PRESS RELEASES
Paige Announces $26.8 Million in Reading First Grant for Ohio Children
State stands to receive $175.8 million over six years
Archived Information


FOR RELEASE:
January 17, 2003
News Media Contact: Melinda Malico
(202) 401-1576

Reading First Office:
(202) 401-4877

U.S. Secretary of Education Rod Paige today announced that Ohio will receive more than $26.8 million for the first year of a multi-year Reading First grant to help schools and districts improve children's reading achievement using scientifically proven methods of instruction.

The state's application passed a rigorous review panel that judged the plan against 25 main review criteria. Over six years, Ohio will receive approximately $175.8 million in support, subject to the state's successful implementation and congressional appropriations. Ohio is the 24th state or territory to be funded under the new program.

The grant announced today supports critical improvements in classroom reading instruction based on proven methods of instruction, screening and diagnosis of reading difficulties, monitoring of student progress, and thorough and high-quality professional development for teachers. States will build a statewide infrastructure to guide reform and assist school districts that will be funded under a state-run competition for district subgrants.

"Under the historic No Child Left Behind Act of 2001, Reading First is helping children develop an early foundation for all learning through the most focused, early reading initiative ever undertaken in this nation," Paige said. "The program's focus on scientific evidence, including the five essential elements of proven reading instruction, constitutes a formula for success. These funds will help ensure that all children in Ohio have the teaching and tools they need to read well by the end of the third grade."

Ohio plans to hold a competition for eligible school districts to compete for subgrants this spring, with the state planning to support schools in 26 eligible school districts. As part of its professional development plan, the state will hold Summer Institutes for Reading Intervention for all Pre-K-grade 3 teachers, including special education teachers. These institutes will offer basic and advanced training in scientifically based reading instruction. The state will closely monitor the progress of schools and districts participating in Reading First, and will conduct a longitudinal evaluation of its program.

When President Bush took office, he made improving children's reading achievement a centerpiece of his education reform agenda. Research shows that reading failure exacts a heavy toll on student motivation and school performance, and improved early reading instruction can be the first step toward raising academic achievement.

The president designed Reading First around an extensive knowledge base of the skills children need to learn to read. The program reflects the recommendations of a congressionally mandated, exhaustive review of scientifically based research on how students learn to read, completed by the National Reading Panel in 2000. President Bush has announced his intention to ask Congress for $1.1 billion for the third year of the program.

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;
  • basing instruction on scientifically proven methods;
  • providing professional training for educators in reading instruction; and
  • supplying substantial resources to support the unprecedented initiative.

To help them develop quality programs and solid Reading First applications, states had the benefit this spring of nearly three days of assistance during the Secretary's Reading Leadership Academies, to which all states sent representatives.

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.

Paige has announced awards to Alabama, American Samoa, Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Delaware, Florida, Hawaii, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Massachusetts, Michigan, Mississippi, New Jersey, New Mexico, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Utah, Virginia and Washington.

States that are successful will receive funds under a formula. A list of estimated state grants and President Bush's funding request for $1 billion for the second year of the program, still before Congress, is available at www.ed.gov/PressReleases/01-2002/estimates.html.

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Last Modified: 09/15/2004