under section 5481(b), an entity shall submit an 
application to the Secretary at such time, in such manner, and 
accompanied by such information as the Secretary may reasonably 
require.

[SEC. 5483. REPORTS AND EVALUATION.

   [An entity receiving a grant under section 5481(a) shall 
prepare and submit to the Secretary an annual report that 
contains such information as the Secretary may require. At a 
minimum, such report shall describe the program activities 
undertaken with funds received under the grant, including--
          [(1) the core curriculum areas for which program 
        activities have been undertaken and the number of 
        teachers using the program in each core curriculum 
        area; and
          [(2) the States in which teachers using the program 
        are located.

[SEC. 5484. DIGITAL EDUCATIONAL PROGRAMMING GRANTS.

  [(a) Grants.--The Secretary is authorized to award grants 
under section 5481(b) to eligible entities to facilitate the 
development of educational programming that shall--
          [(1) include student assessment tools to provide 
        feedback on student academic achievement;
          [(2) include built-in teacher utilization and support 
        components to ensure that teachers understand and can 
        easily use the content of the programming with group 
        instruction or for individual student use;
          [(3) be created for, or adaptable to, challenging 
        State academic content standards and student academic 
        achievement standards; and
          [(4) be capable of distribution through digital 
        broadcasting and school digital networks.
  [(b) Eligible Entities.--To be eligible to receive a grant 
under section 5481(b), an entity shall be a local public 
telecommunications entity, as defined in section 397(12) of the 
Communications Act of 1934, that is able to demonstrate a 
capacity for the development and distribution of educational 
and instructional television programming of high quality.
  [(c) Competitive Basis.--Grants under section 5481(b) shall 
be awarded on a competitive basis as determined by the 
Secretary.
  [(d) Matching Requirement.--To be eligible to receive a grant 
under section 5481(b), an entity shall contribute to the 
activities assisted under such grant non-Federal matching funds 
in an amount equal to not less than 100 percent of the amount 
of the grant. Such matching funds may include funds provided 
for the transition to digital broadcasting, as well as in-kind 
contributions.
  [(e) Duration.--A grant under section 5481(b) shall be 
awarded for a period of 3 years in order to provide a 
sufficient period of time for the creation of a substantial 
body of significant content.

[SEC. 5485. ADMINISTRATIVE COSTS.

  [An entity that receives a grant under this subpart may not 
use more than 5 percent of the amount received under the grant 
for administrative costs.

            [Subpart 9--Foreign Language Assistance Program

[SEC. 5491. SHORT TITLE.

  [This subpart may be cited as the ``Foreign Language 
Assistance Act of 2001''.

[SEC. 5492. PROGRAM AUTHORIZED.

  [(a) Program Authority.--
          [(1) In general.--The Secretary is authorized to make 
        grants, on a competitive basis, to State educational 
        agencies or local educational agencies to pay the 
        Federal share of the cost of innovative model programs 
        providing for the establishment, improvement, or 
        expansion of foreign language study for elementary 
        school and secondary school students.
          [(2) Duration.--Each grant under paragraph (1) shall 
        be awarded for a period of 3 years.
  [(b) Requirements.--
          [(1) Grants to state educational agencies.--In 
        awarding a grant under subsection (a) to a State 
        educational agency, the Secretary shall support 
        programs that promote systemic approaches to improving 
        foreign language learning in the State.
          [(2) Grants to local educational agencies.--In 
        awarding a grant under subsection (a) to a local 
        educational agency, the Secretary shall support 
        programs that--
                  [(A) show the promise of being continued 
                beyond the grant period;
                  [(B) demonstrate approaches that can be 
                disseminated and duplicated in other local 
                educational agencies; and
                  [(C) may include a professional development 
                component.
  [(c) Federal Share.--
          [(1) In general.--The Federal share for each fiscal 
        year shall be 50 percent.
          [(2) Waiver.--Notwithstanding paragraph (1), the 
        Secretary may determine the Federal share for any local 
        educational agency which the Secretary determines does 
        not have adequate resources to pay the non-Federal 
        share of the cost of the activities assisted under this 
        subpart.
  [(d) Special rule.--Not less than \3/4\ of the funds made 
available under section 5401 to carry out this subpart shall be 
used for the expansion of foreign language learning in the 
elementary grades.
  [(e) Reservation.--The Secretary may reserve not more than 5 
percent of funds made available under section 5401 to carry out 
this subpart for a fiscal year to evaluate the efficacy of 
programs assisted under this subpart.

[SEC. 5493. APPLICATIONS.

  [(a) In General.--Any State educational agency or local 
educational agency desiring a grant under this subpart shall 
submit an application to the Secretary at such time, in such 
manner, and containing such information and assurances as the 
Secretary may require.
  [(b) Special Consideration.--The Secretary shall give special 
consideration to applications describing programs that--
          [(1) include intensive summer foreign language 
        programs for professional development;
          [(2) link nonnative English speakers in the community 
        with the schools in order to promote two-way language 
        learning;
          [(3) promote the sequential study of a foreign 
        language for students, beginning in elementary schools;
          [(4) make effective use of technology, such as 
        computer-assisted instruction, language laboratories, 
        or distance learning, to promote foreign language 
        study;
          [(5) promote innovative activities, such as foreign 
        language immersion, partial foreign language immersion, 
        or content-based instruction; and
          [(6) are carried out through a consortium comprised 
        of the agency receiving the grant and an elementary 
        school or secondary school.

[SEC. 5494. ELEMENTARY SCHOOL FOREIGN LANGUAGE INCENTIVE PROGRAM.

  [(a) Incentive Payments.--From amounts made available under 
section 5401 to carry out this subpart, the Secretary shall 
make an incentive payment for each fiscal year to each public 
elementary school that provides to students attending such 
school a program designed to lead to communicative competency 
in a foreign language.
  [(b) Amount.--The Secretary shall determine the amount of the 
incentive payment under subsection (a) for each public 
elementary school for each fiscal year on the basis of the 
number of students participating in a program described in such 
subsection at such school for such year compared to the total 
number of such students at all such schools in the United 
States for such year.
  [(c) Requirement.--The Secretary shall consider a program to 
be designed to lead to communicative competency in a foreign 
language if such program is comparable to a program that 
provides not less than 45 minutes of instruction in a foreign 
language for not fewer than 4 days per week throughout an 
academic year.

                    [Subpart 10--Physical Education

[SEC. 5501. SHORT TITLE.

  [This subpart may be cited as the ``Carol M. White Physical 
Education Program''.

[SEC. 5502. PURPOSE.

  [The purpose of this subpart is to award grants and contracts 
to initiate, expand, and improve physical education programs 
for all kindergarten through 12th-grade students.

[SEC. 5503. PROGRAM AUTHORIZED.

  [(a) Authorization.--The Secretary is authorized to award 
grants to local educational agencies and community-based 
organizations (such as Boys and Girls Clubs, Boy Scouts and 
Girl Scouts, and the Young Men's Christian Organization (YMCA) 
and Young Women's Christian Organization (YWCA)) to pay the 
Federal share of the costs of initiating, expanding, and 
improving physical education programs (including after-school 
programs) for kindergarten through 12th-grade students by--
          [(1) providing equipment and support to enable 
        students to participate actively in physical education 
        activities; and
          [(2) providing funds for staff and teacher training 
        and education.
  [(b) Program Elements.--A physical education program funded 
under this subpart may provide for one or more of the 
following:
          [(1) Fitness education and assessment to help 
        students understand, improve, or maintain their 
        physical well-being.
          [(2) Instruction in a variety of motor skills and 
        physical activities designed to enhance the physical, 
        mental, and social or emotional development of every 
        student.
          [(3) Development of, and instruction in, cognitive 
        concepts about motor skill and physical fitness that 
        support a lifelong healthy lifestyle.
          [(4) Opportunities to develop positive social and 
        cooperative skills through physical activity 
        participation.
          [(5) Instruction in healthy eating habits and good 
        nutrition.
          [(6) Opportunities for professional development for 
        teachers of physical education to stay abreast of the 
        latest research, issues, and trends in the field of 
        physical education.
  [(c) Special Rule.--For the purpose of this subpart, 
extracurricular activities, such as team sports and Reserve 
Officers' Training Corps (ROTC) program activities, shall not 
be considered as part of the curriculum of a physical education 
program assisted under this subpart.

[SEC. 5504. APPLICATIONS.

  [(a) Submission.--Each local educational agency or community-
based organization desiring a grant or contract under this 
subpart shall submit to the Secretary an application that 
contains a plan to initiate, expand, or improve physical 
education programs in order to make progress toward meeting 
State standards for physical education.
  [(b) Private School and Home-Schooled Students.--An 
application for funds under this subpart may provide for the 
participation, in the activities funded under this subpart, 
of--
          [(1) students enrolled in private nonprofit 
        elementary schools or secondary schools, and their 
        parents and teachers; or
          [(2) home-schooled students, and their parents and 
        teachers.

[SEC. 5505. REQUIREMENTS.

  [(a) Annual Report to the Secretary.--In order to continue 
receiving funding after the first year of a multiyear grant or 
contract under this subpart, the administrator of the grant or 
contract for the local educational agency or community-based 
organization shall submit to the Secretary an annual report 
that--
          [(1) describes the activities conducted during the 
        preceding year; and
          [(2) demonstrates that progress has been made toward 
        meeting State standards for physical education.
  [(b) Administrative Expenses.--Not more than 5 percent of the 
grant funds made available to a local educational agency or 
community-based organization under this subpart for any fiscal 
year may be used for administrative expenses.

[SEC. 5506. ADMINISTRATIVE PROVISIONS.

  [(a) Federal Share.--The Federal share under this subpart may 
not exceed--
          [(1) 90 percent of the total cost of a program for 
        the first year for which the program receives 
        assistance under this subpart; and
          [(2) 75 percent of such cost for the second and each 
        subsequent such year.
  [(b) Proportionality.--To the extent practicable, the 
Secretary shall ensure that grants awarded under this subpart 
shall be equitably distributed among local educational agencies 
and community-based organizations serving urban and rural 
areas.
  [(c) Report to Congress.--Not later than June 1, 2003, the 
Secretary shall submit a report to Congress that--
          [(1) describes the programs assisted under this 
        subpart;
          [(2) documents the success of such programs in 
        improving physical fitness; and
          [(3) makes such recommendations as the Secretary 
        determines appropriate for the continuation and 
        improvement of the programs assisted under this 
        subpart.
  [(d) Availability of Funds.--Amounts made available to the 
Secretary to carry out this subpart shall remain available 
until expended.

[SEC. 5507. SUPPLEMENT, NOT SUPPLANT.

  [Funds made available under this subpart shall be used to 
supplement, and not supplant, any other Federal, State, or 
local funds available for physical education activities.

               [Subpart 11--Community Technology Centers

[SEC. 5511. PURPOSE AND PROGRAM AUTHORIZATION.

  [(a) Purpose.--It is the purpose of this subpart to assist 
eligible applicants--
          [(1) to create or expand community technology centers 
        that will provide disadvantaged residents of 
        economically distressed urban and rural communities 
        with access to information technology and related 
        training; and
          [(2) to provide technical assistance and support to 
        community technology centers.
  [(b) Program Authorization.--The Secretary is authorized, in 
conjunction with the Office of Educational Technology, to award 
grants, contracts, or cooperative agreements, on a competitive 
basis, for a period of not more than 3 years, to eligible 
applicants in order to assist such applicants in--
          [(1) creating or expanding community technology 
        centers; or
          [(2) providing technical assistance and support to 
        community technology centers.
          [(3) Service of americorps participants.--The 
        Secretary may collaborate with the Chief Executive 
        Officer of the Corporation for National and Community 
        Service on the use in community technology centers of 
        participants in National Service programs carried out 
        under subtitle C of title I of the National and 
        Community Service Act of 1990 (42 U.S.C. 12571 et 
        seq.).

[SEC. 5512. ELIGIBILITY AND APPLICATION REQUIREMENTS.

  [(a) Eligible Applicants.--In order to be eligible to receive 
an award under this subpart, an applicant shall--
          [(1) be an entity (such as a foundation, museum, 
        library, for-profit business, public or private 
        nonprofit organization, or community-based 
        organization), an institution of higher education, a 
        State educational agency, a local education agency, or 
        a consortium of such entities, institutions, or 
        agencies; and
          [(2) have the capacity to significantly expand access 
        to computers and related services for disadvantaged 
        residents of economically distressed urban and rural 
        communities (who would otherwise be denied such 
        access).
  [(b) Application Requirements.--In order to receive an award 
under this subpart, an eligible applicant shall submit an 
application to the Secretary at such time, and containing such 
information, as the Secretary may require. The application 
shall include each of the following:
          [(1) A description of the proposed project, including 
        a description of the magnitude of the need for the 
        services and how the project would expand access to 
        information technology and related services to 
        disadvantaged residents of an economically distressed 
        urban or rural community.
          [(2) A demonstration of--
                  [(A) the commitment, including the financial 
                commitment, of entities (such as institutions, 
                organizations, business and other groups in the 
                community) that will provide support for the 
                creation, expansion, and continuation of the 
                proposed project; and
                  [(B) the extent to which the proposed project 
                coordinates with other appropriate agencies, 
                efforts, and organizations providing services 
                to disadvantaged residents of an economically 
                distressed urban or rural community.
          [(3) A description of how the proposed project would 
        be sustained once the Federal funds awarded under this 
        subpart end.
          [(4) A plan for the evaluation of the program, which 
        shall include benchmarks to monitor progress toward 
        specific project objectives.
  [(c) Matching Requirements.--The Federal share of the cost of 
any project funded under this subpart shall not exceed 50 
percent. The non-Federal share of such project may be in cash 
or in kind, fairly evaluated, including services.

[SEC. 5513. USES OF FUNDS.

  [(a) Required Uses.--A recipient shall use funds under this 
subpart for--
          [(1) creating or expanding community technology 
        centers that expand access to information technology 
        and related training for disadvantaged residents of 
        distressed urban or rural communities; and
          [(2) evaluating the effectiveness of the project.
  [(b) Permissible Uses.--A recipient may use funds under this 
subpart for activities, described in its application, that 
carry out the purposes of this subpart, such as--
          [(1) supporting a center coordinator, and staff, to 
        supervise instruction and build community partnerships;
          [(2) acquiring equipment, networking capabilities, 
        and infrastructure to carry out the project; and
          [(3) developing and providing services and activities 
        for community residents that provide access to 
        computers, information technology, and the use of such 
        technology in support of preschool preparation, 
        academic achievement, educational development, and 
        workforce development, such as the following:
                  [(A) After-school activities in which 
                children and youths use software that provides 
                academic enrichment and assistance with 
                homework, develop their technical skills, 
                explore the Internet, and participate in 
                multimedia activities, including web page 
                design and creation.
                  [(B) Adult education and family literacy 
                activities through technology and the Internet, 
                including--
                          [(i) General Education Development, 
                        Language Instruction Educational 
                        Programs, and adult basic education 
                        classes or programs;
                          [(ii) introduction to computers;
                          [(iii) intergenerational activities; 
                        and
                          [(iv) educational development 
                        opportunities.
                  [(C) Career development and job preparation 
                activities, such as--
                          [(i) training in basic and advanced 
                        computer skills;
                          [(ii) resume writing workshops; and
                          [(iii) access to databases of 
                        employment opportunities, career 
                        information, and other online 
                        materials.
                  [(D) Small business activities, such as--
                          [(i) computer-based training for 
                        basic entrepreneurial skills and 
                        electronic commerce; and
                          [(ii) access to information on 
                        business start-up programs that is 
                        available online, or from other 
                        sources.
                  [(E) Activities that provide home access to 
                computers and technology, such as assistance 
                and services to promote the acquisition, 
                installation, and use of information technology 
                in the home through low-cost solutions such as 
                networked computers, web-based television 
                devices, and other technology.

   [Subpart 12--Educational, Cultural, Apprenticeship, and Exchange 
  Programs for Alaska Natives, Native Hawaiians, and Their Historical 
             Whaling and Trading Partners in Massachusetts

[SEC. 5521. SHORT TITLE.

  [This subpart may be cited as the ``Alaska Native and Native 
Hawaiian Education Through Cultural and Historical 
Organizations Act''.

[SEC. 5522. FINDINGS AND PURPOSES.

  [(a) Findings.--Congress finds the following:
          [(1) Alaska Natives and Native Hawaiians have been 
        linked for over 200 years to the coastal towns of 
        Salem, Massachusetts, and New Bedford, Massachusetts, 
        through the China trade from Salem and whaling voyages 
        from New Bedford.
          [(2) Nineteenth-century trading ships sailed from 
        Salem, Massachusetts, around Cape Horn of South 
        America, and up the Northwest coast of the United 
        States to Alaska, where their crews traded with Alaska 
        Native people for furs, and then went on to Hawaii to 
        trade for sandalwood with Native Hawaiians before going 
        on to China.
          [(3) During the 19th century, over 2,000 whaling 
        voyages sailed out of New Bedford, Massachusetts to the 
        Arctic region of Alaska, and joined Alaska Natives from 
        Barrow, Alaska and other areas in the Arctic region in 
        subsistence whaling activities.
          [(4) Many New Bedford whaling voyages continued on to 
        Hawaii, where they joined Native Hawaiians from the 
        neighboring islands.
          [(5) From those commercial and whaling voyages, a 
        rich cultural exchange and strong trading relationships 
        developed among the three peoples involved.
          [(6) In the past decades, awareness of the historical 
        trading, cultural, and whaling links has faded among 
        Alaska Natives, Native Hawaiians, and the people of the 
        continental United States.
          [(7) In 2000, the Alaska Native Heritage Center in 
        Alaska, the Bishop Museum in Hawaii, and the Peabody-
        Essex Museum in Massachusetts initiated the New Trade 
        Winds project to use 21st-century technology, including 
        the Internet, to educate students and their parents 
        about historic and contemporary cultural and trading 
        ties that continue to link the diverse cultures of the 
        peoples involved.
          [(8) The New Bedford Whaling Museum, in partnership 
        with the New Bedford Whaling National Historical Park, 
        has developed a cultural exchange and educational 
        program with the Inupiat Heritage Center in Barrow, 
        Alaska to bring together the children, parents, and 
        elders from the Arctic region of Alaska with children 
        and families of Massachusetts to learn about their 
        historical ties and about each other's contemporary 
        cultures.
          [(9) Within the fast-growing cultural sector, 
        meaningful educational and career opportunities based 
        on traditional relationships exist for Alaska Natives, 
        Native Hawaiians, and low-income youth in 
        Massachusetts.
          [(10) Cultural institutions can provide practical, 
        culturally relevant, education-related internship and 
        apprentice programs, such as the Museum Action Corps at 
        the Peabody-Essex Museum and similar programs at the 
        New Bedford Oceanarium and other institutions, to 
        prepare youths and their families for careers in the 
        cultural sector.
          [(11) The resources of the institutions described in 
        paragraphs (7) and (8) provide unique opportunities for 
        illustrating and interpreting the contributions of 
        Alaska Natives, Native Hawaiians, the whaling industry, 
        and the China trade to the economic, social, and 
        environmental history of the United States, for 
        educating students and their parents, and for providing 
        opportunities for internships and apprenticeships 
        leading to careers with cultural institutions.
  [(b) Purposes.--The purposes of this subpart are the 
following:
          [(1) To authorize and develop innovative culturally-
        based educational programs and cultural exchanges to 
        assist Alaska Natives, Native Hawaiians, and children 
        and families of Massachusetts linked by history and 
        tradition to Alaska and Hawaii to learn about shared 
        culture and traditions.
          [(2) To authorize and develop internship and 
        apprentice programs to assist Alaska Natives, Native 
        Hawaiians, and children and families of Massachusetts 
        linked by history and tradition with Alaska and Hawaii 
        to prepare for careers with cultural institutions.
          [(3) To supplement programs and authorities in the 
        area of education to further the objectives of this 
        subpart.
          [(4) To authorize and develop cultural and 
        educational programs relating to any Federally 
        recognized Indian tribe in Mississippi.

[SEC. 5523. PROGRAM AUTHORIZATION.

  [(a) Grants and Contracts.--In order to carry out programs 
that fulfill the purposes of this subpart, the Secretary is 
authorized to make grants to, or enter into contracts with, the 
following:
          [(1) The Alaska Native Heritage Center in Anchorage, 
        Alaska.
          [(2) The Inupiat Heritage Center in Barrow, Alaska.
          [(3) The Bishop Museum in Hawaii.
          [(4) The Peabody-Essex Museum in Salem, 
        Massachusetts.
          [(5) The New Bedford Whaling Museum and the New 
        Bedford Oceanarium in New Bedford, Massachusetts.
          [(6) The Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians in 
        Choctaw, Mississippi.
          [(7) Other Alaska Native and Native Hawaiian cultural 
        and educational organizations.
          [(8) Cultural and educational organizations with 
        experience in developing or operating programs that 
        illustrate and interpret the contributions of Alaska 
        Natives, Native Hawaiians, the whaling industry, and 
        the China trade to the economic, social, and 
        environmental history of the United States.
          [(9) Consortia of the organizations and entities 
        described in this subsection.
  [(b) Uses of Funds.--Activities provided through programs 
carried out under this subpart may include one or more of the 
following:
          [(1) Development and implementation of educational 
        programs to increase understanding of cultural 
        diversity and multicultural communication among Alaska 
        Natives, Native Hawaiians, and the people of the 
        continental United States, based on historic patterns 
        of trading and commerce.
          [(2) Development and implementation of programs using 
        modern technology, including the Internet, to educate 
        students, their parents, and teachers about historic 
        and contemporary cultural and trading ties that 
        continue to link the diverse cultures of Alaska 
        Natives, Native Hawaiians, and the people of 
        Massachusetts.
          [(3) Cultural exchanges of elders, students, parents, 
        and teachers among Alaska Natives, Native Hawaiians, 
        and the people of Massachusetts to increase awareness 
        of diverse cultures among each group.
          [(4) Sharing of collections among cultural 
        institutions designed to increase awareness of diverse 
        cultures and links among them.
          [(5) Development and implementation of internship and 
        apprentice programs in cultural institutions to train 
        Alaska Natives, Native Hawaiians, and low-income 
        students in Massachusetts for careers with cultural 
        institutions.
          [(6) Other activities, consistent with the purposes 
        of this subpart, to meet the educational needs of 
        Alaska Natives, Native Hawaiians, and students and 
        their parents in Massachusetts.
          [(7) Cultural and educational programs relating to 
        any Federally recognized Indian tribe in Mississippi.

[SEC. 5524. ADMINISTRATIVE PROVISIONS.

  [(a) Application Required.--No grant may be made under this 
subpart, and no contract may be entered into under this 
subpart, unless the entity seeking the grant or contract 
submits an application to the Secretary at such time, in such 
manner, and containing such information as the Secretary may 
determine to be necessary to carry out the provisions of this 
subpart.
  [(b) Local Educational Agency Coordination.--Each applicant 
for a grant or contract under this subpart shall inform each 
local educational agency serving students who will participate 
in the program to be carried out under the grant or contract 
about the application.

[SEC. 5525. AVAILABILITY OF FUNDS.

   [If sufficient funds are made available under section 5401 
to carry out this subpart for a fiscal year, the Secretary 
shall make available, to support activities described in 
section 5523(b), the following amounts:
          [(1) Not less than $2,000,000 each to--
                  [(A) the New Bedford Whaling Museum, in 
                partnership with the New Bedford Oceanarium, in 
                Massachusetts;
                  [(B) the Inupiat Heritage Center in Alaska; 
                and
                  [(C) the Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians 
                in Choctaw, Mississippi.
          [(2) For the New Trade Winds project, not less than 
        $1,000,000 each to--
                  [(A) the Alaska Native Heritage Center in 
                Alaska;
                  [(B) the Bishop Museum in Hawaii; and
                  [(C) the Peabody-Essex Museum in 
                Massachusetts.
          [(3) For internship and apprenticeship programs 
        (including the Museum Action Corps of the Peabody-Essex 
        Museum), not less than $1,000,000 each to--
                  [(A) the Alaska Native Heritage Center in 
                Alaska;
                  [(B) the Bishop Museum in Hawaii; and
                  [(C) the Peabody-Essex Museum in 
                Massachusetts.

[SEC. 5526. DEFINITIONS.

   [In this subpart:
          [(1) Alaska native.--The term ``Alaska Native'' has 
        the meaning given that term in section 7306.
          [(2) Native hawaiian.--The term ``Native Hawaiian'' 
        has the meaning given that term in section 7207.

             [Subpart 13--Excellence in Economic Education

[SEC. 5531. SHORT TITLE.

  [This subpart may be cited as the ``Excellence in Economic 
Education Act of 2001''.

[SEC. 5532. PURPOSE AND GOALS.

  [(a) Purpose.--The purpose of this subpart is to promote 
economic and financial literacy among all students in 
kindergarten through grade 12 by awarding a competitive grant 
to a national nonprofit educational organization that has as 
its primary purpose the improvement of the quality of student 
understanding of personal finance and economics.
  [(b) Objectives.--The objectives of this subpart are the 
following:
          [(1) To increase students' knowledge of, and 
        achievement in, economics to enable the students to 
        become more productive and informed citizens.
          [(2) To strengthen teachers' understanding of, and 
        competency in, economics to enable the teachers to 
        increase student mastery of economic principles and the 
        practical application of those principles.
          [(3) To encourage economic education research and 
        development, to disseminate effective instructional 
        materials, and to promote replication of best practices 
        and exemplary programs that foster economic literacy.
          [(4) To assist States in measuring the impact of 
        education in economics.
          [(5) To leverage and expand private and public 
        support for economic education partnerships at 
        national, State, and local levels.

[SEC. 5533. GRANT PROGRAM AUTHORIZED.

  [(a) Authorization.--The Secretary is authorized to award a 
competitive grant to a national nonprofit educational 
organization that has as its primary purpose the improvement of 
the quality of student understanding of personal finance and 
economics through effective teaching of economics in the 
Nation's classrooms (referred to in this subpart as the 
``grantee'').
  [(b) Uses of Funds.--
          [(1) Direct activities.--The grantee shall use 25 
        percent of the funds made available through the grant 
        for a fiscal year--
                  [(A) to strengthen and expand the grantee's 
                relationships with State and local personal 
                finance, entrepreneurial, and economic 
                education organizations;
                  [(B) to support and promote training of 
                teachers who teach a grade from kindergarten 
                through grade 12 regarding economics, including 
                the dissemination of information on effective 
                practices and research findings regarding the 
                teaching of economics;
                  [(C) to support research on effective 
                teaching practices and the development of 
                assessment instruments to document student 
                understanding of personal finance and 
                economics; and
                  [(D) to develop and disseminate appropriate 
                materials to foster economic literacy.
          [(2) Subgrants.--The grantee shall use 75 percent of 
        the funds made available through the grant for a fiscal 
        year to award subgrants to State educational agencies 
        or local educational agencies, and State or local 
        economic, personal finance, or entrepreneurial 
        education organizations (referred to in this section as 
        the ``recipient''). The grantee shall award such a 
        subgrant to pay for the Federal share of the cost of 
        enabling the recipient to work in partnership with one 
        or more of the entities described in paragraph (3) for 
        one or more of the following purposes:
                  [(A) Collaboratively establishing and 
                conducting teacher training programs that use 
                effective and innovative approaches to the 
                teaching of economics, personal finance, and 
                entrepreneurship.
                  [(B) Providing resources to school districts 
                that desire to incorporate economics and 
                personal finance into the curricula of the 
                schools in the districts.
                  [(C) Conducting evaluations of the impact of 
                economic and financial literacy education on 
                students.
                  [(D) Conducting economic and financial 
                literacy education research.
                  [(E) Creating and conducting school-based 
                student activities to promote consumer, 
                economic, and personal finance education (such 
                as saving, investing, and entrepreneurial 
                education) and to encourage awareness and 
                student academic achievement in economics.
                  [(F) Encouraging replication of best 
                practices to promote economic and financial 
                literacy.
          [(3) Partnership entities.--The entities described in 
        this paragraph are the following:
                  [(A) A private sector entity.
                  [(B) A State educational agency.
                  [(C) A local educational agency.
                  [(D) An institution of higher education.
                  [(E) An organization promoting economic 
                development.
                  [(F) An organization promoting educational 
                excellence.
                  [(G) An organization promoting personal 
                finance or entrepreneurial education.

[SEC. 5534. APPLICATIONS.

  [(a) Grantee Applications.--To be eligible to receive a grant 
under this subpart, the grantee shall submit to the Secretary 
an application at such time, in such manner, and accompanied by 
such information as the Secretary may require.
  [(b) Recipient Applications.--
          [(1) Submission.--To be eligible to receive a 
        subgrant under this section, a recipient shall submit 
        an application to the grantee at such time, in such 
        manner, and accompanied by such information as the 
        grantee may require.
          [(2) Review.--The grantee shall invite the 
        individuals described in paragraph (3) to review all 
        applications from recipients for a subgrant under this 
        section and to make recommendations to the grantee 
        regarding the approval of the applications.
          [(3) Reviewers.--The individuals described in this 
        paragraph are the following:
                          [(i) Leaders in the fields of 
                        economics and education.
                          [(ii) Such other individuals as the 
                        grantee determines to be necessary, 
                        especially members of the State and 
                        local business, banking, and finance 
                        communities.

[SEC. 5535. REQUIREMENTS.

  [(a) Administrative Costs.--The grantee and each recipient 
receiving a subgrant under this subpart for a fiscal year may 
use not more than 5 percent of the funds made available through 
the grant or subgrant for administrative costs.
  [(b) Teacher Training Programs.--In carrying out the teacher 
training programs described in section 5533(b)(2)(A), a 
recipient shall--
          [(1) train teachers who teach a grade from 
        kindergarten through grade 12; and
          [(2) encourage teachers from disciplines other than 
        economics and financial literacy to participate in such 
        teacher training programs, if the training will promote 
        the economic and financial literacy of those teachers' 
        students.
  [(c) Involvement of Business Community.--In carrying out the 
activities assisted under this subpart, the grantee and 
recipients are strongly encouraged to--
          [(1) include interactions with the local business 
        community to the fullest extent possible to reinforce 
        the connection between economic and financial literacy 
        and economic development; and
          [(2) work with private businesses to obtain matching 
        contributions for Federal funds and assist recipients 
        in working toward self-sufficiency.
  [(d) Additional Requirements and Technical Assistance.--The 
grantee shall--
          [(1) meet such other requirements as the Secretary 
        determines to be necessary to assure compliance with 
        this section; and
          [(2) receive from the Secretary such technical 
        assistance as may be necessary to carry out this 
        section.

[SEC. 5536. ADMINISTRATIVE PROVISIONS.

  [(a) Federal Share.--The Federal share of the cost described 
in section 5533(b)(2) shall be 50 percent.
  [(b) Payment of Non-Federal Share.--The non-Federal share may 
be paid in cash or in kind (fairly evaluated, including plant, 
equipment, or services).
  [(c) Reports to Congress.--Not later than 2 years after the 
date funds are first made available to carry out this subpart, 
and every 2 years thereafter, the Secretary shall submit to the 
appropriate committees of Congress a report regarding 
activities assisted under this subpart.

[SEC. 5537. SUPPLEMENT, NOT SUPPLANT.

  [Funds made available to carry out this subpart shall be used 
to supplement, and not supplant, other Federal, State, and 
local funds expended for the purpose described in section 
5532(a).

      [Subpart 14--Grants to Improve the Mental Health of Children

[SEC. 5541. GRANTS FOR THE INTEGRATION OF SCHOOLS AND MENTAL HEALTH 
                    SYSTEMS.

  [(a) Authorization.--The Secretary is authorized to award 
grants to, or enter into contracts or cooperative agreements 
with, State educational agencies, local educational agencies, 
or Indian tribes, for the purpose of increasing student access 
to quality mental health care by developing innovative programs 
to link local school systems with the local mental health 
system.
  [(b) Duration.--With respect to a grant, contract, or 
cooperative agreement awarded or entered into under this 
section, the period during which payments under such grant, 
contract or agreement are made to the recipient may not exceed 
5 years.
  [(c) Use of Funds.--A State educational agency, local 
educational agency, or Indian tribe that receives a grant, 
contract, or cooperative agreement under this section shall use 
amounts made available through such grant, contract, or 
cooperative agreement for the following:
          [(1) To enhance, improve, or develop collaborative 
        efforts between school-based service systems and mental 
        health service systems to provide, enhance, or improve 
        prevention, diagnosis, and treatment services to 
        students.
          [(2) To enhance the availability of crisis 
        intervention services, appropriate referrals for 
        students potentially in need of mental health services, 
        and ongoing mental health services.
          [(3) To provide training for the school personnel and 
        mental health professionals who will participate in the 
        program carried out under this section.
          [(4) To provide technical assistance and consultation 
        to school systems and mental health agencies and 
        families participating in the program carried out under 
        this section.
          [(5) To provide linguistically appropriate and 
        culturally competent services.
          [(6) To evaluate the effectiveness of the program 
        carried out under this section in increasing student 
        access to quality mental health services, and make 
        recommendations to the Secretary about sustainability 
        of the program.
  [(d) Applications.--To be eligible to receive a grant, 
contract, or cooperative agreement under this section, a State 
educational agency, local educational agency, or Indian tribe 
shall submit an application to the Secretary at such time, in 
such manner, and containing such information as the Secretary 
may reasonably require. The application shall include each of 
the following:
          [(1) A description of the program to be funded under 
        the grant, contract, or cooperative agreement.
          [(2) A description of how such program will increase 
        access to quality mental health services for students.
          [(3) A description of how the applicant will 
        establish a crisis intervention program to provide 
        immediate mental health services to the school 
        community when necessary.
          [(4) An assurance that--
                  [(A) persons providing services under the 
                grant, contract, or cooperative agreement are 
                adequately trained to provide such services;
                  [(B) the services will be provided in 
                accordance with subsection (c);
                  [(C) teachers, principal administrators, and 
                other school personnel are aware of the 
                program; and
                  [(D) parents of students participating in 
                services under this section will be involved in 
                the design and implementation of the services.
          [(5) An explanation of how the applicant will support 
        and integrate existing school-based services with the 
        program to provide appropriate mental health services 
        for students.
          [(6) An explanation of how the applicant will 
        establish a program that will support students and the 
        school in maintaining an environment conducive to 
        learning.
  [(e) Interagency Agreements.--
          [(1) Designation of lead agency.--The recipient of 
        each grant, contract, or cooperative agreement shall 
        designate a lead agency to direct the establishment of 
        an interagency agreement among local educational 
        agencies, juvenile justice authorities, mental health 
        agencies, and other relevant entities in the State, in 
        collaboration with local entities and parents and 
        guardians of students.
          [(2) Contents.--The interagency agreement shall 
        ensure the provision of the services described in 
        subsection (c), specifying with respect to each agency, 
        authority, or entity--
                  [(A) the financial responsibility for the 
                services;
                  [(B) the conditions and terms of 
                responsibility for the services, including 
                quality, accountability, and coordination of 
                the services; and
                  [(C) the conditions and terms of 
                reimbursement among the agencies, authorities, 
                or entities that are parties to the interagency 
                agreement, including procedures for dispute 
                resolution.
  [(f) Evaluation.--The Secretary shall evaluate each program 
carried out by a State educational agency, local educational 
agency, or Indian tribe under this section and shall 
disseminate the findings with respect to each such evaluation 
to appropriate public and private entities.
  [(g) Distribution of Awards.--The Secretary shall ensure that 
grants, contracts, and cooperative agreements awarded or 
entered into under this section are equitably distributed among 
the geographical regions of the United States and among urban, 
suburban, and rural populations.
  [(h) Rule of Construction.--Nothing in Federal law shall be 
construed--
          [(1) to prohibit an entity involved with a program 
        carried out under this section from reporting a crime 
        that is committed by a student to appropriate 
        authorities; or
          [(2) to prevent State law enforcement and judicial 
        authorities from exercising their responsibilities with 
        regard to the application of Federal and State law to 
        crimes committed by a student.
  [(i) Supplement, Not Supplant.--Any services provided through 
programs carried out under this section must supplement, and 
not supplant, existing mental health services, including any 
services required to be provided under the Individuals with 
Disabilities Education Act (20 U.S.C. 1400 et seq.).

[SEC. 5542. PROMOTION OF SCHOOL READINESS THROUGH EARLY CHILDHOOD 
                    EMOTIONAL AND SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT.

  [(a) Authorization.--The Secretary, in consultation with the 
Secretary of Health and Human Services, may award grants (to be 
known as ``Foundations for Learning Grants'') to local 
educational agencies, local councils, community-based 
organizations, and other public or nonprofit private entities 
to assist eligible children to become ready for school.
  [(b) Applications.--To be eligible to receive a grant under 
this section, a local educational agency, local council, 
community-based organization, or other public or nonprofit 
private entity, or a combination of such entities, shall submit 
an application to the Secretary at such time, in such manner, 
and accompanied by such information as the Secretary may 
reasonably require. The application shall include each of the 
following:
          [(1) A description of the population that the 
        applicant intends to serve and the types of services to 
        be provided under the grant.
          [(2) A description of the manner in which services 
        under the grant will be coordinated with existing 
        similar services provided by public and nonprofit 
        private entities within the State.
          [(3) An assurance that--
                  [(A) services under the grant shall be 
                provided by or under the supervision of 
                qualified professionals with expertise in early 
                childhood development;
                  [(B) such services shall be culturally 
                competent;
                  [(C) such services shall be provided in 
                accordance with subsection (c);
                  [(D) funds received under this section shall 
                be used to supplement, and not supplant, non-
                Federal funds; and
                  [(E) parents of students participating in 
                services under this section will be involved in 
                the design and implementation of the services.
  [(c) Uses of Funds.--A local educational agency, local 
council, community-based organization, or other public or 
nonprofit private entity that receives funds under this section 
may use such funds to benefit eligible children, for one or 
more of the following:
          [(1) To deliver services to eligible children and 
        their families that foster eligible children's 
        emotional, behavioral, and social development and take 
        into consideration the characteristics described in 
        subsection (f)(1).
          [(2) To coordinate and facilitate access by eligible 
        children and their families to the services available 
        through community resources, including mental health, 
        physical health, substance abuse, educational, domestic 
        violence prevention, child welfare, and social 
        services.
          [(3) To provide ancillary services such as 
        transportation or child care in order to facilitate the 
        delivery of any other services or activities authorized 
        by this section.
          [(4) To develop or enhance early childhood community 
        partnerships and build toward a community system of 
        care that brings together child-serving agencies or 
        organizations to provide individualized supports for 
        eligible children and their families.
          [(5) To evaluate the success of strategies and 
        services provided pursuant to this section in promoting 
        young children's successful entry to school and to 
        maintain data systems required for effective 
        evaluations.
          [(6) To pay for the expenses of administering the 
        activities authorized under this section, including 
        assessment of children's eligibility for services.
  [(d) Limitations.--
          [(1) Services not otherwise funded.--A local 
        educational agency, local council, community-based 
        organization, or other public or nonprofit private 
        entity may use funds under this section only to pay for 
        services that cannot be paid for using other Federal, 
        State, or local public resources or through private 
        insurance.
          [(2) Administrative expenses.--A grantee may not use 
        more than 3 percent of the amount of the grant to pay 
        the administrative expenses described in subsection 
        (c)(6).
  [(e) Evaluations.--The Secretary shall directly evaluate, or 
enter into a contract for an outside evaluation of, each 
program carried out under this section and shall disseminate 
the findings with respect to such evaluation to appropriate 
public and private entities.
  [(f) Definitions.--In this section:
          [(1) Eligible child.--The term ``eligible child'' 
        means a child who has not attained the age of 7 years, 
        and to whom two or more of the following 
        characteristics apply:
                  [(A) The child has been abused, maltreated, 
                or neglected.
                  [(B) The child has been exposed to violence.
                  [(C) The child has been homeless.
                  [(D) The child has been removed from child 
                care, Head Start, or preschool for behavioral 
                reasons or is at risk of being so removed.
                  [(E) The child has been exposed to parental 
                depression or other mental illness.
                  [(F) The family income with respect to the 
                child is below 200 percent of the poverty line.
                  [(G) The child has been exposed to parental 
                substance abuse.
                  [(H) The child has had early behavioral and 
                peer relationship problems.
                  [(I) The child had a low birth weight.
                  [(J) The child has a cognitive deficit or 
                developmental disability.
          [(2) Local council.--The term ``local council'' means 
        a council that is established or designated by a local 
        government entity, Indian tribe, regional corporation, 
        or native Hawaiian entity, as appropriate, which is 
        composed of representatives of local agencies directly 
        affected by early learning programs, parents, key 
        community leaders, and other individuals concerned with 
        early learning issues in the locality, such as 
        elementary education, child care resource and referral 
        services, early learning opportunities, child care, and 
        health services.
          [(3) Provider of early childhood services.--The term 
        ``provider of early childhood services'' means a public 
        or private entity that has regular contact with young 
        children, including child welfare agencies, child care 
        providers, Head Start and Early Head Start providers, 
        preschools, kindergartens, libraries, mental health 
        professionals, family courts, homeless shelters, and 
        primary care providers.

                     [Subpart 15--Arts in Education

[SEC. 5551. ASSISTANCE FOR ARTS EDUCATION.

  [(a) Purposes.--The purposes of this subpart are the 
following:
          [(1) To support systemic education reform by 
        strengthening arts education as an integral part of the 
        elementary school and secondary school curriculum.
          [(2) To help ensure that all students meet 
        challenging State academic content standards and 
        challenging State student academic achievement 
        standards in the arts.
          [(3) To support the national effort to enable all 
        students to demonstrate competence in the arts.
  [(b) Authority.--The Secretary is authorized to make grants 
to, or enter into contracts or cooperative agreements with, 
eligible entities described in subsection (c).
  [(c) Eligible Entities.--The Secretary may make assistance 
available under subsection (b) to each of the following 
eligible entities:
          [(1) State educational agencies.
          [(2) Local educational agencies.
          [(3) Institutions of higher education.
          [(4) Museums or other cultural institutions.
          [(5) Any other public or private agencies, 
        institutions, or organizations.
  [(d) Use of Funds.--Assistance made available under this 
subpart may be used for any of the following:
          [(1) Research on arts education.
          [(2) Planning, developing, acquiring, expanding, 
        improving, or disseminating information about model 
        school-based arts education programs.
          [(3) The development of model State arts education 
        assessments based on State academic achievement 
        standards.
          [(4) The development and implementation of curriculum 
        frameworks for arts education.
          [(5) The development of model inservice professional 
        development programs for arts educators and other 
        instructional staff.
          [(6) Supporting collaborative activities with Federal 
        agencies or institutions involved in arts education, 
        arts educators, and organizations representing the 
        arts, including State and local arts agencies involved 
        in arts education.
          [(7) Supporting model projects and programs in the 
        performing arts for children and youth through 
        arrangements made with the John F. Kennedy Center for 
        the Performing Arts.
          [(8) Supporting model projects and programs by Very 
        Special Arts which assure the participation in 
        mainstream settings in arts and education programs of 
        individuals with disabilities.
          [(9) Supporting model projects and programs to 
        integrate arts education into the regular elementary 
        school and secondary school curriculum.
          [(10) Other activities that further the purposes of 
        this subpart.
  [(e) Special Rule.--If the amount made available to the 
Secretary to carry out this subpart for any fiscal year is 
$15,000,000 or less, then such amount shall only be available 
to carry out the activities described in paragraphs (7) and (8) 
of subsection (d).
  [(f) Conditions.--As conditions of receiving assistance made 
available under this subpart, the Secretary shall require each 
entity receiving such assistance--
          [(1) to coordinate, to the extent practicable, each 
        project or program carried out with such assistance 
        with appropriate activities of public or private 
        cultural agencies, institutions, and organizations, 
        including museums, arts education associations, 
        libraries, and theaters; and
          [(2) to use such assistance only to supplement, and 
        not to supplant, any other assistance or funds made 
        available from non-Federal sources for the activities 
        assisted under this subpart.
  [(g) Consultation.--In carrying out this subpart, the 
Secretary shall consult with Federal agencies or institutions, 
arts educators (including professional arts education 
associations), and organizations representing the arts 
(including State and local arts agencies involved in arts 
education).

 [Subpart 16--Parental Assistance and Local Family Information Centers

[SEC. 5561. PURPOSES.

   [The purposes of this subpart are the following:
          [(1) To provide leadership, technical assistance, and 
        financial support to nonprofit organizations (including 
        statewide nonprofit organizations) and local 
        educational agencies to help the organizations and 
        agencies implement successful and effective parental 
        involvement policies, programs, and activities that 
        lead to improvements in student academic achievement.
          [(2) To strengthen partnerships among parents 
        (including parents of children from birth through age 
        5), teachers, principals, administrators, and other 
        school personnel in meeting the educational needs of 
        children.
          [(3) To develop and strengthen the relationship 
        between parents and their children's school.
          [(4) To further the developmental progress of 
        children assisted under this subpart.
          [(5) To coordinate activities funded under this 
        subpart with parental involvement initiatives funded 
        under section 1118 and other provisions of this Act.
          [(6) To provide a comprehensive approach to improving 
        student learning, through coordination and integration 
        of Federal, State, and local services and programs.

[SEC. 5562. GRANTS AUTHORIZED.

  [(a) Parental Information and Resource Centers.--The 
Secretary is authorized to award grants in each fiscal year to 
nonprofit organizations (including statewide nonprofit 
organizations), and consortia of such organizations and local 
educational agencies, to establish school-linked or school-
based parental information and resource centers that provide 
comprehensive training, information, and support to--
          [(1) parents of children enrolled in elementary 
        schools and secondary schools;
          [(2) individuals who work with the parents of 
        children enrolled in elementary schools and secondary 
        schools;
          [(3) State educational agencies, local educational 
        agencies, schools, organizations that support family-
        school partnerships (such as parent-teacher 
        associations and Parents as Teachers organizations), 
        and other organizations that carry out parent education 
        and family involvement programs; and
          [(4) parents of children from birth through age 5.
  [(b) Geographic Distribution.--In awarding grants under this 
subpart, the Secretary shall, to the extent practicable, ensure 
that such grants are distributed in all geographic regions of 
the United States.

[SEC. 5563. APPLICATIONS.

  [(a) Submission.--Each nonprofit organization (including a 
statewide nonprofit organization), or a consortia of such an 
organization and a local educational agency, that desires a 
grant under this subpart shall submit an application to the 
Secretary at such time, in such manner, and accompanied by such 
information as the Secretary may require.
  [(b) Contents.--Each application submitted under subsection 
(a), at a minimum, shall include assurances that the 
organization or consortium will--
          [(1)(A) be governed by a board of directors the 
        membership of which includes parents; or
          [(B) be an organization or consortium that represents 
        the interests of parents;
          [(2) establish a special advisory committee the 
        membership of which includes--
                  [(A) parents of children enrolled in 
                elementary schools and secondary schools, who 
                shall constitute a majority of the members of 
                the special advisory committee;
                  [(B) representatives of education 
                professionals with expertise in improving 
                services for disadvantaged children; and
                  [(C) representatives of local elementary 
                schools and secondary schools, including 
                students and representatives from local youth 
                organizations;
          [(3) use at least 50 percent of the funds received 
        under this subpart in each fiscal year to serve areas 
        with high concentrations of low-income families, in 
        order to serve parents who are severely educationally 
        or economically disadvantaged;
          [(4) operate a center of sufficient size, scope, and 
        quality to ensure that the center is adequate to serve 
        the parents in the area;
          [(5) serve both urban and rural areas;
          [(6) design a center that meets the unique training, 
        information, and support needs of parents of children 
        enrolled in elementary schools and secondary schools, 
        particularly such parents who are educationally or 
        economically disadvantaged;
          [(7) demonstrate the capacity and expertise to 
        conduct the effective training, information, and 
        support activities for which assistance is sought;
          [(8) network with--
                  [(A) local educational agencies and schools;
                  [(B) parents of children enrolled in 
                elementary schools and secondary schools;
                  [(C) parent training and information centers 
                assisted under section 671 of the Individuals 
                with Disabilities Education Act;
                  [(D) clearinghouses; and
                  [(E) other organizations and agencies;
          [(9) focus on serving parents of children enrolled in 
        elementary schools and secondary schools who are 
        parents of low-income, minority, and limited English 
        proficient children;
          [(10) use at least 30 percent of the funds received 
        under this subpart in each fiscal year to establish, 
        expand, or operate Parents as Teachers programs, Home 
        Instruction for Preschool Youngsters programs, or other 
        early childhood parent education programs;
          [(11) provide assistance to parents in areas such as 
        understanding State and local standards and measures of 
        student and school academic achievement;
          [(12) work with State educational agencies and local 
        educational agencies to determine parental needs and 
        the best means for delivery of services;
          [(13) identify and coordinate Federal, State, and 
        local services and programs that support improved 
        student learning, including programs supported under 
        this Act, violence prevention programs, nutrition 
        programs, housing programs, Head Start programs, adult 
        education, and job training; and
          [(14) work with and foster partnerships with other 
        agencies that provide programs and deliver services 
        described in paragraph (13) to make such programs and 
        services more accessible to children and families.

[SEC. 5564. USES OF FUNDS.

  [(a) In General.--Grant funds received under this subpart 
shall be used for one or more of the following:
          [(1) To assist parents in participating effectively 
        in their children's education and to help their 
        children meet State and local standards, such as 
        assisting parents--
                  [(A) to engage in activities that will 
                improve student academic achievement, including 
                understanding the accountability systems in 
                place within their State educational agency and 
                local educational agency and understanding 
                their children's educational academic 
                achievement in comparison to State and local 
                standards;
                  [(B) to provide follow-up support for their 
                children's educational achievement;
                  [(C) to communicate effectively with 
                teachers, principals, counselors, 
                administrators, and other school personnel;
                  [(D) to become active participants in the 
                development, implementation, and review of 
                school-parent compacts, parent involvement 
                policies, and school planning and improvement;
                  [(E) to participate in the design and 
                provision of assistance to students who are not 
                making adequate academic progress;
                  [(F) to participate in State and local 
                decisionmaking; and
                  [(G) to train other parents (such as training 
                related to Parents as Teachers activities).
          [(2) To obtain information about the range of 
        options, programs, services, and resources available at 
        the national, State, and local levels to assist parents 
        and school personnel who work with parents.
          [(3) To help the parents learn and use the technology 
        applied in their children's education.
          [(4) To plan, implement, and fund activities for 
        parents that coordinate the education of their children 
        with other Federal, State, and local services and 
        programs that serve their children or their families.
          [(5) To provide support for State or local 
        educational personnel, if the participation of such 
        personnel will further the activities assisted under 
        the grant.
          [(6) To coordinate and integrate early childhood 
        programs with school-age programs.
  [(b) Permissive Activities.--Grant funds received under this 
subpart may be used to assist schools with activities including 
one or more of the following:
          [(1) Developing and implementing the schools' plans 
        or activities under sections 1118 and 1119.
          [(2) Developing and implementing school improvement 
        plans, including addressing problems that develop in 
        the implementation of the schools' plans or activities 
        under sections 1118 and 1119.
          [(3) Providing information about assessment and 
        individual results to parents in a manner and a 
        language the family can understand.
          [(4) Coordinating the efforts of Federal, State, and 
        local parent education and family involvement 
        initiatives.
          [(5) Providing training, information, and support 
        to--
                  [(A) State educational agencies;
                  [(B) local educational agencies and schools, 
                especially low-performing local educational 
                agencies and schools; and
                  [(C) organizations that support family-school 
                partnerships.

[SEC. 5565. ADMINISTRATIVE PROVISIONS.

  [(a) Matching Funds for Grant Renewal.--For each fiscal year 
after the first fiscal year in which an organization or 
consortium receives assistance under this subpart, the 
organization or consortium shall demonstrate in the application 
submitted for such fiscal year, that a portion of the services 
provided by the organization or consortium is supported through 
non-Federal contributions, which contributions may be in cash 
or in kind.
  [(b) Submission of Information.--
          [(1) In general.--Each organization or consortium 
        receiving assistance under this subpart shall submit to 
        the Secretary, on an annual basis, information 
        concerning the parental information and resource 
        centers assisted under this subpart, including the 
        following information:
                  [(A) The number of parents (including the 
                number of minority and limited English 
                proficient parents) who receive information and 
                training.
                  [(B) The types and modes of training, 
                information, and support provided under this 
                subpart.
                  [(C) The strategies used to reach and serve 
                parents of minority and limited English 
                proficient children, parents with limited 
                literacy skills, and other parents in need of 
                the services provided under this subpart.
                  [(D) The parental involvement policies and 
                practices used by the center and an evaluation 
                of whether such policies and practices are 
                effective in improving home-school 
                communication, student academic achievement, 
                student and school academic achievement, and 
                parental involvement in school planning, 
                review, and improvement.
                  [(E) The effectiveness of the activities that 
                local educational agencies and schools are 
                carrying out, with regard to parental 
                involvement and other activities assisted under 
                this Act, that lead to improved student 
                academic achievement and improved student and 
                school academic achievement.
          [(2) Dissemination.--The Secretary shall disseminate 
        annually to Congress and the public the information 
        that each organization or consortium submits under 
        paragraph (1).
  [(c) Technical Assistance.--The Secretary shall provide 
technical assistance, by grant or contract, for the 
establishment, development, and coordination of parent 
training, information, and support programs and parental 
information and resource centers.
  [(d) Rule of Construction.--Nothing in this subpart shall be 
construed to prohibit a parental information and resource 
center from--
          [(1) having its employees or agents meet with a 
        parent at a site that is not on school grounds; or
          [(2) working with another agency that serves 
        children.
  [(e) Parental Rights.--Notwithstanding any other provision of 
this subpart--
          [(1) no person (including a parent who educates a 
        child at home, a public school parent, or a private 
        school parent) shall be required to participate in any 
        program of parent education or developmental screening 
        under this subpart; and
          [(2) no program or center assisted under this subpart 
        shall take any action that infringes in any manner on 
        the right of a parent to direct the education of their 
        children.
  [(f) Continuation of Awards.--The Secretary shall use funds 
made available under this subpart to continue to make grant or 
contract payments to each entity that was awarded a multiyear 
grant or contract under title IV of the Goals 2000: Educate 
America Act (as such title was in effect on the day before the 
date of enactment of the No Child Left Behind Act of 2001) for 
the duration of the grant or contract award.

[SEC. 5566. LOCAL FAMILY INFORMATION CENTERS.

  [(a) In General.--If the amount made available to carry out 
this subpart for a fiscal year is more than $50,000,000, the 
Secretary is authorized to award 50 percent of the amount that 
exceeds $50,000,000 as grants to, and enter into contracts and 
cooperative agreements with, local nonprofit parent 
organizations to enable the organizations to support local 
family information centers that help ensure that parents of 
students in elementary schools and secondary schools assisted 
under this subpart have the training, information, and support 
the parents need to enable the parents to participate 
effectively in their children's early childhood education, in 
their children's elementary and secondary education, and in 
helping their children to meet challenging State academic 
content and student academic achievement standards.
  [(b) Local Nonprofit Parent Organization Defined.--In this 
section, the term ``local nonprofit parent organization'' means 
a private nonprofit organization (other than an institution of 
higher education) that--
          [(1) has a demonstrated record of working with low-
        income individuals and parents;
          [(2)(A) has a board of directors, the majority of 
        whom are parents of students in elementary schools and 
        secondary schools assisted under part A of title I and 
        located in the geographic area to be served by a local 
        family information center; or
          [(B) has a special governing committee to direct and 
        implement a local family information center, a majority 
        of the members of whom are parents of students in 
        schools assisted under part A of title I; and
          [(3) is located in a community with elementary 
        schools and secondary schools that receive funds under 
        part A of title I, and is accessible to the families of 
        students in those schools.

               [Subpart 17--Combatting Domestic Violence

[SEC. 5571. GRANTS TO COMBAT THE IMPACT OF EXPERIENCING OR WITNESSING 
                    DOMESTIC VIOLENCE ON ELEMENTARY AND SECONDARY 
                    SCHOOL CHILDREN.

  [(a) Definitions.--In this section:
          [(1) Domestic violence.--The term ``domestic 
        violence'' has the meaning given that term in section 
        2003 of the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act 
        of 1968 (42 U.S.C. 3796gg-2).
          [(2) Expert.--The term ``expert'' means--
                  [(A) an expert on domestic violence, sexual 
                assault, and child abuse from the educational, 
                legal, youth, mental health, substance abuse, 
                or victim advocacy field; and
                  [(B) a State or local domestic violence 
                coalition or community-based youth 
                organization.
          [(3) Witness domestic violence.--
                  [(A) In general.--The term ``witness domestic 
                violence'' means to witness--
                          [(i) an act of domestic violence that 
                        constitutes actual or attempted 
                        physical assault; or
                          [(ii) a threat or other action that 
                        places the victim in fear of domestic 
                        violence.
                  [(B) Witness.--In subparagraph (A), the term 
                ``witness'' means--
                          [(i) to directly observe an act, 
                        threat, or action described in 
                        subparagraph (A), or the aftermath of 
                        that act, threat, or action; or
                          [(ii) to be within earshot of an act, 
                        threat, or action described in 
                        subparagraph (A), or the aftermath of 
                        that act, threat, or action.
  [(b) Grants Authorized.--
          [(1) Authority.--The Secretary is authorized to award 
        grants to local educational agencies that work with 
        experts to enable the elementary schools and secondary 
        schools served by the local educational agency--
                  [(A) to provide training to school 
                administrators, faculty, and staff, with 
                respect to issues concerning children who 
                experience domestic violence in dating 
                relationships or who witness domestic violence, 
                and the impact of the violence on the children;
                  [(B) to provide educational programming for 
                students regarding domestic violence and the 
                impact of experiencing or witnessing domestic 
                violence on children;
                  [(C) to provide support services for students 
                and school personnel to develop and strengthen 
                effective prevention and intervention 
                strategies with respect to issues concerning 
                children who experience domestic violence in 
                dating relationships or who witness domestic 
                violence, and the impact of the violence on the 
                children; and
                  [(D) to develop and implement school system 
                policies regarding appropriate and safe 
                responses to, identification of, and referral 
                procedures for, students who are experiencing 
                or witnessing domestic violence.
          [(2) Award basis.--The Secretary is authorized to 
        award grants under this section--
                  [(A) on a competitive basis; and
                  [(B) in a manner that ensures that such 
                grants are equitably distributed among local 
                educational agencies located in rural, urban, 
                and suburban areas.
          [(3) Policy dissemination.--The Secretary shall 
        disseminate to local educational agencies any 
        Department policy guidance regarding the prevention of 
        domestic violence and the impact on children of 
        experiencing or witnessing domestic violence.
  [(c) Uses of Funds.--Funds made available to carry out this 
subpart may be used for one or more of the following purposes:
          [(1) To provide training for elementary school and 
        secondary school administrators, faculty, and staff 
        that addresses issues concerning elementary school and 
        secondary school students who experience domestic 
        violence in dating relationships or who witness 
        domestic violence, and the impact of such violence on 
        those students.
          [(2) To provide education programs for elementary 
        school and secondary school students that are 
        developmentally appropriate for the students' grade 
        levels and are designed to meet any unique cultural and 
        language needs of the particular student populations.
          [(3) To develop and implement elementary school and 
        secondary school system policies regarding--
                  [(A) appropriate and safe responses to, 
                identification of, and referral procedures for, 
                students who are experiencing or witnessing 
                domestic violence; and
                  [(B) to develop and implement policies on 
                reporting and referral procedures for those 
                students.
          [(4) To provide the necessary human resources to 
        respond to the needs of elementary school and secondary 
        school students and personnel who are faced with the 
        issue of domestic violence, such as a resource person 
        who is either on-site or on-call and who is an expert.
          [(5) To provide media center materials and 
        educational materials to elementary schools and 
        secondary schools that address issues concerning 
        children who experience domestic violence in dating 
        relationships or who witness domestic violence, and the 
        impact of the violence on those children.
          [(6) To conduct evaluations to assess the impact of 
        programs and policies assisted under this subpart in 
        order to enhance the development of the programs.
  [(d) Confidentiality.--Policies, programs, training 
materials, and evaluations developed and implemented under 
subsection (c) shall address issues of safety and 
confidentiality for the victim and the victim's family in a 
manner consistent with applicable Federal and State laws.
  [(e) Application.--To be eligible for a grant under this 
section for a fiscal year, a local educational agency, in 
consultation with an expert, shall submit an application to the 
Secretary at such time, in such manner, and containing such 
information as the Secretary may require. The application shall 
include each of the following:
          [(1) A description of the need for funds provided 
        under the grant and the plan for implementation of any 
        of the activities described in subsection (c).
          [(2) A description of how the experts will work in 
        consultation and collaboration with the local 
        educational agency.
          [(3) Measurable objectives for, and expected results 
        from, the use of the funds provided under the grant.
          [(4) Provisions for appropriate remuneration for 
        collaborating partners.

             [Subpart 18--Healthy, High-Performance Schools

[SEC. 5581. GRANT PROGRAM AUTHORIZED.

  [The Secretary, in consultation with the Secretary of Energy 
and the Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency, 
is authorized to award grants to State educational agencies to 
permit such State educational agencies to carry out section 
5582.

[SEC. 5582. STATE USES OF FUNDS.

  [(a) Subgrants.--
          [(1) In general.--A State educational agency 
        receiving a grant under this subpart shall use funds 
        made available under the grant to award subgrants to 
        local educational agencies to permit such local 
        educational agencies to carry out the activities 
        described in section 5583.
          [(2) Limitation.--A State educational agency shall 
        award subgrants under this subsection to local 
        educational agencies that are the neediest, as 
        determined by the State, and that have made a 
        commitment to develop healthy, high-performance school 
        buildings in accordance with the plan developed and 
        approved under paragraph (3)(A).
          [(3) Implementation.--
                  [(A) Plans.--A State educational agency shall 
                award subgrants under this subsection only to 
                local educational agencies that, in 
                consultation with the State educational agency 
                and State agencies with responsibilities 
                relating to energy and health, have developed 
                plans that the State educational agency 
                determines to be feasible and appropriate in 
                order to achieve the purposes for which the 
                subgrants are made.
                  [(B) Supplementing grant funds.--The State 
                educational agency shall encourage local 
                educational agencies that receive subgrants 
                under this subsection to supplement their 
                subgrant funds with funds from other sources in 
                order to implement their plans.
  [(b) Administration.--A State educational agency receiving a 
grant under this subpart shall use the grant funds made 
available under this subpart for one or more of the following:
          [(1) To evaluate compliance by local educational 
        agencies with the requirements of this subpart.
          [(2) To distribute information and materials on 
        healthy, high-performance school buildings for both new 
        and existing facilities.
          [(3) To organize and conduct programs for school 
        board members, school district personnel, and others to 
        disseminate information on healthy, high-performance 
        school buildings.
          [(4) To provide technical services and assistance in 
        planning and designing healthy, high-performance school 
        buildings.
          [(5) To collect and monitor information pertaining to 
        healthy, high-performance school building projects.

[SEC. 5583. LOCAL USES OF FUNDS.

  [(a) In General.--A local educational agency that receives a 
subgrant under section 5582(a) shall use the subgrant funds to 
plan and prepare for healthy, high-performance school building 
projects that--
          [(1) reduce energy use to at least 30 percent below 
        that of a school constructed in compliance with 
        standards prescribed in chapter 8 of the 2000 
        International Energy Conservation Code, or a similar 
        State code intended to achieve substantially equivalent 
        results;
          [(2) meet Federal and State health and safety codes; 
        and
          [(3) support healthful, energy efficient, and 
        environmentally sound practices.
  [(b) Use of Funds.--A local educational agency that receives 
a subgrant under section 5582(a) shall use funds for one or 
more of the following:
          [(1) To develop a comprehensive energy audit of the 
        energy consumption characteristics of a building and 
        the need for additional energy conservation measures 
        necessary to allow schools to meet the guidelines set 
        out in subsection (a).
          [(2) To produce a comprehensive analysis of building 
        strategies, designs, materials, and equipment that--
                  [(A) are cost effective, produce greater 
                energy efficiency, and enhance indoor air 
                quality; and
                  [(B) can be used when conducting school 
                construction and renovation or purchasing 
                materials and equipment.
          [(3) To obtain research and provide technical 
        services and assistance in planning and designing 
        healthy, high-performance school buildings, including 
        developing a timeline for implementation of such plans.

[SEC. 5584. REPORT TO CONGRESS.

  [The Secretary shall conduct a biennial review of State 
actions implementing this subpart and carrying out the plans 
developed under this subpart through State and local funding, 
and shall submit a report to Congress on the results of such 
reviews.

[SEC. 5585. LIMITATIONS.

   [No funds received under this subpart may be used for any of 
the following:
          [(1) Payment of maintenance of costs in connection 
        with any projects constructed in whole or in part with 
        Federal funds provided under this subpart.
          [(2) Construction, renovation, or repair of school 
        facilities.
          [(3) Construction, renovation, repair, or acquisition 
        of a stadium or other facility primarily used for 
        athletic contests or exhibitions, or other events for 
        which admission is charged to the general public.

[SEC. 5586. HEALTHY, HIGH-PERFORMANCE SCHOOL BUILDING DEFINED.

   [In this subpart, the term ``healthy, high-performance 
school building'' means a school building in which the design, 
construction, operation, and maintenance--
          [(1) use energy-efficient and affordable practices 
        and materials;
          [(2) are cost-effective;
          [(3) enhance indoor air quality; and
          [(4) protect and conserve water.

    [Subpart 19--Grants for Capital Expenses of Providing Equitable 
                  Services for Private School Students

[SEC. 5591. GRANT PROGRAM AUTHORIZED.

  [The Secretary is authorized to award grants to State 
educational agencies, from allotments made under section 5593, 
to enable the State educational agencies to award subgrants to 
local educational agencies to pay for capital expenses in 
accordance with this subpart.

[SEC. 5592. USES OF FUNDS.

  [A local educational agency that receives a subgrant under 
this subpart shall use the subgrant funds only to pay for 
capital expenses incurred in providing equitable services for 
private school students under section 1120.

[SEC. 5593. ALLOTMENTS TO STATES.

  [From the funds made available to carry out this subpart for 
a fiscal year, the Secretary shall allot to each State an 
amount that bears the same ratio to the funds made available as 
the number of private school students who received services 
under part A of title I in the State in the most recent year 
for which data, satisfactory to the Secretary, are available 
bears to the number of such students in all States in such 
year.

[SEC. 5594. SUBGRANTS TO LOCAL EDUCATIONAL AGENCIES.

  [(a) Applications.--A local educational agency that desires 
to receive a subgrant under this subpart shall submit an 
application to the State educational agency involved at such 
time, in such manner, and containing such information as the 
State educational agency may require.
  [(b) Distribution.--A State educational agency shall award 
subgrants to local educational agencies within the State based 
on the degree of need set forth in their respective 
applications submitted under subsection (a).

[SEC. 5595. CAPITAL EXPENSES DEFINED.

   [In this subpart, the term ``capital expenses'' means--
          [(1) expenditures for noninstructional goods and 
        services, such as the purchase, lease, or renovation of 
        real and personal property, including mobile 
        educational units and leasing of neutral sites or 
        spaces;
          [(2) insurance and maintenance costs;
          [(3) transportation; and
          [(4) other comparable goods and services.

[SEC. 5596. TERMINATION.

  [The authority provided by this subpart terminates effective 
October 1, 2003.

   [Subpart 20--Additional Assistance for Certain Local Educational 
           Agencies Impacted by Federal Property Acquisition

[SEC. 5601. RESERVATION.

  [The Secretary is authorized to provide additional assistance 
to meet special circumstances relating to the provision of 
education in local educational agencies eligible to receive 
assistance under section 8002.

[SEC. 5602. ELIGIBILITY.

   [A local educational agency is eligible to receive 
additional assistance under this subpart only if such agency--
          [(1) received a payment under both section 8002 and 
        section 8003(b) for fiscal year 1996 and is eligible to 
        receive payments under those sections for the year of 
        application;
          [(2) provided a free public education to children 
        described under subparagraph (A), (B), or (D) of 
        section 8003(a)(1);
          [(3) had a military installation located within the 
        geographic boundaries of the local educational agency 
        that was closed as a result of base closure or 
        realignment and, at the time at which the agency is 
        applying for a payment under this subpart, the agency 
        does not have a military installation located within 
        its geographic boundaries;
          [(4) remains responsible for the free public 
        education of children residing in housing located on 
        Federal property within the boundaries of the closed 
        military installation but whose parents are on active 
        duty in the uniformed services and assigned to a 
        military activity located within the boundaries of an 
        adjoining local educational agency; and
          [(5) demonstrates to the satisfaction of the 
        Secretary that such agency's per-pupil revenue derived 
        from local sources for current expenditures is not less 
        than that revenue for the preceding fiscal year.

[SEC. 5603. MAXIMUM AMOUNT.

  [(a) Maximum Amount.--The maximum amount that a local 
educational agency is eligible to receive under this subpart 
for any fiscal year, when combined with its payment under 
section 8002(b), shall not be more than 50 percent of the 
maximum amount determined under section 8002(b).
  [(b) Insufficient Funds.--If funds appropriated under section 
5401 are insufficient to pay the amount determined under 
subsection (a), the Secretary shall ratably reduce the payment 
to each local educational agency eligible under this subpart.
  [(c) Excess Funds.--If funds appropriated under section 5401 
are in excess of the amount determined under subsection (a), 
the Secretary shall ratably distribute any excess funds to all 
local educational agencies eligible for payment under section 
8002(b).

              [Subpart 21--Women's Educational Equity Act

[SEC. 5611. SHORT TITLE AND FINDINGS.

  [(a) Short Title.--This subpart may be cited as the ``Women's 
Educational Equity Act of 2001''.
  [(b) Findings.--Congress finds that--
          [(1) since the enactment of title IX of the Education 
        Amendments of 1972, women and girls have made strides 
        in educational achievement and in their ability to 
        avail themselves of educational opportunities;
          [(2) because of funding provided under the Women's 
        Educational Equity Act of 2001, more curricula, 
        training, and other educational materials concerning 
        educational equity for women and girls are available 
        for national dissemination;
          [(3) teaching and learning practices in the United 
        States are frequently inequitable as such practices 
        relate to women and girls, for example--
                  [(A) sexual harassment, particularly that 
                experienced by girls, undermines the ability of 
                schools to provide a safe and equitable 
                learning or workplace environment;
                  [(B) classroom textbooks and other 
                educational materials do not sufficiently 
                reflect the experiences, achievements, or 
                concerns of women and, in most cases, are not 
                written by women or persons of color;
                  [(C) girls do not take as many mathematics 
                and science courses as boys, girls lose 
                confidence in their mathematics and science 
                ability as girls move through adolescence, and 
                there are few women role models in the 
                sciences; and
                  [(D) pregnant and parenting teenagers are at 
                high risk for dropping out of school and 
                existing dropout prevention programs do not 
                adequately address the needs of such teenagers;
          [(4) efforts to improve the quality of public 
        education also must include efforts to ensure equal 
        access to quality education programs for all women and 
        girls;
          [(5) Federal support should address not only research 
        and development of innovative model curricula and 
        teaching and learning strategies to promote gender 
        equity, but should also assist schools and local 
        communities implement gender equitable practices;
          [(6) Federal assistance for gender equity must be 
        tied to systemic reform, involve collaborative efforts 
        to implement effective gender practices at the local 
        level, and encourage parental participation; and
          [(7) excellence in education, high educational 
        achievements and standards, and the full participation 
        of women and girls in American society, cannot be 
        achieved without educational equity for women and 
        girls.

[SEC. 5612. STATEMENT OF PURPOSE.

   [It is the purpose of this subpart--
          [(1) to promote gender equity in education in the 
        United States;
          [(2) to provide financial assistance to enable 
        educational agencies and institutions to meet the 
        requirements of title IX of the Educational Amendments 
        of 1972; and
          [(3) to promote equity in education for women and 
        girls who suffer from multiple forms of discrimination 
        based on sex, race, ethnic origin, limited English 
        proficiency, disability, or age.

[SEC. 5613. PROGRAMS AUTHORIZED.

  [(a) In General.--The Secretary is authorized--
          [(1) to promote, coordinate, and evaluate gender 
        equity policies, programs, activities, and initiatives 
        in all Federal education programs and offices;
          [(2) to develop, maintain, and disseminate materials, 
        resources, analyses, and research relating to education 
        equity for women and girls;
          [(3) to provide information and technical assistance 
        to assure the effective implementation of gender equity 
        programs;
          [(4) to coordinate gender equity programs and 
        activities with other Federal agencies with 
        jurisdiction over education and related programs;
          [(5) to assist the Director of the Institute of 
        Education Sciences in identifying research priorities 
        related to education equity for women and girls; and
          [(6) to perform any other activities consistent with 
        achieving the purposes of this subpart.
  [(b) Grants Authorized.--
          [(1) In general.--The Secretary is authorized to 
        award grants to, and enter into contracts and 
        cooperative agreements with, public agencies, private 
        nonprofit agencies, organizations, institutions, 
        student groups, community groups, and individuals, for 
        a period not to exceed 4 years, to--
                  [(A) provide grants to develop model equity 
                programs; and
                  [(B) provide funds for the implementation of 
                equity programs in schools throughout the 
                Nation.
          [(2) Support and technical assistance.--To achieve 
        the purposes of this subpart, the Secretary is 
        authorized to provide support and technical 
        assistance--
                  [(A) to implement effective gender-equity 
                policies and programs at all educational 
                levels, including--
                          [(i) assisting educational agencies 
                        and institutions to implement policies 
                        and practices to comply with title IX 
                        of the Education Amendments of 1972;
                          [(ii) training for teachers, 
                        counselors, administrators, and other 
                        school personnel, especially preschool 
                        and elementary school personnel, in 
                        gender equitable teaching and learning 
                        practices;
                          [(iii) leadership training for women 
                        and girls to develop professional and 
                        marketable skills to compete in the 
                        global marketplace, improve self-
                        esteem, and benefit from exposure to 
                        positive role models;
                          [(iv) school-to-work transition 
                        programs, guidance and counseling 
                        activities, and other programs to 
                        increase opportunities for women and 
                        girls to enter a technologically 
                        demanding workplace and, in particular, 
                        to enter highly skilled, high paying 
                        careers in which women and girls have 
                        been underrepresented;
                          [(v) enhancing educational and career 
                        opportunities for those women and girls 
                        who suffer multiple forms of 
                        discrimination, based on sex, and on 
                        race, ethnic origin, limited English 
                        proficiency, disability, socioeconomic 
                        status, or age;
                          [(vi) assisting pregnant students and 
                        students rearing children to remain in 
                        or to return to secondary school, 
                        graduate, and prepare their preschool 
                        children to start school;
                          [(vii) evaluating exemplary model 
                        programs to assess the ability of such 
                        programs to advance educational equity 
                        for women and girls;
                          [(viii) introduction into the 
                        classroom of textbooks, curricula, and 
                        other materials designed to achieve 
                        equity for women and girls;
                          [(ix) programs and policies to 
                        address sexual harassment and violence 
                        against women and girls and to ensure 
                        that educational institutions are free 
                        from threats to the safety of students 
                        and personnel;
                          [(x) nondiscriminatory tests of 
                        aptitude and achievement and of 
                        alternative assessments that eliminate 
                        biased assessment instruments from use;
                          [(xi) programs to increase 
                        educational opportunities, including 
                        higher education, vocational training, 
                        and other educational programs for low-
                        income women, including underemployed 
                        and unemployed women, and women 
                        receiving assistance under a State 
                        program funded under part A of title IV 
                        of the Social Security Act;
                          [(xii) programs to improve 
                        representation of women in educational 
                        administration at all levels; and
                          [(xiii) planning, development, and 
                        initial implementation of--
                                  [(I) comprehensive 
                                institutionwide or districtwide 
                                evaluation to assess the 
                                presence or absence of gender 
                                equity in educational settings;
                                  [(II) comprehensive plans for 
                                implementation of equity 
                                programs in State educational 
                                agencies and local educational 
                                agencies and institutions of 
                                higher education, including 
                                community colleges; and
                                  [(III) innovative approaches 
                                to school-community 
                                partnerships for educational 
                                equity; and
                  [(B) for research and development, which 
                shall be coordinated with each of the National 
                Education Centers of the Institute of Education 
                Sciences to avoid duplication of research 
                efforts, designed to advance gender equity 
                nationwide and to help make policies and 
                practices in educational agencies and 
                institutions, and local communities, gender 
                equitable, including--
                          [(i) research and development of 
                        innovative strategies and model 
                        training programs for teachers and 
                        other education personnel;
                          [(ii) the development of high-quality 
                        and challenging assessment instruments 
                        that are nondiscriminatory;
                          [(iii) the development and evaluation 
                        of model curricula, textbooks, 
                        software, and other educational 
                        materials to ensure the absence of 
                        gender stereotyping and bias;
                          [(iv) the development of instruments 
                        and procedures that employ new and 
                        innovative strategies to assess whether 
                        diverse educational settings are gender 
                        equitable;
                          [(v) the development of instruments 
                        and strategies for evaluation, 
                        dissemination, and replication of 
                        promising or exemplary programs 
                        designed to assist local educational 
                        agencies in integrating gender equity 
                        in their educational policies and 
                        practices;
                          [(vi) updating high-quality 
                        educational materials previously 
                        developed through awards made under 
                        this subpart;
                          [(vii) the development of policies 
                        and programs to address and prevent 
                        sexual harassment and violence to 
                        ensure that educational institutions 
                        are free from threats to safety of 
                        students and personnel;
                          [(viii) the development and 
                        improvement of programs and activities 
                        to increase opportunity for women, 
                        including continuing educational 
                        activities, vocational education, and 
                        programs for low-income women, 
                        including underemployed and unemployed 
                        women, and women receiving assistance 
                        under the State program funded under 
                        part A of title IV of the Social 
                        Security Act; and
                          [(ix) the development of guidance and 
                        counseling activities, including career 
                        education programs, designed to ensure 
                        gender equity.

[SEC. 5614. APPLICATIONS.

   [An application under this subpart shall--
          [(1) set forth policies and procedures that will 
        ensure a comprehensive evaluation of the activities 
        assisted under this subpart, including an evaluation of 
        the practices, policies, and materials used by the 
        applicant and an evaluation or estimate of the 
        continued significance of the work of the project 
        following completion of the award period;
          [(2) demonstrate how the applicant will address 
        perceptions of gender roles based on cultural 
        differences or stereotypes;
          [(3) for applications for assistance under section 
        5613(b)(1), demonstrate how the applicant will foster 
        partnerships and, where applicable, share resources 
        with State educational agencies, local educational 
        agencies, institutions of higher education, community-
        based organizations (including organizations serving 
        women), parent, teacher, and student groups, 
        businesses, or other recipients of Federal educational 
        funding which may include State literacy resource 
        centers;
          [(4) for applications for assistance under section 
        5613(b)(1), demonstrate how parental involvement in the 
        project will be encouraged; and
          [(5) for applications for assistance under section 
        5613(b)(1), describe plans for continuation of the 
        activities assisted under this subpart with local 
        support following completion of the grant period and 
        termination of Federal support under this subpart.

[SEC. 5615. CRITERIA AND PRIORITIES.

  [(a) Criteria and Priorities.--
          [(1) In general.--The Secretary shall establish 
        separate criteria and priorities for awards under 
        paragraphs (1) and (2) of section 5613(b) to ensure 
        that funds under this subpart are used for programs 
        that most effectively will achieve the purposes of this 
        subpart.
          [(2) Criteria.--The criteria described in paragraph 
        (1) may include the extent to which the activities 
        assisted under this subpart--
                  [(A) address the needs of women and girls of 
                color and women and girls with disabilities;
                  [(B) meet locally defined and documented 
                educational equity needs and priorities, 
                including compliance with title IX of the 
                Education Amendments of 1972;
                  [(C) are a significant component of a 
                comprehensive plan for educational equity and 
                compliance with title IX of the Education 
                Amendments of 1972 in the particular school 
                district, institution of higher education, 
                vocational-technical institution, or other 
                educational agency or institution; and
                  [(D) implement an institutional change 
                strategy with long-term impact that will 
                continue as a central activity of the applicant 
                after the grant under this subpart has 
                terminated.
  [(b) Priorities.--In awarding grants under this subpart, the 
Secretary may give special consideration to applications--
          [(1) submitted by applicants that have not received 
        assistance under this subpart or this subpart's 
        predecessor authorities;
          [(2) for projects that will contribute significantly 
        to directly improving teaching and learning practices 
        in the local community; and
          [(3) for projects that will--
                  [(A) provide for a comprehensive approach to 
                enhancing gender equity in educational 
                institutions and agencies;
                  [(B) draw on a variety of resources, 
                including the resources of local educational 
                agencies, community-based organizations, 
                institutions of higher education, and private 
                organizations;
                  [(C) implement a strategy with long-term 
                impact that will continue as a central activity 
                of the applicant after the grant under this 
                subpart has terminated;
                  [(D) address issues of national significance 
                that can be duplicated; and
                  [(E) address the educational needs of women 
                and girls who suffer multiple or compound 
                discrimination based on sex and on race, ethnic 
                origin, disability, or age.
  [(c) Special Rule.--To the extent feasible, the Secretary 
shall ensure that grants awarded under this subpart for each 
fiscal year address--
          [(1) all levels of education, including preschool, 
        elementary and secondary education, higher education, 
        vocational education, and adult education;
          [(2) all regions of the United States; and
          [(3) urban, rural, and suburban educational 
        institutions.
  [(d) Coordination.--Research activities supported under this 
subpart--
          [(1) shall be carried out in consultation with the 
        Institute of Education Sciences to ensure that such 
        activities are coordinated with and enhance the 
        research and development activities supported by the 
        Institute; and
          [(2) may include collaborative research activities 
        which are jointly funded and carried out with the 
        Institute of Education Sciences.
  [(e) Limitation.--Nothing in this subpart shall be construed 
as prohibiting men and boys from participating in any programs 
or activities assisted with funds under this subpart.

[SEC. 5616. REPORT.

  [Not later than January 1, 2006, the Secretary shall submit 
to the President and Congress a report on the status of 
educational equity for girls and women in the Nation.

[SEC. 5617. ADMINISTRATION.

  [(a) Evaluation and Dissemination.--Not later than January 1, 
2005, the Secretary shall evaluate and disseminate materials 
and programs developed under this subpart and shall report to 
Congress regarding such evaluation materials and programs.
  [(b) Program Operations.--The Secretary shall ensure that the 
activities assisted under this subpart are administered within 
the Department by a person who has recognized professional 
qualifications and experience in the field of gender equity 
education.

[SEC. 5618. AMOUNT.

  [From amounts made available to carry out this subpart for a 
fiscal year, not less than two-thirds of such amount shall be 
used to carry out the activities described in section 
5613(b)(1).

               [TITLE VI--FLEXIBILITY AND ACCOUNTABILITY

                [PART A--IMPROVING ACADEMIC ACHIEVEMENT

                       [Subpart 1--Accountability

[SEC. 6111. GRANTS FOR STATE ASSESSMENTS AND RELATED ACTIVITIES.

   [The Secretary shall make grants to States to enable the 
States--
          [(1) to pay the costs of the development of the 
        additional State assessments and standards required by 
        section 1111(b), which may include the costs of working 
        in voluntary partnerships with other States, at the 
        sole discretion of each such State; and
          [(2) if a State has developed the assessments and 
        standards required by section 1111(b), to administer 
        those assessments or to carry out other activities 
        described in this subpart and other activities related 
        to ensuring that the State's schools and local 
        educational agencies are held accountable for results, 
        such as the following:
                  [(A) Developing challenging State academic 
                content and student academic achievement 
                standards and aligned assessments in academic 
                subjects for which standards and assessments 
                are not required by section 1111(b).
                  [(B) Developing or improving assessments of 
                English language proficiency necessary to 
                comply with section 1111(b)(7).
                  [(C) Ensuring the continued validity and 
                reliability of State assessments.
                  [(D) Refining State assessments to ensure 
                their continued alignment with the State's 
                academic content standards and to improve the 
                alignment of curricula and instructional 
                materials.
                  [(E) Developing multiple measures to increase 
                the reliability and validity of State 
                assessment systems.
                  [(F) Strengthening the capacity of local 
                educational agencies and schools to provide all 
                students the opportunity to increase 
                educational achievement, including carrying out 
                professional development activities aligned 
                with State student academic achievement 
                standards and assessments.
                  [(G) Expanding the range of accommodations 
                available to students with limited English 
                proficiency and students with disabilities to 
                improve the rates of inclusion of such 
                students, including professional development 
                activities aligned with State academic 
                achievement standards and assessments.
                  [(H) Improving the dissemination of 
                information on student achievement and school 
                performance to parents and the community, 
                including the development of information and 
                reporting systems designed to identify best 
                educational practices based on scientifically 
                based research or to assist in linking records 
                of student achievement, length of enrollment, 
                and graduation over time.

[SEC. 6112. GRANTS FOR ENHANCED ASSESSMENT INSTRUMENTS.

  [(a) Grant Program Authorized.--From funds made available to 
carry out this subpart, the Secretary shall award, on a 
competitive basis, grants to State educational agencies that 
have submitted an application at such time, in such manner, and 
containing such information as the Secretary may require, which 
demonstrate to the satisfaction of the Secretary, that the 
requirements of this section will be met, for the following:
          [(1) To enable States (or consortia of States) to 
        collaborate with institutions of higher education, 
        other research institutions, or other organizations to 
        improve the quality, validity, and reliability of State 
        academic assessments beyond the requirements for such 
        assessments described in section 1111(b)(3).
          [(2) To measure student academic achievement using 
        multiple measures of student academic achievement from 
        multiple sources.
          [(3) To chart student progress over time.
          [(4) To evaluate student academic achievement through 
        the development of comprehensive academic assessment 
        instruments, such as performance and technology-based 
        academic assessments.
  [(b) Application.--Each State wishing to apply for funds 
under this section shall include in its State plan under part A 
of title I such information as the Secretary may require.
  [(c) Annual Report.--Each State educational agency receiving 
a grant under this section shall submit an annual report to the 
Secretary describing its activities, and the result of those 
activities, under the grant.

[SEC. 6113. FUNDING.

  [(a) Authorization of Appropriations.--
          [(1) National assessment of educational progress.--
        For the purpose of administering the State assessments 
        under the National Assessment of Educational Progress, 
        there are authorized to be appropriated $72,000,000 for 
        fiscal year 2002, and such sums as may be necessary for 
        each of the 5 succeeding fiscal years.
          [(2) State assessments and related activities.--For 
        the purpose of carrying out this subpart, there are 
        authorized to be appropriated $490,000,000 for fiscal 
        year 2002, and such sums as may be necessary for each 
        of the 5 succeeding fiscal years.
  [(b) Allotment of Appropriated Funds.--
          [(1) In general.--From amounts made available for 
        each fiscal year under subsection (a)(2) that are equal 
        to or less than the amount described in section 
        1111(b)(3)(D) (hereinafter in this subsection referred 
        to as the ``trigger amount''), the Secretary shall--
                  [(A) reserve one-half of 1 percent for the 
                Bureau of Indian Affairs;
                  [(B) reserve one-half of 1 percent for the 
                outlying areas; and
                  [(C) from the remainder, allocate to each 
                State an amount equal to--
                          [(i) $3,000,000; and
                          [(ii) with respect to any amounts 
                        remaining after the allocation is made 
                        under clause (i), an amount that bears 
                        the same relationship to such total 
                        remaining amounts as the number of 
                        students ages 5 through 17 in the State 
                        (as determined by the Secretary on the 
                        basis of the most recent satisfactory 
                        data) bears to the total number of such 
                        students in all States.
          [(2) Remainder.--Any amounts remaining for a fiscal 
        year after the Secretary carries out paragraph (1) 
        shall be made available as follows:
                  [(A)(i) To award funds under section 6112 to 
                States according to the quality, needs, and 
                scope of the State application under that 
                section.
                  [(ii) In determining the grant amount under 
                clause (i), the Secretary shall ensure that a 
                State's grant shall include an amount that 
                bears the same relationship to the total funds 
                available under this paragraph for the fiscal 
                year as the number of students ages 5 through 
                17 in the State (as determined by the Secretary 
                on the basis of the most recent satisfactory 
                data) bears to the total number of such 
                students in all States.
                  [(B) Any amounts remaining after the 
                Secretary awards funds under subparagraph (A) 
                shall be allocated to each State that did not 
                receive a grant under such subparagraph, in an 
                amount that bears the same relationship to the 
                total funds available under this subparagraph 
                as the number of students ages 5 through 17 in 
                the State (as determined by the Secretary on 
                the basis of the most recent satisfactory data) 
                bears to the total number of such students in 
                all States.
  [(c) State Defined.--In this section, the term ``State'' 
means each of the 50 States, the District of Columbia, and the 
Commonwealth of Puerto Rico.

  [Subpart 2--Funding Transferability for State and Local Educational 
                                Agencies

[SEC. 6121. SHORT TITLE.

  [This subpart may be cited as the ``State and Local 
Transferability Act''.

[SEC. 6122. PURPOSE.

   [The purpose of this subpart is to allow States and local 
educational agencies the flexibility--
          [(1) to target Federal funds to Federal programs that 
        most effectively address the unique needs of States and 
        localities; and
          [(2) to transfer Federal funds allocated to other 
        activities to allocations for certain activities 
        authorized under title I.

[SEC. 6123. TRANSFERABILITY OF FUNDS.

  [(a) Transfers by States.--
          [(1) In general.--In accordance with this subpart, a 
        State may transfer not more than 50 percent of the 
        nonadministrative State funds (including funds 
        transferred under paragraph (2)) allotted to the State 
        for use for State-level activities under the following 
        provisions for a fiscal year to one or more of the 
        State's allotments for such fiscal year under any other 
        of such provisions:
                  [(A) Section 2113(a)(3).
                  [(B) Section 2412(a)(1).
                  [(C) Subsections (a)(1) (with the agreement 
                of the Governor) and (c)(1) of section 4112 and 
                section 4202(c)(3).
                  [(D) Section 5112(b).
          [(2) Additional funds for title i.--In accordance 
        with this subpart and subject to the 50 percent 
        limitation described in paragraph (1), a State may 
        transfer any funds allotted to the State under a 
        provision listed in paragraph (1) to its allotment 
        under title I.
  [(b) Transfers by Local Educational Agencies.--
          [(1) Authority to transfer funds.--
                  [(A) In general.--In accordance with this 
                subpart, a local educational agency (except a 
                local educational agency identified for 
                improvement under section 1116(c) or subject to 
                corrective action under section 1116(c)(9)) may 
                transfer not more than 50 percent of the funds 
                allocated to it (including funds transferred 
                under subparagraph (C)) under each of the 
                provisions listed in paragraph (2) for a fiscal 
                year to one or more of its allocations for such 
                fiscal year under any other provision listed in 
                paragraph (2).
                  [(B) Agencies identified for improvement.--In 
                accordance with this subpart, a local 
                educational agency identified for improvement 
                under section 1116(c) may transfer not more 
                than 30 percent of the funds allocated to it 
                (including funds transferred under subparagraph 
                (C)) under each of the provisions listed in 
                paragraph (2) for a fiscal year--
                          [(i) to its allocation for school 
                        improvement for such fiscal year under 
                        section 1003; or
                          [(ii) to any other allocation for 
                        such fiscal year if such transferred 
                        funds are used only for local 
                        educational agency improvement 
                        activities consistent with section 
                        1116(c).
                  [(C) Additional funds for title i.--In 
                accordance with this subpart and subject to the 
                percentage limitation described in subparagraph 
                (A) or (B), as applicable, a local educational 
                agency may transfer funds allocated to such 
                agency under any of the provisions listed in 
                paragraph (2) for a fiscal year to its 
                allocation for part A of title I for that 
                fiscal year.
          [(2) Applicable provisions.--A local educational 
        agency may transfer funds under subparagraph (A), (B), 
        or (C) of paragraph (1) from allocations made under 
        each of the following provisions:
                  [(A) Section 2121.
                  [(B) Section 2412(a)(2)(A).
                  [(C) Section 4112(b)(1).
                  [(D) Section 5112(a).
  [(c) No Transfer of Title I Funds.--A State or a local 
educational agency may not transfer under this subpart to any 
other program any funds allotted or allocated to it for part A 
of title I.
  [(d) Modification of Plans and Applications; Notification.--
          [(1) State transfers.--Each State that makes a 
        transfer of funds under this section shall--
                  [(A) modify, to account for such transfer, 
                each State plan, or application submitted by 
                the State, to which such funds relate;
                  [(B) not later than 30 days after the date of 
                such transfer, submit a copy of such modified 
                plan or application to the Secretary; and
                  [(C) not later than 30 days before the 
                effective date of such transfer, notify the 
                Secretary of such transfer.
          [(2) Local transfers.--Each local educational agency 
        that makes a transfer of funds under this section 
        shall--
                  [(A) modify, to account for such transfer, 
                each local plan, or application submitted by 
                the agency, to which such funds relate;
                  [(B) not later than 30 days after the date of 
                such transfer, submit a copy of such modified 
                plan or application to the State; and
                  [(C) not later than 30 days before the 
                effective date of such transfer, notify the 
                State of such transfer.
  [(e) Applicable Rules.--
          [(1) In general.--Except as otherwise provided in 
        this subpart, funds transferred under this section are 
        subject to each of the rules and requirements 
        applicable to the funds under the provision to which 
        the transferred funds are transferred.
          [(2) Consultation.--Each State educational agency or 
        local educational agency that transfers funds under 
        this section shall conduct consultations in accordance 
        with section 9501, if such transfer transfers funds 
        from a program that provides for the participation of 
        students, teachers, or other educational personnel, 
        from private schools.

         [Subpart 3--State and Local Flexibility Demonstration

[SEC. 6131. SHORT TITLE.

  [This subpart may be cited as the ``State and Local 
Flexibility Demonstration Act''.

[SEC. 6132. PURPOSE.

   [The purpose of this subpart is to create options for 
selected State educational agencies and local educational 
agencies--
          [(1) to improve the academic achievement of all 
        students, and to focus the resources of the Federal 
        Government upon such achievement;
          [(2) to improve teacher quality and subject matter 
        mastery, especially in mathematics, reading, and 
        science;
          [(3) to better empower parents, educators, 
        administrators, and schools to effectively address the 
        needs of their children and students;
          [(4) to give participating State educational agencies 
        and local educational agencies greater flexibility in 
        determining how to increase their students' academic 
        achievement and implement education reforms in their 
        schools;
          [(5) to eliminate barriers to implementing effective 
        State and local education reform, while preserving the 
        goals of opportunity for all students and 
        accountability for student progress;
          [(6) to hold participating State educational agencies 
        and local educational agencies accountable for 
        increasing the academic achievement of all students, 
        especially disadvantaged students; and
          [(7) to narrow achievement gaps between the lowest 
        and highest achieving groups of students so that no 
        child is left behind.

[SEC. 6133. GENERAL PROVISION.

  [For purposes of this subpart, any State that is one local 
educational agency shall be considered a State educational 
agency and not a local educational agency.

                [CHAPTER A--STATE FLEXIBILITY AUTHORITY

[SEC. 6141. STATE FLEXIBILITY.

  [(a) Flexibility Authority.--Except as otherwise provided in 
this chapter, the Secretary shall, on a competitive basis, 
grant flexibility authority to not more than seven eligible 
State educational agencies, under which the agencies may 
consolidate and use funds in accordance with section 6142.
  [(b) Definitions.--In this chapter:
          [(1) Eligible state educational agency.--The term 
        ``eligible State educational agency'' means a State 
        educational agency that--
                  [(A) submits an approvable application under 
                subsection (c); and
                  [(B) proposes performance agreements--
                          [(i) that shall be entered into with 
                        not fewer than 4, and not more than 10, 
                        local educational agencies;
                          [(ii) not fewer than half of which 
                        shall be entered into with high-poverty 
                        local educational agencies; and
                          [(iii) that require the local 
                        educational agencies described in 
                        clause (i) to align their use of 
                        consolidated funds under section 6152 
                        with the State educational agency's use 
                        of consolidated funds under section 
                        6142.
          [(2) High-poverty local educational agency.--The term 
        ``high-poverty local educational agency'' means a local 
        educational agency for which 20 percent or more of the 
        children who are age 5 through 17, and served by the 
        local educational agency, are from families with 
        incomes below the poverty line.
  [(c) State Applications.--
          [(1) Applications.--To be eligible to receive 
        flexibility authority under this chapter, a State 
        educational agency shall submit an application to the 
        Secretary at such time, in such manner, and containing 
        such information as the Secretary may require, 
        including--
                  [(A) information demonstrating, to the 
                satisfaction of the Secretary, that the grant 
                of authority offers substantial promise of--
                          [(i) assisting the State educational 
                        agency in making adequate yearly 
                        progress, as defined under section 
                        1111(b)(2); and
                          [(ii) aligning State and local 
                        reforms and assisting the local 
                        educational agencies that enter into 
                        performance agreements with the State 
                        educational agency under paragraph (2) 
                        in making such adequate yearly 
                        progress;
                  [(B) the performance agreements that the 
                State educational agency proposes to enter into 
                with eligible local educational agencies under 
                paragraph (2);
                  [(C) information demonstrating that the State 
                educational agency has consulted with and 
                involved parents, representatives of local 
                educational agencies, and other educators in 
                the development of the terms of the grant of 
                authority;
                  [(D) a provision specifying that the grant of 
                flexibility authority shall be for a term of 
                not more than 5 years;
                  [(E) a list of the programs described in 
                section 6142(b) that are included in the scope 
                of the grant of authority;
                  [(F) a provision specifying that no 
                requirements of any program described in 
                section 6142(b) and included by a State 
                educational agency in the scope of the grant of 
                authority shall apply to that agency, except as 
                otherwise provided in this chapter;
                  [(G) a 5-year plan describing how the State 
                educational agency intends to consolidate and 
                use the funds from programs included in the 
                scope of the grant of authority, for any 
                educational purpose authorized under this Act, 
                in order to make adequate yearly progress and 
                advance the education priorities of the State 
                and the local educational agencies with which 
                the State educational agency enters into 
                performance agreements;
                  [(H) an assurance that the State educational 
                agency will provide parents, teachers, and 
                representatives of local educational agencies 
                and schools with notice and an opportunity to 
                comment on the proposed terms of the grant of 
                authority;
                  [(I) an assurance that the State educational 
                agency, and the local educational agencies with 
                which the State educational agency enters into 
                performance agreements, will use fiscal control 
                and fund accounting procedures that will ensure 
                proper disbursement of, and accounting for, 
                Federal funds consolidated and used under the 
                grant of authority;
                  [(J) an assurance that the State educational 
                agency, and the local educational agencies with 
                which the State educational agency enters into 
                performance agreements, will meet the 
                requirements of all applicable Federal civil 
                rights laws in carrying out the grant of 
                authority, including consolidating and using 
                funds under the grant of authority;
                  [(K) an assurance that, in consolidating and 
                using funds under the grant of authority--
                          [(i) the State educational agency, 
                        and the local educational agencies with 
                        which the State educational agency 
                        enters into performance agreements, 
                        will provide for the equitable 
                        participation of students and 
                        professional staff in private schools 
                        consistent with section 9501; and
                          [(ii) that sections 9502, 9503, and 
                        9504 shall apply to all services and 
                        assistance provided with such funds in 
                        the same manner as such sections apply 
                        to services and assistance provided in 
                        accordance with section 9501;
                  [(L) an assurance that the State educational 
                agency will, for the duration of the grant of 
                authority, use funds consolidated under section 
                6142 only to supplement the amount of funds 
                that would, in the absence of those Federal 
                funds, be made available from non-Federal 
                sources for the education of students 
                participating in programs assisted with the 
                consolidated funds, and not to supplant those 
                funds; and
                  [(M) an assurance that the State educational 
                agency shall, not later than 1 year after the 
                date on which the Secretary makes the grant of 
                authority, and annually thereafter during the 
                term of the grant of authority, disseminate 
                widely to parents and the general public, 
                transmit to the Secretary, distribute to print 
                and broadcast media, and post on the Internet, 
                a report, which shall include a detailed 
                description of how the State educational 
                agency, and the local educational agencies with 
                which the State educational agency enters into 
                performance agreements, used the funds 
                consolidated under the grant of authority to 
                make adequate yearly progress and advance the 
                education priorities of the State and local 
                educational agencies in the State.
          [(2) Proposed performance agreements with local 
        educational agencies.--
                  [(A) In general.--A State educational agency 
                that wishes to receive flexibility authority 
                under this subpart shall propose performance 
                agreements that meet the requirements of 
                clauses (i) and (ii) of subsection (b)(1)(B) 
                (subject to approval of the application or 
                amendment involved under subsection (d) or 
                (e)).
                  [(B) Performance agreements.--Each proposed 
                performance agreement with a local educational 
                agency shall--
                          [(i) contain plans for the local 
                        educational agency to consolidate and 
                        use funds in accordance with section 
                        6152, for activities that are aligned 
                        with the State educational agency's 
                        plan described in paragraph (1)(G);
                          [(ii) be subject to the requirements 
                        of chapter B relating to agreements 
                        between the Secretary and a local 
                        educational agency, except--
                                  [(I) that, as appropriate, 
                                references in that chapter to 
                                the Secretary shall be deemed 
                                to be references to the State 
                                educational agency; and
                                  [(II) as otherwise provided 
                                in this chapter; and
                          [(iii) contain an assurance that the 
                        local educational agency will, for the 
                        duration of the grant of authority, use 
                        funds consolidated under section 6152 
                        only to supplement the amount of funds 
                        that would, in the absence of those 
                        Federal funds, be made available from 
                        non-Federal sources for the education 
                        of students participating in programs 
                        assisted with the consolidated funds, 
                        and not to supplant those funds.
  [(d) Approval and Selection.--The Secretary shall--
          [(1) establish a peer review process to assist in the 
        review of proposed State applications under this 
        section; and
          [(2) appoint individuals to participate in the peer 
        review process who are--
                  [(A) representative of parents, teachers, 
                State educational agencies, and local 
                educational agencies; and
                  [(B) familiar with educational standards, 
                assessments, accountability, curricula, 
                instruction, and staff development, and other 
                diverse educational needs of students.
  [(e) Amendment to Grant of Authority.--
          [(1) In general.--Subject to paragraph (2), the 
        Secretary shall amend the grant of flexibility 
        authority made to a State educational agency under this 
        chapter, in each of the following circumstances:
                  [(A) Reduction in scope of the grant of 
                authority.--Not later than 1 year after 
                receiving a grant of flexibility authority, the 
                State educational agency seeks to amend the 
                grant of authority to remove from the scope of 
                the grant of authority any program described in 
                section 6142(b).
                  [(B) Expansion of scope of the grant of 
                authority.--Not later than 1 year after 
                receiving a grant of flexibility authority, the 
                State educational agency seeks to amend the 
                grant of authority to include in the scope of 
                the grant of authority any additional program 
                described in section 6142(b) or any additional 
                achievement indicators for which the State will 
                be held accountable.
                  [(C) Changes with respect to number of 
                performance agreements.--The State educational 
                agency seeks to amend the grant of authority to 
                include or remove performance agreements that 
                the State educational agency proposes to enter 
                into with eligible local educational agencies, 
                except that in no case may the State 
                educational agency enter into performance 
                agreements that do not meet the requirements of 
                clauses (i) and (ii) of subsection (b)(1)(B).
          [(2) Approval and disapproval.--
                  [(A) Deemed approval.--A proposed amendment 
                to a grant of flexibility authority submitted 
                by a State educational agency pursuant to 
                paragraph (1) shall be deemed to be approved by 
                the Secretary unless the Secretary makes a 
                written determination, prior to the expiration 
                of the 120-day period beginning on the date on 
                which the Secretary received the proposed 
                amendment, that the proposed amendment is not 
                in compliance with this chapter.
                  [(B) Disapproval.--The Secretary shall not 
                finally disapprove the proposed amendment, 
                except after giving the State educational 
                agency notice and an opportunity for a hearing.
                  [(C) Notification.--If the Secretary finds 
                that the proposed amendment is not in 
                compliance, in whole or in part, with this 
                chapter, the Secretary shall--
                          [(i) give the State educational 
                        agency notice and an opportunity for a 
                        hearing; and
                          [(ii) notify the State educational 
                        agency of the finding of noncompliance 
                        and, in such notification, shall--
                                  [(I) cite the specific 
                                provisions in the proposed 
                                amendment that are not in 
                                compliance; and
                                  [(II) request additional 
                                information, only as to the 
                                noncompliant provisions, needed 
                                to make the proposed amendment 
                                compliant.
                  [(D) Response.--If the State educational 
                agency responds to the Secretary's notification 
                described in subparagraph (C)(ii) during the 
                45-day period beginning on the date on which 
                the agency received the notification, and 
                resubmits the proposed amendment with the 
                requested information described in subparagraph 
                (C)(ii)(II), the Secretary shall approve or 
                disapprove such proposed amendment prior to the 
                later of--
                          [(i) the expiration of the 45-day 
                        period beginning on the date on which 
                        the proposed amendment is resubmitted; 
                        or
                          [(ii) the expiration of the 120-day 
                        period described in subparagraph (A).
                  [(E) Failure to respond.--If the State 
                educational agency does not respond to the 
                Secretary's notification described in 
                subparagraph (C)(ii) during the 45-day period 
                beginning on the date on which the agency 
                received the notification, such proposed 
                amendment shall be deemed to be disapproved.
          [(3) Treatment of program funds withdrawn from grant 
        of authority.--Beginning on the effective date of an 
        amendment executed under paragraph (1)(A), each program 
        requirement of each program removed from the scope of a 
        grant of authority shall apply to the use of funds made 
        available under the program by the State educational 
        agency and each local educational agency with which the 
        State educational agency has a performance agreement.

[SEC. 6142. CONSOLIDATION AND USE OF FUNDS.

  [(a) In General.--
          [(1) Authority.--Under a grant of flexibility 
        authority made under this chapter, a State educational 
        agency may consolidate Federal funds described in 
        subsection (b) and made available to the agency, and 
        use such funds for any educational purpose authorized 
        under this Act.
          [(2) Program requirements.--Except as otherwise 
        provided in this chapter, a State educational agency 
        may use funds under paragraph (1) notwithstanding the 
        program requirements of the program under which the 
        funds were made available to the State.
  [(b) Eligible Funds and Programs.--
          [(1) Funds.--The funds described in this subsection 
        are funds, for State-level activities and State 
        administration, that are described in the following 
        provisions:
                  [(A) Section 1004.
                  [(B) Paragraphs (4) and (5) of section 
                1202(d).
                  [(C) Section 2113(a)(3).
                  [(D) Section 2412(a)(1).
                  [(E) Subsections (a) (with the agreement of 
                the Governor), (b)(2), and (c)(1) of section 
                4112.
                  [(F) Paragraphs (2) and (3) of section 
                4202(c).
                  [(G) Section 5112(b).
          [(2) Programs.--The programs described in this 
        subsection are the programs authorized to be carried 
        out with funds described in paragraph (1).
  [(c) Special Rule.--A State educational agency that receives 
a grant of flexibility authority under this chapter--
          [(1) shall ensure that the funds described in section 
        5112(a) are allocated to local educational agencies in 
        the State in accordance with section 5112(a); but
          [(2) may specify how the local educational agencies 
        shall use the allocated funds.

[SEC. 6143. PERFORMANCE REVIEW AND PENALTIES.

  [(a) Midterm Review.--
          [(1) Failure to make adequate yearly progress.--If, 
        during the term of a grant of flexibility authority 
        under this chapter, a State educational agency fails to 
        make adequate yearly progress for 2 consecutive years, 
        the Secretary shall, after providing notice and an 
        opportunity for a hearing, terminate the grant of 
        authority promptly.
          [(2) Noncompliance.--The Secretary may, after 
        providing notice and an opportunity for a hearing 
        (including the opportunity to provide evidence as 
        described in paragraph (3)), terminate a grant of 
        flexibility authority for a State if there is evidence 
        that the State educational agency involved has failed 
        to comply with the terms of the grant of authority.
          [(3) Evidence.--If a State educational agency 
        believes that a determination of the Secretary under 
        this subsection is in error for statistical or other 
        substantive reasons, the State educational agency may 
        provide supporting evidence to the Secretary, and the 
        Secretary shall consider that evidence before making a 
        final termination determination under this subsection.
  [(b) Final Review.--
          [(1) In general.--If, at the end of the 5-year term 
        of a grant of flexibility authority made under this 
        chapter, the State educational agency has not met the 
        requirements described in section 6141(c), the 
        Secretary may not renew the grant of flexibility 
        authority under section 6144.
          [(2) Compliance.--Beginning on the date on which such 
        term ends, the State educational agency, and the local 
        educational agencies with which the State educational 
        agency has entered into performance agreements, shall 
        be required to comply with each of the program 
        requirements in effect on such date for each program 
        that was included in the grant of authority.

[SEC. 6144. RENEWAL OF GRANT OF FLEXIBILITY AUTHORITY.

  [(a) In General.--Except as provided in section 6143 and in 
accordance with this section, if a State educational agency has 
met, by the end of the original 5-year term of a grant of 
flexibility authority under this chapter, the requirements 
described in section 6141(c), the Secretary shall renew a grant 
of flexibility authority for one additional 5-year term.
  [(b) Renewal.--The Secretary may not renew a grant of 
flexibility authority under this chapter unless, not later than 
6 months before the end of the original term of the grant of 
authority, the State educational agency seeking the renewal 
notifies the Secretary, and the local educational agencies with 
which the State educational agency has entered into performance 
agreements, of the agency's intention to renew the grant of 
authority.
  [(c) Effective Date.--A renewal under this section shall be 
effective on the later of--
          [(1) the expiration of the original term of the grant 
        of authority; or
          [(2) the date on which the State educational agency 
        seeking the renewal provides to the Secretary all data 
        required for the application described in section 
        6141(c).

              [CHAPTER B--LOCAL FLEXIBILITY DEMONSTRATION

[SEC. 6151. LOCAL FLEXIBILITY DEMONSTRATION AGREEMENTS.

  [(a) Authority.--Except as otherwise provided in this 
chapter, the Secretary shall, on a competitive basis, enter 
into local flexibility demonstration agreements--
          [(1) with local educational agencies that submit 
        approvable proposed agreements under subsection (c) and 
        that are selected under subsection (b); and
          [(2) under which those agencies may consolidate and 
        use funds in accordance with section 6152.
  [(b) Selection of Local Educational Agencies.--
          [(1) In general.--Subject to paragraph (2), the 
        Secretary shall enter into local flexibility 
        demonstration agreements under this chapter with not 
        more than 80 local educational agencies. Each local 
        educational agency shall be selected on a competitive 
        basis from among those local educational agencies 
        that--
                  [(A) submit a proposed local flexibility 
                demonstration agreement under subsection (c) to 
                the Secretary and demonstrate, to the 
                satisfaction of the Secretary, that the 
                agreement--
                          [(i) has a substantial promise of 
                        assisting the local educational agency 
                        in meeting the State's definition of 
                        adequate yearly progress, advancing the 
                        education priorities of the local 
                        educational agency, meeting the general 
                        purposes of the programs included under 
                        this chapter and the purposes of this 
                        part, improving student achievement, 
                        and narrowing achievement gaps in 
                        accordance with section 1111(b);
                          [(ii) meets the requirements of this 
                        chapter; and
                          [(iii) contains a plan to consolidate 
                        and use funds in accordance with 
                        section 6152 in order to meet the 
                        State's definition of adequate yearly 
                        progress and the local educational 
                        agency's specific, measurable goals for 
                        improving student achievement and 
                        narrowing achievement gaps; and
                  [(B) have consulted and involved parents and 
                other educators in the development of the 
                proposed local flexibility demonstration 
                agreement.
          [(2) Geographic distribution.--
                  [(A) Initial agreements.--The Secretary may 
                enter into not more than three local 
                flexibility demonstration agreements under this 
                chapter with local educational agencies in each 
                State that does not have a grant of flexibility 
                authority under chapter A.
                  [(B) Urban and rural areas.--If more than 
                three local educational agencies in a State 
                submit approvable local flexibility 
                demonstration agreements under this chapter, 
                the Secretary shall select local educational 
                agencies with which to enter into such 
                agreements in a manner that ensures an 
                equitable distribution among such agencies 
                serving urban and rural areas.
                  [(C) Priority of states to enter into state 
                flexibility demonstration agreements.--
                Notwithstanding any other provision of this 
                part, a local educational agency may not seek 
                to enter into a local flexibility demonstration 
                agreement under this chapter if that agency is 
                located in a State for which the State 
                educational agency--
                          [(i) has, not later than 4 months 
                        after the date of enactment of the No 
                        Child Left Behind Act of 2001, notified 
                        the Secretary of its intent to apply 
                        for a grant of flexibility authority 
                        under chapter A and, within such period 
                        of time as the Secretary may establish, 
                        is provided with such authority by the 
                        Secretary; or
                          [(ii) has, at any time after such 
                        period, been granted flexibility 
                        authority under chapter A.
  [(c) Required Terms of Local Flexibility Demonstration 
Agreement.--Each local flexibility demonstration agreement 
entered into with the Secretary under this chapter shall 
contain each of the following terms:
          [(1) Duration.--The local flexibility demonstration 
        agreement shall be for a term of 5 years.
          [(2) Application of program requirements.--The local 
        flexibility demonstration agreement shall provide that 
        no requirements of any program described in section 
        6152 and included by a local educational agency in the 
        scope of its agreement shall apply to that agency, 
        except as otherwise provided in this chapter.
          [(3) List of programs.--The local flexibility 
        demonstration agreement shall list which of the 
        programs described in section 6152 are included in the 
        scope of the agreement.
          [(4) Use of funds to improve student achievement.--
        The local flexibility demonstration agreement shall 
        contain a 5-year plan describing how the local 
        educational agency intends to consolidate and use the 
        funds from programs included in the scope of the 
        agreement for any educational purpose authorized under 
        this Act to advance the education priorities of the 
        local educational agency, meet the general purposes of 
        the included programs, improve student achievement, and 
        narrow achievement gaps in accordance with section 
        1111(b).
          [(5) Local input.--The local flexibility 
        demonstration agreement shall contain an assurance that 
        the local educational agency will provide parents, 
        teachers, and representatives of schools with notice 
        and an opportunity to comment on the proposed terms of 
        the local flexibility demonstration agreement.
          [(6) Fiscal responsibilities.--The local flexibility 
        demonstration agreement shall contain an assurance that 
        the local educational agency will use fiscal control 
        and fund accounting procedures that will ensure proper 
        disbursement of, and accounting for, Federal funds 
        consolidated and used under the agreement.
          [(7) Civil rights.--The local flexibility 
        demonstration agreement shall contain an assurance that 
        the local educational agency will meet the requirements 
        of all applicable Federal civil rights laws in carrying 
        out the agreement and in consolidating and using the 
        funds under the agreement.
          [(8) Private school participation.--The local 
        flexibility demonstration agreement shall contain an 
        assurance that the local educational agency agrees that 
        in consolidating and using funds under the agreement--
                  [(A) the local educational agency, will 
                provide for the equitable participation of 
                students and professional staff in private 
                schools consistent with section 9501; and
                  [(B) that sections 9502, 9503, and 9504 shall 
                apply to all services and assistance provided 
                with such funds in the same manner as such 
                sections apply to services and assistance 
                provided in accordance with section 9501.
          [(9) Supplanting.--The local flexibility 
        demonstration agreement shall contain an assurance that 
        the local educational agency will, for the duration of 
        the grant of authority, use funds consolidated under 
        section 6152 only to supplement the amount of funds 
        that would, in the absence of those Federal funds, be 
        made available from non-Federal sources for the 
        education of students participating in programs 
        assisted with the consolidated funds, and not to 
        supplant those funds.
          [(10) Annual reports.--The local flexibility 
        demonstration agreement shall contain an assurance that 
        the local educational agency shall, not later than 1 
        year after the date on which the Secretary enters into 
        the agreement, and annually thereafter during the term 
        of the agreement, disseminate widely to parents and the 
        general public, transmit to the Secretary, and the 
        State educational agency for the State in which the 
        local educational agency is located, distribute to 
        print and broadcast media, and post on the Internet, a 
        report that includes a detailed description of how the 
        local educational agency used the funds consolidated 
        under the agreement to improve student academic 
        achievement and reduce achievement gaps.
  [(d) Peer Review.--The Secretary shall--
          [(1) establish a peer review process to assist in the 
        review of proposed local flexibility demonstration 
        agreements under this chapter; and
          [(2) appoint individuals to the peer review process 
        who are representative of parents, teachers, State 
        educational agencies, and local educational agencies, 
        and who are familiar with educational standards, 
        assessments, accountability, curriculum, instruction 
        and staff development, and other diverse educational 
        needs of students.
  [(e) Amendment to Performance Agreement.--
          [(1) In general.--In each of the following 
        circumstances, the Secretary shall amend a local 
        flexibility demonstration agreement entered into with a 
        local educational agency under this chapter:
                  [(A) Reduction in scope of local flexibility 
                demonstration agreement.--Not later than 1 year 
                after entering into a local flexibility 
                demonstration agreement, the local educational 
                agency seeks to amend the agreement to remove 
                from the scope any program described in section 
                6152.
                  [(B) Expansion of scope of local flexibility 
                demonstration agreement.--Not later than 1 year 
                after entering into the local flexibility 
                demonstration agreement, a local educational 
                agency seeks to amend the agreement to include 
                in its scope any additional program described 
                in section 6251 or any additional achievement 
                indicators for which the local educational 
                agency will be held accountable.
          [(2) Approval and disapproval.--
                  [(A) Deemed approval.--A proposed amendment 
                to a local flexibility demonstration agreement 
                pursuant to paragraph (1) shall be deemed to be 
                approved by the Secretary unless the Secretary 
                makes a written determination, prior to the 
                expiration of the 120-day period beginning on 
                the date on which the Secretary received the 
                proposed amendment, that the proposed amendment 
                is not in compliance with this chapter.
                  [(B) Disapproval.--The Secretary shall not 
                finally disapprove the proposed amendment, 
                except after giving the local educational 
                agency notice and an opportunity for a hearing.
                  [(C) Notification.--If the Secretary finds 
                that the proposed amendment is not in 
                compliance, in whole or in part, with this 
                chapter, the Secretary shall--
                          [(i) give the local educational 
                        agency notice and an opportunity for a 
                        hearing; and
                          [(ii) notify the local educational 
                        agency of the finding of noncompliance 
                        and, in such notification, shall--
                                  [(I) cite the specific 
                                provisions in the proposed 
                                amendment that are not in 
                                compliance; and
                                  [(II) request additional 
                                information, only as to the 
                                noncompliant provisions, needed 
                                to make the proposed amendment 
                                compliant.
                  [(D) Response.--If the local educational 
                agency responds to the Secretary's notification 
                described in subparagraph (C)(ii) during the 
                45-day period beginning on the date on which 
                the agency received the notification, and 
                resubmits the proposed amendment with the 
                requested information described in subparagraph 
                (C)(ii)(II), the Secretary shall approve or 
                disapprove such proposed amendment prior to the 
                later of--
                          [(i) the expiration of the 45-day 
                        period beginning on the date on which 
                        the proposed amendment is resubmitted; 
                        or
                          [(ii) the expiration of the 120-day 
                        period described in subparagraph (A).
                  [(E) Failure to respond.--If the local 
                educational agency does not respond to the 
                Secretary's notification described in 
                subparagraph (C)(ii) during the 45-day period 
                beginning on the date on which the agency 
                received the notification, such proposed 
                amendment shall be deemed to be disapproved.
          [(3) Treatment of program funds withdrawn from 
        agreement.--Beginning on the effective date of an 
        amendment executed under paragraph (1)(A), each program 
        requirement of each program removed from the scope of a 
        local flexibility demonstration agreement shall apply 
        to the use of funds made available under the program by 
        the local educational agency.

[SEC. 6152. CONSOLIDATION AND USE OF FUNDS.

  [(a) In General.--
          [(1) Authority.--Under a local flexibility 
        demonstration agreement entered into under this 
        chapter, a local educational agency may consolidate 
        Federal funds made available to the agency under the 
        provisions listed in subsection (b) and use such funds 
        for any educational purpose permitted under this Act.
          [(2) Program requirements.--Except as otherwise 
        provided in this chapter, a local educational agency 
        may use funds under paragraph (1) notwithstanding the 
        program requirements of the program under which the 
        funds were made available to the agency.
  [(b) Eligible Programs.--Program funds made available to 
local educational agencies on the basis of a formula under the 
following provisions may be consolidated and used under 
subsection (a):
          [(1) Subpart 2 of part A of title II.
          [(2) Subpart 1 of part D of title II.
          [(3) Subpart 1 of part A of title IV.
          [(4) Subpart 1 of part A of title V.

[SEC. 6153. LIMITATIONS ON ADMINISTRATIVE EXPENDITURES.

  [Each local educational agency that has entered into a local 
flexibility demonstration agreement with the Secretary under 
this chapter may use for administrative purposes not more than 
4 percent of the total amount of funds allocated to the agency 
under the programs included in the scope of the agreement.

[SEC. 6154. PERFORMANCE REVIEW AND PENALTIES.

  [(a) Midterm Review.--
          [(1) Failure to make adequate yearly progress.--If, 
        during the term of a local flexibility demonstration 
        agreement, a local educational agency fails to make 
        adequate yearly progress for 2 consecutive years, the 
        Secretary shall, after notice and opportunity for a 
        hearing, promptly terminate the agreement.
          [(2) Noncompliance.--The Secretary may, after 
        providing notice and an opportunity for a hearing 
        (including the opportunity to provide information as 
        provided for in paragraph (3)), terminate a local 
        flexibility demonstration agreement under this chapter 
        if there is evidence that the local educational agency 
        has failed to comply with the terms of the agreement.
          [(3) Evidence.--If a local educational agency 
        believes that the Secretary's determination under this 
        subsection is in error for statistical or other 
        substantive reasons, the local educational agency may 
        provide supporting evidence to the Secretary, and the 
        Secretary shall consider that evidence before making a 
        final early termination determination.
  [(b) Final Review.--If, at the end of the 5-year term of a 
local flexibility demonstration agreement entered into under 
this chapter, the local educational agency has not met the 
requirements described in section 6151(c), the Secretary may 
not renew the agreement under section 6155 and, beginning on 
the date on which such term ends, the local educational agency 
shall be required to comply with each of the program 
requirements in effect on such date for each program included 
in the local flexibility demonstration agreement.

[SEC. 6155. RENEWAL OF LOCAL FLEXIBILITY DEMONSTRATION AGREEMENT.

  [(a) In General.--Except as provided in section 6154 and in 
accordance with this section, the Secretary shall renew for one 
additional 5-year term a local flexibility demonstration 
agreement entered into under this chapter if the local 
educational agency has met, by the end of the original term of 
the agreement, the requirements described in section 6151(c).
  [(b) Notification.--The Secretary may not renew a local 
flexibility demonstration agreement under this chapter unless, 
not less than 6 months before the end of the original term of 
the agreement, the local educational agency seeking the renewal 
notifies the Secretary of its intention to renew.
  [(c) Effective Date.--A renewal under this section shall be 
effective at the end of the original term of the agreement or 
on the date on which the local educational agency seeking 
renewal provides to the Secretary all data required under the 
agreement, whichever is later.

[SEC. 6156. REPORTS.

  [(a) Transmittal to Congress.--Not later than 60 days after 
the Secretary receives a report described in section 
6151(b)(10), the Secretary shall make the report available to 
the Committee on Education and the Workforce of the House of 
Representatives and the Committee on Health, Education, Labor, 
and Pensions of the Senate.
  [(b) Limitation.--A State in which a local educational agency 
that has a local flexibility demonstration agreement is located 
may not require such local educational agency to provide any 
application information with respect to the programs included 
within the scope of that agreement other than that information 
that is required to be included in the report described in 
section 6151(b)(10).

     [Subpart 4--State Accountability for Adequate Yearly Progress

[SEC. 6161. ACCOUNTABILITY FOR ADEQUATE YEARLY PROGRESS.

   [In the case of a State educational agency that has a plan 
approved under subpart 1 of part A of title I after the date of 
enactment of the No Child Left Behind Act of 2001, and has a 
plan approved under subpart 1 of part A of title III of such 
Act after such date of enactment, the Secretary shall annually, 
starting with the beginning of the first school year following 
the first two school years for which such plans were 
implemented, review whether the State has--
          [(1) made adequate yearly progress, as defined in 
        section 1111(b)(2)(B), for each of the groups of 
        students described in section 1111(b)(2)(C)(v); and
          [(2) met its annual measurable achievement objectives 
        under section 3122(a).

[SEC. 6162. PEER REVIEW.

  [The Secretary shall use a peer review process to review, 
based on data from the State assessments administered under 
section 1111(b)(3) and on data from the evaluations conducted 
under section 3121, whether the State has failed to make 
adequate yearly progress for 2 consecutive years or whether the 
State has met its annual measurable achievement objectives.

[SEC. 6163. TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE.

  [(a) Provision of Assistance.--
          [(1) Adequate yearly progress.--Based on the review 
        described in section 6161(1), the Secretary shall 
        provide technical assistance to a State that has failed 
        to make adequate yearly progress, as defined in section 
        1111(b)(2), for 2 consecutive years. The Secretary 
        shall provide such assistance not later than the 
        beginning of the first school year that begins after 
        such determination is made.
          [(2) Annual measurable achievement objectives.--Based 
        on the reviews described in section 6161(2), the 
        Secretary may provide technical assistance to a State 
        that has failed to meet its annual measurable 
        achievement objectives under section 3122(a) for 2 
        consecutive years. The Secretary shall provide such 
        assistance not later than the beginning of the first 
        school year that begins after such determination is 
        made.
  [(b) Characteristics.--The technical assistance described in 
subsection (a) shall--
          [(1) be valid, reliable and rigorous; and
          [(2) provide constructive feedback to help the State 
        make adequate yearly progress, as defined in section 
        1111(b)(2), or meet the annual measurable achievement 
        objectives under section 3122(a).

[SEC. 6164. REPORT TO CONGRESS.

   [Beginning with the school year that begins in 2005, the 
Secretary shall submit an annual report to the Committee on 
Education and the Workforce of the House of Representatives and 
the Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions of the 
Senate containing the following:
          [(1) A list of each State that has not made adequate 
        yearly progress based on the review conducted under 
        section 6161(1).
          [(2) A list of each State that has not met its annual 
        measurable achievement objectives based on the review 
        conducted under section 6161(2).
          [(3) The information reported by the State to the 
        Secretary pursuant to section 1119(a).
          [(4) A description of any technical assistance 
        provided pursuant to section 6163.

                  [PART B--RURAL EDUCATION INITIATIVE

[SEC. 6201. SHORT TITLE.

  [This part may be cited as the ``Rural Education Achievement 
Program''.

[SEC. 6202. PURPOSE.

   [It is the purpose of this part to address the unique needs 
of rural school districts that frequently--
          [(1) lack the personnel and resources needed to 
        compete effectively for Federal competitive grants; and
          [(2) receive formula grant allocations in amounts too 
        small to be effective in meeting their intended 
        purposes.

          [Subpart 1--Small, Rural School Achievement Program

[SEC. 6211. USE OF APPLICABLE FUNDING.

  [(a) Alternative Uses.--
          [(1) In general.--Notwithstanding any other provision 
        of law, an eligible local educational agency may use 
        the applicable funding that the agency is eligible to 
        receive from the State educational agency for a fiscal 
        year to carry out local activities authorized under any 
        of the following provisions:
                  [(A) Part A of title I.
                  [(B) Part A or D of title II.
                  [(C) Title III.
                  [(D) Part A or B of title IV.
                  [(E) Part A of title V.
          [(2) Notification.--An eligible local educational 
        agency shall notify the State educational agency of the 
        local educational agency's intention to use the 
        applicable funding in accordance with paragraph (1), by 
        a date that is established by the State educational 
        agency for the notification.
  [(b) Eligibility.--
          [(1) In general.--A local educational agency shall be 
        eligible to use the applicable funding in accordance 
        with subsection (a) if--
                  [(A)(i)(I) the total number of students in 
                average daily attendance at all of the schools 
                served by the local educational agency is fewer 
                than 600; or
                  [(II) each county in which a school served by 
                the local educational agency is located has a 
                total population density of fewer than 10 
                persons per square mile; and
                  [(ii) all of the schools served by the local 
                educational agency are designated with a school 
                locale code of 7 or 8, as determined by the 
                Secretary; or
                  [(B) the agency meets the criteria 
                established in subparagraph (A)(i) and the 
                Secretary, in accordance with paragraph (2), 
                grants the local educational agency's request 
                to waive the criteria described in subparagraph 
                (A)(ii).
          [(2) Certification.--The Secretary shall determine 
        whether to waive the criteria described in paragraph 
        (1)(A)(ii) based on a demonstration by the local 
        educational agency, and concurrence by the State 
        educational agency, that the local educational agency 
        is located in an area defined as rural by a 
        governmental agency of the State.
  [(c) Applicable Funding Defined.--In this section, the term 
``applicable funding'' means funds provided under any of the 
following provisions:
          [(1) Subpart 2 and section 2412(a)(2)(A) of title II.
          [(2) Section 4114.
          [(3) Part A of title V.
  [(d) Disbursement.--Each State educational agency that 
receives applicable funding for a fiscal year shall disburse 
the applicable funding to local educational agencies for 
alternative uses under this section for the fiscal year at the 
same time as the State educational agency disburses the 
applicable funding to local educational agencies that do not 
intend to use the applicable funding for such alternative uses 
for the fiscal year.
  [(e) Applicable Rules.--Applicable funding under this section 
shall be available to carry out local activities authorized 
under subsection (a).

[SEC. 6212. GRANT PROGRAM AUTHORIZED.

  [(a) In General.--The Secretary is authorized to award grants 
to eligible local educational agencies to enable the local 
educational agencies to carry out activities authorized under 
any of the following provisions:
          [(1) Part A of title I.
          [(2) Part A or D of title II.
          [(3) Title III.
          [(4) Part A or B of title IV.
          [(5) Part A of title V.
  [(b) Allocation.--
          [(1) In general.--Except as provided in paragraph 
        (3), the Secretary shall award a grant under subsection 
        (a) to a local educational agency eligible under 
        section 6211(b) for a fiscal year in an amount equal to 
        the initial amount determined under paragraph (2) for 
        the fiscal year minus the total amount received by the 
        agency under the provisions of law described in section 
        6211(c) for the preceding fiscal year.
          [(2) Determination of initial amount.--The initial 
        amount referred to in paragraph (1) is equal to $100 
        multiplied by the total number of students in excess of 
        50 students, in average daily attendance at the schools 
        served by the local educational agency, plus $20,000, 
        except that the initial amount may not exceed $60,000.
          [(3) Ratable adjustment.--
                  [(A) In general.--If the amount made 
                available to carry out this section for any 
                fiscal year is not sufficient to pay in full 
                the amounts that local educational agencies are 
                eligible to receive under paragraph (1) for 
                such year, the Secretary shall ratably reduce 
                such amounts for such year.
                  [(B) Additional amounts.--If additional funds 
                become available for making payments under 
                paragraph (1) for such fiscal year, payments 
                that were reduced under subparagraph (A) shall 
                be increased on the same basis as such payments 
                were reduced.
  [(c) Disbursement.--The Secretary shall disburse the funds 
awarded to a local educational agency under this section for a 
fiscal year not later than July 1 of that fiscal year.
  [(d) Special Eligibility Rule.--A local educational agency 
that is eligible to receive a grant under this subpart for a 
fiscal year is not eligible to receive funds for such fiscal 
year under subpart 2.

[SEC. 6213. ACCOUNTABILITY.

  [(a) Academic Achievement Assessment.--Each local educational 
agency that uses or receives funds under this subpart for a 
fiscal year shall administer an assessment that is consistent 
with section 1111(b)(3).
  [(b) Determination Regarding Continuing Participation.--Each 
State educational agency that receives funding under the 
provisions of law described in section 6211(c) shall--
          [(1) after the third year that a local educational 
        agency in the State participates in a program under 
        this subpart and on the basis of the results of the 
        assessments described in subsection (a), determine 
        whether the local educational agency participating in 
        the program made adequate yearly progress, as described 
        in section 1111(b)(2);
          [(2) permit only those local educational agencies 
        that participated and made adequate yearly progress, as 
        described in section 1111(b)(2), to continue to 
        participate; and
          [(3) permit those local educational agencies that 
        participated and failed to make adequate yearly 
        progress, as described in section 1111(b)(2), to 
        continue to participate only if such local educational 
        agencies use applicable funding under this subpart to 
        carry out the requirements of section 1116.

            [Subpart 2--Rural and Low-Income School Program

[SEC. 6221. PROGRAM AUTHORIZED.

  [(a) Grants to States.--
          [(1) In general.--From amounts appropriated under 
        section 6234 for this subpart for a fiscal year that 
        are not reserved under subsection (c), the Secretary 
        shall award grants (from allotments made under 
        paragraph (2)) for the fiscal year to State educational 
        agencies that have applications submitted under section 
        6223 approved to enable the State educational agencies 
        to award grants to eligible local educational agencies 
        for local authorized activities described in section 
        6222(a).
          [(2) Allotment.--From amounts described in paragraph 
        (1) for a fiscal year, the Secretary shall allot to 
        each State educational agency for that fiscal year an 
        amount that bears the same ratio to those amounts as 
        the number of students in average daily attendance 
        served by eligible local educational agencies in the 
        State for that fiscal year bears to the number of all 
        such students served by eligible local educational 
        agencies in all States for that fiscal year.
          [(3) Specially qualified agencies.--
                  [(A) Eligibility and application.--If a State 
                educational agency elects not to participate in 
                the program under this subpart or does not have 
                an application submitted under section 6223 
                approved, a specially qualified agency in such 
                State desiring a grant under this subpart may 
                submit an application under such section 
                directly to the Secretary to receive an award 
                under this subpart.
                  [(B) Direct awards.--The Secretary may award, 
                on a competitive basis or by formula, the 
                amount the State educational agency is eligible 
                to receive under paragraph (2) directly to a 
                specially qualified agency in the State that 
                has submitted an application in accordance with 
                subparagraph (A) and obtained approval of the 
                application.
                  [(C) Specially qualified agency defined.--In 
                this subpart, the term ``specially qualified 
                agency'' means an eligible local educational 
                agency served by a State educational agency 
                that does not participate in a program under 
                this subpart in a fiscal year, that may apply 
                directly to the Secretary for a grant in such 
                year under this subsection.
  [(b) Local Awards.--
          [(1) Eligibility.--A local educational agency shall 
        be eligible to receive a grant under this subpart if--
                  [(A) 20 percent or more of the children ages 
                5 through 17 years served by the local 
                educational agency are from families with 
                incomes below the poverty line; and
                  [(B) all of the schools served by the agency 
                are designated with a school locale code of 6, 
                7, or 8, as determined by the Secretary.
          [(2) Award basis.--A State educational agency shall 
        award grants to eligible local educational agencies--
                  [(A) on a competitive basis;
                  [(B) according to a formula based on the 
                number of students in average daily attendance 
                served by the eligible local educational 
                agencies or schools in the State; or
                  [(C) according to an alternative formula, if, 
                prior to awarding the grants, the State 
                educational agency demonstrates, to the 
                satisfaction of the Secretary, that the 
                alternative formula enables the State 
                educational agency to allot the grant funds in 
                a manner that serves equal or greater 
                concentrations of children from families with 
                incomes below the poverty line, relative to the 
                concentrations that would be served if the 
                State educational agency used the formula 
                described in subparagraph (B).
  [(c) Reservations.--From amounts appropriated under section 
6234 for this subpart for a fiscal year, the Secretary shall 
reserve--
          [(1) one-half of 1 percent to make awards to 
        elementary schools or secondary schools operated or 
        supported by the Bureau of Indian Affairs, to carry out 
        the activities authorized under this subpart; and
          [(2) one-half of 1 percent to make awards to the 
        outlying areas in accordance with their respective 
        needs, to carry out the activities authorized under 
        this subpart.

[SEC. 6222. USES OF FUNDS.

  [(a) Local Awards.--Grant funds awarded to local educational 
agencies under this subpart shall be used for any of the 
following:
          [(1) Teacher recruitment and retention, including the 
        use of signing bonuses and other financial incentives.
          [(2) Teacher professional development, including 
        programs that train teachers to utilize technology to 
        improve teaching and to train special needs teachers.
          [(3) Educational technology, including software and 
        hardware, as described in part D of title II.
          [(4) Parental involvement activities.
          [(5) Activities authorized under the Safe and Drug-
        Free Schools program under part A of title IV.
          [(6) Activities authorized under part A of title I.
          [(7) Activities authorized under title III.
  [(b) Administrative Costs.--A State educational agency 
receiving a grant under this subpart may not use more than 5 
percent of the amount of the grant for State administrative 
costs and to provide technical assistance to eligible local 
educational agencies.

[SEC. 6223. APPLICATIONS.

  [(a) In General.--Each State educational agency or specially 
qualified agency desiring to receive a grant under this subpart 
shall submit an application to the Secretary at such time, in 
such manner, and accompanied by such information as the 
Secretary may require.
  [(b) Contents.--At a minimum, each application submitted 
under subsection (a) shall include information on specific 
measurable goals and objectives to be achieved through the 
activities carried out through the grant, which may include 
specific educational goals and objectives relating to--
          [(1) increased student academic achievement;
          [(2) decreased student dropout rates; or
          [(3) such other factors as the State educational 
        agency or specially qualified agency may choose to 
        measure.

[SEC. 6224. ACCOUNTABILITY.

  [(a) State Report.--Each State educational agency that 
receives a grant under this subpart shall prepare and submit an 
annual report to the Secretary. The report shall describe--
          [(1) the method the State educational agency used to 
        award grants to eligible local educational agencies, 
        and to provide assistance to schools, under this 
        subpart;
          [(2) how local educational agencies and schools used 
        funds provided under this subpart; and
          [(3) the degree to which progress has been made 
        toward meeting the goals and objectives described in 
        the application submitted under section 6223.
  [(b) Specially Qualified Agency Report.--Each specially 
qualified agency that receives a grant under this subpart shall 
provide an annual report to the Secretary. Such report shall 
describe--
          [(1) how such agency uses funds provided under this 
        subpart; and
          [(2) the degree to which progress has been made 
        toward meeting the goals and objectives described in 
        the application submitted under section 6223.
  [(c) Report to Congress.--The Secretary shall prepare and 
submit to the Committee on Education and the Workforce of the 
House of Representatives and the Committee on Health, 
Education, Labor, and Pensions of the Senate a biennial report. 
The report shall describe--
          [(1) the methods the State educational agencies used 
        to award grants to eligible local educational agencies, 
        and to provide assistance to schools, under this 
        subpart;local educational agencies and schools used 
        funds provided under this subpart; and
          [(3) the degree to which progress has been made 
        toward meeting the goals and objectives described in 
        the applications submitted under section 6223.
  [(d) Academic Achievement Assessment.--Each local educational 
agency or specially qualified agency that receives a grant 
under this subpart for a fiscal year shall administer an 
assessment that is consistent with section 1111(b)(3).
  [(e) Determination Regarding Continuing Participation.--Each 
State educational agency or specially qualified agency that 
receives a grant under this subpart shall--
          [(1) after the third year that a local educational 
        agency or specially qualified agency in the State 
        receives funds under this subpart, and on the basis of 
        the results of the assessments described in subsection 
        (d)--
                  [(A) in the case of a local educational 
                agency, determine whether the local educational 
                agency made adequate yearly progress, as 
                described in section 1111(b)(2); and
                  [(B) in the case of a specially qualified 
                agency, submit to the Secretary information 
                that would allow the Secretary to determine 
                whether the specially qualified agency has made 
                adequate yearly progress, as described in 
                section 1111(b)(2);
          [(2) permit only those local educational agencies or 
        specially qualified agencies that made adequate yearly 
        progress, as described in section 1111(b)(2), to 
        continue to receive grants under this subpart; and
          [(3) permit those local educational agencies or 
        specially qualified agencies that failed to make 
        adequate yearly progress, as described in section 
        1111(b)(2), to continue to receive such grants only if 
        the State educational agency disbursed such grants to 
        the local educational agencies or specially qualified 
        agencies to carry out the requirements of section 1116.

                     [Subpart 3--General Provisions

[SEC. 6231. ANNUAL AVERAGE DAILY ATTENDANCE DETERMINATION.

  [(a) Census Determination.--Each local educational agency 
desiring a grant under section 6212 and each local educational 
agency or specially qualified agency desiring a grant under 
subpart 2 shall--
          [(1) not later than December 1 of each year, conduct 
        a census to determine the number of students in average 
        daily attendance in kindergarten through grade 12 at 
        the schools served by the agency; and
          [(2) not later than March 1 of each year, submit the 
        number described in paragraph (1) to the Secretary (and 
        to the State educational agency, in the case of a local 
        educational agency seeking a grant under subpart (2)).
  [(b) Penalty.--If the Secretary determines that a local 
educational agency or specially qualified agency has knowingly 
submitted false information under subsection (a) for the 
purpose of gaining additional funds under section 6212 or 
subpart 2, then the agency shall be fined an amount equal to 
twice the difference between the amount the agency received 
under this section and the correct amount the agency would have 
received under section 6212 or subpart 2 if the agency had 
submitted accurate information under subsection (a).

[SEC. 6232. SUPPLEMENT, NOT SUPPLANT.

  [Funds made available under subpart 1 or subpart 2 shall be 
used to supplement, and not supplant, any other Federal, State, 
or local education funds.

[SEC. 6233. RULE OF CONSTRUCTION.

  [Nothing in this part shall be construed to prohibit a local 
educational agency that enters into cooperative arrangements 
with other local educational agencies for the provision of 
special, compensatory, or other education services, pursuant to 
State law or a written agreement, from entering into similar 
arrangements for the use, or the coordination of the use, of 
the funds made available under this part.

[SEC. 6234. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS.

  [There are authorized to be appropriated to carry out this 
part $300,000,000 for fiscal year 2002 and such sums as may be 
necessary for each of the 5 succeeding fiscal years, to be 
distributed equally between subparts 1 and 2.

                      [PART C--GENERAL PROVISIONS

[SEC. 6301. PROHIBITION AGAINST FEDERAL MANDATES, DIRECTION, OR 
                    CONTROL.

  [Nothing in this title shall be construed to authorize an 
officer or employee of the Federal Government to mandate, 
direct, or control a State, local educational agency, or 
school's specific instructional content, academic achievement 
standards and assessments, curriculum, or program of 
instruction, as a condition of eligibility to receive funds 
under this Act.

[SEC. 6302. RULE OF CONSTRUCTION ON EQUALIZED SPENDING.

  [Nothing in this title shall be construed to mandate 
equalized spending per pupil for a State, local educational 
agency, or school.

    [TITLE VII--INDIAN, NATIVE HAWAIIAN, AND ALASKA NATIVE EDUCATION

                       [PART A--INDIAN EDUCATION

[SEC. 7101. STATEMENT OF POLICY.

  [It is the policy of the United States to fulfill the Federal 
Government's unique and continuing trust relationship with and 
responsibility to the Indian people for the education of Indian 
children. The Federal Government will continue to work with 
local educational agencies, Indian tribes and organizations, 
postsecondary institutions, and other entities toward the goal 
of ensuring that programs that serve Indian children are of the 
highest quality and provide for not only the basic elementary 
and secondary educational needs, but also the unique 
educational and culturally related academic needs of these 
children.

[SEC. 7102. PURPOSE.

  [(a) Purpose.--It is the purpose of this part to support the 
efforts of local educational agencies, Indian tribes and 
organizations, postsecondary institutions, and other entities 
to meet the unique educational and culturally related academic 
needs of American Indian and Alaska Native students, so that 
such students can meet the same challenging State student 
academic achievement standards as all other students are 
expected to meet.
  [(b) Programs.--This part carries out the purpose described 
in subsection (a) by authorizing programs of direct assistance 
for--
          [(1) meeting the unique educational and culturally 
        related academic needs of American Indians and Alaska 
        Natives;
          [(2) the education of Indian children and adults;
          [(3) the training of Indian persons as educators and 
        counselors, and in other professions serving Indian 
        people; and
          [(4) research, evaluation, data collection, and 
        technical assistance.

        [Subpart 1--Formula Grants to Local Educational Agencies

[SEC. 7111. PURPOSE.

   [It is the purpose of this subpart to support local 
educational agencies in their efforts to reform elementary 
school and secondary school programs that serve Indian students 
in order to ensure that such programs--
          [(1) are based on challenging State academic content 
        and student academic achievement standards that are 
        used for all students; and
          [(2) are designed to assist Indian students in 
        meeting those standards.

[SEC. 7112. GRANTS TO LOCAL EDUCATIONAL AGENCIES AND TRIBES.

  [(a) In General.--The Secretary may make grants, from 
allocations made under section 7113, to local educational 
agencies and Indian tribes, in accordance with this section and 
section 7113.
  [(b) Local Educational Agencies.--
          [(1) Enrollment requirements.--A local educational 
        agency shall be eligible for a grant under this subpart 
        for any fiscal year if the number of Indian children 
        eligible under section 7117 who were enrolled in the 
        schools of the agency, and to whom the agency provided 
        free public education, during the preceding fiscal 
        year--
                  [(A) was at least 10; or
                  [(B) constituted not less than 25 percent of 
                the total number of individuals enrolled in the 
                schools of such agency.
          [(2) Exclusion.--The requirement of paragraph (1) 
        shall not apply in Alaska, California, or Oklahoma, or 
        with respect to any local educational agency located 
        on, or in proximity to, a reservation.
  [(c) Indian Tribes.--
          [(1) In general.--If a local educational agency that 
        is otherwise eligible for a grant under this subpart 
        does not establish a committee under section 7114(c)(4) 
        for such grant, an Indian tribe that represents not 
        less than \1/2\ of the eligible Indian children who are 
        served by such local educational agency may apply for 
        such grant.
          [(2) Special rule.--The Secretary shall treat each 
        Indian tribe applying for a grant pursuant to paragraph 
        (1) as if such Indian tribe were a local educational 
        agency for purposes of this subpart, except that any 
        such tribe is not subject to section 7114(c)(4), 
        section 7118(c), or section 7119.

[SEC. 7113. AMOUNT OF GRANTS.

  [(a) Amount of Grant Awards.--
          [(1) In general.--Except as provided in subsection 
        (b) and paragraph (2), the Secretary shall allocate to 
        each local educational agency that has an approved 
        application under this subpart an amount equal to the 
        product of--
                  [(A) the number of Indian children who are 
                eligible under section 7117 and served by such 
                agency; and
                  [(B) the greater of--
                          [(i) the average per pupil 
                        expenditure of the State in which such 
                        agency is located; or
                          [(ii) 80 percent of the average per 
                        pupil expenditure of all the States.
          [(2) Reduction.--The Secretary shall reduce the 
        amount of each allocation otherwise determined under 
        this section in accordance with subsection (e).
  [(b) Minimum Grant.--
          [(1) In general.--Notwithstanding subsection (e), an 
        entity that is eligible for a grant under section 7112, 
        and a school that is operated or supported by the 
        Bureau of Indian Affairs that is eligible for a grant 
        under subsection (d), that submits an application that 
        is approved by the Secretary, shall, subject to 
        appropriations, receive a grant under this subpart in 
        an amount that is not less than $3,000.
          [(2) Consortia.--Local educational agencies may form 
        a consortium for the purpose of obtaining grants under 
        this subpart.
          [(3) Increase.--The Secretary may increase the 
        minimum grant under paragraph (1) to not more than 
        $4,000 for all grantees if the Secretary determines 
        such increase is necessary to ensure the quality of the 
        programs provided.
  [(c) Definition.--For the purpose of this section, the term 
``average per pupil expenditure'', used with respect to a 
State, means an amount equal to--
          [(1) the sum of the aggregate current expenditures of 
        all the local educational agencies in the State, plus 
        any direct current expenditures by the State for the 
        operation of such agencies, without regard to the 
        sources of funds from which such local or State 
        expenditures were made, during the second fiscal year 
        preceding the fiscal year for which the computation is 
        made; divided by
          [(2) the aggregate number of children who were 
        included in average daily attendance for whom such 
        agencies provided free public education during such 
        preceding fiscal year.
  [(d) Schools Operated or Supported by the Bureau of Indian 
Affairs.--
          [(1) In general.--Subject to subsection (e), in 
        addition to the grants awarded under subsection (a), 
        the Secretary shall allocate to the Secretary of the 
        Interior an amount equal to the product of--
                  [(A) the total number of Indian children 
                enrolled in schools that are operated by--
                          [(i) the Bureau of Indian Affairs; or
                          [(ii) an Indian tribe, or an 
                        organization controlled or sanctioned 
                        by an Indian tribal government, for the 
                        children of that tribe under a contract 
                        with, or grant from, the Department of 
                        the Interior under the Indian Self-
                        Determination Act or the Tribally 
                        Controlled Schools Act of 1988; and
                  [(B) the greater of--
                          [(i) the average per pupil 
                        expenditure of the State in which the 
                        school is located; or
                          [(ii) 80 percent of the average per 
                        pupil expenditure of all the States.
          [(2) Special rule.--Any school described in paragraph 
        (1)(A) that wishes to receive an allocation under this 
        subpart shall submit an application in accordance with 
        section 7114, and shall otherwise be treated as a local 
        educational agency for the purpose of this subpart, 
        except that such school shall not be subject to section 
        7114(c)(4), section 7118(c), or section 7119.
  [(e) Ratable Reductions.--If the sums appropriated for any 
fiscal year under section 7152(a) are insufficient to pay in 
full the amounts determined for local educational agencies 
under subsection (a)(1) and for the Secretary of the Interior 
under subsection (d), each of those amounts shall be ratably 
reduced.

[SEC. 7114. APPLICATIONS.

  [(a) Application Required.--Each local educational agency 
that desires to receive a grant under this subpart shall submit 
an application to the Secretary at such time, in such manner, 
and containing such information as the Secretary may reasonably 
require.
  [(b) Comprehensive Program Required.--Each application 
submitted under subsection (a) shall include a description of a 
comprehensive program for meeting the needs of Indian children 
served by the local educational agency, including the language 
and cultural needs of the children, that--
          [(1) describes how the comprehensive program will 
        offer programs and activities to meet the culturally 
        related academic needs of American Indian and Alaska 
        Native students;
          [(2)(A) is consistent with the State and local plans 
        submitted under other provisions of this Act; and
          [(B) includes academic content and student academic 
        achievement goals for such children, and benchmarks for 
        attaining such goals, that are based on the challenging 
        State academic content and student academic achievement 
        standards adopted under title I for all children;
          [(3) explains how Federal, State, and local programs, 
        especially programs carried out under title I, will 
        meet the needs of such students;
          [(4) demonstrates how funds made available under this 
        subpart will be used for activities described in 
        section 7115;
          [(5) describes the professional development 
        opportunities that will be provided, as needed, to 
        ensure that--
                  [(A) teachers and other school professionals 
                who are new to the Indian community are 
                prepared to work with Indian children; and
                  [(B) all teachers who will be involved in 
                programs assisted under this subpart have been 
                properly trained to carry out such programs; 
                and
          [(6) describes how the local educational agency--
                  [(A) will periodically assess the progress of 
                all Indian children enrolled in the schools of 
                the local educational agency, including Indian 
                children who do not participate in programs 
                assisted under this subpart, in meeting the 
                goals described in paragraph (2);
                  [(B) will provide the results of each 
                assessment referred to in subparagraph (A) to--
                          [(i) the committee described in 
                        subsection (c)(4); and
                          [(ii) the community served by the 
                        local educational agency; and
                  [(C) is responding to findings of any 
                previous assessments that are similar to the 
                assessments described in subparagraph (A).
  [(c) Assurances.--Each application submitted under subsection 
(a) shall include assurances that--
          [(1) the local educational agency will use funds 
        received under this subpart only to supplement the 
        funds that, in the absence of the Federal funds made 
        available under this subpart, such agency would make 
        available for the education of Indian children, and not 
        to supplant such funds;
          [(2) the local educational agency will prepare and 
        submit to the Secretary such reports, in such form and 
        containing such information, as the Secretary may 
        require to--
                  [(A) carry out the functions of the Secretary 
                under this subpart; and
                  [(B) determine the extent to which activities 
                carried out with funds provided to the local 
                educational agency under this subpart are 
                effective in improving the educational 
                achievement of Indian students served by such 
                agency;
          [(3) the program for which assistance is sought--
                  [(A) is based on a comprehensive local 
                assessment and prioritization of the unique 
                educational and culturally related academic 
                needs of the American Indian and Alaska Native 
                students for whom the local educational agency 
                is providing an education;
                  [(B) will use the best available talents and 
                resources, including individuals from the 
                Indian community; and
                  [(C) was developed by such agency in open 
                consultation with parents of Indian children 
                and teachers, and, if appropriate, Indian 
                students from secondary schools, including 
                through public hearings held by such agency to 
                provide to the individuals described in this 
                subparagraph a full opportunity to understand 
                the program and to offer recommendations 
                regarding the program; and
          [(4) the local educational agency developed the 
        program with the participation and written approval of 
        a committee--
                  [(A) that is composed of, and selected by--
                          [(i) parents of Indian children in 
                        the local educational agency's schools;
                          [(ii) teachers in the schools; and
                          [(iii) if appropriate, Indian 
                        students attending secondary schools of 
                        the agency;
                  [(B) a majority of whose members are parents 
                of Indian children;
                  [(C) that has set forth such policies and 
                procedures, including policies and procedures 
                relating to the hiring of personnel, as will 
                ensure that the program for which assistance is 
                sought will be operated and evaluated in 
                consultation with, and with the involvement of, 
                parents of the children, and representatives of 
                the area, to be served;
                  [(D) with respect to an application 
                describing a schoolwide program in accordance 
                with section 7115(c), that has--
                          [(i) reviewed in a timely fashion the 
                        program; and
                          [(ii) determined that the program 
                        will not diminish the availability of 
                        culturally related activities for 
                        American Indian and Alaska Native 
                        students; and
                  [(E) that has adopted reasonable bylaws for 
                the conduct of the activities of the committee 
                and abides by such bylaws.

[SEC. 7115. AUTHORIZED SERVICES AND ACTIVITIES.

  [(a) General Requirements.--Each local educational agency 
that receives a grant under this subpart shall use the grant 
funds, in a manner consistent with the purpose specified in 
section 7111, for services and activities that--
          [(1) are designed to carry out the comprehensive 
        program of the local educational agency for Indian 
        students, and described in the application of the local 
        educational agency submitted to the Secretary under 
        section 7114(a);
          [(2) are designed with special regard for the 
        language and cultural needs of the Indian students; and
          [(3) supplement and enrich the regular school program 
        of such agency.
  [(b) Particular Activities.--The services and activities 
referred to in subsection (a) may include--
          [(1) culturally related activities that support the 
        program described in the application submitted by the 
        local educational agency;
          [(2) early childhood and family programs that 
        emphasize school readiness;
          [(3) enrichment programs that focus on problem 
        solving and cognitive skills development and directly 
        support the attainment of challenging State academic 
        content and student academic achievement standards;
          [(4) integrated educational services in combination 
        with other programs that meet the needs of Indian 
        children and their families;
          [(5) career preparation activities to enable Indian 
        students to participate in programs such as the 
        programs supported by the Carl D. Perkins Career and 
        Technical Education Act of 2006, including programs for 
        tech-prep education, mentoring, and apprenticeship;
          [(6) activities to educate individuals concerning 
        substance abuse and to prevent substance abuse;
          [(7) the acquisition of equipment, but only if the 
        acquisition of the equipment is essential to achieve 
        the purpose described in section 7111;
          [(8) activities that promote the incorporation of 
        culturally responsive teaching and learning strategies 
        into the educational program of the local educational 
        agency;
          [(9) activities that incorporate American Indian and 
        Alaska Native specific curriculum content, consistent 
        with State standards, into the curriculum used by the 
        local educational agency;
          [(10) family literacy services; and
          [(11) activities that recognize and support the 
        unique cultural and educational needs of Indian 
        children, and incorporate appropriately qualified 
        tribal elders and seniors.
  [(c) Schoolwide Programs.--Notwithstanding any other 
provision of law, a local educational agency may use funds made 
available to such agency under this subpart to support a 
schoolwide program under section 1114 if--
          [(1) the committee established pursuant to section 
        7114(c)(4) approves the use of the funds for the 
        schoolwide program; and
          [(2) the schoolwide program is consistent with the 
        purpose described in section 7111.
  [(d) Limitation on Administrative Costs.--Not more than 5 
percent of the funds provided to a grantee under this subpart 
for any fiscal year may be used for administrative purposes.

[SEC. 7116. INTEGRATION OF SERVICES AUTHORIZED.

  [(a) Plan.--An entity receiving funds under this subpart may 
submit a plan to the Secretary for the integration of education 
and related services provided to Indian students.
  [(b) Consolidation of Programs.--Upon the receipt of an 
acceptable plan under subsection (a), the Secretary, in 
cooperation with each Federal agency providing grants for the 
provision of education and related services to the entity, 
shall authorize the entity to consolidate, in accordance with 
such plan, the federally funded education and related services 
programs of the entity and the Federal programs, or portions of 
the programs, serving Indian students in a manner that 
integrates the program services involved into a single, 
coordinated, comprehensive program and reduces administrative 
costs by consolidating administrative functions.
  [(c) Programs Affected.--The funds that may be consolidated 
in a demonstration project under any such plan referred to in 
subsection (a) shall include funds for any Federal program 
exclusively serving Indian children, or the funds reserved 
under any Federal program to exclusively serve Indian children, 
under which the entity is eligible for receipt of funds under a 
statutory or administrative formula for the purposes of 
providing education and related services that would be used to 
serve Indian students.
  [(d) Plan Requirements.--For a plan to be acceptable pursuant 
to subsection (b), the plan shall--
          [(1) identify the programs or funding sources to be 
        consolidated;
          [(2) be consistent with the objectives of this 
        section concerning authorizing the services to be 
        integrated in a demonstration project;
          [(3) describe a comprehensive strategy that 
        identifies the full range of potential educational 
        opportunities and related services to be provided to 
        assist Indian students to achieve the objectives set 
        forth in this subpart;
          [(4) describe the way in which services are to be 
        integrated and delivered and the results expected from 
        the plan;
          [(5) identify the projected expenditures under the 
        plan in a single budget;
          [(6) identify the State, tribal, or local agency or 
        agencies to be involved in the delivery of the services 
        integrated under the plan;
          [(7) identify any statutory provisions, regulations, 
        policies, or procedures that the entity believes need 
        to be waived in order to implement the plan;
          [(8) set forth measures for academic content and 
        student academic achievement goals designed to be met 
        within a specific period of time; and
          [(9) be approved by a committee formed in accordance 
        with section 7114(c)(4), if such a committee exists.
  [(e) Plan Review.--Upon receipt of the plan from an eligible 
entity, the Secretary shall consult with the Secretary of each 
Federal department providing funds to be used to implement the 
plan, and with the entity submitting the plan. The parties so 
consulting shall identify any waivers of statutory requirements 
or of Federal departmental regulations, policies, or procedures 
necessary to enable the entity to implement the plan. 
Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the Secretary of 
the affected department shall have the authority to waive any 
regulation, policy, or procedure promulgated by that department 
that has been so identified by the entity or department, unless 
the Secretary of the affected department determines that such a 
waiver is inconsistent with the objectives of this subpart or 
those provisions of the statute from which the program involved 
derives authority that are specifically applicable to Indian 
students.
  [(f) Plan Approval.--Within 90 days after the receipt of an 
entity's plan by the Secretary, the Secretary shall inform the 
entity, in writing, of the Secretary's approval or disapproval 
of the plan. If the plan is disapproved, the entity shall be 
informed, in writing, of the reasons for the disapproval and 
shall be given an opportunity to amend the plan or to petition 
the Secretary to reconsider such disapproval.
  [(g) Responsibilities of Department of Education.--Not later 
than 180 days after the date of enactment of the No Child Left 
Behind Act of 2001, the Secretary of Education, the Secretary 
of the Interior, and the head of any other Federal department 
or agency identified by the Secretary of Education, shall enter 
into an interdepartmental memorandum of agreement providing for 
the implementation of the demonstration projects authorized 
under this section. The lead agency head for a demonstration 
project under this section shall be--
          [(1) the Secretary of the Interior, in the case of an 
        entity meeting the definition of a contract or grant 
        school under title XI of the Education Amendments of 
        1978; or
          [(2) the Secretary of Education, in the case of any 
        other entity.
  [(h) Responsibilities of Lead Agency.--The responsibilities 
of the lead agency shall include--
          [(1) the use of a single report format related to the 
        plan for the individual project, which shall be used by 
        an eligible entity to report on the activities 
        undertaken under the project;
          [(2) the use of a single report format related to the 
        projected expenditures for the individual project which 
        shall be used by an eligible entity to report on all 
        project expenditures;
          [(3) the development of a single system of Federal 
        oversight for the project, which shall be implemented 
        by the lead agency; and
          [(4) the provision of technical assistance to an 
        eligible entity appropriate to the project, except that 
        an eligible entity shall have the authority to accept 
        or reject the plan for providing such technical 
        assistance and the technical assistance provider.
  [(i) Report Requirements.--A single report format shall be 
developed by the Secretary, consistent with the requirements of 
this section. Such report format shall require that reports 
described in subsection (h), together with records maintained 
on the consolidated program at the local level, shall contain 
such information as will allow a determination that the 
eligible entity has complied with the requirements incorporated 
in its approved plan, including making a demonstration of 
student academic achievement, and will provide assurances to 
each Secretary that the eligible entity has complied with all 
directly applicable statutory requirements and with those 
directly applicable regulatory requirements that have not been 
waived.
  [(j) No Reduction in Amounts.--In no case shall the amount of 
Federal funds available to an eligible entity involved in any 
demonstration project be reduced as a result of the enactment 
of this section.
  [(k) Interagency Fund Transfers Authorized.--The Secretary is 
authorized to take such action as may be necessary to provide 
for an interagency transfer of funds otherwise available to an 
eligible entity in order to further the objectives of this 
section.
  [(l) Administration of Funds.--
          [(1) In general.--Program funds for the consolidated 
        programs shall be administered in such a manner as to 
        allow for a determination that funds from a specific 
        program are spent on allowable activities authorized 
        under such program, except that the eligible entity 
        shall determine the proportion of the funds granted 
        that shall be allocated to such program.
          [(2) Separate records not required.--Nothing in this 
        section shall be construed as requiring the eligible 
        entity to maintain separate records tracing any 
        services or activities conducted under the approved 
        plan to the individual programs under which funds were 
        authorized for the services or activities, nor shall 
        the eligible entity be required to allocate 
        expenditures among such individual programs.
  [(m) Overage.--The eligible entity may commingle all 
administrative funds from the consolidated programs and shall 
be entitled to the full amount of such funds (under each 
program's or agency's regulations). The overage (defined as the 
difference between the amount of the commingled funds and the 
actual administrative cost of the programs) shall be considered 
to be properly spent for Federal audit purposes, if the overage 
is used for the purposes provided for under this section.
  [(n) Fiscal Accountability.--Nothing in this part shall be 
construed so as to interfere with the ability of the Secretary 
or the lead agency to fulfill the responsibilities for the 
safeguarding of Federal funds pursuant to chapter 75 of title 
31, United States Code.
  [(o) Report on Statutory Obstacles to Program Integration.--
          [(1) Preliminary report.--Not later than 2 years 
        after the date of enactment of the No Child Left Behind 
        Act of 2001, the Secretary of Education shall submit a 
        preliminary report to the Committee on Education and 
        the Workforce and the Committee on Resources of the 
        House of Representatives and the Committee on Health, 
        Education, Labor, and Pensions and the Committee on 
        Indian Affairs of the Senate on the status of the 
        implementation of the demonstration projects authorized 
        under this section.
          [(2) Final report.--Not later than 5 years after the 
        date of enactment of the No Child Left Behind Act of 
        2001, the Secretary of Education shall submit a report 
        to the Committee on Education and the Workforce and the 
        Committee on Resources of the House of Representatives 
        and the Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and 
        Pensions and the Committee on Indian Affairs of the 
        Senate on the results of the implementation of the 
        demonstration projects authorized under this section. 
        Such report shall identify statutory barriers to the 
        ability of participants to integrate more effectively 
        their education and related services to Indian students 
        in a manner consistent with the objectives of this 
        section.
  [(p) Definitions.--For the purposes of this section, the term 
``Secretary'' means--
          [(1) the Secretary of the Interior, in the case of an 
        entity meeting the definition of a contract or grant 
        school under title XI of the Education Amendments of 
        1978; or
          [(2) the Secretary of Education, in the case of any 
        other entity.

[SEC. 7117. STUDENT ELIGIBILITY FORMS.

  [(a) In General.--The Secretary shall require that, as part 
of an application for a grant under this subpart, each 
applicant shall maintain a file, with respect to each Indian 
child for whom the local educational agency provides a free 
public education, that contains a form that sets forth 
information establishing the status of the child as an Indian 
child eligible for assistance under this subpart, and that 
otherwise meets the requirements of subsection (b).
  [(b) Forms.--The form described in subsection (a) shall 
include--
          [(1) either--
                  [(A)(i) the name of the tribe or band of 
                Indians (as defined in section 7151) with 
                respect to which the child claims membership;
                  [(ii) the enrollment number establishing the 
                membership of the child (if readily available); 
                and
                  [(iii) the name and address of the 
                organization that maintains updated and 
                accurate membership data for such tribe or band 
                of Indians; or
                  [(B) the name, the enrollment number (if 
                readily available), and the name and address of 
                the organization responsible for maintaining 
                updated and accurate membership data, of any 
                parent or grandparent of the child from whom 
                the child claims eligibility under this 
                subpart, if the child is not a member of the 
                tribe or band of Indians (as so defined);
          [(2) a statement of whether the tribe or band of 
        Indians (as so defined), with respect to which the 
        child, or parent or grandparent of the child, claims 
        membership, is federally recognized;
          [(3) the name and address of the parent or legal 
        guardian of the child;
          [(4) a signature of the parent or legal guardian of 
        the child that verifies the accuracy of the information 
        supplied; and
          [(5) any other information that the Secretary 
        considers necessary to provide an accurate program 
        profile.
  [(c) Statutory Construction.--Nothing in this section shall 
be construed to affect a definition contained in section 7151.
  [(d) Forms and Standards of Proof.--The forms and the 
standards of proof (including the standard of good faith 
compliance) that were in use during the 1985-86 academic year 
to establish the eligibility of a child for entitlement under 
the Indian Elementary and Secondary School Assistance Act shall 
be the forms and standards of proof used--
          [(1) to establish eligibility under this subpart; and
          [(2) to meet the requirements of subsection (a).
  [(e) Documentation.--For purposes of determining whether a 
child is eligible to be counted for the purpose of computing 
the amount of a grant award under section 7113, the membership 
of the child, or any parent or grandparent of the child, in a 
tribe or band of Indians (as so defined) may be established by 
proof other than an enrollment number, notwithstanding the 
availability of an enrollment number for a member of such tribe 
or band. Nothing in subsection (b) shall be construed to 
require the furnishing of an enrollment number.
  [(f) Monitoring and Evaluation Review.--
          [(1) In general.--
                  [(A) Review.--For each fiscal year, in order 
                to provide such information as is necessary to 
                carry out the responsibility of the Secretary 
                to provide technical assistance under this 
                subpart, the Secretary shall conduct a 
                monitoring and evaluation review of a sampling 
                of the recipients of grants under this subpart. 
                The sampling conducted under this subparagraph 
                shall take into account the size of and the 
                geographic location of each local educational 
                agency.
                  [(B) Exception.--A local educational agency 
                may not be held liable to the United States or 
                be subject to any penalty, by reason of the 
                findings of an audit that relates to the date 
                of completion, or the date of submission, of 
                any forms used to establish, before April 28, 
                1988, the eligibility of a child for an 
                entitlement under the Indian Elementary and 
                Secondary School Assistance Act.
          [(2) False information.--Any local educational agency 
        that provides false information in an application for a 
        grant under this subpart shall--
                  [(A) be ineligible to apply for any other 
                grant under this subpart; and
                  [(B) be liable to the United States for any 
                funds from the grant that have not been 
                expended.
          [(3) Excluded children.--A student who provides false 
        information for the form required under subsection (a) 
        shall not be counted for the purpose of computing the 
        amount of a grant under section 7113.
  [(g) Tribal Grant and Contract Schools.--Notwithstanding any 
other provision of this section, in calculating the amount of a 
grant under this subpart to a tribal school that receives a 
grant or contract from the Bureau of Indian Affairs, the 
Secretary shall use only one of the following, as selected by 
the school:
          [(1) A count of the number of students in the schools 
        certified by the Bureau.
          [(2) A count of the number of students for whom the 
        school has eligibility forms that comply with this 
        section.
  [(h) Timing of Child Counts.--For purposes of determining the 
number of children to be counted in calculating the amount of a 
local educational agency's grant under this subpart (other than 
in the case described in subsection (g)(1)), the local 
educational agency shall--
          [(1) establish a date on, or a period not longer than 
        31 consecutive days during, which the agency counts 
        those children, if that date or period occurs before 
        the deadline established by the Secretary for 
        submitting an application under section 7114; and
          [(2) determine that each such child was enrolled, and 
        receiving a free public education, in a school of the 
        agency on that date or during that period, as the case 
        may be.

[SEC. 7118. PAYMENTS.

  [(a) In General.--Subject to subsections (b) and (c), the 
Secretary shall pay to each local educational agency that 
submits an application that is approved by the Secretary under 
this subpart the amount determined under section 7113. The 
Secretary shall notify the local educational agency of the 
amount of the payment not later than June 1 of the year for 
which the Secretary makes the payment.
  [(b) Payments Taken Into Account by the State.--The Secretary 
may not make a grant under this subpart to a local educational 
agency for a fiscal year if, for such fiscal year, the State in 
which the local educational agency is located takes into 
consideration payments made under this chapter in determining 
the eligibility of the local educational agency for State aid, 
or the amount of the State aid, with respect to the free public 
education of children during such fiscal year or the preceding 
fiscal year.
  [(c) Reduction of Payment for Failure To Maintain Fiscal 
Effort.--
          [(1) In general.--The Secretary may not pay a local 
        educational agency the full amount of a grant award 
        determined under section 7113 for any fiscal year 
        unless the State educational agency notifies the 
        Secretary, and the Secretary determines, that with 
        respect to the provision of free public education by 
        the local educational agency for the preceding fiscal 
        year, the combined fiscal effort of the local 
        educational agency and the State, computed on either a 
        per student or aggregate expenditure basis, was not 
        less than 90 percent of the amount of the combined 
        fiscal effort, computed on the same basis, for the 
        second preceding fiscal year.
          [(2) Failure to maintain effort.--If, for the 
        preceding fiscal year, the Secretary determines that a 
        local educational agency and State failed to maintain 
        the combined fiscal effort for such agency at the level 
        specified in paragraph (1), the Secretary shall--
                  [(A) reduce the amount of the grant that 
                would otherwise be made to such agency under 
                this subpart in the exact proportion of the 
                failure to maintain the fiscal effort at such 
                level; and
                  [(B) not use the reduced amount of the agency 
                and State expenditures for the preceding year 
                to determine compliance with paragraph (1) for 
                any succeeding fiscal year, but shall use the 
                amount of expenditures that would have been 
                required to comply with paragraph (1).
          [(3) Waiver.--
                  [(A) In general.--The Secretary may waive the 
                requirement of paragraph (1) for a local 
                educational agency, for not more than 1 year at 
                a time, if the Secretary determines that the 
                failure to comply with such requirement is due 
                to exceptional or uncontrollable circumstances, 
                such as a natural disaster or a precipitous and 
                unforeseen decline in the agency's financial 
                resources.
                  [(B) Future determinations.--The Secretary 
                shall not use the reduced amount of the 
                agency's expenditures for the fiscal year 
                preceding the fiscal year for which a waiver is 
                granted to determine compliance with paragraph 
                (1) for any succeeding fiscal year, but shall 
                use the amount of expenditures that would have 
                been required to comply with paragraph (1) in 
                the absence of the waiver.
  [(d) Reallocations.--The Secretary may reallocate, in a 
manner that the Secretary determines will best carry out the 
purpose of this subpart, any amounts that--
          [(1) based on estimates made by local educational 
        agencies or other information, the Secretary determines 
        will not be needed by such agencies to carry out 
        approved programs under this subpart; or
          [(2) otherwise become available for reallocation 
        under this subpart.

[SEC. 7119. STATE EDUCATIONAL AGENCY REVIEW.

  [Before submitting an application to the Secretary under 
section 7114, a local educational agency shall submit the 
application to the State educational agency, which may comment 
on such application. If the State educational agency comments 
on the application, the agency shall comment on all 
applications submitted by local educational agencies in the 
State and shall provide those comments to the respective local 
educational agencies, with an opportunity to respond.

   [Subpart 2--Special Programs and Projects To Improve Educational 
                   Opportunities for Indian Children

[SEC. 7121. IMPROVEMENT OF EDUCATIONAL OPPORTUNITIES FOR INDIAN 
                    CHILDREN.

  [(a) Purpose.--
          [(1) In general.--It is the purpose of this section 
        to support projects to develop, test, and demonstrate 
        the effectiveness of services and programs to improve 
        educational opportunities and achievement of Indian 
        children.
          [(2) Coordination.--The Secretary shall take the 
        necessary actions to achieve the coordination of 
        activities assisted under this subpart with--
                  [(A) other programs funded under this Act; 
                and
                  [(B) other Federal programs operated for the 
                benefit of American Indian and Alaska Native 
                children.
  [(b) Eligible Entities.--In this section, the term ``eligible 
entity'' means a State educational agency, local educational 
agency, Indian tribe, Indian organization, federally supported 
elementary school or secondary school for Indian students, 
Indian institution (including an Indian institution of higher 
education), or a consortium of such entities.
  [(c) Grants Authorized.--
          [(1) In general.--The Secretary shall award grants to 
        eligible entities to enable such entities to carry out 
        activities that meet the purpose of this section, 
        including--
                  [(A) innovative programs related to the 
                educational needs of educationally 
                disadvantaged children;
                  [(B) educational services that are not 
                available to such children in sufficient 
                quantity or quality, including remedial 
                instruction, to raise the achievement of Indian 
                children in one or more of the core academic 
                subjects of English, mathematics, science, 
                foreign languages, art, history, and geography;
                  [(C) bilingual and bicultural programs and 
                projects;
                  [(D) special health and nutrition services, 
                and other related activities, that address the 
                special health, social, and psychological 
                problems of Indian children;
                  [(E) special compensatory and other programs 
                and projects designed to assist and encourage 
                Indian children to enter, remain in, or reenter 
                school, and to increase the rate of high school 
                graduation for Indian children;
                  [(F) comprehensive guidance, counseling, and 
                testing services;
                  [(G) early childhood and kindergarten 
                programs, including family-based preschool 
                programs that emphasize school readiness and 
                parental skills, and the provision of services 
                to Indian children with disabilities;
                  [(H) partnership projects between local 
                educational agencies and institutions of higher 
                education that allow secondary school students 
                to enroll in courses at the postsecondary level 
                to aid such students in the transition from 
                secondary to postsecondary education;
                  [(I) partnership projects between schools and 
                local businesses for career preparation 
                programs designed to provide Indian youth with 
                the knowledge and skills such youth need to 
                make an effective transition from school to a 
                high-skill, high-wage career;
                  [(J) programs designed to encourage and 
                assist Indian students to work toward, and gain 
                entrance into, an institution of higher 
                education;
                  [(K) family literacy services;
                  [(L) activities that recognize and support 
                the unique cultural and educational needs of 
                Indian children, and incorporate appropriately 
                qualified tribal elders and seniors; or
                  [(M) other services that meet the purpose 
                described in this section.
          [(2) Professional development.--Professional 
        development of teaching professionals and 
        paraprofessionals may be a part of any program assisted 
        under this section.
  [(d) Grant Requirements and Applications.--
          [(1) Grant requirements.--
                  [(A) In general.--The Secretary may make 
                multiyear grants under subsection (c) for the 
                planning, development, pilot operation, or 
                demonstration of any activity described in 
                subsection (c) for a period not to exceed 5 
                years.
                  [(B) Priority.--In making multiyear grants 
                described in this paragraph, the Secretary 
                shall give priority to entities submitting 
                applications that present a plan for combining 
                two or more of the activities described in 
                subsection (c) over a period of more than 1 
                year.
                  [(C) Progress.--The Secretary shall make a 
                grant payment for a grant described in this 
                paragraph to an eligible entity after the 
                initial year of the multiyear grant only if the 
                Secretary determines that the eligible entity 
                has made substantial progress in carrying out 
                the activities assisted under the grant in 
                accordance with the application submitted under 
                paragraph (3) and any subsequent modifications 
                to such application.
          [(2) Dissemination grants.--
                  [(A) In general.--In addition to awarding the 
                multiyear grants described in paragraph (1), 
                the Secretary may award grants under subsection 
                (c) to eligible entities for the dissemination 
                of exemplary materials or programs assisted 
                under this section.
                  [(B) Determination.--The Secretary may award 
                a dissemination grant described in this 
                paragraph if, prior to awarding the grant, the 
                Secretary determines that the material or 
                program to be disseminated--
                          [(i) has been adequately reviewed;
                          [(ii) has demonstrated educational 
                        merit; and
                          [(iii) can be replicated.
          [(3) Application.--
                  [(A) In general.--Any eligible entity that 
                desires to receive a grant under this section 
                shall submit an application to the Secretary at 
                such time and in such manner as the Secretary 
                may reasonably require.
                  [(B) Contents.--Each application submitted to 
                the Secretary under subparagraph (A), other 
                than an application for a dissemination grant 
                under paragraph (2), shall contain--
                          [(i) a description of how parents of 
                        Indian children and representatives of 
                        Indian tribes have been, and will be, 
                        involved in developing and implementing 
                        the activities for which assistance is 
                        sought;
                          [(ii) assurances that the applicant 
                        will participate, at the request of the 
                        Secretary, in any national evaluation 
                        of activities assisted under this 
                        section;
                          [(iii) information demonstrating that 
                        the proposed program for the activities 
                        is a scientifically based research 
                        program, where applicable, which may 
                        include a program that has been 
                        modified to be culturally appropriate 
                        for students who will be served;
                          [(iv) a description of how the 
                        applicant will incorporate the proposed 
                        activities into the ongoing school 
                        program involved once the grant period 
                        is over; and
                          [(v) such other assurances and 
                        information as the Secretary may 
                        reasonably require.
  [(e) Administrative Costs.--Not more than 5 percent of the 
funds provided to a grantee under this subpart for any fiscal 
year may be used for administrative purposes.

[SEC. 7122. PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT FOR TEACHERS AND EDUCATION 
                    PROFESSIONALS.

  [(a) Purposes.--The purposes of this section are--
          [(1) to increase the number of qualified Indian 
        individuals in teaching or other education professions 
        that serve Indian people;
          [(2) to provide training to qualified Indian 
        individuals to enable such individuals to become 
        teachers, administrators, teacher aides, social 
        workers, and ancillary educational personnel; and
          [(3) to improve the skills of qualified Indian 
        individuals who serve in the capacities described in 
        paragraph (2).
  [(b) Eligible Entities.--For the purpose of this section, the 
term ``eligible entity'' means--
          [(1) an institution of higher education, including an 
        Indian institution of higher education;
          [(2) a State educational agency or local educational 
        agency, in consortium with an institution of higher 
        education;
          [(3) an Indian tribe or organization, in consortium 
        with an institution of higher education; and
          [(4) a Bureau-funded school (as defined in section 
        1146 of the Education Amendments of 1978).
  [(c) Program Authorized.--The Secretary is authorized to 
award grants to eligible entities having applications approved 
under this section to enable those entities to carry out the 
activities described in subsection (d).
  [(d) Authorized Activities.--
          [(1) In general.--Grant funds under this section 
        shall be used for activities to provide support and 
        training for Indian individuals in a manner consistent 
        with the purposes of this section. Such activities may 
        include continuing programs, symposia, workshops, 
        conferences, and direct financial support, and may 
        include programs designed to train tribal elders and 
        seniors.
          [(2) Special rules.--
                  [(A) Type of training.--For education 
                personnel, the training received pursuant to a 
                grant under this section may be inservice or 
                preservice training.
                  [(B) Program.--For individuals who are being 
                trained to enter any field other than teaching, 
                the training received pursuant to a grant under 
                this section shall be in a program that results 
                in a graduate degree.
  [(e) Application.--Each eligible entity desiring a grant 
under this section shall submit an application to the Secretary 
at such time, in such manner, and accompanied by such 
information, as the Secretary may reasonably require.
  [(f) Special Rule.--In awarding grants under this section, 
the Secretary--
          [(1) shall consider the prior performance of the 
        eligible entity; and
          [(2) may not limit eligibility to receive a grant 
        under this section on the basis of--
                  [(A) the number of previous grants the 
                Secretary has awarded such entity; or
                  [(B) the length of any period during which 
                such entity received such grants.
  [(g) Grant Period.--Each grant under this section shall be 
awarded for a period of not more than 5 years.
  [(h) Service Obligation.--
          [(1) In general.--The Secretary shall require, by 
        regulation, that an individual who receives training 
        pursuant to a grant made under this section--
                  [(A) perform work--
                          [(i) related to the training received 
                        under this section; and
                          [(ii) that benefits Indian people; or
                  [(B) repay all or a prorated part of the 
                assistance received.
          [(2) Reporting.--The Secretary shall establish, by 
        regulation, a reporting procedure under which a grant 
        recipient under this section shall, not later than 12 
        months after the date of completion of the training, 
        and periodically thereafter, provide information 
        concerning compliance with the work requirement under 
        paragraph (1).

                    [Subpart 3--National Activities

[SEC. 7131. NATIONAL RESEARCH ACTIVITIES.

  [(a) Authorized Activities.--The Secretary may use funds made 
available under section 7152(b) for each fiscal year to--
          [(1) conduct research related to effective approaches 
        for the education of Indian children and adults;
          [(2) evaluate federally assisted education programs 
        from which Indian children and adults may benefit;
          [(3) collect and analyze data on the educational 
        status and needs of Indians; and
          [(4) carry out other activities that are consistent 
        with the purpose of this part.
  [(b) Eligibility.--The Secretary may carry out any of the 
activities described in subsection (a) directly or through 
grants to, or contracts or cooperative agreements with, Indian 
tribes, Indian organizations, State educational agencies, local 
educational agencies, institutions of higher education, 
including Indian institutions of higher education, and other 
public and private agencies and institutions.
  [(c) Coordination.--Research activities supported under this 
section--
          [(1) shall be carried out in consultation with the 
        Institute of Education Sciences to ensure that such 
        activities are coordinated with and enhance the 
        research and development activities supported by the 
        Institute; and
          [(2) may include collaborative research activities 
        that are jointly funded and carried out by the Office 
        of Indian Education Programs and the Institute of 
        Education Sciences.

[SEC. 7132. IN-SERVICE TRAINING FOR TEACHERS OF INDIAN CHILDREN.

  [(a) Grants Authorized.--In addition to the grants authorized 
by section 7122(c), the Secretary may make grants to eligible 
consortia for the provision of high quality in-service 
training. The Secretary may make such a grant to--
          [(1) a consortium of a tribal college and an 
        institution of higher education that awards a degree in 
        education; or
          [(2) a consortium of--
                  [(A) a tribal college;
                  [(B) an institution of higher education that 
                awards a degree in education; and
                  [(C) one or more elementary schools or 
                secondary schools operated by the Bureau of 
                Indian Affairs, local educational agencies 
                serving Indian children, or tribal educational 
                agencies.
  [(b) Use of Funds.--
          [(1) In-service training.--A consortium that receives 
        a grant under subsection (a) shall use the grant funds 
        only to provide high quality in-service training to 
        teachers, including teachers who are not Indians, in 
        schools of local educational agencies with substantial 
        numbers of Indian children enrolled in their schools, 
        in order to better meet the needs of those children.
          [(2) Components.--The training described in paragraph 
        (1) shall include such activities as preparing teachers 
        to use the best available scientifically based research 
        practices and learning strategies, and to make the most 
        effective use of curricula and materials, to respond to 
        the unique needs of Indian children in their 
        classrooms.
  [(c) Preference for Indian Applicants.--In applying section 
7143 to this section, the Secretary shall give a preference to 
any consortium that includes one or more of the entities 
described in section 7143.

[SEC. 7133. FELLOWSHIPS FOR INDIAN STUDENTS.

  [(a) Fellowships.--
          [(1) Authority.--The Secretary is authorized to award 
        fellowships to Indian students to enable such students 
        to study in graduate and professional programs at 
        institutions of higher education.
          [(2) Requirements.--The fellowships described in 
        paragraph (1) shall be awarded to Indian students to 
        enable such students to pursue a course of study--
                  [(A) of not more than 4 academic years; and
                  [(B) that leads--
                          [(i) toward a postbaccalaureate 
                        degree in medicine, clinical 
                        psychology, psychology, law, education, 
                        or a related field; or
                          [(ii) to an undergraduate or graduate 
                        degree in engineering, business 
                        administration, natural resources, or a 
                        related field.
  [(b) Stipends.--The Secretary shall pay to Indian students 
awarded fellowships under subsection (a) such stipends 
(including allowances for subsistence of such students and 
dependents of such students) as the Secretary determines to be 
consistent with prevailing practices under comparable federally 
supported programs.
  [(c) Payments to Institutions in Lieu of Tuition.--The 
Secretary shall pay to the institution of higher education at 
which such a fellowship recipient is pursuing a course of 
study, in lieu of tuition charged to such recipient, such 
amounts as the Secretary may determine to be necessary to cover 
the cost of education provided to such recipient.
  [(d) Special Rules.--
          [(1) In general.--If a fellowship awarded under 
        subsection (a) is vacated prior to the end of the 
        period for which the fellowship is awarded, the 
        Secretary may award an additional fellowship for the 
        unexpired portion of the period of the first 
        fellowship.
          [(2) Written notice.--Not later than 45 days before 
        the commencement of an academic term, the Secretary 
        shall provide to each individual who is awarded a 
        fellowship under subsection (a) for such academic term 
        written notice of--
                  [(A) the amount of the funding for the 
                fellowship; and
                  [(B) any stipends or other payments that will 
                be made under this section to, or for the 
                benefit of, the individual for the academic 
                term.
          [(3) Priority.--Not more than 10 percent of the 
        fellowships awarded under subsection (a) shall be 
        awarded, on a priority basis, to persons receiving 
        training in guidance counseling with a specialty in the 
        area of alcohol and substance abuse counseling and 
        education.
  [(e) Service Obligation.--
          [(1) In general.--The Secretary shall require, by 
        regulation, that an individual who receives financial 
        assistance under this section--
                  [(A) perform work--
                          [(i) related to the training for 
                        which the individual receives the 
                        assistance under this section; and
                          [(ii) that benefits Indian people; or
                  [(B) repay all or a prorated portion of such 
                assistance.
          [(2) Reporting.--The Secretary shall establish, by 
        regulation, a reporting procedure under which a 
        recipient of assistance under this section shall, not 
        later than 12 months after the date of completion of 
        the training, and periodically thereafter, provide 
        information concerning the compliance of such recipient 
        with the work requirement described in paragraph (1).
  [(f) Administration of Fellowships.--The Secretary may 
administer the fellowships authorized under this section 
through a grant to, or contract or cooperative agreement with, 
an Indian organization with demonstrated qualifications to 
administer all facets of the program assisted under this 
section.

[SEC. 7134. GIFTED AND TALENTED INDIAN STUDENTS.

  [(a) Program Authorized.--The Secretary is authorized to--
          [(1) establish two centers for gifted and talented 
        Indian students at tribally controlled community 
        colleges in accordance with this section; and
          [(2) support demonstration projects described in 
        subsection (c).
  [(b) Eligible Entities.--The Secretary shall make grants, or 
enter into contracts, for the activities described in 
subsection (a), to or with--
          [(1) two tribally controlled community colleges 
        that--
                  [(A) are eligible for funding under the 
                Tribally Controlled Colleges and Universities 
                Assistance Act of 1978; and
                  [(B) are fully accredited; or
          [(2) the American Indian Higher Education Consortium, 
        if the Secretary does not receive applications that the 
        Secretary determines to be approvable from two colleges 
        that meet the requirements of paragraph (1).
  [(c) Use of Funds.--
          [(1) In general.--Funds made available through the 
        grants made, or contracts entered into, by the 
        Secretary under subsection (b) shall be used for--
                  [(A) the establishment of centers described 
                in subsection (a); and
                  [(B) carrying out demonstration projects 
                designed to--
                          [(i) address the special needs of 
                        Indian students in elementary schools 
                        and secondary schools who are gifted 
                        and talented; and
                          [(ii) provide such support services 
                        to the families of the students 
                        described in clause (i) as are needed 
                        to enable such students to benefit from 
                        the projects.
          [(2) Subcontracts.--Each recipient of a grant or 
        contract under subsection (b) to carry out a 
        demonstration project under subsection (a) may enter 
        into a contract with any other entity, including the 
        Children's Television Workshop, to carry out the 
        demonstration project.
          [(3) Demonstration projects.--Demonstration projects 
        assisted under subsection (b) may include--
                  [(A) the identification of the special needs 
                of gifted and talented Indian students, 
                particularly at the elementary school level, 
                giving attention to--
                          [(i) identifying the emotional and 
                        psychosocial needs of such students; 
                        and
                          [(ii) providing such support services 
                        to the families of such students as are 
                        needed to enable such students to 
                        benefit from the projects;
                  [(B) the conduct of educational, 
                psychosocial, and developmental activities that 
                the Secretary determines hold a reasonable 
                promise of resulting in substantial progress 
                toward meeting the educational needs of such 
                gifted and talented children, including--
                          [(i) demonstrating and exploring the 
                        use of Indian languages and exposure to 
                        Indian cultural traditions; and
                          [(ii) carrying out mentoring and 
                        apprenticeship programs;
                  [(C) the provision of technical assistance 
                and the coordination of activities at schools 
                that receive grants under subsection (d) with 
                respect to the activities assisted under such 
                grants, the evaluation of programs assisted 
                under such grants, or the dissemination of such 
                evaluations;
                  [(D) the use of public television in meeting 
                the special educational needs of such gifted 
                and talented children;
                  [(E) leadership programs designed to 
                replicate programs for such children throughout 
                the United States, including disseminating 
                information derived from the demonstration 
                projects conducted under subsection (a); and
                  [(F) appropriate research, evaluation, and 
                related activities pertaining to the needs of 
                such children and to the provision of such 
                support services to the families of such 
                children as are needed to enable such children 
                to benefit from the projects.
          [(4) Application.--Each eligible entity desiring a 
        grant or contract under subsection (b) shall submit an 
        application to the Secretary at such time, in such 
        manner, and accompanied by such information, as the 
        Secretary may reasonably require.
  [(d) Additional Grants.--
          [(1) In general.--The Secretary, in consultation with 
        the Secretary of the Interior, shall award 5 grants to 
        schools funded by the Bureau of Indian Affairs 
        (hereafter referred to individually in this section as 
        a ``Bureau school'') for program research and 
        development and the development and dissemination of 
        curriculum and teacher training material, regarding--
                  [(A) gifted and talented students;
                  [(B) college preparatory studies (including 
                programs for Indian students with an interest 
                in pursuing teaching careers);
                  [(C) students with special culturally related 
                academic needs, including students with social, 
                lingual, and cultural needs; or
                  [(D) mathematics and science education.
          [(2) Applications.--Each Bureau school desiring a 
        grant under this subsection shall submit an application 
        to the Secretary at such time, in such manner, and 
        accompanied by such information, as the Secretary may 
        reasonably require.
          [(3) Special rule.--Each application described in 
        paragraph (2) shall be developed, and each grant under 
        this subsection shall be administered, jointly by the 
        supervisor of the Bureau school and the local 
        educational agency serving such school.
          [(4) Requirements.--In awarding grants under 
        paragraph (1), the Secretary shall achieve a mixture of 
        the programs described in paragraph (1) that ensures 
        that Indian students at all grade levels and in all 
        geographic areas of the United States are able to 
        participate in a program assisted under this 
        subsection.
          [(5) Grant period.--Subject to the availability of 
        appropriations, a grant awarded under paragraph (1) 
        shall be awarded for a 3-year period and may be renewed 
        by the Secretary for additional 3-year periods if the 
        Secretary determines that the performance of the grant 
        recipient has been satisfactory.
          [(6) Dissemination.--
                  [(A) Cooperative efforts.--The dissemination 
                of any materials developed from activities 
                assisted under paragraph (1) shall be carried 
                out in cooperation with entities that receive 
                funds pursuant to subsection (b).
                  [(B) Report.--The Secretary shall prepare and 
                submit to the Secretary of the Interior and to 
                Congress a report concerning any results from 
                activities described in this subsection.
          [(7) Evaluation costs.--
                  [(A) Division.--The costs of evaluating any 
                activities assisted under paragraph (1) shall 
                be divided between the Bureau schools 
                conducting such activities and the recipients 
                of grants or contracts under subsection (b) who 
                conduct demonstration projects under subsection 
                (a).
                  [(B) Grants and contracts.--If no funds are 
                provided under subsection (b) for--
                          [(i) the evaluation of activities 
                        assisted under paragraph (1);
                          [(ii) technical assistance and 
                        coordination with respect to such 
                        activities; or
                          [(iii) the dissemination of the 
                        evaluations referred to in clause (i),
                the Secretary shall make such grants, or enter 
                into such contracts, as are necessary to 
                provide for the evaluations, technical 
                assistance, and coordination of such 
                activities, and the dissemination of the 
                evaluations.
  [(e) Information Network.--The Secretary shall encourage each 
recipient of a grant or contract under this section to work 
cooperatively as part of a national network to ensure that the 
information developed by the grant or contract recipient is 
readily available to the entire educational community.

[SEC. 7135. GRANTS TO TRIBES FOR EDUCATION ADMINISTRATIVE PLANNING AND 
                    DEVELOPMENT.

  [(a) In General.--The Secretary may make grants to Indian 
tribes, and tribal organizations approved by Indian tribes, to 
plan and develop a centralized tribal administrative entity 
to--
          [(1) coordinate all education programs operated by 
        the tribe or within the territorial jurisdiction of the 
        tribe;
          [(2) develop education codes for schools within the 
        territorial jurisdiction of the tribe;
          [(3) provide support services and technical 
        assistance to schools serving children of the tribe; 
        and
          [(4) perform child-find screening services for the 
        preschool-aged children of the tribe to--
                  [(A) ensure placement in appropriate 
                educational facilities; and
                  [(B) coordinate the provision of any needed 
                special services for conditions such as 
                disabilities and English language skill 
                deficiencies.
  [(b) Period of Grant.--Each grant awarded under this section 
may be awarded for a period of not more than 3 years. Such 
grant may be renewed upon the termination of the initial period 
of the grant if the grant recipient demonstrates to the 
satisfaction of the Secretary that renewing the grant for an 
additional 3-year period is necessary to carry out the 
objectives of the grant described in subsection (c)(2)(A).
  [(c) Application for Grant.--
          [(1) In general.--Each Indian tribe and tribal 
        organization desiring a grant under this section shall 
        submit an application to the Secretary at such time, in 
        such manner, containing such information, and 
        consistent with such criteria, as the Secretary may 
        prescribe in regulations.
          [(2) Contents.--Each application described in 
        paragraph (1) shall contain--
                  [(A) a statement describing the activities to 
                be conducted, and the objectives to be 
                achieved, under the grant; and
                  [(B) a description of the method to be used 
                for evaluating the effectiveness of the 
                activities for which assistance is sought and 
                for determining whether such objectives are 
                achieved.
          [(3) Approval.--The Secretary may approve an 
        application submitted by a tribe or tribal organization 
        pursuant to this section only if the Secretary is 
        satisfied that such application, including any 
        documentation submitted with the application--
                  [(A) demonstrates that the applicant has 
                consulted with other education entities, if 
                any, within the territorial jurisdiction of the 
                applicant who will be affected by the 
                activities to be conducted under the grant;
                  [(B) provides for consultation with such 
                other education entities in the operation and 
                evaluation of the activities conducted under 
                the grant; and
                  [(C) demonstrates that there will be adequate 
                resources provided under this section or from 
                other sources to complete the activities for 
                which assistance is sought, except that the 
                availability of such other resources shall not 
                be a basis for disapproval of such application.
  [(d) Restriction.--A tribe may not receive funds under this 
section if such tribe receives funds under section 1144 of the 
Education Amendments of 1978.

[SEC. 7136. IMPROVEMENT OF EDUCATIONAL OPPORTUNITIES FOR ADULT INDIANS.

  [(a) In General.--The Secretary shall make grants to State 
educational agencies, local educational agencies, and Indian 
tribes, institutions, and organizations--
          [(1) to support planning, pilot, and demonstration 
        projects that are designed to test and demonstrate the 
        effectiveness of programs for improving employment and 
        educational opportunities for adult Indians;
          [(2) to assist in the establishment and operation of 
        programs that are designed to stimulate--
                  [(A) the provision of basic literacy 
                opportunities for all nonliterate Indian 
                adults; and
                  [(B) the provision of opportunities to all 
                Indian adults to qualify for a secondary school 
                diploma, or its recognized equivalent, in the 
                shortest period of time feasible;
          [(3) to support a major research and development 
        program to develop more innovative and effective 
        techniques for achieving literacy and secondary school 
        equivalency for Indians;
          [(4) to provide for basic surveys and evaluations to 
        define accurately the extent of the problems of 
        illiteracy and lack of secondary school completion 
        among Indians; and
          [(5) to encourage the dissemination of information 
        and materials relating to, and the evaluation of, the 
        effectiveness of education programs that may offer 
        educational opportunities to Indian adults.
  [(b) Educational Services.--The Secretary may make grants to 
Indian tribes, institutions, and organizations to develop and 
establish educational services and programs specifically 
designed to improve educational opportunities for Indian 
adults.
  [(c) Information and Evaluation.--The Secretary may make 
grants to, and enter into contracts with, public agencies and 
institutions and Indian tribes, institutions, and 
organizations, for--
          [(1) the dissemination of information concerning 
        educational programs, services, and resources available 
        to Indian adults, including evaluations of the 
        programs, services, and resources; and
          [(2) the evaluation of federally assisted programs in 
        which Indian adults may participate to determine the 
        effectiveness of the programs in achieving the purposes 
        of the programs with respect to Indian adults.
  [(d) Applications.--
          [(1) In general.--Each entity desiring a grant or 
        contract under this section shall submit to the 
        Secretary an application at such time, in such manner, 
        containing such information, and consistent with such 
        criteria, as the Secretary may prescribe in 
        regulations.
          [(2) Contents.--Each application described in 
        paragraph (1) shall contain--
                  [(A) a statement describing the activities to 
                be conducted and the objectives to be achieved 
                under the grant or contract; and
                  [(B) a description of the method to be used 
                for evaluating the effectiveness of the 
                activities for which assistance is sought and 
                determining whether the objectives of the grant 
                or contract are achieved.
          [(3) Approval.--The Secretary shall not approve an 
        application described in paragraph (1) unless the 
        Secretary determines that such application, including 
        any documentation submitted with the application, 
        indicates that--
                  [(A) there has been adequate participation, 
                by the individuals to be served and the 
                appropriate tribal communities, in the planning 
                and development of the activities to be 
                assisted; and
                  [(B) the individuals and tribal communities 
                referred to in subparagraph (A) will 
                participate in the operation and evaluation of 
                the activities to be assisted.
          [(4) Priority.--In approving applications under 
        paragraph (1), the Secretary shall give priority to 
        applications from Indian educational agencies, 
        organizations, and institutions.
  [(e) Administrative Costs.--Not more than 5 percent of the 
funds made available to an entity through a grant or contract 
made or entered into under this section for a fiscal year may 
be used to pay for administrative costs.

                   [Subpart 4--Federal Administration

[SEC. 7141. NATIONAL ADVISORY COUNCIL ON INDIAN EDUCATION.

  [(a) Membership.--There is established a National Advisory 
Council on Indian Education (hereafter in this section referred 
to as the ``Council''), which shall--
          [(1) consist of 15 Indian members, who shall be 
        appointed by the President from lists of nominees 
        furnished, from time to time, by Indian tribes and 
        organizations; and
          [(2) represent different geographic areas of the 
        United States.
  [(b) Duties.--The Council shall--
          [(1) advise the Secretary concerning the funding and 
        administration (including the development of 
        regulations and administrative policies and practices) 
        of any program, including any program established under 
        this part--
                  [(A) with respect to which the Secretary has 
                jurisdiction; and
                  [(B)(i) that includes Indian children or 
                adults as participants; or
                  [(ii) that may benefit Indian children or 
                adults;
          [(2) make recommendations to the Secretary for 
        filling the position of Director of Indian Education 
        whenever a vacancy occurs; and
          [(3) submit to Congress, not later than June 30 of 
        each year, a report on the activities of the Council, 
        including--
                  [(A) any recommendations that the Council 
                considers appropriate for the improvement of 
                Federal education programs that include Indian 
                children or adults as participants, or that may 
                benefit Indian children or adults; and
                  [(B) recommendations concerning the funding 
                of any program described in subparagraph (A).

[SEC. 7142. PEER REVIEW.

  [The Secretary may use a peer review process to review 
applications submitted to the Secretary under subpart 2 or 
subpart 3.

[SEC. 7143. PREFERENCE FOR INDIAN APPLICANTS.

  [In making grants and entering into contracts or cooperative 
agreements under subpart 2 or subpart 3, the Secretary shall 
give a preference to Indian tribes, organizations, and 
institutions of higher education under any program with respect 
to which Indian tribes, organizations, and institutions are 
eligible to apply for grants, contracts, or cooperative 
agreements.

[SEC. 7144. MINIMUM GRANT CRITERIA.

   [The Secretary may not approve an application for a grant, 
contract, or cooperative agreement under subpart 2 or subpart 3 
unless the application is for a grant, contract, or cooperative 
agreement that is--
          [(1) of sufficient size, scope, and quality to 
        achieve the purpose or objectives of such grant, 
        contract, or cooperative agreement; and
          [(2) based on relevant research findings.

       [Subpart 5--Definitions; Authorizations of Appropriations

[SEC. 7151. DEFINITIONS.

   [For the purposes of this part:
          [(1) Adult.--The term ``adult'' means an individual 
        who--
                  [(A) has attained the age of 16 years; or
                  [(B) has attained an age that is greater than 
                the age of compulsory school attendance under 
                an applicable State law.
          [(2) Free public education.--The term ``free public 
        education'' means education that is--
                  [(A) provided at public expense, under public 
                supervision and direction, and without tuition 
                charge; and
                  [(B) provided as elementary or secondary 
                education in the applicable State or to 
                preschool children.
          [(3) Indian.--The term ``Indian'' means an individual 
        who is--
                  [(A) a member of an Indian tribe or band, as 
                membership is defined by the tribe or band, 
                including--
                          [(i) any tribe or band terminated 
                        since 1940; and
                          [(ii) any tribe or band recognized by 
                        the State in which the tribe or band 
                        resides;
                  [(B) a descendant, in the first or second 
                degree, of an individual described in 
                subparagraph (A);
                  [(C) considered by the Secretary of the 
                Interior to be an Indian for any purpose;
                  [(D) an Eskimo, Aleut, or other Alaska 
                Native; or
                  [(E) a member of an organized Indian group 
                that received a grant under the Indian 
                Education Act of 1988 as in effect the day 
                preceding the date of enactment of the 
                Improving America's Schools Act of 1994.

[SEC. 7152. AUTHORIZATIONS OF APPROPRIATIONS.

  [(a) Subpart 1.--For the purpose of carrying out subpart 1, 
there are authorized to be appropriated $96,400,000 for fiscal 
year 2002 and such sums as may be necessary for each of the 5 
succeeding fiscal years.
  [(b) Subparts 2 and 3.--For the purpose of carrying out 
subparts 2 and 3, there are authorized to be appropriated 
$24,000,000 for fiscal year 2002 and such sums as may be 
necessary for each of the 5 succeeding fiscal years.

                   [PART B--NATIVE HAWAIIAN EDUCATION

[SEC. 7201. SHORT TITLE.

  [This part may be cited as the ``Native Hawaiian Education 
Act''.

[SEC. 7202. FINDINGS.

   [Congress finds the following:
          [(1) Native Hawaiians are a distinct and unique 
        indigenous people with a historical continuity to the 
        original inhabitants of the Hawaiian archipelago, whose 
        society was organized as a nation and internationally 
        recognized as a nation by the United States, Britain, 
        France, and Japan, as evidenced by treaties governing 
        friendship, commerce, and navigation.
          [(2) At the time of the arrival of the first 
        nonindigenous people in Hawaii in 1778, the Native 
        Hawaiian people lived in a highly organized, self-
        sufficient subsistence social system based on a 
        communal land tenure system with a sophisticated 
        language, culture, and religion.
          [(3) A unified monarchal government of the Hawaiian 
        Islands was established in 1810 under Kamehameha I, the 
        first King of Hawaii.
          [(4) From 1826 until 1893, the United States 
        recognized the sovereignty and independence of the 
        Kingdom of Hawaii, which was established in 1810 under 
        Kamehameha I, extended full and complete diplomatic 
        recognition to the Kingdom of Hawaii, and entered into 
        treaties and conventions with the Kingdom of Hawaii to 
        govern friendship, commerce and navigation in 1826, 
        1842, 1849, 1875, and 1887.
          [(5) In 1893, the sovereign, independent, 
        internationally recognized, and indigenous government 
        of Hawaii, the Kingdom of Hawaii, was overthrown by a 
        small group of non-Hawaiians, including United States 
        citizens, who were assisted in their efforts by the 
        United States Minister, a United States naval 
        representative, and armed naval forces of the United 
        States. Because of the participation of United States 
        agents and citizens in the overthrow of the Kingdom of 
        Hawaii, in 1993 the United States apologized to Native 
        Hawaiians for the overthrow and the deprivation of the 
        rights of Native Hawaiians to self-determination 
        through Public Law 103-150 (107 Stat. 1510).
          [(6) In 1898, the joint resolution entitled ``Joint 
        Resolution to provide for annexing the Hawaiian Islands 
        to the United States'', approved July 7, 1898 (30 Stat. 
        750), ceded absolute title of all lands held by the 
        Republic of Hawaii, including the government and crown 
        lands of the former Kingdom of Hawaii, to the United 
        States, but mandated that revenue generated from the 
        lands be used ``solely for the benefit of the 
        inhabitants of the Hawaiian Islands for educational and 
        other public purposes''.
          [(7) By 1919, the Native Hawaiian population had 
        declined from an estimated 1,000,000 in 1778 to an 
        alarming 22,600, and in recognition of this severe 
        decline, Congress enacted the Hawaiian Homes Commission 
        Act, 1920 (42 Stat. 108), which designated 
        approximately 200,000 acres of ceded public lands for 
        homesteading by Native Hawaiians.
          [(8) Through the enactment of the Hawaiian Homes 
        Commission Act, 1920, Congress affirmed the special 
        relationship between the United States and the Native 
        Hawaiians, which was described by then Secretary of the 
        Interior Franklin K. Lane, who said: ``One thing that 
        impressed me... was the fact that the natives of the 
        island who are our wards, I should say, and for whom in 
        a sense we are trustees, are falling off rapidly in 
        numbers and many of them are in poverty.''.
          [(9) In 1938, Congress again acknowledged the unique 
        status of the Hawaiian people by including in the Act 
        of June 20, 1938 (52 Stat. 781, chapter 530; 16 U.S.C. 
        391b, 391b-1, 392b, 392c, 396, 396a), a provision to 
        lease lands within the National Parks extension to 
        Native Hawaiians and to permit fishing in the area 
        ``only by native Hawaiian residents of said area or of 
        adjacent villages and by visitors under their 
        guidance.''.
          [(10) Under the Act entitled ``An Act to provide for 
        the admission of the State of Hawaii into the Union'', 
        approved March 18, 1959 (73 Stat. 4), the United States 
        transferred responsibility for the administration of 
        the Hawaiian Home Lands to the State of Hawaii but 
        reaffirmed the trust relationship between the United 
        States and the Hawaiian people by retaining the 
        exclusive power to enforce the trust, including the 
        power to approve land exchanges and amendments to such 
        Act affecting the rights of beneficiaries under such 
        Act.
          [(11) In 1959, under the Act entitled ``An Act to 
        provide for the admission of the State of Hawaii into 
        the Union'', the United States also ceded to the State 
        of Hawaii title to the public lands formerly held by 
        the United States, but mandated that such lands be held 
        by the State ``in public trust'' and reaffirmed the 
        special relationship that existed between the United 
        States and the Hawaiian people by retaining the legal 
        responsibility to enforce the public trust 
        responsibility of the State of Hawaii for the 
        betterment of the conditions of Native Hawaiians, as 
        defined in section 201(a) of the Hawaiian Homes 
        Commission Act, 1920.
          [(12) The United States has recognized and reaffirmed 
        that--
                  [(A) Native Hawaiians have a cultural, 
                historic, and land-based link to the indigenous 
                people who exercised sovereignty over the 
                Hawaiian Islands, and that group has never 
                relinquished its claims to sovereignty or its 
                sovereign lands;
                  [(B) Congress does not extend services to 
                Native Hawaiians because of their race, but 
                because of their unique status as the 
                indigenous people of a once sovereign nation as 
                to whom the United States has established a 
                trust relationship;
                  [(C) Congress has also delegated broad 
                authority to administer a portion of the 
                Federal trust responsibility to the State of 
                Hawaii;
                  [(D) the political status of Native Hawaiians 
                is comparable to that of American Indians and 
                Alaska Natives; and
                  [(E) the aboriginal, indigenous people of the 
                United States have--
                          [(i) a continuing right to autonomy 
                        in their internal affairs; and
                          [(ii) an ongoing right of self-
                        determination and self-governance that 
                        has never been extinguished.
          [(13) The political relationship between the United 
        States and the Native Hawaiian people has been 
        recognized and reaffirmed by the United States, as 
        evidenced by the inclusion of Native Hawaiians in--
                  [(A) the Native American Programs Act of 1974 
                (42 U.S.C. 2991 et seq.);
                  [(B) the American Indian Religious Freedom 
                Act (42 U.S.C. 1996);
                  [(C) the National Museum of the American 
                Indian Act (20 U.S.C. 80q et seq.);
                  [(D) the Native American Graves Protection 
                and Repatriation Act (25 U.S.C. 3001 et seq.);
                  [(E) division A of subtitle III of title 54, 
                UnitedStates Code;
                  [(F) the Native American Languages Act (25 
                U.S.C. 2901 et seq.);
                  [(G) the American Indian, Alaska Native, and 
                Native Hawaiian Culture and Art Development Act 
                (20 U.S.C. 4401 et seq.);
                  [(H) the Workforce Investment Act of 1998 (29 
                U.S.C. 2801 et seq.); and
                  [(I) the Older Americans Act of 1965 (42 
                U.S.C. 3001 et seq.).
          [(14) In 1981, Congress instructed the Office of 
        Education to submit to Congress a comprehensive report 
        on Native Hawaiian education. The report, entitled the 
        ``Native Hawaiian Educational Assessment Project'', was 
        released in 1983 and documented that Native Hawaiians 
        scored below parity with regard to national norms on 
        standardized achievement tests, were disproportionately 
        represented in many negative social and physical 
        statistics indicative of special educational needs, and 
        had educational needs that were related to their unique 
        cultural situation, such as different learning styles 
        and low self-image.
          [(15) In recognition of the educational needs of 
        Native Hawaiians, in 1988, Congress enacted title IV of 
        the Augustus F. Hawkins-Robert T. Stafford Elementary 
        and Secondary School Improvement Amendments of 1988 
        (102 Stat. 130) to authorize and develop supplemental 
        educational programs to address the unique conditions 
        of Native Hawaiians.
          [(16) In 1993, the Kamehameha Schools Bishop Estate 
        released a 10-year update of findings of the Native 
        Hawaiian Educational Assessment Project, which found 
        that despite the successes of the programs established 
        under title IV of the Augustus F. Hawkins-Robert T. 
        Stafford Elementary and Secondary School Improvement 
        Amendments of 1988, many of the same educational needs 
        still existed for Native Hawaiians. Subsequent reports 
        by the Kamehameha Schools Bishop Estate and other 
        organizations have generally confirmed those findings. 
        For example--
                  [(A) educational risk factors continue to 
                start even before birth for many Native 
                Hawaiian children, including--
                          [(i) late or no prenatal care;
                          [(ii) high rates of births by Native 
                        Hawaiian women who are unmarried; and
                          [(iii) high rates of births to 
                        teenage parents;
                  [(B) Native Hawaiian students continue to 
                begin their school experience lagging behind 
                other students in terms of readiness factors 
                such as vocabulary test scores;
                  [(C) Native Hawaiian students continue to 
                score below national norms on standardized 
                education achievement tests at all grade 
                levels;
                  [(D) both public and private schools continue 
                to show a pattern of lower percentages of 
                Native Hawaiian students in the uppermost 
                achievement levels and in gifted and talented 
                programs;
                  [(E) Native Hawaiian students continue to be 
                overrepresented among students qualifying for 
                special education programs provided to students 
                with learning disabilities, mild intellectual 
                disabilities, emotional impairment, and other 
                such disabilities;
                  [(F) Native Hawaiians continue to be 
                underrepresented in institutions of higher 
                education and among adults who have completed 
                four or more years of college;
                  [(G) Native Hawaiians continue to be 
                disproportionately represented in many negative 
                social and physical statistics indicative of 
                special educational needs, as demonstrated by 
                the fact that--
                          [(i) Native Hawaiian students are 
                        more likely to be retained in grade 
                        level and to be excessively absent in 
                        secondary school;
                          [(ii) Native Hawaiian students have 
                        the highest rates of drug and alcohol 
                        use in the State of Hawaii; and
                          [(iii) Native Hawaiian children 
                        continue to be disproportionately 
                        victimized by child abuse and neglect; 
                        and
                  [(H) Native Hawaiians now comprise over 23 
                percent of the students served by the State of 
                Hawaii Department of Education, and there are 
                and will continue to be geographically rural, 
                isolated areas with a high Native Hawaiian 
                population density.
          [(17) In the 1998 National Assessment of Educational 
        Progress, Hawaiian fourth-graders ranked 39th among 
        groups of students from 39 States in reading. Given 
        that Hawaiian students rank among the lowest groups of 
        students nationally in reading, and that Native 
        Hawaiian students rank the lowest among Hawaiian 
        students in reading, it is imperative that greater 
        focus be placed on beginning reading and early 
        education and literacy in Hawaii.
          [(18) The findings described in paragraphs (16) and 
        (17) are inconsistent with the high rates of literacy 
        and integration of traditional culture and Western 
        education historically achieved by Native Hawaiians 
        through a Hawaiian language-based public school system 
        established in 1840 by Kamehameha III.
          [(19) Following the overthrow of the Kingdom of 
        Hawaii in 1893, Hawaiian medium schools were banned. 
        After annexation, throughout the territorial and 
        statehood period of Hawaii, and until 1986, use of the 
        Hawaiian language as an instructional medium in 
        education in public schools was declared unlawful. The 
        declaration caused incalculable harm to a culture that 
        placed a very high value on the power of language, as 
        exemplified in the traditional saying: ``I ka ``o/lelo 
        no/ ke ola; I ka ``o/lelo no/ ka make. In the language 
        rests life; In the language rests death.''.
          [(20) Despite the consequences of over 100 years of 
        nonindigenous influence, the Native Hawaiian people are 
        determined to preserve, develop, and transmit to future 
        generations their ancestral territory and their 
        cultural identity in accordance with their own 
        spiritual and traditional beliefs, customs, practices, 
        language, and social institutions.
          [(21) The State of Hawaii, in the constitution and 
        statutes of the State of Hawaii--
                  [(A) reaffirms and protects the unique right 
                of the Native Hawaiian people to practice and 
                perpetuate their culture and religious customs, 
                beliefs, practices, and language;
                  [(B) recognizes the traditional language of 
                the Native Hawaiian people as an official 
                language of the State of Hawaii, which may be 
                used as the language of instruction for all 
                subjects and grades in the public school 
                system; and
                  [(C) promotes the study of the Hawaiian 
                culture, language, and history by providing a 
                Hawaiian education program and using community 
                expertise as a suitable and essential means to 
                further the program.

[SEC. 7203. PURPOSES.

   [The purposes of this part are to--
          [(1) authorize and develop innovative educational 
        programs to assist Native Hawaiians;
          [(2) provide direction and guidance to appropriate 
        Federal, State, and local agencies to focus resources, 
        including resources made available under this part, on 
        Native Hawaiian education, and to provide periodic 
        assessment and data collection;
          [(3) supplement and expand programs and authorities 
        in the area of education to further the purposes of 
        this title; and
          [(4) encourage the maximum participation of Native 
        Hawaiians in planning and management of Native Hawaiian 
        education programs.

[SEC. 7204. NATIVE HAWAIIAN EDUCATION COUNCIL AND ISLAND COUNCILS.

  [(a) Establishment of Native Hawaiian Education Council.--In 
order to better effectuate the purposes of this part through 
the coordination of educational and related services and 
programs available to Native Hawaiians, including those 
programs receiving funding under this part, the Secretary is 
authorized to establish a Native Hawaiian Education Council 
(hereafter in this part referred to as the ``Education 
Council'').
  [(b) Composition of Education Council.--The Education Council 
shall consist of not more than 21 members, unless otherwise 
determined by a majority of the council.
  [(c) Conditions and Terms.--
          [(1) Conditions.--At least 10 members of the 
        Education Council shall be Native Hawaiian education 
        service providers and 10 members of the Education 
        Council shall be Native Hawaiians or Native Hawaiian 
        education consumers. In addition, a representative of 
        the State of Hawaii Office of Hawaiian Affairs shall 
        serve as a member of the Education Council.
          [(2) Appointments.--The members of the Education 
        Council shall be appointed by the Secretary based on 
        recommendations received from the Native Hawaiian 
        community.
          [(3) Terms.--Members of the Education Council shall 
        serve for staggered terms of 3 years, except as 
        provided in paragraph (4).
          [(4) Council determinations.--Additional conditions 
        and terms relating to membership on the Education 
        Council, including term lengths and term renewals, 
        shall be determined by a majority of the Education 
        Council.
  [(d) Native Hawaiian Education Council Grant.--The Secretary 
shall make a direct grant to the Education Council to carry out 
the following activities:
          [(1) Coordinate the educational and related services 
        and programs available to Native Hawaiians, including 
        the programs assisted under this part.
          [(2) Assess the extent to which such services and 
        programs meet the needs of Native Hawaiians, and 
        collect data on the status of Native Hawaiian 
        education.
          [(3) Provide direction and guidance, through the 
        issuance of reports and recommendations, to appropriate 
        Federal, State, and local agencies in order to focus 
        and improve the use of resources, including resources 
        made available under this part, relating to Native 
        Hawaiian education, and serve, where appropriate, in an 
        advisory capacity.
          [(4) Make direct grants, if such grants enable the 
        Education Council to carry out the duties of the 
        Education Council, as described in paragraphs (1) 
        through (3).
  [(e) Additional Duties of the Education Council.--
          [(1) In general.--The Education Council shall provide 
        copies of any reports and recommendations issued by the 
        Education Council, including any information that the 
        Education Council provides to the Secretary pursuant to 
        subsection (i), to the Secretary, the Committee on 
        Education and the Workforce of the House of 
        Representatives, and the Committee on Indian Affairs of 
        the Senate.
          [(2) Annual report.--The Education Council shall 
        prepare and submit to the Secretary an annual report on 
        the Education Council's activities.
          [(3) Island council support and assistance.--The 
        Education Council shall provide such administrative 
        support and financial assistance to the island councils 
        established pursuant to subsection (f) as the Secretary 
        determines to be appropriate, in a manner that supports 
        the distinct needs of each island council.
  [(f) Establishment of Island Councils.--
          [(1) In general.--In order to better effectuate the 
        purposes of this part and to ensure the adequate 
        representation of island and community interests within 
        the Education Council, the Secretary is authorized to 
        facilitate the establishment of Native Hawaiian 
        education island councils (hereafter in this part 
        referred to as an ``island council'') for the following 
        islands:
                  [(A) Hawaii.
                  [(B) Maui.
                  [(C) Molokai.
                  [(D) Lanai.
                  [(E) Oahu.
                  [(F) Kauai.
                  [(G) Niihau.
          [(2) Composition of island councils.--Each island 
        council shall consist of parents, students, and other 
        community members who have an interest in the education 
        of Native Hawaiians, and shall be representative of 
        individuals concerned with the educational needs of all 
        age groups, from children in preschool through adults. 
        At least three-fourths of the members of each island 
        council shall be Native Hawaiians.
  [(g) Administrative Provisions Relating to Education Council 
and Island Councils.--The Education Council and each island 
council shall meet at the call of the chairperson of the 
appropriate council, or upon the request of the majority of the 
members of the appropriate council, but in any event not less 
often than four times during each calendar year. The provisions 
of the Federal Advisory Committee Act shall not apply to the 
Education Council and each island council.
  [(h) Compensation.--Members of the Education Council and each 
island council shall not receive any compensation for service 
on the Education Council and each island council, respectively.
  [(i) Report.--Not later than 4 years after the date of 
enactment of the No Child Left Behind Act of 2001, the 
Secretary shall prepare and submit to the Committee on 
Education and the Workforce of the House of Representatives and 
the Committee on Indian Affairs of the Senate a report that 
summarizes the annual reports of the Education Council, 
describes the allocation and use of funds under this part, and 
contains recommendations for changes in Federal, State, and 
local policy to advance the purposes of this part.

[SEC. 7205. PROGRAM AUTHORIZED.

