TTT ICR Supp Statement

TTT ICR Supp Statement.doc

Transition to Teaching Evaluation

OMB: 1855-0018

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Supporting Statement:
Transition to Teaching (TTT) Program Evaluation

PART A. JUSTIFICATION

A1. Circumstances Making Collection of Information Necessary

This is a request for approval to collect information from Transition to Teaching (TTT) grantees that will be used to prepare required interim and final program evaluation reports for submission to the Secretary of the U.S. Department of Education (ED) and Congress. TTT grantees are required by statute to submit an interim project evaluation to ED at the end of the third project year and a final project evaluation at the project’s end. The reports are to “describe the extent to which local educational agencies that received funds through the grant have met the goals relating to teacher recruitment and retention described in the application.”1 Currently, ED uses the information submitted by grantees in the project evaluations, along with the annual project performance reports, to prepare the interim and final program evaluation reports. The project performance and evaluation reports provide data on the specific GPRA program measures (see Current Reporting Requirements) and information on grantee activities related to recruitment and retention. However, without an OMB-approved data collection, ED is not able to require all grantees to respond to the same data items in a consistent manner. Grantees provide consistent data only in response to the GPRA measures. The Department has used evaluation questions to encourage grantees to provide data on their recruitment and retention strategies. However, grantees are not required to respond to these questions and the responses from those that do are inconsistent and typically not of the same depth and clarity. In addition, the poor quality of some reports and missing or incomplete data in others have made it difficult to aggregate data across grantees and accurately describe to the Secretary and Congress the extent of program implementation.

This proposed data collection will allow ED to gather data on a common set of indicators across grantees, and will be coordinated with the ongoing content analysis of grantee performance and evaluation reports. These complementary data sets will enable ED to improve the quality of the required reports to the Secretary and Congress by being able to more fully and accurately describe project implementation and how projects have recruited, selected, prepared, placed, certified, supported, and retained eligible nontraditional teaching candidates in high-need schools in high-need LEAs for at least three years.

The TTT Program

The TTT grant program is housed within the Office of Innovation and Improvement (OII) in the U.S. Department of Education. The TTT program is authorized under Title II, Part C, Subpart 1, Chapter B of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965, as amended by the No Child Left Behind Act of 2001 (NCLB) (Pub. L. No. 107‑110). The program provides five-year grants to eligible applicants to develop and implement a comprehensive approach to recruit, select, prepare, place, certify, support, and retain mid-career professionals, including highly qualified paraprofessionals, and recent college graduates. Eligible grantees include State educational agencies (SEAs), high-need local educational agencies (LEAs), for-profit organizations, non-profit organizations, and institutions of higher education (IHEs) in partnership with high-need LEAs or SEAs.

In Fiscal Year (FY) 2002, ED funded 94 projects across the country. In FY 2004, ED funded 32 grantees (one has since been terminated), followed by 31 grantees in FY 2006 and 42 grantees in FY 2007.

TTT Program Components

The major components of the TTT program correspond to the process by which grantees identify eligible candidates, place qualified teachers in the classroom, and retain them for three years. These components reflect the overall purpose of TTT, the application content, and allowed uses of funds identified in the authorizing legislation.

  • Recruitment: Identifying and attracting eligible TTT participants.

  • Selection: Determining eligibility requirements for candidates to be enrolled in a TTT project, including requisite content knowledge, skills, and commitment to teach in high-need schools in high-need LEAs.

  • Preparation: Providing a route to certification that is accelerated, integrates coursework and field experience, is adapted to participants’ learning needs, and yields highly qualified teachers that are prepared to teach in high-need schools in high-need LEAs.

  • Placement: Identifying the needs of eligible partner LEAs and working with these LEAs to hire qualified teachers of record (TORs) in high-need schools.

  • Certification: Ensuring that teacher preparation activities fulfill the relevant legislative requirements for certification through the State-approved alternate routes in each State.

  • Support/Retention: Providing mentoring and other supports to TORs so that they will remain as teachers in high-need schools in high-need districts for at least three years.

Current Reporting Requirements

ED has established one performance goal for assessing the effectiveness of the TTT program: increasing the percentage of new, highly qualified TTT teachers who teach in high-need schools in high-need LEAs for at least three years. TTT tracks progress toward achieving program results through three performance measures:

  • The percentage of TTT participants who become teachers of record in high-need schools in high-need LEAs. For this measure, grantees provide the number of participants and the number of TORs in high-need schools in high-need LEAs.

  • The percentage of TTT participants receiving certification/licensure within three years. For this measure, grantees report the number of participants who became certified within three years.

  • The percentage of TTT TORs who teach in high-need schools in high-need LEAs for at least three years. For this measure, grantees report the number of TORs who have been teaching in high-need schools in high-need LEAs for at least three years.

TTT grantees report annually on these performance measures as well as their own specific project objectives and measures using ED’s standard performance reporting form (524B). In addition, at the interim and after the final year of the project, grantees provide a project evaluation.

