19 Tex. Admin. Code § 102.1041 - Texas Accelerated Science Achievement Program Grant
(a) The intent and purpose of the Texas
Accelerated Science Achievement Program (Texas ASAP) is to establish and
implement intensive after-school and summer school programs designed to
increase Grade 10 and 11 student achievement on the science portion of the
Texas Assessment of Knowledge and Skills (TAKS). Through intervention programs
that will serve students in Grades 9 - 12, the Texas ASAP will target high
schools with low student performance on the Grade 10 and 11 science TAKS
examinations.
(b) Funds shall be
distributed by the commissioner of education, on a competitive grant basis, to
be used by school districts for the implementation of scientific,
research-based science programs designed to improve the performance of students
in science, including programs designed to address the gender gap in
performance. Prior to providing a program, in accordance with the Texas
Education Code, §
29.089, and the
General Appropriations Act, House Bill 1, Article III, Rider 45, 78th Texas
Legislature, 2003, each school district receiving a grant must:
(1) document its locally-adopted board of
trustees policy for:
(A) determining student
eligibility for participating in the program that:
(i) prescribes the grade level or course a
student must be enrolled in to be eligible; and
(ii) provides for considering teacher
recommendations in determining eligibility;
(B) ensuring that parents of or persons
standing in parental relation to eligible students are provided notice of the
program;
(C) ensuring that eligible
students are encouraged to attend the program;
(D) ensuring that the program is offered at
one or more locations in the district that are easily accessible to eligible
students; and
(E) measuring student
progress;
(2)
demonstrate a need for additional intervention as evidenced by student
performance in science resulting in at least one high school identified as
under performing. An under-performing campus is one with a TAKS science passing
rate below the state average; and
(3) partner with a science department of an
institution of higher education.
(c) The guidelines delineated in this
subsection shall determine which school districts may receive funding under the
Texas ASAP.
(1) School districts must submit
applications in accordance with instructions provided by the Texas Education
Agency (TEA). Applications received by the established deadline date and time
will be reviewed. For each eligible application, the recommendations of the
reviewers will be assembled and presented to the commissioner or the
commissioner's designee who will:
(A) approve
the application in whole or in part; or
(B) disapprove the application.
(2) Awards will be considered on
the basis of total points. Grant awards will be made starting with the highest
scoring application and continue to the next highest score until funds are
exhausted or until the applications meeting minimum criteria or higher are
funded. In the event of a tie score that would preclude determination of
funding, the effected applicants will be asked to provide additional clarifying
information to determine highest need or greatest capacity for successful
implementation.
(3) The TEA will
notify each applicant in writing of the selection or non-selection for funding.
In the case of an application selected for funding, notification to the grantee
will include the contractual conditions which the applicant must accept in
accordance with state law.
(d) Grantees must agree to submit all
information requested by the TEA through periodic activity/progress reports, a
final evaluation report, and other activities related to the evaluation of the
program. Reports will be due to the TEA no later than 30 days after the close
of the reporting period and must contain all requested information in the
prescribed format. These reports will be used by the TEA to evaluate the
implementation and progress of grant-funded programs and to determine if
modifications or adjustments to the program are necessary.
(e) Based on a comprehensive analysis of the
periodic activity/progress reports, final evaluation reports, and other
relevant data, the TEA will disseminate to each Texas school district
information concerning instructional methods that have proved successful in
improving student performance in science.
Notes
State regulations are updated quarterly; we currently have two versions available. Below is a comparison between our most recent version and the prior quarterly release. More comparison features will be added as we have more versions to compare.
No prior version found.