  [(a) General Authority.--
          [(1) Grants and contracts.--The Secretary is 
        authorized to make direct grants to, or enter into 
        contracts with--
                  [(A) Native Hawaiian educational 
                organizations;
                  [(B) Native Hawaiian community-based 
                organizations;
                  [(C) public and private nonprofit 
                organizations, agencies, and institutions with 
                experience in developing or operating Native 
                Hawaiian programs or programs of instruction in 
                the Native Hawaiian language; and
                  [(D) consortia of the organizations, 
                agencies, and institutions described in 
                subparagraphs (A) through (C),
        to carry out programs that meet the purposes of this 
        part.
          [(2) Priorities.--In awarding grants or contracts to 
        carry out activities described in paragraph (3), the 
        Secretary shall give priority to entities proposing 
        projects that are designed to address--
                  [(A) beginning reading and literacy among 
                students in kindergarten through third grade;
                  [(B) the needs of at-risk children and youth;
                  [(C) needs in fields or disciplines in which 
                Native Hawaiians are underemployed; and
                  [(D) the use of the Hawaiian language in 
                instruction.
          [(3) Authorized activities.--Activities provided 
        through programs carried out under this part may 
        include--
                  [(A) the development and maintenance of a 
                statewide Native Hawaiian early education and 
                care system to provide a continuum of services 
                for Native Hawaiian children from the prenatal 
                period of the children through age 5;
                  [(B) the operation of family-based education 
                centers that provide such services as--
                          [(i) programs for Native Hawaiian 
                        parents and their infants from the 
                        prenatal period of the infants through 
                        age 3;
                          [(ii) preschool programs for Native 
                        Hawaiians; and
                          [(iii) research on, and development 
                        and assessment of, family-based, early 
                        childhood, and preschool programs for 
                        Native Hawaiians;
                  [(C) activities that enhance beginning 
                reading and literacy in either the Hawaiian or 
                the English language among Native Hawaiian 
                students in kindergarten through third grade 
                and assistance in addressing the distinct 
                features of combined English and Hawaiian 
                literacy for Hawaiian speakers in fifth and 
                sixth grade;
                  [(D) activities to meet the special needs of 
                Native Hawaiian students with disabilities, 
                including--
                          [(i) the identification of such 
                        students and their needs;
                          [(ii) the provision of support 
                        services to the families of those 
                        students; and
                          [(iii) other activities consistent 
                        with the requirements of the 
                        Individuals with Disabilities Education 
                        Act;
                  [(E) activities that address the special 
                needs of Native Hawaiian students who are 
                gifted and talented, including--
                          [(i) educational, psychological, and 
                        developmental activities designed to 
                        assist in the educational progress of 
                        those students; and
                          [(ii) activities that involve the 
                        parents of those students in a manner 
                        designed to assist in the students' 
                        educational progress;
                  [(F) the development of academic and 
                vocational curricula to address the needs of 
                Native Hawaiian children and adults, including 
                curriculum materials in the Hawaiian language 
                and mathematics and science curricula that 
                incorporate Native Hawaiian tradition and 
                culture;
                  [(G) professional development activities for 
                educators, including--
                          [(i) the development of programs to 
                        prepare prospective teachers to address 
                        the unique needs of Native Hawaiian 
                        students within the context of Native 
                        Hawaiian culture, language, and 
                        traditions;
                          [(ii) in-service programs to improve 
                        the ability of teachers who teach in 
                        schools with concentrations of Native 
                        Hawaiian students to meet those 
                        students' unique needs; and
                          [(iii) the recruitment and 
                        preparation of Native Hawaiians, and 
                        other individuals who live in 
                        communities with a high concentration 
                        of Native Hawaiians, to become 
                        teachers;
                  [(H) the operation of community-based 
                learning centers that address the needs of 
                Native Hawaiian families and communities 
                through the coordination of public and private 
                programs and services, including--
                          [(i) preschool programs;
                          [(ii) after-school programs;
                          [(iii) vocational and adult education 
                        programs; and
                          [(iv) programs that recognize and 
                        support the unique cultural and 
                        educational needs of Native Hawaiian 
                        children, and incorporate appropriately 
                        qualified Native Hawaiian elders and 
                        seniors;
                  [(I) activities, including program co-
                location, to enable Native Hawaiians to enter 
                and complete programs of postsecondary 
                education, including--
                          [(i) provision of full or partial 
                        scholarships for undergraduate or 
                        graduate study that are awarded to 
                        students based on their academic 
                        promise and financial need, with a 
                        priority, at the graduate level, given 
                        to students entering professions in 
                        which Native Hawaiians are 
                        underrepresented;
                          [(ii) family literacy services;
                          [(iii) counseling and support 
                        services for students receiving 
                        scholarship assistance;
                          [(iv) counseling and guidance for 
                        Native Hawaiian secondary students who 
                        have the potential to receive 
                        scholarships; and
                          [(v) faculty development activities 
                        designed to promote the matriculation 
                        of Native Hawaiian students;
                  [(J) research and data collection activities 
                to determine the educational status and needs 
                of Native Hawaiian children and adults;
                  [(K) other research and evaluation activities 
                related to programs carried out under this 
                part; and
                  [(L) other activities, consistent with the 
                purposes of this part, to meet the educational 
                needs of Native Hawaiian children and adults.
          [(4) Special rule and conditions.--
                  [(A) Institutions outside hawaii.--The 
                Secretary shall not establish a policy under 
                this section that prevents a Native Hawaiian 
                student enrolled at a 2- or 4-year degree 
                granting institution of higher education 
                outside of the State of Hawaii from receiving a 
                scholarship pursuant to paragraph (3)(I).
                  [(B) Scholarship conditions.--The Secretary 
                shall establish conditions for receipt of a 
                scholarship awarded under paragraph (3)(I). The 
                conditions shall require that an individual 
                seeking such a scholarship enter into a 
                contract to provide professional services, 
                either during the scholarship period or upon 
                completion of a program of postsecondary 
                education, to the Native Hawaiian community.
  [(b) Administrative Costs.--Not more than 5 percent of funds 
provided to a recipient of a grant or contract under subsection 
(a) for any fiscal year may be used for administrative 
purposes.
  [(c) Authorization of Appropriations.--
          [(1) In general.--There are authorized to be 
        appropriated to carry out this section and section 7204 
        such sums as may be necessary for fiscal year 2002 and 
        each of the 5 succeeding fiscal years.
          [(2) Reservation.--Of the funds appropriated under 
        this subsection, the Secretary shall reserve $500,000 
        for fiscal year 2002 and each of the 5 succeeding 
        fiscal years to make a direct grant to the Education 
        Council to carry out section 7204.
          [(3) Availability.--Funds appropriated under this 
        subsection shall remain available until expended.

[SEC. 7206. ADMINISTRATIVE PROVISIONS.

  [(a) Application Required.--No grant may be made under this 
part, and no contract may be entered into under this part, 
unless the entity seeking the grant or contract submits an 
application to the Secretary at such time, in such manner, and 
containing such information as the Secretary may determine to 
be necessary to carry out the provisions of this part.
  [(b) Special Rule.--Each applicant for a grant or contract 
under this part shall submit the application for comment to the 
local educational agency serving students who will participate 
in the program to be carried out under the grant or contract, 
and include those comments, if any, with the application to the 
Secretary.

[SEC. 7207. DEFINITIONS.

   [In this part:
          [(1) Native hawaiian.--The term ``Native Hawaiian'' 
        means any individual who is--
                  [(A) a citizen of the United States; and
                  [(B) a descendant of the aboriginal people 
                who, prior to 1778, occupied and exercised 
                sovereignty in the area that now comprises the 
                State of Hawaii, as evidenced by--
                          [(i) genealogical records;
                          [(ii) Kupuna (elders) or Kamaaina 
                        (long-term community residents) 
                        verification; or
                          [(iii) certified birth records.
          [(2) Native hawaiian community-based organization.--
        The term ``Native Hawaiian community-based 
        organization'' means any organization that is composed 
        primarily of Native Hawaiians from a specific community 
        and that assists in the social, cultural, and 
        educational development of Native Hawaiians in that 
        community.
          [(3) Native hawaiian educational organization.--The 
        term ``Native Hawaiian educational organization'' means 
        a private nonprofit organization that--
                  [(A) serves the interests of Native 
                Hawaiians;
                  [(B) has Native Hawaiians in substantive and 
                policymaking positions within the organization;
                  [(C) incorporates Native Hawaiian 
                perspective, values, language, culture, and 
                traditions into the core function of the 
                organization;
                  [(D) has demonstrated expertise in the 
                education of Native Hawaiian youth; and
                  [(E) has demonstrated expertise in research 
                and program development.
          [(4) Native hawaiian language.--The term ``Native 
        Hawaiian language'' means the single Native American 
        language indigenous to the original inhabitants of the 
        State of Hawaii.
          [(5) Native hawaiian organization.--The term ``Native 
        Hawaiian organization'' means a private nonprofit 
        organization that--
                  [(A) serves the interests of Native 
                Hawaiians;
                  [(B) has Native Hawaiians in substantive and 
                policymaking positions within the organization; 
                and
                  [(C) is recognized by the Governor of Hawaii 
                for the purpose of planning, conducting, or 
                administering programs (or portions of 
                programs) for the benefit of Native Hawaiians.
          [(6) Office of hawaiian affairs.--The term ``Office 
        of Hawaiian Affairs'' means the Office of Hawaiian 
        Affairs established by the Constitution of the State of 
        Hawaii.

                    [PART C--ALASKA NATIVE EDUCATION

[SEC. 7301. SHORT TITLE.

  [This part may be cited as the ``Alaska Native Educational 
Equity, Support, and Assistance Act''.

[SEC. 7302. FINDINGS.

   [Congress finds and declares the following:
          [(1) The attainment of educational success is 
        critical to the betterment of the conditions, long-term 
        well-being, and preservation of the culture of Alaska 
        Natives.
          [(2) It is the policy of the Federal Government to 
        encourage the maximum participation by Alaska Natives 
        in the planning and the management of Alaska Native 
        education programs.
          [(3) Alaska Native children enter and exit school 
        with serious educational handicaps.
          [(4) The educational achievement of Alaska Native 
        children is far below national norms. Native 
        performance on standardized tests is low, Native 
        student dropout rates are high, and Natives are 
        significantly underrepresented among holders of 
        baccalaureate degrees in the State of Alaska. As a 
        result, Native students are being denied their 
        opportunity to become full participants in society by 
        grade school and high school educations that are 
        condemning an entire generation to an underclass status 
        and a life of limited choices.
          [(5) The programs authorized in this part, combined 
        with expanded Head Start, infant learning, and early 
        childhood education programs, and parent education 
        programs, are essential if educational handicaps are to 
        be overcome.
          [(6) The sheer magnitude of the geographic barriers 
        to be overcome in delivering educational services in 
        rural Alaska and Alaska villages should be addressed 
        through the development and implementation of 
        innovative, model programs in a variety of areas.
          [(7) Native children should be afforded the 
        opportunity to begin their formal education on a par 
        with their non-Native peers. The Federal Government 
        should lend support to efforts developed by and 
        undertaken within the Alaska Native community to 
        improve educational opportunity for all students.

[SEC. 7303. PURPOSES.

   [The purposes of this part are as follows:
          [(1) To recognize the unique educational needs of 
        Alaska Natives.
          [(2) To authorize the development of supplemental 
        educational programs to benefit Alaska Natives.
          [(3) To supplement existing programs and authorities 
        in the area of education to further the purposes of 
        this part.
          [(4) To provide direction and guidance to appropriate 
        Federal, State and local agencies to focus resources, 
        including resources made available under this part, on 
        meeting the educational needs of Alaska Natives.

[SEC. 7304. PROGRAM AUTHORIZED.

  [(a) General Authority.--
          [(1) Grants and contracts.--The Secretary is 
        authorized to make grants to, or enter into contracts 
        with, Alaska Native organizations, educational entities 
        with experience in developing or operating Alaska 
        Native programs or programs of instruction conducted in 
        Alaska Native languages, cultural and community-based 
        organizations with experience in developing or 
        operating programs to benefit Alaska Natives, and 
        consortia of organizations and entities described in 
        this paragraph to carry out programs that meet the 
        purposes of this part.
          [(2) Permissible activities.--Activities provided 
        through programs carried out under this part may 
        include the following:
                  [(A) The development and implementation of 
                plans, methods, and strategies to improve the 
                education of Alaska Natives.
                  [(B) The development of curricula and 
                educational programs that address the 
                educational needs of Alaska Native students, 
                including the following:
                          [(i) Curriculum materials that 
                        reflect the cultural diversity or the 
                        contributions of Alaska Natives.
                          [(ii) Instructional programs that 
                        make use of Native Alaskan languages.
                          [(iii) Networks that introduce 
                        successful programs, materials, and 
                        techniques to urban and rural schools.
                  [(C) Professional development activities for 
                educators, including the following:
                          [(i) Programs to prepare teachers to 
                        address the cultural diversity and 
                        unique needs of Alaska Native students.
                          [(ii) In-service programs to improve 
                        the ability of teachers to meet the 
                        unique needs of Alaska Native students.
                          [(iii) Recruitment and preparation of 
                        teachers who are Alaska Native, reside 
                        in communities with high concentrations 
                        of Alaska Native students, or are 
                        likely to succeed as teachers in 
                        isolated, rural communities and engage 
                        in cross-cultural instruction in 
                        Alaska.
                  [(D) The development and operation of home 
                instruction programs for Alaska Native 
                preschool children, to ensure the active 
                involvement of parents in their children's 
                education from the earliest ages.
                  [(E) Family literacy services.
                  [(F) The development and operation of student 
                enrichment programs in science and mathematics 
                that--
                          [(i) are designed to prepare Alaska 
                        Native students from rural areas, who 
                        are preparing to enter secondary 
                        school, to excel in science and math;
                          [(ii) provide appropriate support 
                        services to the families of such 
                        students that are needed to enable such 
                        students to benefit from the programs; 
                        and
                          [(iii) may include activities that 
                        recognize and support the unique 
                        cultural and educational needs of 
                        Alaska Native children, and incorporate 
                        appropriately qualified Alaska Native 
                        elders and seniors.
                  [(G) Research and data collection activities 
                to determine the educational status and needs 
                of Alaska Native children and adults.
                  [(H) Other research and evaluation activities 
                related to programs carried out under this 
                part.
                  [(I) Remedial and enrichment programs to 
                assist Alaska Native students in performing at 
                a high level on standardized tests.
                  [(J) Education and training of Alaska Native 
                students enrolled in a degree program that will 
                lead to certification or licensing as teachers.
                  [(K) Parenting education for parents and 
                caregivers of Alaska Native children to improve 
                parenting and caregiving skills (including 
                skills relating to discipline and cognitive 
                development), including parenting education 
                provided through in-home visitation of new 
                mothers.
                  [(L) Cultural education programs operated by 
                the Alaska Native Heritage Center and designed 
                to share the Alaska Native culture with 
                students.
                  [(M) A cultural exchange program operated by 
                the Alaska Humanities Forum and designed to 
                share Alaska Native culture with urban students 
                in a rural setting, which shall be known as the 
                Rose Cultural Exchange Program.
                  [(N) Activities carried out through Even 
                Start programs carried out under subpart 3 of 
                part B of title I and Head Start programs 
                carried out under the Head Start Act, including 
                the training of teachers for programs described 
                in this subparagraph.
                  [(O) Other early learning and preschool 
                programs.
                  [(P) Dropout prevention programs operated by 
                the Cook Inlet Tribal Council's Partners for 
                Success program.
                  [(Q) An Alaska Initiative for Community 
                Engagement program.
                  [(R) Career preparation activities to enable 
                Alaska Native children and adults to prepare 
                for meaningful employment, including programs 
                providing tech-prep, mentoring, training, and 
                apprenticeship activities.
                  [(S) Provision of operational support and 
                purchasing of equipment, to develop regional 
                vocational schools in rural areas of Alaska, 
                including boarding schools, for Alaska Native 
                students in grades 9 through 12, or at higher 
                levels of education, to provide the students 
                with necessary resources to prepare for skilled 
                employment opportunities.
                  [(T) Other activities, consistent with the 
                purposes of this part, to meet the educational 
                needs of Alaska Native children and adults.
          [(3) Home instruction programs.--Home instruction 
        programs for Alaska Native preschool children carried 
        out under paragraph (2)(D) may include the following:
                  [(A) Programs for parents and their infants, 
                from the prenatal period of the infant through 
                age 3.
                  [(B) Preschool programs.
                  [(C) Training, education, and support for 
                parents in such areas as reading readiness, 
                observation, story telling, and critical 
                thinking.
  [(b) Limitation on Administrative Costs.--Not more than 5 
percent of funds provided to a grantee under this section for 
any fiscal year may be used for administrative purposes.
  [(c) Priorities.--In awarding grants or contracts to carry 
out activities described in subsection (a)(2), except for 
activities listed in subsection (d)(2), the Secretary shall 
give priority to applications from Alaska Native regional 
nonprofit organizations, or consortia that include at least one 
Alaska Native regional nonprofit organization.
  [(d) Authorization of Appropriations.--
          [(1) In general.--There are authorized to be 
        appropriated to carry out this section such sums as may 
        be necessary for fiscal year 2002 and each of the 5 
        succeeding fiscal years.
          [(2) Availability of funds.--Of the funds 
        appropriated and made available under this section for 
        a fiscal year, the Secretary shall make available--
                  [(A) not less than $1,000,000 to support 
                activities described in subsection (a)(2)(K);
                  [(B) not less than $1,000,000 to support 
                activities described in subsection (a)(2)(L);
                  [(C) not less than $1,000,000 to support 
                activities described in subsection (a)(2)(M);
                  [(D) not less than $2,000,000 to support 
                activities described in subsection (a)(2)(P); 
                and
                  [(E) not less than $2,000,000 to support 
                activities described in subsection (a)(2)(Q).

[SEC. 7305. ADMINISTRATIVE PROVISIONS.

  [(a) Application Required.--No grant may be made under this 
part, and no contract may be entered into under this part, 
unless the entity seeking the grant or contract submits an 
application to the Secretary in such form, in such manner, and 
containing such information as the Secretary may determine 
necessary to carry out the provisions of this part.
  [(b) Applications.--A State educational agency or local 
educational agency may apply for an award under this part only 
as part of a consortium involving an Alaska Native 
organization. The consortium may include other eligible 
applicants.
  [(c) Consultation Required.--Each applicant for an award 
under this part shall provide for ongoing advice from and 
consultation with representatives of the Alaska Native 
community.
  [(d) Local Educational Agency Coordination.--Each applicant 
for an award under this part shall inform each local 
educational agency serving students who would participate in 
the program to be carried out under the grant or contract about 
the application.

[SEC. 7306. DEFINITIONS.

   [In this part:
          [(1) Alaska native.--The term ``Alaska Native'' has 
        the same meaning as the term ``Native'' has in section 
        3(b) of the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act.
          [(2) Alaska native organization.--The term ``Alaska 
        Native organization'' means a federally recognized 
        tribe, consortium of tribes, regional nonprofit Native 
        association, and another organization that--
                  [(A) has or commits to acquire expertise in 
                the education of Alaska Natives; and
                  [(B) has Alaska Natives in substantive and 
                policymaking positions within the 
                organization.]

          TITLE III--PARENTAL ENGAGEMENT AND LOCAL FLEXIBILITY

                      PART A--PARENTAL ENGAGEMENT

                   Subpart 1--Charter School Program

SEC. 3101. PURPOSE.

  It is the purpose of this subpart to--
          (1) improve the United States education system and 
        education opportunities for all Americans by supporting 
        innovation in public education in public school 
        settings that prepare students to compete and 
        contribute to the global economy and a stronger 
        America;
          (2) provide financial assistance for the planning, 
        program design, and initial implementation of charter 
        schools;
          (3) expand the number of high-quality charter schools 
        available to students across the Nation;
          (4) evaluate the impact of such schools on student 
        achievement, families, and communities, and share best 
        practices between charter schools and other public 
        schools;
          (5) encourage States to provide support to charter 
        schools for facilities financing in an amount more 
        nearly commensurate to the amount the States have 
        typically provided for traditional public schools;
          (6) improve student services to increase 
        opportunities for students with disabilities, English 
        learners, and other traditionally underserved students 
        to attend charter schools and meet challenging State 
        academic achievement standards;
          (7) support efforts to strengthen the charter school 
        authorizing process to improve performance management, 
        including transparency, oversight, monitoring, and 
        evaluation of such schools; and
          (8) support quality accountability and transparency 
        in the operational performance of all authorized public 
        chartering agencies, which include State educational 
        agencies, local educational agencies, and other 
        authorizing entities.

SEC. 3102. PROGRAM AUTHORIZED.

  (a) In General.--This subpart authorizes the Secretary to 
carry out a charter school program that supports charter 
schools that serve elementary school and secondary school 
students by--
          (1) supporting the startup of charter schools, and 
        the replication and expansion of high-quality charter 
        schools;
          (2) assisting charter schools in accessing credit to 
        acquire and renovate facilities for school use; and
          (3) carrying out national activities to support--
                  (A) charter school development;
                  (B) the dissemination of best practices of 
                charter schools for all schools;
                  (C) the evaluation of the impact of the 
                program on schools participating in the 
                program; and
                  (D) stronger charter school authorizing.
  (b) Funding Allotment.--From the amount made available under 
section 3(c)(1)(A) for a fiscal year, the Secretary shall--
          (1) reserve 12.5 percent to support charter school 
        facilities assistance under section 3104;
          (2) reserve not more than 10 percent to carry out 
        national activities under section 3105; and
          (3) use the remaining amount after the Secretary 
        reserves funds under paragraphs (1) and (2) to carry 
        out section 3103.
  (c) Prior Grants and Subgrants.--The recipient of a grant or 
subgrant under this subpart or subpart 2, as such subpart was 
in effect on the day before the date of the enactment of the 
Student Success Act, shall continue to receive funds in 
accordance with the terms and conditions of such grant or 
subgrant.
  (d) GAO Report.--Not later than 3 years after the date of the 
enactment of the Student Success Act, the Comptroller General 
of the United States shall submit a report to the Secretary and 
Congress that--
          (1) examines whether the funds authorized to be 
        reserved by State entities for administrative costs 
        under section 3103(b)(1)(C) is appropriate; and
          (2) if such reservation of funds is determined not to 
        be appropriate, makes recommendations on the 
        appropriate reservation of funding for such 
        administrative costs.

SEC. 3103. GRANTS TO SUPPORT HIGH-QUALITY CHARTER SCHOOLS.

  (a) In General.--From the amount reserved under section 
3102(b)(3), the Secretary shall award grants to State entities 
having applications approved pursuant to subsection (f) to 
enable such entities to--
          (1) award subgrants to eligible applicants for 
        opening and preparing to operate--
                  (A) new charter schools;
                  (B) replicated, high-quality charter school 
                models; or
                  (C) expanded, high-quality charter schools; 
                and
          (2) provide technical assistance to eligible 
        applicants and authorized public chartering agencies in 
        carrying out the activities described in paragraph (1) 
        and work with authorized public chartering agencies in 
        the State to improve authorizing quality.
  (b) State Uses of Funds.--
          (1) In general.--A State entity receiving a grant 
        under this section shall--
                  (A) use not less than 90 percent of the grant 
                funds to award subgrants to eligible 
                applicants, in accordance with the quality 
                charter school program described in the State 
                entity's application approved pursuant to 
                subsection (f), for the purposes described in 
                subparagraphs (A) through (C) of subsection 
                (a)(1);
                  (B) reserve not less than 7 percent of such 
                funds to carry out the activities described in 
                subsection (a)(2); and
                  (C) reserve not more than 3 percent of such 
                funds for administrative costs which may 
                include technical assistance.
          (2) Contracts and grants.--A State entity may use a 
        grant received under this section to carry out the 
        activities described in subparagraphs (A) and (B) of 
        paragraph (1) directly or through grants, contracts, or 
        cooperative agreements.
          (3) Rule of construction.--Nothing in this Act shall 
        prohibit the Secretary from awarding grants to States 
        that use a weighted lottery to give slightly better 
        chances for admission to all, or a subset of, 
        educationally disadvantaged students if--
                  (A) the use of weighted lotteries in favor of 
                such students is not prohibited by State law, 
                and such State law is consistent with laws 
                described in section 6101(3)(G); and
                  (B) such weighted lotteries are not used for 
                the purpose of creating schools exclusively to 
                serve a particular subset of students.
  (c) Program Periods; Peer Review; Grant Number and Amount; 
Diversity of Projects; Waivers.--
          (1) Program periods.--
                  (A) Grants.--A grant awarded by the Secretary 
                to a State entity under this section shall be 
                for a period of not more than 5 years.
                  (B) Subgrants.--A subgrant awarded by a State 
                entity under this section shall be for a period 
                of not more than 5 years, of which an eligible 
                applicant may use not more than 18 months for 
                planning and program design.
          (2) Peer review.--The Secretary, and each State 
        entity receiving a grant under this section, shall use 
        a peer review process to review applications for 
        assistance under this section.
          (3) Grant awards.--The Secretary shall--
                  (A) for each fiscal year for which funds are 
                appropriated under section 3(c)(1)(A)--
                          (i) award not less than 3 grants 
                        under this section;
                          (ii) wholly fund each grant awarded 
                        under this section, without making 
                        continuation awards; and
                          (iii) fully obligate the funds 
                        appropriated for the purpose of 
                        awarding grants under this section in 
                        the fiscal year for which such grants 
                        are awarded; and
                  (B) prior to the start of the final year of 
                the grant period of each grant awarded under 
                this section to a State entity, review whether 
                the State entity is using the grant funds for 
                the agreed upon uses of funds and whether the 
                full amount of the grant will be needed for the 
                remainder of the grant period and may, as 
                determined necessary based on that review, 
                terminate or reduce the amount of the grant and 
                reallocate the remaining grant funds to other 
                State entities during the succeeding grant 
                competition under this section.
          (4) Diversity of projects.--Each State entity 
        receiving a grant under this section shall award 
        subgrants under this section in a manner that, to the 
        extent possible, ensures that such subgrants--
                  (A) are distributed throughout different 
                areas, including urban, suburban, and rural 
                areas; and
                  (B) will assist charter schools representing 
                a variety of educational approaches.
          (5) Waivers.--The Secretary may waive any statutory 
        or regulatory requirement over which the Secretary 
        exercises administrative authority, except for any such 
        requirement relating to the elements of a charter 
        school described in section 6101(3), if--
                  (A) the waiver is requested in an approved 
                application under this section; and
                  (B) the Secretary determines that granting 
                such a waiver will promote the purposes of this 
                subpart.
  (d) Limitations.--
          (1) Grants.--The Secretary shall not award a grant to 
        a State entity under this section in a case in which 
        such award would result in more than 1 grant awarded 
        under this section being carried out in a State at the 
        same time.
          (2) Subgrants.--An eligible applicant may not receive 
        more than 1 subgrant under this section per individual 
        charter school for a 5-year period, unless the eligible 
        applicant demonstrates to the State entity not less 
        than 3 years of improved educational results in the 
        areas described in subparagraphs (A) and (D) of section 
        3110(7) for students enrolled in such charter school.
  (e) Applications.--A State entity desiring to receive a grant 
under this section shall submit an application to the Secretary 
at such time and in such manner as the Secretary may require. 
The application shall include the following:
          (1) Description of program.--A description of the 
        State entity's objectives under this section and how 
        the objectives of the State entity's quality charter 
        school program will be carried out, including a 
        description--
                  (A) of how the State entity--
                          (i) will support the opening of new 
                        charter schools, replicated, high-
                        quality charter school models, or 
                        expanded, high-quality charter schools, 
                        and a description of the proposed 
                        number of each type of charter school 
                        or model, if applicable, to be opened 
                        under the State entity's program;
                          (ii) will inform eligible charter 
                        schools, developers, and authorized 
                        public chartering agencies of the 
                        availability of funds under the 
                        program;
                          (iii) will work with eligible 
                        applicants to ensure that the eligible 
                        applicants access all Federal funds 
                        that they are eligible to receive, and 
                        help the charter schools supported by 
                        the applicants and the students 
                        attending the charter schools--
                                  (I) participate in the 
                                Federal programs in which the 
                                schools and students are 
                                eligible to participate;
                                  (II) receive the commensurate 
                                share of Federal funds the 
                                schools and students are 
                                eligible to receive under such 
                                programs; and
                                  (III) meet the needs of 
                                students served under such 
                                programs, including students 
                                with disabilities and English 
                                learners;
                          (iv) will have clear plans and 
                        procedures to assist students enrolled 
                        in a charter school that closes or 
                        loses its charter to attend other high-
                        quality schools;
                          (v) in the case in which the State 
                        entity is not a State educational 
                        agency--
                                  (I) will work with the State 
                                educational agency and the 
                                charter schools in the State to 
                                maximize charter school 
                                participation in Federal and 
                                State programs for charter 
                                schools; and
                                  (II) will work with the State 
                                educational agency to 
                                adequately operate the State 
                                entity's program under this 
                                section, where applicable;
                          (vi) will ensure each eligible 
                        applicant that receives a subgrant 
                        under the State entity's program to 
                        open and prepare to operate a new 
                        charter school, a replicated, high-
                        quality charter school model, or an 
                        expanded, high-quality charter school--
                                  (I) will ensure such school 
                                or model meets the requirements 
                                under section 6101(3); and
                                  (II) is prepared to continue 
                                to operate such school or 
                                model, in a manner consistent 
                                with the eligible applicant's 
                                application, after the subgrant 
                                funds have expired;
                          (vii) will support charter schools in 
                        local educational agencies with large 
                        numbers of schools identified by the 
                        State for improvement, including 
                        supporting the use of charter schools 
                        to improve, or in turning around, 
                        struggling schools;
                          (viii) will work with charter schools 
                        to promote inclusion of all students, 
                        including eliminating any barriers to 
                        enrollment for foster youth or 
                        unaccompanied homeless youth, and 
                        support all students once they are 
                        enrolled to promote retention including 
                        through the use of fair disciplinary 
                        practice;
                          (ix) will work with charter schools 
                        on recruitment practices, including 
                        efforts to engage groups that may 
                        otherwise have limited opportunities to 
                        participate in charter schools, and to 
                        ensure such schools do not have in 
                        effect policies or procedures that may 
                        create barriers to enrollment of 
                        students, including educationally 
                        disadvantaged students, and are in 
                        compliance with all Federal and State 
                        laws on enrollment practices;
                          (x) will share best and promising 
                        practices between charter schools and 
                        other public schools, including, where 
                        appropriate, instruction and 
                        professional development in science, 
                        technology, engineering, and math 
                        education, including computer science, 
                        and other subjects;
                          (xi) will ensure the charter schools 
                        receiving funds under the State 
                        entity's program meet the educational 
                        needs of their students, including 
                        students with disabilities and English 
                        learners;
                          (xii) will support efforts to 
                        increase quality initiatives, including 
                        meeting the quality authorizing 
                        elements described in paragraph (2)(E);
                          (xiii) in the case of a State entity 
                        not described in clause (xiv), will 
                        provide oversight of authorizing 
                        activity, including how the State will 
                        help ensure better authorizing, such as 
                        by establishing authorizing standards 
                        that may include approving, actively 
                        monitoring, and re-approving or 
                        revoking the authority of an authorized 
                        public chartering agency based on the 
                        performance of the charter schools 
                        authorized by such agency in the areas 
                        of student achievement, student safety, 
                        financial and operational management, 
                        and compliance with all applicable 
                        statutes and regulations;
                          (xiv) in the case of a State entity 
                        defined in subsection (i)(4), will work 
                        with the State to support the State's 
                        system of assistance and oversight of 
                        authorized public chartering agencies 
                        for authorizing activity described in 
                        clause (xiii); and
                          (xv) will work with eligible 
                        applicants receiving a subgrant under 
                        the State entity's program to support 
                        the opening of charter schools or 
                        charter school models described in 
                        clause (i) that are secondary schools;
                  (B) of the extent to which the State entity--
                          (i) is able to meet and carry out the 
                        priorities listed in subsection (f)(2); 
                        and
                          (ii) is working to develop or 
                        strengthen a cohesive statewide system 
                        to support the opening of new charter 
                        schools, replicated, high-quality 
                        charter school models, or expanded, 
                        high-quality charter schools;
                  (C) of how the State entity will carry out 
                the subgrant competition, including--
                          (i) a description of the application 
                        each eligible applicant desiring to 
                        receive a subgrant will submit, 
                        including--
                                  (I) a description of the 
                                roles and responsibilities of 
                                the eligible applicant, partner 
                                organizations, and management 
                                organizations, including the 
                                administrative and contractual 
                                roles and responsibilities;
                                  (II) a description of the 
                                quality controls agreed to 
                                between the eligible applicant 
                                and the authorized public 
                                chartering agency involved, 
                                such as a contract or 
                                performance agreement, how a 
                                school's performance in the 
                                State's academic accountability 
                                system will be one of the most 
                                important factors for renewal 
                                or revocation of the school's 
                                charter, and how the State 
                                entity and the authorized 
                                public chartering agency 
                                involved will reserve the right 
                                to revoke or not renew a 
                                school's charter based on 
                                financial, structural, or 
                                operational factors involving 
                                the management of the school;
                                  (III) a description of how 
                                the eligible applicant will 
                                solicit and consider input from 
                                parents and other members of 
                                the community on the 
                                implementation and operation of 
                                each charter school that will 
                                receive funds under the State 
                                entity's program; and
                                  (IV) a description of the 
                                planned activities and 
                                expenditures for the subgrant 
                                funds for purposes of opening 
                                and preparing to operate a new 
                                charter school, a replicated, 
                                high-quality charter school 
                                model, or an expanded, high-
                                quality charter school, and how 
                                the school or model will 
                                maintain financial 
                                sustainability after the end of 
                                the subgrant period; and
                          (ii) a description of how the State 
                        entity will review applications;
                  (D) in the case of a State entity that 
                partners with an outside organization to carry 
                out the State entity's quality charter school 
                program, in whole or in part, of the roles and 
                responsibilities of this partner;
                  (E) of how the State entity will help the 
                charter schools receiving funds under the State 
                entity's program consider the transportation 
                needs of the schools' students; and
                  (F) of how the State entity will support 
                diverse charter school models, including models 
                that serve rural communities.
          (2) Assurances.--Assurances, including a description 
        of how the assurances will be met, that--
                  (A) each charter school receiving funds under 
                the State entity's program will have a high 
                degree of autonomy over budget and operations;
                  (B) the State entity will support charter 
                schools in meeting the educational needs of 
                their students as described in paragraph 
                (1)(A)(xi);
                  (C) the State entity will ensure that the 
                authorized public chartering agency of any 
                charter school that receives funds under the 
                State entity's program--
                          (i) adequately monitors each such 
                        charter school in recruiting, 
                        enrolling, and meeting the needs of all 
                        students, including students with 
                        disabilities and English learners; and
                          (ii) ensures that each such charter 
                        school solicits and considers input 
                        from parents and other members of the 
                        community on the implementation and 
                        operation of the school;
                  (D) the State entity will provide adequate 
                technical assistance to eligible applicants 
                to--
                          (i) meet the objectives described in 
                        clauses (viii) and (ix) of paragraph 
                        (1)(A) and subparagraph (B) of this 
                        paragraph; and
                          (ii) recruit, enroll, and retain 
                        traditionally underserved students, 
                        including students with disabilities 
                        and English learners, at rates similar 
                        to traditional public schools;
                  (E) the State entity will promote quality 
                authorizing, such as through providing 
                technical assistance and supporting all 
                authorized public chartering agencies in the 
                State to improve the oversight of their charter 
                schools, including by--
                          (i) assessing annual performance data 
                        of the schools, including, as 
                        appropriate, graduation rates, student 
                        academic growth, and rates of student 
                        attrition;
                          (ii) reviewing the schools' 
                        independent, annual audits of financial 
                        statements conducted in accordance with 
                        generally accepted accounting 
                        principles, and ensuring any such 
                        audits are publically reported; and
                          (iii) holding charter schools 
                        accountable to the academic, financial, 
                        and operational quality controls agreed 
                        to between the charter school and the 
                        authorized public chartering agency 
                        involved, such as through renewal, non-
                        renewal, or revocation of the school's 
                        charter;
                  (F) the State entity will work to ensure that 
                charter schools are included with the 
                traditional public schools in decisionmaking 
                about the public school system in the State; 
                and
                  (G) The State entity will ensure that each 
                charter school receiving funds under the State 
                entity's program makes publicly available, 
                consistent with the dissemination requirements 
                of the annual State report card, information to 
                help parents make informed decisions about the 
                education options available to their children, 
                including information for each school on--
                          (i) the educational program;
                          (ii) student support services;
                          (iii) annual performance and 
                        enrollment data, disaggregated by the 
                        groups of students described in section 
                        1111(b)(3)(B)(ii)(II), except that such 
                        disaggregation shall not be required in 
                        a case in which the number of students 
                        in a group is insufficient to yield 
                        statistically reliable information or 
                        the results would reveal personally 
                        identifiable information about an 
                        individual student; and
                          (iv) any other information the State 
                        requires all other public schools to 
                        report for purposes of section 
                        1111(h)(1)(D).
          (3) Requests for waivers.--A request and 
        justification for waivers of any Federal statutory or 
        regulatory provisions that the State entity believes 
        are necessary for the successful operation of the 
        charter schools that will receive funds under the State 
        entity's program under this section or, in the case of 
        a State entity defined in subsection (i)(4), a 
        description of how the State entity will work with the 
        State to request such necessary waivers, where 
        applicable, and a description of any State or local 
        rules, generally applicable to public schools, that 
        will be waived, or otherwise not apply to such schools.
  (f) Selection Criteria; Priority.--
          (1) Selection criteria.--The Secretary shall award 
        grants to State entities under this section on the 
        basis of the quality of the applications submitted 
        under subsection (e), after taking into consideration--
                  (A) the degree of flexibility afforded by the 
                State's public charter school law and how the 
                State entity will work to maximize the 
                flexibility provided to charter schools under 
                the law;
                  (B) the ambitiousness of the State entity's 
                objectives for the quality charter school 
                program carried out under this section;
                  (C) the quality of the strategy for assessing 
                achievement of those objectives;
                  (D) the likelihood that the eligible 
                applicants receiving subgrants under the 
                program will meet those objectives and improve 
                educational results for students;
                  (E) the State entity's plan to--
                          (i) adequately monitor the eligible 
                        applicants receiving subgrants under 
                        the State entity's program;
                          (ii) work with the authorized public 
                        chartering agencies involved to avoid 
                        duplication of work for the charter 
                        schools and authorized public 
                        chartering agencies; and
                          (iii) provide adequate technical 
                        assistance and support for--
                                  (I) the charter schools 
                                receiving funds under the State 
                                entity's program; and
                                  (II) quality authorizing 
                                efforts in the State; and
                  (F) the State entity's plan to solicit and 
                consider input from parents and other members 
                of the community on the implementation and 
                operation of the charter schools in the State.
          (2) Priority.--In awarding grants under this section, 
        the Secretary shall give priority to State entities to 
        the extent that they meet the following criteria:
                  (A) The State entity is located in a State--
                          (i) that allows at least one entity 
                        that is not a local educational agency 
                        to be an authorized public chartering 
                        agency for developers seeking to open a 
                        charter school in the State; or
                          (ii) in which local educational 
                        agencies are the only authorized public 
                        chartering agencies and that has an 
                        appeals process for the denial of an 
                        application for a charter school;
                  (B) The State entity is located in a State 
                that does not impose any limitation on the 
                number or percentage of charter schools that 
                may exist or the number or percentage of 
                students that may attend charter schools in the 
                State.
                  (C) The State entity is located in a State 
                that ensures equitable financing, as compared 
                to traditional public schools, for charter 
                schools and students in a prompt manner.
                  (D) The State entity is located in a State 
                that uses best practices from charter schools 
                to help improve struggling schools and local 
                educational agencies.
                  (E) The State entity partners with an 
                organization that has a demonstrated record of 
                success in developing management organizations 
                to support the development of charter schools 
                in the State.
                  (F) The State entity supports charter schools 
                that support at-risk students through 
                activities such as dropout prevention, dropout 
                recovery, or comprehensive career counseling 
                practices.
                  (G) The State entity authorizes all charter 
                schools in the State to serve as school food 
                authorities.
                  (H) The State entity has taken steps to 
                ensure that all authorizing public chartering 
                agencies implement best practices for charter 
                school authorizing.
                  (I) The State entity is able to demonstrate 
                that its State provides charter schools one or 
                more of the following:
                          (i) Funding for facilities.
                          (ii) Assistance with the acquisition 
                        of facilities.
                          (iii) Access to public facilities.
                          (iv) The right of first refusal to 
                        purchase public school buildings.
                          (v) Low or no cost leasing 
                        privileges.
  (g) Local Uses of Funds.--An eligible applicant receiving a 
subgrant under this section shall use such funds to carry out 
activities related to opening and preparing to operate a new 
charter school, a replicated, high-quality charter school 
model, or an expanded, high-quality charter school, such as--
          (1) preparing teachers and school leaders, including 
        through professional development;
          (2) acquiring equipment, educational materials, and 
        supplies; and
          (3) carrying out necessary renovations and minor 
        facilities repairs (excluding construction).
  (h) Reporting Requirements.--Each State entity receiving a 
grant under this section shall submit to the Secretary, at the 
end of the third year of the 5-year grant period and at the end 
of such grant period, a report on--
          (1) the number of students served by each subgrant 
        awarded under this section and, if applicable, how many 
        new students were served during each year of the 
        subgrant period;
          (2) the progress the State entity made toward meeting 
        the priorities described in subsection (f)(2), as 
        applicable;
          (3) how the State entity met the objectives of the 
        quality charter school program described in the State 
        entity's application under subsection (e), including 
        how the State entity met the objective of sharing best 
        and promising practices described in subsection 
        (e)(1)(A)(x) in areas such as instruction, professional 
        development, curricula development, and operations 
        between charter schools and other public schools, and 
        the extent to which, if known, such practices were 
        adopted and implemented by such other public schools;
          (4) how the State entity complied with, and ensured 
        that eligible applicants complied with, the assurances 
        described in the State entity's application;
          (5) how the State entity worked with authorized 
        public chartering agencies, including how the agencies 
        worked with the management company or leadership of the 
        schools that received subgrants under this section;
          (6) the number of subgrants awarded under this 
        section to carry out each of the following:
                  (A) the opening of new charter schools;
                  (B) the opening of replicated, high-quality 
                charter school models; and
                  (C) the opening of expanded, high-quality 
                charter schools; and
          (7) how the State entity has worked with charter 
        schools receiving funds under the State entity's 
        program to foster community involvement in the planning 
        for and opening of such schools.
  (i) State Entity Defined.--For purposes of this section, the 
term ``State entity'' means--
          (1) a State educational agency;
          (2) a State charter school board;
          (3) a Governor of a State; or
          (4) a charter school support organization.

SEC. 3104. FACILITIES FINANCING ASSISTANCE.

  (a) Grants to Eligible Entities.--
          (1) In general.--From the amount reserved under 
        section 3102(b)(1), the Secretary shall not use less 
        than 50 percent to award grants to eligible entities 
        that have the highest-quality applications approved 
        under subsection (d), after considering the diversity 
        of such applications, to demonstrate innovative methods 
        of assisting charter schools to address the cost of 
        acquiring, constructing, and renovating facilities by 
        enhancing the availability of loans or bond financing.
          (2) Eligible entity defined.--For purposes of this 
        section, the term ``eligible entity'' means--
                  (A) a public entity, such as a State or local 
                governmental entity;
                  (B) a private nonprofit entity; or
                  (C) a consortium of entities described in 
                subparagraphs (A) and (B).
  (b) Grantee Selection.--The Secretary shall evaluate each 
application submitted under subsection (d), and shall determine 
whether the application is sufficient to merit approval.
  (c) Grant Characteristics.--Grants under subsection (a) shall 
be of a sufficient size, scope, and quality so as to ensure an 
effective demonstration of an innovative means of enhancing 
credit for the financing of charter school acquisition, 
construction, or renovation.
  (d) Applications.--
          (1) In general.--To receive a grant under subsection 
        (a), an eligible entity shall submit to the Secretary 
        an application in such form as the Secretary may 
        reasonably require.
          (2) Contents.--An application submitted under 
        paragraph (1) shall contain--
                  (A) a statement identifying the activities 
                proposed to be undertaken with funds received 
                under subsection (a), including how the 
                eligible entity will determine which charter 
                schools will receive assistance, and how much 
                and what types of assistance charter schools 
                will receive;
                  (B) a description of the involvement of 
                charter schools in the application's 
                development and the design of the proposed 
                activities;
                  (C) a description of the eligible entity's 
                expertise in capital market financing;
                  (D) a description of how the proposed 
                activities will leverage the maximum amount of 
                private-sector financing capital relative to 
                the amount of public funding used and otherwise 
                enhance credit available to charter schools, 
                including how the eligible entity will offer a 
                combination of rates and terms more favorable 
                than the rates and terms that a charter school 
                could receive without assistance from the 
                eligible entity under subsection (a);
                  (E) a description of how the eligible entity 
                possesses sufficient expertise in education to 
                evaluate the likelihood of success of a charter 
                school program for which facilities financing 
                is sought; and
                  (F) in the case of an application submitted 
                by a State governmental entity, a description 
                of the actions that the entity has taken, or 
                will take, to ensure that charter schools 
                within the State receive the funding the 
                charter schools need to have adequate 
                facilities.
  (e) Charter School Objectives.--An eligible entity receiving 
a grant under subsection (a) shall use the funds deposited in 
the reserve account established under subsection (f) to assist 
one or more charter schools to access private sector capital to 
accomplish one or more of the following objectives:
          (1) The acquisition (by purchase, lease, donation, or 
        otherwise) of an interest (including an interest held 
        by a third party for the benefit of a charter school) 
        in improved or unimproved real property that is 
        necessary to commence or continue the operation of a 
        charter school.
          (2) The construction of new facilities, or the 
        renovation, repair, or alteration of existing 
        facilities, necessary to commence or continue the 
        operation of a charter school.
          (3) The predevelopment costs required to assess sites 
        for purposes of paragraph (1) or (2) and which are 
        necessary to commence or continue the operation of a 
        charter school.
  (f) Reserve Account.--
          (1) Use of funds.--To assist charter schools to 
        accomplish the objectives described in subsection (e), 
        an eligible entity receiving a grant under subsection 
        (a) shall, in accordance with State and local law, 
        directly or indirectly, alone or in collaboration with 
        others, deposit the funds received under subsection (a) 
        (other than funds used for administrative costs in 
        accordance with subsection (g)) in a reserve account 
        established and maintained by the eligible entity for 
        this purpose. Amounts deposited in such account shall 
        be used by the eligible entity for one or more of the 
        following purposes:
                  (A) Guaranteeing, insuring, and reinsuring 
                bonds, notes, evidences of debt, loans, and 
                interests therein, the proceeds of which are 
                used for an objective described in subsection 
                (e).
                  (B) Guaranteeing and insuring leases of 
                personal and real property for an objective 
                described in subsection (e).
                  (C) Facilitating financing by identifying 
                potential lending sources, encouraging private 
                lending, and other similar activities that 
                directly promote lending to, or for the benefit 
                of, charter schools.
                  (D) Facilitating the issuance of bonds by 
                charter schools, or by other public entities 
                for the benefit of charter schools, by 
                providing technical, administrative, and other 
                appropriate assistance (including the 
                recruitment of bond counsel, underwriters, and 
                potential investors and the consolidation of 
                multiple charter school projects within a 
                single bond issue).
          (2) Investment.--Funds received under subsection (a) 
        and deposited in the reserve account established under 
        paragraph (1) shall be invested in obligations issued 
        or guaranteed by the United States or a State, or in 
        other similarly low-risk securities.
          (3) Reinvestment of earnings.--Any earnings on funds 
        received under subsection (a) shall be deposited in the 
        reserve account established under paragraph (1) and 
        used in accordance with such paragraph.
  (g) Limitation on Administrative Costs.--An eligible entity 
may use not more than 2.5 percent of the funds received under 
subsection (a) for the administrative costs of carrying out its 
responsibilities under this section (excluding subsection (k)).
  (h) Audits and Reports.--
          (1) Financial record maintenance and audit.--The 
        financial records of each eligible entity receiving a 
        grant under subsection (a) shall be maintained in 
        accordance with generally accepted accounting 
        principles and shall be subject to an annual audit by 
        an independent public accountant.
          (2) Reports
                  (A) Grantee annual reports.--Each eligible 
                entity receiving a grant under subsection (a) 
                annually shall submit to the Secretary a report 
                of its operations and activities under this 
                section (excluding subsection (k)).
                  (B) Contents.--Each annual report submitted 
                under subparagraph (A) shall include--
                          (i) a copy of the most recent 
                        financial statements, and any 
                        accompanying opinion on such 
                        statements, prepared by the independent 
                        public accountant reviewing the 
                        financial records of the eligible 
                        entity;
                          (ii) a copy of any report made on an 
                        audit of the financial records of the 
                        eligible entity that was conducted 
                        under paragraph (1) during the 
                        reporting period;
                          (iii) an evaluation by the eligible 
                        entity of the effectiveness of its use 
                        of the Federal funds provided under 
                        subsection (a) in leveraging private 
                        funds;
                          (iv) a listing and description of the 
                        charter schools served during the 
                        reporting period, including the amount 
                        of funds used by each school, the type 
                        of project facilitated by the grant, 
                        and the type of assistance provided to 
                        the charter schools;
                          (v) a description of the activities 
                        carried out by the eligible entity to 
                        assist charter schools in meeting the 
                        objectives set forth in subsection (e); 
                        and
                          (vi) a description of the 
                        characteristics of lenders and other 
                        financial institutions participating in 
                        the activities undertaken by the 
                        eligible entity under this section 
                        (excluding subsection (k)) during the 
                        reporting period.
                  (C) Secretarial report.--The Secretary shall 
                review the reports submitted under subparagraph 
                (A) and shall provide a comprehensive annual 
                report to Congress on the activities conducted 
                under this section (excluding subsection (k)).
  (i) No Full Faith and Credit for Grantee Obligation.--No 
financial obligation of an eligible entity entered into 
pursuant to this section (such as an obligation under a 
guarantee, bond, note, evidence of debt, or loan) shall be an 
obligation of, or guaranteed in any respect by, the United 
States. The full faith and credit of the United States is not 
pledged to the payment of funds which may be required to be 
paid under any obligation made by an eligible entity pursuant 
to any provision of this section.
  (j) Recovery of Funds.--
          (1) In general.--The Secretary, in accordance with 
        chapter 37 of title 31, United States Code, shall 
        collect--
                  (A) all of the funds in a reserve account 
                established by an eligible entity under 
                subsection (f)(1) if the Secretary determines, 
                not earlier than 2 years after the date on 
                which the eligible entity first received funds 
                under subsection (a), that the eligible entity 
                has failed to make substantial progress in 
                carrying out the purposes described in 
                subsection (f)(1); or
                  (B) all or a portion of the funds in a 
                reserve account established by an eligible 
                entity under subsection (f)(1) if the Secretary 
                determines that the eligible entity has 
                permanently ceased to use all or a portion of 
                the funds in such account to accomplish any 
                purpose described in subsection (f)(1).
          (2) Exercise of Authority.--The Secretary shall not 
        exercise the authority provided in paragraph (1) to 
        collect from any eligible entity any funds that are 
        being properly used to achieve one or more of the 
        purposes described in subsection (f)(1).
          (3)  Procedures.--The provisions of sections 451, 
        452, and 458 of the General Education Provisions Act 
        (20 U.S.C. 124, 1234a, 1234g) shall apply to the 
        recovery of funds under paragraph (1).
          (4) Construction.--This subsection shall not be 
        construed to impair or affect the authority of the 
        Secretary to recover funds under part D of the General 
        Education Provisions Act (20 U.S.C. 1234 et seq.).
  (k) Per-Pupil Facilities Aid Program.--
          (1) Definition of per-pupil facilities aid program.--
        In this subsection, the term ``per-pupil facilities aid 
        program'' means a program in which a State makes 
        payments, on a per-pupil basis, to charter schools to 
        provide the schools with financing--
                  (A) that is dedicated solely for funding 
                charter school facilities; or
                  (B) a portion of which is dedicated for 
                funding charter school facilities.
          (2) Grants.--
                  (A) In general.--From the amount under 
                section 3102(b)(1) remaining after the 
                Secretary makes grants under subsection (a), 
                the Secretary shall make grants, on a 
                competitive basis, to States to pay for the 
                Federal share of the cost of establishing or 
                enhancing, and administering per-pupil 
                facilities aid programs.
                  (B) Period.--The Secretary shall award grants 
                under this subsection for periods of not more 
                than 5 years.
                  (C) Federal share.--The Federal share of the 
                cost described in subparagraph (A) for a per-
                pupil facilities aid program shall be not more 
                than--
                          (i) 90 percent of the cost, for the 
                        first fiscal year for which the program 
                        receives assistance under this 
                        subsection;
                          (ii) 80 percent in the second such 
                        year;
                          (iii) 60 percent in the third such 
                        year;
                          (iv) 40 percent in the fourth such 
                        year; and
                          (v) 20 percent in the fifth such 
                        year.
                  (D) State share.--A State receiving a grant 
                under this subsection may partner with 1 or 
                more organizations to provide up to 50 percent 
                of the State share of the cost of establishing 
                or enhancing, and administering the per-pupil 
                facilities aid program.
                  (E) Multiple grants.--A State may receive 
                more than 1 grant under this subsection, so 
                long as the amount of such funds provided to 
                charter schools increases with each successive 
                grant.
          (3) Use of funds.--
                  (A) In general.--A State that receives a 
                grant under this subsection shall use the funds 
                made available through the grant to establish 
                or enhance, and administer, a per-pupil 
                facilities aid program for charter schools in 
                the State of the applicant.
                  (B) Evaluations; technical assistance; 
                dissemination.--From the amount made available 
                to a State through a grant under this 
                subsection for a fiscal year, the State may 
                reserve not more than 5 percent to carry out 
                evaluations, to provide technical assistance, 
                and to disseminate information.
                  (C) Supplement, not supplant.--Funds made 
                available under this subsection shall be used 
                to supplement, and not supplant, State and 
                local public funds expended to provide per 
                pupil facilities aid programs, operations 
                financing programs, or other programs, for 
                charter schools.
          (4) Requirements.--
                  (A) Voluntary participation.--No State may be 
                required to participate in a program carried 
                out under this subsection.
                  (B) State law.--
                          (i) In general.--Except as provided 
                        in clause (ii), to be eligible to 
                        receive a grant under this subsection, 
                        a State shall establish or enhance, and 
                        administer, a per-pupil facilities aid 
                        program for charter schools in the 
                        State, that--
                                  (I) is specified in State 
                                law; and
                                  (II) provides annual 
                                financing, on a per-pupil 
                                basis, for charter school 
                                facilities.
                          (ii) Special rule.--Notwithstanding 
                        clause (i), a State that is required 
                        under State law to provide its charter 
                        schools with access to adequate 
                        facility space, but which does not have 
                        a per-pupil facilities aid program for 
                        charter schools specified in State law, 
                        may be eligible to receive a grant 
                        under this subsection if the State 
                        agrees to use the funds to develop a 
                        per-pupil facilities aid program 
                        consistent with the requirements of 
                        this subsection.
          (5) Applications.--To be eligible to receive a grant 
        under this subsection, a State shall submit an 
        application to the Secretary at such time, in such 
        manner, and containing such information as the 
        Secretary may require.

SEC. 3105. NATIONAL ACTIVITIES.

  (a) In General.--Of the amount reserved under section 
3102(b)(2), the Secretary shall--
          (1) use not less than 75 percent of such amount to 
        award grants in accordance with subsection (b); and
          (2) use not more than 25 percent of such amount to--
                  (A) provide technical assistance to State 
                entities in awarding subgrants under section 
                3103, and eligible entities and States 
                receiving grants under section 3104;
                  (B) disseminate best practices; and
                  (C) evaluate the impact of the charter school 
                program, including the impact on student 
                achievement, carried out under this subpart.
  (b)  Grants.--
          (1) In general.--The Secretary shall make grants, on 
        a competitive basis, to eligible applicants for the 
        purpose of carrying out the activities described in 
        section 3102(a)(1), subparagraphs (A) through (C) of 
        section 3103(a)(1), and section 3103(g).
          (2) Terms and conditions.--Except as otherwise 
        provided in this subsection, grants awarded under this 
        subsection shall have the same terms and conditions as 
        grants awarded to State entities under section 3103.
          (3) Charter management organizations.--The Secretary 
        shall--
                  (A) of the amount described in subsection 
                (a)(1), use not less than 75 percent to make 
                grants, on a competitive basis, to eligible 
                applicants described in paragraph (4)(B); and
                  (B) notwithstanding paragraphs (1)(A) and (2) 
                of section 3103(f)--
                          (i) award grants to eligible 
                        applicants on the basis of the quality 
                        of the applications submitted under 
                        this subsection; and
                          (ii) in awarding grants to eligible 
                        applicants described in paragraph 
                        (4)(B) of this subsection, take into 
                        consideration whether such an eligible 
                        applicant--
                                  (I) demonstrates a high 
                                proportion of high-quality 
                                charter schools within the 
                                network of the eligible 
                                applicant;
                                  (II) demonstrates success in 
                                serving students who are 
                                educationally disadvantaged;
                                  (III) does not have a 
                                significant proportion of 
                                charter schools that have been 
                                closed, had their charter 
                                revoked for compliance issues, 
                                or had their affiliation with 
                                such eligible applicant 
                                revoked;
                                  (IV) has sufficient 
                                procedures in effect to ensure 
                                timely closure of low-
                                performing or financially 
                                mismanaged charter schools and 
                                clear plans and procedures in 
                                effect for the students in such 
                                schools to attend other high-
                                quality schools; and
                                  (V) demonstrates success in 
                                working with schools identified 
                                for improvement by the State.
          (4) Eligible applicant defined.--For purposes of this 
        subsection, the term ``eligible applicant'' means an 
        eligible applicant (as defined in section 3110) that--
                  (A) desires to open a charter school in--
                          (i) a State that did not apply for a 
                        grant under section 3103; or
                          (ii) a State that did not receive a 
                        grant under section 3103; or
                  (B) is a charter management organization.
  (c) Contracts and Grants.--The Secretary may carry out any of 
the activities described in this section directly or through 
grants, contracts, or cooperative agreements.

SEC. 3106. FEDERAL FORMULA ALLOCATION DURING FIRST YEAR AND FOR 
                    SUCCESSIVE ENROLLMENT EXPANSIONS.

  (a) In General.--For purposes of the allocation to schools by 
the States or their agencies of funds under part A of title I, 
and any other Federal funds which the Secretary allocates to 
States on a formula basis, the Secretary and each State 
educational agency shall take such measures as are necessary to 
ensure that every charter school receives the Federal funding 
for which the charter school is eligible not later than 5 
months after the charter school first opens, notwithstanding 
the fact that the identity and characteristics of the students 
enrolling in that charter school are not fully and completely 
determined until that charter school actually opens. The 
measures similarly shall ensure that every charter school 
expanding its enrollment in any subsequent year of operation 
receives the Federal funding for which the charter school is 
eligible not later than 5 months after such expansion.
  (b) Adjustment and Late Openings.--
          (1) In general.--The measures described in subsection 
        (a) shall include provision for appropriate 
        adjustments, through recovery of funds or reduction of 
        payments for the succeeding year, in cases where 
        payments made to a charter school on the basis of 
        estimated or projected enrollment data exceed the 
        amounts that the school is eligible to receive on the 
        basis of actual or final enrollment data.
          (2) Rule.--For charter schools that first open after 
        November 1 of any academic year, the State, in 
        accordance with guidance provided by the Secretary and 
        applicable Federal statutes and regulations, shall 
        ensure that such charter schools that are eligible for 
        the funds described in subsection (a) for such academic 
        year have a full and fair opportunity to receive those 
        funds during the charter schools' first year of 
        operation.

SEC. 3107. SOLICITATION OF INPUT FROM CHARTER SCHOOL OPERATORS.

  To the extent practicable, the Secretary shall ensure that 
administrators, teachers, and other individuals directly 
involved in the operation of charter schools are consulted in 
the development of any rules or regulations required to 
implement this subpart, as well as in the development of any 
rules or regulations relevant to charter schools that are 
required to implement part A of title I, the Individuals with 
Disabilities Education Act, or any other program administered 
by the Secretary that provides education funds to charter 
schools or regulates the activities of charter schools.

SEC. 3108. RECORDS TRANSFER.

  State educational agencies and local educational agencies, as 
quickly as possible and to the extent practicable, shall ensure 
that a student's records and, if applicable, a student's 
individualized education program as defined in section 602(14) 
of the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act, are 
transferred to a charter school upon the transfer of the 
student to the charter school, and to another public school 
upon the transfer of the student from a charter school to 
another public school, in accordance with applicable State law.

SEC. 3109. PAPERWORK REDUCTION.

  To the extent practicable, the Secretary and each authorized 
public chartering agency shall ensure that implementation of 
this subpart results in a minimum of paperwork for any eligible 
applicant or charter school.

SEC. 3110. DEFINITIONS.

  In this subpart:
          (1) Charter management organization.--The term 
        ``charter management organization'' means a nonprofit 
        organization that manages a network of charter schools 
        linked by centralized support, operations, and 
        oversight.
          (2) Charter school support organization.--The term 
        ``charter school support organization'' means a 
        nonprofit, nongovernmental entity that is not an 
        authorized public chartering agency, which provides on 
        a statewide basis--
                  (A) assistance to developers during the 
                planning, program design, and initial 
                implementation of a charter school; and
                  (B) technical assistance to charter schools 
                to operate such schools.
          (3) Developer.--The term ``developer'' means an 
        individual or group of individuals (including a public 
        or private nonprofit organization), which may include 
        teachers, administrators and other school staff, 
        parents, or other members of the local community in 
        which a charter school project will be carried out.
          (4) Eligible applicant.--The term ``eligible 
        applicant'' means a developer that has--
                  (A) applied to an authorized public 
                chartering authority to operate a charter 
                school; and
                  (B) provided adequate and timely notice to 
                that authority.
          (5) Authorized public chartering agency.--The term 
        ``authorized public chartering agency'' means a State 
        educational agency, local educational agency, or other 
        public entity that has the authority pursuant to State 
        law and approved by the Secretary to authorize or 
        approve a charter school.
          (6) Expanded, high-quality charter school.--The term 
        ``expanded, high-quality charter school'' means a high-
        quality charter school that has either significantly 
        increased its enrollment or added one or more grades to 
        its school.
          (7) High-quality charter school.--The term ``high-
        quality charter school'' means a charter school that--
                  (A) shows evidence of strong academic 
                results, which may include strong academic 
                growth as determined by a State;
                  (B) has no significant issues in the areas of 
                student safety, operational and financial 
                management, or statutory or regulatory 
                compliance;
                  (C) has demonstrated success in significantly 
                increasing student academic achievement, 
                including graduation rates where applicable, 
                consistent with the requirements under title I, 
                for all students served by the charter school; 
                and
                  (D) has demonstrated success in increasing 
                student academic achievement, including 
                graduation rates where applicable, for the 
                groups of students described in section 
                1111(b)(3)(B)(ii)(II), except that such 
                demonstration is not required in a case in 
                which the number of students in a group is 
                insufficient to yield statistically reliable 
                information or the results would reveal 
                personally identifiable information about an 
                individual student.
          (8) Replicated, high-quality charter school model.--
        The term ``replicated, high-quality charter school 
        model'' means a high-quality charter school that has 
        opened a new campus under an existing charter or an 
        additional charter if required or permitted by State 
        law.

                  Subpart 2--Magnet School Assistance

SEC. 3121. PURPOSE.

  The purpose of this subpart is to assist in the desegregation 
of schools served by local educational agencies by providing 
financial assistance to eligible local educational agencies 
for--
          (1) the elimination, reduction, or prevention of 
        minority group isolation in elementary schools and 
        secondary schools with substantial proportions of 
        minority students, which shall include assisting in the 
        efforts of the United States to achieve voluntary 
        desegregation in public schools;
          (2) the development and implementation of magnet 
        school programs that will assist local educational 
        agencies in achieving systemic reforms and providing 
        all students the opportunity to meet State academic 
        standards;
          (3) the development and design of innovative 
        educational methods and practices that promote 
        diversity and increase choices in public elementary 
        schools and public secondary schools and public 
        educational programs;
          (4) courses of instruction within magnet schools that 
        will substantially strengthen the knowledge of academic 
        subjects and the attainment of tangible and marketable 
        career, technical, and professional skills of students 
        attending such schools;
          (5) improving the ability of local educational 
        agencies, including through professional development, 
        to continue operating magnet schools at a high 
        performance level after Federal funding for the magnet 
        schools is terminated; and
          (6) ensuring that students enrolled in the magnet 
        school programs have equitable access to a quality 
        education that will enable the students to succeed 
        academically and continue with postsecondary education 
        or employment.

SEC. 3122. DEFINITION.

  For the purpose of this subpart, the term ``magnet school'' 
means a public elementary school, public secondary school, 
public elementary education center, or public secondary 
education center that offers a special curriculum capable of 
attracting substantial numbers of students of different racial 
backgrounds.

SEC. 3123. PROGRAM AUTHORIZED.

  From the amount appropriated under section 3(c)(1)(B), the 
Secretary, in accordance with this subpart, is authorized to 
award grants to eligible local educational agencies, and 
consortia of such agencies where appropriate, to carry out the 
purpose of this subpart for magnet schools that are--
          (1) part of an approved desegregation plan; and
          (2) designed to bring students from different social, 
        economic, ethnic, and racial backgrounds together.

SEC. 3124. ELIGIBILITY.

  A local educational agency, or consortium of such agencies 
where appropriate, is eligible to receive a grant under this 
subpart to carry out the purpose of this subpart if such agency 
or consortium--
          (1) is implementing a plan undertaken pursuant to a 
        final order issued by a court of the United States, or 
        a court of any State, or any other State agency or 
        official of competent jurisdiction, that requires the 
        desegregation of minority-group-segregated children or 
        faculty in the elementary schools and secondary schools 
        of such agency; or
          (2) without having been required to do so, has 
        adopted and is implementing, or will, if a grant is 
        awarded to such local educational agency, or consortium 
        of such agencies, under this subpart, adopt and 
        implement a plan that has been approved by the 
        Secretary as adequate under title VI of the Civil 
        Rights Act of 1964 for the desegregation of minority-
        group-segregated children or faculty in such schools.

SEC. 3125. APPLICATIONS AND REQUIREMENTS.

  (a) Applications.--An eligible local educational agency, or 
consortium of such agencies, desiring to receive a grant under 
this subpart shall submit an application to the Secretary at 
such time and in such manner as the Secretary may reasonably 
require.
  (b) Information and Assurances.--Each application submitted 
under subsection (a) shall include--
          (1) a description of--
                  (A) how a grant awarded under this subpart 
                will be used to promote desegregation, 
                including how the proposed magnet school 
                programs will increase interaction among 
                students of different social, economic, ethnic, 
                and racial backgrounds;
                  (B) the manner and extent to which the magnet 
                school program will increase student academic 
                achievement in the instructional area or areas 
                offered by the school;
                  (C) how the applicant will continue the 
                magnet school program after assistance under 
                this subpart is no longer available, and, if 
                applicable, an explanation of why magnet 
                schools established or supported by the 
                applicant with grant funds under this subpart 
                cannot be continued without the use of grant 
                funds under this subpart;
                  (D) how grant funds under this subpart will 
                be used--
                          (i) to improve student academic 
                        achievement for all students attending 
                        the magnet school programs; and
                          (ii) to implement services and 
                        activities that are consistent with 
                        other programs under this Act, and 
                        other Acts, as appropriate; and
                  (E) the criteria to be used in selecting 
                students to attend the proposed magnet school 
                program; and
          (2) assurances that the applicant will--
                  (A) use grant funds under this subpart for 
                the purposes specified in section 3121;
                  (B) employ effective teachers in the courses 
                of instruction assisted under this subpart;
                  (C) not engage in discrimination based on 
                race, religion, color, national origin, sex, or 
                disability in--
                          (i) the hiring, promotion, or 
                        assignment of employees of the 
                        applicant or other personnel for whom 
                        the applicant has any administrative 
                        responsibility;
                          (ii) the assignment of students to 
                        schools, or to courses of instruction 
                        within the schools, of such applicant, 
                        except to carry out the approved plan; 
                        and
                          (iii) designing or operating 
                        extracurricular activities for 
                        students;
                  (D) carry out a quality education program 
                that will encourage greater parental 
                decisionmaking and involvement; and
                  (E) give students residing in the local 
                attendance area of the proposed magnet school 
                program equitable consideration for placement 
                in the program, consistent with desegregation 
                guidelines and the capacity of the applicant to 
                accommodate the students.
  (c) Special Rule.--No grant shall be awarded under this 
subpart unless the Assistant Secretary of Education for Civil 
Rights determines that the assurances described in subsection 
(b)(2)(C) will be met.

SEC. 3126. PRIORITY.

  In awarding grants under this subpart, the Secretary shall 
give priority to applicants that--
          (1) demonstrate the greatest need for assistance, 
        based on the expense or difficulty of effectively 
        carrying out approved desegregation plans and the 
        magnet school program for which the grant is sought;
          (2) propose to carry out new magnet school programs, 
        or significantly revise existing magnet school 
        programs;
          (3) propose to select students to attend magnet 
        school programs by methods such as lottery, rather than 
        through academic examination; and
          (4) propose to serve the entire student population of 
        a school.

SEC. 3127. USE OF FUNDS.

  (a) In General.--Grant funds made available under this 
subpart may be used by an eligible local educational agency, or 
consortium of such agencies--
          (1) for planning and promotional activities directly 
        related to the development, expansion, continuation, or 
        enhancement of academic programs and services offered 
        at magnet schools;
          (2) for the acquisition of books, materials, and 
        equipment, including computers and the maintenance and 
        operation of materials, equipment, and computers, 
        necessary to conduct programs in magnet schools;
          (3) for the compensation, or subsidization of the 
        compensation, of elementary school and secondary school 
        teachers, and instructional staff where applicable, who 
        are necessary to conduct programs in magnet schools;
          (4) with respect to a magnet school program offered 
        to less than the entire student population of a school, 
        for instructional activities that--
                  (A) are designed to make available the 
                special curriculum that is offered by the 
                magnet school program to students who are 
                enrolled in the school but who are not enrolled 
                in the magnet school program; and
                  (B) further the purpose of this subpart;
          (5) for activities, which may include professional 
        development, that will build the recipient's capacity 
        to operate magnet school programs once the grant period 
        has ended;
          (6) to enable the local educational agency, or 
        consortium of such agencies, to have more flexibility 
        in the administration of a magnet school program in 
        order to serve students attending a school who are not 
        enrolled in a magnet school program; and
          (7) to enable the local educational agency, or 
        consortium of such agencies, to have flexibility in 
        designing magnet schools for students in all grades.
  (b) Special Rule.--Grant funds under this subpart may be used 
for activities described in paragraphs (2) and (3) of 
subsection (a) only if the activities are directly related to 
improving student academic achievement based on the State's 
academic standards or directly related to improving student 
reading skills or knowledge of mathematics, science, history, 
geography, English, foreign languages, art, or music, or to 
improving career, technical, and professional skills.

SEC. 3128. LIMITATIONS.

  (a) Duration of Awards.--A grant under this subpart shall be 
awarded for a period that shall not exceed 3 fiscal years.
  (b) Limitation on Planning Funds.--A local educational 
agency, or consortium of such agencies, may expend for planning 
(professional development shall not be considered to be 
planning for purposes of this subsection) not more than 50 
percent of the grant funds received under this subpart for the 
first year of the program and not more than 15 percent of such 
funds for each of the second and third such years.
  (c) Amount.--No local educational agency, or consortium of 
such agencies, awarded a grant under this subpart shall receive 
more than $4,000,000 under this subpart for any 1 fiscal year.
  (d) Timing.--To the extent practicable, the Secretary shall 
award grants for any fiscal year under this subpart not later 
than July 1 of the applicable fiscal year.

SEC. 3129. EVALUATIONS.

  (a) Reservation.--The Secretary may reserve not more than 2 
percent of the funds appropriated under section 3(c)(1)(B) for 
any fiscal year to carry out evaluations, provide technical 
assistance, and carry out dissemination projects with respect 
to magnet school programs assisted under this subpart.
  (b) Contents.--Each evaluation described in subsection (a), 
at a minimum, shall address--
          (1) how and the extent to which magnet school 
        programs lead to educational quality and academic 
        improvement;
          (2) the extent to which magnet school programs 
        enhance student access to a quality education;
          (3) the extent to which magnet school programs lead 
        to the elimination, reduction, or prevention of 
        minority group isolation in elementary schools and 
        secondary schools with substantial proportions of 
        minority students; and
          (4) the extent to which magnet school programs differ 
        from other school programs in terms of the 
        organizational characteristics and resource allocations 
        of such magnet school programs.
  (c) Dissemination.--The Secretary shall collect and 
disseminate to the general public information on successful 
magnet school programs.

SEC. 3130. RESERVATION.

  In any fiscal year for which the amount appropriated under 
section 3(c)(1)(B) exceeds $75,000,000, the Secretary shall 
give priority in using such amounts in excess of $75,000,000 to 
awarding grants to local educational agencies or consortia of 
such agencies that did not receive a grant under this subpart 
in the preceding fiscal year.

           Subpart 3--Family Engagement in Education Programs

SEC. 3141. PURPOSES.

  The purposes of this subpart are the following:
          (1) To provide financial support to organizations to 
        provide technical assistance and training to State and 
        local educational agencies in the implementation and 
        enhancement of systemic and effective family engagement 
        policies, programs, and activities that lead to 
        improvements in student development and academic 
        achievement.
          (2) To assist State educational agencies, local 
        educational agencies, community-based organizations, 
        schools, and educators in strengthening partnerships 
        among parents, teachers, school leaders, 
        administrators, and other school personnel in meeting 
        the educational needs of children and fostering greater 
        parental engagement.
          (3) To support State educational agencies, local 
        educational agencies, schools, educators, and parents 
        in developing and strengthening the relationship 
        between parents and their children's school in order to 
        further the developmental progress of children.
          (4) To coordinate activities funded under this 
        subpart with parent involvement initiatives funded 
        under section 1118 and other provisions of this Act.
          (5) To assist the Secretary, State educational 
        agencies, and local educational agencies in the 
        coordination and integration of Federal, State, and 
        local services and programs to engage families in 
        education.

SEC. 3142. GRANTS AUTHORIZED.

  (a) Statewide Family Engagement Centers.--From the amount 
appropriated under section 3(c)(1)(C), the Secretary is 
authorized to award grants for each fiscal year to statewide 
organizations (or consortia of such organizations), to 
establish Statewide Family Engagement Centers that provide 
comprehensive training and technical assistance to State 
educational agencies, local educational agencies, schools 
identified by State educational agencies and local educational 
agencies, organizations that support family-school 
partnerships, and other organizations that carry out, or carry 
out directly, parent education and family engagement in 
education programs.
  (b) Minimum Award.--In awarding grants under this section, 
the Secretary shall, to the extent practicable, ensure that a 
grant is awarded for a Statewide Family Engagement Center in an 
amount not less than $500,000.

SEC. 3143. APPLICATIONS.

  (a) Submissions.--Each statewide organization, or a 
consortium of such organizations, that desires a grant under 
this subpart shall submit an application to the Secretary at 
such time, in such manner, and including the information 
described in subsection (b).
  (b) Contents.--Each application submitted under subsection 
(a) shall include, at a minimum, the following:
          (1) A description of the applicant's approach to 
        family engagement in education.
          (2) A description of the support that the Statewide 
        Family Engagement Center that will be operated by the 
        applicant will have from the State educational agency 
        and any partner organization outlining the commitment 
        to work with the center.
          (3) A description of the applicant's plan for 
        building a statewide infrastructure for family 
        engagement in education, that includes--
                  (A) management and governance;
                  (B) statewide leadership; or
                  (C) systemic services for family engagement 
                in education.
          (4) A description of the applicant's demonstrated 
        experience in providing training, information, and 
        support to State educational agencies, local 
        educational agencies, schools, educators, parents, and 
        organizations on family engagement in education 
        policies and practices that are effective for parents 
        (including low-income parents) and families, English 
        learners, minorities, parents of students with 
        disabilities, parents of homeless students, foster 
        parents and students, and parents of migratory 
        students, including evaluation results, reporting, or 
        other data exhibiting such demonstrated experience.
          (5) A description of the steps the applicant will 
        take to target services to low-income students and 
        parents.
          (6) An assurance that the applicant will--
                  (A) establish a special advisory committee, 
                the membership of which includes--
                          (i) parents, who shall constitute a 
                        majority of the members of the special 
                        advisory committee;
                          (ii) representatives of education 
                        professionals with expertise in 
                        improving services for disadvantaged 
                        children;
                          (iii) representatives of local 
                        elementary schools and secondary 
                        schools, including students;
                          (iv) representatives of the business 
                        community; and
                          (v) representatives of State 
                        educational agencies and local 
                        educational agencies;
                  (B) use not less than 65 percent of the funds 
                received under this subpart in each fiscal year 
                to serve local educational agencies, schools, 
                and community-based organizations that serve 
                high concentrations of disadvantaged students, 
                including English learners, minorities, parents 
                of students with disabilities, parents of 
                homeless students, foster parents and students, 
                and parents of migratory students;
                  (C) operate a Statewide Family Engagement 
                Center of sufficient size, scope, and quality 
                to ensure that the Center is adequate to serve 
                the State educational agency, local educational 
                agencies, and community-based organizations;
                  (D) ensure that the Center will retain staff 
                with the requisite training and experience to 
                serve parents in the State;
                  (E) serve urban, suburban, and rural local 
                educational agencies and schools;
                  (F) work with--
                          (i) other Statewide Family Engagement 
                        Centers assisted under this subpart; 
                        and
                          (ii) parent training and information 
                        centers and community parent resource 
                        centers assisted under sections 671 and 
                        672 of the Individuals with 
                        Disabilities Education Act;
                  (G) use not less than 30 percent of the funds 
                received under this subpart for each fiscal 
                year to establish or expand technical 
                assistance for evidence-based parent education 
                programs;
                  (H) provide assistance to State educational 
                agencies and local educational agencies and 
                community-based organizations that support 
                family members in supporting student academic 
                achievement;
                  (I) work with State educational agencies, 
                local educational agencies, schools, educators, 
                and parents to determine parental needs and the 
                best means for delivery of services to address 
                such needs;
                  (J) conduct sufficient outreach to assist 
                parents, including parents who the applicant 
                may have a difficult time engaging with a 
                school or local educational agency; and
                  (K) conduct outreach to low-income students 
                and parents, including low-income students and 
                parents who are not proficient in English.

SEC. 3144. USES OF FUNDS.

  (a) In General.--Grantees shall use grant funds received 
under this subpart, based on the needs determined under section 
3143(b)(6)(I), to provide training and technical assistance to 
State educational agencies, local educational agencies, and 
organizations that support family-school partnerships, and 
activities, services, and training for local educational 
agencies, school leaders, educators, and parents--
          (1) to assist parents in participating effectively in 
        their children's education and to help their children 
        meet State standards, such as assisting parents--
                  (A) to engage in activities that will improve 
                student academic achievement, including 
                understanding how they can support learning in 
                the classroom with activities at home and in 
                afterschool and extracurricular programs;
                  (B) to communicate effectively with their 
                children, teachers, school leaders, counselors, 
                administrators, and other school personnel;
                  (C) to become active participants in the 
                development, implementation, and review of 
                school-parent compacts, family engagement in 
                education policies, and school planning and 
                improvement;
                  (D) to participate in the design and 
                provision of assistance to students who are not 
                making academic progress;
                  (E) to participate in State and local 
                decisionmaking;
                  (F) to train other parents; and
                  (G) to help the parents learn and use 
                technology applied in their children's 
                education;
          (2) to develop and implement, in partnership with the 
        State educational agency, statewide family engagement 
        in education policy and systemic initiatives that will 
        provide for a continuum of services to remove barriers 
        for family engagement in education and support school 
        reform efforts; and
          (3) to develop and implement parental involvement 
        policies under this Act.
  (b) Matching Funds for Grant Renewal.--For each fiscal year 
after the first fiscal year for which an organization or 
consortium receives assistance under this section, the 
organization or consortium shall demonstrate in the application 
that a portion of the services provided by the organization or 
consortium is supported through non-Federal contributions, 
which may be in cash or in-kind.
  (c) Technical Assistance.--The Secretary shall reserve not 
more than 2 percent of the funds appropriated under section 
3(c)(1)(C) to carry out this subpart to provide technical 
assistance, by competitive grant or contract, for the 
establishment, development, and coordination of Statewide 
Family Engagement Centers.
  (d) Rule of Construction.--Nothing in this section shall be 
construed to prohibit a Statewide Family Engagement Center 
from--
          (1) having its employees or agents meet with a parent 
        at a site that is not on school grounds; or
          (2) working with another agency that serves children.
  (e) Parental Rights.--Notwithstanding any other provision of 
this section--
          (1) no person (including a parent who educates a 
        child at home, a public school parent, or a private 
        school parent) shall be required to participate in any 
        program of parent education or developmental screening 
        under this section; and
          (2) no program or center assisted under this section 
        shall take any action that infringes in any manner on 
        the right of a parent to direct the education of their 
        children.

SEC. 3145. FAMILY ENGAGEMENT IN INDIAN SCHOOLS.

  The Secretary of the Interior, in consultation with the 
Secretary of Education, shall establish, or enter into 
contracts and cooperative agreements with local Indian 
nonprofit parent organizations to establish and operate Family 
Engagement Centers.

                 PART B--LOCAL ACADEMIC FLEXIBLE GRANT

SEC. 3201. PURPOSE.

  The purpose of this part is to--
          (1) provide local educational agencies with the 
        opportunity to access funds to support the initiatives 
        important to their schools and students to improve 
        academic achievement and student engagement, including 
        protecting student safety; and
          (2) provide nonprofit and for-profit entities the 
        opportunity to work with students to improve academic 
        achievement and student engagement, including student 
        safety.

SEC. 3202. ALLOTMENTS TO STATES.

  (a) Reservations.--From the funds appropriated under section 
3(c)(2) for any fiscal year, the Secretary shall reserve--
          (1) not more than one-half of 1 percent for national 
        activities to provide technical assistance to eligible 
        entities in carrying out programs under this part; and
          (2) not more than one-half of 1 percent for payments 
        to the outlying areas and the Bureau of Indian 
        Education, to be allotted in accordance with their 
        respective needs for assistance under this part, as 
        determined by the Secretary, to enable the outlying 
        areas and the Bureau to carry out the purpose of this 
        part.
  (b) State Allotments.--
          (1) Determination.--From the funds appropriated under 
        section 3(c)(2) for any fiscal year and remaining after 
        the Secretary makes reservations under subsection (a), 
        the Secretary shall allot to each State for the fiscal 
        year an amount that bears the same relationship to the 
        remainder as the amount the State received under 
        chapter B of subpart 1 of part A of title I for the 
        preceding fiscal year bears to the amount all States 
        received under that chapter for the preceding fiscal 
        year, except that no State shall receive less than an 
        amount equal to one-half of 1 percent of the total 
        amount made available to all States under this 
        subsection.
          (2) Reallotment of unused funds.--If a State does not 
        receive an allotment under this part for a fiscal year, 
        the Secretary shall reallot the amount of the State's 
        allotment to the remaining States in accordance with 
        this section.
  (c) State Use of Funds.--
          (1) In general.--Each State that receives an 
        allotment under this part shall reserve not less than 
        75 percent of the amount allotted to the State under 
        subsection (b) for each fiscal year for awards to 
        eligible entities under section 3204.
          (2) Awards to nongovernmental entities to improve 
        student academic achievement.--Each State that receives 
        an allotment under subsection (b) for each fiscal year 
        shall reserve not less than 8 percent of the amount 
        allotted to the State for awards to nongovernmental 
        entities under section 3205.
          (3) State activities and state administration.--A 
        State educational agency may reserve not more than 17 
        percent of the amount allotted to the State under 
        subsection (b) for each fiscal year for one or more of 
        the following:
                  (A) Enabling the State educational agency--
                          (i) to pay the costs of developing 
                        the State assessments and standards 
                        required under section 1111(b), which 
                        may include the costs of working, at 
                        the sole discretion of the State, in 
                        voluntary partnerships with other 
                        States to develop such assessments and 
                        standards; or
                          (ii) if the State has developed the 
                        assessments and standards required 
                        under section 1111(b), to administer 
                        those assessments or carry out other 
                        activities related to ensuring that the 
                        State's schools and local educational 
                        agencies are helping students meet the 
                        State's academic standards under such 
                        section.
                  (B) The administrative costs of carrying out 
                its responsibilities under this part, except 
                that not more than 5 percent of the reserved 
                amount may be used for this purpose.
                  (C) Monitoring and evaluation of programs and 
                activities assisted under this part.
                  (D) Providing training and technical 
                assistance under this part.
                  (E) Statewide academic focused programs.
                  (F) Sharing evidence-based and other 
                effective strategies with eligible entities.
                  (G) Awarding grants for blended learning 
                projects under paragraph (4).
          (4) Blended learning projects.--
                  (A) In general.--From the amount of funds a 
                State educational agency reserves under 
                subsection (c)(3) for each fiscal year to carry 
                out this paragraph, the State educational 
                agency shall award grants on a competitive 
                basis to eligible entities in the State to 
                carry out blended learning projects described 
                in this paragraph.
                  (B) Geographic diversity.-- In awarding 
                grants under this paragraph, a State 
                educational agency shall distribute funds 
                equitably among geographic areas of the State, 
                including rural and urban communities.
                  (C) Application.--An eligible entity desiring 
                to receive a grant under this paragraph shall 
                submit an application to the State educational 
                agency at such time and in such manner as the 
                agency may require, and which describes--
                          (i) the blended learning project to 
                        be carried out by the eligible entity, 
                        including the design of the 
                        instructional model to be carried out 
                        by the eligible entity and how such 
                        eligible entity will use funds provided 
                        under this paragraph to carry out the 
                        project;
                          (ii) in the case of an eligible 
                        entity described in subclause (I) or 
                        (III) of subparagraph (F)(ii), the 
                        schools that will participate in the 
                        project;
                          (iii) the expected impact on student 
                        academic achievement;
                          (iv) how the eligible entity will 
                        ensure sufficient information 
                        technology is available to carry out 
                        the project;
                          (v) how the eligible entity will 
                        ensure sufficient digital instructional 
                        resources are available to students 
                        participating in the project;
                          (vi) the ongoing professional 
                        development to be provided for 
                        teachers, school leaders, and other 
                        personnel carrying out the project;
                          (vii) the State policies and 
                        procedures for which the eligible 
                        entity requests waivers from the State 
                        to carry out the project, which may 
                        include requests for the waivers 
                        described in section 3203(a)(11)(B);
                          (viii) as appropriate, how the 
                        eligible entity will use the blended 
                        learning project to improve instruction 
                        and access to the curriculum for 
                        diverse groups of students, including 
                        students with disabilities and students 
                        who are limited English proficient;
                          (ix) how the eligible entity will 
                        evaluate the project in terms of 
                        student academic achievement and 
                        publicly report the results of such 
                        evaluation; and
                          (x) how the eligible entity will 
                        sustain the project beyond the grant 
                        period.
                  (D) Uses of funds.--An eligible entity 
                receiving a grant under this paragraph shall 
                use such grant to carry out a blended learning 
                project, which shall include at least 1 of the 
                following activities:
                          (i) Planning activities, which may 
                        include development of new 
                        instructional models (including blended 
                        learning technology software and 
                        platforms), the purchase of digital 
                        instructional resources, initial 
                        professional development activities, 
                        and one-time information technology 
                        purchases, except that such 
                        expenditures may not include 
                        expenditures related to significant 
                        construction or renovation of 
                        facilities.
                          (ii) Ongoing professional development 
                        for teachers, school leaders, or other 
                        personnel involved in the project that 
                        is designed to support the 
                        implementation and academic success of 
                        the project.
                  (E) Non-federal match.--A State educational 
                agency that carries out a grant program under 
                this paragraph shall provide non-Federal 
                matching funds equal to not less than 10 
                percent of the grant funds awarded by the State 
                educational agency to eligible entities under 
                this paragraph.
                  (F) Definitions.--In this paragraph:
                          (i) Blended learning project.--The 
                        term ``blended learning project'' means 
                        a formal education program--
                                  (I) that includes an element 
                                of online learning, and 
                                instructional time in a 
                                supervised location away from 
                                home;
                                  (II) that includes an element 
                                of student control over time, 
                                path, or pace; and
                                  (III) in which the elements 
                                are connected to provide an 
                                integrated learning experience.
                          (ii) Eligible entity.--The term 
                        ``eligible entity'' means a--
                                  (I) local educational agency;
                                  (II) charter school; or
                                  (III) consortium of the 
                                entities described in subclause 
                                (I) or (II), which may be in 
                                partnership with a for-profit 
                                or nonprofit entity.

SEC. 3203. STATE APPLICATION.

  (a) In General.--In order to receive an allotment under 
section 3202 for any fiscal year, a State educational agency 
shall submit to the Secretary, at such time as the Secretary 
may require, an application that--
          (1) describes how the State educational agency will 
        use funds reserved for State-level activities, 
        including how, if any, of the funds will be used to 
        support student safety;
          (2) describes the procedures and criteria the State 
        educational agency will use for reviewing applications 
        and awarding funds to eligible entities on a 
        competitive basis, which shall include reviewing how 
        the proposed project will help increase student 
        academic achievement and student engagement;
          (3) describes how the State educational agency will 
        ensure that awards made under this part are--
                  (A) of sufficient size and scope to support 
                high-quality, effective programs that are 
                consistent with the purpose of this part; and
                  (B) in amounts that are consistent with 
                section 3204(f);
          (4) describes the steps the State educational agency 
        will take to ensure that programs implement effective 
        strategies, including providing ongoing technical 
        assistance and training, and dissemination of evidence-
        based and other effective strategies;
          (5) describes how the State educational agency will 
        consider students across all grades when making these 
        awards;
          (6) an assurance that, other than providing technical 
        and advisory assistance and monitoring compliance with 
        this part, the State educational agency has not 
        exercised and will not exercise any influence in the 
        decisionmaking process of eligible entities as to the 
        expenditure of funds received by the eligible entities 
        under this part;
          (7) describes how programs under this part will be 
        coordinated with programs under this Act, and other 
        programs as appropriate;
          (8) contains an assurance that the State educational 
        agency--
                  (A) will make awards for programs for a 
                period of not more than 5 years; and
                  (B) will require each eligible entity seeking 
                such an award to submit a plan describing how 
                the project to be funded through the award will 
                continue after funding under this part ends, if 
                applicable;
          (9) contains an assurance that funds appropriated to 
        carry out this part will be used to supplement, and not 
        supplant, State and local public funds expended to 
        provide programs and activities authorized under this 
        part and other similar programs;
          (10) an assurance that the State will support 
        projects from each of the categories listed in section 
        3204(b)(1)(D) in awarding subgrants to local 
        educational agencies; and
          (11) in the case of a State that will carry out a 
        program to award grants under section 3202(c)(4), a 
        description of the program, which shall include--
                  (A) the criteria the State will use to award 
                grants under such section to eligible entities 
                to carry out blended learning projects;
                  (B) the State policies and procedures to be 
                waived by the State, consistent with Federal 
                law, for such eligible entities to carry out 
                such projects, which may include waivers with 
                respect to--
                          (i) restrictions on class sizes;
                          (ii) restrictions on licensing or 
                        credentialing of personnel supervising 
                        student work in such projects;
                          (iii) restrictions on the use of 
                        State funding for instructional 
                        materials for the purchase of digital 
                        instructional resources;
                          (iv) restrictions on advancing 
                        students based on demonstrated mastery 
                        of learning outcomes, rather than seat-
                        time requirements; and
                          (v) restrictions on secondary school 
                        students in the State enrolling in 
                        online coursework;
                  (C) how the State will inform eligible 
                entities of the availability of the waivers 
                described in subparagraph (B); and
                  (D) how the State will provide the non-
                Federal match required under section 
                3202(c)(4)(E).
  (b) Deemed Approval.--An application submitted by a State 
educational agency pursuant to subsection (a) shall be deemed 
to be approved by the Secretary unless the Secretary makes a 
written determination, prior to the expiration of the 120-day 
period beginning on the date on which the Secretary received 
the application, that the application is not in compliance with 
this part.
  (c) Disapproval.--The Secretary shall not finally disapprove 
the application, except after giving the State educational 
agency notice and an opportunity for a hearing.
  (d) Notification.--If the Secretary finds that the 
application is not in compliance, in whole or in part, with 
this part, the Secretary shall--
          (1) give the State educational agency notice and an 
        opportunity for a hearing; and
          (2) notify the State educational agency of the 
        finding of noncompliance, and, in such notification, 
        shall--
                  (A) cite the specific provisions in the 
                application that are not in compliance; and
                  (B) request additional information, only as 
                to the noncompliant provisions, needed to make 
                the application compliant.
  (e) Response.--If the State educational agency responds to 
the Secretary's notification described in subsection (d)(2) 
during the 45-day period beginning on the date on which the 
agency received the notification, and resubmits the application 
with the requested information described in subsection 
(d)(2)(B), the Secretary shall approve or disapprove such 
application prior to the later of--
          (1) the expiration of the 45-day period beginning on 
        the date on which the application is resubmitted; or
          (2) the expiration of the 120-day period described in 
        subsection (b).
  (f) Failure To Respond.--If the State educational agency does 
not respond to the Secretary's notification described in 
subsection (d)(2) during the 45-day period beginning on the 
date on which the agency received the notification, such 
application shall be deemed to be disapproved.
  (g) Rule of Construction An application submitted by a State 
educational agency pursuant to subsection (a) shall not be 
approved or disapproved based upon the activities for which the 
agency may make funds available to eligible entities under 
section 3204 if the agency's use of funds is consistent with 
section 3204(b).

SEC. 3204. LOCAL COMPETITIVE GRANT PROGRAM.

  (a) In General.--A State that receives funds under this part 
for a fiscal year shall provide the amount made available under 
section 3202(c)(1) to eligible entities in accordance with this 
section.
  (b) Use of Funds.--
          (1) In general.--An eligible entity that receives an 
        award under this part shall use the funds for 
        activities that--
                  (A) are evidence-based;
                  (B) will improve student academic achievement 
                and student engagement;
                  (C) are allowable under State law; and
                  (D) focus on one or more projects from the 
                following two categories:
                          (i) Supplemental student support 
                        activities such as before, after, or 
                        summer school activities, tutoring, and 
                        expanded learning time, but not 
                        including athletics or in-school 
                        learning activities.
                          (ii) Activities designed to support 
                        students, such as academic subject 
                        specific programs including computer 
                        science and other science, technology, 
                        engineering, and mathematics programs, 
                        arts education, civic education, and 
                        adjunct teacher, extended-learning-
                        time, and dual enrollment programs, and 
                        parent engagement, but not including 
                        activities to--
                                  (I) support smaller class 
                                sizes or construction; or
                                  (II) provide compensation or 
                                benefits to teachers, school 
                                leaders, other school 
                                officials, or local educational 
                                agency staff.
          (2) Participation of children enrolled in private 
        schools.--An eligible entity that receives an award 
        under this part shall ensure compliance with section 
        6501 (relating to participation of children enrolled in 
        private schools).
  (c) Application.--
          (1) In general.--To be eligible to receive an award 
        under this part, an eligible entity shall submit an 
        application to the State educational agency at such 
        time, in such manner, and including such information as 
        the State educational agency may reasonably require, 
        including the contents required by paragraph (2).
          (2) Contents.--Each application submitted under 
        paragraph (1) shall include--
                  (A) a description of the activities to be 
                funded and how they are consistent with 
                subsection (b), including any activities that 
                will increase student safety;
                  (B) an assurance that funds under this part 
                will be used to increase the level of State, 
                local, and other non-Federal funds that would, 
                in the absence of funds under this part, be 
                made available for programs and activities 
                authorized under this part, and in no case 
                supplant State, local, or non-Federal funds;
                  (C) an assurance that the community will be 
                given notice of an intent to submit an 
                application with an opportunity for comment, 
                and that the application will be available for 
                public review after submission of the 
                application; and
                  (D) an assurance that students who benefit 
                from any activity funded under this part shall 
                continue to maintain enrollment in a public 
                elementary or secondary school.
  (d) Review.--In reviewing local applications under this 
section, a State educational agency shall use a peer review 
process or other methods of assuring the quality of such 
applications but the review shall be limited to the likelihood 
that the project will increase student academic achievement and 
student engagement.
  (e) Geographic Diversity.--A State educational agency shall 
distribute funds under this part equitably among geographic 
areas within the State, including rural, suburban, and urban 
communities.
  (f) Award.--A grant shall be awarded to all eligible entities 
that submit an application that meets the requirements of this 
section in an amount that is not less than $10,000, but there 
shall be only one annual award granted to any one local 
educational agency, but such award may be for multiple projects 
or programs with the local educational agency.
  (g) Duration of Awards.--Grants under this part may be 
awarded for a period of not more than 5 years.
  (h) Eligible Entity Defined.--In this section, the term 
``eligible entity'' means--
          (1) a local educational agency in partnership with a 
        community-based organization, institution of higher 
        education, business entity, or nongovernmental entity;
          (2) a consortium of local educational agencies 
        working in partnership with a community-based 
        organization, institution of higher education, business 
        entity, or nongovernmental entity;
          (3) a community-based organization or institution of 
        higher education in partnership with a local 
        educational agency and, if applicable, a business 
        entity or nongovernmental entity; or
          (4) a business entity in partnership with a local 
        educational agency and, if applicable, a community-
        based organization, institution of higher education, or 
        nongovernmental entity.

SEC. 3205. AWARDS TO NONGOVERNMENTAL ENTITIES TO IMPROVE ACADEMIC 
                    ACHIEVEMENT.

  (a) In General.--From the amount reserved under section 
3202(c)(2), a State educational agency shall award grants to 
nongovernmental entities, including public or private 
organizations, community-based or faith-based organizations, 
institutions of higher education, and business entities for a 
program or project to increase the academic achievement and 
student engagement of public school students attending public 
elementary or secondary schools (or both) in compliance with 
the requirements in this section. Subject to the availability 
of funds, the State educational agency shall award a grant to 
each eligible applicant that meets the requirements in a 
sufficient size and scope to support the program.
  (b) Application.--The State educational agency shall require 
an application that includes the following information:
          (1) A description of the program or project the 
        applicant will use the funds to support.
          (2) A description of how the applicant is using or 
        will use other State, local, or private funding to 
        support the program or project.
          (3) A description of how the program or project will 
        help increase student academic achievement and student 
        engagement, including the evidence to support this 
        claim.
          (4) A description of the student population the 
        program or project is targeting to impact, and if the 
        program will prioritize students in high-need local 
        educational agencies.
          (5) A description of how the applicant will conduct 
        sufficient outreach to ensure students can participate 
        in the program or project.
          (6) A description of any partnerships the applicant 
        has entered into with local educational agencies or 
        other entities the applicant will work with, if 
        applicable.
          (7) A description of how the applicant will work to 
        share evidence-based and other effective strategies 
        from the program or project with local educational 
        agencies and other entities working with students to 
        increase academic achievement.
          (8) An assurance that students who benefit from any 
        program or project funded under this section shall 
        continue to maintain enrollment in a public elementary 
        or secondary school.
  (c) Matching Contribution.--An eligible applicant receiving a 
grant under this section shall provide, either directly or 
through private contributions, non-Federal matching funds equal 
to not less than 50 percent of the amount of the grant.
  (d) Review.--The State educational agency shall review the 
application to ensure that--
          (1) the applicant is an eligible applicant;
          (2) the application clearly describes the required 
        elements in subsection (b);
          (3) the entity meets the matching requirement 
        described in subsection (c); and
          (4) the program is allowable and complies with 
        Federal, State, and local laws.
  (e) Distribution of Funds.--If the application requests 
exceed the funds available, the State educational agency shall 
prioritize projects that support students in high-need local 
educational agencies and ensure geographic diversity, including 
serving rural, suburban, and urban areas.
  (f) Administrative Costs.--Not more than 1 percent of a grant 
awarded under this section may be used for administrative 
costs.

SEC. 3206. REPORT.

  Each recipient of a grant under section 3204 or 3205 shall 
report to the State educational agency on--
          (1) the success of the program in reaching the goals 
        of the program;
          (2) a description of the students served by the 
        program and how the students' academic achievement 
        improved; and
          (3) the results of any evaluation conducted on the 
        success of the program.

                      TITLE [VIII] IV--IMPACT AID

SEC. [8001.]  4001. PURPOSE.

   In order to fulfill the Federal responsibility to assist 
with the provision of educational services to federally 
connected children in a manner that promotes control by local 
educational agencies with little or no Federal or State 
involvement, because certain activities of the Federal 
Government, such as activities to fulfill the responsibilities 
of the Federal Government with respect to Indian tribes and 
activities under section 511 of the Servicemembers Civil Relief 
Act, place a financial burden on the local educational agencies 
serving areas where such activities are carried out, and to 
help such children meet [challenging State standards] State 
academic standards, it is the purpose of this title to provide 
financial assistance to local educational agencies that--
          (1) experience a substantial and continuing financial 
        burden due to the acquisition of real property by the 
        United States;
          (2) educate children who reside on Federal property 
        and whose parents are employed on Federal property;
          (3) educate children of parents who are in the 
        military services and children who live in low-rent 
        housing;
          (4) educate heavy concentrations of children whose 
        parents are civilian employees of the Federal 
        Government and do not reside on Federal property; or
          (5) need special assistance with capital expenditures 
        for construction activities because of the enrollments 
        of substantial numbers of children who reside on 
        Federal lands and because of the difficulty of raising 
        local revenue through bond referendums for capital 
        projects due to the inability to tax Federal property.

SEC. [8002.]  4002. PAYMENTS RELATING TO FEDERAL ACQUISITION OF REAL 
                    PROPERTY.