Proposed Data Collection

The proposed data collection would focus on the implementation and outcomes of TTT projects at the interim and at the end of the project period. Only one cohort of grantees will participate in the proposed data collection at any one time. Currently, grantees provide data in a consistent manner in the annual performance reports on the GPRA measures: the number of participants, TORs, and certified and retained teachers. However, these reports do not provide adequate information on how the major project components (as identified under TTT Program Components) are being implemented by all grantees. In addition, while data on the program performance measures have been reported consistently across grantees, specific information on project participants, other TTT components such as preparation and support, and project measures is reported inconsistently across projects due to differences in project implementation and State requirements. This data collection will provide information on the various components as undertaken by grantees and how various project activities support the goals of each project as well as the performance goals of the TTT program. In order to describe program implementation and the processes used by grantees to recruit and retain teachers as described in the program components above, additional data are necessary and these data need to be reported consistently by all grantees.

The data collection will consist of a web-based survey to be completed by each TTT Project Director. Project Directors will complete this survey at the interim (during the third year) and in the final year of the project. The survey will complement the annual performance report and the project evaluation. Items will be constructed to answer the following evaluation questions, organized around the components of the TTT program:

  • What strategies were used to recruit TTT participants?

  • What factors and processes were used to select TTT participants?

  • How were participants prepared to become certified to teach in high-need schools in high-need LEAs?

  • What was the process for placing TORs in high-need schools? What were the major barriers to placement?

  • How were TORs supported? Which support activities (mentoring, team teaching, common planning times, etc.) were successful in retaining teachers?

TTT grantees are encouraged to and already collect most of the data needed to respond to these questions. However, in current reports grantees have not provided the information consistently or, in some cases, they have provided it in a limited way.

A2. Purpose and Uses of the Data

The data from this collection will be used to prepare a report for the Secretary and Congress on the implementation of the TTT program for a given cohort of grantees at the interim and at the end of the project period. This program evaluation report will include information on the recruitment, selection, preparation, placement, support, and retention of TTT participants in high-need schools in high-need LEAs for at least three years. Data from the web-based survey completed by each TTT Project Director will be combined with the content analysis of grantee performance reports and evaluation reports to provide a complete picture of program implementation.

Collecting data from each grantee on the same items through this data collection will allow ED and the TTT program to aggregate data on items that are important for a clearer and more accurate understanding of the implementation of TTT by an entire cohort. These data will supplement the program measure numbers and enhance the project-specific information provided in the individual performance and evaluation reports, resulting in a more complete report on program implementation to the Secretary, Congress, TTT grantees, and other interested parties. ED will also use these data to improve program management and technical assistance to grantees.

A3. Use of Technology to Reduce Burden

The contractor will use a web-based survey to collect information from grantees. The survey will be structured to allow users to enter data in multiple sessions so respondents can schedule time for the survey accordingly. Since TTT grantees have ready access to the Internet and are accustomed to communicating with ED via email, the electronic dissemination of the survey is appropriate for this population.

During the data collection and reporting period, the contractor will establish a toll-free telephone number and dedicated email address to allow respondents to ask questions or request assistance during the reporting period. The telephone number and e-mail address will be featured on all pages of the survey and in any related correspondence to grantees.

A4. Efforts to Identify Duplication

ED conducted a data collection for the interim evaluation of the FY 2002 grantee cohort between 2004 and 2006, with an interim program evaluation report issued in 2007. The proposed data collection will build on the findings of the previous report, make use of survey items from the previous survey, as appropriate, and focus on new grantee cohorts. It will be conducted in conjunction with the submission of the grantee annual performance and interim and final evaluation reports. The contractor and TTT staff will coordinate all correspondence to grantees to present the survey and the performance and evaluation reports as an interrelated task and to avoid redundancy. The survey instrument has been developed to build upon the reporting requirements of each project and to collect data on project implementation that are currently not reported elsewhere. The contractor has also reviewed previous project reports and program documents used to guide the review of grantee performance and evaluation reports in order to identify the data elements most vital to the program evaluation.

A5. Methods to Minimize Burden on Small Entities

No small businesses or entities will be involved as respondents.

A6. Consequences of Not Collecting the Data

A program evaluation report for the Secretary and Congress can be prepared without this data collection. The program will continue to use the information submitted by grantees in their annual project performance reports (524B) and interim evaluations to report to the Secretary and to Congress on the status of the TTT program. However, as noted under Current Reporting Requirements, there are gaps that prevent the program from fully reporting on all aspects of program implementation. The program evaluation will be severely limited by the lack of information on the major components of the TTT program. In addition, since most of the information provided in the current project performance reports and evaluations is qualitative, it is difficult to aggregate and analyze in order to make valid and reliable points about the program as a whole. In short, without this requested data collection, the quality of the program evaluation report will be compromised and data that can better inform the Secretary, Congress, and the program staff about the implementation of the TTT program will not be available.

