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FOR RELEASE MANCHESTER, N.H. --
U.S. Secretary of Education Rod Paige today announced that New Hampshire will
receive more than $2.1 million for the first year of a multi-year Reading First
grant to help schools and districts improve children's reading achievement
through scientifically proven methods of instruction. Paige made the
announcement during a Manchester Chamber of Commerce breakfast.
The state's
application passed a rigorous review panel that judged the plan against 25 main
review criteria. Over six years, New Hampshire will receive approximately
$14.4 million in support, subject to the state's successful implementation and
congressional appropriations.
"Too many of our
children struggle to read, and when they don't learn to do so early, the
long-term consequences are tremendous," Rod Paige said. "The basic
elements of Reading First are clear: diagnose and address reading
difficulties early; base instruction on what works; give teachers the training
they need; constantly assess progress; and develop a state infrastructure to see
it through. "By designing
instruction around scientific evidence, including the five essential components
of proven reading instruction," Paige added, "children in New Hampshire and
other states will have the teaching and tools they need to read well by the end
of the third grade." New Hampshire plans
to hold a competition for eligible school districts to compete for subgrants
this spring, with the state planning to support some seven schools in those
districts. As part of its
professional development plan, the state will hold a series of six workshops for
all K-3 teachers and K-12 special education teachers. These professional
development sessions will provide intensive training on classroom reading
instruction based on scientific research, so that teachers learn to tailor
instruction around sound, research-based information. One of President
Bush's first actions after taking office was to make improving children's
reading achievement a centerpiece of his education reform agenda. Studies
show that when children fail to learn to read early in school, every aspect of
school success is affected. Academic achievement
can be enhanced through early diagnosis and help for reading difficulties.
The president
designed Reading First around an extensive knowledge base of the essential
skills children must have to learn to read. The program reflects the
findings of a congressionally mandated extensive review of scientifically based
research on how students learn to read, completed by the National Reading Panel
in 2000. Reading First was
passed into law by a bipartisan majority of Congress under the No Child Left
Behind Act of 2001 and centers on the following priorities: · raising the caliber and
quality of classroom instruction; State applications
undergo a rigorous review by a panel of reading experts, selected by the
secretary of education, the National Institute for Literacy, the National
Research Council, and the National Institute of Child Health and Human
Development. Successful states will receive funds under a formula.
Paige has announced
awards to Alabama, American Samoa, Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado,
Delaware, Florida, Hawaii, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Louisiana,
Massachusetts, Michigan, Mississippi, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, North
Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Utah, Virginia and
Washington. A list of estimated
state grants for FY 2002, FY 2003 and under President Bush's budget request for
FY2004 is available at: http://www.ed.gov/offices/OUS/Budget04/04StateTables/04stbypr.pdf. NOTE TO EDITORS: For more information about New
Hampshire's plans for Reading First,
State slated to receive $14.4 million over six years
Office of
Public Affairs, News Branch
400 Maryland
Ave., S.W.
Washington, D.C. 20202
May
2, 2003
Contacts: Jo Ann Webb or Dan Langan
(202) 401-1576
The grant
will support key improvements in classroom reading instruction, including
teaching based on what research shows works, early identification and help for
reading difficulties, monitoring student progress, and continuous, high-quality
professional development for teachers. States will create a statewide
infrastructure to steer reform and help school districts that will receive
funding under a state-run competition for district subgrants.
· basing instruction on
scientifically proven methods;
· providing professional training for
educators in reading instruction; and
· supplying substantial resources to
support the unprecedented initiative.
contact Janet
Catalfano at (603) 271-0055.
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