  (a) In General.--Where the Secretary, after consultation with 
any local educational agency and with the appropriate State 
educational agency, determines--
          (1) that the United States owns Federal property in 
        the local educational agency, and that such property--
                  (A) has been acquired by the United States 
                since 1938;
                  (B) was not acquired by exchange for other 
                Federal property in the local educational 
                agency which the United States owned before 
                1939; and
                  (C) [had an assessed value (determined as of 
                the time or times when so acquired) aggregating 
                10 percent or more of the assessed value of--] 
                had an assessed value according to original 
                records (including facsimiles or other 
                reproductions of those records) documenting the 
                assessed value of such property (determined as 
                of the time or times when so acquired) prepared 
                by the local officials referred to in 
                subsection (b)(3) or, when such original 
                records are not available due to unintentional 
                destruction (such as natural disaster, fire, 
                flooding, pest infestation, or deterioration 
                due to age), other records, including Federal 
                agency records, local historical records, or 
                other records that the Secretary determines to 
                be appropriate and reliable, aggregating 10 
                percent or more of the assessed value of--
                          (i) all real property in the local 
                        educational agency (similarly 
                        determined as of the time or times when 
                        such Federal property was so acquired); 
                        or
                          (ii) all real property in the local 
                        educational agency as assessed in the 
                        first year preceding or succeeding 
                        acquisition, whichever is greater, only 
                        if--
                                  (I) the assessment of all 
                                real property in the local 
                                educational agency is not made 
                                at the same time or times that 
                                such Federal property was so 
                                acquired and assessed; and
                                  (II) State law requires an 
                                assessment be made of property 
                                so acquired; and
          (2) that such agency is not being substantially 
        compensated for the loss in revenue resulting from such 
        ownership by increases in revenue accruing to the 
        agency from the conduct of Federal activities with 
        respect to such Federal property,
then such agency shall be eligible to receive the amount 
described in subsection (b) or (h).
  (b) Amount.--
          (1) In general.--(A)(i)(I) Subject to subclauses (II) 
        and (III), the amount that a local educational agency 
        shall be paid under subsection (a) for a fiscal year 
        shall be calculated in accordance with paragraph (2).
          (II) Except as provided in subclause (III), the 
        Secretary may not reduce the amount of a payment under 
        this section to a local educational agency for a fiscal 
        year by (aa) the amount equal to the amount of revenue, 
        if any, the agency received during the previous fiscal 
        year from activities conducted on Federal property 
        eligible under this section and located in a school 
        district served by the agency, including amounts 
        received from any Federal department or agency (other 
        than the Department of Education) from such activities, 
        by reason of receipt of such revenue, or (bb) any other 
        amount by reason of receipt of such revenue.
          (III) If the amount equal to the sum of (aa) the 
        proposed payment under this section to a local 
        educational agency for a fiscal year and (bb) the 
        amount of revenue described in subclause (II)(aa) 
        received by the agency during the previous fiscal year, 
        exceeds the maximum amount the agency is eligible to 
        receive under this section for the fiscal year 
        involved, then the Secretary shall reduce the amount of 
        the proposed payment under this section by an amount 
        equal to such excess amount.
          (ii) For purposes of clause (i), the amount of 
        revenue that a local educational agency receives during 
        the previous fiscal year from activities conducted on 
        Federal property shall not include payments received by 
        the agency from the Secretary of Defense to support--
                  (I) the operation of a domestic dependent 
                elementary or secondary school; or
                  (II) the provision of a free public education 
                to dependents of members of the Armed Forces 
                residing on or near a military installation.
          (B) If funds appropriated under [section 8014(a)] 
        section 3(d)(1) are insufficient to pay the amount 
        determined under subparagraph (A), the Secretary shall 
        calculate the payment for each eligible local 
        educational agency in accordance with subsection (h).
          (C) Notwithstanding any other provision of this 
        subsection, a local educational agency may not be paid 
        an amount under this section that, when added to the 
        amount such agency receives under [section 8003(b)] 
        section 4003(b), exceeds the maximum amount that such 
        agency is eligible to receive for such fiscal year 
        under [section 8003(b)(1)(C)] section 4003(b)(1)(C), or 
        the maximum amount that such agency is eligible to 
        receive for such fiscal year under this section, 
        whichever is greater.
          (2) Application of current levied real property tax 
        rate.--In calculating the amount that a local 
        educational agency is eligible to receive for a fiscal 
        year, the Secretary shall apply the current levied real 
        property tax rate for current expenditures levied by 
        fiscally independent local educational agencies, or 
        imputed for fiscally dependent local educational 
        agencies, to the current annually determined estimated 
        taxable value of such acquired Federal property.
          (3) Determination of taxable value for eligible 
        federal property.--
                  (A) In general.--In determining the estimated 
                taxable value of such acquired Federal property 
                for fiscal year 2010 and each succeeding fiscal 
                year, the Secretary shall--
                          (i) first determine the total taxable 
                        value for the purpose of levying 
                        property tax for school purposes for 
                        current expenditures of real property 
                        located within the boundaries of such 
                        local educational agency;
                          (ii) then determine the per acre 
                        value of the eligible Federal property 
                        by dividing the total taxable value as 
                        determined in clause (i) by the 
                        difference between the total acres 
                        located within the boundaries of the 
                        local educational agency and the number 
                        of Federal acres eligible under this 
                        section; and
                          (iii) then determine the total 
                        taxable value of the eligible Federal 
                        property by multiplying the per acre 
                        value as calculated under clause (ii) 
                        by the number of Federal acres eligible 
                        under this section.
                  (B) Special rule.--In the case of Federal 
                property eligible under this section that is 
                within the boundaries of 2 or more local 
                educational agencies, such a local educational 
                agency may ask the Secretary to calculate the 
                per acre value of each such local educational 
                agency as provided under subparagraph (A) and 
                apply the average of these per acre values to 
                the acres of the Federal property in such 
                agency.
  (c) Applicability to Tennessee Valley Authority Act.--For the 
purpose of this section, any real property with respect to 
which payments are being made under section 13 of the Tennessee 
Valley Authority Act of 1933 shall not be regarded as Federal 
property.
  (d) Ownership by United States.--The United States shall be 
deemed to own Federal property for the purposes of this Act, 
where--
          (1) prior to the transfer of Federal property, the 
        United States owned Federal property meeting the 
        requirements of subparagraphs (A), (B), and (C) of 
        subsection (a)(1); and
          (2) the United States transfers a portion of the 
        property referred to in paragraph (1) to another 
        nontaxable entity, and the United States--
                  (A) restricts some or any construction on 
                such property;
                  (B) requires that the property be used in 
                perpetuity for the public purposes for which 
                the property was conveyed;
                  (C) requires the grantee of the property to 
                report to the Federal Government (or its agent) 
                regarding information on the use of the 
                property;
                  (D) except with the approval of the Federal 
                Government (or its agent), prohibits the sale, 
                lease, assignment, or other disposal of the 
                property unless such sale, lease, assignment, 
                or other disposal is to another eligible 
                government agency; and
                  (E) reserves to the Federal Government a 
                right of reversion at any time the Federal 
                Government (or its agent) deems it necessary 
                for the national defense.
  (e) Local Educational Agency Containing Forest Service Land 
and Serving Certain Counties.--Beginning with fiscal year 1995, 
a local educational agency shall be deemed to meet the 
requirements of subsection (a)(1)(C) if such local educational 
agency meets the following requirements:
          (1) Acreage and acquisition by the forest service.--
        The local educational agency serves a school district 
        that contains between 20,000 and 60,000 acres of land 
        that has been acquired by the Forest Service of the 
        Department of Agriculture between 1915 and 1990, as 
        demonstrated by written evidence from the Forest 
        Service satisfactory to the Secretary.
          (2) County charter.--The local educational agency 
        serves a county chartered under State law in 1875 or 
        1890.
  [(f) Special Rule.--(1) Beginning with fiscal year 1994, and 
notwithstanding any other provision of law limiting the period 
during which fiscal year 1994 funds may be obligated, the 
Secretary shall treat the local educational agency serving the 
Wheatland R-II School District, Wheatland, Missouri, as meeting 
the eligibility requirements of section 2(a)(1)(C) of the Act 
of September 30, 1950 (Public Law 874, 81st Congress) (as such 
section was in effect on the day preceding the date of 
enactment of the Improving America's Schools Act of 1994) (20 
U.S.C. 237(a)(1)(C)) or subsection (a)(1)(C).
          [(2) For each fiscal year beginning with fiscal year 
        1999, the Secretary shall treat the Webster School 
        District, Day County, South Dakota as meeting the 
        eligibility requirements of subsection (a)(1)(C) of 
        this section.
          [(3) For each fiscal year beginning with fiscal year 
        2000, the Secretary shall treat the Central Union, 
        California; Island, California; Hill City, South 
        Dakota; and Wall, South Dakota local educational 
        agencies as meeting the eligibility requirements of 
        subsection (a)(1)(C) of this section.
          [(4) For the purposes of payments under this section 
        for each fiscal year beginning with fiscal year 2000, 
        the Secretary shall treat the Hot Springs, South Dakota 
        local educational agency as if it had filed a timely 
        application under section 8002 of the Elementary and 
        Secondary Education Act of 1965 for fiscal year 1994 if 
        the Secretary has received the fiscal year 1994 
        application, as well as Exhibits A and B not later than 
        December 1, 1999.
          [(5) For purposes of payments under this section for 
        each fiscal year beginning with fiscal year 2000, the 
        Secretary shall treat the Hueneme, California local 
        educational agency as if it had filed a timely 
        application under section 8002 of the Elementary and 
        Secondary Education Act of 1965 if the Secretary has 
        received the fiscal year 1995 application not later 
        than December 1, 1999.]
  (f) Special Rule.--Beginning with fiscal year 2014, a local 
educational agency shall be deemed to meet the requirements of 
subsection (a)(1)(C) if records to determine eligibility under 
such subsection were destroyed prior to fiscal year 2000 and 
the agency received funds under subsection (b) in the previous 
year.
  [(g) Former Districts.--
          [(1) In general.--Where the school district of any 
        local educational agency described in paragraph (2) is 
        formed at any time after 1938 by the consolidation of 
        two or more former school districts, such agency may 
        elect (at any time such agency files an application 
        under section 8005) for any fiscal year after fiscal 
        year 1994 to have (A) the eligibility of such local 
        educational agency, and (B) the amount which such 
        agency shall be eligible to receive, determined under 
        this section only with respect to such of the former 
        school districts comprising such consolidated school 
        districts as such agency shall designate in such 
        election.
          [(2) Eligible local educational agencies.--A local 
        educational agency referred to in paragraph (1) is any 
        local educational agency that, for fiscal year 1994 or 
        any preceding fiscal year, applied for and was 
        determined eligible under section 2(c) of the Act of 
        September 30, 1950 (Public Law 874, 81st Congress) as 
        such section was in effect for such fiscal year.]
  (g) Former Districts.--
          (1) Consolidations.--For fiscal year 2006 and each 
        succeeding fiscal year, if a local educational agency 
        described in subsection (b) is formed at any time after 
        1938 by the consolidation of 2 or more former school 
        districts, the local educational agency may elect to 
        have the Secretary determine its eligibility for any 
        fiscal year on the basis of 1 or more of those former 
        districts, as designated by the local educational 
        agency.
          (2) Eligible local educational agencies.--A local 
        educational agency referred to in subsection (a) is--
                  (A) any local educational agency that, for 
                fiscal year 1994 or any preceding fiscal year, 
                applied, and was determined to be eligible 
                under, section 2(c) of the Act of September 30, 
                1950 (Public Law 874, 81st Congress) as that 
                section was in effect for that fiscal year; or
                  (B) a local educational agency formed by the 
                consolidation of 2 or more districts, at least 
                1 of which was eligible for assistance under 
                this section for the fiscal year preceding the 
                year of the consolidation, if--
                          (i) for fiscal years 2006 through 
                        2015 the local educational agency 
                        notified the Secretary not later than 
                        30 days after the date of the enactment 
                        of this Act; and
                          (ii) for fiscal year 2016 the local 
                        educational agency includes the 
                        designation in its application under 
                        section 8005 or any timely amendment to 
                        such application.
          (3) Amount.--A local educational agency eligible 
        under subsection (b) shall receive a foundation payment 
        as provided for under subparagraphs (A) and (B) of 
        subsection (h)(1), except that the foundation payment 
        shall be calculated based on the most recent payment 
        received by the local educational based on its former 
        common status.
  (h) Payments With Respect to Fiscal Years in Which 
Insufficient Funds Are Appropriated.--For any fiscal year for 
which the amount appropriated under section 8014(a) is 
insufficient to pay to each eligible local educational agency 
the full amount determined under subsection (b), the Secretary 
shall make payments to each local educational agency under this 
section as follows:
          (1) Foundation payments for pre-2010 recipients.--
                  (A) In general.--The Secretary shall first 
                make a foundation payment to each local 
                educational agency that is determined by the 
                Secretary to be eligible to receive a payment 
                under this section for the fiscal year involved 
                and that filed a timely application, and met, 
                or has been determined by statute to meet, the 
                eligibility requirements of subsection (a) for 
                fiscal year 2009.
                  (B) Amount.--
                          (i) In general.--The amount of a 
                        payment under subparagraph (A) for a 
                        local educational agency shall be equal 
                        to the greater of 90 percent of the 
                        payment the local educational agency 
                        received from dollars appropriated for 
                        fiscal year 2009 or 90 percent of the 
                        average payment that the local 
                        educational agency received from 
                        dollars appropriated for fiscal years 
                        2006, 2007, 2008, and 2009, and shall 
                        be calculated without regard to the 
                        maximum payment provisions in 
                        subsection (b)(1)(C).
                          (ii) Exception.--In calculating such 
                        average payment for a local educational 
                        agency that did not receive a payment 
                        under subsection (b) for 1 or more of 
                        the fiscal years between fiscal year 
                        2006 and 2009, inclusive, the lowest 
                        such payment made to the agency for 
                        fiscal year 2006, 2007, 2008, or 2009, 
                        shall be treated as the payment that 
                        the agency received under subsection 
                        (b) for each fiscal year for which the 
                        agency did not receive such a payment.
                  (C) Insufficient appropriations.--If the 
                amount appropriated under section 8014(a) is 
                insufficient to pay the full amount determined 
                under this paragraph for all eligible local 
                educational agencies for the fiscal year, then 
                the Secretary shall ratably reduce the payment 
                to each local educational agency under this 
                paragraph.
          (2) Foundation payments for new applicants.--
                  (A) First year.--From any amounts remaining 
                after making payments under paragraph (1) and 
                subsection (i)(1) for the fiscal year involved, 
                the Secretary shall make a payment, in an 
                amount determined in accordance with 
                subparagraph (C), to each local educational 
                agency that the Secretary determines eligible 
                for a payment under this section for a fiscal 
                year after fiscal year 2009 and that did not 
                receive a payment under paragraph (1) for the 
                fiscal year for which such agency was 
                determined eligible for such payment.
                  (B) Second and succeeding years.--For any 
                succeeding fiscal year after the first fiscal 
                year that a local educational agency receives a 
                foundation payment under subparagraph (A), the 
                amount of the local educational agency's 
                foundation payment under this paragraph for 
                such succeeding fiscal year shall be equal to 
                the local educational agency's foundation 
                payment under this paragraph for the first 
                fiscal year.
                  (C) Amounts.--The amount of a payment under 
                subparagraph (A) for a local educational agency 
                shall be determined as follows:
                          (i) Calculate the local educational 
                        agency's maximum payment under 
                        subsection (b).
                          (ii) Calculate the percentage that 
                        the amount appropriated under [section 
                        8014(a)] section 3(d)(1) for the most 
                        recent fiscal year for which the 
                        Secretary has completed making payments 
                        under this section is of the total 
                        maximum payments for such fiscal year 
                        for all local educational agencies 
                        eligible for a payment under subsection 
                        (b) and multiply the agency's maximum 
                        payment by such percentage.
                          (iii) Multiply the amount determined 
                        under clause (ii) by 90 percent.
                  (D) Insufficient funds.--If the amount 
                appropriated under [section 8014(a)] section 
                3(d)(1) of this title is insufficient to pay 
                the full amount determined under this paragraph 
                for all eligible local educational agencies for 
                the fiscal year, then the Secretary shall 
                ratably reduce the payment to each local 
                educational agency under this paragraph.
          (3) Remaining funds.--From any funds remaining after 
        making payments under paragraphs (1) and (2) for the 
        fiscal year involved, the Secretary shall make a 
        payment to each local educational agency that received 
        a foundation payment under paragraph (1) or (2) or 
        subsection (i)(1), for the fiscal year involved in an 
        amount that bears the same relation to the remainder as 
        a percentage share determined for the local educational 
        agency (by dividing the maximum amount that the agency 
        is eligible to receive under subsection (b) by the 
        total of the maximum amounts for all such agencies) 
        bears to the percentage share determined (in the same 
        manner) for all local educational agencies eligible to 
        receive a payment under this section for the fiscal 
        year involved, except that, for the purpose of 
        calculating a local educational agency's maximum amount 
        under subsection (b), data from the most current fiscal 
        year shall be used.
          (4) Data.--For each local educational agency that 
        received a payment under this section for fiscal year 
        2010 through the fiscal year in which the [Impact Aid 
        Improvement Act of 2012] Student Success Act is 
        enacted, the Secretary shall not make a payment under 
        paragraph (3) to a local educational agency that fails 
        to submit, within 60 days of the date the Secretary 
        notifies the agency that the information is needed, the 
        data necessary to calculate the maximum amount of a 
        payment under subsection (b) for that local educational 
        agency.
  (i) Special Payments.--
          (1) In general.--For any fiscal year beginning with 
        fiscal year 2000 for which the amount appropriated to 
        carry out this section exceeds the amount so 
        appropriated for fiscal year 1996 and for which 
        subsection (b)(1)(B) applies, the Secretary shall use 
        the remainder described in subsection (h)(3) for the 
        fiscal year involved (not to exceed the amount equal to 
        the difference between (A) the amount appropriated to 
        carry out this section for fiscal year 1997 and (B) the 
        amount appropriated to carry out this section for 
        fiscal year 1996) to increase the payment that would 
        otherwise be made under this section to not more than 
        50 percent of the maximum amount determined under 
        subsection (b) for any local educational agency 
        described in paragraph (2).
          (2) Local educational agency described.--A local 
        educational agency described in this paragraph is a 
        local educational agency that--
                  (A) received a payment under this section for 
                fiscal year 1996;
                  (B) serves a school district that contains 
                all or a portion of a United States military 
                academy;
                  (C) serves a school district in which the 
                local tax assessor has certified that at least 
                60 percent of the real property is federally 
                owned; and
                  (D) demonstrates to the satisfaction of the 
                Secretary that such agency's per-pupil revenue 
                derived from local sources for current 
                expenditures is not less than that revenue for 
                the preceding fiscal year.
  [(k) Special Rule.--For purposes of payments under this 
section for each fiscal year beginning with fiscal year 1998--
          [(1) the Secretary shall, for the Stanley County, 
        South Dakota local educational agency, calculate 
        payments as if subsection (e) had been in effect for 
        fiscal year 1994; and
          [(2) the Secretary shall treat the Delaware Valley, 
        Pennsylvania local educational agency as if it had 
        filed a timely application under section 2 of Public 
        Law 81-874 for fiscal year 1994.]
  [(l)] (j) Prior Year Data.--Notwithstanding any other 
provision of this section, in determining the eligibility of a 
local educational agency for a payment under subsection (b) or 
[(h)(4)(B)] (h)(2) of this section for a fiscal year, and in 
calculating the amount of such payment, the Secretary--
          (1) shall use data from the prior fiscal year with 
        respect to the Federal property involved, including 
        data with respect to the assessed value of the property 
        and the real property tax rate for current expenditures 
        levied against or imputed to the property; and
          (2) shall use data from the second prior fiscal year 
        with respect to determining the amount of revenue 
        referred to in subsection (b)(1)(A)(i).
  [(m) Eligibility.--
          [(1) Old federal property.--Except as provided in 
        paragraph (2), a local educational agency that is 
        eligible to receive a payment under this section for 
        Federal property acquired by the Federal Government, 
        before the date of the enactment of the Impact Aid 
        Reauthorization Act of 2000, shall be eligible to 
        receive the payment only if the local educational 
        agency submits an application for a payment under this 
        section not later than 7 years after the date of the 
        enactment of such Act.
          [(2) Combined federal property.--A local educational 
        agency that is eligible to receive a payment under this 
        section for Federal property acquired by the Federal 
        Government before the date of the enactment of the 
        Impact Aid Reauthorization Act of 2000 shall be 
        eligible to receive the payment if--
                  [(A) the Federal property, when combined with 
                other Federal property in the school district 
                served by the local educational agency acquired 
                by the Federal Government after the date of the 
                enactment of such Act, meets the requirements 
                of subsection (a); and
                  [(B) the local educational agency submits an 
                application for a payment under this section 
                not later than 7 years after the date of 
                acquisition of the Federal property acquired 
                after the date of the enactment of such Act.
          [(3) New federal property.--A local educational 
        agency that is eligible to receive a payment under this 
        section for Federal property acquired by the Federal 
        Government after the date of the enactment of the 
        Impact Aid Reauthorization Act of 2000 shall be 
        eligible to receive the payment only if the local 
        educational agency submits an application for a payment 
        under this section not later than 7 years after the 
        date of acquisition.]
  [(n)] (k) Loss of Eligibility.--
          (1) In general.--Notwithstanding any other provision 
        of this section, the Secretary shall make a minimum 
        payment to a local educational agency described in 
        paragraph (2), for the first fiscal year that the 
        agency loses eligibility for assistance under this 
        section as a result of property located within the 
        school district served by the agency failing to meet 
        the definition of Federal property under [section 
        8013(5)(C)(iii)] section 4013(5)(C)(iii), in an amount 
        equal to 90 percent of the amount received by the 
        agency under this section for the preceding year.
          (2) Local educational agency described.--A local 
        educational agency described in this paragraph is an 
        agency that--
                  (A) was eligible for, and received, a payment 
                under this section for fiscal year 2002; and
                  (B) beginning in fiscal year 2003 or a 
                subsequent fiscal year, is no longer eligible 
                for payments under this section as provided for 
                in subsection (a)(1)(C) as a result of the 
                transfer of the Federal property involved to a 
                non-Federal entity.

SEC. [8003.]  4003. PAYMENTS FOR ELIGIBLE FEDERALLY CONNECTED CHILDREN.

  (a) Computation of Payment.--
          (1) In general.--For the purpose of computing the 
        amount that a local educational agency is eligible to 
        receive under subsection (b) or (d) for any fiscal 
        year, the Secretary shall determine the number of 
        children who were in average daily attendance in the 
        schools of such agency (including those children 
        enrolled in such agency as a result of the open 
        enrollment policy of the State in which the agency is 
        located, but not including children who are enrolled in 
        a distance education program at such agency and who are 
        not residing within the geographic boundaries of such 
        agency), and for whom such agency provided free public 
        education, during the preceding school year and who, 
        while in attendance at such schools--
                  (A)(i) resided on Federal property with a 
                parent employed on Federal property situated in 
                whole or in part within the boundaries of the 
                school district of such agency; or
                  (ii) resided on Federal property with a 
                parent who is an official of, and accredited 
                by, a foreign government and is a foreign 
                military officer;
                  (B) resided on Federal property and had a 
                parent on active duty in the uniformed services 
                (as defined in section 101 of title 37, United 
                States Code);
                  (C) resided on Indian lands;
                  (D)(i) had a parent on active duty in the 
                uniformed services (as defined by section 101 
                of title 37, United States Code) but did not 
                reside on Federal property; or
                  (ii) had a parent who is an official of, and 
                has been accredited by, a foreign government 
                and is a foreign military officer but did not 
                reside on Federal property;
                  (E) resided in low-rent housing;
                  (F) resided on Federal property and is not 
                described in subparagraph (A) or (B); or
                  (G) resided with a parent employed on Federal 
                property situated--
                          (i) in whole or in part in the county 
                        in which such agency is located, or in 
                        whole or in part in such agency if such 
                        agency is located in more than one 
                        county; or
                          (ii) if not in such county, in whole 
                        or in part in the same State as such 
                        agency.
          (2) Determination of weighted student units.--For the 
        purpose of computing the basic support payment under 
        subsection (b), the Secretary shall calculate the total 
        number of weighted student units for a local 
        educational agency by adding together the results 
        obtained by the following computations:
                  (A) Multiply the number of children described 
                in subparagraphs (A) and (B) of paragraph (1) 
                by a factor of 1.0.
                  (B) Multiply the number of children described 
                in paragraph (1)(C) by a factor of 1.25.
                  (C) Multiply the number of children described 
                in subparagraphs (A) and (B) of paragraph (1) 
                by a factor of .35 if the local educational 
                agency has--
                          (i) a number of such children 
                        described in such subparagraphs which 
                        exceeds 5,000; and
                          (ii) an average daily attendance for 
                        all children which exceeds 100,000.
                  (D) Multiply the number of children described 
                in subparagraph (D) of paragraph (1) by a 
                factor of .20.
                  (E) Multiply the number of children described 
                in subparagraph (E) of paragraph (1) by a 
                factor of .10.
                  (F) Multiply the number of children described 
                in subparagraphs (F) and (G) of paragraph (1) 
                by a factor of .05.
          (3) Special rule.--The Secretary shall only compute a 
        payment for a local educational agency for children 
        described in subparagraph (F) or (G) of paragraph (1) 
        if the number of such children equals or exceeds 1,000 
        or such number equals or exceeds 10 percent of the 
        total number of students in average daily attendance in 
        the schools of such agency.
          (4) Military installation and indian housing 
        undergoing renovation or rebuilding.--
                  (A) Military installation housing.--Beginning 
                in fiscal year 2014, in determining the amount 
                of a payment for a local educational agency for 
                children described in paragraph (1)(D)(i), the 
                Secretary shall consider those children as if 
                they were children described in paragraph 
                (1)(B) if the Secretary determines, on the 
                basis of a certification provided to the 
                Secretary by a designated representative of the 
                Secretary of Defense, that those children would 
                have resided in housing on Federal property if 
                the housing was not undergoing renovation or 
                rebuilding. The total number of children 
                treated as children described in paragraph 
                (1)(B) shall not exceed the lessor of--
                          (i) the total number of children 
                        eligible under paragraph (1)(B) for the 
                        year prior to the initiation of the 
                        housing project on Federal property 
                        undergoing renovation or rebuilding; or
                          (ii) the total number of Federally 
                        connected children enrolled at the 
                        local educational agency as stated in 
                        the application filed for the payment 
                        for the year for which the 
                        determination is made.
                  (B) Indian lands.--Beginning in fiscal year 
                2014, in determining the amount of a payment 
                for a local educational agency that received a 
                payment for children that resided on Indian 
                lands in accordance with paragraph (1)(C) for 
                the fiscal year prior to the fiscal year for 
                which the local educational agency is making an 
                application, the Secretary shall consider those 
                children to be children described in paragraph 
                (1)(C) if the Secretary determines on the basis 
                of a certification provided to the Secretary by 
                a designated representative of the Secretary of 
                the Interior or the Secretary of Housing and 
                Urban Development that those children would 
                have resided in housing on Indian lands if the 
                housing was not undergoing renovation or 
                rebuilding. The total number of children 
                treated as children described in paragraph 
                (1)(C) shall not exceed the lessor of--
                          (i) the total number of children 
                        eligible under paragraph (1)(C) for the 
                        year prior to the initiation of the 
                        housing project on Indian lands 
                        undergoing renovation or rebuilding; or
                          (ii) the total number of Federally 
                        connected children enrolled at the 
                        local educational agency as stated in 
                        the application filed for the payment 
                        for the year for which the 
                        determination is made.
                  (C) Eligible housing.--Renovation or 
                rebuilding shall be defined as projects 
                considered as capitalization, modernization, or 
                restoration, as defined by the Secretary of 
                Defense or the Secretary of the Interior (as 
                the case may be) and are projects that last 
                more than 30 days, but do not include 
                ``sustainment projects'' such as painting, 
                carpeting, or minor repairs.
          (5) Military ``build to lease'' program housing.--
                  (A) In general.--For purposes of computing 
                the amount of payment for a local educational 
                agency for children identified under paragraph 
                (1), the Secretary shall consider children 
                residing in housing initially acquired or 
                constructed under the former section 2828(g) of 
                title 10, United States Code (commonly known as 
                the ``Build to Lease'' program), as added by 
                section 801 of the Military Construction 
                Authorization Act, [1984, to be children 
                described under paragraph (1)(B) if the 
                property described is within the fenced 
                security perimeter of the military facility 
                upon which such housing is situated] 1984, or 
                under lease of off-base property under 
                subchapter IV of chapter 169 of title 10, 
                United States Code, to be children described 
                under paragraph (1)(B) if the property 
                described is within the fenced security 
                perimeter of the military facility or attached 
                to and under any type of force protection 
                agreement with the military installation upon 
                which such housing is situated.
                  (B) Additional requirements.--If the property 
                described in subparagraph (A) is not owned by 
                the Federal Government, is subject to taxation 
                by a State or political subdivision of a State, 
                and thereby generates revenues for a local 
                educational agency that is applying to receive 
                a payment under this section, then the 
                Secretary--
                          (i) shall require the local 
                        educational agency to provide 
                        certification from an appropriate 
                        official of the Department of Defense 
                        that the property is being used to 
                        provide military housing; and
                          (ii) shall reduce the amount of the 
                        payment under this section by an amount 
                        equal to the amount of revenue from 
                        such taxation received in the second 
                        preceding fiscal year by such local 
                        educational agency, unless the amount 
                        of such revenue was taken into account 
                        by the State for such second preceding 
                        fiscal year and already resulted in a 
                        reduction in the amount of State aid 
                        paid to such local educational agency.
  (b) Basic Support Payments and Payments With Respect to 
Fiscal Years in Which Insufficient Funds Are Appropriated.--
          (1) Basic support payments.--
                  (A) In general.--From the amount appropriated 
                under [section 8014(b)] section 3(d)(2) for a 
                fiscal year, the Secretary is authorized to 
                make basic support payments to eligible local 
                educational agencies with children described in 
                subsection (a).
                  (B) Eligibility.--A local educational agency 
                is eligible to receive a basic support payment 
                under subparagraph (A) for a fiscal year with 
                respect to a number of children determined 
                under subsection (a)(1) only if the number of 
                children so determined with respect to such 
                agency amounts to the lesser of--
                          (i) at least 400 such children; or
                          (ii) a number of such children which 
                        equals at least 3 percent of the total 
                        number of children who were in average 
                        daily attendance, during such year, at 
                        the schools of such agency and for whom 
                        such agency provided free public 
                        education.
                  (C) Maximum amount.--The maximum amount that 
                a local educational agency is eligible to 
                receive under this paragraph for any fiscal 
                year is the sum of the total weighted student 
                units, as computed under subsection (a)(2), 
                multiplied by the greater of--
                          (i) one-half of the average per-pupil 
                        expenditure of the State in which the 
                        local educational agency is located for 
                        the third fiscal year preceding the 
                        fiscal year for which the determination 
                        is made;
                          (ii) one-half of the average per-
                        pupil expenditure of all of the States 
                        for the third fiscal year preceding the 
                        fiscal year for which the determination 
                        is made;
                          (iii) the comparable local 
                        contribution rate certified by the 
                        State, as determined under regulations 
                        prescribed to carry out the Act of 
                        September 30, 1950 (Public Law 874, 
                        81st Congress), as such regulations 
                        were in effect on January 1, 1994; or
                          (iv) the average per-pupil 
                        expenditure of the State in which the 
                        local educational agency is located, 
                        multiplied by the local contribution 
                        percentage.
                  (D) Data.--If satisfactory data from the 
                third preceding fiscal year are not available 
                for any of the expenditures described in clause 
                (i) or (ii) of subparagraph (C), the Secretary 
                shall use data from the most recent fiscal year 
                for which data that are satisfactory to the 
                Secretary are available.
                  [(E) Special rule.--For purposes of 
                determining the comparable local contribution 
                rate under subparagraph (C)(iii) for a local 
                educational agency described in section 
                222.39(c)(3) of title 34, Code of Federal 
                Regulations, that had its comparable local 
                contribution rate for fiscal year 1998 
                calculated pursuant to section 222.39 of title 
                34, Code of Federal Regulations, the Secretary 
                shall determine such comparable local 
                contribution rate as the rate upon which 
                payments under this subsection for fiscal year 
                2000 were made to the local educational agency 
                adjusted by the percentage increase or decrease 
                in the per pupil expenditure in the State 
                serving the local educational agency calculated 
                on the basis of the second most recent 
                preceding school year compared to the third 
                most recent preceding school year for which 
                school year data are available.]
                  (F) Increase in local contribution rate due 
                to unusual geographic factors.--If the current 
                expenditures in those local educational 
                agencies which the Secretary has determined to 
                be generally comparable to the local 
                educational agency for which a computation is 
                made under subparagraph (C) are not reasonably 
                comparable because of unusual geographical 
                factors which affect the current expenditures 
                necessary to maintain, in such agency, a level 
                of education equivalent to that maintained in 
                such other agencies, then the Secretary shall 
                increase the local contribution rate for such 
                agency under subparagraph (C)(iii) by such an 
                amount which the Secretary determines will 
                compensate such agency for the increase in 
                current expenditures necessitated by such 
                unusual geographical factors. The amount of any 
                such supplementary payment may not exceed the 
                per-pupil share (computed with regard to all 
                children in average daily attendance), as 
                determined by the Secretary, of the increased 
                current expenditures necessitated by such 
                unusual geographic factors.
                  (G) Beginning with fiscal year 2002, for the 
                purpose of calculating a payment under this 
                paragraph for a local educational agency whose 
                local contribution rate was computed under 
                subparagraph (C)(iii) for the previous year, 
                the Secretary shall use a local contribution 
                rate that is not less than 95 percent of the 
                rate that the LEA received for the preceding 
                year.
          (2) Basic Support Payments for Heavily Impacted Local 
        Educational Agencies.--
                  (A) In general.--(i) From the amount 
                appropriated under [section 8014(b)] section 
                3(d)(2) for a fiscal year, the Secretary is 
                authorized to make basic support payments to 
                eligible heavily impacted local educational 
                agencies with children described in subsection 
                (a).
                  (ii) A local educational agency that receives 
                a basic support payment under this paragraph 
                for a fiscal year shall not be eligible to 
                receive a basic support payment under paragraph 
                (1) for that fiscal year.
                  (B) Eligibility for [continuing] heavily 
                impacted local educational agencies.--
                          [(i) In general.--A heavily impacted 
                        local educational agency is eligible to 
                        receive a basic support payment under 
                        subparagraph (A) with respect to a 
                        number of children determined under 
                        subsection (a)(1) if the agency--
                                  [(I) received an additional 
                                assistance payment under 
                                subsection (f) (as such 
                                subsection was in effect on the 
                                day before the date of the 
                                enactment of the Impact Aid 
                                Reauthorization Act of 2000) 
                                for fiscal year 2000; and
                                  [(II)(aa) is a local 
                                educational agency whose 
                                boundaries are the same as a 
                                Federal military installation;
                                  [(bb) has an enrollment of 
                                children described in 
                                subsection (a)(1) that 
                                constitutes a percentage of the 
                                total student enrollment of the 
                                agency which is not less than 
                                35 percent, has a per-pupil 
                                expenditure that is less than 
                                the average per-pupil 
                                expenditure of the State in 
                                which the agency is located or 
                                the average per-pupil 
                                expenditure of all States 
                                (whichever average per-pupil 
                                expenditure is greater), except 
                                that a local educational agency 
                                with a total student enrollment 
                                of less than 350 students shall 
                                be deemed to have satisfied 
                                such per-pupil expenditure 
                                requirement, and has a tax rate 
                                for general fund purposes which 
                                is not less than 95 percent of 
                                the average tax rate for 
                                general fund purposes of local 
                                educational agencies in the 
                                State;
                                  [(cc) has an enrollment of 
                                children described in 
                                subsection (a)(1) that 
                                constitutes a percentage of the 
                                total student enrollment of the 
                                agency which is not less than 
                                30 percent, and has a tax rate 
                                for general fund purposes which 
                                is not less than 125 percent of 
                                the average tax rate for 
                                general fund purposes for 
                                comparable local educational 
                                agencies in the State;
                                  [(dd) has a total student 
                                enrollment of not less than 
                                25,000 students, of which not 
                                less than 50 percent are 
                                children described in 
                                subsection (a)(1) and not less 
                                than 6,000 of such children are 
                                children described in 
                                subparagraphs (A) and (B) of 
                                subsection (a)(1); or
                                  [(ee) meets the requirements 
                                of subsection (f)(2) applying 
                                the data requirements of 
                                subsection (f)(4) (as such 
                                subsections were in effect on 
                                the day before the date of the 
                                enactment of the Impact Aid 
                                Reauthorization Act of 2000).]
                          (i) In general.--A heavily impacted 
                        local educational agency is eligible to 
                        receive a basic support payment under 
                        subparagraph (A) with respect to a 
                        number of children determined under 
                        subsection (a)(1) if the agency--
                                  (I) is a local educational 
                                agency--
                                          (aa) whose boundaries 
                                        are the same as a 
                                        Federal military 
                                        installation or an 
                                        island property 
                                        designated by the 
                                        Secretary of the 
                                        Interior to be property 
                                        that is held in trust 
                                        by the Federal 
                                        Government; and
                                          (bb) that has no 
                                        taxing authority;
                                  (II) is a local educational 
                                agency that--
                                          (aa) has an 
                                        enrollment of children 
                                        described in subsection 
                                        (a)(1) that constitutes 
                                        a percentage of the 
                                        total student 
                                        enrollment of the 
                                        agency that is not less 
                                        than 45 percent;
                                          (bb) has a per-pupil 
                                        expenditure that is 
                                        less than--
                                                  (AA) for an 
                                                agency that has 
                                                a total student 
                                                enrollment of 
                                                500 or more 
                                                students, 125 
                                                percent of the 
                                                average per-
                                                pupil 
                                                expenditure of 
                                                the State in 
                                                which the 
                                                agency is 
                                                located; or
                                                  (BB) for any 
                                                agency that has 
                                                a total student 
                                                enrollment less 
                                                than 500, 150 
                                                percent of the 
                                                average per-
                                                pupil 
                                                expenditure of 
                                                the State in 
                                                which the 
                                                agency is 
                                                located or the 
                                                average per-
                                                pupil 
                                                expenditure of 
                                                3 or more 
                                                comparable 
                                                local 
                                                educational 
                                                agencies in the 
                                                State in which 
                                                the agency is 
                                                located; and
                                          (cc) is an agency 
                                        that has a tax rate for 
                                        general fund purposes 
                                        that is not less than 
                                        95 percent of the 
                                        average tax rate for 
                                        general fund purposes 
                                        of comparable local 
                                        educational agencies in 
                                        the State;
                                  (III) is a local educational 
                                agency that--
                                          (aa) has an 
                                        enrollment of children 
                                        described in subsection 
                                        (a)(1) that constitutes 
                                        a percentage of the 
                                        total student 
                                        enrollment of the 
                                        agency that is not less 
                                        than 20 percent;
                                          (bb) for the 3 fiscal 
                                        years preceding the 
                                        fiscal year for which 
                                        the determination is 
                                        made, the average 
                                        enrollment of children 
                                        who are not described 
                                        in subsection (a)(1) 
                                        and who are eligible 
                                        for a free or reduced 
                                        price lunch under the 
                                        Richard B. Russell 
                                        National School Lunch 
                                        Act constitutes a 
                                        percentage of the total 
                                        student enrollment of 
                                        the agency that is not 
                                        less than 65 percent; 
                                        and
                                          (cc) has a tax rate 
                                        for general fund 
                                        purposes which is not 
                                        less than 125 percent 
                                        of the average tax rate 
                                        for general fund 
                                        purposes for comparable 
                                        local educational 
                                        agencies in the State;
                                  (IV) is a local educational 
                                agency that has a total student 
                                enrollment of not less than 
                                25,000 students, of which--
                                          (aa) not less than 50 
                                        percent are children 
                                        described in subsection 
                                        (a)(1); and
                                          (bb) not less than 
                                        5,500 of such children 
                                        are children described 
                                        in subparagraphs (A) 
                                        and (B) of subsection 
                                        (a)(1); or
                                  (V) is a local educational 
                                agency that--
                                          (aa) has an 
                                        enrollment of children 
                                        described in subsection 
                                        (a)(1) including, for 
                                        purposes of determining 
                                        eligibility, those 
                                        children described in 
                                        subparagraphs (F) and 
                                        (G) of such subsection, 
                                        that is not less than 
                                        35 percent of the total 
                                        student enrollment of 
                                        the agency; and
                                          (bb) was eligible to 
                                        receive assistance 
                                        under subparagraph (A) 
                                        for fiscal year 2001.
                          (ii) Loss of eligibility.-- [A 
                        heavily]
                                  (I) In general._Subject to 
                                subclause (II), a heavily 
                                impacted local educational 
                                agency that met the 
                                requirements of clause (i) for 
                                a fiscal year shall be 
                                ineligible to receive a basic 
                                support payment under 
                                subparagraph (A) if the agency 
                                fails to meet the requirements 
                                of clause (i) for a subsequent 
                                fiscal year, except that such 
                                agency shall continue to 
                                receive a basic support payment 
                                under this paragraph for the 
                                fiscal year for which the 
                                ineligibility determination is 
                                made.
                                  (II) Loss of eligibility due 
                                to falling below 95 percent of 
                                the average tax rate for 
                                general fund purposes.--In a 
                                case of a heavily impacted 
                                local educational agency that 
                                is eligible to receive a basic 
                                support payment under 
                                subparagraph (A), but that has 
                                had, for 2 consecutive fiscal 
                                years, a tax rate for general 
                                fund purposes that falls below 
                                95 percent of the average tax 
                                rate for general fund purposes 
                                of comparable local educational 
                                agencies in the State, such 
                                agency shall be determined to 
                                be ineligible under clause (i) 
                                and ineligible to receive a 
                                basic support payment under 
                                subparagraph (A) for each 
                                fiscal year succeeding such 2 
                                consecutive fiscal years for 
                                which the agency has such a tax 
                                rate for general fund purposes, 
                                and until the fiscal year for 
                                which the agency resumes such 
                                eligibility in accordance with 
                                clause (iii).
                          (iii) Resumption of eligibility.--A 
                        heavily impacted local educational 
                        agency described in clause (i) that 
                        becomes ineligible under such clause 
                        for 1 or more fiscal years may resume 
                        eligibility for a basic support payment 
                        under this paragraph for a subsequent 
                        fiscal year only if the agency meets 
                        the requirements of clause (i) for that 
                        subsequent fiscal year, except that 
                        such agency shall not receive a basic 
                        support payment under this paragraph 
                        until the fiscal year succeeding the 
                        fiscal year for which the eligibility 
                        determination is made.
                  [(C) Eligibility for new heavily impacted 
                local educational agencies.--
                          [(i) In general.--A heavily impacted 
                        local educational agency that did not 
                        receive an additional assistance 
                        payment under subsection (f) (as such 
                        subsection was in effect on the day 
                        before the date of the enactment of the 
                        Impact Aid Reauthorization Act of 2000) 
                        for fiscal year 2000 is eligible to 
                        receive a basic support payment under 
                        subparagraph (A) for fiscal year 2002 
                        and any subsequent fiscal year with 
                        respect to a number of children 
                        determined under subsection (a)(1) only 
                        if the agency is a local educational 
                        agency whose boundaries are the same as 
                        a Federal military installation (or if 
                        the agency is a qualified local 
                        educational agency as described in 
                        clause (iv)), or the agency--
                                  [(I) has an enrollment of 
                                children described in 
                                subsection (a)(1) that 
                                constitutes a percentage of the 
                                total student enrollment of the 
                                agency that--
                                          [(aa) is not less 
                                        than 50 percent if such 
                                        agency receives a 
                                        payment on behalf of 
                                        children described in 
                                        subparagraphs (F) and 
                                        (G) of such subsection; 
                                        or
                                          [(bb) is not less 
                                        than 40 percent if such 
                                        agency does not receive 
                                        a payment on behalf of 
                                        such children;
                                  [(II)(aa) for a local 
                                educational agency that has a 
                                total student enrollment of 350 
                                or more students, has a per-
                                pupil expenditure that is less 
                                than the average per-pupil 
                                expenditure of the State in 
                                which the agency is located; or
                                  [(bb) for a local educational 
                                agency that has a total student 
                                enrollment of less than 350 
                                students, has a per-pupil 
                                expenditure that is less than 
                                the average per-pupil 
                                expenditure of a comparable 
                                local education agency or three 
                                comparable local educational 
                                agencies in the State in which 
                                the local educational agency is 
                                located; and
                                  [(III) has a tax rate for 
                                general fund purposes that is 
                                at least 95 percent of the 
                                average tax rate for general 
                                fund purposes of comparable 
                                local educational agencies in 
                                the State.
                          [(ii) Resumption of eligibility.--A 
                        heavily impacted local educational 
                        agency described in clause (i) that 
                        becomes ineligible under such clause 
                        for 1 or more fiscal years may resume 
                        eligibility for a basic support payment 
                        under this paragraph for a subsequent 
                        fiscal year only if the agency is a 
                        local educational agency whose 
                        boundaries are the same as a Federal 
                        military installation (or if the agency 
                        is a qualified local educational agency 
                        as described in clause (iv)), or meets 
                        the requirements of clause (i), for 
                        that subsequent fiscal year, except 
                        that such agency shall continue to 
                        receive a basic support payment under 
                        this paragraph for the fiscal year for 
                        which the ineligibility determination 
                        is made.
                          [(iii) Application.--With respect to 
                        the first fiscal year for which a 
                        heavily impacted local educational 
                        agency described in clause (i) applies 
                        for a basic support payment under 
                        subparagraph (A), or with respect to 
                        the first fiscal year for which a 
                        heavily impacted local educational 
                        agency applies for a basic support 
                        payment under subparagraph (A) after 
                        becoming ineligible under clause (i) 
                        for 1 or more preceding fiscal years, 
                        the agency shall apply for such payment 
                        at least 1 year prior to the start of 
                        that first fiscal year.
                          [(iv) Qualified local educational 
                        agency.--A qualified local educational 
                        agency described in this clause is an 
                        agency that meets the following 
                        requirements:
                                  [(I) The boundaries of the 
                                agency are the same as island 
                                property designated by the 
                                Secretary of the Interior to be 
                                property that is held in trust 
                                by the Federal Government.
                                  [(II) The agency has no 
                                taxing authority.
                                  [(III) The agency received a 
                                payment under paragraph (1) for 
                                fiscal year 2001.
                  [(D)] (C) Maximum amount for [regular] 
                heavily impacted local educational agencies.--
                (i) Except as provided in subparagraph [(E)] 
                (D), the maximum amount that a heavily impacted 
                local educational agency is eligible to receive 
                under this paragraph for any fiscal year is the 
                sum of the total weighted student units, as 
                computed under subsection (a)(2) and subject to 
                clause (ii), multiplied by the greater of--
                          (I) four-fifths of the average per-
                        pupil expenditure of the State in which 
                        the local educational agency is located 
                        for the third fiscal year preceding the 
                        fiscal year for which the determination 
                        is made; or
                          (II) four-fifths of the average per-
                        pupil expenditure of all of the States 
                        for the third fiscal year preceding the 
                        fiscal year for which the determination 
                        is made.
                  (ii)[(I) For a local educational agency with 
                respect to which 35 percent or more of the 
                total student enrollment of the schools of the 
                agency are children described in subparagraph 
                (D) or (E) (or a combination thereof) of 
                subsection (a)(1), the Secretary shall 
                calculate the weighted student units of such 
                children for purposes of subsection (a)(2) by 
                multiplying the number of such children by a 
                factor of 0.55.](I)(aa) For a local educational 
                agency with respect to which 35 percent or more 
                of the total student enrollment of the schools 
                of the agency are children described in 
                subparagraph (D) or (E) (or a combination 
                thereof) of subsection (a)(1), and that has an 
                enrollment of children described in 
                subparagraph (A), (B), or (C) of such 
                subsection equal to at least 10 percent of the 
                agency's total enrollment, the Secretary shall 
                calculate the weighted student units of those 
                children described in subparagraph (D) or (E) 
                of such subsection by multiplying the number of 
                such children by a factor of 0.55.
                          (bb) Notwithstanding subitem (aa), a 
                        local educational agency that received 
                        a payment under this paragraph for 
                        fiscal year 2013 shall not be required 
                        to have an enrollment of children 
                        described in subparagraph (A), (B), or 
                        (C) of subsection (a)(1) equal to at 
                        least 10 percent of the agency's total 
                        enrollment. 
                  (II) For a local educational agency that has 
                an enrollment of 100 or fewer children 
                described in subsection (a)(1), the Secretary 
                shall calculate the total number of weighted 
                student units for purposes of subsection (a)(2) 
                by multiplying the number of such children by a 
                factor of 1.75.
                  (III) For a local educational agency that 
                does not qualify under [(B)(i)(II)(aa)] 
                subparagraph (B)(i)(I) of this subsection and 
                has an enrollment of more than 100 but not more 
                than 1,000 children described in subsection 
                (a)(1), the Secretary shall calculate the total 
                number of weighted student units for purposes 
                of subsection (a)(2) by multiplying the number 
                of such children by a factor of 1.25.
                  [(E)] (D) Maximum amount for large heavily 
                impacted local educational agencies.--(i)(I) 
                Subject to clause (ii), the maximum amount that 
                a heavily impacted local educational agency 
                described in subclause (II) is eligible to 
                receive under this paragraph for any fiscal 
                year shall be determined in accordance with the 
                formula described in paragraph (1)(C).
                  (II) A heavily impacted local educational 
                agency described in this subclause is a local 
                educational agency that has a total student 
                enrollment of not less than 25,000 students, of 
                which not less than 50 percent are children 
                described in subsection (a)(1) and not less 
                than [6,000] 5,500 of such children are 
                children described in subparagraphs (A) and (B) 
                of subsection (a)(1).
                  [(ii) For purposes of calculating the maximum 
                amount described in clause (i), the factor used 
                in determining the weighted student units under 
                subsection (a)(2) with respect to children 
                described in subparagraphs (A) and (B) of 
                subsection (a)(1) shall be 1.35.]
                  [(F)] (E) Data.--For purposes of providing 
                assistance under this paragraph the 
                [Secretary--]
                          [(i) shall use] Secretary shall use 
                        student, revenue, expenditure, and tax 
                        data from the third fiscal year 
                        preceding the fiscal year for which the 
                        local educational agency is applying 
                        for assistance under this paragraph[; 
                        and].
                          [(ii) except as provided in 
                        subparagraph (C)(i)(I), shall include 
                        all of the children described in 
                        subparagraphs (F) and (G) of subsection 
                        (a)(1) enrolled in schools of the local 
                        educational agency in determining (I) 
                        the eligibility of the agency for 
                        assistance under this paragraph, and 
                        (II) the amount of such assistance if 
                        the number of such children meet the 
                        requirements of subsection (a)(3).]
                  [(G)] (F) Determination of average tax rates 
                for general fund purposes.--For the purpose of 
                determining average tax rates for general fund 
                purposes for local educational agencies in a 
                State under this paragraph (except under 
                [subparagraph (C)(i)(II)(bb)] subparagraph 
                (B)(i)(II)(bb)(BB)), the Secretary shall use 
                either--
                          (i) the average tax rate for general 
                        fund purposes for comparable local 
                        educational agencies, as determined by 
                        the Secretary in regulations; or
                          (ii) the average tax rate of all the 
                        local educational agencies in the 
                        State.
                  [(H)] (G) Eligibility for heavily impacted 
                local educational agencies affected by 
                privatization of military housing.--
                          (i) Eligibility.--For any fiscal 
                        year, a heavily impacted local 
                        educational agency that received a 
                        basic support payment under this 
                        paragraph for the prior fiscal year, 
                        but is ineligible for such payment for 
                        the current fiscal year under 
                        [subparagraph (B), (C), (D), or (E)] 
                        subparagraph (B), (C), or (D), as the 
                        case may be, [by reason of] due to the 
                        conversion of military housing units to 
                        private housing described in clause 
                        (iii), or as the direct result of base 
                        realignment and closure or 
                        modularization as determined by the 
                        Secretary of Defense and force 
                        structure change or force relocation, 
                        shall be deemed to meet the eligibility 
                        requirements under subparagraph (B) or 
                        (C), as the case may be, for the period 
                        during which the housing units are 
                        undergoing such conversion or during 
                        such time as activities associated with 
                        base closure and realignment, 
                        modularization, force structure change, 
                        or force relocation are ongoing.
                          (ii) Amount of payment.--The amount 
                        of a payment to a heavily impacted 
                        local educational agency for a fiscal 
                        year by reason of the application of 
                        clause (i), and calculated in 
                        accordance with subparagraph [(D) or 
                        (E)] (C) or (D), as the case may be, 
                        shall be based on the number of 
                        children in average daily attendance in 
                        the schools of such agency for the 
                        fiscal year and under the same 
                        provisions of subparagraph [(D) or (E)] 
                        (C) or (D) under which the agency was 
                        paid during the prior fiscal year.
                          (iii) Conversion of military housing 
                        units to private housing described.--
                        For purposes of clause (i), 
                        ``conversion of military housing units 
                        to private housing'' means the 
                        conversion of military housing units to 
                        private housing units pursuant to 
                        subchapter IV of chapter 169 of title 
                        10, United States Code, or pursuant to 
                        any other related provision of law.
          (3) Payments with respect to fiscal years in which 
        insufficient funds are appropriated.--
                  (A) In general.--For any fiscal year in which 
                the sums appropriated under [section 8014(b)] 
                section 3(d)(2) are insufficient to pay to each 
                local educational agency the full amount 
                computed under paragraphs (1) and (2), the 
                Secretary shall make payments in accordance 
                with this paragraph.
                  (B) Learning opportunity threshold payments 
                in lieu of payments under paragraph (1).--(i) 
                For fiscal years described in subparagraph (A), 
                the Secretary shall compute a learning 
                opportunity threshold payment (hereafter in 
                this title referred to as the ``threshold 
                payment'') in lieu of basic support payments 
                under paragraph (1) by multiplying the amount 
                obtained under paragraph (1)(C) by the total 
                percentage obtained by adding--
                          (I) the percentage of federally 
                        connected children for each local 
                        educational agency determined by 
                        calculating the fraction, the numerator 
                        of which is the total number of 
                        children described under subsection 
                        (a)(1) and the denominator of which is 
                        the total number of children in average 
                        daily attendance at the schools served 
                        by such agency; and
                          (II) the percentage that funds under 
                        paragraph (1)(C) represent of the total 
                        budget of the local educational agency, 
                        determined by calculating the fraction, 
                        the numerator of which is the total 
                        amount of funds calculated for each 
                        local educational agency under this 
                        paragraph, and the denominator of which 
                        is the total current expenditures for 
                        such agency in the second preceding 
                        fiscal year for which the determination 
                        is made.
                  (ii) Such total percentage used to calculate 
                threshold payments under paragraph (1) shall 
                not exceed 100.
                  [(iii) For the purpose of determining the 
                percentages described in subclauses (I) and 
                (II) of clause (i) that are applicable to the 
                local educational agency providing free public 
                education to students in grades 9 through 12 
                residing on Hanscom Air Force Base, 
                Massachusetts, the Secretary shall consider 
                only that portion of such agency's total 
                enrollment of students in grades 9 through 12 
                when calculating the percentage under such 
                subclause (I) and only that portion of the 
                total current expenditures attributed to the 
                operation of grades 9 through 12 in such agency 
                when calculating the percentage under subclause 
                (II).]
                  (iii) In the case of a local educational 
                agency providing a free public education to 
                students enrolled in kindergarten through grade 
                12, but which enrolls students described in 
                subparagraphs (A), (B), and (D) of subsection 
                (a)(1) only in grades 9 through 12, and which 
                received a final payment in fiscal year 2009 
                calculated under this paragraph (as this 
                paragraph was in effect on the day before the 
                date of the enactment of the Student Success 
                Act) for students in grades 9 through 12, the 
                Secretary shall, in calculating the agency's 
                payment, consider only that portion of such 
                agency's total enrollment of students in grades 
                9 through 12 when calculating the percentage 
                under clause (i)(I) and only that portion of 
                the total current expenditures attributed to 
                the operation of grades 9 through 12 in such 
                agency when calculating the percentage under 
                clause (i)(II).
                  (iv) In the case of a local educational 
                agency that has a total student enrollment of 
                fewer than 1,000 students and that has a per-
                pupil expenditure that is less than the average 
                per-pupil expenditure of the State in which the 
                agency is located or less than the average per-
                pupil expenditure of all the States, the total 
                percentage used to calculate threshold payments 
                under clause (i) shall not be less than 40 
                percent.
                  (v) In the case of a local educational agency 
                that is providing a program of distance 
                education to children not residing within the 
                geographic boundaries of the agency, the 
                Secretary shall--
                          (I) for purposes of the calculation 
                        under clause (i)(I), disregard such 
                        children from the total number of 
                        children in average daily attendance at 
                        the schools served by such agency; and
                          (II) for purposes of the calculation 
                        under clause (i)(II), disregard any 
                        funds received for such children from 
                        the total current expenditures for such 
                        agency.
                  (C) Learning opportunity threshold payments 
                in lieu of payments under paragraph (2).--For 
                fiscal years described in subparagraph (A), the 
                learning opportunity threshold payment in lieu 
                of basic support payments under paragraph (2) 
                shall be equal to the amount obtained under 
                [subparagraph (D) or (E) of paragraph (2), as 
                the case may be] paragraph (2)(D).
                  [(D) Ratable distribution.--For fiscal years 
                described in subparagraph (A), the Secretary 
                shall make payments as a ratable distribution 
                based upon the computations made under 
                subparagraphs (B) and (C).]
                  (D) Ratable distribution.--For any fiscal 
                year described in subparagraph (A) for which 
                the sums available exceed the amount required 
                to pay each local educational agency 100 
                percent of its threshold payment, the Secretary 
                shall distribute the excess sums to each 
                eligible local educational agency that has not 
                received its full amount computed under 
                paragraph (1) or (2) (as the case may be) by 
                multiplying--
                          (i) a percentage, the denominator of 
                        which is the difference between the 
                        full amount computed under paragraph 
                        (1) or (2) (as the case may be) for all 
                        local educational agencies and the 
                        amount of the threshold payment (as 
                        calculated under subparagraphs (B) and 
                        (C)) of all local educational agencies, 
                        and the numerator of which is the 
                        aggregate of the excess sums, by
                          (ii) the difference between the full 
                        amount computed under paragraph (1) or 
                        (2) (as the case may be) for the agency 
                        and the amount of the threshold payment 
                        as calculated under subparagraphs (B) 
                        and (C) of the agency.
                  (E) Insufficient payments.--For each fiscal 
                year described in subparagraph (A) for which 
                the sums appropriated under section 3(d)(2) are 
                insufficient to pay each local educational 
                agency all of the local educational agency's 
                threshold payment described in subparagraph 
                (D), the Secretary shall ratably reduce the 
                payment to each local educational agency under 
                this paragraph.
                  (F) Increases.--If the sums appropriated 
                under section 3(d)(2) are sufficient to 
                increase the threshold payment above the 100 
                percent threshold payment described in 
                subparagraph (D), then the Secretary shall 
                increase payments on the same basis as such 
                payments were reduced, except no local 
                educational agency may receive a payment amount 
                greater than 100 percent of the maximum payment 
                calculated under this subsection.
          (4) States with only one local educational agency.--
                  (A) In general.--In any of the 50 States of 
                the United States in which there is only one 
                local educational agency, the Secretary shall, 
                for purposes of subparagraphs (B) and (C) of 
                paragraph (1) or subparagraphs (B) [through 
                (D)] and (C) of paragraph (2), as the case may 
                be, paragraph (3) of this subsection, and 
                subsection (e), consider each administrative 
                school district in the State to be a separate 
                local educational agency.
                  (B) Computation of maximum amount of basic 
                support payment and threshold payment.--In 
                computing the maximum payment amount under 
                paragraph (1)(C) or [subparagraph (D) or (E)] 
                subparagraph (C) or (D) of paragraph (2), as 
                the case may be, and the learning opportunity 
                threshold payment under subparagraph (B) or (C) 
                of paragraph (3), as the case may be, for an 
                administrative school district described in 
                subparagraph (A)--
                          (i) the Secretary shall first 
                        determine the maximum payment amount 
                        and the total current expenditures for 
                        the State as a whole; and
                          (ii) the Secretary shall then--
                                  (I) proportionately allocate 
                                such maximum payment amount 
                                among the administrative school 
                                districts on the basis of the 
                                respective weighted student 
                                units of such districts; and
                                  (II) proportionately allocate 
                                such total current expenditures 
                                among the administrative school 
                                districts on the basis of the 
                                respective number of students 
                                in average daily attendance at 
                                such districts.
          (5) Local educational agencies affected by removal of 
        federal property.--
                  (A) In general.--In computing the amount of a 
                basic support payment under this subsection for 
                a fiscal year for a local educational agency 
                described in subparagraph (B), the Secretary 
                shall meet the additional requirements 
                described in subparagraph (C).
                  (B) Local educational agency described.--A 
                local educational agency described in this 
                subparagraph is a local educational agency with 
                respect to which Federal property (i) located 
                within the boundaries of the agency, and (ii) 
                on which one or more children reside who are 
                receiving a free public education at a school 
                of the agency, is transferred by the Federal 
                Government to another entity in any fiscal year 
                beginning on or after the date of the enactment 
                of the Impact Aid Reauthorization Act of 2000 
                so that the property is subject to taxation by 
                the State or a political subdivision of the 
                State.
                  (C) Additional requirements.--The additional 
                requirements described in this subparagraph are 
                the following:
                          (i) For each fiscal year beginning 
                        after the date on which the Federal 
                        property is transferred, a child 
                        described in subparagraph (B) who 
                        continues to reside on such property 
                        and who continues to receive a free 
                        public education at a school of the 
                        agency shall be deemed to be a child 
                        who resides on Federal property for 
                        purposes of computing under the 
                        applicable subparagraph of subsection 
                        (a)(1) the amount that the agency is 
                        eligible to receive under this 
                        subsection.
                          (ii)(I) For the third fiscal year 
                        beginning after the date on which the 
                        Federal property is transferred, and 
                        for each fiscal year thereafter, the 
                        Secretary shall, after computing the 
                        amount that the agency is otherwise 
                        eligible to receive under this 
                        subsection for the fiscal year 
                        involved, deduct from such amount an 
                        amount equal to the revenue received by 
                        the agency for the immediately 
                        preceding fiscal year as a result of 
                        the taxable status of the former 
                        Federal property.
                          (II) For purposes of determining the 
                        amount of revenue to be deducted in 
                        accordance with subclause (I), the 
                        local educational agency--
                                  (aa) shall provide for a 
                                review and certification of 
                                such amount by an appropriate 
                                local tax authority; and
                                  (bb) shall submit to the 
                                Secretary a report containing 
                                the amount certified under item 
                                (aa).
  (c) Prior Year Data.--
          (1) In general.--Except as provided in subsections 
        (b)(1)(D), (b)(2), and paragraph (2), all calculations 
        under this section shall be based on data for each 
        local educational agency from not later than the fiscal 
        year preceding the fiscal year for which the agency is 
        making application for payment.
          [(2) Exception.--Calculations for a local educational 
        agency that is newly established by a State shall, for 
        the first year of operation of such agency, be based on 
        data from the fiscal year for which the agency is 
        making application for payment.]
          (2) Exception.--Calculation of payments for a local 
        educational agency shall be based on data from the 
        fiscal year for which the agency is making an 
        application for payment if such agency--
                  (A) is newly established by a State, for the 
                first year of operation of such agency only;
                  (B) was eligible to receive a payment under 
                this section for the previous fiscal year and 
                has had an overall increase in enrollment (as 
                determined by the Secretary in consultation 
                with the Secretary of Defense, the Secretary of 
                the Interior, or the heads of other Federal 
                agencies)--
                          (i) of not less than 10 percent, or 
                        100 students, of children described 
                        in--
                                  (I) subparagraph (A), (B), 
                                (C), or (D) of subsection 
                                (a)(1); or
                                  (II) subparagraphs (F) and 
                                (G) of subsection (a)(1), but 
                                only to the extent such 
                                children are civilian 
                                dependents of employees of the 
                                Department of Defense or the 
                                Department of the Interior; and
                          (ii) that is the direct result of 
                        closure or realignment of military 
                        installations under the base closure 
                        process or the relocation of members of 
                        the Armed Forces and civilian employees 
                        of the Department of Defense as part of 
                        the force structure changes or 
                        movements of units or personnel between 
                        military installations or because of 
                        actions initiated by the Secretary of 
                        the Interior or the head of another 
                        Federal agency; or
                  (C) was eligible to receive a payment under 
                this section for the previous fiscal year and 
                has had an increase in enrollment (as 
                determined by the Secretary)--
                          (i) of not less than 10 percent of 
                        children described in subsection (a)(1) 
                        or not less than 100 of such children; 
                        and
                          (ii) that is the direct result of the 
                        closure of a local educational agency 
                        that received a payment under 
                        subsection (b)(1) or (b)(2) in the 
                        previous fiscal year.
  (d) Children With Disabilities.--
          (1) In general.--From the amount appropriated under 
        [section 8014(c)] section 3(d)(3) for a fiscal year, 
        the Secretary shall pay to each eligible local 
        educational agency, on a pro rata basis, the amounts 
        determined by--
                  (A) multiplying the number of children 
                described in subparagraphs (A)(ii), (B) and (C) 
                of subsection (a)(1) who are eligible to 
                receive services under the Individuals with 
                Disabilities Education Act (20 U.S.C. 1400 et 
                seq.) by a factor of 1.0; and
                  (B) multiplying the number of children 
                described in subparagraph (D) of subsection 
                (a)(1) who are eligible to receive services 
                under such Act by a factor of 0.5.
          (2) Use of funds.--A local educational agency that 
        receives funds under paragraph (1) shall use such funds 
        to provide a free appropriate public education to 
        children described in paragraph (1) in accordance with 
        the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (20 
        U.S.C. 1400 et seq.).
  (e) Hold Harmless.--
          [(1) In general.--Subject to paragraphs (2) and (3), 
        the total amount the Secretary shall pay a local 
        educational agency under subsection (b)--
                  [(A) for fiscal year 2001 shall not be less 
                than 85 percent of the total amount that the 
                local educational agency received under 
                subsections (b) and (f) for fiscal year 2000; 
                and
                  [(B) for fiscal year 2002 shall not be less 
                than 70 percent of the total amount that the 
                local educational agency received under 
                subsections (b) and (f) for fiscal year 2000.
          [(2) Maximum amount.--The total amount provided to a 
        local educational agency under subparagraph (A) or (B) 
        of paragraph (1) for a fiscal year shall not exceed the 
        maximum basic support payment amount for such agency 
        determined under paragraph (1) or (2) of subsection 
        (b), as the case may be.]
          (1) In general.--Subject to paragraph (2), the total 
        amount the Secretary shall pay a local educational 
        agency under subsection (b)--
                  (A) for fiscal year 2016, shall not be less 
                than 90 percent of the total amount that the 
                local educational agency received under 
                subsection (b)(1), (b)(2), or (b)(2)(B)(ii) for 
                fiscal year 2013;
                  (B) for fiscal year 2017, shall not be less 
                than 85 percent of the total amount that the 
                local educational agency received under 
                subsection (b)(1), (b)(2), or (b)(2)(B)(ii) for 
                fiscal year 2013; and
                  (C) for fiscal year 2018, shall not be less 
                than 80 percent of the total amount that the 
                local educational agency received under 
                subsection (b)(1), (b)(2), or (b)(2)(B)(ii) for 
                fiscal year 2013.
          (2) Maximum amount.--The total amount provided to a 
        local educational agency under subparagraph (A), (B), 
        or (C) of paragraph (1) for a fiscal year shall not 
        exceed the maximum basic support payment amount for 
        such agency determined under paragraph (1) or (2) of 
        subsection (b), as the case may be, for such fiscal 
        year.
          (3) Ratable reductions.--
                  (A) In general.--If the sums made available 
                under this title for any fiscal year are 
                insufficient to pay the full amounts that all 
                local educational agencies in all States are 
                eligible to receive under paragraph (1) for 
                such year, then the Secretary shall ratably 
                reduce the payments to all such agencies for 
                such year.
                  (B) Additional funds.--If additional funds 
                become available for making payments under 
                paragraph (1) for such fiscal year, payments 
                that were reduced under subparagraph (A) shall 
                be increased on the same basis as such payments 
                were reduced.
  (f) Other Funds.--Notwithstanding any other provision of law, 
a local educational agency receiving funds under this section 
may also receive funds under section 386 of the National 
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 1993 or such 
section's successor authority.
  [(g) Maintenance of Effort.--A local educational agency may 
receive funds under sections 8002 and 8003(b) for any fiscal 
year only if the State educational agency finds that either the 
combined fiscal effort per student or the aggregate 
expenditures of that agency and the State with respect to the 
provision of free public education by that agency for the 
preceding fiscal year was not less than 90 percent of such 
combined fiscal effort or aggregate expenditures for the second 
preceding fiscal year.]

SEC. [8004.]  4004. POLICIES AND PROCEDURES RELATING TO CHILDREN 
                    RESIDING ON INDIAN LANDS.

  (a) In General.--A local educational agency that claims 
children residing on Indian lands for the purpose of receiving 
funds under [section 8003] section 4003 shall establish 
policies and procedures to ensure that--
          (1) such children participate in programs and 
        activities supported by such funds on an equal basis 
        with all other children;
          (2) parents of such children and Indian tribes are 
        afforded an opportunity to present their views on such 
        programs and activities, including an opportunity to 
        make recommendations on the needs of those children and 
        how the local educational agency may help such children 
        realize the benefits of such programs and activities;
          (3) parents and Indian tribes are consulted and 
        involved in planning and developing such programs and 
        activities;
          (4) relevant applications, evaluations, and program 
        plans are disseminated to the parents and Indian 
        tribes; and
          (5) parents and Indian tribes are afforded an 
        opportunity to present their views to such agency 
        regarding such agency's general educational program.
  (b) Records.--A local educational agency that claims children 
residing on Indian lands for the purpose of receiving funds 
under [section 8003] section 4003 shall maintain records 
demonstrating such agency's compliance with the requirements 
contained in subsection (a).
  (c) Waiver.--A local educational agency that claims children 
residing on Indian lands for the purpose of receiving funds 
under [section 8003] section 4003 shall not be required to 
comply with the requirements of subsections (a) and (b) for any 
fiscal year with respect to any Indian tribe from which such 
agency has received a written statement that the agency need 
not comply with those subsections because the tribe is 
satisfied with the provision of educational services by such 
agency to such children.
  (d) Technical Assistance and Enforcement.--The Secretary 
shall--
          (1) provide technical assistance to local educational 
        agencies, parents, and Indian tribes to enable such 
        agencies, parents, and tribes to carry out this 
        section; and
          (2) enforce this section through such actions, which 
        may include the withholding of funds, as the Secretary 
        determines to be appropriate, after affording the 
        affected local educational agency, parents, and Indian 
        tribe an opportunity to present their views.
  (e) Complaints.--
          (1) In general.--(A) Any tribe, or its designee, 
        which has students in attendance at a local educational 
        agency may, in its discretion and without regard to the 
        requirements of any other provision of law, file a 
        written complaint with the Secretary regarding any 
        action of a local educational agency taken pursuant to, 
        or relevant to, the requirements of this section.
          (B) Within ten working days from receipt of a 
        complaint, the Secretary shall--
                  (i) designate a time and place for a hearing 
                into the matters relating to the complaint at a 
                location in close proximity to the local 
                educational agency involved, or if the 
                Secretary determines there is good cause, at 
                some other location convenient to both the 
                tribe, or its designee, and the local 
                educational agency;
                  (ii) designate a hearing examiner to conduct 
                the hearing; and
                  (iii) notify the affected tribe or tribes and 
                the local educational agency involved of the 
                time, place, and nature of the hearing and send 
                copies of the complaint to the local 
                educational agency and the affected tribe or 
                tribes.
          (2) Hearing.--The hearing shall be held within 30 
        days of the designation of a hearing examiner and shall 
        be open to the public. A record of the proceedings 
        shall be established and maintained.
          (3) Evidence; recommendations; cost.--The complaining 
        tribe, or its designee, and the local educational 
        agency shall be entitled to present evidence on matters 
        relevant to the complaint and to make recommendations 
        concerning the appropriate remedial actions. Each party 
        to the hearing shall bear only its own costs in the 
        proceedings.
          (4) Findings and recommendations.--Within 30 days of 
        the completion of the hearing, the hearing examiner 
        shall, on the basis of the record, make written 
        findings of fact and recommendations concerning 
        appropriate remedial action, if any, which should be 
        taken. The hearing examiner's findings and 
        recommendations, along with the hearing record, shall 
        be forwarded to the Secretary.
          (5) Written determination.--Within 30 days of the 
        Secretary's receipt of the findings, recommendations, 
        and record, the Secretary shall, on the basis of the 
        record, make a written determination of the appropriate 
        remedial action, if any, to be taken by the local 
        educational agency, the schedule for completion of the 
        remedial action, and the reasons for the Secretary's 
        decision.
          (6) Copies provided.--Upon completion of the 
        Secretary's final determination, the Secretary shall 
        provide the complaining tribe, or its designee, and the 
        local educational agency with copies of the hearing 
        record, the hearing examiner's findings and 
        recommendations, and the Secretary's final 
        determination. The final determination of the Secretary 
        shall be subject to judicial review.
          (7) Consolidation.--In all actions under this 
        subsection, the Secretary shall have discretion to 
        consolidate complaints involving the same tribe or 
        local educational agency.
          (8) Withholding.--If the local educational agency 
        rejects the determination of the Secretary, or if the 
        remedy required is not undertaken within the time 
        established and the Secretary determines that an 
        extension of the time established will not effectively 
        encourage the remedy required, the Secretary shall 
        withhold payment of all moneys to which such local 
        agency is eligible under [section 8003] section 4003 
        until such time as the remedy required is undertaken, 
        except where the complaining tribe or its designee 
        formally requests that such funds be released to the 
        local educational agency, except that the Secretary may 
        not withhold such moneys during the course of the 
        school year if the Secretary determines that such 
        withholding would substantially disrupt the educational 
        programs of the local educational agency.
          (9) Rejection of determination.--If the local 
        educational agency rejects the determination of the 
        Secretary and a tribe exercises the option under 
        section 1101(d) of the Education Amendments of 1978, to 
        have education services provided either directly by the 
        [Bureau of Indian Affairs] Bureau of Indian Education 
        or by contract with the [Bureau of Indian Affairs] 
        Bureau of Indian Education, any Indian students 
        affiliated with that tribe who wish to remain in 
        attendance at the local educational agency against whom 
        the complaint which led to the tribal action under such 
        subsection (d) was lodged may be counted with respect 
        to that local educational agency for the purpose of 
        receiving funds under [section 8003] section 4003. In 
        such event, funds under such section shall not be 
        withheld pursuant to paragraph (8) and no further 
        complaints with respect to such students may be filed 
        under paragraph (1).
  (f) Construction.--This section is based upon the special 
relationship between the Indian nations and the United States 
and nothing in this section shall be construed to relieve any 
State of any duty with respect to any citizens of that State.

SEC. [8005.]  4005. APPLICATION FOR PAYMENTS UNDER SECTIONS [8002 AND 
                    8003]  4002 AND 4003.

  (a) In General.--A local educational agency desiring to 
receive a payment under [section 8002] section 4002 [or 8003] 
or 4003 shall--
          (1) submit an application for such payment to the 
        Secretary; and
          (2) provide a copy of such application to the State 
        educational agency.
  (b) Contents.--Each such application shall be submitted in 
such form and manner, [and shall contain such information,] as 
the Secretary may require, including--
          (1) information to determine the eligibility of the 
        local educational agency for a payment and the amount 
        of such payment; and
          (2) where applicable, an assurance that such agency 
        is in compliance with [section 8004] section 4004 
        (relating to children residing on Indian lands).
  (c) Deadline for Submission.--The Secretary shall establish 
deadlines for the submission of applications under this 
section.
  (d) Approval.--
          (1) In general.--The Secretary shall approve an 
        application submitted under this section that--
                  (A) except as provided in paragraph (2), is 
                filed by the deadline established under 
                subsection (c); and
                  (B) otherwise meets the requirements of this 
                title.
          (2) Reduction in payment.--The Secretary shall 
        approve an application filed not more than 60 days 
        after a deadline established under subsection (c), or 
        not more than 60 days after the date on which the 
        Secretary sends written notice to the local educational 
        agency pursuant to paragraph (3)(A), as the case may 
        be, that otherwise meets the requirements of this 
        title, except that, notwithstanding [section 8003(e)] 
        section 4003(e), the Secretary shall reduce the payment 
        based on such late application by 10 percent of the 
        amount that would otherwise be paid.
          (3) Late applications.--
                  (A) Notice.--The Secretary shall, as soon as 
                practicable after the deadline established 
                under subsection (c), provide to each local 
                educational agency that applied for a payment 
                under [section 8002] section 4002 [or 8003] or 
                4003 for the prior fiscal year, and with 
                respect to which the Secretary has not received 
                an application for a payment under either such 
                section (as the case may be) for the fiscal 
                year in question, written notice of the failure 
                to comply with the deadline and instruction to 
                ensure that the application is filed not later 
                than 60 days after the date on which the 
                Secretary sends the notice.
                  (B) Acceptance and approval of late 
                applications.--The Secretary shall not accept 
                or approve any application of a local 
                educational agency that is filed more than 60 
                days after the date on which the Secretary 
                sends written notice to the local educational 
                agency pursuant to subparagraph (A).
          (4) State application authority.--Notwithstanding any 
        other provision of law, a State educational agency that 
        had been accepted as an applicant for funds under 
        section 3 of the Act of September 30, 1950 (Public Law 
        874, 81st Congress) (as such section was in effect on 
        the day preceding the date of enactment of the 
        Improving America's Schools Act of 1994) in fiscal year 
        1994 shall be permitted to continue as an applicant 
        under the same conditions by which such agency made 
        application during such fiscal year only if such State 
        educational agency distributes all funds received for 
        the students for which application is being made by 
        such State educational agency to the local educational 
        agencies providing educational services to such 
        students.

SEC. [8007.]  4007. CONSTRUCTION.

  (a) Construction Payments Authorized.--
          (1) In general.--From 40 percent of the amount 
        appropriated for each fiscal year under [section 
        8014(e)] section 3(d)(4), the Secretary shall make 
        payments in accordance with this subsection to each 
        local educational agency that receives a basic support 
        payment under [section 8003(b)] section 4003(b) for 
        that fiscal year.
          (2) Additional requirements.--A local educational 
        agency that receives a basic support payment under 
        [section 8003(b)] section 4003(b)(1) shall also meet at 
        least one of the following requirements:
                  (A) The number of children determined under 
                [section 8003(a)] section 4003(a)(1)(C) for the 
                agency for the preceding school year 
                constituted at least 50 percent of the total 
                student enrollment in the schools of the agency 
                during the preceding school year.
                  (B) The number of children determined under 
                subparagraphs (B) and (D)(i) of [section 
                8003(a)] section 4003(a)(1) for the agency for 
                the preceding school year constituted at least 
                50 percent of the total student enrollment in 
                the schools of the agency during the preceding 
                school year.
                  (C) The agency is eligible under section 
                4003(b)(2) or is receiving basic support 
                payments under circumstances described in 
                section 4003(b)(2)(B)(ii).
          (3) Amount of payments.--
                  (A) Local educational agencies impacted by 
                military dependent children.--The amount of a 
                payment to each local educational agency 
                described in this subsection that is impacted 
                by military dependent children for a fiscal 
                year shall be equal to--
                          (i)(II) 20 percent of the amount 
                        appropriated under [section 8014(e)] 
                        section 3(d)(4) for such fiscal year; 
                        divided by
                          (II) the total number of weighted 
                        student units of children described in 
                        subparagraphs (B) and (D)(i) of 
                        [section 8003(a)] section 4003(a)(1) 
                        for all local educational agencies 
                        described in this subsection (as 
                        calculated under [section 8003(a)] 
                        section 4003(a)(2)), including the 
                        number of weighted student units of 
                        such children attending a school 
                        facility described in [section 8008(a)] 
                        section 4008(a) if the Secretary does 
                        not provide assistance for the school 
                        facility under that section for the 
                        prior fiscal year; multiplied by
                          (ii) the total number of such 
                        weighted student units for the agency.
                  (B) Local educational agencies impacted by 
                children who reside on indian lands.--The 
                amount of a payment to each local educational 
                agency described in this subsection that is 
                impacted by children who reside on Indian lands 
                for a fiscal year shall be equal to--
                          (i)(I) 20 percent of the amount 
                        appropriated under [section 8014(e)] 
                        section 3(d)(4) for such fiscal year; 
                        divided by
                          (II) the total number of weighted 
                        student units of children described in 
                        [section 8003(a)] section 4003(a)(1)(C) 
                        for all local educational agencies 
                        described in this subsection (as 
                        calculated under [section 8003(a)] 
                        section 4003(a)(2)); multiplied by
                          (ii) the total number of such 
                        weighted student units for the agency.
          (4) Use of funds.--Any local educational agency that 
        receives funds under this subsection shall use such 
        funds for construction, as defined in [section 8013(3)] 
        section 4013(3).
  (b) School Facility Emergency and Modernization Grants 
Authorized.--
          (1) In general.--From 60 percent of the amount 
        appropriated for each fiscal year under [section 
        8014(e)] section 3(d)(4), the Secretary--
                  (A) shall award emergency grants in 
                accordance with this subsection to eligible 
                local educational agencies to enable the 
                agencies to carry out emergency repairs of 
                school facilities; and
                  (B) shall award modernization grants in 
                accordance with this subsection to eligible 
                local educational agencies to enable the 
                agencies to carry out the modernization of 
                school facilities.
          (2) Priority.--In approving applications from local 
        educational agencies for emergency grants and 
        modernization grants under this subsection, the 
        Secretary shall give priority to applications in 
        accordance with the following:
                  (A) The Secretary shall first give priority 
                to applications for emergency grants from local 
                educational agencies that meet the requirements 
                of paragraph (3)(A) and, among such 
                applications for emergency grants, shall give 
                priority to those applications of local 
                educational agencies based on the severity of 
                the emergency, as determined by the Secretary.
                  (B) The Secretary shall next give priority to 
                applications for emergency grants from local 
                educational agencies that meet the requirements 
                of subparagraph (C) or (D) of paragraph (3) 
                and, among such applications for emergency 
                grants, shall give priority to those 
                applications of local educational agencies 
                based on the severity of the emergency, as 
                determined by the Secretary.
                  (C) The Secretary shall next give priority to 
                applications for modernization grants from 
                local educational agencies that meet the 
                requirements of paragraph (3)(B) and, among 
                such applications for modernization grants, 
                shall give priority to those applications of 
                local educational agencies based on the 
                severity of the need for modernization, as 
                determined by the Secretary.
                  (D) The Secretary shall next give priority to 
                applications for modernization grants from 
                local educational agencies that meet the 
                requirements of subparagraph (C) or (D) of 
                paragraph (3) and, among such applications for 
                modernization grants, shall give priority to 
                those applications of local educational 
                agencies based on the severity of the need for 
                modernization, as determined by the Secretary.
          (3) Eligibility requirements.--
                  (A) Emergency grants.--A local educational 
                agency is eligible to receive an emergency 
                grant under paragraph (2)(A) if--
                          (i) the agency (or in the case of a 
                        local educational agency that does not 
                        have the authority to tax or issue 
                        bonds, the agency's fiscal agent)--
                                  (I) has no practical capacity 
                                to issue bonds;
                                  (II) has minimal capacity to 
                                issue bonds and is at not less 
                                than 75 percent of the agency's 
                                limit of bonded indebtedness; 
                                or
                                  (III) does not meet the 
                                requirements of subclauses (I) 
                                and (II) but is eligible to 
                                receive funds under [section 
                                8003(b)] section 4003(b)(2) for 
                                the fiscal year; and
                          (ii) the agency is eligible to 
                        receive assistance under subsection (a) 
                        for the fiscal year and has a school 
                        facility emergency, as determined by 
                        the Secretary, that poses a health or 
                        safety hazard to the students and 
                        school personnel assigned to the school 
                        facility.
                  (B) Modernization grants.--A local 
                educational agency is eligible to receive a 
                modernization grant under paragraph (2)(C) if--
                          (i) the agency is eligible to receive 
                        assistance under this title for the 
                        fiscal year;
                          (ii) the agency (or in the case of a 
                        local educational agency that does not 
                        have the authority to tax or issue 
                        bonds, the agency's fiscal agent) meets 
                        the requirements of subclause (I), 
                        (II), or (III) of subparagraph (A)(i); 
                        and
                          (iii) the agency has facility needs 
                        resulting from the presence of the 
                        Federal Government, such as the 
                        enrollment of federally connected 
                        children, the presence of tax-exempt 
                        Federal property, or an increase in 
                        enrollment due to the expansion of 
                        Federal activities, housing 
                        privatization, or the acquisition of 
                        Federal property.
                  (C) Additional eligibility for emergency and 
                modernization grants.--(i) A local educational 
                agency is eligible to receive an emergency 
                grant or a modernization grant under 
                subparagraph (B) or (D) of paragraph (2), 
                respectively, if the agency meets the following 
                requirements:
                          (I) The agency receives a basic 
                        support payment under [section 8003(b)] 
                        section 4003(b) for the fiscal year and 
                        the agency meets at least one of the 
                        following requirements:
                                  (aa) The number of children 
                                determined under [section 
                                8003(a)] section 4003(a)(1)(C) 
                                for the agency for the 
                                preceding school year 
                                constituted at least 40 percent 
                                of the total student enrollment 
                                in the schools of the agency 
                                during the preceding school 
                                year.
                                  (bb) The number of children 
                                determined under subparagraphs 
                                (B) and (D)(i) of [section 
                                8003(a)] section 4003(a)(1) for 
                                the agency for the preceding 
                                school year constituted at 
                                least 40 percent of the total 
                                student enrollment in the 
                                schools of the agency during 
                                the preceding school year.
                                  (cc) At least 10 percent of 
                                the property in the agency is 
                                exempt from State and local 
                                taxation under Federal law.
                          (II) The agency (or in the case of a 
                        local educational agency that does not 
                        have the authority to tax or issue 
                        bonds, the agency's fiscal agent) is at 
                        not less than 75 percent of the 
                        agency's limit of bonded indebtedness.
                          (III) The agency has an assessed 
                        value of real property per student that 
                        may be taxed for school purposes that 
                        is less than the average of the 
                        assessed value of real property per 
                        student that may be taxed for school 
                        purposes in the State in which the 
                        local educational agency is located.
                  (ii) A local educational agency is also 
                eligible to receive a modernization grant under 
                this subparagraph if the agency is eligible to 
                receive assistance under [section 8002] section 
                4002 for the fiscal year and meets the 
                requirements of subclauses (II) and (III) of 
                clause (i).
                  (D) Special rule.--
                          (i) In general.--Any school described 
                        in clause (ii) that desires to receive 
                        an emergency grant or a modernization 
                        grant under subparagraph (B) or (D) of 
                        paragraph (2), respectively, shall, 
                        except as provided in the following 
                        sentence, submit an application in 
                        accordance with paragraph (6), and 
                        shall otherwise be treated as a local 
                        educational agency for the purpose of 
                        this subsection. The school shall 
                        submit an application for the grant to 
                        the local educational agency of such 
                        school and the agency shall submit the 
                        application on behalf of the school to 
                        the Secretary.
                          (ii) School described.--A school 
                        described in this clause is a school 
                        that meets the following requirements:
                                  (I) The school is located 
                                within the geographic 
                                boundaries of a local 
                                educational agency that does 
                                not meet the applicable 
                                eligibility requirements under 
                                subparagraph (A), (B), or (C) 
                                for a grant under this 
                                subsection.
                                  (II) The school meets at 
                                least one of the following 
                                requirements:
                                          (aa) The number of 
                                        children determined 
                                        under [section 8003(a)] 
                                        section 4003(a)(1)(C) 
                                        for the school for the 
                                        preceding school year 
                                        constituted at least 40 
                                        percent of the total 
                                        student enrollment in 
                                        the school during the 
                                        preceding school year.
                                          (bb) The number of 
                                        children determined 
                                        under subparagraphs (B) 
                                        and (D)(i) of [section 
                                        8003(a)] section 
                                        4003(a)(1) for the 
                                        school for the 
                                        preceding school year 
                                        constituted at least 40 
                                        percent of the total 
                                        student enrollment in 
                                        the school during the 
                                        preceding school year.
                                  (III) The school is located 
                                within the geographic 
                                boundaries of a local 
                                educational agency that meets 
                                the requirements of subclauses 
                                (II) and (III) of subparagraph 
                                (C)(i).
                  (E) Rule of construction.--For purposes of 
                subparagraph (A)(i), a local educational 
                agency--
                          (i) has no practical capacity to 
                        issue bonds if the total assessed value 
                        of real property that may be taxed for 
                        school purposes is less than 
                        $25,000,000; and
                          (ii) has minimal capacity to issue 
                        bonds if the total assessed value of 
                        real property that may be taxed for 
                        school purposes is at least $25,000,000 
                        but not more than $50,000,000.
                  (F) Limitations on eligibility 
                requirements.--The Secretary shall not limit 
                eligibility--
                          (i) under subparagraph (C)(i)(I)(aa), 
                        to those local educational agencies in 
                        which the number of children determined 
                        under section 4003(a)(1)(C) for each 
                        such agency for the preceding school 
                        year constituted more than 40 percent 
                        of the total student enrollment in the 
                        schools of each such agency during the 
                        preceding school year; and
                          (ii) under subparagraph 
                        (C)(i)(I)(cc), to those local 
                        educational agencies in which more than 
                        10 percent of the property in each such 
                        agency is exempt from State and local 
                        taxation under Federal law.
          (4) Award criteria.--In awarding emergency grants and 
        modernization grants under this subsection, the 
        Secretary shall consider the following factors:
                  (A) The ability of the local educational 
                agency to respond to the emergency, or to pay 
                for the modernization project, as the case may 
                be, as measured by--
                          (i) the agency's level of bonded 
                        indebtedness;
                          (ii) the assessed value of real 
                        property per student that may be taxed 
                        for school purposes compared to the 
                        average of the assessed value of real 
                        property per student that may be taxed 
                        for school purposes in the State in 
                        which the agency is located;
                          (iii) the agency's total tax rate for 
                        school purposes (or, if applicable, for 
                        capital expenditures) compared to the 
                        average total tax rate for school 
                        purposes (or the average capital 
                        expenditure tax rate, if applicable) in 
                        the State in which the agency is 
                        located; and
                          (iv) funds that are available to the 
                        agency, from any other source, 
                        including subsection (a), that may be 
                        used for capital expenditures.
                  (B) The percentage of property in the agency 
                that is nontaxable due to the presence of the 
                Federal Government.
                  (C) The number and percentages of children 
                described in subparagraphs (A), (B), (C), and 
                (D) of [section 8003(a)] section 4003(a)(1) 
                served in the school facility with the 
                emergency or served in the school facility 
                proposed for modernization, as the case may be.
                  (D) In the case of an emergency grant, the 
                severity of the emergency, as measured by the 
                threat that the condition of the school 
                facility poses to the health, safety, and well-
                being of students.
                  (E) In the case of a modernization grant--
                          (i) the severity of the need for 
                        modernization, as measured by such 
                        factors as--
                                  (I) overcrowding, as 
                                evidenced by the use of 
                                portable classrooms, or the 
                                potential for future 
                                overcrowding because of 
                                increased enrollment; or
                                  (II) the agency's inability 
                                to utilize technology or offer 
                                a curriculum in accordance with 
                                contemporary State standards 
                                due to the physical limitations 
                                of the current school facility; 
                                and
                          (ii) the age of the school facility 
                        proposed for modernization.
          (5) Other award provisions.--
                  (A) General provisions.--
                          (i) Limitations on amount of funds.--
                                  (I) In general.--The amount 
                                of funds provided under an 
                                emergency grant or a 
                                modernization grant awarded 
                                under this subsection to a 
                                local educational agency that 
                                meets the requirements of 
                                subclause (II) or (III) of 
                                paragraph (3)(A)(i) for 
                                purposes of eligibility under 
                                subparagraph (A) or (B) of 
                                paragraph (3) or that meets the 
                                requirements of clause (i) or 
                                (ii) of paragraph (3)(C) for 
                                purposes of eligibility under 
                                such paragraph (3)(C), or to a 
                                school that is eligible under 
                                paragraph (3)(D)--
                                          (aa) shall not exceed 
                                        50 percent of the total 
                                        cost of the project to 
                                        be assisted under this 
                                        subsection; and
                                          (bb) shall not exceed 
                                        $4,000,000 during any 
                                        4-year period.
                                  (II) In-kind contributions.--
                                A local educational agency may 
                                use in-kind contributions to 
                                meet the matching requirement 
                                of subclause (I)(aa).
                          (ii) Prohibitions on use of funds.--A 
                        local educational agency may not use 
                        funds provided under an emergency grant 
                        or modernization grant awarded under 
                        this subsection for--
                                  (I) a project for a school 
                                facility for which the agency 
                                does not have full title or 
                                other interest;
                                  (II) stadiums or other school 
                                facilities that are primarily 
                                used for athletic contests, 
                                exhibitions, or other events 
                                for which admission is charged 
                                to the general public; or
                                  (III) the acquisition of real 
                                property.
                          (iii) Supplement, not supplant.--A 
                        local educational agency shall use 
                        funds provided under an emergency grant 
                        or modernization grant awarded under 
                        this subsection only to supplement the 
                        amount of funds that would, in the 
                        absence of the Federal funds provided 
                        under the grant, be made available from 
                        non-Federal sources to carry out 
                        emergency repairs of school facilities 
                        or to carry out the modernization of 
                        school facilities, as the case may be, 
                        and not to supplant such funds.
                          (iv) Maintenance costs.--Nothing in 
                        this subsection shall be construed to 
                        authorize the payment of maintenance 
                        costs in connection with any school 
                        facility modernized in whole or in part 
                        with Federal funds provided under this 
                        subsection.
                          (v) Environmental safeguards.--All 
                        projects carried out with Federal funds 
                        provided under this subsection shall 
                        comply with all relevant Federal, 
                        State, and local environmental laws and 
                        regulations.
                          (vi) Carry-over of certain 
                        applications.--A local educational 
                        agency that applies for an emergency 
                        grant or a modernization grant under 
                        this subsection for a fiscal year and 
                        does not receive the grant for the 
                        fiscal year shall have the application 
                        for the grant considered for the 
                        following fiscal year, subject to the 
                        priority requirements of paragraph (2) 
                        and the award criteria requirements of 
                        paragraph (4).
                  (B) Emergency grants; prohibition on use of 
                funds.--A local educational agency that is 
                awarded an emergency grant under this 
                subsection may not use amounts under the grant 
                for the complete or partial replacement of an 
                existing school facility unless such 
                replacement is less expensive or more cost-
                effective than correcting the identified 
                emergency.
          (6) Application.--A local educational agency that 
        desires to receive an emergency grant or a 
        modernization grant under this subsection shall submit 
        an application to the Secretary at such time, [in such 
        manner, and accompanied by such information] and in 
        such manner as the Secretary may require. Each 
        application shall contain the following:
                  (A) A description of how the local 
                educational agency meets the award criteria 
                under paragraph (4), including the information 
                described in clauses (i) through (iv) of 
                paragraph (4)(A) and subparagraphs (B) and (C) 
                of paragraph (4).
                  (B) In the case of an application for an 
                emergency grant--
                          (i) a description of the school 
                        facility deficiency that poses a health 
                        or safety hazard to the occupants of 
                        the facility and a description of how 
                        the deficiency will be repaired; and
                          (ii) a signed statement from an 
                        appropriate local official certifying 
                        that a deficiency in the school 
                        facility threatens the health or safety 
                        of the occupants of the facility or 
                        that prevents the use of all or a 
                        portion of the building.
                  (C) In the case of an application for a 
                modernization grant--
                          (i) an explanation of the need for 
                        the school facility modernization 
                        project;
                          (ii) the date on which original 
                        construction of the facility to be 
                        modernized was completed;
                          (iii) a listing of the school 
                        facilities to be modernized, including 
                        the number and percentage of children 
                        determined under [section 8003(a)] 
                        section 4003(a)(1) in average daily 
                        attendance in each school facility; and
                          (iv) a description of the ownership 
                        of the property on which the current 
                        school facility is located or on which 
                        the planned school facility will be 
                        located.
                  (D) A description of the project for which a 
                grant under this subsection will be used, 
                including a cost estimate for the project.
                  (E) A description of the interest in, or 
                authority over, the school facility involved, 
                such as an ownership interest or a lease 
                arrangement.
                  [(F) Such other information and assurances as 
                the Secretary may reasonably require.]

SEC. [8008.]  4008. FACILITIES.

  (a) Current Facilities.--From the amount appropriated for any 
fiscal year under [section 8014(f)] section 3(d)(5), the 
Secretary may continue to provide assistance for school 
facilities that were supported by the Secretary under section 
10 of the Act of September 23, 1950 (Public Law 815, 81st 
Congress) (as such Act was in effect on the day preceding the 
date of the enactment of the Improving America's Schools Act of 
1994).
  (b) Transfer of Facilities.--
          (1) In general.--The Secretary shall, as soon as 
        practicable, transfer to the appropriate local 
        educational agency or another appropriate entity all 
        the right, title, and interest of the United States in 
        and to each facility provided under section 10 of the 
        Act of September 23, 1950 (Public Law 815, 81st 
        Congress), or under section 204 or 310 of the Act of 
        September 30, 1950 (Public Law 874, 81st Congress) (as 
        such Acts were in effect on January 1, 1958).
          (2) Other requirements.--Any such transfer shall be 
        without charge to such agency or entity, and prior to 
        such transfer, the transfer shall be consented to by 
        the local educational agency or other appropriate 
        entity, and may be made on such terms and conditions as 
        the Secretary deems appropriate to carry out the 
        purposes of this title.

SEC. [8009.]  4009. STATE CONSIDERATION OF PAYMENTS IN PROVIDING STATE 
                    AID.

  (a) General Prohibition.--Except as provided in subsection 
(b), a State may not--
          (1) consider payments under this title in determining 
        for any fiscal year--
                  (A) the eligibility of a local educational 
                agency for State aid for free public education; 
                or
                  (B) the amount of such aid; or
          (2) make such aid available to local educational 
        agencies in a manner that results in less State aid to 
        any local educational agency that is eligible for such 
        payment than such agency would receive if such agency 
        were not so eligible.
  (b) State Equalization Plans.--
          (1) In general.--A State may reduce State aid to a 
        local educational agency that receives a payment under 
        [section 8002] section 4002 [or 8003(b)] or 4003(b) 
        (except the amount calculated in excess of 1.0 under 
        [section 8003(a)(2)(B)] section 4003(a)(2)(B) and, with 
        respect to a local educational agency that receives a 
        payment under [section 8003(b)(2)] section 4003(b)(2), 
        the amount in excess of the amount that the agency 
        would receive if the agency were deemed to be an agency 
        eligible to receive a payment under [section 8003(b)] 
        section 4003(b)(1) and not [section 8003(b)(2)] section 
        4003(b)(2)) for any fiscal year if the Secretary 
        determines, and certifies under subsection (c)(3)(A), 
        that the State has in effect a program of State aid 
        that equalizes expenditures for free public education 
        among local educational agencies in the State.
          (2) Computation.--
                  (A) In general.--For purposes of paragraph 
                (1), a program of State aid equalizes 
                expenditures among local educational agencies 
                if, in the second fiscal year preceding the 
                fiscal year for which the determination is 
                made, the amount of per-pupil expenditures made 
                by, or per-pupil revenues available to, the 
                local educational agency in the State with the 
                highest such per-pupil expenditures or revenues 
                did not exceed the amount of such per-pupil 
                expenditures made by, or per-pupil revenues 
                available to, the local educational agency in 
                the State with the lowest such expenditures or 
                revenues by more than 25 percent.
                  (B) Other factors.--In making a determination 
                under this subsection, the Secretary shall--
                          (i) disregard local educational 
                        agencies with per-pupil expenditures or 
                        revenues above the 95th percentile or 
                        below the 5th percentile of such 
                        expenditures or revenues in the State; 
                        and
                          (ii) take into account the extent to 
                        which a program of State aid reflects 
                        the additional cost of providing free 
                        public education in particular types of 
                        local educational agencies, such as 
                        those that are geographically isolated, 
                        or to particular types of students, 
                        such as children with disabilities.
          (3) Exception.--Notwithstanding paragraph (2), if the 
        Secretary determines that the State has substantially 
        revised its program of State aid, the Secretary may 
        certify such program for any fiscal year only if--
                  (A) the Secretary determines, on the basis of 
                projected data, that the State's program will 
                meet the disparity standard described in 
                paragraph (2) for the fiscal year for which the 
                determination is made; and
                  (B) the State provides an assurance to the 
                Secretary that, if final data do not 
                demonstrate that the State's program met such 
                standard for the fiscal year for which the 
                determination is made, the State will pay to 
                each affected local educational agency the 
                amount by which the State reduced State aid to 
                the local educational agency.
  (c) Procedures for Review of State Equalization Plans.--
          (1) Written notice.--
                  (A) In general.--Any State that wishes to 
                consider payments described in subsection 
                (b)(1) in providing State aid to local 
                educational agencies shall submit to the 
                Secretary, not later than 120 days before the 
                beginning of the State's fiscal year, a written 
                notice of such State's intention to do so.
                  (B) Contents.--Such notice shall be in the 
                form [and contain the information] the 
                Secretary requires, including evidence that the 
                State has notified each local educational 
                agency in the State of such State's intention 
                to consider such payments in providing State 
                aid.
          (2) Opportunity to present views.--Before making a 
        determination under subsection (b), the Secretary shall 
        afford the State, and local educational agencies in the 
        State, an opportunity to present their views.
          (3) Qualification procedures.--If the Secretary 
        determines that a program of State aid qualifies under 
        subsection (b), the Secretary shall--
                  (A) certify the program and so notify the 
                State; and
                  (B) afford an opportunity for a hearing, in 
                accordance with [section 8011(a)] section 
                4011(a), to any local educational agency 
                adversely affected by such certification.
          (4) Non-qualification procedures.--If the Secretary 
        determines that a program of State aid does not qualify 
        under subsection (b), the Secretary shall--
                  (A) so notify the State; and
                  (B) afford an opportunity for a hearing, in 
                accordance with [section 8011(a)] section 
                4011(a), to the State, and to any local 
                educational agency adversely affected by such 
                determination.
  (d) Treatment of State Aid.--
          (1) In general.--If a State has in effect a program 
        of State aid for free public education for any fiscal 
        year, which is designed to equalize expenditures for 
        free public education among the local educational 
        agencies of that State, payments under this title for 
        any fiscal year may be taken into consideration by such 
        State in determining the relative--
                  (A) financial resources available to local 
                educational agencies in that State; and
                  (B) financial need of such agencies for the 
                provision of free public education for children 
                served by such agency, except that a State may 
                consider as local resources funds received 
                under this title only in proportion to the 
                share that local tax revenues covered under a 
                State equalization program are of total local 
                tax revenues.
          (2) Prohibition.--A State may not take into 
        consideration payments under this title before such 
        State's program of State aid has been certified by the 
        Secretary under subsection (c)(3).
  (e) Remedies for State Violations.--
          (1) In general.--The Secretary or any aggrieved local 
        educational agency may, not earlier than 150 days after 
        an adverse determination by the Secretary against a 
        State for violation of subsections (a) or (d)(2) or for 
        failure to carry out an assurance under subsection 
        (b)(3)(B), and if an administrative proceeding has not 
        been concluded within such time, bring an action in a 
        United States district court against such State for 
        such violations or failure.
          (2) Immunity.--A State shall not be immune under the 
        11th amendment to the Constitution of the United States 
        from an action described in paragraph (1).
          (3) Relief.--The court shall grant such relief as the 
        court determines is appropriate.

SEC. [8010.]  4010. FEDERAL ADMINISTRATION.

  (a) Payments in Whole Dollar Amounts.--The Secretary shall 
round any payments under this title to the nearest whole dollar 
amount.
  (b) Other Agencies.--Each Federal agency administering 
Federal property on which children reside, and each agency 
principally responsible for an activity that may occasion 
assistance under this title, shall, to the maximum extent 
practicable, comply with requests of the Secretary for 
information the Secretary may require to carry out this title.
  (c) Special Rules.--
          (1) Certain children eligible under subparagraphs (a) 
        and (g)(ii) of section [8003]  4003 (a)(1).--(A) The 
        Secretary shall treat as eligible under subparagraph 
        (A) of [section 8003(a)] section 4003(a)(1) any child 
        who would be eligible under such subparagraph except 
        that the Federal property on which the child resides or 
        on which the child's parent is employed is not in the 
        same State in which the child attends school, if such 
        child meets the requirements of paragraph (2).
          (B) The Secretary shall treat as eligible under 
        subparagraph (G) of [section 8003(a)] section 
        4003(a)(1) any child who would be eligible under such 
        subparagraph except that such child does not meet the 
        requirements of clause (ii) of such subparagraph, if 
        such child meets the requirements of paragraph (2).
          (2) Requirements.--A child meets the requirements of 
        this paragraph if--
                  (A) such child resides--
                          (i) in a State adjacent to the State 
                        in which the local educational agency 
                        serving the school such child attends 
                        is located; or
                          (ii) with a parent employed on 
                        Federal property in a State adjacent to 
                        the State in which such agency is 
                        located;
                  (B) the schools of such agency are within a 
                more reasonable commuting distance of such 
                child's home than the schools of the local 
                educational agency that serves the school 
                attendance area where such child resides;
                  (C) attending the schools of the local 
                educational agency that serves the school 
                attendance area where such child resides will 
                impose a substantial hardship on such child;
                  (D) the State in which such child attends 
                school provides funds for the education of such 
                child on the same basis as all other public 
                school children in the State, unless otherwise 
                permitted under [section 8009(b)] section 
                4009(b) of this title; and
                  (E) such agency received a payment for fiscal 
                year 1999 under [section 8003(b)] section 
                4003(b) on behalf of children described in 
                paragraph (1).
  (d) Timely Payments.--
          (1) In general.--Subject to paragraph (2), the 
        Secretary shall pay a local educational agency the full 
        amount that the agency is eligible to receive under 
        this title for a fiscal year not later than September 
        30 of the second fiscal year following the fiscal year 
        for which such amount has been appropriated if, not 
        later than 1 calendar year following the fiscal year in 
        which such amount has been appropriated, such local 
        educational agency submits to the Secretary all the 
        data and information necessary for the Secretary to pay 
        the full amount that the agency is eligible to receive 
        under this title for such fiscal year.
          (2) Payments with respect of fiscal years in which 
        insufficient funds are appropriated.--For a fiscal year 
        in which the amount appropriated under [section 8014] 
        section 3(d) is insufficient to pay the full amount a 
        local educational agency is eligible to receive under 
        this title, paragraph (1) shall be applied by 
        substituting ``is available to pay the agency'' for 
        ``the agency is eligible to receive'' each place the 
        term appears.

SEC. [8011.]  4011. ADMINISTRATIVE HEARINGS AND JUDICIAL REVIEW.

  (a) Administrative Hearings.--A local educational agency and 
a State that is adversely affected by any action of the 
Secretary under this title [or under the Act of September 30, 
1950 (Public Law 874, 81st Congress) (as such Act was in effect 
on the day preceding the date of enactment of the Improving 
America's Schools Act of 1994)] shall be entitled to a hearing 
on such action in the same manner as if such agency were a 
person under chapter 5 of title 5, United States Code if the 
local educational agency or State, as the case may be, submits 
to the Secretary a request for the hearing not later than 60 
days after the date of the action of the Secretary under this 
title.
  (b) Judicial Review of Secretarial Action.--
          (1) In general.--A local educational agency or a 
        State aggrieved by the Secretary's final decision 
        following an agency proceeding under subsection (a) 
        may, within 30 working days (as determined by the local 
        educational agency or State) after receiving notice of 
        such decision, file with the United States court of 
        appeals for the circuit in which such agency or State 
        is located a petition for review of that action. The 
        clerk of the court shall promptly transmit a copy of 
        the petition to the Secretary. The Secretary shall then 
        file in the court the record of the proceedings on 
        which the Secretary's action was based, as provided in 
        section 2112 of title 28, United States Code.
          (2) Findings of fact.--The findings of fact by the 
        Secretary, if supported by substantial evidence, shall 
        be conclusive, but the court, for good cause shown, may 
        remand the case to the Secretary to take further 
        evidence. The Secretary may thereupon make new or 
        modified findings of fact and may modify the 
        Secretary's previous action, and shall file in the 
        court the record of the further proceedings. Such new 
        or modified findings of fact shall likewise be 
        conclusive if supported by substantial evidence.
          (3) Review.--The court shall have exclusive 
        jurisdiction to affirm the action of the Secretary or 
        to set it aside, in whole or in part. The judgment of 
        the court shall be subject to review by the Supreme 
        Court of the United States upon certiorari or 
        certification as provided in section 1254 of title 28, 
        United States Code.

SEC. [8012.]  4012. FORGIVENESS OF OVERPAYMENTS.

  Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the Secretary may 
forgive the obligation of a local educational agency to repay, 
in whole or in part, the amount of any overpayment received 
under this title, or under this title's predecessor 
authorities, if the Secretary determines that the overpayment 
was made as a result of an error made by--
          (1) the Secretary; or
          (2) the local educational agency and repayment of the 
        full amount of the overpayment will result in an undue 
        financial hardship on the agency and seriously harm the 
        agency's educational program.

SEC. [8013.]  4013. DEFINITIONS.

   For purposes of this title:
          (1) Armed forces.--The term ``Armed Forces'' means 
        the Army, Navy, Air Force, [and Marine Corps] Marine 
        Corps, and Coast Guard.
          (2) Average per-pupil expenditure.--The term 
        ``average per-pupil expenditure'' means--
                  (A) the aggregate current expenditures of all 
                local educational agencies in the State; 
                divided by
                  (B) the total number of children in average 
                daily attendance for whom such agencies 
                provided free public education.
          (3) Construction.--The term ``construction'' means--
                  (A) the preparation of drawings and 
                specifications for school facilities;
                  (B) erecting, building, acquiring, altering, 
                remodeling, repairing, or extending school 
                facilities;
                  (C) inspecting and supervising the 
                construction of school facilities; and
                  (D) debt service for such activities.
          (4) Current expenditures.--The term ``current 
        expenditures'' means expenditures for free public 
        education, including expenditures for administration, 
        instruction, attendance and health services, pupil 
        transportation services, operation and maintenance of 
        plant, fixed charges, and net expenditures to cover 
        deficits for food services and student body activities, 
        but does not include expenditures for community 
        services, capital outlay, and debt service, or any 
        expenditures made from funds awarded under part A of 
        title I [and title VI]. The determination of whether an 
        expenditure for the replacement of equipment is 
        considered a current expenditure or a capital outlay 
        shall be determined in accordance with generally 
        accepted accounting principles as determined by the 
        State.
          (5) Federal property.--
                  (A) In general.--Except as provided in 
                subparagraphs (B) through (F), the term 
                ``Federal property'' means real property that 
                is not subject to taxation by any State or any 
                political subdivision of a State due to Federal 
                agreement, law, or policy, and that is--
                          (i) owned by the United States or 
                        leased by the United States from 
                        another entity;
                          (ii)(I) held in trust by the United 
                        States for individual Indians or Indian 
                        tribes;
                          (II) held by individual Indians or 
                        Indian tribes subject to restrictions 
                        on alienation imposed by the United 
                        States;
                          (III) conveyed at any time under the 
                        Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act to 
                        a Native individual, Native group, or 
                        village or regional corporation;
                          (IV) public land owned by the United 
                        States that is designated for the sole 
                        use and benefit of individual Indians 
                        or Indian tribes; or
                          (V) used for low-rent housing, as 
                        described in paragraph (10), that is 
                        located on land described in subclause 
                        (I), (II), (III), or (IV) of this 
                        clause or on land that met one of those 
                        descriptions immediately before such 
                        property's use for such housing;
                          (iii)(I) part of a low-rent housing 
                        project assisted under the United 
                        States Housing Act of 1937;
                          (II) used to provide housing for 
                        homeless children at closed military 
                        installations pursuant to section 501 
                        of the [Stewart B. McKinney Homeless 
                        Assistance Act] McKinney-Vento Homeless 
                        Assistance Act (42 U.S.C. 11411); or
                                  (III) used for affordable 
                                housing assisted under the 
                                Native American Housing 
                                Assistance and Self-
                                Determination Act of 1996 (25 
                                U.S.C. 4101 et seq.); or
                          (iv) owned by a foreign government or 
                        by an international organization.
                  (B) Schools providing flight training to 
                members of air force.--The term ``Federal 
                property'' includes, so long as not subject to 
                taxation by any State or any political 
                subdivision of a State, and whether or not that 
                tax exemption is due to Federal agreement, law, 
                or policy, any school providing flight training 
                to members of the Air Force under contract with 
                the Air Force at an airport owned by a State or 
                political subdivision of a State.
                  (C) Non-federal easements, leases, licenses, 
                permits, improvements, and certain other real 
                property.--The term ``Federal property'' 
                includes, whether or not subject to taxation by 
                a State or a political subdivision of a State--
                          (i) any non-Federal easement, lease, 
                        license, permit, or other such interest 
                        in Federal property as otherwise 
                        described in this paragraph, but not 
                        including any non-Federal fee-simple 
                        interest;
                          (ii) any improvement on Federal 
                        property as otherwise described in this 
                        paragraph; and
                          (iii) real property that, immediately 
                        before its sale or transfer to a non-
                        Federal party, was owned by the United 
                        States and otherwise qualified as 
                        Federal property described in this 
                        paragraph, but only for one year beyond 
                        the end of the fiscal year of such sale 
                        or transfer.
                  (D) Certain postal service property and 
                pipelines and utility lines.--Notwithstanding 
                any other provision of this paragraph, the term 
                ``Federal property'' does not include--
                          (i) any real property under the 
                        jurisdiction of the United States 
                        Postal Service that is used primarily 
                        for the provision of postal services; 
                        or
                          (ii) pipelines and utility lines.
                  (E) Property with respect to which state or 
                local tax revenues may not be expended, 
                allocated, or available for free public 
                education.--Notwithstanding any other provision 
                of this paragraph, ``Federal property'' does 
                not include any property on which children 
                reside that is otherwise described in this 
                paragraph if--
                          (i) no tax revenues of the State or 
                        of any political subdivision of the 
                        State may be expended for the free 
                        public education of children who reside 
                        on that Federal property; or
                          (ii) no tax revenues of the State are 
                        allocated or available for the free 
                        public education of such children.
                  (F) Property located in the state of oklahoma 
                owned by indian housing authority for low-
                income housing.--The term ``Federal property'' 
                includes any real property located in the State 
                of Oklahoma that--
                          (i) is owned by an Indian housing 
                        authority and used for low-income 
                        housing (including housing assisted 
                        under or authorized by the Native 
                        American Housing Assistance and Self-
                        Determination Act of 1996); and
                          (ii) at any time--
                                  (I) was designated by treaty 
                                as tribal land; or
                                  (II) satisfied the definition 
                                of Federal property under 
                                section 403(1)(A) of the Act of 
                                September 30, 1950 (Public Law 
                                874, 81st Congress) (as such 
                                Act was in effect on the day 
                                preceding the date of enactment 
                                of the Improving America's 
                                Schools Act of 1994).
          (6) Free public education.--The term ``free public 
        education'' means education that is provided--
                  (A) at public expense, under public 
                supervision and direction, and without tuition 
                charge; and
                  (B) as elementary or secondary education, as 
                determined under State law, except that, 
                notwithstanding State law, such term--
                          (i) includes preschool education; and
                          (ii) does not include any education 
                        provided beyond grade 12.
          (7) Indian lands.--The term ``Indian lands'' means 
        any Federal property described in paragraph (5)(A)(ii) 
        or (5)(F).
          (8) Local contribution percentage.--
                  (A) In general.--The term ``local 
                contribution percentage'' means the percentage 
                of current expenditures in the State derived 
                from local and intermediate sources, as 
                reported to [and verified by], and verified by, 
                the National Center for Education Statistics.
                  (B) Hawaii and district of columbia.--
                Notwithstanding subparagraph (A), the local 
                contribution percentage for Hawaii and for the 
                District of Columbia shall be the average local 
                contribution percentage for the 50 States and 
                the District of Columbia.
          (9) Local educational agency.--
                  (A) In general.--Except as provided in 
                subparagraph (B), the term ``local educational 
                agency''--
                          (i) means a board of education or 
                        other legally constituted local school 
                        authority having administrative control 
                        and direction of free public education 
                        in a county, township, independent 
                        school district, or other school 
                        district; and
                          (ii) includes any State agency that 
                        directly operates and maintains 
                        facilities for providing free public 
                        education.
                  (B) Exception.--The term ``local educational 
                agency'' does not include any agency or school 
                authority that the Secretary determines on a 
                case-by-case basis--
                          (i) was constituted or reconstituted 
                        primarily for the purpose of receiving 
                        assistance under this title or the Act 
                        of September 30, 1950 (Public Law 874, 
                        81st Congress) (as such Act was in 
                        effect on the day preceding the date of 
                        enactment of the Improving America's 
                        Schools Act of 1994) or increasing the 
                        amount of such assistance; or
                          (ii) is not constituted or 
                        reconstituted for legitimate 
                        educational purposes.
          (10) Low-rent housing.--The term ``low-rent housing'' 
        means housing located on property that is described in 
        paragraph (5)(A)(iii).
          (11) Modernization.--The term ``modernization'' means 
        repair, renovation, alteration, or construction, 
        including--
                  (A) the concurrent installation of equipment; 
                and
                  (B) the complete or partial replacement of an 
                existing school facility, but only if such 
                replacement is less expensive and more cost-
                effective than repair, renovation, or 
                alteration of the school facility.
          (12) Revenue derived from local sources.--The term 
        ``revenue derived from local sources'' means--
                  (A) revenue produced within the boundaries of 
                a local educational agency and available to 
                such agency for such agency's use; or
                  (B) funds collected by another governmental 
                unit, but distributed back to a local 
                educational agency in the same proportion as 
                such funds were collected as a local revenue 
                source.
          (13) School facilities.--The term ``school 
        facilities'' includes--
                  (A) classrooms and related facilities; and
                  (B) equipment, machinery, and utilities 
                necessary or appropriate for school purposes.

[SEC. 8014. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS.

  [(a) Payments for Federal Acquisition of Real Property.--For 
the purpose of making payments under section 8002, there are 
authorized to be appropriated $32,000,000 for fiscal year 2000 
and such sums as may be necessary for each of the seven 
succeeding fiscal years.
  [(b) Basic Payments; Payments for Heavily Impacted Local 
Educational Agencies.--For the purpose of making payments under 
section 8003(b), there are authorized to be appropriated 
$809,400,000 for fiscal year 2000 and such sums as may be 
necessary for each of the seven succeeding fiscal years.
  [(c) Payments for Children With Disabilities.--For the 
purpose of making payments under section 8003(d), there are 
authorized to be appropriated $50,000,000 for fiscal year 2000 
and such sums as may be necessary for each of the seven 
succeeding fiscal years.
  [(e) Construction.--For the purpose of carrying out section 
8007, there are authorized to be appropriated $10,052,000 for 
fiscal year 2000 and such sums as may be necessary for fiscal 
year 2001, $150,000,000 for fiscal year 2002, and such sums as 
may be necessary for each of the five succeeding fiscal years.
  [(f) Facilities Maintenance.--For the purpose of carrying out 
section 8008, there are authorized to be appropriated 
$5,000,000 for fiscal year 2000 and such sums as may be 
necessary for each of the seven succeeding fiscal years.]

