Student Success Act
Student Success Act
-
In 2022, the Oregon Department of Education (ODE) released (ODE’s Integrated Guidance), which brings together six programs, including the Student Investment Account (SIA), focused on improving outcomes and learning conditions for students and educators. Please see the ODE Integrated Guidance Page for our current SIA plan.
-
Student Investment Account Plan Update for Year 2
On June 30, 2021, èßäapp¹ÙÍø submitted the SIA Plan Year Two (2021-2022) to the Oregon Department of Education.
Our priorities for SIA investments remain the same. We are committed to eliminating pervasive opportunity gaps, which means creating the conditions so that every student, especially our Black, Native American and students of color can realize academic excellence, mental health, and personal success. Central to this is èßäapp¹ÙÍø living into our expressed commitment toward our core value of racial equity and social justice.
Explore these links to learn more about our SIA Plan Year Two Update:
- See an overview of the plan
- Learn about the SIA process and community engagement
- Learn how we are investing to deepen supports and bolster achievement through our and our
-
Introduction: A historic investment in K-12 education in Oregon
Español| Ti?ng Vi?t| ÖÐÎÄ | §²§å§ã§ã§Ü§Ú§Û | Soomaali
The Student Success Act and was signed into law by Gov. Kate Brown. It provides a historic $2 billion investment in the state’s preK-12 education system.
"This is a huge and historic win for public education in general and for èßäapp¹ÙÍø in particular," èßäapp¹ÙÍø Superintendent Guadalupe Guerrero wrote in a letter to the community. "Our work begins now to lay out a plan for how we will use our share of the additional funds, starting in the 2020-21 school year, in ways that will improve the educational experience for all of our diverse learners."
The infusion of funding will help èßäapp¹ÙÍø begin the transformative work to fulfill the longterm vision for the district identified through a comprehensive, community-oriented Visioning process. The èßäapp¹ÙÍø Vision (read the full Visioning document) describes our goals for the graduating class of 2030, and the educational experience that will increasingly be the reality for each of our graduates from 2019 onward.
-
How the Student Success Act money is allocated
Student Investment Account, 50%: The Student Success Act dedicates half of its funding to a newly-established Student Investment Account that will be distributed as non-competitive grants to all Oregon school districts and eligible charter schools. Districts are allowed to invest that money toward addressing class size, providing a well-rounded education, instructional time, and health and safety. Within those four investment categories, districts have these five priority areas:
- Reducing academic disparities for students who are of color; have disabilities; are emerging bilingual; are navigating poverty, homelessness and foster care; or have historically experienced disparities in schools
- Meeting students' mental and behavioral health needs
- Providing access to academic courses
- Allowing teachers and staff sufficient time to collaborate, review data and develop strategies to help students stay on track to graduate
- Establishing and strengthening partnerships
Statewide Education Initiatives Account, 30%: Dedicated to expanding school breakfast and lunch programs, operating the youth reengagement system, establishing the Statewide School Safety and Prevention System, developing statewide equity initiatives, providing summer learning programs for certain schools and full funding for Measure 98 (which provides direct funding to school districts to increase high school graduation rates).
Early Learning Account, 20%: Dedicated to early childhood special education and early intervention services, relief nurseries, professional development, Head Start programs, among others. The grants are aimed at promoting capacity of culturally-specific organizations and reducing the equity gap for early childhood program
Student Investment Account Application
-
On March 4, 2020, èßäapp¹ÙÍø submitted its application to the state for the Student Investment Account (SIA). We were slated to receive $39 million as an SIA, which was revised to $12 million due to the impacts related to COVID-19. This new funding will deepen supports and accelerate progress toward our vision.
Thank you to our community! We are grateful to our community, state and local leaders, legislators and partners for making the Student Success Act a reality. The funding from the SIA provides an exciting opportunity to make strategic investments that will support and accelerate improved student outcomes.
Initial three-year SIA Plan Application (Submitted March 2020)
Links to application documents:
- Learn about the SIA process and community engagement
- Learn about our multi-year SIA plan with system shifts, strategies, and investments
- Learn how we are investing to deepen supports and bolster achievement through our Integrated Planning Tool and our Budget Template
Contact
Other Material
-
Read: As part of the Student Success Act process, the district gathered feedback from various stakeholders in October. Read the report to the Board of Education on the feedback, prepared by Dr. Russell Brown, Chief of Systems Performance.
Read: èßäapp¹ÙÍø Vision, "èßäapp¹ÙÍø Public School Reimagined (click on image)
Read:
Watch Gov. Kate Brown's ceremonial signing of the Student Success Act at Jefferson High School: