Paige Announces Support for Reading First In Arizona, Michigan, And
Utah
States receive share of
$900 million for year one of Reading First grants to improve
students' reading achievement.
August 7, 2002,
News Media Contact: Melinda Malico,
(202) 401-1576, Reading First Office: (202)
401-4877
U.S. Secretary of Education
Rod Paige today announced that Arizona, Michigan and Utah will
receive
major new grants to help
schools and school districts improve
student's reading achievement under Reading
First, President Bush's extraordinary
reading reform initiative built on
scientifically based research.
The three states'
applications were comprehensive and each passed a rigorous
panel review that judged
state plans to meet 25 review
criteria. Arizona will receive $17.7
million this year, and $116 million over six years; Michigan
will receive $28.5
million this year and $186.5 million over
six years; and Utah will receive $4.6
million and $30 million over six years. The
six-year totals are subject to each state's
successful implementation and congressional
appropriations. This year's funds are
available to states now. The grants
announced today support significant
improvements in classroom reading instruction based
on proven methods, 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 are funded
under a state-run competition
for subgrants.
"Reading First will help
transform reading instruction from the fads of the past into
the most focused, early
reading initiative ever undertaken in
this nation," Paige said. "The program's
focus on scientific evidence, including the
essential elements of proven reading
instruction, constitutes a recipe for
success. Now we can ensure that all children
will be given the tools and instruction
they need to read well by the end of
the third grade."
When President Bush entered
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.
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 scientific research
proven to work in the teaching of reading;
Providing professional training for
educators in reading instruction; and
Supplying substantial resources to support
the unprecedented initiative. To help states
develop quality programs and solid
applications, states had the benefit of
nearly three days of assistance to
develop their state strategies and
Reading First applications during the Secretary's Reading
Leadership Academies that all states
attended this spring.
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
announced awards to Alabama, Colorado and
Florida in June. States that are successful
will receive funds under a formula and
will run competitions for subgrants
to eligible school districts. A list of
estimated state grants, and next year's
funding under President Bush's request for
$1 billion for the second year of the program, is available at:
www.ed.gov/PressReleases/01-2002/estimates.html.
For more
information about Arizona's plans for Reading First, contact:
Marie Mancuso at (602) 542-5134.
For more information about
Michigan's plans for Reading First, contact: Faith Stevens at
(517) 241-2479. For
more information about Utah's plans
for Reading First, contact Laurie Lacy at
(801) 538-7510.