  TITLE V--THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT'S TRUST RESPONSIBILITY TO AMERICAN 
          INDIAN, ALASKA NATIVE, AND NATIVE HAWAIIAN EDUCATION

                        PART A--INDIAN EDUCATION

SEC. 5101. STATEMENT OF POLICY.

  It is the policy of the United States to fulfill the Federal 
Government's unique and continuing trust relationship with, and 
responsibility to, the Indian people for the education of 
Indian children. The Federal Government will continue to work 
with local educational agencies, Indian tribes and 
organizations, postsecondary institutions, and other entities 
toward the goal of ensuring that programs that serve Indian 
children are of the highest quality and provide for not only 
the basic elementary and secondary educational needs, but also 
the unique educational and culturally related academic needs of 
these children.

SEC. 5102. PURPOSE.

  It is the purpose of this part to support the efforts of 
local educational agencies, Indian tribes and organizations, 
postsecondary institutions, and other entities--
          (1) to meet the unique educational and culturally 
        related academic needs of American Indian and Alaska 
        Native students, so that such students can meet State 
        student academic achievement standards;
          (2) to ensure that Indian and Alaskan Native students 
        gain knowledge and understanding of Native communities, 
        languages, tribal histories, traditions, and cultures; 
        and
          (3) to ensure that school leaders, teachers, and 
        other staff who serve Indian and Alaska Native students 
        have the ability to provide culturally appropriate and 
        effective instruction to such students.

        Subpart 1--Formula Grants to Local Educational Agencies

SEC. 5111. PURPOSE.

  It is the purpose of this subpart to support the efforts of 
local educational agencies, Indian tribes and organizations, 
and other entities to improve the academic achievement of 
American Indian and Alaska Native students by providing for 
their unique cultural, language, and educational needs and 
ensuring that they are prepared to meet State academic 
standards.

SEC. 5112. GRANTS TO LOCAL EDUCATIONAL AGENCIES AND TRIBES.

  (a) In General.--In accordance with this section and section 
5113, the Secretary may make grants from allocations made under 
section 5113, to--
          (1) local educational agencies;
          (2) Indian tribes;
          (3) Indian organizations; and
          (4) Alaska Native Organizations.
  (b) Local Educational Agencies.--
          (1) Enrollment requirements.--A local educational 
        agency shall be eligible for a grant under this subpart 
        for any fiscal year if the number of Indian children 
        eligible under section 5117 who were enrolled in the 
        schools of the agency, and to whom the agency provided 
        free public education, during the preceding fiscal 
        year--
                  (A) was at least 10; or
                  (B) constituted not less than 25 percent of 
                the total number of individuals enrolled in the 
                schools of such agency.
          (2) Exclusion.--The requirement of paragraph (1) 
        shall not apply in Alaska, California, or Oklahoma, or 
        with respect to any local educational agency located 
        on, or in proximity to, an Indian reservation.
  (c) Indian Tribes, Indian Organizations, Alaska Native 
Organizations, and Consortia.--
          (1) In general.--If a local educational agency that 
        is otherwise eligible for a grant under this subpart 
        does not establish a committee under section 5114(c)(5) 
        for such grant, an Indian tribe, Indian organization, 
        Alaska Native Organization, or consortium of such 
        entities that represents not less than one-third of the 
        eligible Indian or Alaska Native children who are 
        served by such local educational agency may apply for 
        such grant.
          (2) Special rule.--
                  (A) In general.--The Secretary shall treat 
                each Indian tribe, Indian organization, Alaska 
                Native Organization, or consortium of such 
                entities applying for a grant pursuant to 
                paragraph (1) as if such applicant were a local 
                educational agency for purposes of this 
                subpart.
                  (B) Exceptions.--Notwithstanding subparagraph 
                (A), such Indian tribe, Indian organization, 
                Alaska Native Organization, or consortium of 
                such entities shall not be subject to the 
                requirements of section 5114(c)(5) or 5119.
          (3) Eligibility.--If more than 1 applicant qualifies 
        to apply for a grant under paragraph (1), the entity 
        that represents the most eligible Indian and Alaska 
        Native children who are served by the local educational 
        agency shall be eligible to receive the grant or the 
        applicants may apply in consortium and jointly operate 
        a program.
  (d) Indian and Alaska Native Community-based Organizations.--
          (1) In general.--If no local educational agency 
        pursuant to subsection (b), and no Indian tribe, tribal 
        organization, Alaska Native Organization, or consortium 
        pursuant to subsection (c), applies for a grant under 
        this subpart, Indian and Alaska Native community-based 
        organizations serving the community of the local 
        educational agency may apply for the grant.
          (2) Applicability of special rule.--The Secretary 
        shall apply the special rule in subsection (c)(2) to a 
        community-based organization applying or receiving a 
        grant under paragraph (1) in the same manner as such 
        rule applies to an Indian tribe, Indian organization, 
        Alaska Native Organization, or consortium.
          (3) Definition of indian and alaska native community-
        based organizations.--In this subsection, the term 
        ``Indian and Alaska Native community-based 
        organizations'' means any organizations that--
                  (A) are composed primarily of the family 
                members of Indian or Alaska Native students, 
                Indian or Alaska Native community members, 
                tribal government education officials, and 
                tribal members from a specific community;
                  (B) assist in the social, cultural, and 
                educational development of Indians or Alaska 
                Natives in such community;
                  (C) meet the unique cultural, language, and 
                academic needs of Indian or Alaska Native 
                students; and
                  (D) demonstrate organizational and 
                administrative capacity to effectively manage 
                the grant.

SEC. 5113. AMOUNT OF GRANTS.

  (a) Amount of Grant Awards.--
          (1) In general.--Except as provided in subsection (b) 
        and paragraph (2), the Secretary shall allocate to each 
        local educational agency that has an approved 
        application under this subpart an amount equal to the 
        product of--
                  (A) the number of Indian children who are 
                eligible under section 5117 and served by such 
                agency; and
                  (B) the greater of--
                          (i) the average per pupil expenditure 
                        of the State in which such agency is 
                        located; or
                          (ii) 80 percent of the average per 
                        pupil expenditure of all the States.
          (2) Reduction.--The Secretary shall reduce the amount 
        of each allocation otherwise determined under this 
        section in accordance with subsection (e).
  (b) Minimum Grant.--
          (1) In general.--Notwithstanding subsection (e), an 
        entity that is eligible for a grant under section 5112, 
        and a school that is operated or supported by the 
        Bureau of Indian Education that is eligible for a grant 
        under subsection (d), that submits an application that 
        is approved by the Secretary, shall, subject to 
        appropriations, receive a grant under this subpart in 
        an amount that is not less than $3,000.
          (2) Consortia.--Local educational agencies may form a 
        consortium for the purpose of obtaining grants under 
        this subpart.
          (3) Increase.--The Secretary may increase the minimum 
        grant under paragraph (1) to not more than $4,000 for 
        all grantees if the Secretary determines such increase 
        is necessary to ensure the quality of the programs 
        provided.
  (c) Definition.--For the purpose of this section, the term 
``average per pupil expenditure'', used with respect to a 
State, means an amount equal to--
          (1) the sum of the aggregate current expenditures of 
        all the local educational agencies in the State, plus 
        any direct current expenditures by the State for the 
        operation of such agencies, without regard to the 
        sources of funds from which such local or State 
        expenditures were made, during the second fiscal year 
        preceding the fiscal year for which the computation is 
        made; divided by
          (2) the aggregate number of children who were 
        included in average daily attendance for whom such 
        agencies provided free public education during such 
        preceding fiscal year.
  (d) Schools Operated or Supported by the Bureau of Indian 
Education.--
          (1) In general.--Subject to subsection (e), in 
        addition to the grants awarded under subsection (a), 
        the Secretary shall allocate to the Secretary of the 
        Interior an amount equal to the product of--
                  (A) the total number of Indian children 
                enrolled in schools that are operated by--
                          (i) the Bureau of Indian Education; 
                        or
                          (ii) an Indian tribe, or an 
                        organization controlled or sanctioned 
                        by an Indian tribal government, for the 
                        children of that tribe under a contract 
                        with, or grant from, the Department of 
                        the Interior under the Indian Self-
                        Determination Act or the Tribally 
                        Controlled Schools Act of 1988; and
                  (B) the greater of--
                          (i) the average per pupil expenditure 
                        of the State in which the school is 
                        located; or
                          (ii) 80 percent of the average per 
                        pupil expenditure of all the States.
          (2) Special rule.--Any school described in paragraph 
        (1)(A) that wishes to receive an allocation under this 
        subpart shall submit an application in accordance with 
        section 5114, and shall otherwise be treated as a local 
        educational agency for the purpose of this subpart, 
        except that such school shall not be subject to section 
        5114(c)(5) or section 5119.
  (e) Ratable Reductions.--If the sums appropriated for any 
fiscal year to carry out this subpart are insufficient to pay 
in full the amounts determined for local educational agencies 
under subsection (a)(1) and for the Secretary of the Interior 
under subsection (d), each of those amounts shall be ratably 
reduced.

SEC. 5114. APPLICATIONS.

  (a) Application Required.--Each local educational agency that 
desires to receive a grant under this subpart shall submit an 
application to the Secretary at such time, in such manner, and 
containing such information as the Secretary may reasonably 
require.
  (b) Comprehensive Program Required.--Each application 
submitted under subsection (a) shall include a description of a 
comprehensive program for meeting the needs of Indian and 
Alaska Native children served by the local educational agency, 
including the language and cultural needs of the children, 
that--
          (1) describes how the comprehensive program will 
        offer programs and activities to meet the culturally 
        related academic needs of American Indian and Alaska 
        Native students;
          (2)(A) is consistent with the State, tribal, and 
        local plans submitted under other provisions of this 
        Act; and
          (B) includes academic content and student academic 
        achievement goals for such children, and benchmarks for 
        attaining such goals, that are based on State academic 
        content and student academic achievement standards 
        adopted under title I for all children;
          (3) explains how the local educational agency will 
        use the funds made available under this subpart to 
        supplement other Federal, State, and local programs 
        that serve such students;
          (4) demonstrates how funds made available under this 
        subpart will be used for activities described in 
        section 5115;
          (5) describes the professional development 
        opportunities that will be provided, as needed, to 
        ensure that--
                  (A) teachers and other school professionals 
                who are new to the Indian or Alaska Native 
                community are prepared to work with Indian and 
                Alaska Native children;
                  (B) all teachers who will be involved in 
                programs assisted under this subpart have been 
                properly trained to carry out such programs; 
                and
                  (C) those family members of Indian and Alaska 
                Native children and representatives of tribes 
                who are on the committee described in (c)(5) 
                will participate in the planning of 
                professional development materials;
          (6) describes how the local educational agency--
                  (A) will periodically assess the progress of 
                all Indian children enrolled in the schools of 
                the local educational agency, including Indian 
                children who do not participate in programs 
                assisted under this subpart, in meeting the 
                goals described in paragraph (2);
                  (B) will provide the results of each 
                assessment referred to in subparagraph (A) to--
                          (i) the committee described in 
                        subsection (c)(5);
                          (ii) the community served by the 
                        local educational agency; and
                          (iii) the tribes whose children are 
                        served by the local educational agency; 
                        and
                  (C) is responding to findings of any previous 
                assessments that are similar to the assessments 
                described in subparagraph (A); and
          (7) explicitly delineates--
                  (A) a formal, collaborative process that the 
                local educational agency used to directly 
                involve tribes, Indian organizations, or Alaska 
                Native Organizations in the development of the 
                comprehensive programs and the results of such 
                process; and
                  (B) how the local educational agency plans to 
                ensure that tribes, Indian organizations, or 
                Alaska Native Organizations will play an 
                active, meaningful, and ongoing role in the 
                functioning of the comprehensive programs.
  (c) Assurances.--Each application submitted under subsection 
(a) shall include assurances that--
          (1) the local educational agency will use funds 
        received under this subpart only to supplement the 
        funds that, in the absence of the Federal funds made 
        available under this subpart, such agency would make 
        available for services described in this subsection, 
        and not to supplant such funds;
          (2) the local educational agency will use funds 
        received under this subpart only for activities 
        described and authorized under this subpart;
          (3) the local educational agency will prepare and 
        submit to the Secretary such reports, in such form and 
        containing such information, as the Secretary may 
        require to--
                  (A) carry out the functions of the Secretary 
                under this subpart;
                  (B) determine the extent to which activities 
                carried out with funds provided to the local 
                educational agency under this subpart are 
                effective in improving the educational 
                achievement of Indian and Alaska Native 
                students served by such agency; and
                  (C) determine the extent to which such 
                activities address the unique cultural, 
                language, and educational needs of Indian 
                students;
          (4) the program for which assistance is sought--
                  (A) is based on a comprehensive local 
                assessment and prioritization of the unique 
                educational and culturally related academic 
                needs of the American Indian and Alaska Native 
                students for whom the local educational agency 
                is providing an education;
                  (B) will use the best available talents and 
                resources, including individuals from the 
                Indian or Alaska Native community; and
                  (C) was developed by such agency in open 
                consultation with the families of Indian or 
                Alaska Native children, Indian or Alaska Native 
                teachers, Indian or Alaska Native students from 
                secondary schools, and representatives of 
                tribes, Indian organizations, or Alaska Native 
                Organizations in the community including 
                through public hearings held by such agency to 
                provide to the individuals described in this 
                subparagraph a full opportunity to understand 
                the program and to offer recommendations 
                regarding the program;
          (5) the local educational agency developed the 
        program with the participation and written approval of 
        a committee--
                  (A) that is composed of, and selected by--
                          (i) family members of Indian and 
                        Alaska Native children that are 
                        attending the local educational 
                        agency's schools;
                          (ii) teachers in the schools; and
                          (iii) Indian and Alaska Native 
                        students attending secondary schools of 
                        the agency;
                  (B) a majority of whose members are family 
                members of Indian and Alaska Native children 
                that are attending the local educational 
                agency's schools;
                  (C) that has set forth such policies and 
                procedures, including policies and procedures 
                relating to the hiring of personnel, as will 
                ensure that the program for which assistance is 
                sought will be operated and evaluated in 
                consultation with, and with the involvement of, 
                parents of the children, and representatives of 
                the area, to be served;
                  (D) with respect to an application describing 
                a schoolwide program in accordance with section 
                5115(c), that has--
                          (i) reviewed in a timely fashion the 
                        program;
                          (ii) determined that the program will 
                        not diminish the availability of 
                        culturally related activities for 
                        American Indian and Alaska Native 
                        students; and
                          (iii) will directly enhance the 
                        educational experience of American 
                        Indian and Alaska Native students; and
                  (E) that has adopted reasonable bylaws for 
                the conduct of the activities of the committee 
                and abides by such bylaws; and
          (6) the local educational agency conducted adequate 
        outreach to family members to meet the requirements 
        under subsection (c)(5).

SEC. 5115. AUTHORIZED SERVICES AND ACTIVITIES.

  (a) General Requirements.--Each local educational agency that 
receives a grant under this subpart shall use the grant funds, 
in a manner consistent with the purpose specified in section 
5111, for services and activities that--
          (1) are designed to carry out the comprehensive 
        program of the local educational agency for Indian 
        students, and described in the application of the local 
        educational agency submitted to the Secretary under 
        section 5114(a) solely for the services and activities 
        described in such application;
          (2) are designed with special regard for the language 
        and cultural needs of the Indian students; and
          (3) supplement and enrich the regular school program 
        of such agency.
  (b) Particular Activities.--The services and activities 
referred to in subsection (a) may include--
          (1) activities that support Native American language 
        immersion programs and Native American language 
        restoration programs, which may be taught by 
        traditional leaders;
          (2) culturally related activities that support the 
        program described in the application submitted by the 
        local educational agency;
          (3) early childhood and family programs that 
        emphasize school readiness;
          (4) enrichment programs that focus on problem solving 
        and cognitive skills development and directly support 
        the attainment of challenging State academic content 
        and student academic achievement standards;
          (5) integrated educational services in combination 
        with other programs including programs that enhance 
        student achievement by promoting increased involvement 
        of parents and families in school activities;
          (6) career preparation activities to enable Indian 
        students to participate in programs such as the 
        programs supported by the Carl D. Perkins Career and 
        Technical Education Improvement Act of 2006, including 
        programs for tech-prep education, mentoring, and 
        apprenticeship;
          (7) activities to educate individuals so as to 
        prevent violence, suicide, and substance abuse;
          (8) the acquisition of equipment, but only if the 
        acquisition of the equipment is essential to achieve 
        the purpose described in section 5111;
          (9) activities that promote the incorporation of 
        culturally responsive teaching and learning strategies 
        into the educational program of the local educational 
        agency;
          (10) activities that incorporate culturally and 
        linguistically relevant curriculum content into 
        classroom instruction that is responsive to the unique 
        learning styles of Indian and Alaska Native children 
        and ensures that children are better able to meet State 
        standards;
          (11) family literacy services;
          (12) activities that recognize and support the unique 
        cultural and educational needs of Indian children, and 
        incorporate appropriately qualified tribal elders and 
        seniors;
          (13) dropout prevention strategies for Indian and 
        Alaska Native students; and
          (14) strategies to meet the educational needs of at-
        risk Indian students in correctional facilities, 
        including such strategies that support Indian and 
        Alaska Native students who are transitioning from such 
        facilities to schools served by local educational 
        agencies.
  (c) Schoolwide Programs.--Notwithstanding any other provision 
of law, a local educational agency may use funds made available 
to such agency under this subpart to support a schoolwide 
program under section 1114 if--
          (1) the committee established pursuant to section 
        5114(c)(5) approves the use of the funds for the 
        schoolwide program;
          (2) the schoolwide program is consistent with the 
        purpose described in section 5111; and
          (3) the local educational agency identifies in its 
        application how the use of such funds in a schoolwide 
        program will produce benefits to the American Indian 
        and Alaska Native students that would not be achieved 
        if the funds were not used in a schoolwide program.
  (d) Limitation on Administrative Costs.--Not more than 5 
percent of the funds provided to a grantee under this subpart 
for any fiscal year may be used for administrative purposes.
  (e) Limitation on the Use of Funds.--Funds provided to a 
grantee under this subpart may not be used for long-distance 
travel expenses for training activities available locally or 
regionally.

SEC. 5116. INTEGRATION OF SERVICES AUTHORIZED.

  (a) Plan.--An entity receiving funds under this subpart may 
submit a plan to the Secretary for the integration of education 
and related services provided to Indian students.
  (b) Consolidation of Programs.--Upon the receipt of an 
acceptable plan under subsection (a), the Secretary, in 
cooperation with each Federal agency providing grants for the 
provision of education and related services to the entity, 
shall authorize the entity to consolidate, in accordance with 
such plan, the federally funded education and related services 
programs of the entity and the Federal programs, or portions of 
the programs, serving Indian students in a manner that 
integrates the program services involved into a single, 
coordinated, comprehensive program and reduces administrative 
costs by consolidating administrative functions.
  (c) Programs Affected.--The funds that may be consolidated in 
a demonstration project under any such plan referred to in 
subsection (a) shall include funds for any Federal program 
exclusively serving Indian children, or the funds reserved 
under any Federal program to exclusively serve Indian children, 
under which the entity is eligible for receipt of funds under a 
statutory or administrative formula for the purposes of 
providing education and related services that would be used to 
serve Indian students.
  (d) Plan Requirements.--For a plan to be acceptable pursuant 
to subsection (b), the plan shall--
          (1) identify the programs or funding sources to be 
        consolidated;
          (2) be consistent with the objectives of this section 
        concerning authorizing the services to be integrated in 
        a demonstration project;
          (3) describe a comprehensive strategy that identifies 
        the full range of potential educational opportunities 
        and related services to be provided to assist Indian 
        students to achieve the objectives set forth in this 
        subpart;
          (4) describe the way in which services are to be 
        integrated and delivered and the results expected from 
        the plan;
          (5) identify the projected expenditures under the 
        plan in a single budget;
          (6) identify the State, tribal, or local agency or 
        agencies to be involved in the delivery of the services 
        integrated under the plan;
          (7) identify any statutory provisions, regulations, 
        policies, or procedures that the entity believes need 
        to be waived in order to implement the plan;
          (8) set forth measures for academic content and 
        student academic achievement goals designed to be met 
        within a specific period of time; and
          (9) be approved by a committee formed in accordance 
        with section 5114(c)(5), if such a committee exists.
  (e) Plan Review.--Upon receipt of the plan from an eligible 
entity, the Secretary shall consult with the Secretary of each 
Federal department providing funds to be used to implement the 
plan, and with the entity submitting the plan. The parties so 
consulting shall identify any waivers of statutory requirements 
or of Federal departmental regulations, policies, or procedures 
necessary to enable the entity to implement the plan. 
Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the Secretary of 
the affected department shall have the authority to waive any 
regulation, policy, or procedure promulgated by that department 
that has been so identified by the entity or department, unless 
the Secretary of the affected department determines that such a 
waiver is inconsistent with the objectives of this subpart or 
those provisions of the statute from which the program involved 
derives authority that are specifically applicable to Indian 
students.
  (f) Plan Approval.--Within 90 days after the receipt of an 
entity's plan by the Secretary, the Secretary shall inform the 
entity, in writing, of the Secretary's approval or disapproval 
of the plan. If the plan is disapproved, the entity shall be 
informed, in writing, of the reasons for the disapproval and 
shall be given an opportunity to amend the plan or to petition 
the Secretary to reconsider such disapproval.
  (g) Responsibilities of Department of Education.--Not later 
than 180 days after the date of the enactment of the Student 
Success Act, the Secretary of Education, the Secretary of the 
Interior, the Secretary of the Department of Health and Human 
Services, and the head of any other Federal department or 
agency identified by the Secretary of Education, shall enter 
into an interdepartmental memorandum of agreement providing for 
the implementation and coordination of the demonstration 
projects authorized under this section. The lead agency head 
for a demonstration project under this section shall be--
          (1) the Secretary of the Interior, in the case of an 
        entity meeting the definition of a contract or grant 
        school under title XI of the Education Amendments of 
        1978; or
          (2) the Secretary of Education, in the case of any 
        other entity.
  (h) Responsibilities of Lead Agency.--The responsibilities of 
the lead agency shall include--
          (1) the use of a single report format related to the 
        plan for the individual project, which shall be used by 
        an eligible entity to report on the activities 
        undertaken under the project;
          (2) the use of a single report format related to the 
        projected expenditures for the individual project which 
        shall be used by an eligible entity to report on all 
        project expenditures;
          (3) the development of a single system of Federal 
        oversight for the project, which shall be implemented 
        by the lead agency; and
          (4) the provision of technical assistance to an 
        eligible entity appropriate to the project, except that 
        an eligible entity shall have the authority to accept 
        or reject the plan for providing such technical 
        assistance and the technical assistance provider.
  (i) Report Requirements.--A single report format shall be 
developed by the Secretary, consistent with the requirements of 
this section. Such report format shall require that reports 
described in subsection (h), together with records maintained 
on the consolidated program at the local level, shall contain 
such information as will allow a determination that the 
eligible entity has complied with the requirements incorporated 
in its approved plan, including making a demonstration of 
student academic achievement, and will provide assurances to 
each Secretary that the eligible entity has complied with all 
directly applicable statutory requirements and with those 
directly applicable regulatory requirements that have not been 
waived.
  (j) No Reduction in Amounts.--In no case shall the amount of 
Federal funds available to an eligible entity involved in any 
demonstration project be reduced as a result of the enactment 
of this section.
  (k) Interagency Fund Transfers Authorized.--The Secretary is 
authorized to take such action as may be necessary to provide 
for an interagency transfer of funds otherwise available to an 
eligible entity in order to further the objectives of this 
section.
  (l) Administration of Funds.--
          (1) In general.--Program funds for the consolidated 
        programs shall be administered in such a manner as to 
        allow for a determination that funds from a specific 
        program are spent on allowable activities authorized 
        under such program, except that the eligible entity 
        shall determine the proportion of the funds granted 
        that shall be allocated to such program.
          (2) Separate records not required.--Nothing in this 
        section shall be construed as requiring the eligible 
        entity to maintain separate records tracing any 
        services or activities conducted under the approved 
        plan to the individual programs under which funds were 
        authorized for the services or activities, nor shall 
        the eligible entity be required to allocate 
        expenditures among such individual programs.
  (m) Overage.--The eligible entity may commingle all 
administrative funds from the consolidated programs and shall 
be entitled to the full amount of such funds (under each 
program's or agency's regulations). The overage (defined as the 
difference between the amount of the commingled funds and the 
actual administrative cost of the programs) shall be considered 
to be properly spent for Federal audit purposes, if the overage 
is used for the purposes provided for under this section.
  (n) Fiscal Accountability.--Nothing in this part shall be 
construed so as to interfere with the ability of the Secretary 
or the lead agency to fulfill the responsibilities for the 
safeguarding of Federal funds pursuant to chapter 75 of title 
31, United States Code.
  (o) Report on Statutory Obstacles to Program Integration.--
          (1) Preliminary report.--Not later than 2 years after 
        the date of the enactment of the Student Success Act, 
        the Secretary of Education shall submit a preliminary 
        report to the Committee on Education and the Workforce 
        and the Committee on Natural Resources of the House of 
        Representatives and the Committee on Health, Education, 
        Labor, and Pensions and the Committee on Indian Affairs 
        of the Senate on the status of the implementation of 
        the demonstration projects authorized under this 
        section.
          (2) Final report.--Not later than 5 years after the 
        date of the enactment of the Student Success Act, the 
        Secretary of Education shall submit a report to the 
        Committee on Education and the Workforce and the 
        Committee on Natural Resources of the House of 
        Representatives and the Committee on Health, Education, 
        Labor, and Pensions and the Committee on Indian Affairs 
        of the Senate on the results of the implementation of 
        the demonstration projects authorized under this 
        section. Such report shall identify statutory barriers 
        to the ability of participants to integrate more 
        effectively their education and related services to 
        Indian students in a manner consistent with the 
        objectives of this section.
  (p) Definitions.--For the purposes of this section, the term 
``Secretary'' means--
          (1) the Secretary of the Interior, in the case of an 
        entity meeting the definition of a contract or grant 
        school under title XI of the Education Amendments of 
        1978; or
          (2) the Secretary of Education, in the case of any 
        other entity.

SEC. 5117. STUDENT ELIGIBILITY FORMS.

  (a) In General.--The Secretary shall require that, as part of 
an application for a grant under this subpart, each applicant 
shall maintain a file, with respect to each Indian child for 
whom the local educational agency provides a free public 
education, that contains a form that sets forth information 
establishing the status of the child as an Indian child 
eligible for assistance under this subpart, and that otherwise 
meets the requirements of subsection (b).
  (b) Forms.--The form described in subsection (a) shall 
include--
          (1) either--
                  (A)(i) the name of the tribe or band of 
                Indians (as defined in section 5151) with 
                respect to which the child claims membership;
                  (ii) the enrollment or membership number 
                establishing the membership of the child (if 
                readily available); and
                  (iii) the name and address of the 
                organization that maintains updated and 
                accurate membership data for such tribe or band 
                of Indians; or
                  (B) the name, the enrollment or membership 
                number (if readily available), and the name and 
                address of the organization responsible for 
                maintaining updated and accurate membership 
                data, of any parent or grandparent of the child 
                from whom the child claims eligibility under 
                this subpart, if the child is not a member of 
                the tribe or band of Indians (as so defined);
          (2) a statement of whether the tribe or band of 
        Indians (as so defined), with respect to which the 
        child, or parent or grandparent of the child, claims 
        membership, is federally recognized;
          (3) the name and address of the parent or legal 
        guardian of the child;
          (4) a signature of the parent or legal guardian of 
        the child that verifies the accuracy of the information 
        supplied;
          (5) any other information that the Secretary 
        considers necessary to provide an accurate program 
        profile; and
          (6) all individual data collected will be protected 
        by the local educational agencies and only aggregated 
        data will be reported to the Secretary.
  (c) Statutory Construction.--Nothing in this section shall be 
construed to affect a definition contained in section 5151.
  (d) Documentation and Types of Proof.--
          (1) Types of proof.--For purposes of determining 
        whether a child is eligible to be counted for the 
        purpose of computing the amount of a grant award under 
        section 5113, the membership of the child, or any 
        parent or grandparent of the child, in a tribe or band 
        of Indians (as so defined) may be established by proof 
        other than an enrollment number, notwithstanding the 
        availability of an enrollment number for a member of 
        such tribe or band. Nothing in subsection (b) shall be 
        construed to require the furnishing of an enrollment 
        number.
          (2) No new or duplicative determinations.--Once a 
        child is determined to be an Indian eligible to be 
        counted for such grant award, the local education 
        agency shall maintain a record of such determination 
        and shall not require a new or duplicate determination 
        to be made for such child for a subsequent application 
        for a grant under this subpart.
          (3) Previously filed forms.--An Indian student 
        eligibility form that was on file as required by this 
        section on the day before the date of the enactment of 
        the Student Success Act and that met the requirements 
        of this section, as this section was in effect on the 
        day before the date of the enactment of such Act, shall 
        remain valid for such Indian student.
  (e) Monitoring and Evaluation Review.--
          (1) In general.--
                  (A) Review.--For each fiscal year, in order 
                to provide such information as is necessary to 
                carry out the responsibility of the Secretary 
                to provide technical assistance under this 
                subpart, the Secretary shall conduct a 
                monitoring and evaluation review of a sampling 
                of the recipients of grants under this subpart. 
                The sampling conducted under this subparagraph 
                shall take into account the size of and the 
                geographic location of each local educational 
                agency.
                  (B) Exception.--A local educational agency 
                may not be held liable to the United States or 
                be subject to any penalty, by reason of the 
                findings of an audit that relates to the date 
                of completion, or the date of submission, of 
                any forms used to establish, before April 28, 
                1988, the eligibility of a child for an 
                entitlement under the Indian Elementary and 
                Secondary School Assistance Act.
          (2) False information.--Any local educational agency 
        that provides false information in an application for a 
        grant under this subpart shall--
                  (A) be ineligible to apply for any other 
                grant under this subpart; and
                  (B) be liable to the United States for any 
                funds from the grant that have not been 
                expended.
          (3) Excluded children.--A student who provides false 
        information for the form required under subsection (a) 
        shall not be counted for the purpose of computing the 
        amount of a grant under section 5113.
  (f) Tribal Grant and Contract Schools.--Notwithstanding any 
other provision of this section, in calculating the amount of a 
grant under this subpart to a tribal school that receives a 
grant or contract from the Bureau of Indian Education, the 
Secretary shall use only one of the following, as selected by 
the school:
          (1) A count of the number of students in the schools 
        certified by the Bureau.
          (2) A count of the number of students for whom the 
        school has eligibility forms that comply with this 
        section.
  (g) Timing of Child Counts.--For purposes of determining the 
number of children to be counted in calculating the amount of a 
local educational agency's grant under this subpart (other than 
in the case described in subsection (f)(1)), the local 
educational agency shall--
          (1) establish a date on, or a period not longer than 
        31 consecutive days during, which the agency counts 
        those children, if that date or period occurs before 
        the deadline established by the Secretary for 
        submitting an application under section 5114; and
          (2) determine that each such child was enrolled, and 
        receiving a free public education, in a school of the 
        agency on that date or during that period, as the case 
        may be.

SEC. 5118. PAYMENTS.

  (a) In General.--Subject to subsection (b), the Secretary 
shall pay to each local educational agency that submits an 
application that is approved by the Secretary under this 
subpart the amount determined under section 5113. The Secretary 
shall notify the local educational agency of the amount of the 
payment not later than June 1 of the year for which the 
Secretary makes the payment.
  (b) Payments Taken Into Account by the State.--The Secretary 
may not make a grant under this subpart to a local educational 
agency for a fiscal year if, for such fiscal year, the State in 
which the local educational agency is located takes into 
consideration payments made under this chapter in determining 
the eligibility of the local educational agency for State aid, 
or the amount of the State aid, with respect to the free public 
education of children during such fiscal year or the preceding 
fiscal year.
  (c) Reallocations.--The Secretary may reallocate, in a manner 
that the Secretary determines will best carry out the purpose 
of this subpart, any amounts that--
          (1) based on estimates made by local educational 
        agencies or other information, the Secretary determines 
        will not be needed by such agencies to carry out 
        approved programs under this subpart; or
          (2) otherwise become available for reallocation under 
        this subpart.

SEC. 5119. STATE EDUCATIONAL AGENCY REVIEW.

  Before submitting an application to the Secretary under 
section 5114, a local educational agency shall submit the 
application to the State educational agency, which may comment 
on such application. If the State educational agency comments 
on the application, the agency shall comment on all 
applications submitted by local educational agencies in the 
State and shall provide those comments to the respective local 
educational agencies, with an opportunity to respond.

    Subpart 2--Special Programs and Projects to Improve Educational 
              Opportunities for Indian Children and Youth

SEC. 5121. SPECIAL PROGRAMS AND PROJECTS TO IMPROVE EDUCATIONAL 
                    OPPORTUNITIES FOR INDIAN CHILDREN AND YOUTH.

  (a) Purpose.--
          (1) In general.--It is the purpose of this section to 
        support projects to develop, test, and demonstrate the 
        effectiveness of services and programs to improve 
        educational opportunities and achievement of Indian 
        children and youth.
          (2) Coordination.--The Secretary shall take the 
        necessary actions to achieve the coordination of 
        activities assisted under this subpart with--
                  (A) other programs funded under this Act; and
                  (B) other Federal programs operated for the 
                benefit of American Indian and Alaska Native 
                children and youth.
  (b) Eligible Entities.--In this section, the term ``eligible 
entity'' means a State educational agency, local educational 
agency, Indian tribe, Indian organization, federally supported 
elementary school or secondary school for Indian students, 
Indian institution (including an Indian institution of higher 
education), Alaska Native Organization, or a consortium of such 
entities.
  (c) Grants Authorized.--
          (1) In general.--The Secretary shall award grants to 
        eligible entities to enable such entities to carry out 
        activities that meet the purpose of this section, 
        including--
                  (A) innovative programs related to the 
                educational needs of educationally 
                disadvantaged children and youth;
                  (B) educational services that are not 
                available to such children and youth in 
                sufficient quantity or quality, including 
                remedial instruction, to raise the achievement 
                of Indian and Alaska Native children in one or 
                more of the subjects of English, mathematics, 
                science, foreign languages, art, history, and 
                geography;
                  (C) bilingual and bicultural programs and 
                projects;
                  (D) special health and nutrition services, 
                and other related activities, that address the 
                special health, social, emotional, and 
                psychological problems of Indian children;
                  (E) special compensatory and other programs 
                and projects designed to assist and encourage 
                Indian children to enter, remain in, or reenter 
                school, and to increase the rate of high school 
                graduation for Indian children;
                  (F) comprehensive guidance, counseling, and 
                testing services;
                  (G) high quality early childhood education 
                programs that are effective in preparing young 
                children to make sufficient academic growth by 
                the end of grade 3, including kindergarten and 
                pre-kindergarten programs, family-based 
                preschool programs that emphasize school 
                readiness, screening and referral, and the 
                provision of services to Indian children and 
                youth with disabilities;
                  (H) partnership projects between local 
                educational agencies and institutions of higher 
                education that allow secondary school students 
                to enroll in courses at the postsecondary level 
                to aid such students in the transition from 
                secondary to postsecondary education;
                  (I) partnership projects between schools and 
                local businesses for career preparation 
                programs designed to provide Indian youth with 
                the knowledge and skills such youth need to 
                make an effective transition from school to a 
                high-skill, high-wage career;
                   (J) programs designed to encourage and 
                assist Indian students to work toward, and gain 
                entrance into, an institution of higher 
                education;
                   (K) family literacy services;
                   (L) activities that recognize and support 
                the unique cultural and educational needs of 
                Indian children, and incorporate appropriately 
                qualified tribal elders and seniors;
                   (M) high quality professional development of 
                teaching professionals and paraprofessionals; 
                or
                   (N) other services that meet the purpose 
                described in this section.
  (d) Grant Requirements and Applications.--
          (1) Grant requirements.--
                  (A) In general.--The Secretary may make 
                multiyear grants under subsection (c) for the 
                planning, development, pilot operation, or 
                demonstration of any activity described in 
                subsection (c) for a period not to exceed 5 
                years.
                  (B) Priority.--In making multiyear grants 
                described in this paragraph, the Secretary 
                shall give priority to entities submitting 
                applications that present a plan for combining 
                two or more of the activities described in 
                subsection (c) over a period of more than 1 
                year.
                  (C) Progress.--The Secretary shall make a 
                grant payment for a grant described in this 
                paragraph to an eligible entity after the 
                initial year of the multiyear grant only if the 
                Secretary determines that the eligible entity 
                has made substantial progress in carrying out 
                the activities assisted under the grant in 
                accordance with the application submitted under 
                paragraph (3) and any subsequent modifications 
                to such application.
          (2) Dissemination grants.--
                  (A) In general.--In addition to awarding the 
                multiyear grants described in paragraph (1), 
                the Secretary may award grants under subsection 
                (c) to eligible entities for the dissemination 
                of exemplary materials or programs assisted 
                under this section.
                  (B) Determination.--The Secretary may award a 
                dissemination grant described in this paragraph 
                if, prior to awarding the grant, the Secretary 
                determines that the material or program to be 
                disseminated--
                          (i) has been adequately reviewed;
                          (ii) has demonstrated educational 
                        merit; and
                          (iii) can be replicated.
          (3) Application.--
                  (A) In general.--Any eligible entity that 
                desires to receive a grant under this section 
                shall submit an application to the Secretary at 
                such time and in such manner as the Secretary 
                may reasonably require.
                  (B) Contents.--Each application submitted to 
                the Secretary under subparagraph (A), other 
                than an application for a dissemination grant 
                under paragraph (2), shall contain--
                          (i) a description of how parents of 
                        Indian children and representatives of 
                        Indian tribes have been, and will be, 
                        involved in developing and implementing 
                        the activities for which assistance is 
                        sought;
                          (ii) assurances that the applicant 
                        will participate, at the request of the 
                        Secretary, in any national evaluation 
                        of activities assisted under this 
                        section;
                          (iii) information demonstrating that 
                        the proposed program for the activities 
                        is a scientifically based research 
                        program, where applicable, which may 
                        include a program that has been 
                        modified to be culturally appropriate 
                        for students who will be served;
                          (iv) a description of how the 
                        applicant will incorporate the proposed 
                        activities into the ongoing school 
                        program involved once the grant period 
                        is over; and
                          (v) such other assurances and 
                        information as the Secretary may 
                        reasonably require.
  (e) Administrative Costs.--Not more than 5 percent of the 
funds provided to a grantee under this subpart for any fiscal 
year may be used for administrative purposes.

SEC. 5122. PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT FOR TEACHERS AND EDUCATION 
                    PROFESSIONALS.

  (a) Purposes.--The purposes of this section are--
          (1) to increase the number of qualified Indian and 
        Alaska Native teachers and administrators serving 
        Indian and Alaska Native students;
          (2) to provide training to qualified Indian and 
        Alaska Native individuals to become educators and 
        education support service professionals; and
          (3) to improve the skills of qualified Indian 
        individuals who serve in the capacities described in 
        paragraph (2).
  (b) Eligible Entities.--For the purpose of this section, the 
term ``eligible entity'' means--
          (1) an institution of higher education, including an 
        Indian institution of higher education;
          (2) a State educational agency or local educational 
        agency, in consortium with an institution of higher 
        education;
          (3) an Indian tribe or organization, in consortium 
        with an institution of higher education; and
          (4) a Bureau-funded school (as defined in section 
        1146 of the Education Amendments of 1978).
  (c) Program Authorized.--The Secretary is authorized to award 
grants to eligible entities having applications approved under 
this section to enable those entities to carry out the 
activities described in subsection (d).
  (d) Authorized Activities.--
          (1) In general.--Grant funds under this section shall 
        be used for activities to provide support and training 
        for Indian individuals in a manner consistent with the 
        purposes of this section. Such activities may include 
        continuing programs, symposia, workshops, conferences, 
        and direct financial support, and may include programs 
        designed to train tribal elders and seniors.
          (2) Special rules.--
                  (A) Type of training.--For education 
                personnel, the training received pursuant to a 
                grant under this section may be inservice or 
                preservice training.
                  (B) Program.--For individuals who are being 
                trained to enter any field other than teaching, 
                the training received pursuant to a grant under 
                this section shall be in a program that results 
                in a graduate degree.
  (e) Application.--Each eligible entity desiring a grant under 
this section shall submit an application to the Secretary at 
such time, in such manner, and accompanied by such information, 
as the Secretary may reasonably require.
  (f) Special Rule.--In awarding grants under this section, the 
Secretary--
          (1) shall consider the prior performance of the 
        eligible entity; and
          (2) may not limit eligibility to receive a grant 
        under this section on the basis of--
                  (A) the number of previous grants the 
                Secretary has awarded such entity; or
                  (B) the length of any period during which 
                such entity received such grants.
  (g) Grant Period.--Each grant under this section shall be 
awarded for a period of not more than 5 years.
  (h) Service Obligation.--
          (1) In general.--The Secretary shall require, by 
        regulation, that an individual who receives training 
        pursuant to a grant made under this section--
                  (A) perform work--
                          (i) related to the training received 
                        under this section; and
                          (ii) that benefits Indian people; or
                  (B) repay all or a prorated part of the 
                assistance received.
          (2) Reporting.--The Secretary shall establish, by 
        regulation, a reporting procedure under which a grant 
        recipient under this section shall, not later than 12 
        months after the date of completion of the training, 
        and periodically thereafter, provide information 
        concerning compliance with the work requirement under 
        paragraph (1).

SEC. 5123. TRIBAL EDUCATION AGENCIES COOPERATIVE AGREEMENTS.

  (a) Purpose.--Tribes may enter into written cooperative 
agreements with the State educational agency and the local 
educational agencies operating a school or schools within 
Indian lands. For purposes of this section, the term ``Indian 
land'' has the meaning given that term in section 8013.
  (b) Cooperative Agreement.--If requested by the Indian tribe, 
the State educational agency or the local educational agency 
may enter into a cooperative agreement with the Indian tribe. 
Such cooperative agreement--
          (1) may authorize the tribe or such tribe's 
        respective tribal education agency to plan, conduct, 
        consolidate, and administer programs, services, 
        functions, and activities, or portions thereof, 
        administered by the State educational agency or the 
        local educational agency;
          (2) may authorize the tribe or such tribe's 
        respective tribal education agency to reallocate funds 
        for such programs, services, functions, and activities, 
        or portions thereof as necessary; and
          (3) shall--
                  (A) only confer the tribe or such tribe's 
                respective tribal education agency with 
                responsibilities to conduct activities 
                described in paragraph (1) such that the burden 
                assumed by the tribe or the tribal education 
                agency for conducting such is commensurate with 
                the benefit that doing so conveys to all 
                parties of the agreement; and
                  (B) be based solely on terms of the written 
                agreement decided upon by the Indian tribe and 
                the State educational agency or local education 
                agency.
  (c) Disagreement.--Agreements shall only be valid if the 
Indian tribe and State educational agency or local educational 
agency agree fully in writing to all of the terms of the 
written cooperative agreement.
  (d) Compliance With Applicable Law.--Nothing in this section 
shall be construed to relieve any party to a cooperative 
agreement from complying with all applicable Federal, State, 
local laws. State and local educational agencies are still the 
ultimate responsible, liable parties for complying with all 
laws and funding requirements for any functions that are 
conveyed to tribes and tribal education agencies through the 
cooperative agreements.
  (e) Definition.--For the purposes of this subpart, the term 
``Indian Tribe'' means any tribe or band that is officially 
recognized by the Secretary of the Interior.

                     Subpart 3--National Activities

SEC. 5131. NATIONAL RESEARCH ACTIVITIES.

  (a) Authorized Activities.--The Secretary may use funds made 
available to carry out this subpart for each fiscal year to--
          (1) conduct research related to effective approaches 
        for improving the academic achievement and development 
        of Indian and Alaska Native children and adults;
          (2) collect and analyze data on the educational 
        status and needs of Indian and Alaska Native students; 
        and
          (3) carry out other activities that are consistent 
        with the purpose of this part.
  (b) Eligibility.--The Secretary may carry out any of the 
activities described in subsection (a) directly or through 
grants to, or contracts or cooperative agreements with, Indian 
tribes, Indian organizations, State educational agencies, local 
educational agencies, institutions of higher education, 
including Indian institutions of higher education, and other 
public and private agencies and institutions.
  (c) Coordination.--Research activities supported under this 
section--
          (1) shall be coordinated with appropriate offices 
        within the Department; and
          (2) may include collaborative research activities 
        that are jointly funded and carried out by the Office 
        of Indian Education Programs, the Office of Educational 
        Research and Improvement, the Bureau of Indian 
        Education, and the Institute of Education Sciences.

SEC. 5132. IMPROVEMENT OF ACADEMIC SUCCESS FOR STUDENTS THROUGH NATIVE 
                    AMERICAN LANGUAGE.

  (a) Purpose.--It is the purpose of this section to improve 
educational opportunities and academic achievement of Indian 
and Alaska Native students through Native American language 
programs and to foster the acquisition of Native American 
language.
  (b) Definition of Eligible Entity.--In this section, the term 
``eligible entity'' means a State educational agency, local 
educational agency, Indian tribe, Indian organization, 
federally supported elementary school or secondary school for 
Indian students, Indian institution (including an Indian 
institution of higher education), or a consortium of such 
entities.
  (c) Grants Authorized.--The Secretary shall award grants to 
eligible entities to enable such entities to carry out the 
following activities:
          (1) Native American language programs that--
                  (A) provide instruction through the use of a 
                Native American language for not less than 10 
                children for an average of not less than 500 
                hours per year per student;
                  (B) provide for the involvement of parents, 
                caregivers, and families of students enrolled 
                in the program;
                  (C) utilize, and may include the development 
                of, instructional courses and materials for 
                learning Native American languages and for 
                instruction through the use of Native American 
                languages;
                  (D) provide support for professional 
                development activities; and
                  (E) include a goal of all students 
                achieving--
                          (i) fluency in a Native American 
                        language; and
                          (ii) academic proficiency in 
                        mathematics, English, reading or 
                        language arts, and science.
          (2) Native American language restoration programs 
        that--
                  (A) provide instruction in not less than 1 
                Native American language;
                  (B) provide support for professional 
                development activities for teachers of Native 
                American languages;
                  (C) develop instructional materials for the 
                programs; and
                  (D) include the goal of increasing 
                proficiency and fluency in not less than 1 
                Native American language.
  (d) Application.--
          (1) In general.--An eligible entity that desires to 
        receive a grant under this section shall submit an 
        application to the Secretary at such time, in such 
        manner, and accompanied by such information as the 
        Secretary may require.
          (2) Certification.--An eligible entity that submits 
        an application for a grant to carry out the activity 
        specified in subsection (c)(1), shall include in such 
        application a certification that assures that such 
        entity has experience and a demonstrated record of 
        effectiveness in operating and administering a Native 
        American language program or any other educational 
        program in which instruction is conducted in a Native 
        American language.
  (e) Grant Duration.--The Secretary shall make grants under 
this section only on a multi-year basis. Each such grant shall 
be for a period not to exceed 5 years.
  (f) Definition.--In this section, the term ``average'' means 
the aggregate number of hours of instruction through the use of 
a Native American language to all students enrolled in a Native 
American language program during a school year divided by the 
total number of students enrolled in the program.
  (g) Administrative Costs.--
          (1) In general.--Except as provided in paragraph (2), 
        not more than 5 percent of the funds provided to a 
        grantee under this section for any fiscal year may be 
        used for administrative purposes.
          (2) Exception.--An elementary school or secondary 
        school for Indian students that receives funds from a 
        recipient of a grant under subsection (c) for any 
        fiscal year may use not more than 10 percent of the 
        funds for administrative purposes.

SEC. 5133. GRANTS TO TRIBES FOR EDUCATION ADMINISTRATIVE PLANNING AND 
                    DEVELOPMENT.

  (a) In General.--The Secretary may make grants to Indian 
tribes, and tribal organizations approved by Indian tribes, to 
plan and develop a centralized tribal administrative entity 
to--
          (1) coordinate all education programs operated by the 
        tribe or within the territorial jurisdiction of the 
        tribe;
          (2) develop education codes for schools within the 
        territorial jurisdiction of the tribe;
          (3) provide support services and technical assistance 
        to schools serving children of the tribe; and
          (4) perform child-find screening services for the 
        preschool-aged children of the tribe to--
                  (A) ensure placement in appropriate 
                educational facilities; and
                  (B) coordinate the provision of any needed 
                special services for conditions such as 
                disabilities and English language skill 
                deficiencies.
  (b) Period of Grant.--Each grant awarded under this section 
may be awarded for a period of not more than 3 years. Such 
grant may be renewed upon the termination of the initial period 
of the grant if the grant recipient demonstrates to the 
satisfaction of the Secretary that renewing the grant for an 
additional 3-year period is necessary to carry out the 
objectives of the grant described in subsection (c)(2)(A).
  (c) Application for Grant.--
          (1) In general.--Each Indian tribe and tribal 
        organization desiring a grant under this section shall 
        submit an application to the Secretary at such time, in 
        such manner, containing such information, and 
        consistent with such criteria, as the Secretary may 
        prescribe in regulations.
          (2) Contents.--Each application described in 
        paragraph (1) shall contain--
                  (A) a statement describing the activities to 
                be conducted, and the objectives to be 
                achieved, under the grant; and
                  (B) a description of the method to be used 
                for evaluating the effectiveness of the 
                activities for which assistance is sought and 
                for determining whether such objectives are 
                achieved.
          (3) Approval.--The Secretary may approve an 
        application submitted by a tribe or tribal organization 
        pursuant to this section only if the Secretary is 
        satisfied that such application, including any 
        documentation submitted with the application--
                  (A) demonstrates that the applicant has 
                consulted with other education entities, if 
                any, within the territorial jurisdiction of the 
                applicant who will be affected by the 
                activities to be conducted under the grant;
                  (B) provides for consultation with such other 
                education entities in the operation and 
                evaluation of the activities conducted under 
                the grant; and
                  (C) demonstrates that there will be adequate 
                resources provided under this section or from 
                other sources to complete the activities for 
                which assistance is sought, except that the 
                availability of such other resources shall not 
                be a basis for disapproval of such application.
  (d) Restriction.--A tribe may not receive funds under this 
section if such tribe receives funds under section 1144 of the 
Education Amendments of 1978.

                   Subpart 4--Federal Administration

SEC. 5141. NATIONAL ADVISORY COUNCIL ON INDIAN EDUCATION.

  (a) Membership.--There is established a National Advisory 
Council on Indian Education (hereafter in this section referred 
to as the ``Council''), which shall--
          (1) consist of 15 Indian members, who shall be 
        appointed by the President from lists of nominees 
        furnished, from time to time, by Indian tribes and 
        organizations; and
          (2) represent different geographic areas of the 
        United States.
  (b) Duties.--The Council shall--
          (1) advise the Secretary concerning the funding and 
        administration (including the development of 
        regulations and administrative policies and practices) 
        of any program, including any program established under 
        this part--
                  (A) with respect to which the Secretary has 
                jurisdiction; and
                  (B)(i) that includes Indian children or 
                adults as participants; or
                  (ii) that may benefit Indian children or 
                adults;
          (2) make recommendations to the Secretary for filling 
        the position of Director of Indian Education whenever a 
        vacancy occurs; and
          (3) submit to Congress, not later than June 30 of 
        each year, a report on the activities of the Council, 
        including--
                  (A) any recommendations that the Council 
                considers appropriate for the improvement of 
                Federal education programs that include Indian 
                children or adults as participants, or that may 
                benefit Indian children or adults; and
                  (B) recommendations concerning the funding of 
                any program described in subparagraph (A).

SEC. 5142. PEER REVIEW.

  The Secretary may use a peer review process to review 
applications submitted to the Secretary under subpart 2 or 
subpart 3.

SEC. 5143. PREFERENCE FOR INDIAN APPLICANTS.

  In making grants and entering into contracts or cooperative 
agreements under subpart 2 or subpart 3, the Secretary shall 
give a preference to Indian tribes, organizations, and 
institutions of higher education under any program with respect 
to which Indian tribes, organizations, and institutions are 
eligible to apply for grants, contracts, or cooperative 
agreements.

SEC. 5144. MINIMUM GRANT CRITERIA.

  The Secretary may not approve an application for a grant, 
contract, or cooperative agreement under subpart 2 or subpart 3 
unless the application is for a grant, contract, or cooperative 
agreement that is--
          (1) of sufficient size, scope, and quality to achieve 
        the purpose or objectives of such grant, contract, or 
        cooperative agreement; and
          (2) based on relevant research findings.

        Subpart 5--Definitions; Authorizations of Appropriations

SEC. 5151. DEFINITIONS.

  For the purposes of this part:
          (1) Adult.--The term ``adult'' means an individual 
        who--
                  (A) has attained the age of 16 years; or
                  (B) has attained an age that is greater than 
                the age of compulsory school attendance under 
                an applicable State law.
          (2) Free public education.--The term ``free public 
        education'' means education that is--
                  (A) provided at public expense, under public 
                supervision and direction, and without tuition 
                charge; and
                  (B) provided as elementary or secondary 
                education in the applicable State or to 
                preschool children.
          (3) Indian.--The term ``Indian'' means an individual 
        who is--
                  (A) a member of an Indian tribe or band, as 
                membership is defined by the tribe or band, 
                including--
                          (i) any tribe or band terminated 
                        since 1940; and
                          (ii) any tribe or band recognized by 
                        the State in which the tribe or band 
                        resides;
                  (B) a descendant, in the first or second 
                degree, of an individual described in 
                subparagraph (A);
                  (C) considered by the Secretary of the 
                Interior to be an Indian for any purpose;
                  (D) an Alaska Native, as defined in section 
                5206(1); or
                  (E) a member of an organized Indian group 
                that received a grant under the Indian 
                Education Act of 1988 as in effect the day 
                preceding the date of the enactment of the 
                Improving America's Schools Act of 1994.
          (4) Alaska native organization.--The term ``Alaska 
        Native Organization'' has the same meaning as defined 
        in section 5206(2).

SEC. 5152. AUTHORIZATIONS OF APPROPRIATIONS.

  (a) Subpart 1.--For the purpose of carrying out subpart 1, 
there are authorized to be appropriated $105,921,000 for each 
of fiscal years 2016 through 2021.
  (b) Subparts 2 and 3.--For the purpose of carrying out 
subparts 2 and 3, there are authorized to be appropriated 
$24,858,000 for each of fiscal years 2016 through 2021.

                    PART B--ALASKA NATIVE EDUCATION

SEC. 5201. SHORT TITLE.

  This part may be cited as the ``Alaska Native Educational 
Equity, Support, and Assistance Act''.

SEC. 5202. FINDINGS.

  Congress finds and declares the following:
          (1) It is the policy of the Federal Government to 
        maximize the leadership of and participation by Alaska 
        Natives in the planning and the management of Alaska 
        Native education programs and to support efforts 
        developed by and undertaken within the Alaska Native 
        community to improve educational opportunity for all 
        students.
          (2) Many Alaska Native children enter and exit school 
        with serious educational disadvantages.
          (3) Overcoming the magnitude of the geographic 
        challenges, historical inequities, and other barriers 
        to successfully improving educational outcomes for 
        Alaska Native students in rural, village, and urban 
        settings is challenging. Significant disparities 
        between academic achievement of Alaska Native students 
        and non-Native students continues, including lower 
        graduation rates, increased school dropout rates, and 
        lower achievement scores on standardized tests.
          (4) The preservation of Alaska Native cultures and 
        languages and the integration of Alaska Native cultures 
        and languages into education, positive identity 
        development for Alaska Native students, and local, 
        place-based, and culture-based programming are critical 
        to the attainment of educational success and the long-
        term well-being of Alaska Native students.
          (5) Improving educational outcomes for Alaska Native 
        students increases access to employment opportunities.
          (6) The programs and activities authorized under this 
        part give priority to Alaska Native organizations as a 
        means of increasing Alaska Native parents' and 
        community involvement in the promotion of academic 
        success of Alaska Native students.
          (7) The Federal Government should lend support to 
        efforts developed by and undertaken within the Alaska 
        Native community to improve educational opportunity for 
        Alaska Native students. In 1983, pursuant to Public Law 
        98-63, Alaska ceased to receive educational funding 
        from the Bureau of Indian Affairs. The Bureau of Indian 
        Education does not operate any schools in Alaska, nor 
        operate or fund Alaska Native education programs. The 
        program under this part supports the Federal trust 
        responsibility of the United States to Alaska Natives.

SEC. 5203. PURPOSES.

  The purposes of this part are as follows:
          (1) To recognize and address the unique educational 
        needs of Alaska Natives.
          (2) To recognize the role of Alaska Native languages 
        and cultures in the educational success and long-term 
        well-being of Alaska Native students.
          (3) To integrate Alaska Native cultures and languages 
        into education, develop Alaska Native students' 
        positive identity, and support local place-based and 
        culture-based curriculum and programming.
          (4) To authorize the development, management, and 
        expansion of effective supplemental educational 
        programs to benefit Alaska Natives.
          (5) To provide direction and guidance to appropriate 
        Federal, State, and local agencies to focus resources, 
        including resources made available under this part, on 
        meeting the educational needs of Alaska Natives.
          (6) To ensure the maximum participation by Alaska 
        Native educators and leaders in the planning, 
        development, management, and evaluation of programs 
        designed to serve Alaska Natives students, and to 
        ensure Alaska Native organizations play a meaningful 
        role in supplemental educational services provided to 
        Alaska Native students.

SEC. 5204. PROGRAM AUTHORIZED.

  (a) General Authority.--
          (1) Grants and contracts.--The Secretary is 
        authorized to make grants to, or enter into contracts 
        with, Alaska Native organizations, State educational 
        agencies, local educational agencies, educational 
        entities with experience in developing or operating 
        Alaska Native educational programs or programs of 
        instruction conducted in Alaska Native languages, 
        cultural and community-based organizations with 
        experience in developing or operating programs to 
        benefit the educational needs of Alaska Natives, and 
        consortia of organizations and entities described in 
        this paragraph, to carry out programs that meet the 
        purposes of this part.
          (2) Additional requirement.--A State educational 
        agency, local educational agency, educational entity 
        with experience in developing or operating Alaska 
        Native educational programs or programs of instruction 
        conducted in Alaska Native languages, cultural and 
        community-based organization with experience in 
        developing or operating programs to benefit the 
        educational needs of Alaska Natives, or consortium of 
        such organizations and entities is eligible for an 
        award under this part only as part of a partnership 
        involving an Alaska Native organization.
          (3) Mandatory activities.--Activities provided 
        through the programs carried out under this part shall 
        include the following which shall only be provided 
        specifically in the context of elementary and secondary 
        education:
                  (A) The development and implementation of 
                plans, methods, and strategies to improve the 
                educational outcomes of Alaska Native people.
                  (B) The collection of data to assist in the 
                evaluation of the programs carried out under 
                this part.
          (4) Permissible activities.--Activities provided 
        through programs carried out under this part may 
        include the following which shall only be provided 
        specifically in the context of elementary and secondary 
        education:
                  (A) The development of curricula and programs 
                that address the educational needs of Alaska 
                Native students, including the following:
                          (i) Curriculum materials that reflect 
                        the cultural diversity, languages, 
                        history, or the contributions of Alaska 
                        Native people.
                          (ii) Instructional programs that make 
                        use of Alaska Native languages and 
                        cultures.
                          (iii) Networks that develop, test, 
                        and disseminate best practices and 
                        introduce successful programs, 
                        materials, and techniques to meet the 
                        educational needs of Alaska Native 
                        students in urban and rural schools.
                  (B) Training and professional development 
                activities for educators, including the 
                following:
                          (i) Pre-service and in-service 
                        training and professional development 
                        programs to prepare teachers to develop 
                        appreciation for, and understanding of, 
                        Alaska Native history, cultures, 
                        values, ways of knowing and learning in 
                        order to effectively address the 
                        cultural diversity and unique needs of 
                        Alaska Native students.
                          (ii) Recruitment and preparation of 
                        teachers who are Alaska Native.
                          (iii) Programs that will lead to the 
                        certification and licensing of Alaska 
                        Native teachers, principals, and 
                        superintendents.
                  (C) The development and operation of student 
                enrichment programs, including those in 
                science, technology, engineering, and 
                mathematics that--
                          (i) are designed to prepare Alaska 
                        Native students to excel in such 
                        subjects;
                          (ii) provide appropriate support 
                        services to enable such students to 
                        benefit from the programs; and
                          (iii) include activities that 
                        recognize and support the unique 
                        cultural and educational needs of 
                        Alaska Native children, and incorporate 
                        appropriately qualified Alaska Native 
                        elders and other tradition bearers.
                  (D) Research and data collection activities 
                to determine the educational status and needs 
                of Alaska Native children and other research 
                and evaluation activities related to programs 
                carried out under this part.
                  (E) Activities designed to increase the 
                graduation rates of Alaska Native students and 
                prepare Alaska Native students to be college 
                and career ready upon graduation from secondary 
                school, such as--
                          (i) remedial and enrichment programs; 
                        and
                          (ii) culturally based education 
                        programs, such as--
                                  (I) programs of study and 
                                other instruction in Alaska 
                                Native history and way of 
                                living, to share the rich and 
                                diverse cultures of Alaska 
                                Native peoples among Alaska 
                                Native youth and elders, non-
                                Native students, teachers, and 
                                the larger community;
                                  (II) instruction in 
                                leadership, communication, 
                                Native culture, arts, and 
                                languages to Alaska Native 
                                youth;
                                  (III) instruction in Alaska 
                                Native history and ways of 
                                living to students and teachers 
                                in the local school district;
                                  (IV) intergenerational 
                                learning and internship 
                                opportunities to Alaska Native 
                                youth and young adults; and
                                  (V) providing cultural 
                                immersion activities aimed at 
                                Alaska Native cultural 
                                preservation.
                  (F) Statewide on-site exchange programs, for 
                both students and teachers, that work to 
                facilitate cultural relationships between urban 
                and rural Alaskans to build mutual respect and 
                understanding, and foster a statewide sense of 
                common identity through host family, school, 
                and community cross-cultural immersion.
                  (G) Education programs for at-risk urban 
                Alaska Native students in kindergarten through 
                grade 12 that are designed to improve academic 
                proficiency and graduation rates, utilize 
                strategies otherwise permissible under this 
                part, and incorporate a strong data collection 
                and continuous evaluation component.
                  (H) Statewide programs that provide technical 
                assistance and support to schools and 
                communities to engage adults in promoting the 
                academic progress and overall well-being of 
                Alaska Native people through child and youth 
                development, positive youth-adult 
                relationships, improved conditions for learning 
                (school climate, student connection to school 
                and community), and increased connections 
                between schools and families.
                  (I) Career preparation activities to enable 
                Alaska Native children and adults to prepare 
                for meaningful employment, including programs 
                providing tech-prep, mentoring, training, and 
                apprenticeship activities.
                   (J) Support for the development and 
                operational activities of regional vocational 
                schools in rural areas of Alaska to provide 
                students with necessary resources to prepare 
                for skilled employment opportunities.
                   (K) Regional leadership academies that 
                demonstrate effectiveness in building respect, 
                understanding, and fostering a sense of Alaska 
                Native identity to promote their pursuit of and 
                success in completing higher education or 
                career training.
                   (L) Strategies designed to increase the 
                involvement of parents in their children's 
                education.
  (b) Limitation on Administrative Costs.--Not more than 5 
percent of funds provided to an award recipient under this part 
for any fiscal year may be used for administrative purposes.
  (c) Priorities.--In awarding grants or contracts to carry out 
activities described in this subpart, the Secretary shall give 
priority to applications from Alaska Native Organizations. Such 
priority shall be explicitly delineated in the Secretary's 
process for evaluating applications and applied consistently 
and transparently to all applications from Alaska Native 
Organizations.
  (d) Authorization of Appropriations.--There are authorized to 
be appropriated to carry out this part $33,185,000 for each of 
fiscal years 2016 through 2021.

SEC. 5205. ADMINISTRATIVE PROVISIONS.

  (a) Application Required.--
          (1) In general.--No grant may be made under this 
        part, and no contract may be entered into under this 
        part, unless the Alaska Native organization or entity 
        seeking the grant or contract submits an application to 
        the Secretary in such form, in such manner, and 
        containing such information as the Secretary may 
        determine necessary to carry out the provisions of this 
        part.
          (2) Requirement for certain applicants.--An applicant 
        described in section 5204(a)(2) shall, in the 
        application submitted under this paragraph--
                  (A) demonstrate that an Alaska Native 
                organization was directly involved in the 
                development of the program for which the 
                application seeks funds and explicitly 
                delineate the meaningful role that the Alaska 
                Native organization will play in the 
                implementation and evaluation of the program 
                for which funding is sought; and
                  (B) provide a copy of the Alaska Native 
                organization's governing document.
  (b) Consultation Required.--Each applicant for an award under 
this part shall provide for ongoing advice from and 
consultation with representatives of the Alaska Native 
community.
  (c) Local Educational Agency Coordination.--Each applicant 
for an award under this part shall inform each local 
educational agency serving students who would participate in 
the program to be carried out under the grant or contract about 
the application.
  (d) Continuation Awards.--An applicant described in section 
5204(a)(2) that receives funding under this part shall 
periodically demonstrate to the Secretary, during the term of 
the award, that the applicant is continuing to meet the 
requirements of subsection (a)(2)(A).

SEC. 5206. DEFINITIONS.

  In this part:
          (1) Alaska native.--The term ``Alaska Native'' has 
        the same meaning as the term ``Native'' has in section 
        3(b) of the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act and 
        their descendants.
          (2) Alaska native organization.--The term ``Alaska 
        Native organization'' means a federally recognized 
        tribe, consortium of tribes, regional nonprofit Native 
        association, and an organization, that--
                  (A) has or commits to acquire expertise in 
                the education of Alaska Natives; and
                  (B) has Alaska Native people in substantive 
                and policymaking positions within the 
                organization.

                   PART C--NATIVE HAWAIIAN EDUCATION

SEC. 5301. FINDINGS.

  Congress finds the following:
          (1) Native Hawaiians are a distinct and unique 
        indigenous people with a historical continuity to the 
        original inhabitants of the Hawaiian archipelago, whose 
        society was organized as a nation and internationally 
        recognized as a nation by the United States, and many 
        other countries.
          (2) Native Hawaiians have a cultural, historic, and 
        land-based link to the indigenous people who exercised 
        sovereignty over the Hawaiian Islands.
          (3) The political status of Native Hawaiians is 
        comparable to that of American Indians and Alaska 
        Natives.
          (4) The political relationship between the United 
        States and the Native Hawaiian people has been 
        recognized and reaffirmed by the United States, as 
        evidenced by the inclusion of Native Hawaiians in many 
        Federal statutes, including--
                  (A) the Native American Programs Act of 1974 
                (42 U.S.C. 2991 et seq.);
                  (B) Public Law 95-341 (commonly known as the 
                ``American Indian Religious Freedom Act'' (42 
                U.S.C. 1996));
                  (C) the National Museum of the American 
                Indian Act (20 U.S.C. 80q et seq.);
                  (D) the Native American Graves Protection and 
                Repatriation Act (25 U.S.C. 3001 et seq.);
                  (E) the National Historic Preservation Act 
                (16 U.S.C. 470 et seq.);
                  (F) the Native American Languages Act (25 
                U.S.C. 2901 et seq.);
                  (G) the American Indian, Alaska Native, and 
                Native Hawaiian Culture and Art Development Act 
                (20 U.S.C. 4401 et seq.);
                  (H) the Workforce Investment Act of 1998 (29 
                U.S.C. 2801 et seq.); and
                  (I) the Older Americans Act of 1965 (42 
                U.S.C. 3001 et seq.).
          (5) Many Native Hawaiian students lag behind other 
        students in terms of--
                  (A) school readiness factors;
                  (B) scoring below national norms on education 
                achievement tests at all grade levels;
                  (C) underrepresentation in the uppermost 
                achievement levels and in gifted and talented 
                programs;
                  (D) overrepresentation among students 
                qualifying for special education programs;
                  (E) underrepresentation in institutions of 
                higher education and among adults who have 
                completed 4 or more years of college.
          (6) The percentage of Native Hawaiian students served 
        by the State of Hawaii Department of Education rose 30 
        percent from 1980 to 2008, and there are and will 
        continue to be geographically rural, isolated areas 
        with a high Native Hawaiian population density.
          (7) The Native Hawaiian people are determined to 
        preserve, develop, and transmit to future generations 
        their ancestral territory and their cultural identity 
        in accordance with their own spiritual and traditional 
        beliefs, customs, practices, language, and social 
        institutions.

SEC. 5302. PURPOSES.

  The purposes of this part are--
          (1) to authorize, develop, implement, assess, and 
        evaluate innovative educational programs, Native 
        Hawaiian language medium programs, Native Hawaiian 
        culture-based education programs, and other education 
        programs to improve the academic achievement of Native 
        Hawaiian students by meeting their unique cultural and 
        language needs in order to help such students meet 
        challenging State student academic achievement 
        standards;
          (2) to provide guidance to appropriate Federal, 
        State, and local agencies to more effectively and 
        efficiently focus resources, including resources made 
        available under this part, on the development and 
        implementation of--
                  (A) innovative educational programs for 
                Native Hawaiians;
                  (B) rigorous and substantive Native Hawaiian 
                language programs; and
                  (C) Native Hawaiian culture-based educational 
                programs; and
          (3) to create a system by which information from 
        programs funded under this part will be collected, 
        analyzed, evaluated, reported, and used in 
        decisionmaking activities regarding the types of grants 
        awarded under this part.

SEC. 5303. NATIVE HAWAIIAN EDUCATION COUNCIL GRANT.

  (a) Grant Authorized.--In order to better effectuate the 
purposes of this part through the coordination of educational 
and related services and programs available to Native 
Hawaiians, including those programs that receive funding under 
this part, the Secretary shall award a grant to an education 
council, as described under subsection (b).
  (b) Education Council.--
          (1) Eligibility.--To be eligible to receive the grant 
        under subsection (a), the council shall be an education 
        council (referred to in this section as the ``Education 
        Council'') that meets the requirements of this 
        subsection.
          (2) Composition.--The Education Council shall consist 
        of 15 members of whom--
                  (A) one shall be the President of the 
                University of Hawaii (or a designee);
                  (B) one shall be the Governor of the State of 
                Hawaii (or a designee);
                  (C) one shall be the Superintendent of the 
                State of Hawaii Department of Education (or a 
                designee);
                  (D) one shall be the chairperson of the 
                Office of Hawaiian Affairs (or a designee);
                  (E) one shall be the executive director of 
                Hawaii's Charter School Network (or a 
                designee);
                  (F) one shall be the chief executive officer 
                of the Kamehameha Schools (or a designee);
                  (G) one shall be the Chief Executive Officer 
                of the Queen Liliuokalani Trust (or a 
                designee);
                  (H) one shall be a member, selected by the 
                other members of the Education Council, who 
                represents a private grant-making entity;
                  (I) one shall be the Mayor of the County of 
                Hawaii (or a designee);
                   (J) one shall be the Mayor of Maui County 
                (or a designee from the Island of Maui);
                   (K) one shall be the Mayor of the County of 
                Kauai (or a designee);
                   (L) one shall be appointed by the Mayor of 
                Maui County from the Island of either Molokai 
                or Lanai;
                   (M) one shall be the Mayor of the City and 
                County of Honolulu (or a designee);
                   (N) one shall be the chairperson of the 
                Hawaiian Homes Commission (or a designee); and
                   (O) one shall be the chairperson of the 
                Hawaii Workforce Development Council (or a 
                designee representing the private sector).
          (3) Requirements.--Any designee serving on the 
        Education Council shall demonstrate, as determined by 
        the individual who appointed such designee with input 
        from the Native Hawaiian community, not less than 5 
        years of experience as a consumer or provider of Native 
        Hawaiian education or cultural activities, with 
        traditional cultural experience given due 
        consideration.
          (4) Limitation.--A member (including a designee), 
        while serving on the Education Council, shall not be a 
        recipient of grant funds that are awarded under this 
        part.
          (5) Term of members.--A member who is a designee 
        shall serve for a term of not more than 4 years.
          (6) Chair, vice chair.--
                  (A) Selection.--The Education Council shall 
                select a Chair and a Vice Chair from among the 
                members of the Education Council.
                  (B) Term limits.--The Chair and Vice Chair 
                shall each serve for a 2-year term.
          (7) Administrative provisions relating to education 
        council.--The Education Council shall meet at the call 
        of the Chair of the Council, or upon request by a 
        majority of the members of the Education Council, but 
        in any event not less often than every 120 days.
          (8) No compensation.--None of the funds made 
        available through the grant may be used to provide 
        compensation to any member of the Education Council or 
        member of a working group established by the Education 
        Council, for functions described in this section.
  (c) Use of Funds for Coordination Activities.--The Education 
Council shall use funds made available through the grant to 
carry out each of the following activities:
          (1) Providing advice about the coordination, and 
        serving as a clearinghouse for, the educational and 
        related services and programs available to Native 
        Hawaiians, including the programs assisted under this 
        part.
          (2) Assessing the extent to which such services and 
        programs meet the needs of Native Hawaiians, and 
        collecting data on the status of Native Hawaiian 
        education.
          (3) Providing direction and guidance, through the 
        issuance of reports and recommendations, to appropriate 
        Federal, State, and local agencies in order to focus 
        and improve the use of resources, including resources 
        made available under this part, relating to Native 
        Hawaiian education, and serving, where appropriate, in 
        an advisory capacity.
          (4) Awarding grants, if such grants enable the 
        Education Council to carry out the activities described 
        in paragraphs (1) through (3).
          (5) Hiring an executive director who shall assist in 
        executing the duties and powers of the Education 
        Council, as described in subsection (d).
  (d) Use of Funds for Technical Assistance.--The Education 
Council shall use funds made available through the grant to--
          (1) provide technical assistance to Native Hawaiian 
        organizations that are grantees or potential grantees 
        under this part;
          (2) obtain from such grantees information and data 
        regarding grants awarded under this part, including 
        information and data about--
                  (A) the effectiveness of such grantees in 
                meeting the educational priorities established 
                by the Education Council, as described in 
                paragraph (6)(D), using metrics related to 
                these priorities; and
                  (B) the effectiveness of such grantees in 
                carrying out any of the activities described in 
                section 5304(c) that are related to the 
                specific goals and purposes of each grantee's 
                grant project, using metrics related to these 
                priorities;
          (3) assess and define the educational needs of Native 
        Hawaiians;
          (4) assess the programs and services available to 
        address the educational needs of Native Hawaiians;
          (5) assess and evaluate the individual and aggregate 
        impact achieved by grantees under this part in 
        improving Native Hawaiian educational performance and 
        meeting the goals of this part, using metrics related 
        to these goals; and
          (6) prepare and submit to the Secretary, at the end 
        of each calendar year, an annual report that contains--
                  (A) a description of the activities of the 
                Education Council during the calendar year;
                  (B) a description of significant barriers to 
                achieving the goals of this part;
                  (C) a summary of each community consultation 
                session described in subsection (e); and
                  (D) recommendations to establish priorities 
                for funding under this part, based on an 
                assessment of--
                          (i) the educational needs of Native 
                        Hawaiians;
                          (ii) programs and services available 
                        to address such needs;
                          (iii) the effectiveness of programs 
                        in improving the educational 
                        performance of Native Hawaiian students 
                        to help such students meet challenging 
                        State student academic achievement 
                        standards; and
                          (iv) priorities for funding in 
                        specific geographic communities.
  (e) Use of Funds for Community Consultations.--The Education 
Council shall use funds made available through the grant under 
subsection (a) to hold not less than one community consultation 
each year on each of the islands of Hawaii, Maui, Molokai, 
Lanai, Oahu, and Kauai, at which--
          (1) not less than three members of the Education 
        Council shall be in attendance;
          (2) the Education Council shall gather community 
        input regarding--
                  (A) current grantees under this part, as of 
                the date of the consultation;
                  (B) priorities and needs of Native Hawaiians; 
                and
                  (C) other Native Hawaiian education issues; 
                and
          (3) the Education Council shall report to the 
        community on the outcomes of the activities supported 
        by grants awarded under this part.
  (f) Funding.--For each fiscal year, the Secretary shall use 
the amount described in section 5305(d)(2), to make a payment 
under the grant. Funds made available through the grant shall 
remain available until expended.
  (g) Report.--Beginning not later than 2 years after the date 
of the enactment of the Student Success Act, and for each 
subsequent year, the Secretary shall prepare and submit to the 
Committee on Education and the Workforce of the House of 
Representatives, and the Committee on Indian Affairs and the 
Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions of the 
Senate, a report that--
          (1) summarizes the annual reports of the Education 
        Council;
          (2) describes the allocation and use of funds under 
        this part and the information gathered since the first 
        annual report submitted by the Education Council to the 
        Secretary under this section; and
          (3) contains recommendations for changes in Federal, 
        State, and local policy to advance the purposes of this 
        part.

SEC. 5304. GRANT PROGRAM AUTHORIZED.

  (a) Grants and Contracts.--In order to carry out programs 
that meet the purposes of this part, the Secretary is 
authorized to award grants to, or enter into contracts with--
          (1) Native Hawaiian educational organizations;
          (2) Native Hawaiian community-based organizations;
          (3) public and private nonprofit organizations, 
        agencies, and institutions with experience in 
        developing or operating Native Hawaiian education and 
        workforce development programs or programs of 
        instruction in the Native Hawaiian language;
          (4) charter schools; and
          (5) consortia of the organizations, agencies, and 
        institutions described in paragraphs (1) through (4).
  (b) Priority.--In awarding grants and entering into contracts 
under this part, the Secretary shall give priority to--
          (1) programs that meet the educational priority 
        recommendations of the Education Council, as described 
        under section 5303(d)(6)(D);
          (2) the repair and renovation of public schools that 
        serve high concentrations of Native Hawaiian students;
          (3) programs designed to improve the academic 
        achievement of Native Hawaiian students by meeting 
        their unique cultural and language needs in order to 
        help such students meet challenging State student 
        academic achievement standards, including activities 
        relating to--
                  (A) achieving competence in reading, 
                literacy, mathematics, and science for students 
                in preschool through grade 3;
                  (B) the educational needs of at-risk children 
                and youth;
                  (C) professional development for teachers and 
                administrators;
                  (D) the use of Native Hawaiian language and 
                preservation or reclamation of Native Hawaiian 
                culture-based educational practices; and
                  (E) other programs relating to the activities 
                described in this part; and
          (4) programs in which a local educational agency, 
        institution of higher education, or a State educational 
        agency in partnership with a nonprofit entity serving 
        underserved communities within the Native Hawaiian 
        population apply for a grant or contract under this 
        part as part of a partnership or consortium.
  (c) Authorized Activities.--Activities provided through 
programs carried out under this part may include--
          (1) the development and maintenance of a statewide 
        Native Hawaiian early education and care system to 
        provide a continuum of high-quality early learning 
        services for Native Hawaiian children from the prenatal 
        period through the age of kindergarten entry;
          (2) the operation of family-based education centers 
        that provide such services as--
                  (A) early care and education programs for 
                Native Hawaiians; and
                  (B) research on, and development and 
                assessment of, family-based, early childhood, 
                and preschool programs for Native Hawaiians;
          (3) activities that enhance beginning reading and 
        literacy in either the Hawaiian or the English language 
        among Native Hawaiian students in kindergarten through 
        grade 3 and assistance in addressing the distinct 
        features of combined English and Hawaiian literacy for 
        Hawaiian speakers in grades 5 and 6;
          (4) activities to meet the special needs of Native 
        Hawaiian students with disabilities, including--
                  (A) the identification of such students and 
                their needs;
                  (B) the provision of support services to the 
                families of such students; and
                  (C) other activities consistent with the 
                requirements of the Individuals with 
                Disabilities Education Act;
          (5) activities that address the special needs of 
        Native Hawaiian students who are gifted and talented, 
        including--
                  (A) educational, psychological, and 
                developmental activities designed to assist in 
                the educational progress of such students; and
                  (B) activities that involve the parents of 
                such students in a manner designed to assist in 
                the educational progress of such students;
          (6) the development of academic and vocational 
        curricula to address the needs of Native Hawaiian 
        students, including curricula materials in the Hawaiian 
        language and mathematics and science curricula that 
        incorporate Native Hawaiian tradition and culture;
          (7) professional development activities for 
        educators, including--
                  (A) the development of programs to prepare 
                prospective teachers to address the unique 
                needs of Native Hawaiian students within the 
                context of Native Hawaiian culture, language, 
                and traditions;
                  (B) in-service programs to improve the 
                ability of teachers who teach in schools with 
                high concentrations of Native Hawaiian students 
                to meet the unique needs of such students; and
                  (C) the recruitment and preparation of Native 
                Hawaiians, and other individuals who live in 
                communities with a high concentration of Native 
                Hawaiians, to become teachers;
          (8) the operation of community-based learning centers 
        that address the needs of Native Hawaiian students, 
        parents, families, and communities through the 
        coordination of public and private programs and 
        services, including--
                  (A) early education programs;
                  (B) before, after, and Summer school 
                programs, expanded learning time, or weekend 
                academies;
                  (C) career and technical education programs; 
                and
                  (D) programs that recognize and support the 
                unique cultural and educational needs of Native 
                Hawaiian children, and incorporate 
                appropriately qualified Native Hawaiian elders 
                and seniors;
          (9) activities, including program co-location, that 
        ensure Native Hawaiian students graduate college and 
        career ready including--
                  (A) family literacy services;
                  (B) counseling, guidance, and support 
                services for students; and
                  (C) professional development activities 
                designed to help educators improve the college 
                and career readiness of Native Hawaiian 
                students;
          (10) research and data collection activities to 
        determine the educational status and needs of Native 
        Hawaiian children and adults;
          (11) other research and evaluation activities related 
        to programs carried out under this part; and
          (12) other activities, consistent with the purposes 
        of this part, to meet the educational needs of Native 
        Hawaiian children and adults.
  (d) Additional Activities.--Notwithstanding any other 
provision of this part, funds made available to carry out this 
section as of the day before the date of the enactment of the 
Student Success Act shall remain available until expended. The 
Secretary shall use such funds to support the following:
          (1) The repair and renovation of public schools that 
        serve high concentrations of Native Hawaiian students.
          (2) The perpetuation of, and expansion of access to, 
        Hawaiian culture and history through digital archives.
          (3) Informal education programs that connect 
        traditional Hawaiian knowledge, science, astronomy, and 
        the environment through State museums or learning 
        centers.
          (4) Public charter schools serving high 
        concentrations of Native Hawaiian students.
  (e) Administrative Costs.--
          (1) In general.--Except as provided in paragraph (2), 
        not more than 5 percent of funds provided to a 
        recipient of a grant or contract under this section for 
        any fiscal year may be used for administrative 
        purposes.
          (2) Exception.--The Secretary may waive the 
        requirement of paragraph (1) for a nonprofit entity 
        that receives funding under this section and allow not 
        more than 10 percent of funds provided to such 
        nonprofit entity under this section for any fiscal year 
        to be used for administrative purposes.

SEC. 5305. ADMINISTRATIVE PROVISIONS.

  (a) Application Required.--No grant may be made under this 
part, and no contract may be entered into under this part, 
unless the entity seeking the grant or contract submits an 
application to the Secretary at such time, in such manner, and 
containing such information as the Secretary may determine to 
be necessary to carry out the provisions of this part.
  (b) Direct Grant Applications.--The Secretary shall provide a 
copy of all direct grant applications to the Education Council.
  (c) Supplement Not Supplant.--
          (1) In general.--Except as provided in paragraph (2), 
        funds made available under this part shall be used to 
        supplement, and not supplant, any State or local funds 
        used to achieve the purposes of this part.
          (2) Exception.--Paragraph (1) shall not apply to any 
        nonprofit entity or Native Hawaiian community-based 
        organization that receives a grant or other funds under 
        this part.
  (d) Authorization of Appropriations.--
          (1) In general.--There are authorized to be 
        appropriated to carry out this part $34,181,000 for 
        each of fiscal years 2016 through 2021.
          (2) Reservation.--Of the funds appropriated under 
        this subsection, the Secretary shall reserve, for each 
        fiscal year after the date of the enactment of the 
        Student Success Act not less than $500,000 for the 
        grant to the Education Council under section 5303.
          (3) Availability.--Funds appropriated under this 
        subsection shall remain available until expended.

                      TITLE VI--GENERAL PROVISIONS

                          PART A--DEFINITIONS

SEC. 6101. DEFINITIONS.

  Except as otherwise provided, in this Act:
          (1) Average daily attendance.--
                  (A) In general.--Except as provided otherwise 
                by State law or this paragraph, the term 
                ``average daily attendance'' means--
                          (i) the aggregate number of days of 
                        attendance of all students during a 
                        school year; divided by
                          (ii) the number of days school is in 
                        session during that year.
                  (B) Conversion.--The Secretary shall permit 
                the conversion of average daily membership (or 
                other similar data) to average daily attendance 
                for local educational agencies in States that 
                provide State aid to local educational agencies 
                on the basis of average daily membership (or 
                other similar data).
                  (C) Special rule.--If the local educational 
                agency in which a child resides makes a tuition 
                or other payment for the free public education 
                of the child in a school located in another 
                school district, the Secretary shall, for the 
                purpose of this Act--
                          (i) consider the child to be in 
                        attendance at a school of the agency 
                        making the payment; and
                          (ii) not consider the child to be in 
                        attendance at a school of the agency 
                        receiving the payment.
                  (D) Children with disabilities.--If a local 
                educational agency makes a tuition payment to a 
                private school or to a public school of another 
                local educational agency for a child with a 
                disability, as defined in section 602 of the 
                Individuals with Disabilities Education Act, 
                the Secretary shall, for the purpose of this 
                Act, consider the child to be in attendance at 
                a school of the agency making the payment.
          (2) Average per-pupil expenditure.--The term 
        ``average per-pupil expenditure'' means, in the case of 
        a State or of the United States--
                  (A) without regard to the source of funds--
                          (i) the aggregate current 
                        expenditures, during the third fiscal 
                        year preceding the fiscal year for 
                        which the determination is made (or, if 
                        satisfactory data for that year are not 
                        available, during the most recent 
                        preceding fiscal year for which 
                        satisfactory data are available) of all 
                        local educational agencies in the State 
                        or, in the case of the United States, 
                        for all States (which, for the purpose 
                        of this paragraph, means the 50 States 
                        and the District of Columbia); plus
                          (ii) any direct current expenditures 
                        by the State for the operation of those 
                        agencies; divided by
                  (B) the aggregate number of children in 
                average daily attendance to whom those agencies 
                provided free public education during that 
                preceding year.
          (3) Charter school.--The term ``charter school'' 
        means a public school that--
                  (A) in accordance with a specific State 
                statute authorizing the granting of charters to 
                schools, is exempt from significant State or 
                local rules that inhibit the flexible operation 
                and management of public schools, but not from 
                any rules relating to the other requirements of 
                this paragraph;
                  (B) is created by a developer as a public 
                school, or is adapted by a developer from an 
                existing public school, and is operated under 
                public supervision and direction;
                  (C) operates in pursuit of a specific set of 
                educational objectives determined by the 
                school's developer and agreed to by the 
                authorized public chartering agency;
                  (D) provides a program of elementary or 
                secondary education, or both;
                  (E) is nonsectarian in its programs, 
                admissions policies, employment practices, and 
                all other operations, and is not affiliated 
                with a sectarian school or religious 
                institution;
                  (F) does not charge tuition;
                  (G) complies with the Age Discrimination Act 
                of 1975, title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 
                1964, title IX of the Education Amendments of 
                1972, section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 
                1973, part B of the Individuals with 
                Disabilities Education Act, the Americans with 
                Disabilities Act of 1990 (42 U.S.C. 12101 et 
                seq.), and section 444 of the General Education 
                Provisions Act (20 U.S.C. 1232(g)) (commonly 
                known as the ``Family Education Rights and 
                Privacy Act of 1974'');
                  (H) is a school to which parents choose to 
                send their children, and admits students on the 
                basis of a lottery if more students apply for 
                admission than can be accommodated, except that 
                in cases in which students who are enrolled in 
                a charter school affiliated (such as by sharing 
                a network) with another charter school, those 
                students may be automatically enrolled in the 
                next grade level at such other charter school, 
                so long as a lottery is used to fill seats 
                created through regular attrition in student 
                enrollment;
                  (I) agrees to comply with the same Federal 
                and State audit requirements as do other 
                elementary schools and secondary schools in the 
                State, unless such State audit requirements are 
                waived by the State;
                   (J) meets all applicable Federal, State, and 
                local health and safety requirements;
                   (K) operates in accordance with State law;
                   (L) has a written performance contract with 
                the authorized public chartering agency in the 
                State that includes a description of how 
                student performance will be measured in charter 
                schools pursuant to State assessments that are 
                required of other schools and pursuant to any 
                other assessments mutually agreeable to the 
                authorized public chartering agency and the 
                charter school; and
                   (M) may serve prekindergarten or 
                postsecondary students.
          (4) Child.--The term ``child'' means any person 
        within the age limits for which the State provides free 
        public education.
          (5) Child with a disability.--The term ``child with a 
        disability'' has the same meaning given that term in 
        section 602 of the Individuals with Disabilities 
        Education Act.
          (6) Community-based organization.--The term 
        ``community-based organization'' means a public or 
        private nonprofit organization of demonstrated 
        effectiveness that--
                  (A) is representative of a community or 
                significant segments of a community; and
                  (B) provides educational or related services 
                to individuals in the community.
          (7) Consolidated local application.--The term 
        ``consolidated local application'' means an application 
        submitted by a local educational agency pursuant to 
        section 6305.
          (8) Consolidated local plan.--The term ``consolidated 
        local plan'' means a plan submitted by a local 
        educational agency pursuant to section 6305.
          (9) Consolidated state application.--The term 
        ``consolidated State application'' means an application 
        submitted by a State educational agency pursuant to 
        section 6302.
          (10) Consolidated state plan.--The term 
        ``consolidated State plan'' means a plan submitted by a 
        State educational agency pursuant to section 6302.
          (11) County.--The term ``county'' means one of the 
        divisions of a State used by the Secretary of Commerce 
        in compiling and reporting data regarding counties.
          (12) Covered program.--The term ``covered program'' 
        means each of the programs authorized by--
                  (A) part A of title I;
                  (B) title II; and
                  (C) part B of title III.
          (13) Current expenditures.--The term ``current 
        expenditures'' means expenditures for free public 
        education--
                  (A) including expenditures for 
                administration, instruction, attendance and 
                health services, pupil transportation services, 
                operation and maintenance of plant, fixed 
                charges, and net expenditures to cover deficits 
                for food services and student body activities; 
                but
                  (B) not including expenditures for community 
                services, capital outlay, and debt service, or 
                any expenditures made from funds received under 
                title I.
          (14) Department.--The term ``Department'' means the 
        Department of Education.
          (15) Direct student services.--The term ``direct 
        student services'' means public school choice or high-
        quality academic tutoring that are designed to help 
        increase academic achievement for students.
          (16) Distance education.--The term ``distance 
        education'' means the use of one or more technologies 
        to deliver instruction to students who are separated 
        from the instructor and to support regular and 
        substantive interaction between the students and the 
        instructor synchronously or nonsynchronously.
          (17) Educational service agency.--The term 
        ``educational service agency'' means a regional public 
        multiservice agency authorized by State statute to 
        develop, manage, and provide services or programs to 
        local educational agencies.
          (18) Elementary school.--The term ``elementary 
        school'' means a nonprofit institutional day or 
        residential school, including a public elementary 
        charter school, that provides elementary education, as 
        determined under State law.
          (19) English learner.--The term ``English learner'', 
        when used with respect to an individual, means an 
        individual--
                  (A) who is aged 3 through 21;
                  (B) who is enrolled or preparing to enroll in 
                an elementary school or secondary school;
                  (C)(i) who was not born in the United States 
                or whose native language is a language other 
                than English;
                  (ii)(I) who is a Native American or Alaska 
                Native, or a native resident of the outlying 
                areas; and
                  (II) who comes from an environment where a 
                language other than English has had a 
                significant impact on the individual's level of 
                English language proficiency; or
                  (iii) who is migratory, whose native language 
                is a language other than English, and who comes 
                from an environment where a language other than 
                English is dominant; and
                  (D) whose difficulties in speaking, reading, 
                writing, or understanding the English language 
                may be sufficient to deny the individual--
                          (i) the ability to meet the State's 
                        academic standards described in section 
                        1111;
                          (ii) the ability to successfully 
                        achieve in classrooms where the 
                        language of instruction is English; or
                          (iii) the opportunity to participate 
                        fully in society.
          (20) Extended-year adjusted cohort graduation rate.--
                  (A) In general.--The term ``extended-year 
                adjusted cohort graduation rate'' means the 
                ratio where--
                          (i) the denominator consists of the 
                        number of students who form the 
                        original cohort of entering first-time 
                        9th grade students enrolled in the high 
                        school no later than the effective date 
                        for student membership data submitted 
                        annually by State educational agencies 
                        to the National Center for Education 
                        Statistics under section 153 of the 
                        Education Sciences Reform Act, adjusted 
                        by--
                                  (I) adding the students who 
                                joined that cohort, after the 
                                time of the determination of 
                                the original cohort; and
                                  (II) subtracting only those 
                                students who left that cohort, 
                                after the time of the 
                                determination of the original 
                                cohort, as described in 
                                subparagraph (B); and
                          (ii) the numerator consists of the 
                        number of students in the cohort, as 
                        adjusted under clause (i), who earned a 
                        regular high school diploma before, 
                        during, or at the conclusion of--
                                  (I) one or more additional 
                                years beyond the fourth year of 
                                high school; or
                                  (II) a summer session 
                                immediately following the 
                                additional year of high school.
                  (B) Cohort removal.--To remove a student from 
                a cohort, a school or local educational agency 
                shall require documentation to confirm that the 
                student has transferred out, emigrated to 
                another country, transferred to a prison or 
                juvenile facility, or is deceased.
                  (C) Transferred out.--
                          (i) In general.--For purposes of this 
                        paragraph, the term ``transferred out'' 
                        means a student who the high school or 
                        local educational agency has confirmed, 
                        according to clause (ii), has 
                        transferred--
                                  (I) to another school from 
                                which the student is expected 
                                to receive a regular high 
                                school diploma; or
                                  (II) to another educational 
                                program from which the student 
                                is expected to receive a 
                                regular high school diploma.
                          (ii) Confirmation requirements.--
                                  (I) Documentation required.--
                                The confirmation of a student's 
                                transfer to another school or 
                                educational program described 
                                in clause (i) requires 
                                documentation from the 
                                receiving school or program 
                                that the student enrolled in 
                                the receiving school or 
                                program.
                                  (II) Lack of confirmation.--A 
                                student who was enrolled, but 
                                for whom there is no 
                                confirmation of the student 
                                having transferred out, shall 
                                remain in the denominator of 
                                the extended-year adjusted 
                                cohort.
                          (iii) Programs not providing 
                        credit.--A student who is retained in 
                        grade or who is enrolled in a GED or 
                        other alternative educational program 
                        that does not issue or provide credit 
                        toward the issuance of a regular high 
                        school diploma shall not be considered 
                        transferred out and shall remain in the 
                        extended-year adjusted cohort.
                  (D) Special rule.--For those high schools 
                that start after grade 9, the original cohort 
                shall be calculated for the earliest high 
                school grade students attend no later than the 
                effective date for student membership data 
                submitted annually by State educational 
                agencies to the National Center for Education 
                Statistics pursuant to section 153 of the 
                Education Sciences Reform Act.
          (21) Family literacy services.--The term ``family 
        literacy services'' means services provided to 
        participants on a voluntary basis that are of 
        sufficient intensity in terms of hours, and of 
        sufficient duration, to make sustainable changes in a 
        family, and that integrate all of the following 
        activities:
                  (A) Interactive literacy activities between 
                parents and their children.
                  (B) Training for parents regarding how to be 
                the primary teacher for their children and full 
                partners in the education of their children.
                  (C) Parent literacy training that leads to 
                economic self-sufficiency.
                  (D) An age-appropriate education to prepare 
                children for success in school and life 
                experiences.
          (22) Four-year adjusted cohort graduation rate.--
                  (A) In general.--The term ``four-year 
                adjusted cohort graduation rate'' means the 
                ratio where--
                          (i) the denominator consists of the 
                        number of students who form the 
                        original cohort of entering first-time 
                        9th grade students enrolled in the high 
                        school no later than the effective date 
                        for student membership data submitted 
                        annually by State educational agencies 
                        to the National Center for Education 
                        Statistics pursuant to section 153 of 
                        the Education Sciences Reform Act, 
                        adjusted by--
                                  (I) adding the students who 
                                joined that cohort, after the 
                                time of the determination of 
                                the original cohort; and
                                  (II) subtracting only those 
                                students who left that cohort, 
                                after the time of the 
                                determination of the original 
                                cohort, as described in 
                                subparagraph (B); and
                          (ii) the numerator consists of the 
                        number of students in the cohort, as 
                        adjusted under clause (i), who earned a 
                        regular high school diploma before, 
                        during, or at the conclusion of--
                                  (I) the fourth year of high 
                                school; or
                                  (II) a summer session 
                                immediately following the 
                                fourth year of high school.
                  (B) Cohort removal.--To remove a student from 
                a cohort, a school or local educational agency 
                shall require documentation to confirm that the 
                student has transferred out, emigrated to 
                another country, transferred to a prison or 
                juvenile facility, or is deceased.
                  (C) Transferred out.--
                          (i) In general.--For purposes of this 
                        paragraph, the term ``transferred out'' 
                        means a student who the high school or 
                        local educational agency has confirmed, 
                        according to clause (ii), has 
                        transferred--
                                  (I) to another school from 
                                which the student is expected 
                                to receive a regular high 
                                school diploma; or
                                  (II) to another educational 
                                program from which the student 
                                is expected to receive a 
                                regular high school diploma.
                          (ii) Confirmation requirements.--
                                  (I) Documentation required.--
                                The confirmation of a student's 
                                transfer to another school or 
                                educational program described 
                                in clause (i) requires 
                                documentation from the 
                                receiving school or program 
                                that the student enrolled in 
                                the receiving school or 
                                program.
                                  (II) Lack of confirmation.--A 
                                student who was enrolled, but 
                                for whom there is no 
                                confirmation of the student 
                                having transferred out, shall 
                                remain in the adjusted cohort.
                          (iii) Programs not providing 
                        credit.--A student who is retained in 
                        grade or who is enrolled in a GED or 
                        other alternative educational program 
                        that does not issue or provide credit 
                        toward the issuance of a regular high 
                        school diploma shall not be considered 
                        transferred out and shall remain in the 
                        adjusted cohort.
                  (D) Special rule.--For those high schools 
                that start after grade 9, the original cohort 
                shall be calculated for the earliest high 
                school grade students attend no later than the 
                effective date for student membership data 
                submitted annually by State educational 
                agencies to the National Center for Education 
                Statistics pursuant to section 153 of the 
                Education Sciences Reform Act.
          (23) Free public education.--The term ``free public 
        education'' means education that is provided--
                  (A) at public expense, under public 
                supervision and direction, and without tuition 
                charge; and
                  (B) as elementary school or secondary school 
                education as determined under applicable State 
                law, except that the term does not include any 
                education provided beyond grade 12.
          (24) Gifted and talented.--The term ``gifted and 
        talented'', when used with respect to students, 
        children, or youth, means students, children, or youth 
        who give evidence of high achievement capability in 
        areas such as intellectual, creative, artistic, or 
        leadership capacity, or in specific academic fields, 
        and who need services or activities not ordinarily 
        provided by the school in order to fully develop those 
        capabilities.
          (25) High-quality academic tutoring.--The term `high-
        quality academic tutoring' means supplemental academic 
        services that--
                  (A) are in addition to instruction provided 
                during the school day;
                  (B) are provided by a non-governmental entity 
                or local educational agency that--
                          (i) is included on a State 
                        educational agency approved provider 
                        list after demonstrating to the State 
                        educational agency that its program 
                        consistently improves the academic 
                        achievement of students; and
                          (ii) agrees to provide parents of 
                        children receiving high-quality 
                        academic tutoring, the appropriate 
                        local educational agency, and school 
                        with information on participating 
                        students increases in academic 
                        achievement, in a format, and to the 
                        extent practicable, a language that 
                        such parent can understand, and in a 
                        manner that protects the privacy of 
                        individuals consistent with section 444 
                        of the General Education Provisions Act 
                        (20 U.S.C. 1232g);
                  (C) are selected by the parents of students 
                who are identified by the local educational 
                agency as being eligible for such services from 
                among providers on the approved provider list 
                described in subparagraph (B)(i);
                  (D) meet all applicable Federal, State, and 
                local health, safety, and civil rights laws; 
                and
                  (E) ensure that all instruction and content 
                are secular, neutral, and non-ideological.
          (26) High school.--The term ``high school'' means a 
        secondary school that--
                  (A) grants a diploma, as defined by the 
                State; and
                  (B) includes, at least, grade 12.
          (27) Institution of higher education.--The term 
        ``institution of higher education'' has the meaning 
        given that term in section 101(a) of the Higher 
        Education Act of 1965.
          (28) Local educational agency.--
                  (A) In general.--The term ``local educational 
                agency'' means a public board of education or 
                other public authority legally constituted 
                within a State for either administrative 
                control or direction of, or to perform a 
                service function for, public elementary schools 
                or secondary schools in a city, county, 
                township, school district, or other political 
                subdivision of a State, or of or for a 
                combination of school districts or counties 
                that is recognized in a State as an 
                administrative agency for its public elementary 
                schools or secondary schools.
                  (B) Administrative control and direction.--
                The term includes any other public institution 
                or agency having administrative control and 
                direction of a public elementary school or 
                secondary school.
                  (C) BIE schools.--The term includes an 
                elementary school or secondary school funded by 
                the Bureau of Indian Education but only to the 
                extent that including the school makes the 
                school eligible for programs for which specific 
                eligibility is not provided to the school in 
                another provision of law and the school does 
                not have a student population that is smaller 
                than the student population of the local 
                educational agency receiving assistance under 
                this Act with the smallest student population, 
                except that the school shall not be subject to 
                the jurisdiction of any State educational 
                agency other than the Bureau of Indian 
                Education.
                  (D) Educational service agencies.--The term 
                includes educational service agencies and 
                consortia of those agencies.
                  (E) State educational agency.--The term 
                includes the State educational agency in a 
                State in which the State educational agency is 
                the sole educational agency for all public 
                schools.
          (29) Native american and native american language.--
        The terms ``Native American'' and ``Native American 
        language'' have the same meaning given those terms in 
        section 103 of the Native American Languages Act of 
        1990.
          (30) Other staff.--The term ``other staff'' means 
        specialized instructional support personnel, 
        librarians, career guidance and counseling personnel, 
        education aides, and other instructional and 
        administrative personnel.
          (31) Outlying area.--The term ``outlying area''--
                  (A) means American Samoa, the Commonwealth of 
                the Northern Mariana Islands, Guam, and the 
                United States Virgin Islands;
                  (B) means the Republic of Palau, to the 
                extent permitted under section 105(f)(1)(B)(ix) 
                of the Compact of Free Association Amendments 
                Act of 2003 (Public Law 99-658; 117 Stat. 2751) 
                and until an agreement for the extension of 
                United States education assistance under the 
                Compact of Free Association becomes effective 
                for the Republic of Palau; and
                  (C) for the purpose of any discretionary 
                grant program under this Act, includes the 
                Republic of the Marshall Islands and the 
                Federated States of Micronesia, to the extent 
                permitted under section 105(f)(1)(B)(viii) of 
                the Compact of Free Association Amendments Act 
                of 2003 (Public Law 108-188; 117 Stat. 2751).
          (32) Parent.--The term ``parent'' includes a legal 
        guardian or other person standing in loco parentis 
        (such as a grandparent, stepparent, or foster parent 
        with whom the child lives, or a person who is legally 
        responsible for the child's welfare).
          (33) Parental involvement.--The term ``parental 
        involvement'' means the participation of parents in 
        regular, two-way, and meaningful communication 
        involving student academic learning and other school 
        activities, including ensuring--
                  (A) that parents play an integral role in 
                assisting in their child's learning;
                  (B) that parents are encouraged to be 
                actively involved in their child's education at 
                school;
                  (C) that parents are full partners in their 
                child's education and are included, as 
                appropriate, in decisionmaking and on advisory 
                committees to assist in the education of their 
                child; and
                  (D) the carrying out of other activities, 
                such as those described in section 1118.
          (34) Poverty line.--The term ``poverty line'' means 
        the poverty line (as defined by the Office of 
        Management and Budget and revised annually in 
        accordance with section 673(2) of the Community 
        Services Block Grant Act) applicable to a family of the 
        size involved.
          (35) Professional development.--The term 
        ``professional development''--
                  (A) includes evidence-based, job-embedded, 
                continuous activities that--
                          (i) improve and increase teachers' 
                        knowledge of the academic subjects the 
                        teachers teach, and enable teachers to 
                        become effective educators;
                          (ii) are an integral part of broad 
                        schoolwide and districtwide educational 
                        improvement plans;
                          (iii) give teachers, school leaders, 
                        other staff, and administrators the 
                        knowledge and skills to provide 
                        students with the opportunity to meet 
                        State academic standards;
                          (iv) improve classroom management 
                        skills;
                          (v)(I) have a positive and lasting 
                        impact on classroom instruction and the 
                        teacher's performance in the classroom; 
                        and
                          (II) are not 1-day or short-term 
                        workshops or conferences;
                          (vi) support the recruiting, hiring, 
                        and training of effective teachers, 
                        including teachers who became certified 
                        or licensed through State and local 
                        alternative routes to certification;
                          (vii) advance teacher understanding 
                        of effective instructional strategies 
                        that are strategies for improving 
                        student academic achievement or 
                        substantially increasing the knowledge 
                        and teaching skills of teachers, 
                        including through addressing the social 
                        and emotional development needs of 
                        students;
                          (viii) are aligned with and directly 
                        related to--
                                  (I) State academic standards 
                                and assessments; and
                                  (II) the curricula and 
                                programs tied to the standards 
                                described in subclause (I);
                          (ix) are developed with extensive 
                        participation of teachers, school 
                        leaders, parents, and administrators of 
                        schools to be served under this Act;
                          (x) are designed to give teachers of 
                        English learners and other teachers and 
                        instructional staff, the knowledge and 
                        skills to provide instruction and 
                        appropriate language and academic 
                        support services to those children, 
                        including the appropriate use of 
                        curricula and assessments;
                          (xi) to the extent appropriate, 
                        provide training for teachers, other 
                        staff, and school leaders in the use of 
                        technology so that technology and 
                        technology applications are effectively 
                        used to improve teaching and learning 
                        in the curricula and core academic 
                        subjects in which the students receive 
                        instruction;
                          (xii) as a whole, are regularly 
                        evaluated for their impact on increased 
                        teacher effectiveness and improved 
                        student academic achievement, with the 
                        findings of the evaluations used to 
                        improve the quality of the professional 
                        development;
                          (xiii) provide instruction in methods 
                        of teaching children with special 
                        needs;
                          (xiv) include instruction in the use 
                        of data and assessments to inform and 
                        instruct classroom practice; and
                          (xv) include instruction in ways that 
                        teachers, school leaders, specialized 
                        instructional support personnel, other 
                        staff, and school administrators may 
                        work more effectively with parents; and
                  (B) may include evidence-based, job-embedded, 
                continuous activities that--
                          (i) involve the forming of 
                        partnerships with institutions of 
                        higher education to establish school-
                        based teacher training programs that 
                        provide prospective teachers and new 
                        teachers with an opportunity to work 
                        under the guidance of experienced 
                        teachers and college faculty;
                          (ii) create programs to enable 
                        paraprofessionals (assisting teachers 
                        employed by a local educational agency 
                        receiving assistance under subpart 1 of 
                        part A of title I) to obtain the 
                        education necessary for those 
                        paraprofessionals to become certified 
                        and licensed teachers; and
                          (iii) provide follow-up training to 
                        individuals who have participated in 
                        activities described in subparagraph 
                        (A) or another clause of this 
                        subparagraph that are designed to 
                        ensure that the knowledge and skills 
                        learned by the teachers are implemented 
                        in the classroom.
          (36) Regular high school diploma.--
                  (A) In general.--The term ``regular high 
                school diploma'' means the standard high school 
                diploma awarded to the preponderance of 
                students in the State that is fully aligned 
                with State standards, or a higher diploma. Such 
                term shall not include a GED or other 
                recognized equivalent of a diploma, a 
                certificate of attendance, or any lesser 
                diploma award.
                  (B) Exception for students with significant 
                cognitive disabilities.--For a student who is 
                assessed using an alternate assessment aligned 
                to alternate academic standards under section 
                1111(b)(1)(D), receipt of a regular high school 
                diploma as defined under subparagraph (A) or a 
                State-defined alternate diploma obtained within 
                the time period for which the State ensures the 
                availability of a free appropriate public 
                education and in accordance with section 
                612(a)(1) of the Individuals with Disabilities 
                Education Act shall be counted as graduating 
                with a regular high school diploma for the 
                purposes of this Act.
          (37) School leader.--The term ``school leader'' means 
        a principal, assistant principal, or other individual 
        who is--
                  (A) an employee or officer of a school, local 
                educational agency, or other entity operating 
                the school; and
                  (B) responsible for--
                          (i) the daily instructional 
                        leadership and managerial operations of 
                        the school; and
                          (ii) creating the optimum conditions 
                        for student learning.
          (38) Secondary school.--The term ``secondary school'' 
        means a nonprofit institutional day or residential 
        school, including a public secondary charter school, 
        that provides secondary education, as determined under 
        State law, except that the term does not include any 
        education beyond grade 12.
          (39) Secretary.--The term ``Secretary'' means the 
        Secretary of Education.
          (40) Specialized instructional support personnel; 
        specialized instructional support services.--
                  (A) Specialized instructional support 
                personnel.--The term ``specialized 
                instructional support personnel'' means school 
                counselors, school social workers, school 
                psychologists, and other qualified professional 
                personnel involved in providing assessment, 
                diagnosis, counseling, educational, 
                therapeutic, and other necessary services 
                (including related services as that term is 
                defined in section 602 of the Individuals with 
                Disabilities Education Act) as part of a 
                comprehensive program to meet student needs.
                  (B) Specialized instructional support 
                services.--The term ``specialized instructional 
                support services'' means the services provided 
                by specialized instructional support personnel.
          (41) State.--The term ``State'' means each of the 50 
        States, the District of Columbia, the Commonwealth of 
        Puerto Rico, and each of the outlying areas.
          (42) State educational agency.--The term ``State 
        educational agency'' means the agency primarily 
        responsible for the State supervision of public 
        elementary schools and secondary schools.
          (43) Technology.--The term ``technology'' means 
        modern information, computer and communication 
        technology products, services, or tools, including, but 
        not limited to, the Internet and other communications 
        networks, computer devices and other computer and 
        communications hardware, software applications, data 
        systems, and other electronic content and data storage.

