[Federal Register Volume 77, Number 115 (Thursday, June 14, 2012)]
[Notices]
[Pages 35665-35666]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2012-14593]
[[Page 35665]]
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DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION
Notice of Proposed Information Collection Requests; Office of
Planning, Evaluation and Policy Development; Study of Strategies for
Improving the Quality of Local Grantee Program Evaluation
SUMMARY: This study is intended to inform the Department's decisions
about how to structure future grant competitions; how to support
evaluation and performance reporting activities among funded grantees,
including technical assistance to improve the quality of evaluations
and performance reporting; and how to make the best possible use of
grantee evaluation findings.
DATES: Interested persons are invited to submit comments on or before
August 13, 2012.
ADDRESSES: Written comments regarding burden and/or the collection
activity requirements should be electronically mailed to
ICDocketMgr@ed.gov or mailed to U.S. Department of Education, 400
Maryland Avenue SW., LBJ, Washington, DC 20202-4537. Copies of the
proposed information collection request may be accessed from http://edicsweb.ed.gov, by selecting the ``Browse Pending Collections'' link
and by clicking on link number 04869. When you access the information
collection, click on ``Download Attachments'' to view. Written requests
for information should be addressed to U.S. Department of Education,
400 Maryland Avenue SW., LBJ, Washington, DC 20202-4537. Requests may
also be electronically mailed to ICDocketMgr@ed.gov or faxed to 202-
401-0920. Please specify the complete title of the information
collection and OMB Control Number when making your request.
Individuals who use a telecommunications device for the deaf (TDD)
may call the Federal Information Relay Service (FIRS) at 1-800-877-
8339.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Section 3506 of the Paperwork Reduction Act
of 1995 (44 U.S.C. Chapter 35) requires that Federal agencies provide
interested parties an early opportunity to comment on information
collection requests. The Director, Information Collection Clearance
Division, Privacy, Information and Records Management Services, Office
of Management, publishes this notice containing proposed information
collection requests at the beginning of the Departmental review of the
information collection. The Department of Education is especially
interested in public comment addressing the following issues: (1) Is
this collection necessary to the proper functions of the Department;
(2) will this information be processed and used in a timely manner; (3)
is the estimate of burden accurate; (4) how might the Department
enhance the quality, utility, and clarity of the information to be
collected; and (5) how might the Department minimize the burden of this
collection on the respondents, including through the use of information
technology. Please note that written comments received in response to
this notice will be considered public records.
Title of Collection: Study of Strategies for Improving the Quality
of Local Grantee Program Evaluation.
OMB Control Number: 1875-NEW.
Type of Review: New.
Total Estimated Number of Annual Responses: 20.
Total Estimated Number of Annual Burden Hours: 20.
Abstract: The U.S. Department of Education provides support to
states, districts and schools through a number of competitive and
formula grant programs. Through these programs, the federal government
funds a wide array of activities, from professional development for
teachers to turnaround efforts for failing schools. High-quality
evaluation plays an essential role informing policy makers about
program performance, outcomes and impact. Performance reporting with
high-quality data can indicate whether a funded project is meeting its
goals and taking place as planned. Project evaluations can explore how
best to implement a particular educational practice, whether positive
student outcomes were attained, or whether a particular educational
intervention actually caused the outcomes observed.
To date, the Department lacks comprehensive information about the
quality or rigor of the performance reporting and evaluation activities
its grantees are undertaking and whether the technical assistance
provided has been useful in improving the quality of the performance
reporting or evaluations. Accordingly, the focus of this study is to
examine the influence of Department-funded technical assistance
practices on the quality and rigor of grantee evaluations and
performance reporting in two Department programs (described below). It
will describe the technical assistance provided by the Department to
support grantee performance reporting and evaluation; explore how
grantees perceive the technical assistance has influenced their
activities; assess the quality of performance reporting and evaluations
undertaken; and determine how the findings from performance reporting
and evaluations were used both by grantees and by the Department.
This study will be based upon a systematic review of existing
documentation as well as interviews with selected grantees and with
federal staff and federal contractors involved in grant monitoring and
in the provision of technical assistance to grantees. The interviews
with selected grantees are the subject of this OMB clearance request.
This study will focus on two grant programs within the Department's
Office of Innovation and Improvement: the Charter Schools Program:
State Educational Agencies (CSP SEA) program and the Voluntary Public
School Choice (VPSC) program. A brief description of each program is
provided below.
1. Voluntary Public School Choice (authorized under the Elementary
and Secondary Education Act of 1965, as amended, Title V, Part B,
Subpart 3, (20 U.S.C. 7225-7225g)). The goal of the VPSC program is to
support the creation and development of a large number of high-quality
charter schools that are held accountable for enabling students to
reach challenging state performance standards, and are open to all
students. The program was first enacted as part of the No Child Left
Behind Act of 2001 (Pub. L. No. 107-110, Sec. 115, Stat. 1425) to
support the emergence and growth of choice initiatives across the
country. VPSC's goal is to assist states and local school districts in
creating, expanding, and implementing public school choice programs.
The program has awarded two cycles of competitive grants to states,
local education agencies, and partnerships that include public,
nonprofit and for-profit organizations. In 2007, the most recent award
year, the program awarded a total of 14 competitive grants to two
states, eight school districts, a charter school, an intermediate
school district, and KIPP schools in Texas.
2. Charter Schools Program: State Educational Agencies (authorized
under the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965, Section 5201-
5211 (20 U.S.C. 7221a)). Federal support for charter schools began in
1995 with the authorization of the CSP. The CSP SEA program awards
competitive grants to state education agencies to plan, design, and
implement new charter schools, as well as to disseminate information on
successful charter schools. The key goals of the CSP SEA program are to
increase the number of charter schools in operation across the nation
and to increase the number of students who are achieving proficiency
[[Page 35666]]
on state assessments of math and reading. The CSP statute also
addresses expanding the number of high-quality charter schools and
encouraging states to provide support for facilities financing equal to
what states provide for traditional public schools. Grants have been
awarded to 40 states, including awards to 33 states since 2005. Grants
are typically awarded for three years and may be renewed.
This study will review all technical assistance provided to CSP SEA
and VPSC grantees on performance reporting and evaluations and how
grantees conduct these activities. All CSP SEA and VPSC grantees are
required by the Department to conduct performance reporting. Although
grantees are not required to conduct any particular type of evaluation,
the study will review both impact evaluations and non-impact
evaluations conducted by grantees. The study approach, with respect to
the review of performance reporting, impact evaluations, and non-impact
evaluations, is described below.
Performance Reporting
The goal of performance reporting is to measure performance and
track outcomes of the project's stated goals and objectives. The
collection of accurate data on program performance is necessary for the
reporting required by the Government Performance and Results Act
(GPRA), which was passed by Congress in 1993 and updated through the
GPRA Modernization Act of 2010. The latter will require even more
frequent reporting--quarterly instead of annually.
In addition to requiring grantees to collect annual data in support
of GPRA reporting, the CSP SEA and VPSC programs encourage grantees to
develop implementation and outcome measures in support of other program
goals. Throughout this document, when we refer to grantee performance
measures, we are referring to the measures grantees use not only for
GPRA reporting, but also for reporting on other activities and
outcomes.
The CSP and VPSC programs provide technical assistance to grantees
on developing appropriate objectives and performance measures and on
obtaining quality data in support of those measures. Because all
grantees conduct some kind of performance reporting, this study's
examination of performance reporting encompasses all grantees. It will
describe the type of technical assistance provided, categorize the
types of performance measures that grantees address, determine whether
the measures are responsive to the GPRA indicators defined for each
program, review whether the initial set of performance measures changed
as a result of the technical assistance received, and examine the
quality and appropriateness of data collection for those measures.
Impact Evaluation
While documenting implementation activities and outcomes can be
useful to school and district administrators, it does not provide
information on the effectiveness of funded interventions. The only
evaluation designs that provide credible evidence about the impacts of
interventions are rigorous experimental and quasi-experimental designs.
Impact evaluations can provide guidance about what interventions should
be considered for future funding and replication.
This study will review the quality and rigor of all impact
evaluations being conducted of higher-order outcomes, particularly
student achievement, using criteria that were adapted from the What
Works Clearinghouse review standards for grantees as part of the
Department's Data Quality Initiative. These criteria were revised by
Abt Associates as part of its annual review of Mathematics and Science
Partnership final-year evaluations. The criteria are listed in Appendix
A. The study will also examine the completeness and clarity of
evaluation reports submitted as part of an impact evaluation.
Non-Impact Evaluation
Grantees may choose to conduct non-impact evaluations to examine
program outcomes and implementation processes. Non-impact evaluations
may include both formative implementation and process evaluations that
evaluate a program as it is unfolding, and summative descriptive
evaluations that examine changes in final outcomes in a non-causal
manner. A full framework of formative and summative evaluations is
included in Appendix B.
The main focus of the review of non-impact evaluations will be on
those that focus on a change in higher-order outcomes using a one-group
pre-post design. For these evaluations, the study will examine the
appropriateness of data collection strategies for the design chosen and
whether the findings of the study are described appropriately based on
the design. The study will also describe other non-impact evaluations
that grantees have undertaken, without commenting on their quality.
Data collection, including conducting interviews and reviewing
extant documents, is required to complete this study. Part A of this
request discusses the justification for these data collection
activities, while Part B describes the data collection and analysis
procedures.
Darrin A. King,
Director, Information Collection Clearance Division, Privacy,
Information and Records Management Services, Office of Management.
[FR Doc. 2012-14593 Filed 6-13-12; 8:45 am]
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