A7. Special Circumstances

There are no special circumstances that require the collection to be conducted in a manner inconsistent with the guidelines in 5 CFR 1320.5.

A8. Federal Register Comments and Persons Consulted Outside the Agency

A notice about the study will be published in the Federal Register when the final OMB package is submitted.

As an early step in developing guidance for grantees regarding current reporting requirements, TTT and the contractor convened a meeting with grantees to solicit their feedback on the supporting documentation for the 524B and other related forms. The contractor will use the information gleaned from that task to inform the survey development and administration procedures.

A9. Payment or Gifts

There are no payments or gifts to respondents other than the allocation of Federal funds that result from the TTT grant award.

A10. Assurance of Confidentiality

This collection does not involve collecting any confidential information. Therefore, no assurances of confidentiality are required.

A11. Justification of Sensitive Questions

This project does not include any questions of a sensitive nature. As required by the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, information will be provided to grantees about the purpose of the data collection and how ED will use the information to evaluate the TTT program.

A12. Estimates of Hour Burden

The estimated annual response burden is 45 person hours. TTT grantees will be asked to complete the survey in conjunction with their interim and final performance and evaluation reports. Thus, grantees from different cohorts would complete the survey at different points in time. Assuming a three year approval period, the survey would be administered a total of four times from 2009-2012. FY 2004 and FY 2007 grantees would complete the survey only once. FY 2006 grantees would complete the survey twice because both their interim and final performance reporting dates would fall within the three-year approval period (see Exhibit 1).







Exhibit 1: Reporting Schedule for TTT Grantees by Cohort


Interim performance report and evaluation

Final performance report and evaluation

FY 2004 cohort

(31 grantees)

May 2007

Dec 2009

FY 2006 cohort

(31 grantees)

May 2009

Dec 2011

FY 2007 cohort

(42 grantees)

May 2010

Dec 2012

Note: Dates shaded are completed tasks. Dates in bold fall within the potential dates for approval.

The total number of combined respondents for the four survey administrations is 135. Across three years, the average annual number of respondents is 45. The survey is estimated to take one hour to complete. Using an hourly rate for LEA administrators taken from California Department of Education financial data, the total cost of the reporting would be $7,020 (Exhibit 2).


Exhibit 2: Estimated Burden for TTT Survey by Cohort and Total

TTT Cohort

Reporting date

Number of respondents

Total Hour Burden

Hourly Rate

Monetary Burden

FY 2004 cohort
(31 grantees)

Dec 2009

31

31

$52

$1,612

FY 2006 cohort
(31 grantees)

May 2009

31

31

$52

$1,612

FY 2007 cohort
(42 grantees)

May 2010

42

42

$52

$2,184

FY 2006 cohort
(31 grantees)

Dec 2011

31

31

$52

$1,612

TOTAL


135

135

-

$7,020

A13. Estimate of Cost Burden to Respondents

There are no additional respondent costs aside from those outlined in section A12.

A14. Estimate of Annual Cost to the Federal Government

The total cost to the Federal Government for the data collection is $147,000. These costs are associated with (1) developing the data collection protocol, (2) providing technical assistance and guidance to grantees as they complete the survey, (3) analyzing the survey data and combining these with data from the performance reports (524B forms) and evaluation reports, (4) preparing a written program evaluation report for the Secretary and Congress, and (5) disseminating the results through briefings and presentations at TTT conferences.


Exhibit 3: Estimated Annual Costs of Data Collection, by Expense Type

Expense Type

Annual Cost (in dollars)

Percent of total cost

Developing the data collection protocol

$29,400

20%

Providing technical assistance and guidance to grantees as they complete the survey

$14,700

10%

Analyzing the survey data and combining these with data from the performance reports (524B forms) and evaluation reports

$51,450

35%

Preparing a written program evaluation report for the Secretary and Congress

$36,750

25%

Disseminating the results through briefings and presentations at TTT conferences

$14,700

10%

TOTAL

$147,000

100%

A15. Program Changes or Adjustment

This is a new request for clearance.

A16. Plans for Tabulation and Publication of Results

The contractor will produce a report on the program implementation following each reporting period outlined in section A12 above. These reports will use data from the new data collection and also incorporate findings from the analysis of performance reports (524B forms) and evaluation reports. These reports will be used by TTT staff to plan for technical assistance and to report to the Secretary and Congress of the status of the program. The contractor will also present findings from the data collection to grantees during TTT conferences and meetings, and to other interested parties as needed.

A17. Approval to Not Display OMB Expiration Date

No request is being made for exemption from displaying the expiration date.

A18. Explanation of Exceptions

This collection of information involves no exceptions to the Certification for Paperwork Reduction Act Submissions.

1 Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965, as amended, Title II, Part C, Subpart 1, Chapter B, Sec. 2314(b).

Transition to Teaching (TTT) Program Evaluation and Assistance page 10

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