SEC. 6102. APPLICABILITY OF TITLE.

  Parts B, C, D, and E of this title do not apply to title IV 
of this Act.

SEC. 6103. APPLICABILITY TO BUREAU OF INDIAN EDUCATION OPERATED 
                    SCHOOLS.

  For the purpose of any competitive program under this Act--
          (1) a consortium of schools operated by the Bureau of 
        Indian Education;
          (2) a school operated under a contract or grant with 
        the Bureau of Indian Education in consortium with 
        another contract or grant school or a tribal or 
        community organization; or
          (3) a Bureau of Indian Education school in consortium 
        with an institution of higher education, a contract or 
        grant school, or a tribal or community organization,
shall be given the same consideration as a local educational 
agency.

    PART B--FLEXIBILITY IN THE USE OF ADMINISTRATIVE AND OTHER FUNDS

SEC. 6201. CONSOLIDATION OF STATE ADMINISTRATIVE FUNDS FOR ELEMENTARY 
                    AND SECONDARY EDUCATION PROGRAMS.

  (a) Consolidation of Administrative Funds.--
          (1) In general.--A State educational agency may 
        consolidate the amounts specifically made available to 
        it for State administration under one or more of the 
        programs under paragraph (2).
          (2) Applicability.--This section applies to any 
        program under this Act under which funds are authorized 
        to be used for administration, and such other programs 
        as the Secretary may designate.
  (b) Use of Funds.--
          (1) In general.--A State educational agency shall use 
        the amount available under this section for the 
        administration of the programs included in the 
        consolidation under subsection (a).
          (2) Additional uses.--A State educational agency may 
        also use funds available under this section for 
        administrative activities designed to enhance the 
        effective and coordinated use of funds under programs 
        included in the consolidation under subsection (a), 
        such as--
                  (A) the coordination of those programs with 
                other Federal and non-Federal programs;
                  (B) the establishment and operation of peer-
                review mechanisms under this Act;
                  (C) the administration of this title;
                  (D) the dissemination of information 
                regarding model programs and practices;
                  (E) technical assistance under any program 
                under this Act;
                  (F) State-level activities designed to carry 
                out this title;
                  (G) training personnel engaged in audit and 
                other monitoring activities; and
                  (H) implementation of the Cooperative Audit 
                Resolution and Oversight Initiative of the 
                Department.
  (c) Records.--A State educational agency that consolidates 
administrative funds under this section shall not be required 
to keep separate records, by individual program, to account for 
costs relating to the administration of programs included in 
the consolidation under subsection (a).
  (d) Review.--To determine the effectiveness of State 
administration under this section, the Secretary may 
periodically review the performance of State educational 
agencies in using consolidated administrative funds under this 
section and take such steps as the Secretary finds appropriate 
to ensure the effectiveness of that administration.
  (e) Unused Administrative Funds.--If a State educational 
agency does not use all of the funds available to the agency 
under this section for administration, the agency may use those 
funds during the applicable period of availability as funds 
available under one or more programs included in the 
consolidation under subsection (a).
  (f) Consolidation of Funds for Standards and Assessment 
Development.--In order to develop State academic standards and 
assessments, a State educational agency may consolidate the 
amounts described in subsection (a) for those purposes under 
title I.

SEC. 6202. SINGLE LOCAL EDUCATIONAL AGENCY STATES.

  A State educational agency that also serves as a local 
educational agency shall, in its applications or plans under 
this Act, describe how the agency will eliminate duplication in 
conducting administrative functions.

SEC. 6203. CONSOLIDATION OF FUNDS FOR LOCAL ADMINISTRATION.

  (a) General Authority.--In accordance with regulations of the 
Secretary and for any fiscal year, a local educational agency, 
with the approval of its State educational agency, may 
consolidate and use for the administration of one or more 
programs under this Act (or such other programs as the 
Secretary shall designate) not more than the percentage, 
established in each program, of the total available for the 
local educational agency under those programs.
  (b) State Procedures.--A State educational agency shall, in 
collaboration with local educational agencies in the State, 
establish procedures for responding to requests from local 
educational agencies to consolidate administrative funds under 
subsection (a) and for establishing limitations on the amount 
of funds under those programs that may be used for 
administration on a consolidated basis.
  (c) Conditions.--A local educational agency that consolidates 
administrative funds under this section for any fiscal year 
shall not use any other funds under the programs included in 
the consolidation for administration for that fiscal year.
  (d) Uses of Administrative Funds.--A local educational agency 
that consolidates administrative funds under this section may 
use the consolidated funds for the administration of the 
programs and for uses, at the school district and school 
levels, comparable to those described in section 6201(b)(2).
  (e) Records.--A local educational agency that consolidates 
administrative funds under this section shall not be required 
to keep separate records, by individual program, to account for 
costs relating to the administration of the programs included 
in the consolidation.

SEC. 6204. CONSOLIDATED SET-ASIDE FOR DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR FUNDS.

  (a) General Authority.--
          (1) Transfer.--The Secretary shall transfer to the 
        Department of the Interior, as a consolidated amount 
        for covered programs, the Indian education programs 
        under part A of title V, and the education for homeless 
        children and youth program under subtitle B of title 
        VII of the McKinney-Vento Homeless Assistance Act, the 
        amounts allotted to the Department of the Interior 
        under those programs.
          (2) Agreement.--
                  (A) In general.--The Secretary and the 
                Secretary of the Interior shall enter into an 
                agreement, consistent with the requirements of 
                the programs specified in paragraph (1), for 
                the distribution and use of those program funds 
                under terms that the Secretary determines best 
                meet the purposes of those programs.
                  (B) Contents.--The agreement shall--
                          (i) set forth the plans of the 
                        Secretary of the Interior for the use 
                        of the amount transferred and the 
                        achievement measures to assess program 
                        effectiveness; and
                          (ii) be developed in consultation 
                        with Indian tribes.
  (b) Administration.--The Department of the Interior may use 
not more than 1.5 percent of the funds consolidated under this 
section for its costs related to the administration of the 
funds transferred under this section.

 PART C--COORDINATION OF PROGRAMS; CONSOLIDATED STATE AND LOCAL PLANS 
                            AND APPLICATIONS

SEC. 6301. PURPOSES.

  The purposes of this part are--
          (1) to improve teaching and learning by encouraging 
        greater cross-program coordination, planning, and 
        service delivery;
          (2) to provide greater flexibility to State and local 
        authorities through consolidated plans, applications, 
        and reporting; and
          (3) to enhance the integration of programs under this 
        Act with State and local programs.

SEC. 6302. OPTIONAL CONSOLIDATED STATE PLANS OR APPLICATIONS.

  (a) General Authority.--
          (1) Simplification.--In order to simplify application 
        requirements and reduce the burden for State 
        educational agencies under this Act, the Secretary, in 
        accordance with subsection (b), shall establish 
        procedures and criteria under which, after consultation 
        with the Governor, a State educational agency may 
        submit a consolidated State plan or a consolidated 
        State application meeting the requirements of this 
        section for--
                  (A) each of the covered programs in which the 
                State participates; and
                  (B) such other programs as the Secretary may 
                designate.
          (2) Consolidated applications and plans.--After 
        consultation with the Governor, a State educational 
        agency that submits a consolidated State plan or a 
        consolidated State application under this section shall 
        not be required to submit separate State plans or 
        applications under any of the programs to which the 
        consolidated State plan or consolidated State 
        application under this section applies.
  (b) Collaboration.--
          (1) In general.--In establishing criteria and 
        procedures under this section, the Secretary shall 
        collaborate with State educational agencies and, as 
        appropriate, with other State agencies, local 
        educational agencies, public and private agencies, 
        organizations, and institutions, private schools, and 
        parents, students, and teachers.
          (2) Contents.--Through the collaborative process 
        described in paragraph (1), the Secretary shall 
        establish, for each program under this Act to which 
        this section applies, the descriptions, information, 
        assurances, and other material required to be included 
        in a consolidated State plan or consolidated State 
        application.
          (3) Necessary materials.--The Secretary shall require 
        only descriptions, information, assurances (including 
        assurances of compliance with applicable provisions 
        regarding participation by private school children and 
        teachers), and other materials that are absolutely 
        necessary for the consideration of the consolidated 
        State plan or consolidated State application.

SEC. 6303. CONSOLIDATED REPORTING.

  (a) In General.--In order to simplify reporting requirements 
and reduce reporting burdens, the Secretary shall establish 
procedures and criteria under which a State educational agency, 
in consultation with the Governor of the State, may submit a 
consolidated State annual report.
  (b) Contents.--The report shall contain information about the 
programs included in the report, including the performance of 
the State under those programs, and other matters as the 
Secretary determines are necessary, such as monitoring 
activities.
  (c) Replacement.--The report shall replace separate 
individual annual reports for the programs included in the 
consolidated State annual report.

SEC. 6304. GENERAL APPLICABILITY OF STATE EDUCATIONAL AGENCY 
                    ASSURANCES.

  (a) Assurances.--A State educational agency, in consultation 
with the Governor of the State, that submits a consolidated 
State plan or consolidated State application under this Act, 
whether separately or under section 6302, shall have on file 
with the Secretary a single set of assurances, applicable to 
each program for which the plan or application is submitted, 
that provides that--
          (1) each such program will be administered in 
        accordance with all applicable statutes, regulations, 
        program plans, and applications;
          (2)(A) the control of funds provided under each such 
        program and title to property acquired with program 
        funds will be in a public agency, an eligible private 
        agency, institution, or organization, or an Indian 
        tribe, if the law authorizing the program provides for 
        assistance to those entities; and
          (B) the public agency, eligible private agency, 
        institution, or organization, or Indian tribe will 
        administer those funds and property to the extent 
        required by the authorizing law;
          (3) the State will adopt and use proper methods of 
        administering each such program, including--
                  (A) the enforcement of any obligations 
                imposed by law on agencies, institutions, 
                organizations, and other recipients responsible 
                for carrying out each program;
                  (B) the correction of deficiencies in program 
                operations that are identified through audits, 
                monitoring, or evaluation; and
                  (C) the adoption of written procedures for 
                the receipt and resolution of complaints 
                alleging violations of law in the 
                administration of the programs;
          (4) the State will cooperate in carrying out any 
        evaluation of each such program conducted by or for the 
        Secretary or other Federal officials;
          (5) the State will use such fiscal control and fund 
        accounting procedures that will ensure proper 
        disbursement of, and accounting for, Federal funds paid 
        to the State under each such program;
          (6) the State will--
                  (A) make reports to the Secretary as may be 
                necessary to enable the Secretary to perform 
                the Secretary's duties under each such program; 
                and
                  (B) maintain such records, provide such 
                information to the Secretary, and afford such 
                access to the records as the Secretary may find 
                necessary to carry out the Secretary's duties; 
                and
          (7) before the plan or application was submitted to 
        the Secretary, the State afforded a reasonable 
        opportunity for public comment on the plan or 
        application and considered such comment.
  (b) GEPA Provision.--Section 441 of the General Education 
Provisions Act shall not apply to programs under this Act.

SEC. 6305. CONSOLIDATED LOCAL PLANS OR APPLICATIONS.

  (a) General Authority.--
          (1) Consolidated plan.--A local educational agency 
        receiving funds under more than one covered program may 
        submit plans or applications to the State educational 
        agency under those programs on a consolidated basis.
          (2) Availability to governor.--The State educational 
        agency shall make any consolidated local plans and 
        applications available to the Governor.
  (b) Required Consolidated Plans or Applications.--A State 
educational agency that has an approved consolidated State plan 
or application under section 6302 may require local educational 
agencies in the State receiving funds under more than one 
program included in the consolidated State plan or consolidated 
State application to submit consolidated local plans or 
applications under those programs, but may not require those 
agencies to submit separate plans.
  (c) Collaboration.--A State educational agency, in 
consultation with the Governor, shall collaborate with local 
educational agencies in the State in establishing procedures 
for the submission of the consolidated State plans or 
consolidated State applications under this section.
  (d) Necessary Materials.--The State educational agency shall 
require only descriptions, information, assurances, and other 
material that are absolutely necessary for the consideration of 
the local educational agency plan or application.

SEC. 6306. OTHER GENERAL ASSURANCES.

  (a) Assurances.--Any applicant, other than a State 
educational agency that submits a plan or application under 
this Act, shall have on file with the State educational agency 
a single set of assurances, applicable to each program for 
which a plan or application is submitted, that provides that--
          (1) each such program will be administered in 
        accordance with all applicable statutes, regulations, 
        program plans, and applications;
          (2)(A) the control of funds provided under each such 
        program and title to property acquired with program 
        funds will be in a public agency or in an eligible 
        private agency, institution, organization, or Indian 
        tribe, if the law authorizing the program provides for 
        assistance to those entities; and
          (B) the public agency, eligible private agency, 
        institution, or organization, or Indian tribe will 
        administer the funds and property to the extent 
        required by the authorizing statutes;
          (3) the applicant will adopt and use proper methods 
        of administering each such program, including--
                  (A) the enforcement of any obligations 
                imposed by law on agencies, institutions, 
                organizations, and other recipients responsible 
                for carrying out each program; and
                  (B) the correction of deficiencies in program 
                operations that are identified through audits, 
                monitoring, or evaluation;
          (4) the applicant will cooperate in carrying out any 
        evaluation of each such program conducted by or for the 
        State educational agency, the Secretary, or other 
        Federal officials;
          (5) the applicant will use such fiscal control and 
        fund accounting procedures as will ensure proper 
        disbursement of, and accounting for, Federal funds paid 
        to the applicant under each such program;
          (6) the applicant will--
                  (A) submit such reports to the State 
                educational agency (which shall make the 
                reports available to the Governor) and the 
                Secretary as the State educational agency and 
                Secretary may require to enable the State 
                educational agency and the Secretary to perform 
                their duties under each such program; and
                  (B) maintain such records, provide such 
                information, and afford such access to the 
                records as the State educational agency (after 
                consultation with the Governor) or the 
                Secretary may reasonably require to carry out 
                the State educational agency's or the 
                Secretary's duties; and
          (7) before the application was submitted, the 
        applicant afforded a reasonable opportunity for public 
        comment on the application and considered such comment.
  (b) GEPA Provision.--Section 442 of the General Education 
Provisions Act shall not apply to programs under this Act.

                            PART D--WAIVERS

SEC. 6401. WAIVERS OF STATUTORY AND REGULATORY REQUIREMENTS.

  (a) In General.--
          (1) Request for waiver.--A State educational agency, 
        local educational agency, or Indian tribe that receives 
        funds under a program authorized under this Act may 
        submit a request to the Secretary to waive any 
        statutory or regulatory requirement of this Act.
          (2) Receipt of waiver.--Except as provided in 
        subsection (c) and subject to the limits in subsection 
        (b)(5)(A), the Secretary shall waive any statutory or 
        regulatory requirement of this Act for a State 
        educational agency, local educational agency, Indian 
        tribe, or school (through a local educational agency), 
        that submits a waiver request pursuant to this 
        subsection.
  (b) Plan.--
          (1) In general.--A State educational agency, local 
        educational agency, or Indian tribe that desires a 
        waiver under this section shall submit a waiver request 
        to the Secretary, which shall include a plan that--
                  (A) identifies the Federal programs affected 
                by the requested waiver;
                  (B) describes which Federal statutory or 
                regulatory requirements are to be waived;
                  (C) reasonably demonstrates that the waiver 
                will improve instruction for students and 
                advance student academic achievement;
                  (D) describes the methods the State 
                educational agency, local educational agency, 
                or Indian tribe will use to monitor the 
                effectiveness of the implementation of the 
                plan; and
                  (E) describes how schools will continue to 
                provide assistance to the same populations 
                served by programs for which the waiver is 
                requested.
          (2) Additional information.--A waiver request under 
        this section--
                  (A) may provide for waivers of requirements 
                applicable to State educational agencies, local 
                educational agencies, Indian tribes, and 
                schools; and
                  (B) shall be developed and submitted--
                          (i)(I) by local educational agencies 
                        (on behalf of those agencies and 
                        schools) to State educational agencies; 
                        and
                          (II) by State educational agencies 
                        (on their own behalf, or on behalf of, 
                        and based on the requests of, local 
                        educational agencies in the State) to 
                        the Secretary; or
                          (ii) by Indian tribes (on behalf of 
                        schools operated by the tribes) to the 
                        Secretary.
          (3) General requirements.--
                  (A) State educational agencies.--In the case 
                of a waiver request submitted by a State 
                educational agency acting on its own behalf, or 
                on behalf of local educational agencies in the 
                State, the State educational agency shall--
                          (i) provide the public and local 
                        educational agencies in the State with 
                        notice and a reasonable opportunity to 
                        comment and provide input on the 
                        request;
                          (ii) submit the comments and input to 
                        the Secretary, with a description of 
                        how the State addressed the comments 
                        and input; and
                          (iii) provide notice and a reasonable 
                        time to comment to the public and local 
                        educational agencies in the manner in 
                        which the applying agency customarily 
                        provides similar notice and opportunity 
                        to comment to the public.
                  (B) Local educational agencies.--In the case 
                of a waiver request submitted by a local 
                educational agency that receives funds under 
                this Act--
                          (i) the request shall be reviewed by 
                        the State educational agency and be 
                        accompanied by the comments, if any, of 
                        the State educational agency and the 
                        public; and
                          (ii) notice and a reasonable 
                        opportunity to comment regarding the 
                        waiver request shall be provided to the 
                        State educational agency and the public 
                        by the agency requesting the waiver in 
                        the manner in which that agency 
                        customarily provides similar notice and 
                        opportunity to comment to the public.
          (4) Peer review.--
                  (A) Establishment.--The Secretary shall 
                establish a multi-disciplinary peer review 
                team, which shall meet the requirements of 
                section 6543, to review waiver requests under 
                this section.
                  (B) Applicability.--The Secretary may approve 
                a waiver request under this section without 
                conducting a peer review of the request, but 
                shall use the peer review process under this 
                paragraph before disapproving such a request.
                  (C) Standard and nature of review.--Peer 
                reviewers shall conduct a good faith review of 
                waiver requests submitted to them under this 
                section. Peer reviewers shall review such 
                waiver requests--
                          (i) in their totality;
                          (ii) in deference to State and local 
                        judgment; and
                          (iii) with the goal of promoting 
                        State- and local-led innovation.
          (5) Waiver determination, demonstration, and 
        revision.--
                  (A) In general.--The Secretary shall approve 
                a waiver request not more than 60 days after 
                the date on which such request is submitted, 
                unless the Secretary determines and 
                demonstrates that--
                          (i) the waiver request does not meet 
                        the requirements of this section;
                          (ii) the waiver is not permitted 
                        under subsection (c);
                          (iii) the plan that is required under 
                        paragraph (1)(C), and reviewed with 
                        deference to State and local judgment, 
                        provides no reasonable evidence to 
                        determine that a waiver will enhance 
                        student academic achievement; or
                          (iv) the waiver request does not 
                        provide for adequate evaluation to 
                        ensure review and continuous 
                        improvement of the plan.
                  (B) Waiver determination and revision.--If 
                the Secretary determines and demonstrates that 
                the waiver request does not meet the 
                requirements of this section, the Secretary 
                shall--
                          (i) immediately--
                                  (I) notify the State 
                                educational agency, local 
                                educational agency, or Indian 
                                tribe of such determination; 
                                and
                                  (II) at the request of the 
                                State educational agency, local 
                                educational agency, or Indian 
                                tribe, provide detailed reasons 
                                for such determination in 
                                writing;
                          (ii) offer the State educational 
                        agency, local educational agency, or 
                        Indian tribe an opportunity to revise 
                        and resubmit the waiver request not 
                        more than 60 days after the date of 
                        such determination; and
                          (iii) if the Secretary determines 
                        that the resubmission does not meet the 
                        requirements of this section, at the 
                        request of the State educational 
                        agency, local educational agency, or 
                        Indian tribe, conduct a public hearing 
                        not more than 30 days after the date of 
                        such resubmission.
                  (C) Waiver disapproval.--The Secretary may 
                disapprove a waiver request if--
                          (i) the State educational agency, 
                        local educational agency, or Indian 
                        tribe has been notified and offered an 
                        opportunity to revise and resubmit the 
                        waiver request, as described under 
                        clauses (i) and (ii) of subparagraph 
                        (B); and
                          (ii) the State educational agency, 
                        local educational agency, or Indian 
                        tribe--
                                  (I) does not revise and 
                                resubmit the waiver request; or
                                  (II) revises and resubmits 
                                the waiver request, and the 
                                Secretary determines that such 
                                waiver request does not meet 
                                the requirements of this 
                                section after a hearing 
                                conducted under subparagraph 
                                (B)(iii), if requested.
                  (D) External conditions.--The Secretary shall 
                not, directly or indirectly, require or impose 
                new or additional requirements in exchange for 
                receipt of a waiver if such requirements are 
                not specified in this Act.
  (c) Restrictions.--The Secretary shall not waive under this 
section any statutory or regulatory requirements relating to--
          (1) the allocation or distribution of funds to 
        States, local educational agencies, Indian tribes, or 
        other recipients of funds under this Act;
          (2) comparability of services;
          (3) use of Federal funds to supplement, not supplant, 
        non-Federal funds;
          (4) equitable participation of private school 
        students and teachers;
          (5) parental participation and involvement;
          (6) applicable civil rights requirements;
          (7) the prohibitions--
                  (A) in subpart 2 of part E;
                  (B) regarding use of funds for religious 
                worship or instruction in section 6505; and
                  (C) regarding activities in section 6524; or
          (8) the selection of a school attendance area or 
        school under subsections (a) and (b) of section 1113, 
        except that the Secretary may grant a waiver to allow a 
        school attendance area or school to participate in 
        activities under subpart 1 of part A of title I if the 
        percentage of children from low-income families in the 
        school attendance area or who attend the school is not 
        more than 10 percentage points below the lowest 
        percentage of those children for any school attendance 
        area or school of the local educational agency that 
        meets the requirements of subsections (a) and (b) of 
        section 1113.
  (d) Duration and Extension of Waiver; Limitations.--
          (1) In general.--Except as provided in paragraph (2), 
        a waiver approved by the Secretary under this section 
        may be for a period not to exceed 3 years.
          (2) Extension.--The Secretary may extend the period 
        described in paragraph (1) if the State demonstrates 
        that--
                  (A) the waiver has been effective in enabling 
                the State or affected recipient to carry out 
                the activities for which the waiver was 
                requested and the waiver has contributed to 
                improved student achievement; and
                  (B) the extension is in the public interest.
          (3) Specific limitations.--The Secretary shall not 
        require a State educational agency, local educational 
        agency, or Indian tribe, as a condition of approval of 
        a waiver request, to--
                  (A) include in, or delete from, such request, 
                specific academic standards, such as the Common 
                Core State Standards developed under the Common 
                Core State Standards Initiative or any other 
                standards common to a significant number of 
                States;
                  (B) use specific academic assessment 
                instruments or items, including assessments 
                aligned to the standards described in 
                subparagraph (A); or
                  (C) include in, or delete from, such waiver 
                request any criterion that specifies, defines, 
                describes, or prescribes the standards or 
                measures that a State or local educational 
                agency or Indian tribe uses to establish, 
                implement, or improve--
                          (i) State academic standards;
                          (ii) academic assessments;
                          (iii) State accountability systems; 
                        or
                          (iv) teacher and school leader 
                        evaluation systems.
  (e) Reports.--
          (1) Waiver reports.--A State educational agency, 
        local educational agency, or Indian tribe that receives 
        a waiver under this section shall, at the end of the 
        second year for which a waiver is received under this 
        section and each subsequent year, submit a report to 
        the Secretary that--
                  (A) describes the uses of the waiver by the 
                agency or by schools;
                  (B) describes how schools continued to 
                provide assistance to the same populations 
                served by the programs for which waivers were 
                granted; and
                  (C) evaluates the progress of the agency and 
                schools, or Indian tribe, in improving the 
                quality of instruction or the academic 
                achievement of students.
          (2) Report to congress.--The Secretary shall annually 
        submit to the Committee on Education and the Workforce 
        of the House of Representatives and the Committee on 
        Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions of the Senate a 
        report--
                  (A) summarizing the uses of waivers by State 
                educational agencies, local educational 
                agencies, Indian tribes, and schools; and
                  (B) describing the status of the waivers in 
                improving academic achievement.
  (f) Termination of Waivers.--The Secretary shall terminate a 
waiver under this section if the Secretary determines, after 
notice and an opportunity for a hearing, that the performance 
of the State or other recipient affected by the waiver has been 
inadequate to justify a continuation of the waiver and the 
recipient of the waiver has failed to make revisions needed to 
carry out the purpose of the waiver, or if the waiver is no 
longer necessary to achieve its original purpose.
  (g) Publication.--A notice of the Secretary's decision to 
grant each waiver under subsection (a) shall be published in 
the Federal Register and the Secretary shall provide for the 
dissemination of the notice to State educational agencies, 
interested parties, including educators, parents, students, 
advocacy and civil rights organizations, and the public.

                       PART E--UNIFORM PROVISIONS

                       Subpart 1--Private Schools

SEC. 6501. PARTICIPATION BY PRIVATE SCHOOL CHILDREN AND TEACHERS.

  (a) Private School Participation.--
          (1) In general.--Except as otherwise provided in this 
        Act, to the extent consistent with the number of 
        eligible children in areas served by a State 
        educational agency, local educational agency, 
        educational service agency, consortium of those 
        agencies, or another entity receiving financial 
        assistance under a program specified in subsection (b), 
        who are enrolled in private elementary schools and 
        secondary schools in areas served by such agency, 
        consortium, or entity, the agency, consortium, or 
        entity shall, after timely and meaningful consultation 
        with appropriate private school officials or their 
        representatives, provide to those children and their 
        teachers or other educational personnel, on an 
        equitable basis, special educational services or other 
        benefits that address their needs under the program.
          (2) Secular, neutral, and nonideological services or 
        benefits.--Educational services or other benefits, 
        including materials and equipment, provided under this 
        section, shall be secular, neutral, and nonideological.
          (3) Special rule.--
                  (A) In general.--Educational services and 
                other benefits provided under this section for 
                private school children, teachers, and other 
                educational personnel shall be equitable in 
                comparison to services and other benefits for 
                public school children, teachers, and other 
                educational personnel participating in the 
                program and shall be provided in a timely 
                manner.
                  (B) Ombudsman.--To help ensure equitable 
                services are provided to private school 
                children, teachers, and other educational 
                personnel under this section, the State 
                educational agency involved shall designate the 
                ombudsman designated by the agency under 
                section 1120(a)(3)(B) to monitor and enforce 
                requirements of this section.
          (4) Expenditures.--
                  (A) In general.--Expenditures for educational 
                services and other benefits to eligible private 
                school children, teachers, and other service 
                personnel shall be equal to the expenditures 
                for participating public school children, 
                taking into account the number and educational 
                needs, of the children to be served.
                  (B) Obligation of funds.--Funds allocated to 
                a local educational agency for educational 
                services and other benefits to eligible private 
                school children shall--
                          (i) be obligated in the fiscal year 
                        for which the funds are received by the 
                        agency; and
                          (ii) with respect to any such funds 
                        that cannot be so obligated, be used to 
                        serve such children in the following 
                        fiscal year.
                  (C) Notice of allocation.--Each State 
                educational agency shall--
                          (i) determine, in a timely manner, 
                        the proportion of funds to be allocated 
                        to each local educational agency in the 
                        State for educational services and 
                        other benefits under this subpart to 
                        eligible private school children; and
                          (ii) provide notice, simultaneously, 
                        to each such local educational agency 
                        and the appropriate private school 
                        officials or their representatives in 
                        the State of such allocation of funds.
          (5) Provision of services.--An agency, consortium, or 
        entity described in subsection (a)(1) of this section 
        may provide those services directly or through 
        contracts with public and private agencies, 
        organizations, and institutions.
  (b) Applicability.--
          (1) In general.--This section applies to programs 
        under--
                  (A) subpart 2 of part A of title I;
                  (B) subpart 4 of part A of title I;
                  (C) part A of title II;
                  (D) part B of title II; and
                  (E) part B of title III.
          (2) Definition.--For the purpose of this section, the 
        term ``eligible children'' means children eligible for 
        services under a program described in paragraph (1).
  (c) Consultation.--
          (1) In general.--To ensure timely and meaningful 
        consultation, a State educational agency, local 
        educational agency, educational service agency, 
        consortium of those agencies, or entity shall consult, 
        in order to reach an agreement, with appropriate 
        private school officials or their representatives 
        during the design and development of the programs under 
        this Act, on issues such as--
                  (A) how the children's needs will be 
                identified;
                  (B) what services will be offered;
                  (C) how, where, and by whom the services will 
                be provided;
                  (D) how the services will be assessed and how 
                the results of the assessment will be used to 
                improve those services;
                  (E) the size and scope of the equitable 
                services to be provided to the eligible private 
                school children, teachers, and other 
                educational personnel, the proportion of funds 
                that are allocated for such services, how that 
                proportion of funds is determined, and an 
                itemization of the costs of the services to be 
                provided;
                  (F) how and when the agency, consortium, or 
                entity will make decisions about the delivery 
                of services, including a thorough consideration 
                and analysis of the views of the private school 
                officials or their representatives on the 
                provision of services through potential third-
                party providers or contractors;
                  (G) how, if the agency disagrees with the 
                views of the private school officials or their 
                representatives on the provision of services 
                through a contract, the local educational 
                agency will provide in writing to such private 
                school officials or their representatives an 
                analysis of the reasons why the local 
                educational agency has chosen not to use a 
                contractor;
                  (H) whether the agency will provide services 
                under this section directly or through 
                contracts with public or private agencies, 
                organizations, or institutions; and
                  (I) whether to provide equitable services to 
                eligible private school children--
                          (i) by creating a pool or pools of 
                        funds with all of the funds allocated 
                        under subsection (a)(4) based on all 
                        the children from low-income families 
                        who attend private schools in a 
                        participating school attendance area 
                        from which the local educational agency 
                        will provide such services to all such 
                        children; or
                          (ii) by providing such services to 
                        eligible children in each private 
                        school in the local educational 
                        agency's participating school 
                        attendance area with the proportion of 
                        funds allocated under subsection (a)(4) 
                        based on the number of children from 
                        low-income families who attend such 
                        school.
          (2) Disagreement.--If the agency, consortium, or 
        entity disagrees with the views of the private school 
        officials or their representatives with respect to an 
        issue described in paragraph (1), the agency, 
        consortium, or entity shall provide to the private 
        school officials or their representatives a written 
        explanation of the reasons why the local educational 
        agency has chosen not to adopt the course of action 
        requested by such officials or their representatives.
          (3) Timing.--The consultation required by paragraph 
        (1) shall occur before the agency, consortium, or 
        entity makes any decision that affects the 
        opportunities of eligible private school children, 
        teachers, and other educational personnel to 
        participate in programs under this Act, and shall 
        continue throughout the implementation and assessment 
        of activities under this section.
          (4) Discussion required.--The consultation required 
        by paragraph (1) shall include a discussion of service 
        delivery mechanisms that the agency, consortium, or 
        entity could use to provide equitable services to 
        eligible private school children, teachers, 
        administrators, and other staff.
          (5) Documentation.--Each local educational agency 
        shall maintain in the agency's records and provide to 
        the State educational agency involved a written 
        affirmation signed by officials or their 
        representatives of each participating private school 
        that the meaningful consultation required by this 
        section has occurred. The written affirmation shall 
        provide the option for private school officials or 
        their representatives to indicate that timely and 
        meaningful consultation has not occurred or that the 
        program design is not equitable with respect to 
        eligible private school children. If such officials or 
        their representatives do not provide such affirmation 
        within a reasonable period of time, the local 
        educational agency shall forward the documentation that 
        such consultation has, or attempts at such consultation 
        have, taken place to the State educational agency.
          (6) Compliance.--
                  (A) In general.--If the consultation required 
                under this section is with a local educational 
                agency or educational service agency, a private 
                school official or representative shall have 
                the right to file a complaint with the State 
                educational agency that the consultation 
                required under this section was not meaningful 
                and timely, did not give due consideration to 
                the views of the private school official or 
                representative, or did not treat the private 
                school or its students equitably as required by 
                this section.
                  (B) Procedure.--If the private school 
                official or representative wishes to file a 
                complaint, the private school official or 
                representative shall provide the basis of the 
                noncompliance with this section and all parties 
                shall provide the appropriate documentation to 
                the appropriate officials or representatives.
                  (C) Services.--A State educational agency 
                shall provide services under this section 
                directly or through contracts with public and 
                private agencies, organizations, and 
                institutions, if--
                          (i) the appropriate private school 
                        officials or their representatives 
                        have--
                                  (I) requested that the State 
                                educational agency provide such 
                                services directly; and
                                  (II) demonstrated that the 
                                local educational agency or 
                                Education Service Agency 
                                involved has not met the 
                                requirements of this section; 
                                or
                          (ii) in a case in which--
                                  (I) a local educational 
                                agency has more than 10,000 
                                children from low-income 
                                families who attend private 
                                elementary schools or secondary 
                                schools in such agency's school 
                                attendance areas, as defined in 
                                section 1113(a)(2)(A), that are 
                                not being served by the 
                                agency's program under this 
                                section; or
                                  (II) 90 percent of the 
                                eligible private school 
                                students in a school attendance 
                                area, as defined in section 
                                1113(a)(2)(A), are not being 
                                served by the agency's program 
                                under this section.
  (d) Public Control of Funds.--
          (1) In general.--The control of funds used to provide 
        services under this section, and title to materials, 
        equipment, and property purchased with those funds, 
        shall be in a public agency for the uses and purposes 
        provided in this Act, and a public agency shall 
        administer the funds and property.
          (2) Provision of services.--
                  (A) In general.--The provision of services 
                under this section shall be provided--
                          (i) by employees of a public agency; 
                        or
                          (ii) through contract by the public 
                        agency with an individual, association, 
                        agency, organization, or other entity.
                  (B) Independence; public agency.--In the 
                provision of those services, the employee, 
                person, association, agency, organization, or 
                other entity shall be independent of the 
                private school and of any religious 
                organization, and the employment or contract 
                shall be under the control and supervision of 
                the public agency.
                  (C) Commingling of funds prohibited.--Funds 
                used to provide services under this section 
                shall not be commingled with non-Federal funds.

SEC. 6502. STANDARDS FOR BY-PASS.

  (a) In General.--If, by reason of any provision of law, a 
State educational agency, local educational agency, educational 
service agency, consortium of those agencies, or other entity 
is prohibited from providing for the participation in programs 
of children enrolled in, or teachers or other educational 
personnel from, private elementary schools and secondary 
schools, on an equitable basis, or if the Secretary determines 
that the agency, consortium, or entity has substantially failed 
or is unwilling to provide for that participation, as required 
by section 6501, the Secretary shall--
          (1) waive the requirements of that section for the 
        agency, consortium, or entity; and
          (2) arrange for the provision of equitable services 
        to those children, teachers, or other educational 
        personnel through arrangements that shall be subject to 
        the requirements of this section and of sections 6501, 
        6503, and 6504.
  (b) Determination.--In making the determination under 
subsection (a), the Secretary shall consider one or more 
factors, including the quality, size, scope, and location of 
the program, and the opportunity of private school children, 
teachers, and other educational personnel to participate in the 
program.

SEC. 6503. COMPLAINT PROCESS FOR PARTICIPATION OF PRIVATE SCHOOL 
                    CHILDREN.

  (a) Procedures for Complaints.--The Secretary shall develop 
and implement written procedures for receiving, investigating, 
and resolving complaints from parents, teachers, or other 
individuals and organizations concerning violations of section 
6501 by a State educational agency, local educational agency, 
educational service agency, consortium of those agencies, or 
entity. The individual or organization shall submit the 
complaint to the State educational agency for a written 
resolution by the State educational agency within 45 days.
  (b) Appeals to Secretary.--The resolution may be appealed by 
an interested party to the Secretary not later than 30 days 
after the State educational agency resolves the complaint or 
fails to resolve the complaint within the 45-day time limit. 
The appeal shall be accompanied by a copy of the State 
educational agency's resolution, and, if there is one, a 
complete statement of the reasons supporting the appeal. The 
Secretary shall investigate and resolve the appeal not later 
than 90 days after receipt of the appeal.

SEC. [9504]  6504. BY-PASS DETERMINATION PROCESS.

  (a) Review.--
          (1) In general.--
                  (A) Written objections.--The Secretary shall 
                not take any final action under section [9502] 
                6502 until the State educational agency, local 
                educational agency, educational service agency, 
                consortium of those agencies, or entity 
                affected by the action has had an opportunity, 
                for not less than 45 days after receiving 
                written notice thereof, to submit written 
                objections and to appear before the Secretary 
                to show cause why that action should not be 
                taken.
                  (B) Prior to reduction.--Pending final 
                resolution of any investigation or complaint 
                that could result in a determination under this 
                section, the Secretary may withhold from the 
                allocation of the affected State educational 
                agency or local educational agency the amount 
                estimated by the Secretary to be necessary to 
                pay the cost of those services.
          (2) Petition for review.--
                  (A) Petition.--If the affected agency, 
                consortium, or entity is dissatisfied with the 
                Secretary's final action after a proceeding 
                under paragraph (1), the agency, consortium, or 
                entity may, within 60 days after notice of that 
                action, file with the United States court of 
                appeals for the circuit in which the State is 
                located a petition for review of that action.
                  (B) Transmission.--A copy of the petition 
                shall be forthwith transmitted by the clerk of 
                the court to the Secretary.
                  (C) Filing.--The Secretary, upon receipt of 
                the copy of the petition, shall file in the 
                court the record of the proceedings on which 
                the Secretary based the action, as provided in 
                section 2112 of title 28, United States Code.
          (3) Findings of fact.--
                  (A) In general.--The findings of fact by the 
                Secretary, if supported by substantial 
                evidence, shall be conclusive, but the court, 
                for good cause shown, may remand the case to 
                the Secretary to take further evidence and the 
                Secretary may then make new or modified 
                findings of fact and may modify the Secretary's 
                previous action, and shall file in the court 
                the record of the further proceedings.
                  (B) New or modified findings.--Any new or 
                modified findings of fact shall likewise be 
                conclusive if supported by substantial 
                evidence.
          (4) Jurisdiction.--
                  (A) In general.--Upon the filing of a 
                petition, the court shall have jurisdiction to 
                affirm the action of the Secretary or to set 
                the action aside, in whole or in part.
                  (B) Judgment.--The judgment of the court 
                shall be subject to review by the Supreme Court 
                of the United States upon certiorari or 
                certification as provided in section 1254 of 
                title 28, United States Code.
  (b) Determination.--Any determination by the Secretary under 
this section shall continue in effect until the Secretary 
determines, in consultation with that agency, consortium, or 
entity and representatives of the affected private school 
children, teachers, or other educational personnel, that there 
will no longer be any failure or inability on the part of the 
agency, consortium, or entity to meet the applicable 
requirements of section [9501] 6501 or any other provision of 
this Act.
  (c) Payment From State Allotment.--When the Secretary 
arranges for services pursuant to this section, the Secretary 
shall, after consultation with the appropriate public and 
private school officials, pay the cost of those services, 
including the administrative costs of arranging for those 
services, from the appropriate allocation or allocations under 
this Act.
  (d) Prior Determination.--Any by-pass determination by the 
Secretary under this Act as in effect on the day preceding the 
date of enactment of the [No Child Left Behind Act of 2001] 
Student Success Act shall remain in effect to the extent the 
Secretary determines that that determination is consistent with 
the purpose of this section.

SEC. [9505]  6505. PROHIBITION AGAINST FUNDS FOR RELIGIOUS WORSHIP OR 
                    INSTRUCTION.

  Nothing contained in this Act shall be construed to authorize 
the making of any payment under this Act for religious worship 
or instruction.

SEC. [9506]  6506. PRIVATE, RELIGIOUS, AND HOME SCHOOLS.

  (a) Applicability to Nonrecipient Private Schools.--Nothing 
in this Act shall be construed to affect any private school 
that does not receive funds or services under this Act, nor 
shall any student who attends a private school that does not 
receive funds or services under this Act be required to 
participate in any assessment referenced in this Act.
  (b) Applicability to Home Schools.--Nothing in this Act shall 
be construed to affect a home school, whether or not a home 
school is treated as a home school or a private school under 
State law, nor shall any student schooled at home be required 
to participate in any assessment referenced in this Act.
  (c) Rule of Construction on Prohibition of Federal Control 
Over Nonpublic Schools.--Nothing in this Act shall be construed 
to permit, allow, encourage, or authorize any Federal control 
over any aspect of any private, religious, or home school, 
whether or not a home school is treated as a private school or 
home school under State law. This section shall not be 
construed to bar private, religious, or home schools from 
participation in programs or services under this Act.
  (d) Rule of Construction on State and Local Educational 
Agency Mandates.--Nothing in this Act shall be construed to 
require any State educational agency or local educational 
agency that receives funds under this Act to mandate, direct, 
or control the curriculum of a private or home school, 
regardless or whether or not a home school is treated as a 
private school under state law, nor shall any funds under this 
Act be used for this purpose.

                        Subpart 2--Prohibitions

SEC. 6521. PROHIBITION AGAINST FEDERAL MANDATES, DIRECTION, OR CONTROL.

  (a) In General.--No officer or employee of the Federal 
Government shall, directly or indirectly, through grants, 
contracts, or other cooperative agreements, mandate, direct, 
incentivize, or control a State, local educational agency, or 
school's specific instructional content, academic standards and 
assessments, curricula, or program of instruction, (including 
any requirement, direction, incentive, or mandate to adopt the 
Common Core State Standards developed under the Common Core 
State Standards Initiative or any other academic standards 
common to a significant number of States), nor shall anything 
in this Act be construed to authorize such officer or employee 
to do so.
  (b) Financial Support.--No officer or employee of the Federal 
Government shall, directly or indirectly, through grants, 
contracts, or other cooperative agreements, make financial 
support available in a manner that is conditioned upon a State, 
local educational agency, or school's adoption of specific 
instructional content, academic standards and assessments, 
curriculum, or program of instruction, (including any 
requirement, direction, or mandate to adopt the Common Core 
State Standards developed under the Common Core State Standards 
Initiative, any other academic standards common to a 
significant number of States, or any assessment, instructional 
content, or curriculum aligned to such standards), even if such 
requirements are specified in an Act other than this Act, nor 
shall anything in this Act be construed to authorize such 
officer or employee to do so.

SEC. 6522. PROHIBITIONS ON FEDERAL GOVERNMENT AND USE OF FEDERAL FUNDS.

  (a) General Prohibition.--Nothing in this Act shall be 
construed to authorize an officer or employee of the Federal 
Government directly or indirectly, whether through a grant, 
contract, or cooperative agreement, to mandate, direct, or 
control a State, local educational agency, or school's 
curriculum, program of instruction, or allocation of State or 
local resources, or mandate a State or any subdivision thereof 
to spend any funds or incur any costs not paid for under this 
Act.
  (b) Prohibition on Endorsement of Curriculum.--
Notwithstanding any other prohibition of Federal law, no funds 
provided to the Department under this Act may be used by the 
Department directly or indirectly--whether through a grant, 
contract, or cooperative agreement--to endorse, approve, 
develop, require, or sanction any curriculum, including any 
curriculum aligned to the Common Core State Standards developed 
under the Common Core State Standards Initiative or any other 
academic standards common to a significant number of States, 
designed to be used in an elementary school or secondary 
school.
  (c) Local Control.--Nothing in this Act shall be construed 
to--
          (1) authorize an officer or employee of the Federal 
        Government directly or indirectly--whether through a 
        grant, contract, or cooperative agreement--to mandate, 
        direct, review, or control a State, local educational 
        agency, or school's instructional content, curriculum, 
        and related activities;
          (2) limit the application of the General Education 
        Provisions Act;
          (3) require the distribution of scientifically or 
        medically false or inaccurate materials or to prohibit 
        the distribution of scientifically or medically true or 
        accurate materials; or
          (4) create any legally enforceable right.
  (d) Prohibition on Requiring Federal Approval or 
Certification of Standards.--Notwithstanding any other 
provision of Federal law, no State shall be required to have 
academic standards approved or certified by the Federal 
Government, in order to receive assistance under this Act.
  (e) Rule of Construction on Building Standards.--Nothing in 
this Act shall be construed to mandate national school building 
standards for a State, local educational agency, or school.

SEC. 6523. PROHIBITION ON FEDERALLY SPONSORED TESTING.

  (a) General Prohibition.--Notwithstanding any other provision 
of Federal law and except as provided in subsection (b), no 
funds provided under this Act to the Secretary or to the 
recipient of any award may be used to develop, pilot test, 
field test, implement, administer, or distribute any federally 
sponsored national test or testing materials in reading, 
mathematics, or any other subject, unless specifically and 
explicitly authorized by law.
  (b) Exceptions.--Subsection (a) shall not apply to 
international comparative assessments developed under the 
authority of section 153(a)(5) of the Education Sciences Reform 
Act of 2002 and administered to only a representative sample of 
pupils in the United States and in foreign nations.

SEC. 6524. LIMITATIONS ON NATIONAL TESTING OR CERTIFICATION FOR 
                    TEACHERS.

  (a) Mandatory National Testing or Certification of 
Teachers.--Notwithstanding any other provision of this Act or 
any other provision of law, no funds available to the 
Department or otherwise available under this Act may be used 
for any purpose relating to a mandatory nationwide test or 
certification of teachers or education paraprofessionals, 
including any planning, development, implementation, or 
administration of such test or certification.
  (b) Prohibition on Withholding Funds.--The Secretary is 
prohibited from withholding funds from any State educational 
agency or local educational agency if the State educational 
agency or local educational agency fails to adopt a specific 
method of teacher or paraprofessional certification.

SEC. 6525. PROHIBITED USES OF FUNDS.

  No funds under this Act may be used--
          (1) for construction, renovation, or repair of any 
        school facility, except as authorized under title IV or 
        otherwise authorized under this Act;
          (2) for medical services, drug treatment or 
        rehabilitation, except for specialized instructional 
        support services or referral to treatment for students 
        who are victims of, or witnesses to, crime or who 
        illegally use drugs;
          (3) for transportation unless otherwise authorized 
        under this Act;
          (4) to develop or distribute materials, or operate 
        programs or courses of instruction directed at youth, 
        that are designed to promote or encourage sexual 
        activity, or normalize teen sexual activity as an 
        expected behavior, implicitly or explicitly, whether 
        homosexual or heterosexual;
          (5) to distribute or to aid in the distribution on 
        school grounds by any organization of legally obscene 
        materials to minors or any instruction or materials 
        that normalize teen sexual activity as an expected 
        behavior;
          (6) to provide sex education or HIV-prevention 
        education in schools unless that instruction is age 
        appropriate and includes the health benefits of 
        abstinence; or
          (7) to operate a program of contraceptive 
        distribution in schools.

SEC. [9531]  6526. PROHIBITION ON NATIONWIDE DATABASE.

  Nothing in this Act (other than section 1308(b)) shall be 
construed to authorize the development of a nationwide database 
of personally identifiable information on individuals involved 
in studies or other collections of data under this Act.

SEC. [9533]  6527. PROHIBITION ON DISCRIMINATION.

  Nothing in this Act shall be construed to require, authorize, 
or permit, the Secretary, or a State educational agency, local 
educational agency, or school to grant to a student, or deny or 
impose upon a student, any financial or educational benefit or 
burden, in violation of the fifth or 14th amendments to the 
Constitution or other law relating to discrimination in the 
provision of federally funded programs or activities.

SEC. [9534]  6528. CIVIL RIGHTS.

  [(a) In General.--]Nothing in this Act shall be construed to 
permit discrimination on the basis of race, color, religion, 
sex (except as otherwise permitted under title IX of the 
Education Amendments of 1972), national origin, or disability 
in any program funded under this Act.
  [(b) Rule of Construction.--Nothing in this Act shall be 
construed to require the disruption of services to a child or 
the displacement of a child enrolled in or participating in a 
program administered by an eligible entity, as defined in 
section 1116 of title I and part B of title V, at the 
commencement of the entity's participation in a grant under 
section 1116 of title I or part B of title V.]

SEC. 6529. PROHIBITION REGARDING STATE AID.

  A State shall not take into consideration payments under this 
Act (other than under title IV) in determining the eligibility 
of any local educational agency in that State for State aid, or 
the amount of State aid, with respect to free public education 
of children.

SEC. 6530. PROHIBITION ON REQUIRING STATE PARTICIPATION.

  Any State that opts out of receiving funds, or that has not 
been awarded funds, under one or more programs under this Act 
shall not be required to carry out any of the requirements of 
such program or programs, and nothing in this Act shall be 
construed to require a State to participate in any program 
under this Act.

SEC. 6531. LOCAL CONTROL.

  The Secretary shall not--
          (1) impose any requirements or exercise any 
        governance or authority over school administration, 
        including the development and expenditure of school 
        budgets, unless explicitly authorized under this Act;
          (2) issue any regulations or non-regulatory guidance 
        without first consulting with local stakeholders and 
        fairly addressing their concerns; or
          (3) deny any local educational agency the right to 
        object to any administrative requirement, including 
        actions that place additional burdens or cost on the 
        local educational agency.

                      Subpart 3--Other Provisions

SEC. 6541. ARMED FORCES RECRUITER ACCESS TO STUDENTS AND STUDENT 
                    RECRUITING INFORMATION.

  (a) Policy.--
          (1) Access to student recruiting information.--
        Notwithstanding section 444(a)(5)(B) of the General 
        Education Provisions Act, each local educational agency 
        receiving assistance under this Act shall provide, upon 
        a request made by a military recruiter or an 
        institution of higher education, access to the name, 
        address, and telephone listing of each secondary school 
        student served by the local educational agency, unless 
        the parent of such student has submitted the prior 
        consent request under paragraph (2).
          (2) Consent.--
                  (A) Opt-out process.--A parent of a secondary 
                school student may submit a written request, to 
                the local educational agency, that the 
                student's name, address, and telephone listing 
                not be released for purposes of paragraph (1) 
                without prior written consent of the parent. 
                Upon receiving such request, the local 
                educational agency may not release the 
                student's name, address, and telephone listing 
                for such purposes without the prior written 
                consent of the parent.
                  (B) Notification of opt-out process.--Each 
                local educational agency shall notify the 
                parents of the students served by the agency of 
                the option to make a request described in 
                subparagraph (A).
          (3) Same access to students.--Each local educational 
        agency receiving assistance under this Act shall 
        provide military recruiters the same access to 
        secondary school students as is provided generally to 
        institutions of higher education or to prospective 
        employers of those students.
          (4) Rule of construction prohibiting opt-in 
        processes.--Nothing in this subsection shall be 
        construed to allow a local educational agency to 
        withhold access to a student's name, address, and 
        telephone listing from a military recruiter or 
        institution of higher education by implementing an opt-
        in process or any other process other than the written 
        consent request process under paragraph (2)(A).
          (5) Parental consent.--For purposes of this 
        subsection, whenever a student has attained 18 years of 
        age, the permission or consent required of and the 
        rights accorded to the parents of the student shall 
        only be required of and accorded to the student.
  (b) Notification.--The Secretary, in consultation with the 
Secretary of Defense, shall, not later than 120 days after the 
date of the enactment of the Student Success Act, notify school 
leaders, school administrators, and other educators about the 
requirements of this section.
  (c) Exception.--The requirements of this section do not apply 
to a private secondary school that maintains a religious 
objection to service in the Armed Forces if the objection is 
verifiable through the corporate or other organizational 
documents or materials of that school.

SEC. 6542. RULEMAKING.

  The Secretary shall issue regulations under this Act as 
prescribed under section 1401 only to the extent that such 
regulations are necessary to ensure that there is compliance 
with the specific requirements and assurances required by this 
Act.

SEC. 6543. PEER REVIEW.

  (a) In General.--If the Secretary uses a peer review panel to 
evaluate an application for any program required under this 
Act, the Secretary shall conduct the panel in accordance with 
this section.
  (b) Makeup.--The Secretary shall--
          (1) solicit nominations for peers to serve on the 
        panel from States that are--
                  (A) practitioners in the subject matter; or
                  (B) experts in the subject matter; and
          (2) select the peers from such nominees, except that 
        there shall be at least 75 percent practitioners on 
        each panel and in each group formed from the panel.
  (c) Guidance.--The Secretary shall issue the peer review 
guidance concurrently with the notice of the grant.
  (d) Reporting.--The Secretary shall--
          (1) make the names of the peer reviewers available to 
        the public before the final deadline for the 
        application of the grant;
          (2) make the peer review notes publically available 
        once the review has concluded; and
          (3) make any deviations from the peer reviewers' 
        recommendations available to the public with an 
        explanation of the deviation.
  (e) Applicant Reviews.--An applicant shall have an 
opportunity within 30 days to review the peer review notes and 
appeal the score to the Secretary prior to the Secretary making 
any final determination.
  (f) Prohibition.--The Secretary, and the Secretary's staff, 
may not attempt to participate in, or influence, the peer 
review process. No Federal employee may participate in, or 
attempt to influence the peer review process, except to respond 
to questions of a technical nature, which shall be publicly 
reported.

SEC. 6544. PARENTAL CONSENT.

  Upon receipt of written notification from the parents or 
legal guardians of a student, the local educational agency 
shall withdraw such student from any program funded under part 
B of title III. The local educational agency shall make 
reasonable efforts to inform parents or legal guardians of the 
content of such programs or activities funded under this Act, 
other than classroom instruction.

SEC. [9523]  6545. PRIVACY OF ASSESSMENT RESULTS.

  Any results from an individual assessment referred to in this 
Act of a student that become part of the education records of 
the student shall have the protections provided in section 444 
of the General Education Provisions Act.

SEC. [9524]  6546. SCHOOL PRAYER.

  (a) Guidance.--The Secretary shall provide and revise 
guidance, not later than September 1, 2002, and of every second 
year thereafter, to State educational agencies, local 
educational agencies, and the public on constitutionally 
protected prayer in public elementary schools and secondary 
schools, including making the guidance available on the 
Internet. The guidance shall be reviewed, prior to 
distribution, by the Office of Legal Counsel of the Department 
of Justice for verification that the guidance represents the 
current state of the law concerning constitutionally protected 
prayer in public elementary schools and secondary schools.
  (b) Certification.--As a condition of receiving funds under 
this Act, a local educational agency shall certify in writing 
to the State educational agency involved that no policy of the 
local educational agency prevents, or otherwise denies 
participation in, constitutionally protected prayer in public 
elementary schools and secondary schools, as detailed in the 
guidance required under subsection (a). The certification shall 
be provided by October 1 of each year. The State educational 
agency shall report to the Secretary by November 1 of each year 
a list of those local educational agencies that have not filed 
the certification or against which complaints have been made to 
the State educational agency that the local educational 
agencies are not in compliance with this section.
  (c) Enforcement.--The Secretary is authorized and directed to 
effectuate subsection (b) by issuing, and securing compliance 
with, rules or orders with respect to a local educational 
agency that fails to certify, or is found to have certified in 
bad faith, that no policy of the local educational agency 
prevents, or otherwise denies participation in, 
constitutionally protected prayer in public elementary schools 
and secondary schools.

SEC. [9525]  6547. EQUAL ACCESS TO PUBLIC SCHOOL FACILITIES.

  (a) Short Title.--This section may be cited as the ``Boy 
Scouts of America Equal Access Act''.
  (b) In General.--
          (1) Equal access.--Notwithstanding any other 
        provision of law, no public elementary school, public 
        secondary school, local educational agency, or State 
        educational agency that has a designated open forum or 
        a limited public forum and that receives funds made 
        available through the Department shall deny equal 
        access or a fair opportunity to meet to, or 
        discriminate against, any group officially affiliated 
        with the Boy Scouts of America, or any other youth 
        group listed in title 36 of the United States Code (as 
        a patriotic society), that wishes to conduct a meeting 
        within that designated open forum or limited public 
        forum, including denying such access or opportunity or 
        discriminating for reasons based on the membership or 
        leadership criteria or oath of allegiance to God and 
        country of the Boy Scouts of America or of the youth 
        group listed in title 36 of the United States Code (as 
        a patriotic society).
          (2) Voluntary sponsorship.--Nothing in this section 
        shall be construed to require any school, agency, or a 
        school served by an agency to sponsor any group 
        officially affiliated with the Boy Scouts of America, 
        or any other youth group listed in title 36 of the 
        United States Code (as a patriotic society).
  (c) Termination of Assistance and Other Action.--
          (1) Departmental action.--The Secretary is authorized 
        and directed to effectuate subsection (b) by issuing 
        and securing compliance with rules or orders with 
        respect to a public elementary school, public secondary 
        school, local educational agency, or State educational 
        agency that receives funds made available through the 
        Department and that denies equal access, or a fair 
        opportunity to meet, or discriminates, as described in 
        subsection (b).
          (2) Procedure.--The Secretary shall issue and secure 
        compliance with the rules or orders, under paragraph 
        (1), through the Office for Civil Rights and in a 
        manner consistent with the procedure used by a Federal 
        department or agency under section 602 of the Civil 
        Rights Act of 1964. If the public school or agency does 
        not comply with the rules or orders, then 
        notwithstanding any other provision of law, no funds 
        made available through the Department shall be provided 
        to a school that fails to comply with such rules or 
        orders or to any agency or school served by an agency 
        that fails to comply with such rules or orders.
          (3) Judicial review.--Any action taken by the 
        Secretary under paragraph (1) shall be subject to the 
        judicial review described in section 603 of the Civil 
        Rights Act of 1964. Any person aggrieved by the action 
        may obtain that judicial review in the manner, and to 
        the extent, provided in section 603 of such Act.
  (d) Definition and Rule.--
          (1) Definition.--In this section, the term ``youth 
        group'' means any group or organization intended to 
        serve young people under the age of 21.
          (2) Rule.--For the purpose of this section, an 
        elementary school or secondary school has a limited 
        public forum whenever the school involved grants an 
        offering to, or opportunity for, one or more outside 
        youth or community groups to meet on school premises or 
        in school facilities before or after the hours during 
        which attendance at the school is compulsory.

SEC. 6548. SEVERABILITY.

  If any provision of this Act is held invalid, the remainder 
of this Act shall be unaffected thereby.

SEC. 6549. DEPARTMENT STAFF.

  The Secretary shall--
          (1) not later than 60 days after the date of the 
        enactment of the Student Success Act, identify the 
        number of Department employees who worked on or 
        administered each education program and project 
        authorized under this Act, as such program or project 
        was in effect on the day before such enactment date, 
        and publish such information on the Department's 
        website;
          (2) not later than 60 days after such enactment date, 
        identify the number of full-time equivalent employees 
        who work on or administer programs or projects 
        authorized under this Act, as in effect on the day 
        before such enactment date, that have been eliminated 
        or consolidated since such date;
          (3) not later than 1 year after such enactment date, 
        reduce the workforce of the Department by the number of 
        full-time equivalent employees the Department 
        calculated under paragraph (2); and
          (4) not later than 1 year after such enactment date, 
        report to the Congress on--
                  (A) the number of employees associated with 
                each program or project authorized under this 
                Act administered by the Department;
                  (B) the number of full-time equivalent 
                employees who were determined to be associated 
                with eliminated or consolidated programs or 
                projects under paragraph (2);
                  (C) how the Secretary reduced the number of 
                employees at the Department under paragraph 
                (3);
                  (D) the average salary of the employees 
                described in subparagraph (B) whose positions 
                were eliminated; and
                  (E) the average salary of the full-time 
                equivalent employees who work on or administer 
                a program or project authorized under this Act 
                by the Department, disaggregated by employee 
                function with each such program or project.

SEC. 6550. CRIMINAL BACKGROUND CHECKS.

  (a) Condition of Receipt of Funds.--A local educational 
agency or State educational agency shall be ineligible for 
funds under this Act if such agency--
          (1) employs an individual who--
                  (A) refuses to consent to a criminal 
                background check that includes--
                          (i) a search of the State criminal 
                        registry or repository in the State 
                        where the individual resides;
                          (ii) a search of State-based child 
                        abuse and neglect registries and 
                        databases in the State where the 
                        individual resides;
                          (iii) a search of the National Crime 
                        Information Center;
                          (iv) a Federal Bureau of 
                        Investigation fingerprint check using 
                        the Integrated Automated Fingerprint 
                        Identification System; and
                          (v) a search of the National Sex 
                        Offender Registry established under the 
                        Adam Walsh Child Protection and Safety 
                        Act of 2006 (42 U.S.C. 16901 et seq.);
                  (B) makes a false statement in connection 
                with such criminal background check;
                  (C) is registered or is required to be 
                registered on a State sex offender registry or 
                the National Sex Offender Registry established 
                under the Adam Walsh Child Protection and 
                Safety Act of 2006 (42 U.S.C. 16901 et seq.); 
                or
                  (D) has been convicted of a felony consisting 
                of--
                          (i) homicide;
                          (ii) child abuse or neglect;
                          (iii) a crime against children, 
                        including child pornography;
                          (iv) domestic violence;
                          (v) a crime involving rape or sexual 
                        assault;
                          (vi) kidnapping;
                          (vii) arson; or
                          (viii) physical assault, battery, or 
                        a drug-related offense, committed on or 
                        after the date that is 5 years before 
                        the date of the individual's criminal 
                        background check under this section; or
          (2) knowingly facilitates the transfer of an employee 
        if the agency knows, or has probable cause to believe, 
        that the employee engaged in sexual misconduct with a 
        student.
  (b) Fees for Background Checks.--The Attorney General or a 
State may charge any applicable fees for conducting a criminal 
background check under this section.
  (c) Definition.--In this section, the term ``employee'' 
means--
          (1) an employee of, or person seeking employment 
        with, a local educational agency or State educational 
        agency, and who, as a result of such employment has (or 
        will have) a job duty that results in unsupervised 
        access to elementary school or secondary school 
        students; or
          (2) any person, or an employee of any person who--
                  (A) has a contract or agreement to provide 
                services to an elementary school or secondary 
                school, local educational agency, or State 
                educational agency; and
                  (B) as a result of such contract or agreement 
                has a job duty that results in unsupervised 
                access to elementary school or secondary school 
                students.

SEC. 6551. REDUCTION IN FEDERAL SPENDING.

  To ensure the reduced Federal role established under this Act 
is recognized when allocating spending amounts and 
appropriations for the programs under this Act, the Secretary, 
through the director of the Institute for Education Sciences, 
shall--
          (1) not later than 60 days after the date of the 
        enactment of the Student Success Act, contract with an 
        economist with an expertise in workforce and government 
        efficiency;
          (2) not later than 1 year after the date of the 
        enactment of the Student Success Act and before the 
        Administration's annual budget request for a fiscal 
        year is submitted to Congress annually thereafter, 
        require the economist to issue a report that--
                  (A) examines the annual cost savings from the 
                reduced Federal requirements under this Act, as 
                amended by the Student Success Act, as compared 
                to the requirements under this Act as in effect 
                after fiscal year 2002 and prior to the date of 
                the enactment of the Student Success Act and 
                each year thereafter;
                  (B) determines the reduced need for Federal 
                funds to meet the Federal requirements under 
                this Act, as amended by the Student Success 
                Act, as compared to the requirements under this 
                Act as in effect after fiscal year 2002 and 
                prior to the date of the enactment of the 
                Student Success Act; and
                  (C) includes the specific reduced Federal 
                funding amounts and reduced number of employees 
                at the Department necessary for compliance with 
                the provisions of this Act, as amended by the 
                Student Success Act; and
          (3) not later than one week after Administration's 
        budget request is submitted to Congress for each fiscal 
        year, submit the report to the Committees on Budget and 
        the Committees on Appropriations of the House of 
        Representatives and the Senate, and the Committee on 
        Education and the Workforce of the House of 
        Representatives and the Committee on Health, Education, 
        Labor, and Pensions of the Senate.

SEC. [4141]  6552. GUN-FREE REQUIREMENTS.

  (a) Short Title.--This subpart may be cited as the ``Gun-Free 
Schools Act''.
  (b) Requirements.--
          (1) In general.--Each State receiving Federal funds 
        under any title of this Act shall have in effect a 
        State law requiring local educational agencies to expel 
        from school for a period of not less than 1 year a 
        student who is determined to have brought a firearm to 
        a school, or to have possessed a firearm at a school, 
        under the jurisdiction of local educational agencies in 
        that State, except that such State law shall allow the 
        chief administering officer of a local educational 
        agency to modify such expulsion requirement for a 
        student on a case-by-case basis if such modification is 
        in writing.
          (2) Construction.--Nothing in this subpart shall be 
        construed to prevent a State from allowing a local 
        educational agency that has expelled a student from 
        such a student's regular school setting from providing 
        educational services to such student in an alternative 
        setting.
          (3) Definition.--For the purpose of this section, the 
        term ``firearm'' has the same meaning given such term 
        in section 921(a) of title 18, United States Code.
  (c) Special Rule.--The provisions of this section shall be 
construed in a manner consistent with the Individuals with 
Disabilities Education Act.
  (d) Report to State.--Each local educational agency 
requesting assistance from the State educational agency that is 
to be provided from funds made available to the State under any 
title of this Act shall provide to the State, in the 
application requesting such assistance--
          (1) an assurance that such local educational agency 
        is in compliance with the State law required by 
        subsection (b); and
          (2) a description of the circumstances surrounding 
        any expulsions imposed under the State law required by 
        subsection (b), including--
                  (A) the name of the school concerned;
                  (B) the number of students expelled from such 
                school; and
                  (C) the type of firearms concerned.
  (e) Reporting.--Each State shall report the information 
described in subsection (d) to the Secretary on an annual 
basis.
  (f) Definition.--For the purpose of subsection (d), the term 
``school'' means any setting that is under the control and 
supervision of the local educational agency for the purpose of 
student activities approved and authorized by the local 
educational agency.
  (g) Exception.--Nothing in this section shall apply to a 
firearm that is lawfully stored inside a locked vehicle on 
school property, or if it is for activities approved and 
authorized by the local educational agency and the local 
educational agency adopts appropriate safeguards to ensure 
student safety.
  (h) Policy Regarding Criminal Justice System Referral.--
          (1) In general.--No funds shall be made available 
        under any title of this Act to any local educational 
        agency unless such agency has a policy requiring 
        referral to the criminal justice or juvenile 
        delinquency system of any student who brings a firearm 
        or weapon to a school served by such agency.
          (2) Definition.--For the purpose of this subsection, 
        the term ``school'' has the same meaning given to such 
        term by section 921(a) of title 18, United States Code.

SEC. [4155]  6553. TRANSFER OF SCHOOL DISCIPLINARY RECORDS.

  (a) Nonapplication of Provisions.--This section shall not 
apply to any disciplinary records with respect to a suspension 
or expulsion that are transferred from a private, parochial or 
other nonpublic school, person, institution, or other entity, 
that provides education below the college level.
  (b) Disciplinary Records.--In accordance with the Family 
Educational Rights and Privacy Act of 1974 (20 U.S.C. 1232g), 
not later than 2 years after the date of enactment of this 
part, each State receiving Federal funds under this Act shall 
provide an assurance to the Secretary that the State has a 
procedure in place to facilitate the transfer of disciplinary 
records, with respect to a suspension or expulsion, by local 
educational agencies to any private or public elementary school 
or secondary school for any student who is enrolled or seeks, 
intends, or is instructed to enroll, on a full- or part-time 
basis, in the school.

 Subpart 4--Restoration of State Sovereignty Over Public Education and 
          Parental Rights Over the Education of Their Children

SEC. 6561. STATES TO RETAIN RIGHTS AND AUTHORITIES THEY DO NOT 
                    EXPRESSLY WAIVE.

  (a) Retention of Rights and Authorities.--No officer, 
employee, or other authority of the Secretary shall enforce 
against an authority of a State, nor shall any authority of a 
State have any obligation to obey, any requirement imposed as a 
condition of receiving assistance under a grant program 
established under this Act, nor shall such program operate 
within a State, unless the legislature of that State shall have 
by law expressly approved that program and, in doing so, have 
waived the State's rights and authorities to act inconsistently 
with any requirement that might be imposed by the Secretary as 
a condition of receiving that assistance.
  (b) Amendment of Terms of Receipt of Federal Financial 
Assistance.--An officer, employee, or other authority of the 
Secretary may release assistance under a grant program 
established under this Act to a State only after the 
legislature of the State has by law expressly approved the 
program (as described in subsection (a)). This approval may be 
accomplished by a vote to affirm a State budget that includes 
the use of such Federal funds and any such State budget must 
expressly include any requirement imposed as a condition of 
receiving assistance under a grant program established under 
this Act so that by approving the budget, the State legislature 
is expressly approving the grant program and, in doing so, 
waiving the State's rights and authorities to act 
inconsistently with any requirement that might be imposed by 
the Secretary as a condition of receiving that assistance.
  (c) Special Rule for States With Biennial Legislatures.--In 
the case of a State with a biennial legislature--
          (1) during a year in which the State legislature does 
        not meet, subsections (a) and (b) shall not apply; and
          (2) during a year in which the State legislature 
        meets, subsections (a) and (b) shall apply, and, with 
        respect to any grant program established under this Act 
        during the most recent year in which the State 
        legislature did not meet, the State may by law 
        expressly disapprove the grant program, and, if such 
        disapproval occurs, an officer, employee, or other 
        authority of the Secretary may not release any 
        additional assistance to the State under that grant 
        program.
  (d) Definition of State Authority.--As used in this section, 
the term ``authority of a State'' includes any administering 
agency of the State, any officer or employee of the State, and 
any local government authority of the State.
  (e) Effective Date.--This section applies in each State 
beginning on the 90th day after the end of the first regular 
session of the legislature of that State that begins 5 years 
after the date of the enactment of the Student Success Act and 
shall continue to apply in subsequent years until otherwise 
provided by law.

SEC. 6562. DEDICATION OF SAVINGS TO DEFICIT REDUCTION.

  Notwithstanding any formula reallocations stipulated under 
the Student Success Act, any funds under such Act not allocated 
to a State because a State did not affirmatively agree to the 
receipt of such funds shall not be reallocated among the 
States.

SEC. 6563. DEFINITION OF STATE WITH BIENNIAL LEGISLATURE.

  In this Act, the term ``State with a biennial legislature'' 
means a State the legislature of which meets every other year.

SEC. 6564. INTENT OF CONGRESS.

  It is the intent of Congress that other than the terms and 
conditions expressly approved by State law under the terms of 
this subpart, control over public education and parental rights 
to control the education of their children are vested 
exclusively within the autonomous zone of independent authority 
reserved to the States and individual Americans by the United 
States Constitution, other than the Federal Government's 
undiminishable obligation to enforce minimum Federal standards 
of equal protection and due process.

                          PART F--EVALUATIONS

SEC. 6601. EVALUATIONS.

  (a) Reservation of Funds.--Except as provided in subsections 
(c) and (d), the Secretary may reserve not more than 0.5 
percent of the amount appropriated to carry out each 
categorical program authorized under this Act. The reserved 
amounts shall be used by the Secretary, acting through the 
Director of the Institute of Education Sciences--
          (1) to conduct--
                  (A) comprehensive evaluations of the program 
                or project;
                  (B) studies of the effectiveness of the 
                program or project and its administrative 
                impact on schools and local educational 
                agencies; and
                  (C) the wide dissemination of evaluation 
                findings under this section with respect to 
                programs authorized under this Act--
                          (i) in a timely fashion;
                          (ii) in forms that are 
                        understandable, easily accessible, and 
                        usable or adaptable for use in the 
                        improvement of educational practice;
                          (iii) through electronic transfer, 
                        and other means, such as posting, as 
                        available, to the websites of State 
                        educational agencies, local educational 
                        agencies, the Institute of Education 
                        Sciences, the Department, and other 
                        relevant places; and
                          (iv) in a manner that promotes the 
                        utilization of such findings.
          (2) to evaluate the aggregate short- and long-term 
        effects and cost efficiencies across Federal programs 
        assisted or authorized under this Act and related 
        Federal preschool, elementary, and secondary programs 
        under any other Federal law; and
          (3) to increase the usefulness of evaluations of 
        grant recipients in order to ensure the continuous 
        progress of the program or project by improving the 
        quality, timeliness, efficiency, and use of information 
        relating to performance under the program or project.
  (b) Required Plan.--The Secretary, acting through the 
Director of the Institute of Education Sciences, may use the 
reserved amount under subsection (a) only after completion of a 
comprehensive, multi-year plan--
          (1) for the periodic evaluation of each of the major 
        categorical programs authorized under this Act, and as 
        resources permit, the smaller categorical programs 
        authorized under this Act;
          (2) that shall be developed and implemented with the 
        involvement of other officials at the Department, as 
        appropriate; and
          (3) that shall not be finalized until--
                  (A) the publication of a notice in the 
                Federal Register seeking public comment on such 
                plan and after review by the Secretary of such 
                comments; and
                  (B) the plan is submitted for comment to the 
                Committee on Education and the Workforce of the 
                House of Representatives and the Committee on 
                Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions of the 
                Senate and after review by the Secretary of 
                such comments.
  (c) Title I Excluded.--The Secretary may not reserve under 
subsection (a) funds appropriated to carry out any program 
authorized under title I.
  (d) Evaluation Activities Authorized Elsewhere.--If, under 
any other provision of this Act (other than title I), funds are 
authorized to be reserved or used for evaluation activities 
with respect to a program or project, the Secretary may not 
reserve additional funds under this section for the evaluation 
of that program or project.

                     [TITLE IX--GENERAL PROVISIONS

                          [PART A--DEFINITIONS

[SEC. 9101. DEFINITIONS.

   [Except as otherwise provided, in this Act:
          [(1) Average daily attendance.--
                  [(A) In general.--Except as provided 
                otherwise by State law or this paragraph, the 
                term ``average daily attendance'' means--
                          [(i) the aggregate number of days of 
                        attendance of all students during a 
                        school year; divided by
                          [(ii) the number of days school is in 
                        session during that year.
                  [(B) Conversion.--The Secretary shall permit 
                the conversion of average daily membership (or 
                other similar data) to average daily attendance 
                for local educational agencies in States that 
                provide State aid to local educational agencies 
                on the basis of average daily membership (or 
                other similar data).
                  [(C) Special rule.--If the local educational 
                agency in which a child resides makes a tuition 
                or other payment for the free public education 
                of the child in a school located in another 
                school district, the Secretary shall, for the 
                purpose of this Act--
                          [(i) consider the child to be in 
                        attendance at a school of the agency 
                        making the payment; and
                          [(ii) not consider the child to be in 
                        attendance at a school of the agency 
                        receiving the payment.
                  [(D) Children with disabilities.--If a local 
                educational agency makes a tuition payment to a 
                private school or to a public school of another 
                local educational agency for a child with a 
                disability, as defined in section 602 of the 
                Individuals with Disabilities Education Act, 
                the Secretary shall, for the purpose of this 
                Act, consider the child to be in attendance at 
                a school of the agency making the payment.
          [(2) Average per-pupil expenditure.--The term 
        ``average per-pupil expenditure'' means, in the case of 
        a State or of the United States--
                  [(A) without regard to the source of funds--
                          [(i) the aggregate current 
                        expenditures, during the third fiscal 
                        year preceding the fiscal year for 
                        which the determination is made (or, if 
                        satisfactory data for that year are not 
                        available, during the most recent 
                        preceding fiscal year for which 
                        satisfactory data are available) of all 
                        local educational agencies in the State 
                        or, in the case of the United States, 
                        for all States (which, for the purpose 
                        of this paragraph, means the 50 States 
                        and the District of Columbia); plus
                          [(ii) any direct current expenditures 
                        by the State for the operation of those 
                        agencies; divided by
                  [(B) the aggregate number of children in 
                average daily attendance to whom those agencies 
                provided free public education during that 
                preceding year.
          [(3) Beginning teacher.--The term ``beginning 
        teacher'' means a teacher in a public school who has 
        been teaching less than a total of three complete 
        school years.
          [(4) Child.--The term ``child'' means any person 
        within the age limits for which the State provides free 
        public education.
          [(5) Child with a disability.--The term ``child with 
        a disability'' has the same meaning given that term in 
        section 602 of the Individuals with Disabilities 
        Education Act.
          [(6) Community-based organization.--The term 
        ``community-based organization'' means a public or 
        private nonprofit organization of demonstrated 
        effectiveness that--
                  [(A) is representative of a community or 
                significant segments of a community; and
                  [(B) provides educational or related services 
                to individuals in the community.
          [(7) Consolidated local application.--The term 
        ``consolidated local application'' means an application 
        submitted by a local educational agency pursuant to 
        section 9305.
          [(8) Consolidated local plan.--The term 
        ``consolidated local plan'' means a plan submitted by a 
        local educational agency pursuant to section 9305.
          [(9) Consolidated state application.--The term 
        ``consolidated State application'' means an application 
        submitted by a State educational agency pursuant to 
        section 9302.
          [(10) Consolidated state plan.--The term 
        ``consolidated State plan'' means a plan submitted by a 
        State educational agency pursuant to section 9302.
          [(11) Core academic subjects.--The term ``core 
        academic subjects'' means English, reading or language 
        arts, mathematics, science, foreign languages, civics 
        and government, economics, arts, history, and 
        geography.
          [(12) County.--The term ``county'' means one of the 
        divisions of a State used by the Secretary of Commerce 
        in compiling and reporting data regarding counties.
          [(13) Covered program.--The term ``covered program'' 
        means each of the programs authorized by--
                  [(A) part A of title I;
                  [(B) subpart 3 of part B of title I;
                  [(C) part C of title I;
                  [(D) part D of title I;
                  [(E) part F of title I;
                  [(F) part A of title II;
                  [(G) part D of title II;
                  [(H) part A of title III;
                  [(I) part A of title IV;
                  [(J) part B of title IV;
                  [(K) part A of title V; and
                  [(L) subpart 2 of part B of title VI.
          [(14) Current expenditures.--The term ``current 
        expenditures'' means expenditures for free public 
        education--
                  [(A) including expenditures for 
                administration, instruction, attendance and 
                health services, pupil transportation services, 
                operation and maintenance of plant, fixed 
                charges, and net expenditures to cover deficits 
                for food services and student body activities; 
                but
                  [(B) not including expenditures for community 
                services, capital outlay, and debt service, or 
                any expenditures made from funds received under 
                title I and part A of title V.
          [(15) Department.--The term ``Department'' means the 
        Department of Education.
          [(16) Distance learning.--The term ``distance 
        learning'' means the transmission of educational or 
        instructional programming to geographically dispersed 
        individuals and groups via telecommunications.
          [(17) Educational service agency.--The term 
        ``educational service agency'' means a regional public 
        multiservice agency authorized by State statute to 
        develop, manage, and provide services or programs to 
        local educational agencies.
          [(18) Elementary school.--The term ``elementary 
        school'' means a nonprofit institutional day or 
        residential school, including a public elementary 
        charter school, that provides elementary education, as 
        determined under State law.
          [(19) Exemplary teacher.--The term ``exemplary 
        teacher'' means a teacher who--
                  [(A) is a highly qualified teacher such as a 
                master teacher;
                  [(B) has been teaching for at least 5 years 
                in a public or private school or institution of 
                higher education;
                  [(C) is recommended to be an exemplary 
                teacher by administrators and other teachers 
                who are knowledgeable about the individual's 
                performance;
                  [(D) is currently teaching and based in a 
                public school; and
                  [(E) assists other teachers in improving 
                instructional strategies, improves the skills 
                of other teachers, performs teacher mentoring, 
                develops curricula, and offers other 
                professional development.
          [(20) Family literacy services.--The term ``family 
        literacy services'' means services provided to 
        participants on a voluntary basis that are of 
        sufficient intensity in terms of hours, and of 
        sufficient duration, to make sustainable changes in a 
        family, and that integrate all of the following 
        activities:
                  [(A) Interactive literacy activities between 
                parents and their children.
                  [(B) Training for parents regarding how to be 
                the primary teacher for their children and full 
                partners in the education of their children.
                  [(C) Parent literacy training that leads to 
                economic self-sufficiency.
                  [(D) An age-appropriate education to prepare 
                children for success in school and life 
                experiences.
          [(21) Free public education.--The term ``free public 
        education'' means education that is provided--
                  [(A) at public expense, under public 
                supervision and direction, and without tuition 
                charge; and
                  [(B) as elementary school or secondary school 
                education as determined under applicable State 
                law, except that the term does not include any 
                education provided beyond grade 12.
          [(22) Gifted and talented.--The term ``gifted and 
        talented'', when used with respect to students, 
        children, or youth, means students, children, or youth 
        who give evidence of high achievement capability in 
        areas such as intellectual, creative, artistic, or 
        leadership capacity, or in specific academic fields, 
        and who need services or activities not ordinarily 
        provided by the school in order to fully develop those 
        capabilities.
          [(23) Highly qualified.--The term ``highly 
        qualified''--
                  [(A) when used with respect to any public 
                elementary school or secondary school teacher 
                teaching in a State, means that--
                          [(i) the teacher has obtained full 
                        State certification as a teacher 
                        (including certification obtained 
                        through alternative routes to 
                        certification) or passed the State 
                        teacher licensing examination, and 
                        holds a license to teach in such State, 
                        except that when used with respect to 
                        any teacher teaching in a public 
                        charter school, the term means that the 
                        teacher meets the requirements set 
                        forth in the State's public charter 
                        school law; and
                          [(ii) the teacher has not had 
                        certification or licensure requirements 
                        waived on an emergency, temporary, or 
                        provisional basis;
                  [(B) when used with respect to--
                          [(i) an elementary school teacher who 
                        is new to the profession, means that 
                        the teacher--
                                  [(I) holds at least a 
                                bachelor's degree; and
                                  [(II) has demonstrated, by 
                                passing a rigorous State test, 
                                subject knowledge and teaching 
                                skills in reading, writing, 
                                mathematics, and other areas of 
                                the basic elementary school 
                                curriculum (which may consist 
                                of passing a State-required 
                                certification or licensing test 
                                or tests in reading, writing, 
                                mathematics, and other areas of 
                                the basic elementary school 
                                curriculum); or
                          [(ii) a middle or secondary school 
                        teacher who is new to the profession, 
                        means that the teacher holds at least a 
                        bachelor's degree and has demonstrated 
                        a high level of competency in each of 
                        the academic subjects in which the 
                        teacher teaches by--
                                  [(I) passing a rigorous State 
                                academic subject test in each 
                                of the academic subjects in 
                                which the teacher teaches 
                                (which may consist of a passing 
                                level of performance on a 
                                State-required certification or 
                                licensing test or tests in each 
                                of the academic subjects in 
                                which the teacher teaches); or
                                  [(II) successful completion, 
                                in each of the academic 
                                subjects in which the teacher 
                                teaches, of an academic major, 
                                a graduate degree, coursework 
                                equivalent to an undergraduate 
                                academic major, or advanced 
                                certification or credentialing; 
                                and
                  [(C) when used with respect to an elementary, 
                middle, or secondary school teacher who is not 
                new to the profession, means that the teacher 
                holds at least a bachelor's degree and--
                          [(i) has met the applicable standard 
                        in clause (i) or (ii) of subparagraph 
                        (B), which includes an option for a 
                        test; or
                          [(ii) demonstrates competence in all 
                        the academic subjects in which the 
                        teacher teaches based on a high 
                        objective uniform State standard of 
                        evaluation that--
                                  [(I) is set by the State for 
                                both grade appropriate academic 
                                subject matter knowledge and 
                                teaching skills;
                                  [(II) is aligned with 
                                challenging State academic 
                                content and student academic 
                                achievement standards and 
                                developed in consultation with 
                                core content specialists, 
                                teachers, principals, and 
                                school administrators;
                                  [(III) provides objective, 
                                coherent information about the 
                                teacher's attainment of core 
                                content knowledge in the 
                                academic subjects in which a 
                                teacher teaches;
                                  [(IV) is applied uniformly to 
                                all teachers in the same 
                                academic subject and the same 
                                grade level throughout the 
                                State;
                                  [(V) takes into 
                                consideration, but not be based 
                                primarily on, the time the 
                                teacher has been teaching in 
                                the academic subject;
                                  [(VI) is made available to 
                                the public upon request; and
                                  [(VII) may involve multiple, 
                                objective measures of teacher 
                                competency.
          [(24) Institution of higher education.--The term 
        ``institution of higher education'' has the meaning 
        given that term in section 101(a) of the Higher 
        Education Act of 1965.
          [(25) Limited english proficient.--The term ``limited 
        English proficient'', when used with respect to an 
        individual, means an individual--
                  [(A) who is aged 3 through 21;
                  [(B) who is enrolled or preparing to enroll 
                in an elementary school or secondary school;
                  [(C)(i) who was not born in the United States 
                or whose native language is a language other 
                than English;
                  [(ii)(I) who is a Native American or Alaska 
                Native, or a native resident of the outlying 
                areas; and
                  [(II) who comes from an environment where a 
                language other than English has had a 
                significant impact on the individual's level of 
                English language proficiency; or
                  [(iii) who is migratory, whose native 
                language is a language other than English, and 
                who comes from an environment where a language 
                other than English is dominant; and
                  [(D) whose difficulties in speaking, reading, 
                writing, or understanding the English language 
                may be sufficient to deny the individual--
                          [(i) the ability to meet the State's 
                        proficient level of achievement on 
                        State assessments described in section 
                        1111(b)(3);
                          [(ii) the ability to successfully 
                        achieve in classrooms where the 
                        language of instruction is English; or
                          [(iii) the opportunity to participate 
                        fully in society.
          [(26) Local educational agency.--
                  [(A) In general.--The term ``local 
                educational agency'' means a public board of 
                education or other public authority legally 
                constituted within a State for either 
                administrative control or direction of, or to 
                perform a service function for, public 
                elementary schools or secondary schools in a 
                city, county, township, school district, or 
                other political subdivision of a State, or of 
                or for a combination of school districts or 
                counties that is recognized in a State as an 
                administrative agency for its public elementary 
                schools or secondary schools.
                  [(B) Administrative control and direction.--
                The term includes any other public institution 
                or agency having administrative control and 
                direction of a public elementary school or 
                secondary school.
                  [(C) BIA schools.--The term includes an 
                elementary school or secondary school funded by 
                the Bureau of Indian Affairs but only to the 
                extent that including the school makes the 
                school eligible for programs for which specific 
                eligibility is not provided to the school in 
                another provision of law and the school does 
                not have a student population that is smaller 
                than the student population of the local 
                educational agency receiving assistance under 
                this Act with the smallest student population, 
                except that the school shall not be subject to 
                the jurisdiction of any State educational 
                agency other than the Bureau of Indian Affairs.
                  [(D) Educational service agencies.--The term 
                includes educational service agencies and 
                consortia of those agencies.
                  [(E) State educational agency.--The term 
                includes the State educational agency in a 
                State in which the State educational agency is 
                the sole educational agency for all public 
                schools.
          [(27) Mentoring.--The term ``mentoring'', except when 
        used to refer to teacher mentoring, means a process by 
        which a responsible adult, postsecondary student, or 
        secondary school student works with a child to provide 
        a positive role model for the child, to establish a 
        supportive relationship with the child, and to provide 
        the child with academic assistance and exposure to new 
        experiences and examples of opportunity that enhance 
        the ability of the child to become a responsible adult.
          [(28) Native american and native american language.--
        The terms ``Native American'' and ``Native American 
        language'' have the same meaning given those terms in 
        section 103 of the Native American Languages Act of 
        1990.
          [(29) Other staff.--The term ``other staff'' means 
        pupil services personnel, librarians, career guidance 
        and counseling personnel, education aides, and other 
        instructional and administrative personnel.
          [(30) Outlying area.--The term ``outlying area'' 
        means the United States Virgin Islands, Guam, American 
        Samoa, and the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana 
        Islands, and for the purpose of section 1121(b) and any 
        other discretionary grant program under this Act, 
        includes the freely associated states of the Republic 
        of the Marshall Islands, the Federated States of 
        Micronesia, and the Republic of Palau until an 
        agreement for the extension of United States education 
        assistance under the Compact of Free Association for 
        each of the freely associated states becomes effective 
        after the date of enactment of the No Child Left Behind 
        Act of 2001.
          [(31) Parent.--The term ``parent'' includes a legal 
        guardian or other person standing in loco parentis 
        (such as a grandparent or stepparent with whom the 
        child lives, or a person who is legally responsible for 
        the child's welfare).
          [(32) Parental involvement.--The term ``parental 
        involvement'' means the participation of parents in 
        regular, two-way, and meaningful communication 
        involving student academic learning and other school 
        activities, including ensuring--
                  [(A) that parents play an integral role in 
                assisting their child's learning;
                  [(B) that parents are encouraged to be 
                actively involved in their child's education at 
                school;
                  [(C) that parents are full partners in their 
                child's education and are included, as 
                appropriate, in decisionmaking and on advisory 
                committees to assist in the education of their 
                child;
                  [(D) the carrying out of other activities, 
                such as those described in section 1118.
          [(33) Poverty line.--The term ``poverty line'' means 
        the poverty line (as defined by the Office of 
        Management and Budget and revised annually in 
        accordance with section 673(2) of the Community 
        Services Block Grant Act) applicable to a family of the 
        size involved.
          [(34) Professional development.--The term 
        ``professional development''--
                  [(A) includes activities that--
                          [(i) improve and increase teachers' 
                        knowledge of the academic subjects the 
                        teachers teach, and enable teachers to 
                        become highly qualified;
                          [(ii) are an integral part of broad 
                        schoolwide and districtwide educational 
                        improvement plans;
                          [(iii) give teachers, principals, and 
                        administrators the knowledge and skills 
                        to provide students with the 
                        opportunity to meet challenging State 
                        academic content standards and student 
                        academic achievement standards;
                          [(iv) improve classroom management 
                        skills;
                          [(v)(I) are high quality, sustained, 
                        intensive, and classroom-focused in 
                        order to have a positive and lasting 
                        impact on classroom instruction and the 
                        teacher's performance in the classroom; 
                        and
                          [(II) are not 1-day or short-term 
                        workshops or conferences;
                          [(vi) support the recruiting, hiring, 
                        and training of highly qualified 
                        teachers, including teachers who became 
                        highly qualified through State and 
                        local alternative routes to 
                        certification;
                          [(vii) advance teacher understanding 
                        of effective instructional strategies 
                        that are--
                                  [(I) based on scientifically 
                                based research (except that 
                                this subclause shall not apply 
                                to activities carried out under 
                                part D of title II); and
                                  [(II) strategies for 
                                improving student academic 
                                achievement or substantially 
                                increasing the knowledge and 
                                teaching skills of teachers; 
                                and
                          [(viii) are aligned with and directly 
                        related to--
                                  [(I) State academic content 
                                standards, student academic 
                                achievement standards, and 
                                assessments; and
                                  [(II) the curricula and 
                                programs tied to the standards 
                                described in subclause (I) 
                                except that this subclause 
                                shall not apply to activities 
                                described in clauses (ii) and 
                                (iii) of section 2123(3)(B);
                          [(ix) are developed with extensive 
                        participation of teachers, principals, 
                        parents, and administrators of schools 
                        to be served under this Act;
                          [(x) are designed to give teachers of 
                        limited English proficient children, 
                        and other teachers and instructional 
                        staff, the knowledge and skills to 
                        provide instruction and appropriate 
                        language and academic support services 
                        to those children, including the 
                        appropriate use of curricula and 
                        assessments;
                          [(xi) to the extent appropriate, 
                        provide training for teachers and 
                        principals in the use of technology so 
                        that technology and technology 
                        applications are effectively used in 
                        the classroom to improve teaching and 
                        learning in the curricula and core 
                        academic subjects in which the teachers 
                        teach;
                          [(xii) as a whole, are regularly 
                        evaluated for their impact on increased 
                        teacher effectiveness and improved 
                        student academic achievement, with the 
                        findings of the evaluations used to 
                        improve the quality of professional 
                        development;
                          [(xiii) provide instruction in 
                        methods of teaching children with 
                        special needs;
                          [(xiv) include instruction in the use 
                        of data and assessments to inform and 
                        instruct classroom practice; and
                          [(xv) include instruction in ways 
                        that teachers, principals, pupil 
                        services personnel, and school 
                        administrators may work more 
                        effectively with parents; and
                  [(B) may include activities that--
                          [(i) involve the forming of 
                        partnerships with institutions of 
                        higher education to establish school-
                        based teacher training programs that 
                        provide prospective teachers and 
                        beginning teachers with an opportunity 
                        to work under the guidance of 
                        experienced teachers and college 
                        faculty;
                          [(ii) create programs to enable 
                        paraprofessionals (assisting teachers 
                        employed by a local educational agency 
                        receiving assistance under part A of 
                        title I) to obtain the education 
                        necessary for those paraprofessionals 
                        to become certified and licensed 
                        teachers; and
                          [(iii) provide follow-up training to 
                        teachers who have participated in 
                        activities described in subparagraph 
                        (A) or another clause of this 
                        subparagraph that are designed to 
                        ensure that the knowledge and skills 
                        learned by the teachers are implemented 
                        in the classroom.
          [(35) Public telecommunications entity.--The term 
        ``public telecommunications entity'' has the meaning 
        given that term in section 397(12) of the 
        Communications Act of 1934.
          [(36) Pupil services personnel; pupil services.--
                  [(A) Pupil services personnel.--The term 
                ``pupil services personnel'' means school 
                counselors, school social workers, school 
                psychologists, and other qualified professional 
                personnel involved in providing assessment, 
                diagnosis, counseling, educational, 
                therapeutic, and other necessary services 
                (including related services as that term is 
                defined in section 602 of the Individuals with 
                Disabilities Education Act) as part of a 
                comprehensive program to meet student needs.
                  [(B) Pupil services.--The term ``pupil 
                services'' means the services provided by pupil 
                services personnel.
          [(37) Scientifically based research.--The term 
        ``scientifically based research''--
                  [(A) means research that involves the 
                application of rigorous, systematic, and 
                objective procedures to obtain reliable and 
                valid knowledge relevant to education 
                activities and programs; and
                  [(B) includes research that--
                          [(i) employs systematic, empirical 
                        methods that draw on observation or 
                        experiment;
                          [(ii) involves rigorous data analyses 
                        that are adequate to test the stated 
                        hypotheses and justify the general 
                        conclusions drawn;
                          [(iii) relies on measurements or 
                        observational methods that provide 
                        reliable and valid data across 
                        evaluators and observers, across 
                        multiple measurements and observations, 
                        and across studies by the same or 
                        different investigators;
                          [(iv) is evaluated using experimental 
                        or quasi-experimental designs in which 
                        individuals, entities, programs, or 
                        activities are assigned to different 
                        conditions and with appropriate 
                        controls to evaluate the effects of the 
                        condition of interest, with a 
                        preference for random-assignment 
                        experiments, or other designs to the 
                        extent that those designs contain 
                        within-condition or across-condition 
                        controls;
                          [(v) ensures that experimental 
                        studies are presented in sufficient 
                        detail and clarity to allow for 
                        replication or, at a minimum, offer the 
                        opportunity to build systematically on 
                        their findings; and
                          [(vi) has been accepted by a peer-
                        reviewed journal or approved by a panel 
                        of independent experts through a 
                        comparably rigorous, objective, and 
                        scientific review.
          [(38) Secondary school.--The term ``secondary 
        school'' means a nonprofit institutional day or 
        residential school, including a public secondary 
        charter school, that provides secondary education, as 
        determined under State law, except that the term does 
        not include any education beyond grade 12.
          [(39) Secretary.--The term ``Secretary'' means the 
        Secretary of Education.State.--The term ``State'' means 
        each of the 50 States, the District of Columbia, the 
        Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, and each of the outlying 
        areas.
          [(41) State educational agency.--The term ``State 
        educational agency'' means the agency primarily 
        responsible for the State supervision of public 
        elementary schools and secondary schools.
          [(42) Teacher mentoring.--The term ``teacher 
        mentoring'' means activities that--
                  [(A) consist of structured guidance and 
                regular and ongoing support for teachers, 
                especially beginning teachers, that--
                          [(i) are designed to help the 
                        teachers continue to improve their 
                        practice of teaching and to develop 
                        their instructional skills; andpart of 
                        an ongoing developmental induction 
                        process--
                                  [(I) involve the assistance 
                                of an exemplary teacher and 
                                other appropriate individuals 
                                from a school, local 
                                educational agency, or 
                                institution of higher 
                                education; and
                                  [(II) may include coaching, 
                                classroom observation, team 
                                teaching, and reduced teaching 
                                loads; and
                  [(B) may include the establishment of a 
                partnership by a local educational agency with 
                an institution of higher education, another 
                local educational agency, a teacher 
                organization, or another organization.
          [(43) Technology.--The term ``technology'' means 
        state-of-the-art technology products and services.

[SEC. 9102. APPLICABILITY OF TITLE.

  [Parts B, C, D, and E of this title do not apply to title 
VIII of this Act.

[SEC. 9103. APPLICABILITY TO BUREAU OF INDIAN AFFAIRS OPERATED SCHOOLS.

   [For the purpose of any competitive program under this Act--
          [(1) a consortium of schools operated by the Bureau 
        of Indian Affairs;
          [(2) a school operated under a contract or grant with 
        the Bureau of Indian Affairs in consortium with another 
        contract or grant school or a tribal or community 
        organization; or
          [(3) a Bureau of Indian Affairs school in consortium 
        with an institution of higher education, a contract or 
        grant school, or a tribal or community organization,
shall be given the same consideration as a local educational 
agency.

   [PART B--FLEXIBILITY IN THE USE OF ADMINISTRATIVE AND OTHER FUNDS

[SEC. 9201. CONSOLIDATION OF STATE ADMINISTRATIVE FUNDS FOR ELEMENTARY 
                    AND SECONDARY EDUCATION PROGRAMS.

  [(a) Consolidation of Administrative Funds.--
          [(1) In general.--A State educational agency may 
        consolidate the amounts specifically made available to 
        it for State administration under one or more of the 
        programs under paragraph (2) if the State educational 
        agency can demonstrate that the majority of its 
        resources are derived from non-Federal sources.
          [(2) Applicability.--This section applies to any 
        program under this Act under which funds are authorized 
        to be used for administration, and such other programs 
        as the Secretary may designate.
  [(b) Use of funds.--
          [(1) In general.--A State educational agency shall 
        use the amount available under this section for the 
        administration of the programs included in the 
        consolidation under subsection (a).
          [(2) Additional uses.--A State educational agency may 
        also use funds available under this section for 
        administrative activities designed to enhance the 
        effective and coordinated use of funds under programs 
        included in the consolidation under subsection (a), 
        such as--
                  [(A) the coordination of those programs with 
                other Federal and non-Federal programs;
                  [(B) the establishment and operation of peer-
                review mechanisms under this Act;
                  [(C) the administration of this title;
                  [(D) the dissemination of information 
                regarding model programs and practices;
                  [(E) technical assistance under any program 
                under this Act;
                  [(F) State-level activities designed to carry 
                out this title;
                  [(G) training personnel engaged in audit and 
                other monitoring activities; and
                  [(H) implementation of the Cooperative Audit 
                Resolution and Oversight Initiative of the 
                Department.
  [(c) Records.--A State educational agency that consolidates 
administrative funds under this section shall not be required 
to keep separate records, by individual program, to account for 
costs relating to the administration of programs included in 
the consolidation under subsection (a).
  [(d) Review.--To determine the effectiveness of State 
administration under this section, the Secretary may 
periodically review the performance of State educational 
agencies in using consolidated administrative funds under this 
section and take such steps as the Secretary finds appropriate 
to ensure the effectiveness of that administration.
  [(e) Unused Administrative Funds.--If a State educational 
agency does not use all of the funds available to the agency 
under this section for administration, the agency may use those 
funds during the applicable period of availability as funds 
available under one or more programs included in the 
consolidation under subsection (a).
  [(f) Consolidation of Funds for Standards and Assessment 
Development.--In order to develop challenging State academic 
standards and assessments, a State educational agency may 
consolidate the amounts described in subsection (a) for those 
purposes under title I.

[SEC. 9202. SINGLE LOCAL EDUCATIONAL AGENCY STATES.

  [A State educational agency that also serves as a local 
educational agency shall, in its applications or plans under 
this Act, describe how the agency will eliminate duplication in 
conducting administrative functions.

[SEC. 9203. CONSOLIDATION OF FUNDS FOR LOCAL ADMINISTRATION.

  [(a) General Authority.--In accordance with regulations of 
the Secretary and for any fiscal year, a local educational 
agency, with the approval of its State educational agency, may 
consolidate and use for the administration of one or more 
programs under this Act (or such other programs as the 
Secretary shall designate) not more than the percentage, 
established in each program, of the total available for the 
local educational agency under those programs.
  [(b) State Procedures.--Within 1 year after the date of 
enactment of the No Child Left Behind Act of 2001, a State 
educational agency shall, in collaboration with local 
educational agencies in the State, establish procedures for 
responding to requests from local educational agencies to 
consolidate administrative funds under subsection (a) and for 
establishing limitations on the amount of funds under those 
programs that may be used for administration on a consolidated 
basis.
  [(c) Conditions.--A local educational agency that 
consolidates administrative funds under this section for any 
fiscal year shall not use any other funds under the programs 
included in the consolidation for administration for that 
fiscal year.
  [(d) Uses of Administrative Funds.--A local educational 
agency that consolidates administrative funds under this 
section may use the consolidated funds for the administration 
of the programs and for uses, at the school district and school 
levels, comparable to those described in section 9201(b)(2).
  [(e) Records.--A local educational agency that consolidates 
administrative funds under this section shall not be required 
to keep separate records, by individual program, to account for 
costs relating to the administration of the programs included 
in the consolidation.

[SEC. 9204. CONSOLIDATED SET-ASIDE FOR DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR 
                    FUNDS.

  [(a) General Authority.--
          [(1) Transfer.--The Secretary shall transfer to the 
        Department of the Interior, as a consolidated amount 
        for covered programs, the Indian education programs 
        under part A of title VII, and the education for 
        homeless children and youth program under subtitle B of 
        title VII of the McKinney-Vento Homeless Assistance 
        Act, the amounts allotted to the Department of the 
        Interior under those programs.
          [(2) Agreement.--
                  [(A) In general.--The Secretary and the 
                Secretary of the Interior shall enter into an 
                agreement, consistent with the requirements of 
                the programs specified in paragraph (1), for 
                the distribution and use of those program funds 
                under terms that the Secretary determines best 
                meet the purposes of those programs.
                  [(B) Contents.--The agreement shall--
                          [(i) set forth the plans of the 
                        Secretary of the Interior for the use 
                        of the amount transferred and the 
                        achievement measures to assess program 
                        effectiveness, including measurable 
                        goals and objectives; and
                          [(ii) be developed in consultation 
                        with Indian tribes.
  [(b) Administration.--The Department of the Interior may use 
not more than 1.5 percent of the funds consolidated under this 
section for its costs related to the administration of the 
funds transferred under this section.

 [PART C--COORDINATION OF PROGRAMS; CONSOLIDATED STATE AND LOCAL PLANS 
                            AND APPLICATIONS

[SEC. 9301. PURPOSES.

   [The purposes of this part are--
          [(1) to improve teaching and learning by encouraging 
        greater cross-program coordination, planning, and 
        service delivery;
          [(2) to provide greater flexibility to State and 
        local authorities through consolidated plans, 
        applications, and reporting; and
          [(3) to enhance the integration of programs under 
        this Act with State and local programs.

[SEC. 9302. OPTIONAL CONSOLIDATED STATE PLANS OR APPLICATIONS.

  [(a) General Authority.--
          [(1) Simplification.--In order to simplify 
        application requirements and reduce the burden for 
        State educational agencies under this Act, the 
        Secretary, in accordance with subsection (b), shall 
        establish procedures and criteria under which, after 
        consultation with the Governor, a State educational 
        agency may submit a consolidated State plan or a 
        consolidated State application meeting the requirements 
        of this section for--
                  [(A) each of the covered programs in which 
                the State participates; and
                  [(B) such other programs as the Secretary may 
                designate.
          [(2) Consolidated applications and plans.--After 
        consultation with the Governor, a State educational 
        agency that submits a consolidated State plan or a 
        consolidated State application under this section shall 
        not be required to submit separate State plans or 
        applications under any of the programs to which the 
        consolidated State plan or consolidated State 
        application under this section applies.
  [(b) Collaboration.--
          [(1) In general.--In establishing criteria and 
        procedures under this section, the Secretary shall 
        collaborate with State educational agencies and, as 
        appropriate, with other State agencies, local 
        educational agencies, public and private nonprofit 
        agencies, organizations, and institutions, private 
        schools, and representatives of parents, students, and 
        teachers.
          [(2) Contents.--Through the collaborative process 
        described in paragraph (1), the Secretary shall 
        establish, for each program under this Act to which 
        this section applies, the descriptions, information, 
        assurances, and other material required to be included 
        in a consolidated State plan or consolidated State 
        application.
          [(3) Necessary materials.--The Secretary shall 
        require only descriptions, information, assurances 
        (including assurances of compliance with applicable 
        provisions regarding participation by private school 
        children and teachers), and other materials that are 
        absolutely necessary for the consideration of the 
        consolidated State plan or consolidated State 
        application.

[SEC. 9303. CONSOLIDATED REPORTING.

  [(a) In general.--In order to simplify reporting requirements 
and reduce reporting burdens, the Secretary shall establish 
procedures and criteria under which a State educational agency, 
in consultation with the Governor of the State, may submit a 
consolidated State annual report.
  [(b) Contents.--The report shall contain information about 
the programs included in the report, including the performance 
of the State under those programs, and other matters as the 
Secretary determines are necessary, such as monitoring 
activities.
  [(c) Replacement.--The report shall replace separate 
individual annual reports for the programs included in the 
consolidated State annual report.

[SEC. 9304. GENERAL APPLICABILITY OF STATE EDUCATIONAL AGENCY 
                    ASSURANCES.

  [(a) Assurances.--A State educational agency, in consultation 
with the Governor of the State, that submits a consolidated 
State plan or consolidated State application under this Act, 
whether separately or under section 9302, shall have on file 
with the Secretary a single set of assurances, applicable to 
each program for which the plan or application is submitted, 
that provides that--
          [(1) each such program will be administered in 
        accordance with all applicable statutes, regulations, 
        program plans, and applications;
          [(2)(A) the control of funds provided under each such 
        program and title to property acquired with program 
        funds will be in a public agency, a nonprofit private 
        agency, institution, or organization, or an Indian 
        tribe, if the law authorizing the program provides for 
        assistance to those entities; and
          [(B) the public agency, nonprofit private agency, 
        institution, or organization, or Indian tribe will 
        administer those funds and property to the extent 
        required by the authorizing law;
          [(3) the State will adopt and use proper methods of 
        administering each such program, including--
                  [(A) the enforcement of any obligations 
                imposed by law on agencies, institutions, 
                organizations, and other recipients responsible 
                for carrying out each program;
                  [(B) the correction of deficiencies in 
                program operations that are identified through 
                audits, monitoring, or evaluation; and
                  [(C) the adoption of written procedures for 
                the receipt and resolution of complaints 
                alleging violations of law in the 
                administration of the programs;
          [(4) the State will cooperate in carrying out any 
        evaluation of each such program conducted by or for the 
        Secretary or other Federal officials;
          [(5) the State will use such fiscal control and fund 
        accounting procedures as will ensure proper 
        disbursement of, and accounting for, Federal funds paid 
        to the State under each such program;
          [(6) the State will--
                  [(A) make reports to the Secretary as may be 
                necessary to enable the Secretary to perform 
                the Secretary's duties under each such program; 
                and
                  [(B) maintain such records, provide such 
                information to the Secretary, and afford such 
                access to the records as the Secretary may find 
                necessary to carry out the Secretary's duties; 
                and
          [(7) before the plan or application was submitted to 
        the Secretary, the State afforded a reasonable 
        opportunity for public comment on the plan or 
        application and considered such comment.
  [(b) GEPA Provision.--Section 441 of the General Education 
Provisions Act shall not apply to programs under this Act.

[SEC. 9305. CONSOLIDATED LOCAL PLANS OR APPLICATIONS.

  [(a) General Authority.--
          [(1) Consolidated plan.--A local educational agency 
        receiving funds under more than one covered program may 
        submit plans or applications to the State educational 
        agency under those programs on a consolidated basis.
          [(2) Availability to governor.--The State educational 
        agency shall make any consolidated local plans and 
        applications available to the Governor.
  [(b) Required Consolidated Plans or Applications.--A State 
educational agency that has an approved consolidated State plan 
or application under section 9302 may require local educational 
agencies in the State receiving funds under more than one 
program included in the consolidated State plan or consolidated 
State application to submit consolidated local plans or 
applications under those programs, but may not require those 
agencies to submit separate plans.
  [(c) Collaboration.--A State educational agency, in 
consultation with the Governor, shall collaborate with local 
educational agencies in the State in establishing procedures 
for the submission of the consolidated State plans or 
consolidated State applications under this section.
  [(d) Necessary Materials.--The State educational agency shall 
require only descriptions, information, assurances, and other 
material that are absolutely necessary for the consideration of 
the local educational agency plan or application.

[SEC. 9306. OTHER GENERAL ASSURANCES.

  [(a) Assurances.--Any applicant, other than a State 
educational agency that submits a plan or application under 
this Act, whether separately or pursuant to section 9305, shall 
have on file with the State educational agency a single set of 
assurances, applicable to each program for which a plan or 
application is submitted, that provides that--
          [(1) each such program will be administered in 
        accordance with all applicable statutes, regulations, 
        program plans, and applications;
          [(2)(A) the control of funds provided under each such 
        program and title to property acquired with program 
        funds will be in a public agency or in a nonprofit 
        private agency, institution, organization, or Indian 
        tribe, if the law authorizing the program provides for 
        assistance to those entities; and
          [(B) the public agency, nonprofit private agency, 
        institution, or organization, or Indian tribe will 
        administer the funds and property to the extent 
        required by the authorizing statutes;
          [(3) the applicant will adopt and use proper methods 
        of administering each such program, including--
                  [(A) the enforcement of any obligations 
                imposed by law on agencies, institutions, 
                organizations, and other recipients responsible 
                for carrying out each program; and
                  [(B) the correction of deficiencies in 
                program operations that are identified through 
                audits, monitoring, or evaluation;
          [(4) the applicant will cooperate in carrying out any 
        evaluation of each such program conducted by or for the 
        State educational agency, the Secretary, or other 
        Federal officials;
          [(5) the applicant will use such fiscal control and 
        fund accounting procedures as will ensure proper 
        disbursement of, and accounting for, Federal funds paid 
        to the applicant under each such program;
          [(6) the applicant will--
                  [(A) submit such reports to the State 
                educational agency (which shall make the 
                reports available to the Governor) and the 
                Secretary as the State educational agency and 
                Secretary may require to enable the State 
                educational agency and the Secretary to perform 
                their duties under each such program; and
                  [(B) maintain such records, provide such 
                information, and afford such access to the 
                records as the State educational agency (after 
                consultation with the Governor) or the 
                Secretary may reasonably require to carry out 
                the State educational agency's or the 
                Secretary's duties; and
          [(7) before the application was submitted, the 
        applicant afforded a reasonable opportunity for public 
        comment on the application and considered such comment.
  [(b) GEPA Provision.--Section 442 of the General Education 
Provisions Act shall not apply to programs under this Act.

                            [PART D--WAIVERS

[SEC. 9401. WAIVERS OF STATUTORY AND REGULATORY REQUIREMENTS.

  [(a) In General.--Except as provided in subsection (c), the 
Secretary may waive any statutory or regulatory requirement of 
this Act for a State educational agency, local educational 
agency, Indian tribe, or school through a local educational 
agency, that--
          [(1) receives funds under a program authorized by 
        this Act; and
          [(2) requests a waiver under subsection (b).
  [(b) Request for Waiver.--
          [(1) In general.--A State educational agency, local 
        educational agency, or Indian tribe that desires a 
        waiver shall submit a waiver request to the Secretary 
        that--
                  [(A) identifies the Federal programs affected 
                by the requested waiver;
                  [(B) describes which Federal statutory or 
                regulatory requirements are to be waived and 
                how the waiving of those requirements will--
                          [(i) increase the quality of 
                        instruction for students; and
                          [(ii) improve the academic 
                        achievement of students;
                  [(C) describes, for each school year, 
                specific, measurable educational goals, in 
                accordance with section 1111(b), for the State 
                educational agency and for each local 
                educational agency, Indian tribe, or school 
                that would be affected by the waiver and the 
                methods to be used to measure annually such 
                progress for meeting such goals and outcomes;
                  [(D) explains how the waiver will assist the 
                State educational agency and each affected 
                local educational agency, Indian tribe, or 
                school in reaching those goals; and
                  [(E) describes how schools will continue to 
                provide assistance to the same populations 
                served by programs for which waivers are 
                requested.
          [(2) Additional information.--Such requests--
                  [(A) may provide for waivers of requirements 
                applicable to State educational agencies, local 
                educational agencies, Indian tribes, and 
                schools; and
                  [(B) shall be developed and submitted--
                          [(i)(I) by local educational agencies 
                        (on behalf of those agencies and 
                        schools) to State educational agencies; 
                        and
                          [(II) by State educational agencies 
                        (on behalf of, and based on the 
                        requests of, local educational 
                        agencies) to the Secretary; or
                          [(ii) by Indian tribes (on behalf of 
                        schools operated by the tribes) to the 
                        Secretary.
          [(3) General requirements.--
                  [(A) State educational agencies.--In the case 
                of a waiver request submitted by a State 
                educational agency acting on its own behalf, 
                the State educational agency shall--
                          [(i) provide all interested local 
                        educational agencies in the State with 
                        notice and a reasonable opportunity to 
                        comment on the request;
                          [(ii) submit the comments to the 
                        Secretary; and
                          [(iii) provide notice and information 
                        to the public regarding the waiver 
                        request in the manner in which the 
                        applying agency customarily provides 
                        similar notices and information to the 
                        public.
                  [(B) Local educational agencies.--In the case 
                of a waiver request submitted by a local 
                educational agency that receives funds under 
                this Act--
                          [(i) the request shall be reviewed by 
                        the State educational agency and be 
                        accompanied by the comments, if any, of 
                        the State educational agency; and
                          [(ii) notice and information 
                        regarding the waiver request shall be 
                        provided to the public by the agency 
                        requesting the waiver in the manner in 
                        which that agency customarily provides 
                        similar notices and information to the 
                        public.
  [(c) Restrictions.--The Secretary shall not waive under this 
section any statutory or regulatory requirements relating to--
          [(1) the allocation or distribution of funds to 
        States, local educational agencies, or other recipients 
        of funds under this Act;
          [(2) maintenance of effort;
          [(3) comparability of services;
          [(4) use of Federal funds to supplement, not 
        supplant, non-Federal funds;
          [(5) equitable participation of private school 
        students and teachers;
          [(6) parental participation and involvement;
          [(7) applicable civil rights requirements;
          [(8) the requirement for a charter school under 
        subpart 1 of part B of title V;
          [(9) the prohibitions regarding--
                  [(A) State aid in section 9522;
                  [(B) use of funds for religious worship or 
                instruction in section 9505; and
                  [(C) activities in section 9526; or
          [(10) the selection of a school attendance area or 
        school under subsections (a) and (b) of section 1113, 
        except that the Secretary may grant a waiver to allow a 
        school attendance area or school to participate in 
        activities under part A of title I if the percentage of 
        children from low-income families in the school 
        attendance area or who attend the school is not more 
        than 10 percentage points below the lowest percentage 
        of those children for any school attendance area or 
        school of the local educational agency that meets the 
        requirements of subsections (a) and (b) of section 
        1113.
  [(d) Duration and Extension of Waiver.--
          [(1) In general.--Except as provided in paragraph 
        (2), a waiver approved by the Secretary under this 
        section may be for a period not to exceed 4 years.
          [(2) Extension.--The Secretary may extend the period 
        described in paragraph (1) if the Secretary determines 
        that--
                  [(A) the waiver has been effective in 
                enabling the State or affected recipient to 
                carry out the activities for which the waiver 
                was requested and the waiver has contributed to 
                improved student achievement; and
                  [(B) the extension is in the public interest.
  [(e) Reports.--
          [(1) Local waiver.--A local educational agency that 
        receives a waiver under this section shall, at the end 
        of the second year for which a waiver is received under 
        this section and each subsequent year, submit a report 
        to the State educational agency that--
                  [(A) describes the uses of the waiver by the 
                agency or by schools;
                  [(B) describes how schools continued to 
                provide assistance to the same populations 
                served by the programs for which waivers were 
                granted; and
                  [(C) evaluates the progress of the agency and 
                of schools in improving the quality of 
                instruction or the academic achievement of 
                students.
          [(2) State waiver.--A State educational agency that 
        receives reports required under paragraph (1) shall 
        annually submit a report to the Secretary that is based 
        on those reports and contains such information as the 
        Secretary may require.
          [(3) Indian tribe waiver.--An Indian tribe that 
        receives a waiver under this section shall annually 
        submit a report to the Secretary that--
                  [(A) describes the uses of the waiver by 
                schools operated by the tribe; and
                  [(B) evaluates the progress of those schools 
                in improving the quality of instruction or the 
                academic achievement of students.
          [(4) Report to congress.--Beginning in fiscal year 
        2002 and for each subsequent year, the Secretary shall 
        submit to the Committee on Education and the Workforce 
        of the House of Representatives and the Committee on 
        Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions of the Senate a 
        report--
                  [(A) summarizing the uses of waivers by State 
                educational agencies, local educational 
                agencies, Indian tribes, and schools; and
                  [(B) describing whether the waivers--
                          [(i) increased the quality of 
                        instruction to students; or
                          [(ii) improved the academic 
                        achievement of students.
  [(f) Termination of Waivers.--The Secretary shall terminate a 
waiver under this section if the Secretary determines, after 
notice and an opportunity for a hearing, that the performance 
of the State or other recipient affected by the waiver has been 
inadequate to justify a continuation of the waiver or if the 
waiver is no longer necessary to achieve its original purposes.
  [(g) Publication.--A notice of the Secretary's decision to 
grant each waiver under subsection (a) shall be published in 
the Federal Register and the Secretary shall provide for the 
dissemination of the notice to State educational agencies, 
interested parties, including educators, parents, students, 
advocacy and civil rights organizations, and the public.

                      [PART E--UNIFORM PROVISIONS

                      [Subpart 1--Private Schools

[SEC. 9501. PARTICIPATION BY PRIVATE SCHOOL CHILDREN AND TEACHERS.

  [(a) Private School Participation.--
          [(1) In general.--Except as otherwise provided in 
        this Act, to the extent consistent with the number of 
        eligible children in areas served by a State 
        educational agency, local educational agency, 
        educational service agency, consortium of those 
        agencies, or another entity receiving financial 
        assistance under a program specified in subsection (b), 
        who are enrolled in private elementary schools and 
        secondary schools in areas served by such agency, 
        consortium, or entity, the agency, consortium, or 
        entity shall, after timely and meaningful consultation 
        with appropriate private school officials provide to 
        those children and their teachers or other educational 
        personnel, on an equitable basis, special educational 
        services or other benefits that address their needs 
        under the program.
          [(2) Secular, neutral, and nonideological services or 
        benefits.--Educational services or other benefits, 
        including materials and equipment, provided under this 
        section, shall be secular, neutral, and nonideological.
          [(3) Special rule.--Educational services and other 
        benefits provided under this section for private school 
        children, teachers, and other educational personnel 
        shall be equitable in comparison to services and other 
        benefits for public school children, teachers, and 
        other educational personnel participating in the 
        program and shall be provided in a timely manner.
          [(4) Expenditures.--Expenditures for educational 
        services and other benefits provided under this section 
        for eligible private school children, their teachers, 
        and other educational personnel serving those children 
        shall be equal, taking into account the number and 
        educational needs of the children to be served, to the 
        expenditures for participating public school children.
          [(5) Provision of services.--An agency, consortium, 
        or entity described in subsection (a)(1) of this 
        section may provide those services directly or through 
        contracts with public and private agencies, 
        organizations, and institutions.
  [(b) Applicability.--
          [(1) In general.--This section applies to programs 
        under--
                  [(A) subparts 1 and 3 of part B of title I;
                  [(B) part C of title I;
                  [(C) part A of title II, to the extent 
                provided in paragraph (3);
                  [(D) part B of title II;
                  [(E) part D of title II;
                  [(F) part A of title III;
                  [(G) part A of title IV; and
                  [(H) part B of title IV.
          [(2) Definition.--For the purpose of this section, 
        the term ``eligible children'' means children eligible 
        for services under a program described in paragraph 
        (1).
          [(3) Application.--(A) Except as provided in 
        subparagraph (B), this subpart, including subsection 
        (a)(4), applies to funds awarded to a local educational 
        agency under part A of title II only to the extent that 
        the local educational agency uses funds under that part 
        to provide professional development to teachers and 
        others.
          [(B) Subject to subparagraph (A), the share of the 
        local educational agency's subgrant under part A of 
        title II that is used for professional development and 
        subject to a determination of equitable expenditures 
        under subsection (a)(4) shall not be less than the 
        aggregate share of that agency's awards that were used 
        for professional development for fiscal year 2001 under 
        section 2203(1)(B) (as such section was in effect on 
        the day preceding the date of enactment of the No Child 
        Left Behind Act of 2001) and section 306 of the 
        Department of Education Appropriations Act, 2001.
  [(c) Consultation.--
          [(1) In general.--To ensure timely and meaningful 
        consultation, a State educational agency, local 
        educational agency, educational service agency, 
        consortium of those agencies, or entity shall consult 
        with appropriate private school officials during the 
        design and development of the programs under this Act, 
        on issues such as--
                  [(A) how the children's needs will be 
                identified;
                  [(B) what services will be offered;
                  [(C) how, where, and by whom the services 
                will be provided;
                  [(D) how the services will be assessed and 
                how the results of the assessment will be used 
                to improve those services;
                  [(E) the size and scope of the equitable 
                services to be provided to the eligible private 
                school children, teachers, and other 
                educational personnel and the amount of funds 
                available for those services; and
                  [(F) how and when the agency, consortium, or 
                entity will make decisions about the delivery 
                of services, including a thorough consideration 
                and analysis of the views of the private school 
                officials on the provision of contract services 
                through potential third-party providers.
          [(2) Disagreement.--If the agency, consortium, or 
        entity disagrees with the views of the private school 
        officials on the provision of services through a 
        contract, the agency, consortium, or entity shall 
        provide to the private school officials a written 
        explanation of the reasons why the local educational 
        agency has chosen not to use a contractor.
          [(3) Timing.--The consultation required by paragraph 
        (1) shall occur before the agency, consortium, or 
        entity makes any decision that affects the 
        opportunities of eligible private school children, 
        teachers, and other educational personnel to 
        participate in programs under this Act, and shall 
        continue throughout the implementation and assessment 
        of activities under this section.
          [(4) Discussion required.--The consultation required 
        by paragraph (1) shall include a discussion of service 
        delivery mechanisms that the agency, consortium, or 
        entity could use to provide equitable services to 
        eligible private school children, teachers, 
        administrators, and other staff.
  [(d) Public Control of Funds.--
          [(1) In general.--The control of funds used to 
        provide services under this section, and title to 
        materials, equipment, and property purchased with those 
        funds, shall be in a public agency for the uses and 
        purposes provided in this Act, and a public agency 
        shall administer the funds and property.
          [(2) Provision of services.--
                  [(A) In general.--The provision of services 
                under this section shall be provided--
                          [(i) by employees of a public agency; 
                        or
                          [(ii) through contract by the public 
                        agency with an individual, association, 
                        agency, organization, or other entity.
                  [(B) Independence; public agency.--In the 
                provision of those services, the employee, 
                person, association, agency, organization, or 
                other entity shall be independent of the 
                private school and of any religious 
                organization, and the employment or contract 
                shall be under the control and supervision of 
                the public agency.
                  [(C) Commingling of funds prohibited.--Funds 
                used to provide services under this section 
                shall not be commingled with non-Federal funds.

[SEC. 9502. STANDARDS FOR BY-PASS.

  [(a) In General.--If, by reason of any provision of law, a 
State educational agency, local educational agency, educational 
service agency, consortium of those agencies, or other entity 
is prohibited from providing for the participation in programs 
of children enrolled in, or teachers or other educational 
personnel from, private elementary schools and secondary 
schools, on an equitable basis, or if the Secretary determines 
that the agency, consortium, or entity has substantially failed 
or is unwilling to provide for that participation, as required 
by section 9501, the Secretary shall--
          [(1) waive the requirements of that section for the 
        agency, consortium, or entity; and
          [(2) arrange for the provision of equitable services 
        to those children, teachers, or other educational 
        personnel through arrangements that shall be subject to 
        the requirements of this section and of sections 9501, 
        9503, and 9504.
  [(b) Determination.--In making the determination under 
subsection (a), the Secretary shall consider one or more 
factors, including the quality, size, scope, and location of 
the program, and the opportunity of private school children, 
teachers, and other educational personnel to participate in the 
program.

[SEC. 9503. COMPLAINT PROCESS FOR PARTICIPATION OF PRIVATE SCHOOL 
                    CHILDREN.

  [(a) Procedures for Complaints.--The Secretary shall develop 
and implement written procedures for receiving, investigating, 
and resolving complaints from parents, teachers, or other 
individuals and organizations concerning violations of section 
9501 by a State educational agency, local educational agency, 
educational service agency, consortium of those agencies, or 
entity. The individual or organization shall submit the 
complaint to the State educational agency for a written 
resolution by the State educational agency within a reasonable 
period of time.
  [(b) Appeals to Secretary.--The resolution may be appealed by 
an interested party to the Secretary not later than 30 days 
after the State educational agency resolves the complaint or 
fails to resolve the complaint within a reasonable period of 
time. The appeal shall be accompanied by a copy of the State 
educational agency's resolution, and a complete statement of 
the reasons supporting the appeal. The Secretary shall 
investigate and resolve the appeal not later than 120 days 
after receipt of the appeal.

                      [Subpart 2--Other Provisions

[SEC. 9521. MAINTENANCE OF EFFORT.

  [(a) In General.--A local educational agency may receive 
funds under a covered program for any fiscal year only if the 
State educational agency finds that either the combined fiscal 
effort per student or the aggregate expenditures of the agency 
and the State with respect to the provision of free public 
education by the agency for the preceding fiscal year was not 
less than 90 percent of the combined fiscal effort or aggregate 
expenditures for the second preceding fiscal year.
  [(b) Reduction in Case of Failure To Meet.--
          [(1) In general.--The State educational agency shall 
        reduce the amount of the allocation of funds under a 
        covered program in any fiscal year in the exact 
        proportion by which a local educational agency fails to 
        meet the requirement of subsection (a) of this section 
        by falling below 90 percent of both the combined fiscal 
        effort per student and aggregate expenditures (using 
        the measure most favorable to the local agency).
          [(2) Special rule.--No such lesser amount shall be 
        used for computing the effort required under subsection 
        (a) of this section for subsequent years.
  [(c) Waiver.--The Secretary may waive the requirements of 
this section if the Secretary determines that a waiver would be 
equitable due to--
          [(1) exceptional or uncontrollable circumstances, 
        such as a natural disaster; or
          [(2) a precipitous decline in the financial resources 
        of the local educational agency.

[SEC. 9522. PROHIBITION REGARDING STATE AID.

  [A State shall not take into consideration payments under 
this Act (other than under title VIII) in determining the 
eligibility of any local educational agency in that State for 
State aid, or the amount of State aid, with respect to free 
public education of children.

[SEC. 9526. GENERAL PROHIBITIONS.

  [(a) Prohibition.--None of the funds authorized under this 
Act shall be used--
          [(1) to develop or distribute materials, or operate 
        programs or courses of instruction directed at youth, 
        that are designed to promote or encourage sexual 
        activity, whether homosexual or heterosexual;
          [(2) to distribute or to aid in the distribution by 
        any organization of legally obscene materials to minors 
        on school grounds;
          [(3) to provide sex education or HIV-prevention 
        education in schools unless that instruction is age 
        appropriate and includes the health benefits of 
        abstinence; or
          [(4) to operate a program of contraceptive 
        distribution in schools.
  [(b) Local Control.--Nothing in this section shall be 
construed to--
          [(1) authorize an officer or employee of the Federal 
        Government to mandate, direct, review, or control a 
        State, local educational agency, or school's 
        instructional content, curriculum, and related 
        activities;
          [(2) limit the application of the General Education 
        Provisions Act;
          [(3) require the distribution of scientifically or 
        medically false or inaccurate materials or to prohibit 
        the distribution of scientifically or medically true or 
        accurate materials; or
          [(4) create any legally enforceable right.

[SEC. 9527. PROHIBITIONS ON FEDERAL GOVERNMENT AND USE OF FEDERAL 
                    FUNDS.

  [(a) General Prohibition.--Nothing in this Act shall be 
construed to authorize an officer or employee of the Federal 
Government to mandate, direct, or control a State, local 
educational agency, or school's curriculum, program of 
instruction, or allocation of State or local resources, or 
mandate a State or any subdivision thereof to spend any funds 
or incur any costs not paid for under this Act.
  [(b) Prohibition on Endorsement of Curriculum.--
Notwithstanding any other prohibition of Federal law, no funds 
provided to the Department under this Act may be used by the 
Department to endorse, approve, or sanction any curriculum 
designed to be used in an elementary school or secondary 
school.
  [(c) Prohibition on Requiring Federal Approval or 
Certification of Standards.--
          [(1) In general.--Notwithstanding any other provision 
        of Federal law, no State shall be required to have 
        academic content or student academic achievement 
        standards approved or certified by the Federal 
        Government, in order to receive assistance under this 
        Act.
          [(2) Rule of construction.--Nothing in this 
        subsection shall be construed to affect requirements 
        under title I or part A of title VI.
  [(d) Rule of Construction on Building Standards.--Nothing in 
this Act shall be construed to mandate national school building 
standards for a State, local educational agency, or school.

[SEC. 9528. ARMED FORCES RECRUITER ACCESS TO STUDENTS AND STUDENT 
                    RECRUITING INFORMATION.

  [(a) Policy.--
          [(1) Access to student recruiting information.--
        Notwithstanding section 444(a)(5)(B) of the General 
        Education Provisions Act and except as provided in 
        paragraph (2), each local educational agency receiving 
        assistance under this Act shall provide, on a request 
        made by military recruiters or an institution of higher 
        education, access to secondary school students names, 
        addresses, and telephone listings.
          [(2) Consent.--A secondary school student or the 
        parent of the student may request that the student's 
        name, address, and telephone listing described in 
        paragraph (1) not be released without prior written 
        parental consent, and the local educational agency or 
        private school shall notify parents of the option to 
        make a request and shall comply with any request.
          [(3) Same access to students.--Each local educational 
        agency receiving assistance under this Act shall 
        provide military recruiters the same access to 
        secondary school students as is provided generally to 
        post secondary educational institutions or to 
        prospective employers of those students.
  [(b) Notification.--The Secretary, in consultation with the 
Secretary of Defense, shall, not later than 120 days after the 
date of enactment of the No Child Left Behind Act of 2001, 
notify principals, school administrators, and other educators 
about the requirements of this section.
  [(c) Exception.--The requirements of this section do not 
apply to a private secondary school that maintains a religious 
objection to service in the Armed Forces if the objection is 
verifiable through the corporate or other organizational 
documents or materials of that school.
  [(d) Special Rule.--A local educational agency prohibited by 
Connecticut State law (either explicitly by statute or through 
statutory interpretation by the State Supreme Court or State 
Attorney General) from providing military recruiters with 
information or access as required by this section shall have 
until May 31, 2002, to comply with that requirement.

[SEC. 9529. PROHIBITION ON FEDERALLY SPONSORED TESTING.

  [(a) General Prohibition.--Notwithstanding any other 
provision of Federal law and except as provided in subsection 
(b), no funds provided under this Act to the Secretary or to 
the recipient of any award may be used to develop, pilot test, 
field test, implement, administer, or distribute any federally 
sponsored national test in reading, mathematics, or any other 
subject, unless specifically and explicitly authorized by law.
  [(b) Exceptions.--Subsection (a) shall not apply to 
international comparative assessments developed under the 
authority of section 153(a)(5) of the Education Sciences Reform 
Act of 2002 and administered to only a representative sample of 
pupils in the United States and in foreign nations.

[SEC. 9530. LIMITATIONS ON NATIONAL TESTING OR CERTIFICATION FOR 
                    TEACHERS.

  [(a) Mandatory National Testing or Certification of 
Teachers.--Notwithstanding any other provision of this Act or 
any other provision of law, no funds available to the 
Department or otherwise available under this Act may be used 
for any purpose relating to a mandatory nationwide test or 
certification of teachers or education paraprofessionals, 
including any planning, development, implementation, or 
administration of such test or certification.
  [(b) Prohibition on Withholding Funds.--The Secretary is 
prohibited from withholding funds from any State educational 
agency or local educational agency if the State educational 
agency or local educational agency fails to adopt a specific 
method of teacher or paraprofessional certification.

[SEC. 9532. UNSAFE SCHOOL CHOICE OPTION.

  [(a) Unsafe School Choice Policy.--Each State receiving funds 
under this Act shall establish and implement a statewide policy 
requiring that a student attending a persistently dangerous 
public elementary school or secondary school, as determined by 
the State in consultation with a representative sample of local 
educational agencies, or who becomes a victim of a violent 
criminal offense, as determined by State law, while in or on 
the grounds of a public elementary school or secondary school 
that the student attends, be allowed to attend a safe public 
elementary school or secondary school within the local 
educational agency, including a public charter school.
  [(b) Certification.--As a condition of receiving funds under 
this Act, a State shall certify in writing to the Secretary 
that the State is in compliance with this section.

[SEC. 9535. RULEMAKING.

  [The Secretary shall issue regulations under this Act only to 
the extent that such regulations are necessary to ensure that 
there is compliance with the specific requirements and 
assurances required by this Act.

[SEC. 9536. SEVERABILITY.

  [If any provision of this Act is held invalid, the remainder 
of this Act shall be unaffected thereby.

                          [PART F--EVALUATIONS

[SEC. 9601. EVALUATIONS.

  [(a) Reservation of Funds.--Except as provided in subsections 
(b) and (c), the Secretary may reserve not more than 0.5 
percent of the amount appropriated to carry out each 
categorical program and demonstration project authorized under 
this Act--
          [(1) to conduct--
                  [(A) comprehensive evaluations of the program 
                or project; and
                  [(B) studies of the effectiveness of the 
                program or project and its administrative 
                impact on schools and local educational 
                agencies;
          [(2) to evaluate the aggregate short- and long-term 
        effects and cost efficiencies across Federal programs 
        assisted or authorized under this Act and related 
        Federal preschool, elementary, and secondary programs 
        under any other Federal law; and
          [(3) to increase the usefulness of evaluations of 
        grant recipients in order to ensure the continuous 
        progress of the program or project by improving the 
        quality, timeliness, efficiency, and use of information 
        relating to performance under the program or project.
  [(b) Titles I and III Excluded.--The Secretary may not 
reserve under subsection (a) funds appropriated to carry out 
any program authorized under title I or title III.
  [(c) Evaluation Activities Authorized Elsewhere.--If, under 
any other provision of this Act (other than title I), funds are 
authorized to be reserved or used for evaluation activities 
with respect to a program or project, the Secretary may not 
reserve additional funds under this section for the evaluation 
of that program or project.]
                              ----------                              


HIGHER EDUCATION ACT OF 1965

           *       *       *       *       *       *       *


TITLE II--TEACHER QUALITY ENHANCEMENT

           *       *       *       *       *       *       *


               PART A--TEACHER QUALITY PARTNERSHIP GRANTS

[SEC. 201. PURPOSES

   [The purposes of this part are to--
          [(1) improve student achievement;
          [(2) improve the quality of prospective and new 
        teachers by improving the preparation of prospective 
        teachers and enhancing professional development 
        activities for new teachers;
          [(3) hold teacher preparation programs at 
        institutions of higher education accountable for 
        preparing highly qualified teachers; and
          [(4) recruit highly qualified individuals, including 
        minorities and individuals from other occupations, into 
        the teaching force.

[SEC. 202. PARTNERSHIP GRANTS.

  [(a) Program Authorized.--From amounts made available under 
section 209, the Secretary is authorized to award grants, on a 
competitive basis, to eligible partnerships, to enable the 
eligible partnerships to carry out the activities described in 
subsection (c).
  [(b) Application.--Each eligible partnership desiring a grant 
under this section shall submit an application to the Secretary 
at such time, in such manner, and accompanied by such 
information as the Secretary may require. Each such application 
shall contain--
          [(1) a needs assessment of the partners in the 
        eligible partnership with respect to the preparation, 
        ongoing training, professional development, and 
        retention of general education and special education 
        teachers, principals, and, as applicable, early 
        childhood educators;
          [(2) a description of the extent to which the program 
        to be carried out with grant funds, as described in 
        subsection (c), will prepare prospective and new 
        teachers with strong teaching skills;
          [(3) a description of how such program will prepare 
        prospective and new teachers to understand and use 
        research and data to modify and improve classroom 
        instruction;
          [(4) a description of--
                  [(A) how the eligible partnership will 
                coordinate strategies and activities assisted 
                under the grant with other teacher preparation 
                or professional development programs, including 
                programs funded under the Elementary and 
                Secondary Education Act of 1965 and the 
                Individuals with Disabilities Education Act, 
                and through the National Science Foundation; 
                and
                  [(B) how the activities of the partnership 
                will be consistent with State, local, and other 
                education reform activities that promote 
                teacher quality and student academic 
                achievement;
          [(5) an assessment that describes the resources 
        available to the eligible partnership, including--
                  [(A) the integration of funds from other 
                related sources;
                  [(B) the intended use of the grant funds; and
                  [(C) the commitment of the resources of the 
                partnership to the activities assisted under 
                this section, including financial support, 
                faculty participation, and time commitments, 
                and to the continuation of the activities when 
                the grant ends;
          [(6) a description of--
                  [(A) how the eligible partnership will meet 
                the purposes of this part;
                  [(B) how the partnership will carry out the 
                activities required under subsection (d) or 
                (e), based on the needs identified in paragraph 
                (1), with the goal of improving student 
                academic achievement;
                  [(C) if the partnership chooses to use funds 
                under this section for a project or activities 
                under subsection (f) or (g), how the 
                partnership will carry out such project or 
                required activities based on the needs 
                identified in paragraph (1), with the goal of 
                improving student academic achievement;
                  [(D) the partnership's evaluation plan under 
                section 204(a);
                  [(E) how the partnership will align the 
                teacher preparation program under subsection 
                (c) with the--
                          [(i) State early learning standards 
                        for early childhood education programs, 
                        as appropriate, and with the relevant 
                        domains of early childhood development; 
                        and
                          [(ii) student academic achievement 
                        standards and academic content 
                        standards under section 1111(b)(1) of 
                        the Elementary and Secondary Education 
                        Act of 1965, established by the State 
                        in which the partnership is located;
                  [(F) how the partnership will prepare general 
                education teachers to teach students with 
                disabilities, including training related to 
                participation as a member of individualized 
                education program teams, as defined in section 
                614(d)(1)(B) of the Individuals with 
                Disabilities Education Act;
                  [(G) how the partnership will prepare general 
                education and special education teachers to 
                teach students who are limited English 
                proficient;
                  [(H) how faculty at the partner institution 
                will work, during the term of the grant, with 
                highly qualified teachers in the classrooms of 
                high-need schools served by the high-need local 
                educational agency in the partnership to--
                          [(i) provide high-quality 
                        professional development activities to 
                        strengthen the content knowledge and 
                        teaching skills of elementary school 
                        and secondary school teachers; and
                          [(ii) train other classroom teachers 
                        to implement literacy programs that 
                        incorporate the essential components of 
                        reading instruction;
                  [(I) how the partnership will design, 
                implement, or enhance a year-long and rigorous 
                teaching preservice clinical program component;
                  [(J) how the partnership will support in-
                service professional development strategies and 
                activities; and
                  [(K) how the partnership will collect, 
                analyze, and use data on the retention of all 
                teachers and early childhood educators in 
                schools and early childhood education programs 
                located in the geographic area served by the 
                partnership to evaluate the effectiveness of 
                the partnership's teacher and educator support 
                system; and
          [(7) with respect to the induction program required 
        as part of the activities carried out under this 
        section--
                  [(A) a demonstration that the schools and 
                departments within the institution of higher 
                education that are part of the induction 
                program will effectively prepare teachers, 
                including providing content expertise and 
                expertise in teaching, as appropriate;
                  [(B) a demonstration of the eligible 
                partnership's capability and commitment to, and 
                the accessibility to and involvement of faculty 
                in, the use of empirically-based practice and 
                scientifically valid research on teaching and 
                learning;
                  [(C) a description of how the teacher 
                preparation program will design and implement 
                an induction program to support, through not 
                less than the first two years of teaching, all 
                new teachers who are prepared by the teacher 
                preparation program in the partnership and who 
                teach in the high-need local educational agency 
                in the partnership, and, to the extent 
                practicable, all new teachers who teach in such 
                high-need local educational agency, in the 
                further development of the new teachers' 
                teaching skills, including the use of mentors 
                who are trained and compensated by such program 
                for the mentors' work with new teachers; and
                  [(D) a description of how faculty involved in 
                the induction program will be able to 
                substantially participate in an early childhood 
                education program or an elementary school or 
                secondary school classroom setting, as 
                applicable, including release time and 
                receiving workload credit for such 
                participation.
  [(c) Use of Grant Funds.--An eligible partnership that 
receives a grant under this section--
          [(1) shall use grant funds to carry out a program for 
        the preparation of teachers under subsection (d), a 
        teaching residency program under subsection (e), or a 
        combination of such programs; and
          [(2) may use grant funds to carry out a leadership 
        development program under subsection (f).
  [(d) Partnership Grants for the Preparation of Teachers.--An 
eligible partnership that receives a grant to carry out a 
program for the preparation of teachers shall carry out an 
effective pre-baccalaureate teacher preparation program or a 
5th year initial licensing program that includes all of the 
following:
          [(1) Reforms.--
                  [(A) In general.--Implementing reforms, 
                described in subparagraph (B), within each 
                teacher preparation program and, as applicable, 
                each preparation program for early childhood 
                education programs, of the eligible partnership 
                that is assisted under this section, to hold 
                each program accountable for--
                          [(i) preparing--
                                  [(I) new or prospective 
                                teachers to be highly qualified 
                                (including teachers in rural 
                                school districts who may teach 
                                multiple subjects, special 
                                educators, and teachers of 
                                students who are limited 
                                English proficient who may 
                                teach multiple subjects);
                                  [(II) such teachers and, as 
                                applicable, early childhood 
                                educators, to understand 
                                empirically-based practice and 
                                scientifically valid research 
                                related to teaching and 
                                learning and the applicability 
                                of such practice and research, 
                                including through the effective 
                                use of technology, 
                                instructional techniques, and 
                                strategies consistent with the 
                                principles of universal design 
                                for learning, and through 
                                positive behavioral 
                                interventions and support 
                                strategies to improve student 
                                achievement; and
                                  [(III) as applicable, early 
                                childhood educators to be 
                                highly competent; and
                          [(ii) promoting strong teaching 
                        skills and, as applicable, techniques 
                        for early childhood educators to 
                        improve children's cognitive, social, 
                        emotional, and physical development.
                  [(B) Required reforms.--The reforms described 
                in subparagraph (A) shall include--
                          [(i) implementing teacher preparation 
                        program curriculum changes that 
                        improve, evaluate, and assess how well 
                        all prospective and new teachers 
                        develop teaching skills;
                          [(ii) using empirically-based 
                        practice and scientifically valid 
                        research, where applicable, about 
                        teaching and learning so that all 
                        prospective teachers and, as 
                        applicable, early childhood educators--
                                  [(I) understand and can 
                                implement research-based 
                                teaching practices in classroom 
                                instruction;
                                  [(II) have knowledge of 
                                student learning methods;
                                  [(III) possess skills to 
                                analyze student academic 
                                achievement data and other 
                                measures of student learning, 
                                and use such data and measures 
                                to improve classroom 
                                instruction;
                                  [(IV) possess teaching skills 
                                and an understanding of 
                                effective instructional 
                                strategies across all 
                                applicable content areas that 
                                enable general education and 
                                special education teachers and 
                                early childhood educators to--
                                          [(aa) meet the 
                                        specific learning needs 
                                        of all students, 
                                        including students with 
                                        disabilities, students 
                                        who are limited English 
                                        proficient, students 
                                        who are gifted and 
                                        talented, students with 
                                        low literacy levels 
                                        and, as applicable, 
                                        children in early 
                                        childhood education 
                                        programs; and
                                          [(bb) differentiate 
                                        instruction for such 
                                        students;
                                  [(V) can effectively 
                                participate as a member of the 
                                individualized education 
                                program team, as defined in 
                                section 614(d)(1)(B) of the 
                                Individuals with Disabilities 
                                Education Act; and
                                  [(VI) can successfully employ 
                                effective strategies for 
                                reading instruction using the 
                                essential components of reading 
                                instruction;
                          [(iii) ensuring collaboration with 
                        departments, programs, or units of a 
                        partner institution outside of the 
                        teacher preparation program in all 
                        academic content areas to ensure that 
                        prospective teachers receive training 
                        in both teaching and relevant content 
                        areas in order to become highly 
                        qualified, which may include training 
                        in multiple subjects to teach multiple 
                        grade levels as may be needed for 
                        individuals preparing to teach in rural 
                        communities and for individuals 
                        preparing to teach students with 
                        disabilities as described in section 
                        602(10)(D) of the Individuals with 
                        Disabilities Education Act;
                          [(iv) developing and implementing an 
                        induction program;
                          [(v) developing admissions goals and 
                        priorities aligned with the hiring 
                        objectives of the high-need local 
                        educational agency in the eligible 
                        partnership; and
                          [(vi) implementing program and 
                        curriculum changes, as applicable, to 
                        ensure that prospective teachers have 
                        the requisite content knowledge, 
                        preparation, and degree to teach 
                        Advanced Placement or International 
                        Baccalaureate courses successfully.
          [(2) Clinical experience and interaction.--Developing 
        and improving a sustained and high-quality preservice 
        clinical education program to further develop the 
        teaching skills of all prospective teachers and, as 
        applicable, early childhood educators, involved in the 
        program. Such program shall do the following:
                  [(A) Incorporate year-long opportunities for 
                enrichment, including--
                          [(i) clinical learning in classrooms 
                        in high-need schools served by the 
                        high-need local educational agency in 
                        the eligible partnership, and 
                        identified by the eligible partnership; 
                        and
                          [(ii) closely supervised interaction 
                        between prospective teachers and 
                        faculty, experienced teachers, 
                        principals, other administrators, and 
                        school leaders at early childhood 
                        education programs (as applicable), 
                        elementary schools, or secondary 
                        schools, and providing support for such 
                        interaction.
                  [(B) Integrate pedagogy and classroom 
                practice and promote effective teaching skills 
                in academic content areas.
                  [(C) Provide high-quality teacher mentoring.
                  [(D) Be offered over the course of a program 
                of teacher preparation.
                  [(E) Be tightly aligned with course work (and 
                may be developed as a fifth year of a teacher 
                preparation program).
                  [(F) Where feasible, allow prospective 
                teachers to learn to teach in the same local 
                educational agency in which the teachers will 
                work, learning the instructional initiatives 
                and curriculum of that local educational 
                agency.
                  [(G) As applicable, provide training and 
                experience to enhance the teaching skills of 
                prospective teachers to better prepare such 
                teachers to meet the unique needs of teaching 
                in rural or urban communities.
                  [(H) Provide support and training for 
                individuals participating in an activity for 
                prospective or new teachers described in this 
                paragraph or paragraph (1) or (3), and for 
                individuals who serve as mentors for such 
                teachers, based on each individual's 
                experience. Such support may include--
                          [(i) with respect to a prospective 
                        teacher or a mentor, release time for 
                        such individual's participation;
                          [(ii) with respect to a faculty 
                        member, receiving course workload 
                        credit and compensation for time 
                        teaching in the eligible partnership's 
                        activities; and
                          [(iii) with respect to a mentor, a 
                        stipend, which may include bonus, 
                        differential, incentive, or performance 
                        pay, based on the mentor's extra skills 
                        and responsibilities.
          [(3) Induction programs for new teachers.--Creating 
        an induction program for new teachers or, in the case 
        of an early childhood education program, providing 
        mentoring or coaching for new early childhood 
        educators.
          [(4) Support and training for participants in early 
        childhood education programs.--In the case of an 
        eligible partnership focusing on early childhood 
        educator preparation, implementing initiatives that 
        increase compensation for early childhood educators who 
        attain associate or baccalaureate degrees in early 
        childhood education.
          [(5) Teacher recruitment.--Developing and 
        implementing effective mechanisms (which may include 
        alternative routes to State certification of teachers) 
        to ensure that the eligible partnership is able to 
        recruit qualified individuals to become highly 
        qualified teachers through the activities of the 
        eligible partnership, which may include an emphasis on 
        recruiting into the teaching profession--
                  [(A) individuals from under represented 
                populations;
                  [(B) individuals to teach in rural 
                communities and teacher shortage areas, 
                including mathematics, science, special 
                education, and the instruction of limited 
                English proficient students; and
                  [(C) mid-career professionals from other 
                occupations, former military personnel, and 
                recent college graduates with a record of 
                academic distinction.
          [(6) Literacy training.--Strengthening the literacy 
        teaching skills of prospective and, as applicable, new 
        elementary school and secondary school teachers--
                  [(A) to implement literacy programs that 
                incorporate the essential components of reading 
                instruction;
                  [(B) to use screening, diagnostic, formative, 
                and summative assessments to determine 
                students' literacy levels, difficulties, and 
                growth in order to improve classroom 
                instruction and improve student reading and 
                writing skills;
                  [(C) to provide individualized, intensive, 
                and targeted literacy instruction for students 
                with deficiencies in literacy skills; and
                  [(D) to integrate literacy skills in the 
                classroom across subject areas.
  [(e) Partnership Grants for the Establishment of Teaching 
Residency Programs.--
          [(1) In general.--An eligible partnership receiving a 
        grant to carry out an effective teaching residency 
        program shall carry out a program that includes all of 
        the following activities:
                  [(A) Supporting a teaching residency program 
                described in paragraph (2) for high-need 
                subjects and areas, as determined by the needs 
                of the high-need local educational agency in 
                the partnership.
                  [(B) Placing graduates of the teaching 
                residency program in cohorts that facilitate 
                professional collaboration, both among 
                graduates of the teaching residency program and 
                between such graduates and mentor teachers in 
                the receiving school.
                  [(C) Ensuring that teaching residents who 
                participate in the teaching residency program 
                receive--
                          [(i) effective preservice preparation 
                        as described in paragraph (2);
                          [(ii) teacher mentoring;
                          [(iii) support required through the 
                        induction program as the teaching 
                        residents enter the classroom as new 
                        teachers; and
                          [(iv) the preparation described in 
                        subparagraphs (A), (B), and (C) of 
                        subsection (d)(2).
          [(2) Teaching residency programs.--
                  [(A) Establishment and design.--A teaching 
                residency program under this paragraph shall be 
                a program based upon models of successful 
                teaching residencies that serves as a mechanism 
                to prepare teachers for success in the high-
                need schools in the eligible partnership, and 
                shall be designed to include the following 
                characteristics of successful programs:
                          [(i) The integration of pedagogy, 
                        classroom practice, and teacher 
                        mentoring.
                          [(ii) Engagement of teaching 
                        residents in rigorous graduate-level 
                        course work leading to a master's 
                        degree while undertaking a guided 
                        teaching apprenticeship.
                          [(iii) Experience and learning 
                        opportunities alongside a trained and 
                        experienced mentor teacher--
                                  [(I) whose teaching shall 
                                complement the residency 
                                program so that classroom 
                                clinical practice is tightly 
                                aligned with coursework;
                                  [(II) who shall have extra 
                                responsibilities as a teacher 
                                leader of the teaching 
                                residency program, as a mentor 
                                for residents, and as a teacher 
                                coach during the induction 
                                program for new teachers, and 
                                for establishing, within the 
                                program, a learning community 
                                in which all individuals are 
                                expected to continually improve 
                                their capacity to advance 
                                student learning; and
                                  [(III) who may be relieved 
                                from teaching duties as a 
                                result of such additional 
                                responsibilities.
                          [(iv) The establishment of clear 
                        criteria for the selection of mentor 
                        teachers based on measures of teacher 
                        effectiveness and the appropriate 
                        subject area knowledge. Evaluation of 
                        teacher effectiveness shall be based 
                        on, but not limited to, observations of 
                        the following:
                                  [(I) Planning and 
                                preparation, including 
                                demonstrated knowledge of 
                                content, pedagogy, and 
                                assessment, including the use 
                                of formative and diagnostic 
                                assessments to improve student 
                                learning.
                                  [(II) Appropriate instruction 
                                that engages students with 
                                different learning styles.
                                  [(III) Collaboration with 
                                colleagues to improve 
                                instruction.
                                  [(IV) Analysis of gains in 
                                student learning, based on 
                                multiple measures that are 
                                valid and reliable and that, 
                                when feasible, may include 
                                valid, reliable, and objective 
                                measures of the influence of 
                                teachers on the rate of student 
                                academic progress.
                                  [(V) In the case of mentor 
                                candidates who will be 
                                mentoring new or prospective 
                                literacy and mathematics 
                                coaches or instructors, 
                                appropriate skills in the 
                                essential components of reading 
                                instruction, teacher training 
                                in literacy instructional 
                                strategies across core subject 
                                areas, and teacher training in 
                                mathematics instructional 
                                strategies, as appropriate.
                          [(v) Grouping of teaching residents 
                        in cohorts to facilitate professional 
                        collaboration among such residents.
                          [(vi) The development of admissions 
                        goals and priorities--
                                  [(I) that are aligned with 
                                the hiring objectives of the 
                                local educational agency 
                                partnering with the program, as 
                                well as the instructional 
                                initiatives and curriculum of 
                                such agency, in exchange for a 
                                commitment by such agency to 
                                hire qualified graduates from 
                                the teaching residency program; 
                                and
                                  [(II) which may include 
                                consideration of applicants who 
                                reflect the communities in 
                                which they will teach as well 
                                as consideration of individuals 
                                from underrepresented 
                                populations in the teaching 
                                profession.
                          [(vii) Support for residents, once 
                        the teaching residents are hired as 
                        teachers of record, through an 
                        induction program, professional 
                        development, and networking 
                        opportunities to support the residents 
                        through not less than the residents' 
                        first two years of teaching.
                  [(B) Selection of individuals as teacher 
                residents.--
                          [(i) Eligible individual.--In order 
                        to be eligible to be a teacher resident 
                        in a teaching residency program under 
                        this paragraph, an individual shall--
                                  [(I) be a recent graduate of 
                                a four-year institution of 
                                higher education or a mid-
                                career professional from 
                                outside the field of education 
                                possessing strong content 
                                knowledge or a record of 
                                professional accomplishment; 
                                and
                                  [(II) submit an application 
                                to the teaching residency 
                                program.
                          [(ii) Selection criteria.--An 
                        eligible partnership carrying out a 
                        teaching residency program under this 
                        subsection shall establish criteria for 
                        the selection of eligible individuals 
                        to participate in the teaching 
                        residency program based on the 
                        following characteristics:
                                  [(I) Strong content knowledge 
                                or record of accomplishment in 
                                the field or subject area to be 
                                taught.
                                  [(II) Strong verbal and 
                                written communication skills, 
                                which may be demonstrated by 
                                performance on appropriate 
                                tests.
                                  [(III) Other attributes 
                                linked to effective teaching, 
                                which may be determined by 
                                interviews or performance 
                                assessments, as specified by 
                                the eligible partnership.
                  [(C) Stipends or salaries; applications; 
                agreements; repayments.--
                          [(i) Stipends or salaries.--A 
                        teaching residency program under this 
                        subsection shall provide a one-year 
                        living stipend or salary to teaching 
                        residents during the teaching residency 
                        program.
                          [(ii) Applications for stipends or 
                        salaries.--Each teacher residency 
                        candidate desiring a stipend or salary 
                        during the period of residency shall 
                        submit an application to the eligible 
                        partnership at such time, and 
                        containing such information and 
                        assurances, as the eligible partnership 
                        may require.
                          [(iii) Agreements to serve.--Each 
                        application submitted under clause (ii) 
                        shall contain or be accompanied by an 
                        agreement that the applicant will--
                                  [(I) serve as a full-time 
                                teacher for a total of not less 
                                than three academic years 
                                immediately after successfully 
                                completing the teaching 
                                residency program;
                                  [(II) fulfill the requirement 
                                under subclause (I) by teaching 
                                in a high-need school served by 
                                the high-need local educational 
                                agency in the eligible 
                                partnership and teach a subject 
                                or area that is designated as 
                                high need by the partnership;
                                  [(III) provide to the 
                                eligible partnership a 
                                certificate, from the chief 
                                administrative officer of the 
                                local educational agency in 
                                which the resident is employed, 
                                of the employment required in 
                                subclauses (I) and (II) at the 
                                beginning of, and upon 
                                completion of, each year or 
                                partial year of service;
                                  [(IV) meet the requirements 
                                to be a highly qualified 
                                teacher, as defined in section 
                                9101 of the Elementary and 
                                Secondary Education Act of 
                                1965, or section 602 of the 
                                Individuals with Disabilities 
                                Education Act, when the 
                                applicant begins to fulfill the 
                                service obligation under this 
                                clause; and
                                  [(V) comply with the 
                                requirements set by the 
                                eligible partnership 
                                underclause (iv)if the 
                                applicant is unable or 
                                unwilling to complete the 
                                service obligation required by 
                                this clause.
                          [(iv) Repayments.--
                                  [(I) In general.--A grantee 
                                carrying out a teaching 
                                residency program under this 
                                paragraph shall require a 
                                recipient of a stipend or 
                                salary under clause (i) who 
                                does not complete, or who 
                                notifies the partnership that 
                                the recipient intends not to 
                                complete, the service 
                                obligation required byclause 
                                (iii)to repay such stipend or 
                                salary to the eligible 
                                partnership, together with 
                                interest, at a rate specified 
                                by the partnership in the 
                                agreement, and in accordance 
                                with such other terms and 
                                conditions specified by the 
                                eligible partnership, as 
                                necessary.
                                  [(II) Other terms and 
                                conditions.--Any other terms 
                                and conditions specified by the 
                                eligible partnership may 
                                include reasonable provisions 
                                for pro-rata repayment of the 
                                stipend or salary described in 
                                clause (i) or for deferral of a 
                                teaching resident's service 
                                obligation required byclause 
                                (iii),on grounds of health, 
                                incapacitation, inability to 
                                secure employment in a school 
                                served by the eligible 
                                partnership, being called to 
                                active duty in the Armed Forces 
                                of the United States, or other 
                                extraordinary circumstances.
                                  [(III) Use of repayments.--An 
                                eligible partnership shall use 
                                any repayment received under 
                                this clause to carry out 
                                additional activities that are 
                                consistent with the purposes of 
                                this subsection.
  [(f) Partnership Grants for the Development of Leadership 
Programs.--
          [(1) In general.--An eligible partnership that 
        receives a grant under this section may carry out an 
        effective school leadership program, which may be 
        carried out in partnership with a local educational 
        agency located in a rural area and that shall include 
        all of the following activities:
                  [(A) Preparing individuals enrolled or 
                preparing to enroll in school leadership 
                programs for careers as superintendents, 
                principals, early childhood education program 
                directors, or other school leaders (including 
                individuals preparing to work in local 
                educational agencies located in rural areas who 
                may perform multiple duties in addition to the 
                role of a school leader).
                  [(B) Promoting strong leadership skills and, 
                as applicable, techniques for school leaders to 
                effectively--
                          [(i) create and maintain a data-
                        driven, professional learning community 
                        within the leader's school;
                          [(ii) provide a climate conducive to 
                        the professional development of 
                        teachers, with a focus on improving 
                        student academic achievement and the 
                        development of effective instructional 
                        leadership skills;
                          [(iii) understand the teaching and 
                        assessment skills needed to support 
                        successful classroom instruction and to 
                        use data to evaluate teacher 
                        instruction and drive teacher and 
                        student learning;
                          [(iv) manage resources and school 
                        time to improve student academic 
                        achievement and ensure the school 
                        environment is safe;
                          [(v) engage and involve parents, 
                        community members, the local 
                        educational agency, businesses, and 
                        other community leaders, to leverage 
                        additional resources to improve student 
                        academic achievement; and
                          [(vi) understand how students learn 
                        and develop in order to increase 
                        academic achievement for all students.
                  [(C) Ensuring that individuals who 
                participate in the school leadership program 
                receive--
                          [(i) effective preservice preparation 
                        as described in subparagraph (D);
                          [(ii) mentoring; and
                          [(iii) if applicable, full State 
                        certification or licensure to become a 
                        school leader.
                  [(D) Developing and improving a sustained and 
                high-quality preservice clinical education 
                program to further develop the leadership 
                skills of all prospective school leaders 
                involved in the program. Such clinical 
                education program shall do the following:
                          [(i) Incorporate year-long 
                        opportunities for enrichment, 
                        including--
                                  [(I) clinical learning in 
                                high-need schools served by the 
                                high-need local educational 
                                agency or a local educational 
                                agency located in a rural area 
                                in the eligible partnership and 
                                identified by the eligible 
                                partnership; and
                                  [(II) closely supervised 
                                interaction between prospective 
                                school leaders and faculty, new 
                                and experienced teachers, and 
                                new and experienced school 
                                leaders, in such high-need 
                                schools.
                          [(ii) Integrate pedagogy and practice 
                        and promote effective leadership 
                        skills, meeting the unique needs of 
                        urban, rural, or geographically 
                        isolated communities, as applicable.
                          [(iii) Provide for mentoring of new 
                        school leaders.
                  [(E) Creating an induction program for new 
                school leaders.
                  [(F) Developing and implementing effective 
                mechanisms to ensure that the eligible 
                partnership is able to recruit qualified 
                individuals to become school leaders through 
                the activities of the eligible partnership, 
                which may include an emphasis on recruiting 
                into school leadership professions--
                          [(i) individuals from 
                        underrepresented populations;
                          [(ii) individuals to serve as 
                        superintendents, principals, or other 
                        school administrators in rural and 
                        geographically isolated communities and 
                        school leader shortage areas; and
                          [(iii) mid-career professionals from 
                        other occupations, former military 
                        personnel, and recent college graduates 
                        with a record of academic distinction.
          [(2) Selection of individuals for the leadership 
        program.--In order to be eligible for the school 
        leadership program under this subsection, an individual 
        shall be enrolled in or preparing to enroll in an 
        institution of higher education, and shall--
                  [(A) be a--
                          [(i) recent graduate of an 
                        institution of higher education;
                          [(ii) mid-career professional from 
                        outside the field of education with 
                        strong content knowledge or a record of 
                        professional accomplishment;
                          [(iii) current teacher who is 
                        interested in becoming a school leader; 
                        or
                          [(iv) school leader who is interested 
                        in becoming a superintendent; and
                  [(B) submit an application to the leadership 
                program.
  [(g) Partnership With Digital Education Content Developer.--
An eligible partnership that receives a grant under this 
section may use grant funds provided to carry out the 
activities described in subsection (d) or (e), or both, to 
partner with a television public broadcast station, as defined 
in section 397(6) of the Communications Act of 1934 (47 U.S.C. 
397(6)), or another entity that develops digital educational 
content, for the purpose of improving the quality of pre-
baccalaureate teacher preparation programs or to enhance the 
quality of preservice training for prospective teachers.
  [(h) Evaluation and Reporting.--The Secretary shall--
          [(1) evaluate the programs assisted under this 
        section; and
          [(2) make publicly available a report detailing the 
        Secretary's evaluation of each such program.
  [(i) Consultation.--
          [(1) In general.--Members of an eligible partnership 
        that receives a grant under this section shall engage 
        in regular consultation throughout the development and 
        implementation of programs and activities carried out 
        under this section.
          [(2) Regular communication.--To ensure timely and 
        meaningful consultation as described in paragraph (1), 
        regular communication shall occur among all members of 
        the eligible partnership, including the high-need local 
        educational agency. Such communication shall continue 
        throughout the implementation of the grant and the 
        assessment of programs and activities under this 
        section.
          [(3) Written consent.--The Secretary may approve 
        changes in grant activities of a grant under this 
        section only if the eligible partnership submits to the 
        Secretary a written consent to such changes signed by 
        all members of the eligible partnership.
  [(j) Construction.--Nothing in this section shall be 
construed to prohibit an eligible partnership from using grant 
funds to coordinate with the activities of eligible 
partnerships in other States or on a regional basis through 
Governors, State boards of education, State educational 
agencies, State agencies responsible for early childhood 
education, local educational agencies, or State agencies for 
higher education.
  [(k) Supplement, Not Supplant.--Funds made available under 
this section shall be used to supplement, and not supplant, 
other Federal, State, and local funds that would otherwise be 
expended to carry out activities under this section.

[SEC. 203. ADMINISTRATIVE PROVISIONS.

  [(a) Duration; Number of Awards; Payments.--
          [(1) Duration.--A grant awarded under this part shall 
        be awarded for a period of five years.
          [(2) Number of awards.--An eligible partnership may 
        not receive more than one grant during a five-year 
        period. Nothing in this title shall be construed to 
        prohibit an individual member, that can demonstrate 
        need, of an eligible partnership that receives a grant 
        under this title from entering into another eligible 
        partnership consisting of new members and receiving a 
        grant with such other eligible partnership before the 
        five-year period described in the preceding sentence 
        applicable to the eligible partnership with which the 
        individual member has first partnered has expired.
  [(b) Peer Review.--
          [(1) Panel.--The Secretary shall provide the 
        applications submitted under this part to a peer review 
        panel for evaluation. With respect to each application, 
        the peer review panel shall initially recommend the 
        application for funding or for disapproval.
          [(2) Priority.--The Secretary, in funding 
        applications under this part, shall give priority--
                  [(A) to eligible partnerships that include an 
                institution of higher education whose teacher 
                preparation program has a rigorous selection 
                process to ensure the highest quality of 
                students entering such program; and
                  [(B)(i) to applications from broad-based 
                eligible partnerships that involve businesses 
                and community organizations; or
                  [(ii) to eligible partnerships so that the 
                awards promote an equitable geographic 
                distribution of grants among rural and urban 
                areas.
          [(3) Secretarial selection.--The Secretary shall 
        determine, based on the peer review process, which 
        applications shall receive funding and the amounts of 
        the grants. In determining grant amounts, the Secretary 
        shall take into account the total amount of funds 
        available for all grants under this part and the types 
        of activities proposed to be carried out by the 
        eligible partnership.
  [(c) Matching Requirements.--
          [(1) In general.--Each eligible partnership receiving 
        a grant under this part shall provide, from non-Federal 
        sources, an amount equal to 100 percent of the amount 
        of the grant, which may be provided in cash or in-kind, 
        to carry out the activities supported by the grant.
          [(2) Waiver.--The Secretary may waive all or part of 
        the matching requirement described in paragraph (1) for 
        any fiscal year for an eligible partnership if the 
        Secretary determines that applying the matching 
        requirement to the eligible partnership would result in 
        serious hardship or an inability to carry out the 
        authorized activities described in this part.
  [(d) Limitation on Administrative Expenses.--An eligible 
partnership that receives a grant under this part may use not 
more than two percent of the funds provided to administer the 
grant.

[SEC. 204. ACCOUNTABILITY AND EVALUATION.

  [(a) Eligible Partnership Evaluation.--Each eligible 
partnership submitting an application for a grant under this 
part shall establish, and include in such application, an 
evaluation plan that includes strong and measurable performance 
objectives. The plan shall include objectives and measures for 
increasing--
          [(1) achievement for all prospective and new 
        teachers, as measured by the eligible partnership;
          [(2) teacher retention in the first three years of a 
        teacher's career;
          [(3) improvement in the pass rates and scaled scores 
        for initial State certification or licensure of 
        teachers; and
          [(4)(A) the percentage of highly qualified teachers 
        hired by the high-need local educational agency 
        participating in the eligible partnership;
          [(B) the percentage of highly qualified teachers 
        hired by the high-need local educational agency who are 
        members of underrepresented groups;
          [(C) the percentage of highly qualified teachers 
        hired by the high-need local educational agency who 
        teach high-need academic subject areas (such as 
        reading, mathematics, science, and foreign language, 
        including less commonly taught languages and critical 
        foreign languages);
          [(D) the percentage of highly qualified teachers 
        hired by the high-need local educational agency who 
        teach in high-need areas (including special education, 
        language instruction educational programs for limited 
        English proficient students, and early childhood 
        education);
          [(E) the percentage of highly qualified teachers 
        hired by the high-need local educational agency who 
        teach in high-need schools, disaggregated by the 
        elementary school and secondary school levels;
          [(F) as applicable, the percentage of early childhood 
        education program classes in the geographic area served 
        by the eligible partnership taught by early childhood 
        educators who are highly competent; and
          [(G) as applicable, the percentage of teachers 
        trained--
                  [(i) to integrate technology effectively into 
                curricula and instruction, including technology 
                consistent with the principles of universal 
                design for learning; and
                  [(ii) to use technology effectively to 
                collect, manage, and analyze data to improve 
                teaching and learning for the purpose of 
                improving student academic achievement.
  [(b) Information.--An eligible partnership receiving a grant 
under this part shall ensure that teachers, principals, school 
superintendents, faculty, and leadership at institutions of 
higher education located in the geographic areas served by the 
eligible partnership are provided information, including 
through electronic means, about the activities carried out with 
funds under this part.
  [(c) Revised Application.--If the Secretary determines that 
an eligible partnership receiving a grant under this part is 
not making substantial progress in meeting the purposes, goals, 
objectives, and measures of the grant, as appropriate, by the 
end of the third year of a grant under this part, then the 
Secretary--
          [(1) shall cancel the grant; and
          [(2) may use any funds returned or available because 
        of such cancellation under paragraph (1) to--
                  [(A) increase other grant awards under this 
                part; or
                  [(B) award new grants to other eligible 
                partnerships under this part.
  [(d) Evaluation and Dissemination.--The Secretary shall 
evaluate the activities funded under this part and report the 
findings regarding the evaluation of such activities to the 
authorizing committees. The Secretary shall broadly 
disseminate--
          [(1) successful practices developed by eligible 
        partnerships under this part; and
          [(2) information regarding such practices that were 
        found to be ineffective.]

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NATIONAL DEFENSE AUTHORIZATION ACT FOR FISCAL YEAR 2013

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DIVISION A--DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE AUTHORIZATIONS

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TITLE V--MILITARY PERSONNEL POLICY

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Subtitle G--Defense Dependents' Education and Military Family Readiness

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SEC. 563. AMENDMENTS TO THE IMPACT AID PROGRAM.

  (a) Short Title.--This section may be cited as the ``Impact 
Aid Improvement Act of 2012''.
  (b) Amendments to the Impact Aid Program.--Title VIII of the 
Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 (20 U.S.C. 7701 
et seq.) is amended--
          (1) in section 8002 (20 U.S.C. 7702)--
                  (A) in subsection (a)--
                          (i) by striking ``for a fiscal year 
                        ending prior to October 1, 2003''; and
                          (ii) by inserting ``or (h)'' after 
                        ``subsection (b)'';
                  (B) in subsection (b)--
                          (i) in paragraph (2), by striking 
                        ``aggregate assessed'' and inserting 
                        ``estimated taxable''; and
                          (ii) by striking paragraph (3) and 
                        inserting the following:
          ``(3) Determination of taxable value for eligible 
        federal property.
                  ``(A) In general.--In determining the 
                estimated taxable value of such acquired 
                Federal property for fiscal year 2010 and each 
                succeeding fiscal year, the Secretary shall--
                          ``(i) first determine the total 
                        taxable value for the purpose of 
                        levying property tax for school 
                        purposes for current expenditures of 
                        real property located within the 
                        boundaries of such local educational 
                        agency;
                          ``(ii) then determine the per acre 
                        value of the eligible Federal property 
                        by dividing the total taxable value as 
                        determined in clause (i) by the 
                        difference between the total acres 
                        located within the boundaries of the 
                        local educational agency and the number 
                        of Federal acres eligible under this 
                        section; and
                          ``(iii) then determine the total 
                        taxable value of the eligible Federal 
                        property by multiplying the per acre 
                        value as calculated under clause (ii) 
                        by the number of Federal acres eligible 
                        under this section.
                  ``(B) Special rule.--In the case of Federal 
                property eligible under this section that is 
                within the boundaries of 2 or more local 
                educational agencies, such a local educational 
                agency may ask the Secretary to calculate the 
                per acre value of each such local educational 
                agency as provided under subparagraph (A) and 
                apply the average of these per acre values to 
                the acres of the Federal property in such 
                agency.''; and
                  (C) in subsection (h)--
                          (i) in paragraph (1)--
                                  (I) in the paragraph heading, 
                                by striking ``for pre-1995 
                                recipients'' and inserting 
                                ``for pre-2010 recipients''; 
                                and
                                  (II) by striking 
                                subparagraphs (A) and (B) and 
                                inserting the following:
                  ``(A) In general. --The Secretary shall first 
                make a foundation payment to each local 
                educational agency that is determined by the 
                Secretary to be eligible to receive a payment 
                under this section for the fiscal year involved 
                and that filed a timely application, and met, 
                or has been determined by statute to meet, the 
                eligibility requirements of subsection (a) for 
                fiscal year 2009.
                  ``(B) Amount.---
                          ``(i) In general. --The amount of a 
                        payment under subparagraph (A) for a 
                        local educational agency shall be equal 
                        to the greater of 90 percent of the 
                        payment the local educational agency 
                        received from dollars appropriated for 
                        fiscal year 2009 or 90 percent of the 
                        average payment that the local 
                        educational agency received from 
                        dollars appropriated for fiscal years 
                        2006, 2007, 2008, and 2009, and shall 
                        be calculated without regard to the 
                        maximum payment provisions in 
                        subsection (b)(1)(C).
                          ``(ii) Exception.--In calculating 
                        such average payment for a local 
                        educational agency that did not receive 
                        a payment under subsection (b) for 1 or 
                        more of the fiscal years between fiscal 
                        year 2006 and 2009, inclusive, the 
                        lowest such payment made to the agency 
                        for fiscal year 2006, 2007, 2008, or 
                        2009, shall be treated as the payment 
                        that the agency received under 
                        subsection (b) for each fiscal year for 
                        which the agency did not receive such a 
                        payment.''; and
                          (ii) by striking paragraphs (2) 
                        through (4) and inserting the 
                        following:
          ``(2) Foundation payments for new applicants.--
                  ``(A) First year. --From any amounts 
                remaining after making payments under paragraph 
                (1) and subsection (i)(1) for the fiscal year 
                involved, the Secretary shall make a payment, 
                in an amount determined in accordance with 
                subparagraph (C), to each local educational 
                agency that the Secretary determines eligible 
                for a payment under this section for a fiscal 
                year after fiscal year 2009 and that did not 
                receive a payment under paragraph (1) for the 
                fiscal year for which such agency was 
                determined eligible for such payment.
                  ``(B) Second and succeeding years. --For any 
                succeeding fiscal year after the first fiscal 
                year that a local educational agency receives a 
                foundation payment under subparagraph (A), the 
                amount of the local educational agency's 
                foundation payment under this paragraph for 
                such succeeding fiscal year shall be equal to 
                the local educational agency's foundation 
                payment under this paragraph for the first 
                fiscal year.
                  ``(C) Amounts. --The amount of a payment 
                under subparagraph (A) for a local educational 
                agency shall be determined as follows:
                          ``(i) Calculate the local educational 
                        agency's maximum payment under 
                        subsection (b).
                          ``(ii) Calculate the percentage that 
                        the amount appropriated under section 
                        8014(a) for the most recent fiscal year 
                        for which the Secretary has completed 
                        making payments under this section is 
                        of the total maximum payments for such 
                        fiscal year for all local educational 
                        agencies eligible for a payment under 
                        subsection (b) and multiply the 
                        agency's maximum payment by such 
                        percentage.
                          ``(iii) Multiply the amount 
                        determined under clause (ii) by 90 
                        percent.
                  ``(D) Insufficient funds.--If the amount 
                appropriated under section 8014(a) of this 
                title is insufficient to pay the full amount 
                determined under this paragraph for all 
                eligible local educational agencies for the 
                fiscal year, then the Secretary shall ratably 
                reduce the payment to each local educational 
                agency under this paragraph.
          ``(3) Remaining funds. --From any funds remaining 
        after making payments under paragraphs (1) and (2) for 
        the fiscal year involved, the Secretary shall make a 
        payment to each local educational agency that received 
        a foundation payment under paragraph (1) or (2) or 
        subsection (i)(1), for the fiscal year involved in an 
        amount that bears the same relation to the remainder as 
        a percentage share determined for the local educational 
        agency (by dividing the maximum amount that the agency 
        is eligible to receive under subsection (b) by the 
        total of the maximum amounts for all such agencies) 
        bears to the percentage share determined (in the same 
        manner) for all local educational agencies eligible to 
        receive a payment under this section for the fiscal 
        year involved, except that, for the purpose of 
        calculating a local educational agency's maximum amount 
        under subsection (b), data from the most current fiscal 
        year shall be used.
          ``(4) Data. --For each local educational agency that 
        received a payment under this section for fiscal year 
        2010 through the fiscal year in which the Impact Aid 
        Improvement Act of 2012 is enacted, the Secretary shall 
        not make a payment under paragraph (3) to a local 
        educational agency that fails to submit, within 60 days 
        of the date the Secretary notifies the agency that the 
        information is needed, the data necessary to calculate 
        the maximum amount of a payment under subsection (b) 
        for that local educational agency.'';
          (2) by striking section 8003(a)(4) (20 U.S.C. 
        7703(a)(4)) and inserting the following:
          ``(4) Military installation and indian housing 
        undergoing renovation or rebuilding.--
                  ``(A) Military installation housing.--
                Beginning in fiscal year 2014, in determining 
                the amount of a payment for a local educational 
                agency for children described in paragraph 
                (1)(D)(i), the Secretary shall consider those 
                children as if they were children described in 
                paragraph (1)(B) if the Secretary determines, 
                on the basis of a certification provided to the 
                Secretary by a designated representative of the 
                Secretary of Defense, that those children would 
                have resided in housing on Federal property if 
                the housing was not undergoing renovation or 
                rebuilding. The total number of children 
                treated as children described in paragraph 
                (1)(B) shall not exceed the lessor of--
                          ``(i) the total number of children 
                        eligible under paragraph (1)(B) for the 
                        year prior to the initiation of the 
                        housing project on Federal property 
                        undergoing renovation or rebuilding; or
                          ``(ii) the total number of Federally 
                        connected children enrolled at the 
                        local educational agency as stated in 
                        the application filed for the payment 
                        for the year for which the 
                        determination is made.
                  ``(B) Indian lands.--Beginning in fiscal year 
                2014, in determining the amount of a payment 
                for a local educational agency that received a 
                payment for children that resided on Indian 
                lands in accordance with paragraph (1)(C) for 
                the fiscal year prior to the fiscal year for 
                which the local educational agency is making an 
                application, the Secretary shall consider those 
                children to be children described in paragraph 
                (1)(C) if the Secretary determines on the basis 
                of a certification provided to the Secretary by 
                a designated representative of the Secretary of 
                the Interior or the Secretary of Housing and 
                Urban Development that those children would 
                have resided in housing on Indian lands if the 
                housing was not undergoing renovation or 
                rebuilding. The total number of children 
                treated as children described in paragraph 
                (1)(C) shall not exceed the lessor of--
                          ``(i) the total number of children 
                        eligible under paragraph (1)(C) for the 
                        year prior to the initiation of the 
                        housing project on Indian lands 
                        undergoing renovation or rebuilding; or
                          ``(ii) the total number of Federally 
                        connected children enrolled at the 
                        local educational agency as stated in 
                        the application filed for the payment 
                        for the year for which the 
                        determination is made.
                  ``(C) Eligible housing.--Renovation or 
                rebuilding shall be defined as projects 
                considered as capitalization, modernization, or 
                restoration, as defined by the Secretary of 
                Defense or the Secretary of the Interior (as 
                the case may be) and are projects that last 
                more than 30 days, but do not include 
                `sustainment projects' such as painting, 
                carpeting, or minor repairs.''; and
          (3) in section 8010 (20 U.S.C. 7710)--
                  (A) in subsection (c)(1), by striking 
                ``paragraph (3) of this subsection'' both 
                places the term appears and inserting 
                ``paragraph (2)''; and
                  (B) by adding at the end the following:
  ``(d) Timely Payments.--
          ``(1) In general.--Subject to paragraph (2), the 
        Secretary shall pay a local educational agency the full 
        amount that the agency is eligible to receive under 
        this title for a fiscal year not later than September 
        30 of the second fiscal year following the fiscal year 
        for which such amount has been appropriated if, not 
        later than 1 calendar year following the fiscal year in 
        which such amount has been appropriated, such local 
        educational agency submits to the Secretary all the 
        data and information necessary for the Secretary to pay 
        the full amount that the agency is eligible to receive 
        under this title for such fiscal year.
          ``(2) Payments with respect of fiscal years in which 
        insufficient funds are appropriated.--For a fiscal year 
        in which the amount appropriated under section 8014 is 
        insufficient to pay the full amount a local educational 
        agency is eligible to receive under this title, 
        paragraph (1) shall be applied by substituting `is 
        available to pay the agency' for `the agency is 
        eligible to receive' each place the term appears.''.
  (c) Effective Date, Implementation, and Repeal.--
          [(1) In general.--The amendments made by subsection 
        (b) (other than the amendment made by paragraph (3)(A) 
        of such subsection) shall be effective for a 5-year 
        period beginning on the date of enactment of this Act.]
          [(2)] (1) Effective date.--Notwithstanding section 
        8005(d) of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act 
        of 1965 (20 U.S.C. 7705(d)), subsection (b)(1), and the 
        amendments made by subsection (b)(1), shall take effect 
        with respect to applications submitted under section 
        8002 of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 
        1965 (20 U.S.C. 7702) for fiscal year 2010.
          [(3)] (2) Implementation.--The Secretary of Education 
        shall carry out the amendments made by this section 
        without regard to the rulemaking procedures under 
        section 553 of title 5, United States Code.
          [(4) Repeal.--The amendments made by subsection (b) 
        (other than the amendment made by paragraph (3)(A) of 
        such subsection) shall be repealed on the day after the 
        5-year period described in paragraph (1) and title VIII 
        of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 
        (20 U.S.C. 7701 et seq.) shall be applied as if such 
        subsection and the amendments made by such subsection 
        (other than the amendment made by paragraph (3)(A) of 
        such subsection) had never been enacted.]

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CONSOLIDATED APPROPRIATIONS ACT, 2014

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   DIVISION H--DEPARTMENTS OF LABOR, HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES, AND 
EDUCATION, AND RELATED AGENCIES APPROPRIATIONS ACT, 2014

           *       *       *       *       *       *       *


TITLE III--DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION APPROPRIATIONS ACT, 2014

           *       *       *       *       *       *       *


(TRANSFER OF FUNDS)

           *       *       *       *       *       *       *


  [Sec. 309. (a) Consolidations.--For fiscal year 2006 and each 
succeeding fiscal year, if a local educational agency described 
in subsection (b) is formed at any time after 1938 by the 
consolidation of 2 or more former school districts, the local 
educational agency may elect to have the Secretary determine 
its eligibility for any fiscal year on the basis of 1 or more 
of those former districts, as designated by the local 
educational agency.
  [(b) Eligible Local Educational Agencies.--A local 
educational agency referred to in subsection (a) is--
          [(1) any local educational agency that, for fiscal 
        year 1994 or any preceding fiscal year, applied, and 
        was determined to be eligible under, section 2(c) of 
        the Act of September 30, 1950 (Public Law 874, 81st 
        Congress) as that section was in effect for that fiscal 
        year; or
          [(2) a local educational agency formed by the 
        consolidation of 2 or more districts, at least 1 of 
        which was eligible for assistance under this section 
        for the fiscal year preceding the year of the 
        consolidation, if--
                  [(A) for fiscal years 2006 through 2013 the 
                local educational agency notified the Secretary 
                not later than 30 days after the date of 
                enactment of this Act; and
                  [(B) for fiscal year 2014 the local 
                educational agency includes the designation in 
                its application under section 8005 or any 
                timely amendment to such application.
  [(c) Amount.--A local educational agency eligible under 
subsection (b) shall receive a foundation payment as provided 
for under subparagraphs (A) and (B) of subsection (h)(1), as in 
effect on the date of enactment of this Act, except that the 
foundation payment shall be calculated based on the most recent 
payment received by the local educational agency based on its 
former common status.]

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                              ----------                              


     SECTION 602 OF THE INDIVIDUALS WITH DISABILITIES EDUCATION ACT

SEC. 602. DEFINITIONS.

   Except as otherwise provided, in this title:
          (1) Assistive technology device.--
                  (A) In general.--The term ``assistive 
                technology device'' means any item, piece of 
                equipment, or product system, whether acquired 
                commercially off the shelf, modified, or 
                customized, that is used to increase, maintain, 
                or improve functional capabilities of a child 
                with a disability.
                  (B) Exception.--The term does not include a 
                medical device that is surgically implanted, or 
                the replacement of such device.
          (2) Assistive technology service.--The term 
        ``assistive technology service'' means any service that 
        directly assists a child with a disability in the 
        selection, acquisition, or use of an assistive 
        technology device. Such term includes--
                  (A) the evaluation of the needs of such 
                child, including a functional evaluation of the 
                child in the child's customary environment;
                  (B) purchasing, leasing, or otherwise 
                providing for the acquisition of assistive 
                technology devices by such child;
                  (C) selecting, designing, fitting, 
                customizing, adapting, applying, maintaining, 
                repairing, or replacing assistive technology 
                devices;
                  (D) coordinating and using other therapies, 
                interventions, or services with assistive 
                technology devices, such as those associated 
                with existing education and rehabilitation 
                plans and programs;
                  (E) training or technical assistance for such 
                child, or, where appropriate, the family of 
                such child; and
                  (F) training or technical assistance for 
                professionals (including individuals providing 
                education and rehabilitation services), 
                employers, or other individuals who provide 
                services to, employ, or are otherwise 
                substantially involved in the major life 
                functions of such child.
          (3) Child with a disability.--
                  (A) In general.--The term ``child with a 
                disability'' means a child--
                          (i) with intellectual disabilities, 
                        hearing impairments (including 
                        deafness), speech or language 
                        impairments, visual impairments 
                        (including blindness), serious 
                        emotional disturbance (referred to in 
                        this title as ``emotional 
                        disturbance''), orthopedic impairments, 
                        autism, traumatic brain injury, other 
                        health impairments, or specific 
                        learning disabilities; and
                          (ii) who, by reason thereof, needs 
                        special education and related services.
                  (B) Child aged 3 through 9.--The term ``child 
                with a disability'' for a child aged 3 through 
                9 (or any subset of that age range, including 
                ages 3 through 5), may, at the discretion of 
                the State and the local educational agency, 
                include a child--
                          (i) experiencing developmental 
                        delays, as defined by the State and as 
                        measured by appropriate diagnostic 
                        instruments and procedures, in 1 or 
                        more of the following areas: physical 
                        development; cognitive development; 
                        communication development; social or 
                        emotional development; or adaptive 
                        development; and
                          (ii) who, by reason thereof, needs 
                        special education and related services.
          (4) Core academic subjects.--The term ``core academic 
        subjects'' has the meaning given the term in section 
        9101 of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 
        1965.
          (5) Educational service agency.--The term 
        ``educational service agency''--
                  (A) means a regional public multiservice 
                agency--
                          (i) authorized by State law to 
                        develop, manage, and provide services 
                        or programs to local educational 
                        agencies; and
                          (ii) recognized as an administrative 
                        agency for purposes of the provision of 
                        special education and related services 
                        provided within public elementary 
                        schools and secondary schools of the 
                        State; and
                  (B) includes any other public institution or 
                agency having administrative control and 
                direction over a public elementary school or 
                secondary school.
          (6) Elementary school.--The term ``elementary 
        school'' means a nonprofit institutional day or 
        residential school, including a public elementary 
        charter school, that provides elementary education, as 
        determined under State law.
          (7) Equipment.--The term ``equipment'' includes--
                  (A) machinery, utilities, and built-in 
                equipment, and any necessary enclosures or 
                structures to house such machinery, utilities, 
                or equipment; and
                  (B) all other items necessary for the 
                functioning of a particular facility as a 
                facility for the provision of educational 
                services, including items such as instructional 
                equipment and necessary furniture; printed, 
                published, and audio-visual instructional 
                materials; telecommunications, sensory, and 
                other technological aids and devices; and 
                books, periodicals, documents, and other 
                related materials.
          (8) Excess costs.--The term ``excess costs'' means 
        those costs that are in excess of the average annual 
        per-student expenditure in a local educational agency 
        during the preceding school year for an elementary 
        school or secondary school student, as may be 
        appropriate, and which shall be computed after 
        deducting--
                  (A) amounts received--
                          (i) under part B;
                          (ii) under part A of title I of the 
                        Elementary and Secondary Education Act 
                        of 1965; and
                          (iii) under parts A and B of title 
                        III of that Act; and
                  (B) any State or local funds expended for 
                programs that would qualify for assistance 
                under any of those parts.
          (9) Free appropriate public education.--The term 
        ``free appropriate public education'' means special 
        education and related services that--
                  (A) have been provided at public expense, 
                under public supervision and direction, and 
                without charge;
                  (B) meet the standards of the State 
                educational agency;
                  (C) include an appropriate preschool, 
                elementary school, or secondary school 
                education in the State involved; and
                  (D) are provided in conformity with the 
                individualized education program required under 
                section 614(d).
          [(10) Highly qualified.--
                  [(A) In general.--For any special education 
                teacher, the term ``highly qualified'' has the 
                meaning given the term in section 9101 of the 
                Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965, 
                except that such term also--
                          [(i) includes the requirements 
                        described in subparagraph (B); and
                          [(ii) includes the option for 
                        teachers to meet the requirements of 
                        section 9101 of such Act by meeting the 
                        requirements of subparagraph (C) or 
                        (D).
                  [(B) Requirements for special education 
                teachers.--When used with respect to any public 
                elementary school or secondary school special 
                education teacher teaching in a State, such 
                term means that--
                          [(i) the teacher has obtained full 
                        State certification as a special 
                        education teacher (including 
                        certification obtained through 
                        alternative routes to certification), 
                        or passed the State special education 
                        teacher licensing examination, and 
                        holds a license to teach in the State 
                        as a special education teacher, except 
                        that when used with respect to any 
                        teacher teaching in a public charter 
                        school, the term means that the teacher 
                        meets the requirements set forth in the 
                        State's public charter school law;
                          [(ii) the teacher has not had special 
                        education certification or licensure 
                        requirements waived on an emergency, 
                        temporary, or provisional basis; and
                          [(iii) the teacher holds at least a 
                        bachelor's degree.
                  [(C) Special education teachers teaching to 
                alternate achievement standards.--When used 
                with respect to a special education teacher who 
                teaches core academic subjects exclusively to 
                children who are assessed against alternate 
                achievement standards established under the 
                regulations promulgated under section 
                1111(b)(1) of the Elementary and Secondary 
                Education Act of 1965, such term means the 
                teacher, whether new or not new to the 
                profession, may either--
                          [(i) meet the applicable requirements 
                        of section 9101 of such Act for any 
                        elementary, middle, or secondary school 
                        teacher who is new or not new to the 
                        profession; or
                          [(ii) meet the requirements of 
                        subparagraph (B) or (C) of section 
                        9101(23) of such Act as applied to an 
                        elementary school teacher, or, in the 
                        case of instruction above the 
                        elementary level, has subject matter 
                        knowledge appropriate to the level of 
                        instruction being provided, as 
                        determined by the State, needed to 
                        effectively teach to those standards.
                  [(D) Special education teachers teaching 
                multiple subjects.--When used with respect to a 
                special education teacher who teaches 2 or more 
                core academic subjects exclusively to children 
                with disabilities, such term means that the 
                teacher may either--
                          [(i) meet the applicable requirements 
                        of section 9101 of the Elementary and 
                        Secondary Education Act of 1965 for any 
                        elementary, middle, or secondary school 
                        teacher who is new or not new to the 
                        profession;
                          [(ii) in the case of a teacher who is 
                        not new to the profession, demonstrate 
                        competence in all the core academic 
                        subjects in which the teacher teaches 
                        in the same manner as is required for 
                        an elementary, middle, or secondary 
                        school teacher who is not new to the 
                        profession under section 
                        9101(23)(C)(ii) of such Act, which may 
                        include a single, high objective 
                        uniform State standard of evaluation 
                        covering multiple subjects; or
                          [(iii) in the case of a new special 
                        education teacher who teaches multiple 
                        subjects and who is highly qualified in 
                        mathematics, language arts, or science, 
                        demonstrate competence in the other 
                        core academic subjects in which the 
                        teacher teaches in the same manner as 
                        is required for an elementary, middle, 
                        or secondary school teacher under 
                        section 9101(23)(C)(ii) of such Act, 
                        which may include a single, high 
                        objective uniform State standard of 
                        evaluation covering multiple subjects, 
                        not later than 2 years after the date 
                        of employment.
                  [(E) Rule of construction.--Notwithstanding 
                any other individual right of action that a 
                parent or student may maintain under this part, 
                nothing in this section or part shall be 
                construed to create a right of action on behalf 
                of an individual student or class of students 
                for the failure of a particular State 
                educational agency or local educational agency 
                employee to be highly qualified.
                  [(F) Definition for purposes of the esea.--A 
                teacher who is highly qualified under this 
                paragraph shall be considered highly qualified 
                for purposes of the Elementary and Secondary 
                Education Act of 1965.]
          (11) Homeless children.--The term ``homeless 
        children'' has the meaning given the term ``homeless 
        children and youths'' in section 725 of the McKinney-
        Vento Homeless Assistance Act (42 U.S.C. 11434a).
          (12) Indian.--The term ``Indian'' means an individual 
        who is a member of an Indian tribe.
          (13) Indian tribe.--The term ``Indian tribe'' means 
        any Federal or State Indian tribe, band, rancheria, 
        pueblo, colony, or community, including any Alaska 
        Native village or regional village corporation (as 
        defined in or established under the Alaska Native 
        Claims Settlement Act (43 U.S.C. 1601 et seq.)).
          (14) Individualized education program; IEP.--The term 
        ``individualized education program'' or ``IEP'' means a 
        written statement for each child with a disability that 
        is developed, reviewed, and revised in accordance with 
        section 614(d).
          (15) Individualized family service plan.--The term 
        ``individualized family service plan'' has the meaning 
        given the term in section 636.
          (16) Infant or toddler with a disability.--The term 
        ``infant or toddler with a disability'' has the meaning 
        given the term in section 632.
          (17) Institution of higher education.--The term 
        ``institution of higher education''--
                  (A) has the meaning given the term in section 
                101 of the Higher Education Act of 1965; and
                  (B) also includes any college or university 
                receiving funding from the Secretary of the 
                Interior under the Tribally Controlled Colleges 
                and Universities Assistance Act of 1978.
          (18) Limited english proficient.--The term ``limited 
        English proficient'' has the meaning given the term in 
        section 9101 of the Elementary and Secondary Education 
        Act of 1965.
          (19) Local educational agency.--
                  (A) In general.--The term ``local educational 
                agency'' means a public board of education or 
                other public authority legally constituted 
                within a State for either administrative 
                control or direction of, or to perform a 
                service function for, public elementary schools 
                or secondary schools in a city, county, 
                township, school district, or other political 
                subdivision of a State, or for such combination 
                of school districts or counties as are 
                recognized in a State as an administrative 
                agency for its public elementary schools or 
                secondary schools.
                  (B) Educational service agencies and other 
                public institutions or agencies.--The term 
                includes--
                          (i) an educational service agency; 
                        and
                          (ii) any other public institution or 
                        agency having administrative control 
                        and direction of a public elementary 
                        school or secondary school.
                  (C) BIA funded schools.--The term includes an 
                elementary school or secondary school funded by 
                the Bureau of Indian Affairs, but only to the 
                extent that such inclusion makes the school 
                eligible for programs for which specific 
                eligibility is not provided to the school in 
                another provision of law and the school does 
                not have a student population that is smaller 
                than the student population of the local 
                educational agency receiving assistance under 
                this title with the smallest student 
                population, except that the school shall not be 
                subject to the jurisdiction of any State 
                educational agency other than the Bureau of 
                Indian Affairs.
          (20) Native language.--The term ``native language'', 
        when used with respect to an individual who is limited 
        English proficient, means the language normally used by 
        the individual or, in the case of a child, the language 
        normally used by the parents of the child.
          (21) Nonprofit.--The term ``nonprofit'', as applied 
        to a school, agency, organization, or institution, 
        means a school, agency, organization, or institution 
        owned and operated by 1 or more nonprofit corporations 
        or associations no part of the net earnings of which 
        inures, or may lawfully inure, to the benefit of any 
        private shareholder or individual.
          (22) Outlying area.--The term ``outlying area'' means 
        the United States Virgin Islands, Guam, American Samoa, 
        and the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands.
          (23) Parent.--The term ``parent'' means--
                  (A) a natural, adoptive, or foster parent of 
                a child (unless a foster parent is prohibited 
                by State law from serving as a parent);
                  (B) a guardian (but not the State if the 
                child is a ward of the State);
                  (C) an individual acting in the place of a 
                natural or adoptive parent (including a 
                grandparent, stepparent, or other relative) 
                with whom the child lives, or an individual who 
                is legally responsible for the child's welfare; 
                or
                  (D) except as used in sections 615(b)(2) and 
                639(a)(5), an individual assigned under either 
                of those sections to be a surrogate parent.
          (24) Parent organization.--The term ``parent 
        organization'' has the meaning given the term in 
        section 671(g).
          (25) Parent training and information center.--The 
        term ``parent training and information center'' means a 
        center assisted under section 671 or 672.
          (26) Related services.--
                  (A) In general.--The term ``related 
                services'' means transportation, and such 
                developmental, corrective, and other supportive 
                services (including speech-language pathology 
                and audiology services, interpreting services, 
                psychological services, physical and 
                occupational therapy, recreation, including 
                therapeutic recreation, social work services, 
                school nurse services designed to enable a 
                child with a disability to receive a free 
                appropriate public education as described in 
                the individualized education program of the 
                child, counseling services, including 
                rehabilitation counseling, orientation and 
                mobility services, and medical services, except 
                that such medical services shall be for 
                diagnostic and evaluation purposes only) as may 
                be required to assist a child with a disability 
                to benefit from special education, and includes 
                the early identification and assessment of 
                disabling conditions in children.
                  (B) Exception.--The term does not include a 
                medical device that is surgically implanted, or 
                the replacement of such device.
          (27) Secondary school.--The term ``secondary school'' 
        means a nonprofit institutional day or residential 
        school, including a public secondary charter school, 
        that provides secondary education, as determined under 
        State law, except that it does not include any 
        education beyond grade 12.
          (28) Secretary.--The term ``Secretary'' means the 
        Secretary of Education.
          (29) Special education.--The term ``special 
        education'' means specially designed instruction, at no 
        cost to parents, to meet the unique needs of a child 
        with a disability, including--
                  (A) instruction conducted in the classroom, 
                in the home, in hospitals and institutions, and 
                in other settings; and
                  (B) instruction in physical education.
          (30) Specific learning disability.--
                  (A) In general.--The term ``specific learning 
                disability'' means a disorder in 1 or more of 
                the basic psychological processes involved in 
                understanding or in using language, spoken or 
                written, which disorder may manifest itself in 
                the imperfect ability to listen, think, speak, 
                read, write, spell, or do mathematical 
                calculations.
                  (B) Disorders included.--Such term includes 
                such conditions as perceptual disabilities, 
                brain injury, minimal brain dysfunction, 
                dyslexia, and developmental aphasia.
                  (C) Disorders not included.--Such term does 
                not include a learning problem that is 
                primarily the result of visual, hearing, or 
                motor disabilities, of intellectual 
                disabilities, of emotional disturbance, or of 
                environmental, cultural, or economic 
                disadvantage.
          (31) State.--The term ``State'' means each of the 50 
        States, the District of Columbia, the Commonwealth of 
        Puerto Rico, and each of the outlying areas.
          (32) State educational agency.--The term ``State 
        educational agency'' means the State board of education 
        or other agency or officer primarily responsible for 
        the State supervision of public elementary schools and 
        secondary schools, or, if there is no such officer or 
        agency, an officer or agency designated by the Governor 
        or by State law.
          (33) Supplementary aids and services.--The term 
        ``supplementary aids and services'' means aids, 
        services, and other supports that are provided in 
        regular education classes or other education-related 
        settings to enable children with disabilities to be 
        educated with nondisabled children to the maximum 
        extent appropriate in accordance with section 
        612(a)(5).
          (34) Transition services.--The term ``transition 
        services'' means a coordinated set of activities for a 
        child with a disability that--
                  (A) is designed to be within a results-
                oriented process, that is focused on improving 
                the academic and functional achievement of the 
                child with a disability to facilitate the 
                child's movement from school to post-school 
                activities, including post-secondary education, 
                vocational education, integrated employment 
                (including supported employment), continuing 
                and adult education, adult services, 
                independent living, or community participation;
                  (B) is based on the individual child's needs, 
                taking into account the child's strengths, 
                preferences, and interests; and
                  (C) includes instruction, related services, 
                community experiences, the development of 
                employment and other post-school adult living 
                objectives, and, when appropriate, acquisition 
                of daily living skills and functional 
                vocational evaluation.
          (35) Universal design.--The term ``universal design'' 
        has the meaning given the term in section 3 of the 
        Assistive Technology Act of 1998 (29 U.S.C. 3002).
          (36) Ward of the state.--
                  (A) In general.--The term ``ward of the 
                State'' means a child who, as determined by the 
                State where the child resides, is a foster 
                child, is a ward of the State, or is in the 
                custody of a public child welfare agency.
                  (B) Exception.--The term does not include a 
                foster child who has a foster parent who meets 
                the definition of a parent in paragraph (23).
                              ----------                              


MCKINNEY-VENTO HOMELESS ASSISTANCE ACT

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TITLE VII--EDUCATION, TRAINING, AND COMMUNITY SERVICES PROGRAMS

           *       *       *       *       *       *       *


         Subtitle B--Education for Homeless Children and Youths

SEC. 721. STATEMENT OF POLICY.

   The following is the policy of the Congress:
          (1) Each State educational agency shall ensure that 
        each child of a homeless individual and each homeless 
        youth has equal access to the same free, appropriate 
        public education, including a public preschool 
        education, as provided to other children and youths.
          [(2) In any State that has a compulsory residency 
        requirement as a component of the State's compulsory 
        school attendance laws or other laws, regulations, 
        practices, or policies that may act as a barrier to the 
        enrollment, attendance, or success in school of 
        homeless children and youths, the State will review and 
        undertake steps to revise such laws, regulations, 
        practices, or policies to ensure that homeless children 
        and youths are afforded the same free, appropriate 
        public education as provided to other children and 
        youths.]
          (2) In any State where compulsory residency 
        requirements or other requirements, laws, regulations, 
        practices, or policies may act as a barrier to the 
        identification, enrollment, attendance, or success in 
        school of homeless children and youths, the State and 
        local educational agencies will review and undertake 
        steps to revise such laws, regulations, practices, or 
        policies to ensure that homeless children and youths 
        are afforded the same free, appropriate public 
        education as is provided to other children and youths.
          (3) Homelessness [alone] is not sufficient reason to 
        separate students from the mainstream school 
        environment.
          (4) Homeless children and youths should have access 
        to the education and other services that such children 
        and youths need to ensure that such children and youths 
        have an opportunity to meet the same [challenging State 
        student academic achievement] State academic standards 
        to which all students are held.

SEC. 722. GRANTS FOR STATE AND LOCAL ACTIVITIES FOR THE EDUCATION OF 
                    HOMELESS CHILDREN AND YOUTHS.

  (a) General Authority.--The Secretary is authorized to make 
grants to States in accordance with the provisions of this 
section to enable such States to carry out the activities 
described in subsections (d) through [(g).] (h).
  [(b) Application.--No State may receive a grant under this 
section unless the State educational agency submits an 
application to the Secretary at such time, in such manner, and 
containing or accompanied by such information as the Secretary 
may reasonably require.]
  (c) Allocation and Reservations.--
          (1) Allocation.--(A) Subject to subparagraph (B), the 
        Secretary is authorized to allot to each State an 
        amount that bears the same ratio to the amount 
        appropriated for such year under section 726 that 
        remains after the Secretary reserves funds under 
        paragraph (2) and uses funds to carry out section 
        724(d) and (h), as the amount allocated under section 
        1122 of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 
        1965 to the State for that year bears to the total 
        amount allocated under section 1122 of such Act to all 
        States for that year, except that no State shall 
        receive less than the greater of--
                  (i) $150,000; or
                  (ii) one-fourth of 1 percent of the amount 
                appropriated under section 726 for that year[; 
                or].
                  [(iii) the amount such State received under 
                this section for fiscal year 2001.]
          (B) If there are insufficient funds in a fiscal year 
        to allot to each State the minimum amount under 
        subparagraph (A), the Secretary shall ratably reduce 
        the allotments to all States based on the proportionate 
        share that each State received under this subsection 
        for the preceding fiscal year.
          (2) Reservations.--(A) The Secretary is authorized to 
        reserve 0.1 percent of the amount appropriated for each 
        fiscal year under section 726 to be allocated by the 
        Secretary among the United States Virgin Islands, Guam, 
        American Samoa, and the Commonwealth of the Northern 
        Mariana Islands, according to their respective need for 
        assistance under this subtitle, as determined by the 
        Secretary.
          (B)(i) The Secretary shall transfer 1 percent of the 
        amount appropriated for each fiscal year under section 
        726 to the Department of the Interior for programs for 
        Indian students served by schools funded by the 
        Secretary of the Interior, as determined under the 
        Indian Self-Determination and Education Assistance Act 
        (25 U.S.C. 450 et seq.), that are consistent with the 
        purposes of the programs described in this subtitle.
          (ii) The Secretary and the Secretary of the Interior 
        shall enter into an agreement, consistent with the 
        requirements of this subtitle, for the distribution and 
        use of the funds described in clause (i) under terms 
        that the Secretary determines best meet the purposes of 
        the programs described in this subtitle. Such agreement 
        shall set forth the plans of the Secretary of the 
        Interior for the use of the amounts transferred, 
        including appropriate goals, objectives, and 
        milestones.
          [(3) State defined.--For purposes of this subsection, 
        the term ``State'' does not include the United States 
        Virgin Islands, Guam, American Samoa, or the 
        Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands.]
  (d) Activities.--[Grants] Grant funds from a grant made to a 
State under this section shall be used for the following:
          (1) To carry out the policies set forth in section 
        721 in the State.
          [(2) To provide activities for, and services to, 
        homeless children, including preschool-aged homeless 
        children, and youths that enable such children and 
        youths to enroll in, attend, and succeed in school, or, 
        if appropriate, in preschool programs.]
          (2) To provide services and activities to improve the 
        identification of homeless children (including 
        preschool-aged homeless children and youths) that 
        enable such children and youths to enroll in, attend, 
        and succeed in school, or, if appropriate, in preschool 
        programs.
          (3) To establish or designate an Office of 
        Coordinator for Education of Homeless Children and 
        Youths in the State educational agency in accordance 
        with subsection (f) that can sufficiently carry out the 
        duties described in this subtitle.
          (4) To prepare and carry out the State plan described 
        in subsection (g).
          [(5) To develop and implement professional 
        development programs for school personnel to heighten 
        their awareness of, and capacity to respond to, 
        specific problems in the education of homeless children 
        and youths.]
          (5) To develop and implement professional development 
        programs for liaisons designated under subsection 
        (g)(1)(J)(ii) and other local educational agency 
        personnel--
                  (A) to improve their identification of 
                homeless children and youths; and
                  (B) to heighten their awareness of, and 
                capacity to respond to, specific needs in the 
                education of homeless children and youths.
  (e) State and Local Subgrants.--
          (1) Minimum disbursements by states.--From the [sums] 
        grant funds made available each year to a State under 
        subsection (a) to carry out this subtitle, the State 
        educational agency shall distribute not less than 75 
        percent in subgrants to local educational agencies for 
        the purposes of carrying out section 723, except that 
        States funded at the minimum level set forth in 
        subsection (c)(1) shall distribute not less than 50 
        percent in subgrants to local educational agencies for 
        the purposes of carrying out section 723.
          (2) Use by state educational agency.--A State 
        educational agency may use [funds made available for 
        State use under this subtitle] the grant funds 
        remaining after the State educational agency 
        distributes subgrants under paragraph (1) to conduct 
        activities under subsection (f) directly or through 
        grants or contracts.
          (3) Prohibition on segregating homeless students.--
                  (A) In general.--Except as provided in 
                subparagraph (B) and section 723(a)(2)(B)(ii), 
                in providing a free public education to a 
                homeless child or youth, no State receiving 
                funds under this subtitle shall segregate such 
                child or youth in a separate school, or in a 
                separate program within a school, based on such 
                child's or youth's status as homeless.
                  (B) Exception.--Notwithstanding subparagraph 
                (A), paragraphs (1)(J)(i) and (3) of subsection 
                (g), section 723(a)(2), and any other provision 
                of this subtitle relating to the placement of 
                homeless children or youths in schools, a State 
                that has a separate school for homeless 
                children or youths that was operated in fiscal 
                year 2000 in a covered county shall be eligible 
                to receive funds under this subtitle for 
                programs carried out in such school if--
                          (i) the school meets the requirements 
                        of subparagraph (C);
                          (ii) any local educational agency 
                        serving a school that the homeless 
                        children and youths enrolled in the 
                        separate school are eligible to attend 
                        meets the requirements of subparagraph 
                        (E); and
                          (iii) the State is otherwise eligible 
                        to receive funds under this subtitle.
                  (C) School requirements.--For the State to be 
                eligible under subparagraph (B) to receive 
                funds under this subtitle, the school described 
                in such subparagraph shall--
                          (i) provide written notice, at the 
                        time any child or youth seeks 
                        enrollment in such school, and at least 
                        twice annually while the child or youth 
                        is enrolled in such school, to the 
                        parent or guardian of the child or 
                        youth (or, in the case of an 
                        unaccompanied youth, the youth) that--
                                  (I) shall be signed by the 
                                parent or guardian (or, in the 
                                case of an unaccompanied youth, 
                                the youth);
                                  (II) sets forth the general 
                                rights provided under this 
                                subtitle;
                                  (III) specifically states--
                                          (aa) the choice of 
                                        schools homeless 
                                        children and youths are 
                                        eligible to attend, as 
                                        provided in subsection 
                                        (g)(3)(A);
                                          (bb) that no homeless 
                                        child or youth is 
                                        required to attend a 
                                        separate school for 
                                        homeless children or 
                                        youths;
                                          (cc) that homeless 
                                        children and youths 
                                        shall be provided 
                                        comparable services 
                                        described in subsection 
                                        (g)(4), including 
                                        transportation 
                                        services, educational 
                                        services, and meals 
                                        through school meals 
                                        programs; and
                                          (dd) that homeless 
                                        children and youths 
                                        should not be 
                                        stigmatized by school 
                                        personnel; and
                                  (IV) provides contact 
                                information for the local 
                                liaison for homeless children 
                                and youths and the State 
                                Coordinator for Education of 
                                Homeless Children and Youths;
                          (ii)(I) provide assistance to the 
                        parent or guardian of each homeless 
                        child or youth (or, in the case of an 
                        unaccompanied youth, the youth) to 
                        exercise the right to attend the 
                        parent's or guardian's (or youth's) 
                        choice of schools, as provided in 
                        subsection (g)(3)(A); and
                          (II) coordinate with the local 
                        educational agency with jurisdiction 
                        for the school selected by the parent 
                        or guardian (or youth), to provide 
                        transportation and other necessary 
                        services;
                          (iii) ensure that the parent or 
                        guardian (or, in the case of an 
                        unaccompanied youth, the youth) shall 
                        receive the information required by 
                        this subparagraph in a manner and form 
                        understandable to such parent or 
                        guardian (or youth), including, if 
                        necessary and to the extent feasible, 
                        in the native language of such parent 
                        or guardian (or youth); and
                          (iv) demonstrate in the school's 
                        application for funds under this 
                        subtitle that such school--
                                  (I) is complying with clauses 
                                (i) and (ii); and
                                  (II) is meeting (as of the 
                                date of submission of the 
                                application) the same Federal 
                                and State standards, 
                                regulations, and mandates as 
                                other public schools in the 
                                State (such as complying with 
                                [sections 1111 and 1116] 
                                section 1111 of the Elementary 
                                and Secondary Education Act of 
                                1965 and providing a full range 
                                of education and related 
                                services, including services 
                                applicable to students with 
                                disabilities).
                  (D) School ineligibility.--A separate school 
                described in subparagraph (B) that fails to 
                meet the standards, regulations, and mandates 
                described in subparagraph (C)(iv)(II) shall not 
                be eligible to receive funds under this 
                subtitle for programs carried out in such 
                school after the first date of such failure.
                  (E) Local educational agency requirements.--
                For the State to be eligible to receive the 
                funds described in subparagraph (B), the local 
                educational agency described in subparagraph 
                (B)(ii) shall--
                          (i) implement a coordinated system 
                        for ensuring that homeless children and 
                        youths--
                                  (I) are advised of the choice 
                                of schools provided in 
                                subsection (g)(3)(A);
                                  (II) are immediately 
                                enrolled, in accordance with 
                                subsection (g)(3)(C), in the 
                                school selected under 
                                subsection (g)(3)(A); and
                                  (III) are promptly provided 
                                necessary services described in 
                                subsection (g)(4), including 
                                transportation, to allow 
                                homeless children and youths to 
                                exercise their choices of 
                                schools under subsection 
                                (g)(3)(A);
                          (ii) document that written notice has 
                        been provided--
                                  (I) in accordance with 
                                subparagraph (C)(i) for each 
                                child or youth enrolled in a 
                                separate school under 
                                subparagraph (B); and
                                  (II) in accordance with 
                                subsection (g)(6)(A)(v);
                          (iii) prohibit schools within the 
                        agency's jurisdiction from referring 
                        homeless children or youths to, or 
                        requiring homeless children and youths 
                        to enroll in or attend, a separate 
                        school described in subparagraph (B);
                          (iv) identify and remove any barriers 
                        that exist in schools within the 
                        agency's jurisdiction that may have 
                        contributed to the creation or 
                        existence of separate schools described 
                        in subparagraph (B); and
                          (v) not use funds received under this 
                        subtitle to establish--
                                  (I) new or additional 
                                separate schools for homeless 
                                children or youths; or
                                  (II) new or additional sites 
                                for separate schools for 
                                homeless children or youths, 
                                other than the sites occupied 
                                by the schools described in 
                                subparagraph (B) in fiscal year 
                                2000.
                  (F) Report.--
                          (i) Preparation.--The Secretary shall 
                        prepare [a report] an annual report on 
                        the separate schools and local 
                        educational agencies described in 
                        subparagraph (B) that receive funds 
                        under this subtitle in accordance with 
                        this paragraph. The report shall 
                        contain, at a minimum, information on--
                                  (I) compliance with all 
                                requirements of this paragraph;
                                  (II) barriers to school 
                                access in the school districts 
                                served by the local educational 
                                agencies; [and]
                                  (III) the progress the 
                                separate schools are making in 
                                integrating homeless children 
                                and youths into the mainstream 
                                school environment, including 
                                the average length of student 
                                enrollment in such schools[.]; 
                                and
                                  (IV) the progress the 
                                separate schools are making in 
                                helping all students meet the 
                                State academic standards.
                          (ii) Compliance with information 
                        requests.--For purposes of enabling the 
                        Secretary to prepare the report, the 
                        separate schools and local educational 
                        agencies shall cooperate with the 
                        Secretary and the State Coordinator for 
                        Education of Homeless Children and 
                        Youths established in the State under 
                        subsection (d)(3), and shall comply 
                        with any requests for information by 
                        the Secretary and State Coordinator for 
                        such State.
                          (iii) Submission.--Not later than 2 
                        years after the date of enactment of 
                        the McKinney-Vento Homeless Education 
                        Assistance Improvements Act of 2001, 
                        the Secretary shall submit the report 
                        described in clause (i) to--
                                  (I) the President;
                                  (II) the Committee on 
                                Education and the Workforce of 
                                the House of Representatives; 
                                and
                                  (III) the Committee on 
                                Health, Education, Labor, and 
                                Pensions of the Senate.
                  (G) Definition.--For purposes of this 
                paragraph, the term ``covered county'' means--
                          (i) San Joaquin County, California;
                          (ii) Orange County, California;
                          (iii) San Diego County, California; 
                        and
                          (iv) Maricopa County, Arizona.
  [(f) Functions of the Office of Coordinator.--The Coordinator 
for Education of Homeless Children and Youths established in 
each State shall--
          [(1) gather reliable, valid, and comprehensive 
        information on the nature and extent of the problems 
        homeless children and youths have in gaining access to 
        public preschool programs and to public elementary 
        schools and secondary schools, the difficulties in 
        identifying the special needs of such children and 
        youths, any progress made by the State educational 
        agency and local educational agencies in the State in 
        addressing such problems and difficulties, and the 
        success of the programs under this subtitle in allowing 
        homeless children and youths to enroll in, attend, and 
        succeed in, school;
          [(2) develop and carry out the State plan described 
        in subsection (g);
          [(3) collect and transmit to the Secretary, at such 
        time and in such manner as the Secretary may require, a 
        report containing such information as the Secretary 
        determines is necessary to assess the educational needs 
        of homeless children and youths within the State;
          [(4) facilitate coordination between the State 
        educational agency, the State social services agency, 
        and other agencies (including agencies providing mental 
        health services) to provide services to homeless 
        children, including preschool-aged homeless children, 
        and youths, and to families of such children and 
        youths;
          [(5) in order to improve the provision of 
        comprehensive education and related services to 
        homeless children and youths and their families, 
        coordinate and collaborate with--
                  [(A) educators, including child development 
                and preschool program personnel;
                  [(B) providers of services to homeless and 
                runaway children and youths and homeless 
                families (including domestic violence agencies, 
                shelter operators, transitional housing 
                facilities, runaway and homeless youth centers, 
                and transitional living programs for homeless 
                youths);
                  [(C) local educational agency liaisons 
                designated under subsection (g)(1)(J)(ii) for 
                homeless children and youths; and
                  [(D) community organizations and groups 
                representing homeless children and youths and 
                their families; and
          [(6) provide technical assistance to local 
        educational agencies in coordination with local 
        educational agency liaisons designated under subsection 
        (g)(1)(J)(ii), to ensure that local educational 
        agencies comply with the requirements of section 
        722(e)(3) and paragraphs (3) through (7) of subsection 
        (g).
  [(g) State Plan.--
          [(1) In general.--Each State shall submit to the 
        Secretary a plan to provide for the education of 
        homeless children and youths within the State. Such 
        plan shall include the following:
                  [(A) A description of how such children and 
                youths are (or will be) given the opportunity 
                to meet the same challenging State academic 
                achievement standards all students are expected 
                to meet.
                  [(B) A description of the procedures the 
                State educational agency will use to identify 
                such children and youths in the State and to 
                assess their special needs.
                  [(C) A description of procedures for the 
                prompt resolution of disputes regarding the 
                educational placement of homeless children and 
                youths.
                  [(D) A description of programs for school 
                personnel (including principals, attendance 
                officers, teachers, enrollment personnel, and 
                pupil services personnel) to heighten the 
                awareness of such personnel of the specific 
                needs of runaway and homeless youths.
                  [(E) A description of procedures that ensure 
                that homeless children and youths who meet the 
                relevant eligibility criteria are able to 
                participate in Federal, State, or local food 
                programs.
                  [(F) A description of procedures that ensure 
                that--
                          [(i) homeless children have equal 
                        access to the same public preschool 
                        programs, administered by the State 
                        agency, as provided to other children 
                        in the State;
                          [(ii) homeless youths and youths 
                        separated from the public schools are 
                        identified and accorded equal access to 
                        appropriate secondary education and 
                        support services; and
                          [(iii) homeless children and youths 
                        who meet the relevant eligibility 
                        criteria are able to participate in 
                        Federal, State, or local before- and 
                        after-school care programs.
                  [(G) Strategies to address problems 
                identified in the report provided to the 
                Secretary under subsection (f)(3).
                  [(H) Strategies to address other problems 
                with respect to the education of homeless 
                children and youths, including problems 
                resulting from enrollment delays that are 
                caused by--
                          [(i) immunization and medical records 
                        requirements;
                          [(ii) residency requirements;
                          [(iii) lack of birth certificates, 
                        school records, or other documentation;
                          [(iv) guardianship issues; or
                          [(v) uniform or dress code 
                        requirements.
                  [(I) A demonstration that the State 
                educational agency and local educational 
                agencies in the State have developed, and shall 
                review and revise, policies to remove barriers 
                to the enrollment and retention of homeless 
                children and youths in schools in the State.
                  [(J) Assurances that--
                          [(i) the State educational agency and 
                        local educational agencies in the State 
                        will adopt policies and practices to 
                        ensure that homeless children and 
                        youths are not stigmatized or 
                        segregated on the basis of their status 
                        as homeless;
                          [(ii) local educational agencies will 
                        designate an appropriate staff person, 
                        who may also be a coordinator for other 
                        Federal programs, as a local 
                        educational agency liaison for homeless 
                        children and youths, to carry out the 
                        duties described in paragraph (6)(A); 
                        and
                          [(iii) the State and its local 
                        educational agencies will adopt 
                        policies and practices to ensure that 
                        transportation is provided, at the 
                        request of the parent or guardian (or 
                        in the case of an unaccompanied youth, 
                        the liaison), to and from the school of 
                        origin, as determined in paragraph 
                        (3)(A), in accordance with the 
                        following, as applicable:
                                  [(I) If the homeless child or 
                                youth continues to live in the 
                                area served by the local 
                                educational agency in which the 
                                school of origin is located, 
                                the child's or youth's 
                                transportation to and from the 
                                school of origin shall be 
                                provided or arranged by the 
                                local educational agency in 
                                which the school of origin is 
                                located.
                                  [(II) If the homeless child's 
                                or youth's living arrangements 
                                in the area served by the local 
                                educational agency of origin 
                                terminate and the child or 
                                youth, though continuing his or 
                                her education in the school of 
                                origin, begins living in an 
                                area served by another local 
                                educational agency, the local 
                                educational agency of origin 
                                and the local educational 
                                agency in which the homeless 
                                child or youth is living shall 
                                agree upon a method to 
                                apportion the responsibility 
                                and costs for providing the 
                                child with transportation to 
                                and from the school of origin. 
                                If the local educational 
                                agencies are unable to agree 
                                upon such method, the 
                                responsibility and costs for 
                                transportation shall be shared 
                                equally.
          [(2) Compliance.--
                  [(A) In general.--Each plan adopted under 
                this subsection shall also describe how the 
                State will ensure that local educational 
                agencies in the State will comply with the 
                requirements of paragraphs (3) through (7).
                  [(B) Coordination.--Such plan shall indicate 
                what technical assistance the State will 
                furnish to local educational agencies and how 
                compliance efforts will be coordinated with the 
                local educational agency liaisons designated 
                under paragraph (1)(J)(ii).
          [(3) Local educational agency requirements.--
                  [(A) In general.--The local educational 
                agency serving each child or youth to be 
                assisted under this subtitle shall, according 
                to the child's or youth's best interest--
                          [(i) continue the child's or youth's 
                        education in the school of origin for 
                        the duration of homelessness--
                                  [(I) in any case in which a 
                                family becomes homeless between 
                                academic years or during an 
                                academic year; or
                                  [(II) for the remainder of 
                                the academic year, if the child 
                                or youth becomes permanently 
                                housed during an academic year; 
                                or
                          [(ii) enroll the child or youth in 
                        any public school that nonhomeless 
                        students who live in the attendance 
                        area in which the child or youth is 
                        actually living are eligible to attend.
                  [(B) Best interest.--In determining the best 
                interest of the child or youth under 
                subparagraph (A), the local educational agency 
                shall--
                          [(i) to the extent feasible, keep a 
                        homeless child or youth in the school 
                        of origin, except when doing so is 
                        contrary to the wishes of the child's 
                        or youth's parent or guardian;
                          [(ii) provide a written explanation, 
                        including a statement regarding the 
                        right to appeal under subparagraph (E), 
                        to the homeless child's or youth's 
                        parent or guardian, if the local 
                        educational agency sends such child or 
                        youth to a school other than the school 
                        of origin or a school requested by the 
                        parent or guardian; and
                          [(iii) in the case of an 
                        unaccompanied youth, ensure that the 
                        homeless liaison designated under 
                        paragraph (1)(J)(ii) assists in 
                        placement or enrollment decisions under 
                        this subparagraph, considers the views 
                        of such unaccompanied youth, and 
                        provides notice to such youth of the 
                        right to appeal under subparagraph (E).
                  [(C) Enrollment.--(i) The school selected in 
                accordance with this paragraph shall 
                immediately enroll the homeless child or youth, 
                even if the child or youth is unable to produce 
                records normally required for enrollment, such 
                as previous academic records, medical records, 
                proof of residency, or other documentation.
                  [(ii) The enrolling school shall immediately 
                contact the school last attended by the child 
                or youth to obtain relevant academic and other 
                records.
                  [(iii) If the child or youth needs to obtain 
                immunizations, or immunization or medical 
                records, the enrolling school shall immediately 
                refer the parent or guardian of the child or 
                youth to the local educational agency liaison 
                designated under paragraph (1)(J)(ii), who 
                shall assist in obtaining necessary 
                immunizations, or immunization or medical 
                records, in accordance with subparagraph (D).
                  [(D) Records.--Any record ordinarily kept by 
                the school, including immunization or medical 
                records, academic records, birth certificates, 
                guardianship records, and evaluations for 
                special services or programs, regarding each 
                homeless child or youth shall be maintained--
                          [(i) so that the records are 
                        available, in a timely fashion, when a 
                        child or youth enters a new school or 
                        school district; and
                          [(ii) in a manner consistent with 
                        section 444 of the General Education 
                        Provisions Act (20 U.S.C. 1232g).
                  [(E) Enrollment disputes.--If a dispute 
                arises over school selection or enrollment in a 
                school--
                          [(i) the child or youth shall be 
                        immediately admitted to the school in 
                        which enrollment is sought, pending 
                        resolution of the dispute;
                          [(ii) the parent or guardian of the 
                        child or youth shall be provided with a 
                        written explanation of the school's 
                        decision regarding school selection or 
                        enrollment, including the rights of the 
                        parent, guardian, or youth to appeal 
                        the decision;
                          [(iii) the child, youth, parent, or 
                        guardian shall be referred to the local 
                        educational agency liaison designated 
                        under paragraph (1)(J)(ii), who shall 
                        carry out the dispute resolution 
                        process as described in paragraph 
                        (1)(C) as expeditiously as possible 
                        after receiving notice of the dispute; 
                        and
                          [(iv) in the case of an unaccompanied 
                        youth, the homeless liaison shall 
                        ensure that the youth is immediately 
                        enrolled in school pending resolution 
                        of the dispute.
                  [(F) Placement choice.--The choice regarding 
                placement shall be made regardless of whether 
                the child or youth lives with the homeless 
                parents or has been temporarily placed 
                elsewhere.
                  [(G) School of origin defined.--In this 
                paragraph, the term ``school of origin'' means 
                the school that the child or youth attended 
                when permanently housed or the school in which 
                the child or youth was last enrolled.
                  [(H) Contact information.--Nothing in this 
                subtitle shall prohibit a local educational 
                agency from requiring a parent or guardian of a 
                homeless child to submit contact information.
          [(4) Comparable services.--Each homeless child or 
        youth to be assisted under this subtitle shall be 
        provided services comparable to services offered to 
        other students in the school selected under paragraph 
        (3), including the following:
                  [(A) Transportation services.
                  [(B) Educational services for which the child 
                or youth meets the eligibility criteria, such 
                as services provided under title I of the 
                Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 
                or similar State or local programs, educational 
                programs for children with disabilities, and 
                educational programs for students with limited 
                English proficiency.
                  [(C) Programs in vocational and technical 
                education.
                  [(D) Programs for gifted and talented 
                students.
                  [(E) School nutrition programs.
          [(5) Coordination.--
                  [(A) In general.--Each local educational 
                agency serving homeless children and youths 
                that receives assistance under this subtitle 
                shall coordinate--
                          [(i) the provision of services under 
                        this subtitle with local social 
                        services agencies and other agencies or 
                        programs providing services to homeless 
                        children and youths and their families, 
                        including services and programs funded 
                        under the Runaway and Homeless Youth 
                        Act (42 U.S.C. 5701 et seq.); and
                          [(ii) with other local educational 
                        agencies on interdistrict issues, such 
                        as transportation or transfer of school 
                        records.
                  [(B) Housing assistance.--If applicable, each 
                State educational agency and local educational 
                agency that receives assistance under this 
                subtitle shall coordinate with State and local 
                housing agencies responsible for developing the 
                comprehensive housing affordability strategy 
                described in section 105 of the Cranston-
                Gonzalez National Affordable Housing Act (42 
                U.S.C. 12705) to minimize educational 
                disruption for children and youths who become 
                homeless.
                  [(C) Coordination purpose.--The coordination 
                required under subparagraphs (A) and (B) shall 
                be designed to--
                          [(i) ensure that homeless children 
                        and youths have access and reasonable 
                        proximity to available education and 
                        related support services; and
                          [(ii) raise the awareness of school 
                        personnel and service providers of the 
                        effects of short-term stays in a 
                        shelter and other challenges associated 
                        with homelessness.
          [(6) Local educational agency liaison.--
                  [(A) Duties.--Each local educational agency 
                liaison for homeless children and youths, 
                designated under paragraph (1)(J)(ii), shall 
                ensure that--
                          [(i) homeless children and youths are 
                        identified by school personnel and 
                        through coordination activities with 
                        other entities and agencies;
                          [(ii) homeless children and youths 
                        enroll in, and have a full and equal 
                        opportunity to succeed in, schools of 
                        that local educational agency;
                          [(iii) homeless families, children, 
                        and youths receive educational services 
                        for which such families, children, and 
                        youths are eligible, including Head 
                        Start and Even Start programs and 
                        preschool programs administered by the 
                        local educational agency, and referrals 
                        to health care services, dental 
                        services, mental health services, and 
                        other appropriate services;
                          [(iv) the parents or guardians of 
                        homeless children and youths are 
                        informed of the educational and related 
                        opportunities available to their 
                        children and are provided with 
                        meaningful opportunities to participate 
                        in the education of their children;
                          [(v) public notice of the educational 
                        rights of homeless children and youths 
                        is disseminated where such children and 
                        youths receive services under this Act, 
                        such as schools, family shelters, and 
                        soup kitchens;
                          [(vi) enrollment disputes are 
                        mediated in accordance with paragraph 
                        (3)(E); and
                          [(vii) the parent or guardian of a 
                        homeless child or youth, and any 
                        unaccompanied youth, is fully informed 
                        of all transportation services, 
                        including transportation to the school 
                        of origin, as described in paragraph 
                        (1)(J)(iii), and is assisted in 
                        accessing transportation to the school 
                        that is selected under paragraph 
                        (3)(A).
                  [(B) Notice.--State coordinators established 
                under subsection (d)(3) and local educational 
                agencies shall inform school personnel, service 
                providers, and advocates working with homeless 
                families of the duties of the local educational 
                agency liaisons.
                  [(C) Local and state coordination.--Local 
                educational agency liaisons for homeless 
                children and youths shall, as a part of their 
                duties, coordinate and collaborate with State 
                coordinators and community and school personnel 
                responsible for the provision of education and 
                related services to homeless children and 
                youths.
          [(7) Review and revisions.--
                  [(A) In general.--Each State educational 
                agency and local educational agency that 
                receives assistance under this subtitle shall 
                review and revise any policies that may act as 
                barriers to the enrollment of homeless children 
                and youths in schools that are selected under 
                paragraph (3).
                  [(B) Consideration.--In reviewing and 
                revising such policies, consideration shall be 
                given to issues concerning transportation, 
                immunization, residency, birth certificates, 
                school records and other documentation, and 
                guardianship.
                  [(C) Special attention.--Special attention 
                shall be given to ensuring the enrollment and 
                attendance of homeless children and youths who 
                are not currently attending school.]
  (f) Functions of the Office of Coordinator.--The Coordinator 
for Education of Homeless Children and Youths established in 
each State shall--
          (1) gather and make publically available reliable, 
        valid, and comprehensive information on--
                  (A) the number of homeless children and 
                youths identified in the State, posted annually 
                on the State educational agency's website;
                  (B) the nature and extent of the problems 
                homeless children and youths have in gaining 
                access to public preschool programs and to 
                public elementary schools and secondary 
                schools;
                  (C) the difficulties in identifying the 
                special needs and barriers to the participation 
                and achievement of such children and youths;
                  (D) any progress made by the State 
                educational agency and local educational 
                agencies in the State in addressing such 
                problems and difficulties; and
                  (E) the success of the programs under this 
                subtitle in identifying homeless children and 
                youths and allowing such children and youths to 
                enroll in, attend, and succeed in, school;
          (2) develop and carry out the State plan described in 
        subsection (g);
          (3) collect data for and transmit to the Secretary, 
        at such time and in such manner as the Secretary may 
        require, a report containing information necessary to 
        assess the educational needs of homeless children and 
        youths within the State, including data necessary for 
        the Secretary to fulfill the responsibilities under 
        section 724(h);
          (4) in order to improve the provision of 
        comprehensive education and related support services to 
        homeless children and youths and their families, 
        coordinate and collaborate with--
                  (A) educators, including teachers, special 
                education personnel, administrators, and child 
                development and preschool program personnel;
                  (B) providers of services to homeless 
                children and youths and their families, 
                including services of public and private child 
                welfare and social services agencies, law 
                enforcement agencies, juvenile and family 
                courts, agencies providing mental health 
                services, domestic violence agencies, child 
                care providers, runaway and homeless youth 
                centers, and providers of services and programs 
                funded under the Runaway and Homeless Youth Act 
                (42 U.S.C. 5701 et seq.);
                  (C) providers of emergency, transitional, and 
                permanent housing to homeless children and 
                youths, and their families, including public 
                housing agencies, shelter operators, operators 
                of transitional housing facilities, and 
                providers of transitional living programs for 
                homeless youths;
                  (D) local educational agency liaisons 
                designated under subsection (g)(1)(J)(ii) for 
                homeless children and youths; and
                  (E) community organizations and groups 
                representing homeless children and youths and 
                their families;
          (5) provide technical assistance to local educational 
        agencies, in coordination with local educational agency 
        liaisons designated under subsection (g)(1)(J)(ii), to 
        ensure that local educational agencies comply with the 
        requirements of subsection (e)(3), paragraphs (3) 
        through (7) of subsection (g), and subsection (h);
          (6) provide professional development opportunities 
        for local educational agency personnel and the homeless 
        liaison designated under subsection (g)(1)(J)(ii) to 
        assist such personnel in meeting the needs of homeless 
        children and youths; and
          (7) respond to inquiries from parents and guardians 
        of homeless children and youths and unaccompanied 
        youths to ensure that each child or youth who is the 
        subject of such an inquiry receives the full 
        protections and services provided by this subtitle.
  (g) State Plan.--
          (1) In general.--In order to be eligible to receive a 
        grant under this section, each State educational agency 
        shall submit to the Secretary a plan to provide for the 
        education of homeless children and youths within the 
        State that includes the following:
                  (A) A description of how such children and 
                youths are (or will be) given the opportunity 
                to meet the same State academic standards that 
                all students are expected to meet.
                  (B) A description of the procedures the State 
                educational agency will use to identify such 
                children and youths in the State and to assess 
                their needs.
                  (C) A description of procedures for the 
                prompt resolution of disputes regarding the 
                educational placement of homeless children and 
                youths.
                  (D) A description of programs for school 
                personnel (including liaisons, school leaders, 
                attendance officers, teachers, enrollment 
                personnel, and specialized instructional 
                support personnel) to heighten the awareness of 
                such personnel of the specific needs of 
                homeless adolescents, including runaway and 
                homeless youths.
                  (E) A description of procedures that ensure 
                that homeless children and youths who meet the 
                relevant eligibility criteria are able to 
                participate in Federal, State, or local 
                nutrition programs.
                  (F) A description of procedures that ensure 
                that--
                          (i) homeless children have equal 
                        access to public preschool programs, 
                        administered by the State educational 
                        agency or local educational agency, as 
                        provided to other children in the 
                        State;
                          (ii) homeless youths and youths 
                        separated from public schools are 
                        identified and accorded equal access to 
                        appropriate secondary education and 
                        support services; and
                          (iii) homeless children and youths 
                        who meet the relevant eligibility 
                        criteria are able to participate in 
                        Federal, State, or local education 
                        programs.
                  (G) Strategies to address problems identified 
                in the report provided to the Secretary under 
                subsection (f)(3).
                  (H) Strategies to address other problems with 
                respect to the education of homeless children 
                and youths, including problems resulting from 
                enrollment delays that are caused by--
                          (i) immunization and other health 
                        records requirements;
                          (ii) residency requirements;
                          (iii) lack of birth certificates, 
                        school records, or other documentation;
                          (iv) guardianship issues; or
                          (v) uniform or dress code 
                        requirements.
                  (I) A demonstration that the State 
                educational agency and local educational 
                agencies in the State have developed, and shall 
                review and revise, policies to remove barriers 
                to the identification, enrollment, and 
                retention of homeless children and youths in 
                schools in the State.
                  (J) Assurances that the following will be 
                carried out:
                          (i) The State educational agency and 
                        local educational agencies in the State 
                        will adopt policies and practices to 
                        ensure that homeless children and 
                        youths are not stigmatized or 
                        segregated on the basis of their status 
                        as homeless.
                          (ii) Local educational agencies will 
                        designate an appropriate staff person, 
                        who may also be a coordinator for other 
                        Federal programs, as a local 
                        educational agency liaison for homeless 
                        children and youths, to carry out the 
                        duties described in paragraph (6)(A).
                          (iii) The State and its local 
                        educational agencies will adopt 
                        policies and practices to ensure that 
                        transportation is provided, at the 
                        request of the parent or guardian (or 
                        in the case of an unaccompanied youth, 
                        the liaison), to and from the school of 
                        origin, as determined in paragraph 
                        (3)(A), in accordance with the 
                        following, as applicable:
                                  (I) If the child or youth 
                                continues to live in the area 
                                served by the local educational 
                                agency in which the school of 
                                origin is located, the child's 
                                or youth's transportation to 
                                and from the school of origin 
                                shall be provided or arranged 
                                by the local educational agency 
                                in which the school of origin 
                                is located.
                                  (II) If the child's or 
                                youth's living arrangements in 
                                the area served by the local 
                                educational agency of origin 
                                terminate and the child or 
                                youth, though continuing his or 
                                her education in the school of 
                                origin, begins living in an 
                                area served by another local 
                                educational agency, the local 
                                educational agency of origin 
                                and the local educational 
                                agency in which the child or 
                                youth is living shall agree 
                                upon a method to apportion the 
                                responsibility and costs for 
                                providing the child with 
                                transportation to and from the 
                                school of origin. If the local 
                                educational agencies are unable 
                                to agree upon such method, the 
                                responsibility and costs for 
                                transportation shall be shared 
                                equally.
          (2) Compliance.--
                  (A) In general.--Each plan adopted under this 
                subsection shall also describe how the State 
                will ensure that local educational agencies in 
                the State will comply with the requirements of 
                paragraphs (3) through (7).
                  (B) Coordination.--Such plan shall indicate 
                what technical assistance the State will 
                furnish to local educational agencies and how 
                compliance efforts will be coordinated with the 
                local educational agency liaisons designated 
                under paragraph (1)(J)(ii).
          (3) Local educational agency requirements.--
                  (A) In general.--The local educational agency 
                serving each child or youth to be assisted 
                under this subtitle shall, according to the 
                child's or youth's best interest--
                          (i) continue the child's or youth's 
                        education in the school of origin for 
                        the duration of homelessness--
                                  (I) in any case in which a 
                                family becomes homeless between 
                                academic years or during an 
                                academic year; or
                                  (II) for the remainder of the 
                                academic year, if the child or 
                                youth becomes permanently 
                                housed during an academic year; 
                                or
                          (ii) enroll the child or youth in any 
                        public school that nonhomeless students 
                        who live in the attendance area in 
                        which the child or youth is actually 
                        living are eligible to attend.
                  (B) School stability.--In determining the 
                best interest of the child or youth under 
                subparagraph (A), the local educational agency 
                shall--
                          (i) presume that keeping the child or 
                        youth in the school of origin is in the 
                        child or youth's best interest, except 
                        when doing so is contrary to the wishes 
                        of the child's or youth's parent or 
                        guardian, or the unaccompanied youth;
                          (ii) consider student-centered 
                        factors related to the child's or 
                        youth's best interest, including 
                        factors related to the impact of 
                        mobility on achievement, education, 
                        health, and safety of homeless children 
                        and youth, giving priority to the 
                        wishes of the homeless child's or 
                        youth's parent of guardian or the 
                        unaccompanied youth involved;
                          (iii) if, after conducting the best 
                        interest determination based on 
                        consideration of the presumption in 
                        clause (i) and the student-centered 
                        factors in clause (ii), the local 
                        educational agency determines that it 
                        is not in the child's or youth's best 
                        interest to attend the school of origin 
                        or the school requested by the parent, 
                        guardian, or unaccompanied youth, 
                        provide the child's or youth's parent 
                        or guardian or the unaccompanied youth 
                        with a written explanation of the 
                        reasons for its determination, in a 
                        manner and form understandable to such 
                        parent, guardian, or unaccompanied 
                        youth, including information regarding 
                        the right to appeal under subparagraph 
                        (E); and
                          (iv) in the case of an unaccompanied 
                        youth, ensure that the homeless liaison 
                        designated under paragraph (1)(J)(ii) 
                        assists in placement or enrollment 
                        decisions under this subparagraph, 
                        gives priority to the views of such 
                        unaccompanied youth, and provides 
                        notice to such youth of the right to 
                        appeal under subparagraph (E).
                  (C) Enrollment.--
                          (i) In general.--The school selected 
                        in accordance with this paragraph shall 
                        immediately enroll the homeless child 
                        or youth, even if the child or youth--
                                  (I) is unable to produce 
                                records normally required for 
                                enrollment, such as previous 
                                academic records, records of 
                                immunization and other required 
                                health records, proof of 
                                residency, or other 
                                documentation; or
                                  (II) has missed application 
                                or enrollment deadlines during 
                                any period of homelessness.
                          (ii) Relevant academic records.--The 
                        enrolling school shall immediately 
                        contact the school last attended by the 
                        child or youth to obtain relevant 
                        academic and other records.
                          (iii) Relevant health records.--If 
                        the child or youth needs to obtain 
                        immunizations or other required health 
                        records, the enrolling school shall 
                        immediately refer the parent or 
                        guardian of the child or youth, or the 
                        unaccompanied child or youth, to the 
                        local educational agency liaison 
                        designated under paragraph (1)(J)(ii), 
                        who shall assist in obtaining necessary 
                        immunizations or screenings, or 
                        immunization or other required health 
                        records, in accordance with 
                        subparagraph (D).
                  (D) Records.--Any record ordinarily kept by 
                the school, including immunization or other 
                required health records, academic records, 
                birth certificates, guardianship records, and 
                evaluations for special services or programs, 
                regarding each homeless child or youth shall be 
                maintained--
                          (i) so that the records involved are 
                        available, in a timely fashion, when a 
                        child or youth enters a new school or 
                        school district; and
                          (ii) in a manner consistent with 
                        section 444 of the General Education 
                        Provisions Act (20 U.S.C. 1232g).
                  (E) Enrollment disputes.--If a dispute arises 
                over school selection or enrollment in a 
                school--
                          (i) the child or youth shall be 
                        immediately enrolled in the school in 
                        which enrollment is sought, pending 
                        final resolution of the dispute, 
                        including all available appeals;
                          (ii) the parent, guardian, or 
                        unaccompanied youth shall be provided 
                        with a written explanation of any 
                        decisions made by the school, the local 
                        educational agency, or the State 
                        educational agency involved, including 
                        the rights of the parent, guardian, or 
                        youth to appeal such decisions;
                          (iii) the parent, guardian, or 
                        unaccompanied youth shall be referred 
                        to the local educational agency liaison 
                        designated under paragraph (1)(J)(ii), 
                        who shall carry out the dispute 
                        resolution process as described in 
                        paragraph (1)(C) as expeditiously as 
                        possible after receiving notice of the 
                        dispute; and
                          (iv) in the case of an unaccompanied 
                        youth, the liaison shall ensure that 
                        the youth is immediately enrolled in 
                        school in which the youth seeks 
                        enrollment pending resolution of such 
                        dispute.
                  (F) Placement choice.--The choice regarding 
                placement shall be made regardless of whether 
                the child or youth lives with the homeless 
                parents or has been temporarily placed 
                elsewhere.
                  (G) School of origin defined.--
                          (i) In general.--In this paragraph, 
                        the term ``school of origin'' means the 
                        school that a child or youth attended 
                        when permanently housed or the school 
                        in which the child or youth was last 
                        enrolled.
                          (ii) Receiving school.--When the 
                        child or youth completes the final 
                        grade level served by the school of 
                        origin, as described in clause (i), the 
                        term ``school of origin'' shall include 
                        the designated receiving school at the 
                        next grade level for all feeder 
                        schools.
                  (H) Contact information.--Nothing in this 
                subtitle shall prohibit a local educational 
                agency from requiring a parent or guardian of a 
                homeless child to submit contact information.
                  (I) Privacy.--Information about a homeless 
                child's or youth's living situation shall be 
                treated as a student education record under 
                section 444 of the General Education Provisions 
                Act (20 U.S.C. 1232g) and shall not be released 
                to housing providers, employers, law 
                enforcement personnel, or other persons or 
                agencies not authorized to have such 
                information under section 99.31 of title 34, 
                Code of Federal Regulations.
                  (J) Academic achievement.--The school 
                selected in accordance with this paragraph 
                shall ensure that homeless children and youths 
                have opportunities to meet the same State 
                academic standards to which other students are 
                held.
          (4) Comparable services.--Each homeless child or 
        youth to be assisted under this subtitle shall be 
        provided services comparable to services offered to 
        other students in the school selected under paragraph 
        (3), including the following:
                  (A) Transportation services.
                  (B) Educational services for which the child 
                or youth meets the eligibility criteria, such 
                as services provided under title I of the 
                Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 
                (20 U.S.C. 6301 et seq.) or similar State or 
                local programs, educational programs for 
                children with disabilities, and educational 
                programs for English learners.
                  (C) Programs in career and technical 
                education.
                  (D) Programs for gifted and talented 
                students.
                  (E) School nutrition programs.
          (5) Coordination.--
                  (A) In general.--Each local educational 
                agency serving homeless children and youths 
                that receives assistance under this subtitle 
                shall coordinate--
                          (i) the provision of services under 
                        this subtitle with local social 
                        services agencies and other agencies or 
                        entities providing services to homeless 
                        children and youths and their families, 
                        including services and programs funded 
                        under the Runaway and Homeless Youth 
                        Act (42 U.S.C. 5701 et seq.); and
                          (ii) transportation, transfer of 
                        school records, and other interdistrict 
                        activities, with other local 
                        educational agencies.
                  (B) Housing assistance.--If applicable, each 
                State educational agency and local educational 
                agency that receives assistance under this 
                subtitle shall coordinate with State and local 
                housing agencies responsible for developing the 
                comprehensive housing affordability strategy 
                described in section 105 of the Cranston-
                Gonzalez National Affordable Housing Act (42 
                U.S.C. 12705) to minimize educational 
                disruption for children and youths who become 
                homeless.
                  (C) Coordination purpose.--The coordination 
                required under subparagraphs (A) and (B) shall 
                be designed to--
                          (i) ensure that all homeless children 
                        and youths are promptly identified;
                          (ii) ensure that homeless children 
                        and youths have access to, and are in 
                        reasonable proximity to, available 
                        education and related support services; 
                        and
                          (iii) raise the awareness of school 
                        personnel and service providers of the 
                        effects of short-term stays in a 
                        shelter and other challenges associated 
                        with homelessness.
                  (D) Homeless children and youths with 
                disabilities.--For children and youths who are 
                to be assisted both under this subtitle, and 
                under the Individuals with Disabilities 
                Education Act (20 U.S.C. 1400 et seq.) or 
                section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 
                (29 U.S.C. 794), each local educational agency 
                shall coordinate the provision of services 
                under this subtitle with the provision of 
                programs for children with disabilities served 
                by that local educational agency and other 
                involved local educational agencies.
          (6) Local educational agency liaison.--
                  (A) Duties.--Each local educational agency 
                liaison for homeless children and youths, 
                designated under paragraph (1)(J)(ii), shall 
                ensure that--
                          (i) homeless children and youths are 
                        identified by school personnel through 
                        outreach and coordination activities 
                        with other entities and agencies;
                          (ii) homeless children and youths are 
                        enrolled in, and have a full and equal 
                        opportunity to succeed in, schools of 
                        that local educational agency;
                          (iii) homeless families, children, 
                        and youths have access to and receive 
                        educational services for which such 
                        families, children, and youths are 
                        eligible, including services through 
                        Head Start, Early Head Start, early 
                        intervention, and preschool programs 
                        administered by the local educational 
                        agency;
                          (iv) homeless families, children, and 
                        youths receive referrals to health care 
                        services, dental services, mental 
                        health and substances abuse services, 
                        housing services, and other appropriate 
                        services;
                          (v) the parents or guardians of 
                        homeless children and youths are 
                        informed of the educational and related 
                        opportunities available to their 
                        children and are provided with 
                        meaningful opportunities to participate 
                        in the education of their children;
                          (vi) public notice of the educational 
                        rights of homeless children and youths 
                        is disseminated in locations frequented 
                        by parents or guardians of such 
                        children and youths, and unaccompanied 
                        youths, including schools, shelters, 
                        public libraries, and soup kitchens in 
                        a manner and form understandable to the 
                        parents and guardians of homeless 
                        children and youths, and unaccompanied 
                        youths;
                          (vii) enrollment disputes are 
                        mediated in accordance with paragraph 
                        (3)(E);
                          (viii) the parent or guardian of a 
                        homeless child or youth, and any 
                        unaccompanied youth, is fully informed 
                        of all transportation services, 
                        including transportation to the school 
                        of origin, as described in paragraph 
                        (1)(J)(iii), and is assisted in 
                        accessing transportation to the school 
                        that is selected under paragraph 
                        (3)(A);
                          (ix) school personnel providing 
                        services under this subtitle receive 
                        professional development and other 
                        support; and
                          (x) unaccompanied youths--
                                  (I) are enrolled in school;
                                  (II) have opportunities to 
                                meet the same State academic 
                                standards to which other 
                                students are held, including 
                                through implementation of the 
                                policies and practices required 
                                by paragraph (1)(F)(ii); and
                                  (III) are informed of their 
                                status as independent students 
                                under section 480 of the Higher 
                                Education Act of 1965 (20 
                                U.S.C. 1087vv) and receive 
                                verification of such status for 
                                purposes of the Free 
                                Application for Federal Student 
                                Aid described in section 483 of 
                                such Act (20 U.S.C. 1090).
                  (B) Notice.--State coordinators established 
                under subsection (d)(3) and local educational 
                agencies shall inform school personnel, service 
                providers, advocates working with homeless 
                families, parents and guardians of homeless 
                children and youths, and homeless children and 
                youths of the duties of the local educational 
                agency liaisons, including publishing an 
                annually updated list of the liaisons on the 
                State educational agency's website.
                  (C) Local and state coordination.--Local 
                educational agency liaisons for homeless 
                children and youths shall, as a part of their 
                duties, coordinate and collaborate with State 
                coordinators and community and school personnel 
                responsible for the provision of education and 
                related services to homeless children and 
                youths. Such coordination shall include 
                collecting and providing to the State 
                Coordinator the reliable, valid, and 
                comprehensive data needed to meet the 
                requirements of paragraphs (1) and (3) of 
                subsection (f).
          (7) Review and revisions.--
                  (A) In general.--Each State educational 
                agency and local educational agency that 
                receives assistance under this subtitle shall 
                review and revise any policies that may act as 
                barriers to the enrollment of homeless children 
                and youths in schools that are selected under 
                paragraph (3).
                  (B) Consideration.--In reviewing and revising 
                such policies, consideration shall be given to 
                issues concerning transportation, immunization, 
                residency, birth certificates, school records 
                and other documentation, and guardianship.
                  (C) Special attention.--Special attention 
                shall be given to ensuring the enrollment and 
                attendance of homeless children and youths who 
                are not currently attending school.
  (h) Special Rule for Emergency Assistance.--
          (1) Emergency assistance.--
                  (A) Reservation of amounts.--Subject to 
                paragraph (4) and notwithstanding any other 
                provision of this title, the Secretary shall 
                use funds appropriated under section 726 for 
                [fiscal year 2009,] fiscal years 2014 through 
                2019, but not to exceed $30,000,000, for the 
                purposes of providing emergency assistance 
                through grants.
                  (B) General authority.--The Secretary shall 
                use the funds to make grants to State 
                educational agencies under paragraph (2), to 
                enable the agencies to make subgrants to local 
                educational agencies under paragraph (3), to 
                provide activities described in section 723(d) 
                for individuals referred to in subparagraph 
                (C).
                  (C) Eligible individuals.--Funds made 
                available under this subsection shall be used 
                to provide such activities for eligible 
                individuals, consisting of homeless children 
                and youths, and their families, who have become 
                homeless due to home foreclosure, including 
                children and youths, and their families, who 
                became homeless when lenders foreclosed on 
                properties rented by the families.
          (2) Grants to state educational agencies.--
                  (A) Disbursement.--The Secretary shall make 
                grants with funds provided under paragraph 
                (1)(A) to State educational agencies based on 
                need, consistent with the number of eligible 
                individuals described in paragraph (1)(C) in 
                the States involved, as determined by the 
                Secretary.
                  (B) Assurance.--To be eligible to receive a 
                grant under this paragraph, a State educational 
                agency shall provide an assurance to the 
                Secretary that the State educational agency, 
                and each local educational agency receiving a 
                subgrant from the State educational agency 
                under this subsection shall ensure that the 
                activities carried out under this subsection 
                are consistent with the activities described in 
                section 723(d).
          (3) Subgrants to local educational agencies.--A State 
        educational agency that receives a grant under 
        paragraph (2) shall use the funds made available 
        through the grant to make subgrants to local 
        educational agencies. The State educational agency 
        shall make the subgrants to local educational agencies 
        based on need, consistent with the number of eligible 
        individuals described in paragraph (1)(C) in the areas 
        served by the local educational agencies, as determined 
        by the State educational agency.
          (4) Restriction.--The Secretary--
                  (A) shall determine the amount (if any) by 
                which the funds appropriated under section 726 
                for [fiscal year 2009] fiscal years 2014 
                through 2019 exceed $70,000,000; and
                  (B) may only use funds from that amount to 
                carry out this subsection.

SEC. 723. LOCAL EDUCATIONAL AGENCY SUBGRANTS FOR THE EDUCATION OF 
                    HOMELESS CHILDREN AND YOUTHS.

  (a) General Authority.--
          (1) In general.--The State educational agency shall, 
        in accordance with section 722(e), and from amounts 
        made available to such agency under section 726, make 
        subgrants to local educational agencies for the purpose 
        of [facilitating the enrollment,] facilitating the 
        identification, enrollment, attendance, and success in 
        school of homeless children and youths.
          (2) Services.--
                  (A) In general.--Services under paragraph 
                (1)--
                          (i) may be provided through programs 
                        on school grounds or at other 
                        facilities; and
                          (ii) shall, to the maximum extent 
                        practicable, be provided through 
                        existing programs and mechanisms that 
                        integrate homeless children and youths 
                        with nonhomeless children and youths[; 
                        and].
                          [(iii) shall be designed to expand or 
                        improve services provided as part of a 
                        school's regular academic program, but 
                        not to replace such services provided 
                        under such program.]
                  (B) Services on school grounds.--If services 
                under paragraph (1) are provided on school 
                grounds, schools--
                          (i) may use funds under this subtitle 
                        to provide the same services to other 
                        children and youths who are determined 
                        by the local educational agency to be 
                        at risk of failing in, or dropping out 
                        of, school, subject to the requirements 
                        of clause (ii); and
                          (ii) except as otherwise provided in 
                        section 722(e)(3)(B), shall not provide 
                        services in settings within a school 
                        that segregate homeless children and 
                        youths from other children and youths, 
                        except as necessary for short periods 
                        of time--
                                  (I) for health and safety 
                                emergencies; or
                                  (II) to provide temporary, 
                                special, and supplementary 
                                services to meet the unique 
                                needs of homeless children and 
                                youths.
          (3) Requirement.--Services provided under this 
        section shall not replace the regular academic program 
        and shall be designed to expand upon or improve 
        services provided as part of the school's regular 
        academic program.
          (4) Duration of grants.--Subgrants awarded under this 
        section shall be for terms of not to exceed 3 years.
  (b) Application.--A local educational agency that desires to 
receive a subgrant under this section shall submit an 
application to the State educational agency at such time, in 
such manner, and containing or accompanied by such information 
as the State educational agency may reasonably require. Such 
application shall include the following:
          (1) An assessment of the educational and related 
        needs of homeless children and youths in the area 
        served by such agency (which may be undertaken as part 
        of needs assessments for other disadvantaged groups).
          (2) A description of the services and programs for 
        which assistance is sought to address the needs 
        identified in paragraph (1).
          [(3) An assurance that the local educational agency's 
        combined fiscal effort per student, or the aggregate 
        expenditures of that agency and the State with respect 
        to the provision of free public education by such 
        agency for the fiscal year preceding the fiscal year 
        for which the determination is made, was not less than 
        90 percent of such combined fiscal effort or aggregate 
        expenditures for the second fiscal year preceding the 
        fiscal year for which the determination is made.]
          [(4)] (3) An assurance that the applicant complies 
        with, or will use requested funds to comply with, 
        paragraphs (3) through (7) of section 722(g).
          [(5)] (4) A description of policies and procedures, 
        consistent with section 722(e)(3), that the agency will 
        implement to ensure that activities carried out by the 
        agency will not isolate or stigmatize homeless children 
        and youths.
          (5) An assurance that the local educational agency 
        will collect and promptly provide data requested by the 
        State Coordinator pursuant to paragraphs (1) and (3) of 
        section 722(f).
          (6) An assurance that the local educational agency 
        has removed barriers to complying with the requirements 
        of section 722(g)(1)(I).
  (c) Awards.--
          (1) In general.--The State educational agency shall, 
        in accordance with the requirements of this subtitle 
        and from amounts made available to it under section 
        [726] 722(a), make competitive subgrants to local 
        educational agencies that submit applications under 
        subsection (b). Such subgrants shall be awarded on the 
        basis of the need of such agencies for assistance under 
        this subtitle and the quality of the applications 
        submitted.
          (2) Need.--In determining need under paragraph (1), 
        the State educational agency may consider the number of 
        homeless children and youths enrolled in preschool, 
        elementary, and secondary schools within the area 
        served by the local educational agency, and shall 
        consider the needs of such children and youths and the 
        ability of the local educational agency to meet such 
        needs. The State educational agency may also consider 
        the following:
                  (A) The extent to which the proposed use of 
                funds will facilitate the identification, 
                enrollment, retention, and educational success 
                of homeless children and youths.
                  [(B) The extent to which the application--
                          [(i) reflects coordination with other 
                        local and State agencies that serve 
                        homeless children and youths; and
                          [(ii) describes how the applicant 
                        will meet the requirements of section 
                        722(g)(3).]
                  (B) The extent to which the application 
                reflects coordination with other local and 
                State agencies that serve homeless children and 
                youths.
                  (C) The extent to which the applicant 
                exhibits in the application and in current 
                practice (as of the date of submission of the 
                application) a commitment to education for all 
                homeless children and youths.
                  (D) Such other criteria as the State agency 
                determines appropriate.
          (3) Quality.--In determining the quality of 
        applications under paragraph (1), the State educational 
        agency shall consider the following:
                  (A) The applicant's needs assessment under 
                subsection (b)(1) and the likelihood that the 
                program presented in the application will meet 
                such needs.
                  (B) The types, intensity, and coordination of 
                the services to be provided under the program.
                  [(C) The involvement of parents or guardians 
                of homeless children or youths in the education 
                of their children.]
                  (C) The extent to which the applicant will 
                promote meaningful involvement of parents or 
                guardians of homeless children or youths in the 
                education of their children.
                  (D) The extent to which homeless children and 
                youths will be integrated [within] into the 
                regular education program.
                  (E) The quality of the applicant's evaluation 
                plan for the program.
                  (F) The extent to which services provided 
                under this subtitle will be coordinated with 
                other services available to homeless children 
                and youths and their families.
                  (G) The extent to which the local educational 
                agency will use the subgrant to leverage 
                resources, including by maximizing nonsubgrant 
                funding for the position of the liaison 
                described in section 722(g)(1)(J)(ii) and the 
                provision of transportation.
                  (H) How the local educational agency uses 
                funds to serve homeless children and youths 
                under section 1113(c)(3) of the Elementary and 
                Secondary Education Act of 1965 (20 U.S.C. 
                6313(c)(3)).
                  [(G) Such] (I) The extent to which the 
                applicant's program meets such other measures 
                as the State educational agency considers 
                indicative of a high-quality program, such as 
                the extent to which the local educational 
                agency will provide [case management or 
                related] services to unaccompanied youths.
                  (J) An assurance that the applicant will meet 
                the requirements of section 722(g)(3).
          [(4) Duration of grants.--Grants awarded under this 
        section shall be for terms not to exceed 3 years.]
  (d) Authorized Activities.--A local educational agency may 
use funds awarded under this section for activities that carry 
out the purpose of this subtitle, including the following:
          (1) The provision of tutoring, supplemental 
        instruction, and enriched educational services that are 
        linked to the achievement of the same [challenging 
        State academic content standards] State academic 
        standards [and challenging State student academic 
        achievement standards] the State establishes for other 
        children and youths.
          (2) The provision of expedited evaluations of the 
        strengths and needs of homeless children and youths, 
        including needs and eligibility for programs and 
        services (such as educational programs for gifted and 
        talented students, children with disabilities, and 
        [students with limited English proficiency,] English 
        learners, services provided under title I of the 
        Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 or 
        similar State or local programs, programs in 
        [vocational] career and technical education, and school 
        nutrition programs).
          (3) Professional development and other activities for 
        educators and [pupil services] specialized 
        instructional support personnel that are designed to 
        heighten the understanding and sensitivity of such 
        personnel to the needs of homeless children and youths, 
        the rights of such children and youths under this 
        subtitle, and the specific educational needs of runaway 
        and homeless youths.
          (4) The provision of referral services to homeless 
        children and youths for medical, dental, mental, and 
        other health services.
          (5) The provision of assistance to defray the excess 
        cost of transportation for students under section 
        722(g)(4)(A), not otherwise provided through Federal, 
        State, or local funding, where necessary to enable 
        students to attend the school selected under section 
        722(g)(3).
          (6) The provision of developmentally appropriate 
        early childhood education programs, not otherwise 
        provided through Federal, State, or local funding, for 
        preschool-aged homeless children.
          (7) The provision of services and assistance to 
        attract, engage, and retain homeless children and 
        youths[, and unaccompanied youths,], particularly 
        homeless children and youths who are not enrolled in 
        school, in public school programs and services provided 
        to nonhomeless children and youths.
          (8) The provision for homeless children and youths of 
        before- and after-school, mentoring, and summer 
        programs in which a teacher or other qualified 
        individual provides tutoring, homework assistance, and 
        supervision of educational activities.
          (9) If necessary, the payment of fees and other costs 
        associated with tracking, obtaining, and transferring 
        records necessary to enroll homeless children and 
        youths in school, including birth certificates, 
        immunization or [medical] other required health 
        records, academic records, guardianship records, and 
        evaluations for special programs or services.
          (10) The provision of education and training to the 
        parents of homeless children and youths about the 
        rights of, and resources available to, such children 
        and youths, and other activities designed to increase 
        the meaningful involvement of parents or guardians of 
        homeless children or youths in the education of their 
        children.
          (11) The development of coordination between schools 
        and agencies providing services to homeless children 
        and youths, as described in section 722(g)(5).
          (12) The provision of [pupil] specialized 
        instructional support services (including violence 
        prevention counseling) and referrals for such services.
          (13) Activities to address the particular needs of 
        homeless children and youths that may arise from 
        domestic violence and parental mental health or 
        substance abuse problems.
          (14) The adaptation of space and purchase of supplies 
        for any nonschool facilities made available under 
        subsection (a)(2) to provide services under this 
        subsection.
          (15) The provision of school supplies, including 
        those supplies to be distributed at shelters or 
        temporary housing facilities, or other appropriate 
        locations.
          (16) The provision of other extraordinary or 
        emergency assistance needed to enable homeless children 
        and youths to attend school.

SEC. 724. SECRETARIAL RESPONSIBILITIES.

  (a) Review of State Plans.--In reviewing the State plan 
submitted by a State educational agency under section 722(g), 
the Secretary shall use a peer review process and shall 
evaluate whether State laws, policies, and practices described 
in such plan adequately address the problems of homeless 
children and youths relating to access to education and 
placement as described in such plan.
  (b) Technical Assistance.--The Secretary shall provide 
support and technical assistance to a State educational agency 
to assist such agency in carrying out its responsibilities 
under this subtitle, if requested by the State educational 
agency.
  [(c) Notice.--The Secretary shall, before the next school 
year that begins after the date of enactment of the McKinney-
Vento Homeless Education Assistance Improvements Act of 2001, 
create and disseminate nationwide a public notice of the 
educational rights of homeless children and youths and 
disseminate such notice to other Federal agencies, programs, 
and grantees, including Head Start grantees, Health Care for 
the Homeless grantees, Emergency Food and Shelter grantees, and 
homeless assistance programs administered by the Department of 
Housing and Urban Development.]
  (c) Notice.--
          (1) In general.--The Secretary shall, before the next 
        school year that begins after the date of the enactment 
        of the Student Success Act, update and disseminate 
        nationwide the public notice described in this 
        subsection (as in effect prior to such date) of the 
        educational rights of homeless children and youths.
          (2) Dissemination.--The Secretary shall disseminate 
        the notice nationally to all Federal agencies, program 
        grantees, and grant recipients serving homeless 
        families, children, and youths.
  (d) Evaluation and Dissemination.--The Secretary shall 
conduct evaluation [and dissemination], dissemination, and 
technical assistance activities of programs designed to meet 
the educational needs of homeless elementary and secondary 
school students, and may use funds appropriated under section 
726 to conduct such activities.
  (e) Submission and Distribution.--The Secretary shall require 
[applications for grants under this subtitle] plans for the use 
of grant funds under section 722 to be submitted to the 
Secretary not later than the expiration of the [60-day] 120-day 
period beginning on the date that funds are available for 
purposes of making such grants and shall make such grants not 
later than the expiration of the [120-day] 180-day period 
beginning on such date.
  (f) Determination by Secretary.--The Secretary, based on the 
information received from the States and information gathered 
by the Secretary under subsection (h), shall determine the 
extent to which State educational agencies are ensuring that 
each homeless child and homeless youth has access to a free 
appropriate public education, as described in section 721(1). 
The Secretary shall provide support and technical assistance to 
State educational agencies in areas in which barriers to a free 
appropriate public education persist.
  [(g) Guidelines.--The Secretary shall develop, issue, and 
publish in the Federal Register, not later than 60 days after 
the date of enactment of the McKinney-Vento Homeless Education 
Assistance Improvements Act of 2001, school enrollment 
guidelines for States with respect to homeless children and 
youths. The guidelines shall describe--
          [(1) successful ways in which a State may assist 
        local educational agencies to immediately enroll 
        homeless children and youths in school; and
          [(2) how a State can review the State's requirements 
        regarding immunization and medical or school records 
        and make such revisions to the requirements as are 
        appropriate and necessary in order to enroll homeless 
        children and youths in school immediately.]
  (g) Guidelines.--The Secretary shall develop, issue, and 
publish in the Federal Register, not later than 60 days after 
the date of the enactment of the Student Success Act, 
strategies by which a State--
          (1) may assist local educational agencies to 
        implement the provisions amended by the Act; and
          (2) can review and revise State policies and 
        procedures that may present barriers to the 
        identification, enrollment, attendance, and success of 
        homeless children and youths in school.
  (h) Information.--
          (1) In general.--From funds appropriated under 
        section 726, the Secretary shall, directly or through 
        grants, contracts, or cooperative agreements, 
        periodically collect and disseminate data and 
        information regarding--
                  (A) the number and location of homeless 
                children and youths in all areas served by 
                local educational agencies;
                  (B) the education and related services such 
                children and youths receive;
                  (C) the extent to which the needs of homeless 
                children and youths are being met; and
                  (D) such other data and information as the 
                Secretary determines to be necessary and 
                relevant to carry out this subtitle.
          (2) Coordination.--The Secretary shall coordinate 
        such collection and dissemination with other agencies 
        and entities that receive assistance and administer 
        programs under this subtitle.
  (i) Report.--Not later than 4 years after the date of 
enactment of the [McKinney-Vento Homeless Education Assistance 
Improvements Act of 2001] Student Success Act, the Secretary 
shall prepare and submit to the President and the Committee on 
Education and the Workforce of the House of Representatives and 
the Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions of the 
Senate a report on the status of education of homeless children 
and youths, which shall include information on--
          (1) the education of homeless children and youths; 
        and
          (2) the actions of the Secretary and the 
        effectiveness of the programs supported under this 
        subtitle.

SEC. 725. DEFINITIONS.

   For purposes of this subtitle:
          (1) The terms ``enroll'' and ``enrollment'' include 
        attending classes and participating fully in school 
        activities.
          (2) The term ``homeless children and youths''--
                  (A) means individuals who lack a fixed, 
                regular, and adequate nighttime residence 
                (within the meaning of section 103(a)(1)); and
                  (B) includes--
                          (i) children and youths who are 
                        sharing the housing of other persons 
                        due to loss of housing, economic 
                        hardship, or a similar reason; are 
                        living in motels, hotels, trailer 
                        parks, or camping grounds due to the 
                        lack of alternative adequate 
                        accommodations; are living in emergency 
                        or transitional shelters; are abandoned 
                        in hospitals; or are awaiting foster 
                        care placement;
                          (ii) children and youths who have a 
                        primary nighttime residence that is a 
                        public or private place not designed 
                        for or ordinarily used as a regular 
                        sleeping accommodation for human beings 
                        (within the meaning of section 
                        103(a)(2)(C));
                          (iii) children and youths who are 
                        living in cars, parks, public spaces, 
                        abandoned buildings, substandard 
                        housing, bus or train stations, or 
                        similar settings; and
                          (iv) migratory children (as such term 
                        is defined in section [1309] 1139 of 
                        the Elementary and Secondary Education 
                        Act of 1965) who qualify as homeless 
                        for the purposes of this subtitle 
                        because the children are living in 
                        circumstances described in clauses (i) 
                        through (iii).
          (3) The terms ``local educational agency'' and 
        ``State educational agency'' have the meanings given 
        such terms in section [9101] 6101 of the Elementary and 
        Secondary Education Act of 1965.
          (4) The term ``Secretary'' means the Secretary of 
        Education.
          (5) The term ``State'' means each of the 50 States, 
        the District of Columbia, and the Commonwealth of 
        Puerto Rico.
          (6) The term ``unaccompanied youth'' includes a youth 
        not in the physical custody of a parent or guardian.

[SEC. 726. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS.

  [For the purpose of carrying out this subtitle, there are 
authorized to be appropriated $100,000,000 for fiscal year 2009 
and such sums as may be necessary for each subsequent fiscal 
year.]

SEC. 726. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS.

  For the purpose of carrying out this subtitle, there are 
authorized to be appropriated $65,042,000 for each of fiscal 
years 2016 through 2021.

           *       *       *       *       *       *       *


                             MINORITY VIEWS

    Committee Democrats adamantly and unanimously oppose H.R. 
5, the Student Success Act. All Democratic members voted in 
opposition to the legislation during its consideration in 
Committee on February 11, 2015. We believe the No Child Left 
Behind Act (NCLB) is long-overdue for reauthorization, but H.R. 
5 does not set forth a reauthorization to improve student 
outcomes or provide support to the vulnerable student 
populations the law is intended to serve. Instead, H.R. 5 would 
turn the clock back on equity and accountability in American 
public education while diverting scarce federal dollars away 
from communities plagued by high concentrations of poverty and 
toward low-poverty schools and districts. Additionally, the 
partisan path chosen by Committee Republicans lacks not only a 
deliberative process informed by research and evidence, but 
also the consensus necessary to achieve a comprehensive 
reauthorization worthy of enactment and reflective of 50 years 
of bipartisanship.
    Committee Democrats oppose H.R. 5 because it shortchanges 
students, weakens accountability for improved student outcomes 
for all students, and fails to update current law to take the 
public education system into the 21st century. This opposition 
is shared by the majority of the education, civil rights and 
business community. The Republican bill eliminates critical 
supports and accountability to provide a balanced and effective 
education to every child. H.R. 5 locks in low funding levels 
without allowing appropriators to adjust annual appropriations 
for inflation, despite a projected 14 percent decrease in 
purchasing power and 3.2 million student increase in public 
school enrollment by 2021.\1\ H.R. 5 drastically shifts much-
needed federal resources away from the poorest students, 
undermining the statutory intent of the Elementary and 
Secondary Education Act.\2\ H.R. 5 fails to provide adequate 
support for professional development to improve teaching and 
learning, and fails to provide dedicated support for 
implementation of evidence-based programs and supports to 
improve access to comprehensive literacy, STEM, or other 
subjects that provide students a well-rounded education. The 
bill eliminates wrap-around services, support for before-, 
after, and summer school, and support for expanded learning 
time, all of which have been proven by extensive research to be 
critical to student learning.\3\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \1\Committee for Education Funding, (2015). ``Letter on HR 5 to 
Congress''. Retrieved from http://cef.org/hr-5-letter-to-house/.
    \2\Department of Education. ``Laws & Guidance Elementary and 
Secondary Education''. Retrieved from http://www2.ed.gov/policy/elsec/
leg/esea02/pg1.html.
    \3\Afterschool Alliance, (2015). ``Afterschool Programs: Inspiring 
Students with a Connected Learning Approach.'' Retrieved from http://
afterschoolalliance.org/documents/
Afterschool_and_Connected_Learning.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Given the urgent need to reauthorize current law and to 
address the fatal flaws of H.R. 5, Democrats offered at mark-up 
a series of amendments, culminating in the introduction of a 
comprehensive substitute amendment to the Republican bill that 
demonstrates a positive vision for the reauthorization and a 
path forward to improve student outcomes, promote equity of 
opportunity, and ensure states and districts are held 
accountable for supporting and improving public education 
through effective implementation of limited federal funds. All 
Democrats voted unanimously in support of the comprehensive 
substitute amendment, offered by Ranking Member Scott. The 
Democrats' proposal garnered support from the civil rights, 
education, and business communities.
    Committee Democrats believe that the reauthorization of 
NCLB must build upon what we have learned over the last 10 
years and take advantage of and support the advancements that 
have been made. The most recent long-term trend study by the 
National Assessment of Educational Progress, released in June 
2013, showed that American students have improved their reading 
and math achievement since 1973. Notably, the biggest gains 
were made among African-American and Hispanic students. For 
example, African-American 4th graders improved 36 points in 
both reading and math.\4\ However, progress has stalled since 
2008. Therefore, now is the time to press ahead, and not scale 
back, federal investment and involvement in education.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \4\National Assessment of Educational Progress (2013). ``A First 
Look: 2013 Mathematics and Reading''. Retrieved from http://
nces.ed.gov/nationsreportcard/subject/publications/main2013/
pdf2014451.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    We believe the reauthorization should support college and 
career-ready standards, modern assessments, an accountability 
system that includes meaningful goals and targets for improving 
student achievement while taking into account measures of 
resource equity, and a school improvement system that gives 
schools and districts flexibility in how they achieve those 
goals. Committee Democrats also believe reauthorization should 
support states in ensuring the placement of an effective 
teacher in every classroom and an effective school leader in 
every school across the country. Federal policy should 
encourage and support important professional development 
opportunities for teachers and school leaders. It should 
protect collective bargaining and teacher privacy. Federal 
policy should also support states, districts, and schools in 
their efforts to provide a well-rounded education to students, 
and in addressing non-academic factors, such as mental health 
and counseling needs, that create barriers to student learning.

   H.R. 5 UNDERMINES THE FEDERAL ROLE IN EDUCATION TO PROMOTE EQUAL 
                              OPPORTUNITY

    With the passage of the first Elementary and Secondary 
Education Act (ESEA) in 1965, in response to the Brown vs. 
Board of Education decision, the federal role in education 
focused on promoting equal opportunity in education by 
targeting resources and services to communities plagued with 
high concentrations of poverty and suffering under inequitable 
state and local education financing systems. The arbiter of 
equity in an unequal and often unjust educational delivery 
system operated largely by states and school districts, the 
federal government, through implementation of ESEA, seeks to 
ensure that our nation's public schools provide every student, 
regardless of race, income level, English language proficiency, 
or disability status, the opportunity to fulfill his or her 
academic potential, graduate from high school ready to succeed 
in college or career, and pursue a future of his or her 
choosing. Access to educational quality is a driver of economic 
mobility, and although diminished due to failed Republican 
economic policies of recent decades,\5\ economic mobility 
remains a hallmark measure of equal opportunity in our 
nation.--Providing all students access to a free, high quality, 
public education is the only sure path to improve economic 
mobility and promote an educated and productive citizenry.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \5\Chetty, R.; Hendren, N.; Kline, P.; and Saez, E. (2014). ``Where 
is the Land of Opportunity? The Geography of Intergenerational Mobility 
in the United States''. Retrieved from http://obs_rc_fas.harvard.edu/
chetty/mobility_geo.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    The federal interest in a strong public education system is 
grounded in civil rights, economic, and national security 
concerns. All three areas are threatened by an elementary and 
secondary educational system that is not held accountable for 
supporting the potential of all our nation's students. 
Unfortunately, H.R. 5 both undermines the promise of the Brown 
decision, and the federal role in supporting a strong public 
education system that promotes civil rights, that feeds a 
strong economy, and that builds our national security.

                       STANDARDS AND ASSESSMENTS

    H.R. 5 does not support the national consensus for college 
and career ready standards to ensure students graduate ready to 
succeed and, despite the advances in technology, it fails to 
modernize assessments to measure progress towards those 
standards. The bill does not contain requirements that states 
set high standards to graduate students who are college and 
career-ready and who are able to enroll in postsecondary 
education without the need for remediation. Current law 
requires states to establish standards, but does not assess the 
rigor of those standards. NCLB did not have a check on the 
rigor of assessments, allowing some states to lower academic 
standards in favor of better accountability outcomes, leading 
to tens of thousands of students progressing along an academic 
pathway to nowhere. In fact, according to a 2009 NAEP State 
Mapping Analysis, 15 states lowered their proficiency standards 
in fourth- or eighth-grade reading or math from 2005 to 
2007,\6\ resulting in large discrepancies between high levels 
of proficiency on state standards and low levels of proficiency 
as measured by NAEP. As a result, stakeholders from civil 
rights groups, business groups, and educators believe that 
reauthorization must ensure that academic standards help 
students graduate prepared for college and careers.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \6\National Assessment of Educational Progress, (2009). ``Mapping 
State Proficiency Standards onto the NAEP Scales: Variation and Change 
in State Standards for Reading and Mathematics, 2005-2009''. Retrieved 
from http://nces.ed.gov/nationsreportcard/pdf/studies/2011458.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Refusing to hear these concerns, H.R. 5 weakens current law 
by not establishing parameters on quality standards, and it 
even goes as far as to eliminate use of the word 
``challenging'' with regard to standards. Committee Democrats 
believe that states should maintain control over development 
and adoption of academic standards, but that content standards 
should be validated by state institutions of higher education 
to ensure proficiency upon high school graduation is meaningful 
and allows enrollment in postsecondary education without the 
need for remediation.
    High-quality assessments are essential to measure our 
progress as a nation and to ensure we have reliable data to 
improve student achievement, instruction, and schools. While 
assessment represents one tool in promoting educational equity 
and improving student outcomes, too many states and districts 
are plagued by an overreliance on redundant, low-quality 
assessments that are not valid or reliable for the purposes for 
which they are used and fail to improve teaching and 
learning.\7\ Committee Democrats believe that ESEA 
reauthorization presents a unique opportunity to support states 
in streamlining assessment systems, aligning limited 
assessments to rigorous standards to ensure college- and 
career-readiness, and eliminating duplicative and low-quality 
state and local assessments that are not required by federal 
law. This is why the Democratic substitute amendment fully 
incorporates provisions of the Support Making Assessments 
Reliable and Timely (SMART) Act (H.R. 408), bipartisan 
legislation championed by Representative Suzanne Bonamici, a 
member of the Committee.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \7\Lazarin, M., (2014). ``Testing Overload in America's Schools''. 
Retrieved from https://cdn.americanprogress.org/wp-content/uploads/
2014/10/LazarinOvertestingReport.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    H.R. 5 does not support the development and implementation 
of high-quality assessments that accurately measure growth and 
higher order skills. The bill, similar to current law, requires 
annual English and math assessments in grades 3-8 and once in 
high school, and allows, but does not require, assessments to 
measure student growth in addition to proficiency. 
Unfortunately, the legislation does not ensure assessments are 
high-quality, fails to reflect the advancements in assessments 
over the past decade, and fails to require that states 
differentiate achievement levels of students, a critical tool 
for parents and communities in judging how well schools and 
districts are meeting the academic needs of all students.
    H.R. 5 eliminates the Grants for State Assessments program 
which supports state development of high-quality assessments. 
High-quality assessment systems are expensive to develop but 
critical to effectively measuring student achievement and to 
supporting improvements in teaching and learning. This 
assessment program provides critical support to states as they 
work to implement next generation assessments that measure 
higher order thinking, improve teaching and learning, and 
measure both proficiency and student growth. Lastly, H.R. 5 
fails to promote innovation and flexibility in design of 
competency education assessment systems that utilizes local and 
performance-based assessments to garner student achievement 
data, but also maintains vital equity protections to ensure 
data is meaningful for improving outcomes for all students. 
Committee Democrats believe this reauthorization must begin to 
responsibly chart a new path, in partnership with states, 
toward high quality and meaningful assessment systems that work 
for all students and promote educational equity.
    H.R. 5 also fails to ensure all children are held to high 
expectations by permitting states to develop alternate 
achievement standards for students with the most significant 
cognitive disabilities but does not establish any parameters to 
determine which students should be assessed in this category. 
Additionally, the bill would eliminate the current regulation 
that caps at one percent the number of students scoring 
proficient for accountability purposes who are assessed 
alternatively. This regulation ensures schools are still held 
accountable for the achievement of students with disabilities. 
H.R. 5 also fails to prohibit states from establishing modified 
or other achievement standards, despite recent federal 
regulatory activity to eliminate use of modified achievement 
standards after documentation of widespread abuse of the 
standards.\8\ Representative Jeffries offered an amendment to 
improve H.R. 5's accountability provisions to extend college- 
and career-ready standards to all students, including students 
with significant cognitive disabilities, which was defeated 
despite unanimous support from Committee Democrats.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \8\Advocacy Institute, (2015). ``Assessment & Accountability for 
Students with Disabilities: A Look Back at the Alternate Assessment on 
Modified Academic Achievement Standards''. Retrieved from http://
www.advocacyinstitute.org/ESEA/AA-MAS.Look.Back.Jan2015.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    By failing to codify this current regulatory cap and 
failing to prohibit additional standards, H.R. 5 permits all 
students with disabilities to be held to lower standards and 
given different assessments, effectively allowing those 
students to be educated in a parallel but lesser system. As a 
result, large numbers of students with disabilities could be 
prevented from receiving a regular high school diploma. Taken 
in concert, provisions allowing for the alternate assessment of 
students with significant cognitive disabilities without 
codification of the regulatory one percent cap or prohibition 
on the establishment of modified achievement standards, H.R. 5 
would create a perverse incentive to over-identify children for 
special education to include them in the lower standard. Low-
income and minority students are already over-represented in 
special education, and this legislation could exacerbate that 
problem.

                 ACCOUNTABILITY AND SCHOOL IMPROVEMENT

    One of the most critical aspects of NCLB was that, for the 
first time, schools were held accountable for the performance 
of all students, including student subgroups, and they were 
required to take action when student achievement failed to 
improve. Over the last ten years, NCLB's accountability system 
has received both more praise and criticism than any other 
aspect of the law. Accordingly, Democrats firmly believe that 
the accountability and school improvement system must be 
updated to reflect what we have learned over the last ten 
years, while maintaining a strong focus on improving student 
achievement and increased focus on resource equity for under-
supported schools. Committee Democrats believe that this 
reauthorization must set guardrails to ensure states and 
districts target resources and interventions to boost student 
achievement for subgroups of students farthest from achieving 
college- and career-readiness, while promoting the 
implementation of locally-driven, evidence-based interventions 
and supports tailored to unique community needs and school 
challenges.
    Unfortunately, H.R. 5 would allow states to establish weak 
accountability systems that would not require performance 
targets for student achievement, would not require schools take 
specific action to better support schools that need 
improvement, and would not ensure all students have access to 
high-quality schools. H.R. 5 provides no federal guardrails on 
accountability for student achievement and does not support the 
expectation that all students should graduate high school ready 
for college or career. The lack of quality and consistency in 
the state systems combined with weak standards and low-quality 
assessments would provide little transparency for how schools 
are evaluated, little consistency from district to district or 
state to state, and lack of clarity for parents and communities 
when the academic and resource needs of students aren't being 
met.
    H.R. 5 does not require states to establish overall goals 
for student achievement or to establish performance targets to 
measure progress toward state-established goals, allowing 
states to obfuscate responsibility for measurably improving 
outcomes for historically underserved students that the law is 
intended to serve. In addition, H.R. 5 does not include high 
school graduation rates as a component of the state-developed 
accountability system, despite clear consensus on the need for 
graduation rate accountability to be paired with accountability 
for student achievement to ensure low-performing students do 
not get pushed out of school thanks to a perverse incentive 
created by counting grade-level proficiency but not on-time 
graduation. Further, the bill dismantles current regulations 
requiring states have and utilize meaningful graduation rate 
accountability.
    Committee Democrats believe that high school graduation 
rates must play a critical role in school identification and 
targeted interventions within a state-developed accountability 
system. This is why the comprehensive Democratic substitute 
amendment would support school districts in dropout prevention 
efforts, including the development and implementation of 
evidence-based early intervention warning systems that target 
supports to students who demonstrate warning signs of dropping 
out before entering high school. Committee Democrats believe 
that grade-level proficiency must be used in combination with 
student growth and high school graduation rates within 
accountability systems to ensure systems are working to improve 
student outcomes without creating or furthering incentives to 
push out students in need of targeted interventions. In-line 
with research-based approaches to improving student outcomes, 
Representative Wilson offered an amendment to reinstate and 
improve dropout prevention programming within ESEA that was 
defeated despite unanimous support from Committee Democrats.
    Additionally, while H.R. 5 requires school improvement 
systems be established, it does not establish any parameters 
for identifying schools for improvement. Therefore, there is no 
assurance that schools that are failing to improve student 
achievement or address resource inequities will be required to 
take action to improve. Specifically, H.R. 5 does not define 
categories of schools denoting needed academic interventions or 
supports, nor does it establish any parameters on interventions 
in such schools that may be identified. The bill does not 
establish timelines for improvement, expectations for local or 
state educational agency support for improvement, or 
consequences if schools do not improve. Committee Democrats 
believe that the expectation of support for all public schools 
to improve academic achievement, through locally-driven 
evidence-based interventions to address unique school and 
community needs must be clearly articulated in federal law. 
Once schools are identified for supports or improvement, it is 
incumbent on all stakeholders to work diligently, in 
partnership, to ensure that no student languishes in schools 
incapable or unwilling to meet students' needs. Mr. Polis 
offered an amendment to reinstate and improve provisions 
setting federal guardrails for school improvement activities. 
Unfortunately this amendment was defeated by a partisan voice 
vote.
    H.R. 5 also fails to recognize the critical role of the 
U.S. Department of Education in implementing the law and 
providing oversight of federal funds by prohibiting the 
Secretary of Education from providing guidance on any of the 
bill's standards, assessments, or accountability provisions. 
This short-sighted and highly partisan legislative approach 
assumes both a perfect bill in need of no future clarification 
or guidance and a stagnant education system, incapable of 
adapting to the changing needs of an increasingly global 
economy. Under H.R. 5, the Secretary would be prohibited from 
simply assisting states with guidance when implementation on 
the ground may be unclear or challenging. Additionally, this 
provision would ensure that regulations, including those 
establishing requirements on graduation rates or the one 
percent cap on the number of students taking alternate 
assessments, could not be upheld. Committee Democrats 
unanimously opposed an amendment offered by Mr. Russell under 
the guise of data privacy that would have far-reaching 
consequences in hindering Secretarial authority.
    H.R. 5 also removes current law protections on collective 
bargaining rights that ensure teachers are included in the 
school improvement process, rather than being silenced or 
sidelined. The removal of this provision ignores both the 
rights of teachers to collectively bargain and their important 
role in turning around struggling schools and improving student 
achievement.

                       STUDENTS WITH DISABILITIES

    H.R. 5 dismantles equity protections for many groups of 
students; however, the failures of H.R. 5 will be especially 
detrimental for students with disabilities. Over the course of 
the past decade, students with disabilities have significantly 
benefited from the accountability and reporting requirements 
under current law which mandate that schools not only measure 
and report the academic achievement of every child, but are 
also held accountable for each student's progress.\9\ As a 
result, thousands more students with disabilities have been 
afforded the opportunity to learn--and master--grade-level 
academic content and graduate from high school college- and 
career-ready.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \9\Statement of Katy Beh Neas, Executive Vice President for Public 
Affairs, Easter Seals, before H. Comm. on Educ. & the Workforce 
Minority Forum on the Elementary and Secondary Education Act, February 
5, 2015.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Students with disabilities have made considerable gains 
thanks to current law's focus on all schools and all student 
subgroups, including not only improved participation rates, but 
also improved academic achievement on grade-level reading and 
math assessments. Students with disabilities have benefited 
greatly from increased access to the general curriculum and 
from higher expectations for student achievement due, in large 
part, to the requirement that participation and proficiency of 
all subgroups be measured, reported, and used for the planning 
and implementation of interventions. Simply put, by removing 
subgroup accountability, H.R. 5 will undoubtedly hinder, and 
almost certainly eliminate the gains made by students with 
disabilities.
    The Republican bill seeks to radically reduce expectations 
for students with disabilities, allowing states to teach and 
assess this population of students to an alternate and less-
challenging set of content and achievement standards, only 
intended for students with the most significant cognitive 
disabilities. Furthermore, H.R. 5 would remove current 
restrictions on the use of student scores on such assessments 
for local and state educational agency accountability purposes, 
allowing states to administer and report on a lower standard 
for as many students with disabilities as the state sees fit, 
despite consistent research demonstrating the incidence of 
students with the most significant cognitive disabilities to be 
less than one percent of the student population.\10\ To ignore 
this data by eliminating any federal limitation on the use of 
lower standards and less challenging assessments will result in 
lack of access to general curriculum and lower expectations for 
students with disabilities, turning back the clock on equity 
protections for this vulnerable group of students.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \10\Advocacy Institute (2013). ``Diplomas at Risk: A Critical Look 
at Graduation Rate of Students with Learning Disabilities''. Retrieved 
from http://www.advocacyinstitute.org/resources/Diplomas.at.Risk.pdf.; 
Kearns, J., Kleinert, H., Harrison, B., Sheppard-Jones, K., Hall, M., 
Jones, M. (2010). What does `college and career ready' mean for 
students with significant cognitive disabilities? Lexington: University 
of Kentucky. Retrieved from http://www.naacpartners.org/publications/
CareerCollegeReadiness.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    H.R. 5 lacks any requirements that all schools be held 
accountable for student achievement at the subgroup level or 
that schools receive extra resources and support if and when 
they fail to produce progress for all students. When coupled 
with provisions to allow states to establish alternate 
standards and alternate assessments with no assurances for 
quality or alignment, as well as the repeal of any limitation 
on usage of lower standards, H.R. 5 will place millions of 
students with disabilities at acute risk of receiving a subpar 
education and rob them of the ability to access postsecondary 
education or competitive integrated employment.
    This irresponsible approach to educational equity for 
students with disabilities is why leading disability rights 
coalitions and groups stand unified in firm opposition to H.R. 
5 including the National Center for Learning Disabilities, 
National Disability Rights Network, Council for Exceptional 
Children, Disability Rights Education & Defense Fund, the 
Collaboration to Promote Self Determination, the Council of 
Parent Attorneys and Advocates, and the Consortium for Citizens 
with Disabilities.

  FISCAL RESPONSIBILITY, ``FLEXIBILITY,'' AND UNDERMINING CIVIL RIGHTS

    H.R. 5 undermines fiscal responsibility for special 
populations of students, reduces fiscal transparency, and cuts 
education funding.

Special Populations

    Under the guise of flexibility, H.R. 5 attacks the rights 
of special populations of students. H.R. 5 consolidates the 
following programs as percentage set-asides under Title I, Part 
A: English Language Learners (currently Title III); Education 
of Migratory Children (currently Title I-C); Neglected and 
Delinquent Students (currently Title I-D); and Rural Education 
Initiative (currently Title VI-B) repealing long-standing 
provisions establishing separate authorizations for these 
critical programs The bill also allows for funds traditionally 
to be shared across what would be the new Title I, Part A, 
permitting states and districts to siphon funds away from the 
very populations that drive certain ESEA funding allocations 
and that the law intended to serve.
    The Republicans claim these current law funding streams are 
inflexible, but the reality is states and districts have few, 
if any, restrictions on how the funding can be used. The only 
restriction is on whom the funding supports. The Republicans 
additionally claim that they maintain the funding streams for 
these populations, but they merely make them a percentage set-
aside of Title I and then allow complete flexibility in how 
districts utilize those funds.
    Current law establishes separate funding streams to help 
ensure the needs of English language learners, migrant 
students, and neglected and delinquent students are being met. 
Title III, part A of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act 
was created, after the Lau vs Nichols Supreme Court ruling, to 
help ensure that English learners attain English proficiency, 
develop high levels of academic attainment in English, and meet 
the same state academic content and student academic 
achievement standards that all students are expected to meet. 
This program supports 4.6 million English learners in the 
United States. Over the last ten years, the English learners 
population has increased over 7.1% yet appropriation levels 
have not kept pace with the growing need.\11\ The educational 
needs of migrant children go well beyond those traditionally 
supported by state and local budgets and, due to their high 
mobility, no single state or district is responsible for their 
education. In turn, the schools that serve high concentrations 
of migrant students are among the Nation's highest-need 
schools. Title I, Part C was created to provide additional 
funding to support migrant students. This program currently 
serves about 500,000 students. Authorized over 40 years ago, 
Title I, Part D creates both a state and local program intended 
to improve educational services for students who are neglected, 
delinquent, or at risk of dropping out of school. This program 
currently serves over 100,000 students.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \11\``Statement of Delia Pompa, Senior Vice President Programs, 
National Council of La Raza, before H. Comm. on Educ. & the Workforce 
Minority Forum on the Elementary and Secondary Education Act, February 
5, 2015.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Democrats believe funding allocated based on the number of 
children in need of services--from the number of migrant 
students, the number of neglected or delinquent students, or 
the number of English Language Learners--should be used for 
services to improve educational outcomes for those students. In 
addition to an amendment offered by Representative Hinojosa to 
restore Title III as a separate program, the comprehensive 
Democratic substitute amendment maintained dedicated funding 
for each of these vulnerable student populations and increased 
program authorization levels to be reflective of current need. 
Increasing flexibility is needed in this reauthorization, but 
it must be grounded in increasing equity and improving student 
achievement. This flexibility can be accomplished by aligning 
data and allowing flexibility in school improvement. Arbitrary 
flexibility policies, as put forth by H.R. 5, undermine 
equality of opportunity and hinder our economic 
competitiveness.

Fiscal Accountability and ``Portability''

    H.R. 5 also eliminates fiscal accountability by striking 
the current law ``maintenance of effort'' provisions (MOE). 
Under the Republican bill, states and districts will be able to 
reduce their nonfederal education spending without any penalty. 
This provision will allow states and districts to use education 
funds for tax relief or other initiatives unrelated to 
education, rather than efforts to support students. Federal 
investment in public education is limited and intended to 
supplement state and local resources. Numerous federal court 
cases contesting states' attempts to utilize federal ESEA Title 
I funds to supplant existing state funds have produced court 
rulings upholding the federal government's right and interest 
in requiring maintenance of effort.
    Under current law, MOE requires states and districts 
receiving Title I funds to spend at least 90 percent of what 
they spent in the previous year from nonfederal sources. This 
helps to prevent big decreases in education investment, whether 
driven by tough budget times or genuine desire to reduce 
education funding. There is evidence that absent MOE provisions 
in federal law, states cut education spending, effectively 
redirecting federal funds to non-education related expenditures 
at the cost of the state's most vulnerable students and in-need 
communities where funding from public sources is already low. 
Data suggests that MOE provisions included in the American 
Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) requiring states to 
maintain fiscal effort at FY2006 level influenced a critical 
mass of state governments to reduce state education spending. 
Analysis of data from Phase II ARRA applications reveals that 
MOE, not state formulaic priorities was the overriding factor 
in many states' spending decisions; nine states reduced their 
funding for higher education in FY2010 to within one percent of 
their FY2006 federal MOE threshold, and three states set their 
higher education budgets exactly at the minimum MOE threshold 
required by ARRA. Additionally, the Department of Education 
Office of the Inspector General report found that while many 
states were planning on level funding K-12 education programs, 
they ultimately submitted applications to decrease funding to 
FY2006 levels after learning of lower maintenance of effort 
requirement.\12\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \12\U.S. Department of Education (2009). ``Potential Consequences 
of the Maintenance of Effort Requirements under the American Recovery 
and Reinvestment Act State Fiscal Stabilization Fund''.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    The Republicans claim the MOE provision amounts to 
``federal overreach.'' However, maintenance of effort makes 
requirements about the levels of state and local spending, not 
about how money should be spent.
    In fact many local educators recognize the importance of 
maintenance of effort. In a forum on ESEA reauthorization 
hosted by Ranking Member Scott, we heard from the President of 
the Council of the Great City Schools, who described ESEA's MOE 
provisions as, ``among the most critical provisions and 
successful components of federal education law--and among the 
most effective things the federal government does.''\13\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \13\Statement of Michael Casserly, President, Council of the Great 
City Schools, before H. Comm. on Educ. & the Workforce Minority Forum 
on the Elementary and Secondary Education Act, February 5, 2015.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Committee Republicans claim that because they maintain the 
``supplement, not supplant'' provision they maintain fiscal 
accountability. However, eliminating the maintenance of effort 
requirement and providing complete flexibility in how districts 
spend their federal dollars, means there is no requirement 
under H.R. 5 to actually measure whether districts are using 
federal money to supplement not supplant local money. 
``Supplement, not supplant'' will become meaningless, and 
education spending across the country will decrease. Democrats 
believe the maintenance of effort provision must be maintained 
to ensure tax dollars are being spent responsibly.
    In addition to eliminating MOE requirements, H.R. 5 will 
allow school districts to remove Title I funding from the 
neediest schools and divert it to more affluent schools under 
the innocently titled ``portability'' proposal. Portability has 
been marketed based on the slogan that Title I dollars should 
be placed in a ``backpack'' and follow a child to the school of 
his or her choice. As appealing as this may sound, the net 
effect of portability would be a billion dollar redistribution 
of Title I money away from poor schools towards more affluent 
ones. In a recent report, the Center for American Progress 
suggested that Title I portability could result in America's 
poorest school districts losing more than $675 million in Title 
I funding, while districts with the low levels of poverty could 
gain $440 million.\14\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \14\Max Marchitello & Robert Hanna, Ctr. For Am. Progress, Robin 
Hood In Reverse: How ESEA Title I, Part A ``Portability'' Takes From 
The Poor And Gives To The Rest 2 (2015).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    In a final blow to fiscal accountability, H.R. 5 also 
removes the 40% cap required for schools to use Title I funds 
for school-wide programming. Under current law, schools can 
reserve a portion of Title I funding at the school level to run 
school-wide programs if at least 40% of their students qualify 
for Title I funds. The rationale is that in schools with such 
high proportions of Title I students; school-wide program will 
invariably benefit them. In removing the cap, a school will now 
be able to retain some Title I funding to run a school-wide 
program even if only a handful of children receive Title I 
funds. Removing the cap is yet another policy choice where H.R. 
5 tips the scales away from the children most in need of 
resources. Representative Fudge offered an amendment that was 
cosponsored by Representative Pocan to restore the intent of 
ESEA by targeting limited funds to concentrations of poverty by 
repealing these harmful proposals. This amendment was defeated 
despite unanimous support from Committee Democrats.

Funding

    H.R. 5 caps funding at FY15 appropriations levels and caps 
annual increases based on the inflation rate. Democrats believe 
education funding should not be held to arbitrary caps and that 
funding should reflect national need and priority if our nation 
is to remain globally competitive.
    According to the Committee for Education Funding, a 
coalition of 115 national education associations and 
institutions representing birth to postgraduate education, the 
impact of H.R. 5 would be devastating on our nation's students 
and schools--

          H.R. 5 sets the aggregate ESEA authorization level 
        for FY2016 and for each of the succeeding years at the 
        aggregate FY2015 funding level of $23.30 billion. Doing 
        so locks in over $800 million in cuts to these 
        programs. Should this bill become law, locking in the 
        sequester levels as the authorization levels through 
        FY2021 would prevent the Congress from increasing 
        funding for ESEA programs even if the sequester were 
        replaced or revised at any time in the next six years.
          ESEA programs have already been cut multiple times in 
        the past two and a half years. The FY 2011 continuing 
        resolution cut ESEA programs by an aggregate $1.43 
        billion. The FY 2012 omnibus appropriations bill cut 
        ESEA funding by another $99 million. The final FY 2013 
        level, after both a 0.2 percent across-the board cut 
        and then the 5 percent sequester cuts, slashed another 
        $1.26 billion from ESEA programs. These waves of cuts 
        have come at a time when enrollments have increased, 
        more children are living in poverty, and schools and 
        students have endured deep state and local budget cuts.

    Democrats believe H.R. 5 would put the nation on the wrong 
path. Such low funding levels would make it more difficult for 
schools to accomplish the mission of improving student 
achievement and graduation rates, despite supposedly greater 
flexibility offered to states and districts. More flexibility 
but with far less funding is hardly a beneficial bargain.
    Public polls show the American public agrees--
         According to a national survey by the Pew 
        Research Center for the People & the Press, only a mere 
        10 percent of the public supports decreasing funding 
        for education programs, while 60 percent wants to 
        increase spending.
         A Bloomberg News poll found that 67 percent of 
        the public believes education funding should not be cut 
        at all by the sequester.
    Now is the time to increase, not decrease, federal 
investment in education. As states transition to new standards, 
assessments, and accountability and school improvement systems, 
they need the federal government to be a partner in supporting 
their work. As U.S. students compete globally for high-wage, 
high-growth jobs, Congress must invest in their education, not 
gut funding as H.R. 5 does.

                            WAIVER AUTHORITY

    H.R. 5 limits the waiver authority of the Secretary of 
Education, apparently in response to the voluntary flexibility 
offered by the Department of Education to certain provisions of 
current law. As of December 2015, 42 states and a consortium of 
districts in California have received waivers from the most 
restrictive provisions of No Child Left Behind and are 
operating under state-developed accountability systems. 
Currently one state is awaiting approval of a pending 
application for ESEA Flexibility.
    While Committee Republicans have questioned the legal 
authority of the Department of Education to grant conditional 
waivers, Sec. 9401 of current law clearly provides the 
Secretary of Education broad waiver authority. The waiver 
authority currently used by the Secretary of Education minors 
authority used by Secretary Margaret Spellings to administer 
the Differentiated Accountability Pilot in 2008 and the Growth 
Model Pilot in 2005.
    Additionally, the nonpartisan Congressional Research 
Service (CRS) in their February 2012 report entitled 
Educational Accountability and Secretarial Waiver Authority 
Under the ESEA and in a June 2011 memo to the Committee on 
Education and the Workforce Majority Committee Staff has 
explained the legal authority of the Department of Education to 
provide this flexibility. In the February report, CRS states:

         Based on the plain language of the statute, 
        the scope of ED's waiver authority appears to be quite 
        broad, suggesting that ED may indeed have the authority 
        to waive the various requirements of the ESEA specified 
        in its flexibility proposal. This interpretation is 
        bolstered by the fact that, although the ESEA 
        previously contained similar waiver authority, Congress 
        expressly enacted the current waiver provisions as part 
        of the No Child Left Behind Act amendments to the ESEA, 
        signaling that Congress clearly understood and intended 
        for ED to waive the requirements of that act when 
        appropriate.

    The report further states:

          . . . the courts will generally uphold an 
        agency's exercise of its statutory waiver authority so 
        long as the agency develops an adequate record 
        regarding its decision to grant a waiver and ensures 
        that the waiver is granted consistent with the 
        statutory purposes and procedures set forth in the 
        section authorizing such waivers. As a result, it 
        appears that ED does have the authority to waive ESEA 
        statutory requirements related to issues such as 
        academic standards and assessments; accountability 
        requirements, including the timeline by which all 
        students are to be proficient in reading/language arts 
        and mathematics; school improvement, corrective action, 
        and restructuring requirements; and public school 
        choice and supplemental educational services, as long 
        as ED develops the aforementioned adequate record and 
        ensures that the waiver is granted consistent with the 
        statutory purposes and procedures set forth in Section 
        9401.

    CRS also highlights the voluntary nature of the waivers 
currently offered by the Department of Education.

          H.R. 5 FAILS TO SUPPORT TEACHERS AND SCHOOL LEADERS

    Federal policy must ensure that every student graduates 
from high school prepared for college and the workforce. In 
order to achieve that goal, every student must have access to 
an effective teacher. Unfortunately, H.R. 5 does not increase 
access to effective teachers. The bill fails to provide support 
to teachers to ensure that they are successful. In addition, 
H.R. 5 also fails to ensure that we have the most effective 
school leaders in every school.
    H.R. 5 does not support collective bargaining rights of 
teachers, and it does not require states and districts to 
ensure that teachers' voices are involved in the creation and 
implementation of the educator effectiveness system. H.R. 5 
also does not take into consideration the working conditions of 
teachers and leaders, including those related to school safety. 
In addition, the bill does not support access to effective or 
qualified teachers for all students, particularly minorities 
and students from low-income families. Research has shown the 
need for such equitable distribution policies because, for 
decades, low-income and minority students have been taught by 
teachers and are assigned to schools with less qualified and 
effective teachers and principals, respectively.\15\ This 
policy is a critical component of the federal responsibility to 
ensure equal access to a quality public education and omitting 
it from federal law abandons this responsibility.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \15\Borman, G. D., & Dowling, N. M. (2008). Teacher attrition and 
retention: A meta-analytic and narrative review of the research. Review 
of Educational Research, 78(3), 367-409. doi:10.3102/0034654308321455 ; 
Clotfelter, C. T., Ladd, H. F., & Vigdor, J. (2005). Who teaches whom? 
Race and the distribution of novice teachers. Economics of Education 
Review, 24(4), 377-392.; Clotfelter, C. T., Ladd, H. F., Vigdor, J. L., 
& Wheeler, J. (2007). High-poverty schools and the distribution of 
teachers and principals. North Carolina Law Review, 850348).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    The Democratic substitute put the needs of students first 
by requiring states and districts to address the equitable 
distribution of effective and qualified teachers and school 
leaders to ensure they reach the students that need them the 
most. Committee Democrats believe states and districts should 
be required to develop and implement a plan to ensure students 
are taught and schools are led by qualified and effective 
teachers and school leaders at equal rates across a district. 
Congressman Grijalva offered an amendment to address 
inequitable distribution of teachers, but this amendment was 
defeated despite unanimous support from Committee Democrats.
    H.R. 5 establishes an arbitrary cap on class size funding. 
This provision ignores very clear research that class size 
reduction in early grades is effective in improving student 
achievement. The first large-scale experiment on small class 
size was the Tennessee Student/Teacher Achievement Ratio (STAR) 
program. Several studies on the STAR program and other similar 
class reduction programs confirm substantial academic gains for 
K-3 students in smaller classes compared to students in larger 
classes.
    H.R. 5 eliminates the current law minimum threshold for 
teacher quality by striking the Highly Qualified Teacher 
definition. Current law contains many provisions related to 
improving teacher quality, including the requirement that all 
students be taught by highly qualified teachers. In order to 
become a highly qualified teacher, NCLB requires that teachers 
possess a baccalaureate degree and a state teaching 
certificate. Teachers are also required to demonstrate content 
knowledge for the subjects and grades they teach. Over the past 
ten years, research has shown that teacher quality is one of 
the most important factors in student achievement. Current 
law's provisions requiring minimum standards for teachers prior 
to entering the classroom were an important step forward in 
improving education for both teachers and students. H.R. 5 
undermines this advancement by not only eliminating current law 
requirements, but also by failing to set any new minimum 
standards for teachers before they enter the classroom.
    H.R. 5 also arbitrarily eliminates Title II of Higher 
Education Program, which provides federal support for high 
quality teacher training. Though improvements must be made to 
that system, stripping funds from the programs that train and 
educate 95 percent of teachers is not an effective strategy to 
achieve that goal. Along with removing this essential component 
of successful public education, the bill excludes state 
authority to connect their teacher preparation programs to 
information about those programs' graduates, which may include 
data on student outcomes, workplace conditions, and educator 
diversity. This data link can help policymakers better 
understand what is working in preparing effective teachers and 
leaders and how to best support such approaches.
    The Democratic substitute amendment would restore Title II 
of the Higher Education Act. Committee Democrats would update 
the program to ensure that teachers are prepared to teach 
students to new college and career ready standards and allow 
states to establish a data system link between districts and 
pre-service programs to improve program quality. These 
provisions were offered by Representative Davis as an amendment 
to H.R. 5 which was defeated along a party line vote.

                    H.R. 5 IS FISCALLY IRRESPONSIBLE

    H.R. 5 creates a block grant that is yet another example of 
the Republican failure to learn from the lessons of the past 
ten years and improve upon current law. The bill provides 
limited funding to states and districts to address the needs of 
students ranging from STEM to literacy to the arts to after 
school activities. Block grants are the first step to 
eliminating programs under the guise of increased flexibility 
for administrators. In addition, block grants fail taxpayers 
because there is no accountability for how funds are spent. 
Block grants make it difficult to collect standardized data and 
monitor interventions to determine effectiveness. Additionally, 
under the Republican proposals to eliminate maintenance of 
effort requirements it is likely that block grant funds will 
only be used to fill the holes left after states re-direct 
public education dollars to other areas.
    Moreover, block grants spread funding too thin. When there 
is no concentration of resources on a specific area or 
population, there is no observable change. Block grants reduce 
the ability to demonstrate what programs work and at what 
funding levels they work best. While funding is only a part of 
the education policy equation, spreading money out over 
multiple education programs disrupts the ability to determine 
how much is the right amount to have an effect and under which 
conditions.
    Block grants have been tried in ESEA before, and they 
failed. During the Reagan Administration portions of Title I 
funding were block granted to states with little federal 
oversight as to how the funds were distributed. Consequently, 
many politically connected suburban districts received larger 
Title I allocations than they had in the past. Poorer 
districts, whose high numbers of children in poverty were 
responsible for bringing the majority of Title I dollars to 
states, often received less money than they had before block 
granting.\16\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \16\E.g., State's Impact on Federal Education Policy Project, 
Federal Education Policy and the States, 1945-2009: A Brief Synopsis 
46-47, New York State Archives, 2006. Retrieved from http://
www.archives.nysed.gov/edpolicy/altformats/
ed_background_overview_essay.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Block grants are also the first step towards the defunding 
of programs. During a recent forum on ESEA reauthorization 
hosted by Ranking Member Scott and held due to Republicans' 
refusal to hold a single ESEA hearing, the President of the 
Council of the Great City Schools drew from the history of 
block grants in federal education funding:

           When those initiatives [aimed at the needs 
        of poor and low-achieving students] were at risk, the 
        threat often came under the banner of budget cuts, 
        program consolidation, and regulatory simplification. 
        The mechanism for implementing those priorities was 
        typically block grants. But, once consolidated or 
        ``block granted'', the remaining funding was often 
        diluted and then eroded until it lost its purpose and 
        effect . . . We are not concerned about block grants 
        and program consolidation for philosophical or 
        ideological reasons; we are concerned for historic 
        reasons. Where we have seen these consolidations, we 
        eventually also see the erosion of priorities for our 
        neediest children.\17\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \17\Statement of Michael Casserly, President, Council of the Great 
City Schools, before H. Comm. on Educ. & the Workforce Minority Forum 
on the Elementary and Secondary Education Act, February 5, 2015.

    Based on this history, block grants, especially when 
combined with other H.R. 5 fiscal policies (relaxation of MOE 
requirements, lifting of the school-wide program cap, 
``portability'') would dismantle one of the core tenets of 
ESEA--targeting federal funding at concentrations of poverty as 
a means of bringing equity to our nation's educational system. 
Committee Democrats support keeping the focus of ESEA on our 
children most in-need, and not turning the program into an 
educational slush fund.

    H.R. 5 FAILS TO SUPPORT 21ST CENTURY COMMUNITY LEARNING CENTERS

    H.R. 5 eliminates all dedicated support for additional 
learning time (including before-, after- and summer school 
programs, and expanded learning time). After-school programs, 
supported by current federal 21st CCLC funding have proved 
successful in developing the academic, social, emotional and 
physical needs and interests of students that results in 
improved student achievement.
    For example, in a 20-year UCLA longitudinal study, 
researchers found that LA's BEST--a program funded in part by 
21st CCLC--elementary school students in after school who 
participated for three or more years were nearly 20 percent 
less likely to drop out years later than similar students who 
did not attend LA's BEST.\18\ A 2011 UCLA study confirmed the 
lasting impact of high-quality after school programs, showing 
that students who participated in LA's BEST in their elementary 
school years demonstrated academic gains in math, science and 
history.\19\ After-school programs also provide safe learning 
environments for many low-income students who would otherwise 
be unsupervised and whose families cannot afford needed 
enrichment opportunities.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \18\Huang, D., Kim, K.S., Marshall, A., & Perez, P. (2005). Keeping 
kids in school An LA's BEST example. Los Angeles, CA: National Center 
for Research on Evaluation, Standards and Student Testing, University 
of California, Los Angeles. http://www.lasbest.org/what/publications/
Keeping_Kids_School_Exec_Sum.pdf; LA's BEST After School Enrichment 
Program. (2006). Annual Report 2005-2006. Caught up in the act ... of 
success. http://www.lasbest.org/what/publications/annual_reports/
AR0506-web%5B1%5D.pdf
    \19\UCLA National Center for Research on Evaluations, Standards, 
and Student Testing (CRESST). (2011). Supporting student success in 
middle schools: examining the Relationship between elementary 
afterschool program participation and subsequent middle school 
attainments. Executive summary.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    In recent studies of public schools where low-income 
students were shown to excel, more instructional time than 
conventional schools or expanded learning time was an essential 
factor. The Mid-continent Research for Education and Learning 
(McREL) found that experienced teachers believed that they 
needed at least 20 percent more hours to teach the four core 
academic subjects--English language arts, mathematics, social 
studies, and science--than are available in a standard school 
year.\20\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \20\Judy Florian, ``Teacher Survey of Standards-Based Instruction: 
Addressing Time'' (Aurora, CO: Mid-Continent Research for Education and 
Learning, 1999).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Despite a lack of hearings on ESEA reauthorization this 
Congress, we have heard from experts regarding the importance 
of student supports. At a 2011 hearing entitled, ``Education in 
the Nation: Examining the Challenges and Opportunities Facing 
America's Classrooms'', when asked about the importance of non-
academic supports for students and additional learning time, 
witness Ted Mitchell, CEO and President of the NewSchools 
Venture Fund, said ``In the schools where we work, it is no 
surprise that extending the school day and providing some of 
those kinds of supports, but also the extended safe period for 
kids, has become one of the trends that no one prescribed, but 
it has just grown up over time. And the research on extended 
learning time that is growing, first out of Massachusetts and 
now in other states, is quite compelling, that extended 
learning time can go a long way to addressing many of those 
needs.''
    In addition, the National Center on Time & Learning found 
that 9 in 10 schools considered their longer day and year to be 
essential to meeting their educational goals in a survey of 
nearly 250 schools that feature an expanded schedule.\21\ H.R. 
5 ignores the research. Instead of improving on current law, 
the bill moves our educational system backwards and fails to 
meet the needs of students, jeopardizing their future success 
by removing effective federal policy.
    Committee Democrats believe in maintaining the 21st Century 
Community Learning Centers program and the Democratic 
substitute amendment continues support for before-, after-, and 
summer school programs, as well as expanded learning time 
opportunities. The need to engage and support more students is 
urgent. Now more than ever, we need to be providing students 
with additional learning time to achieve a high-quality 
education and skills that meet the needs of the 21st Century. 
Representative DeSaulnier offered an amendment to reinstate 
this vital program that was defeated along a party line vote, 
despite earlier comments from Representative Barletta 
supporting maintenance of dedicated funding for afterschool 
programming.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \21\Center for American Progress (2010). ``Transforming Schools to 
Meet the Needs of Students''. Retrieved from https://
www.americanprogress.org/issues/education/report/2010/02/17/7264/
transforming-schools-to-meet-the-needs-of-students/.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

   H.R. 5 FAILS TO SUPPORT THE SOCIAL AND EMOTIONAL NEEDS OF STUDENTS

    H.R. 5 eliminates all dedicated support for wrap-around 
services essential to increasing student achievement. A 
student's mental, social, or emotional health, including 
problems such as depression, bullying, or alcohol and substance 
abuse, can create barriers to learning. Such barriers exist for 
an increasingly large number of students. Research clearly 
shows that students suffering from these problems suffer 
declining test scores and diminished academic functioning. An 
estimated 20 percent of school-age students will experience a 
significant mental health problem during their school 
years.\22\ Further, some research suggests that up to 71 
percent of youth experience at least one victimization event 
each year (for example, assault, theft, criminal victimization, 
or child maltreatment), with many exposed to multiple 
victimizations.\23\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \22\Kutash, K., Duchnowski, A. J., & Freidman R.M. (2005). The 
system of care twenty years later. In M.H. Epstein, K. Kutash, & A. J. 
Duchnowski (Eds.), Outcomes for children with emotional and behavioral 
disorders and their families: Program and evaluation best practices 
(2nd ed., pp.3-22). Austin, TX: Pro-Ed.
    \23\Finkelhor, Ormrod, Turner, & Hamby (2005). ``Children's 
Exposure to Violence: A Comprehensive National Survey''. Child 
Maltreatment. 10(1): 5-25.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    In the hearing, ``Education in the Nation: Examining the 
Challenges and Opportunities Facing America's Classrooms,'' on 
February 10, 2011, when asked if it was important to provide 
wrap around services in schools, Republican witness and Indiana 
Superintendent of Public Instruction Tony Bennett said, ``So, 
you know, we have to make tough decisions. This goes to that 
statement about marrying fiscal policy and education policy. We 
have to put our money into the things that are going to drive 
results. And these school corporations that have done this 
around the state of Indiana have had to make tough fiscal 
decisions to provide these services for children, but they have 
made a difference in the lives of those children.'' H.R. 5 
fails to invest in the services that are successful and drive 
results.
    Students show improved outcomes when they have access to 
school-based mental health services. Research shows that 
students who have access to and receive social, emotional, and 
behavioral health support demonstrate better grades and 
standardized test scores.\24\ In addition, school mental health 
programs have been shown to decrease absences and discipline 
referrals.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \24\Jennings, Pearson, and Harris M. (2000). ``Implementing and 
maintaining school-based mental health services in a large, urban 
school district''. Journal of School Health. Accessed: http://
www.sedl.org/connections/resources/citations/171_html
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Unfortunately, H.R. 5 again ignores the research. By 
failing to provide dedicated support for wrap-around service, 
the bill fails to recognize the very real needs of students, 
fails to acknowledge and support what is actually working on 
the ground, and undermines the ability of schools to meet the 
needs of their students.
    Students have to feel safe in school in order to learn and 
succeed in school. For too many poor and low-performing 
students, their school and its surroundings are not places 
where they feel safe. In some communities, the school itself 
can be a contributor to delinquent behavior and gang activity. 
Fortunately there are established proven practices that can 
intervene in the lives of students at risk of becoming involved 
in these activities, and prevent others from heading down that 
path. These programs are an alternative to zero-tolerance 
discipline policies in place in many schools, which many 
suggest are partially responsible for the creation of the 
School to Prison Pipeline.
    Committee Democrats dedicate funding for grants to support 
student safety, health, and success. Under these grants, 
schools can establish comprehensive continuums of evidence-
based prevention and intervention programs designed to reduce 
delinquent behavior and gang activity in and around schools. 
Based on their need, schools can use these funds on a variety 
of programs, from providing safe passage to students to and 
from school, to professional development for teachers and other 
education professionals to recognize early warning signs of 
bullying and harassment. By requiring an evidence base and 
prohibiting the use of funds for zero-tolerance policies, 
Committee Democrats hope to foster positive learning 
environments in all our schools, while using limited federal 
resources in a cost-effective manner.

     H.R. 5 FAILS TO SUPPORT A WELL-ROUNDED EDUCATION FOR STUDENTS

    One of the criticisms commonly heard about No Child Left 
Behind is that it forced schools to narrow their curriculum. 
Despite these criticisms, H.R. 5 eliminates all dedicated 
support for critical programs addressing STEM, literacy, and 
other subject matter that provide for a well-rounded education. 
A number of interventions and practices have been shown to 
increase student literacy skills; school districts just need 
the support to scale up best practices and implement them in 
the classroom. With federal support, 46 states are already 
working to implement comprehensive literacy strategies to 
strengthen our students' ability to compete in the 21st century 
economy. Unfortunately, H.R. 5 eliminates support for literacy 
and once again fails to acknowledge actual need and what is 
working in schools.
    STEM occupations are projected to grow by 17 percent from 
2008 to 2018, compared to 9.8 percent growth for non-STEM 
occupations.\25\ Committee Democrats believe that federal 
policy must keep pace with the increased demand for STEM 
occupations. Dedicated resources to STEM education have already 
led to increases in student achievement. From 1990 to 2007, 
average mathematics scores increased by 27 points for fourth 
graders.\26\ However, when compared to other nations, the math 
and science achievement of U.S. pupils and the rate of STEM 
degree attainment appear inconsistent with a nation considered 
the world leader in scientific innovation. According to the 
2009 Program for International Student Assessment, out of 65 
countries, the U.S. ranked 20th in reading, 23nd in science and 
30th in math.\27\ H.R. 5 does nothing to increase student 
achievement in STEM subjects. It ignores the very real need to 
support STEM learning in order to graduate students who will be 
competitive in STEM careers. Instead of taking steps forward to 
support innovative and effective reform, H.R. 5 once again 
undermines the needs of America's students, fails to improve on 
current law, and fails to provide support for literacy, STEM, 
and other subjects such as art, history, economics, and much 
more.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \25\United States Department of Commerce: Economics & Statistics 
Administration. (2011). ``STEM: Good Jobs Now and For the Future'' 
Accessed: http://www.esa.doc.gov/Reports/stem-good-jobs-now-and-future
    \26\National Science Foundation. ``Chapter 1: Elementary and 
Secondary Mathematics and Science Education''. Accessed: http://
www.nsf.gov/statistics/seind12/pdf/c01.pdf.
    \27\Program for International Student Assessment (2012). ``Selected 
Findings from PISA 2012''. Retrieved from http://nces.ed.gov/surveys/
pisa/pisa2012/pisa2012highlights_l asp.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Committee Democrats support providing a well-rounded 
education for students, ensuring that students have access to 
high-quality literacy and STEM curriculum, including a STEAM 
curriculum, as well as highly skilled teachers to implement 
that curriculum. Committee Democrats believe it is unacceptable 
that American fifteen-year-olds rank fourteenth among developed 
nations in reading, lagging behind such countries as Poland, 
Iceland, and Estonia.\28\ The Democratic substitute recognizes 
that reading and writing are absolutely critical to a student's 
education, and to the nation's economy. The substitute provides 
funds to implement state literacy plans and provides support 
for professional development, curriculum, assessments and other 
academic supports for districts and schools.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \28\U.S. Department of Education--National Center for Education 
Statistics. (2009).''Reading 2009: National Assessment of Educational 
Progress at Grade 4 and 8''. Accessed: http://nationsreportcard.gov/
reading.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    By providing continued support, the Democratic substitute 
also recognizes the Ready to Learn program as a highly cost-
effective and efficient manner of providing all American 
families with access to educational media that has been proven 
to help children learn. Since 2005, more than 80 research and 
evaluation studies have demonstrated that public media's 
multimedia literacy and math content engages children, enhances 
their early learnin skills and allows them to make significant 
academic gains helping to close the achievement gap.\29\ The 
program uses public media's research-based educational content 
to build the math and reading skills of children between the 
ages of two and eight, especially those from low-income 
families. For the 54 percent of American children ages three to 
four who are not in preschool, Ready-to-Learn content provides 
an essential ``school readiness''' experience.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \29\Corporation for Public Broadcasting, (2010). ``Findings from 
Ready to Learn 2005-2010''. Retrieved from http://www.cpb.org/rtl/
FindingsFromReadyToLearn2005-2010.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    The Democratic substitute provides support beyond literacy 
and STEM so that students have access to diverse subject areas 
including American History, Civics, Geography, Economics, 
Entrepreneurship, Financial Literacy, Foreign Languages, Arts 
education, and Javits Gifted and Talented programs. In addition 
to ensuring a broad curriculum, the Democratic substitute 
supports investment in the identification and dissemination of 
innovative new programs and instructional strategies to 
increase student achievement and improve graduation rates. 
Representative Courtney offered an amendment to require 
dedicated funding for STEM education and education technology 
that was defeated despite unanimous support from Committee 
Democrats. Representative Adams offered an amendment to require 
dedicated funding for access to a well-rounded education that 
was also defeated despite unanimous support from Committee 
Democrats.

          H.R. 5 FAILS TO SUPPORT SCHOOL READINESS OF STUDENTS

    Decades of research have found that high-quality early 
childhood education programs lead to better student achievement 
in school, higher graduation rates, lower special education 
placements and grade repetition, while increasing postsecondary 
participation, job earnings and reducing reliance on social 
services and involvement in the criminal justice system. These 
outcomes translate into massive public cost savings, calculated 
at a $7-8 return for a $1 investment.\30\ H.R. 5 does not 
support quality preschool, despite strong research showing its 
positive impact on life outcomes and the reality that less than 
half of low-income children have access to early learning 
programs The Democratic substitute, by contrast, recognized the 
evidence-based concept that learning occurs before Kindergarten 
and provided significant resources to support states' efforts 
to provide high-quality preschool to children from low-income 
families so they are prepared to succeed in school. The 
Democratic substitute also would have strengthened existing 
coordinating provisions by requiring school districts to form 
agreements with Head Start and other early education programs 
in key areas, such as enrollment, recruitment and professional 
development. Representative Clark offered an amendment to 
authorize a dedicated funding stream to support state 
partnerships for early childhood education. Despite bipartisan 
support at the state and federal level and broad recognition of 
the return on investment on early learning programming, this 
amendment was defeated along a party line vote.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \30\Heckman, James J., Moon, Seong Hyeok, Pinto, Rodrigo, Savelyev, 
Peter A., Yavitz, Adam. (2010). ``The rate of return to the HighScope 
Perry Preschool Program.'' Journal of Public Economics. (94)1-2. Pp. 
114-128.; Winton, P., Buysse, V., & Hamrick, C. (Eds.). (2006). ``How 
FPG Got It's Groove: The Abecedarian Story.'' Early Developments. 
(10)1. Pp. 5-10.; Reynolds, Arthur J., Temple, Judy A., White, Barry 
A.B., Ou, Suh-Ruu, and Robertson, Dylan L. (2011). ``Age 26 Cost-
Benefit Analysis of the Child-Parent Center Early Education Program.'' 
Child Development. 82(1). Pp. 379-404.; Yoshikawa, H. et al. (2013). 
``Investing in Our Future: The Evidence Base on Preschool Education''. 
Society for Research in Child Development. Retrieved from http://
fcdus.org/resources/evidence-base-preschool.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    H.R. 5 FAILS TO PROTECT THE RIGHTS AND WELL-BEING OF VULNERABLE 
                                STUDENTS

    While H.R. 5 makes ``school safety'' a delineated allowable 
use of funds under the large, catch-all block grant, the 
measure does nothing to meaningfully address known safety risks 
facing students and school personnel. H.R. 5 lacks any mention 
of, or protections against the overreliance on use of seclusion 
and restraint as disciplinary tactics and makes no effort to 
encourage or incentivize the implementation of school-wide 
positive behavioral supports. In establishing school employee 
criminal background check policies, H.R. 5 lacks key 
protections for both children and school personnel. The bill 
has no federal minimum timelines for updating background checks 
and excludes an appeals process for employees whose records are 
incomplete or inaccurate. The Democratic substitute would 
include a fair and timely appeal process and required school 
employees to update their checks at least every five years. 
Additionally, H.R. 5 is silent on protecting the rights of 
lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender students, including 
against devastating bullying and harassment, despite the 
prevalence of harmful actions against this population of 
students. H.R. 5 also lacks systemic mechanisms for ensuring 
that students in foster care or who are homeless have access to 
quality education. The Democratic substitute included 
provisions requiring school districts and child welfare 
agencies to coordinate records sharing, point of contact and 
transportation to school for children in foster care.

                       BROAD OPPOSITION TO H.R. 5

    H.R. 5 was opposed by a broad array of education, civil 
rights and business organizations. Groups, representing 
students, teachers, school leaders, parents, and business wrote 
letters in opposition to H.R. 5. Some of the groups in 
opposition include: the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, the Education 
Trust, the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights, the 
Consortium for Citizens with Disabilities, the National Center 
for Learning Disabilities, NAACP Legal Defense Fund, National 
Council of La Raza, the National Education Association, the 
American Federation of Teachers, Democrats for Education 
Reform, the Council of the Great City Schools, American, 
Council of Parent Attorneys and Advocates, Easter Seals, 
National Down Syndrome Congress, National Down Syndrome 
Society, National Association of School Psychologists, 
Afterschool Alliance, American University Centers on 
Disabilities, Autism National Committee, Committee for 
Education Funding, First Focus Campaign for Children, National 
Coalition for Public Education, National Urban League and the 
National Women's Law Center.
    Groups expressing serious concerns about portions of the 
bill included the American Federation of School Administrators, 
American Library Association, Business Roundtable, the College 
Board, Dignity in School Campaigns, National Association of 
Elementary School Principals, National Association of Secondary 
School Principals, National Center for Special Education in 
Charter Schools, National Universal Design for Learning and the 
National Indian Education Association.
    Additionally, the Congressional Black Caucus, the 
Congressional Hispanic Caucus, and the Congressional Asian 
Pacific American Caucus wrote a letter in opposition to H.R. 5 
citing ``the potentially grave consequences'' of this bill on 
students and communities.

                                   Robert C. ``Bobby'' Scott,
                                           Ranking Member.
                                   Susan A. Davis.
                                   Joe Courtney.
                                   Jared Polis.
                                   Frederica S. Wilson
                                   Mark Pocan.
                                   Hakeem Jeffries.
                                   Alma Adams.
                                   Rubeen Hinojosa.
                                   Rauul M. Grijalva.
                                   Marcia L. Fudge.
                                   Gregorio Kilili Camacho Sablan.
                                   Suzanne Bonamici.
                                   Mark Takano.
                                   Katherine Clark.
                                   Mark DeSaulnier.

                                  [all]