Rhode
Island Education Policy Home
The
Comprehensive Education Strategy (CES) is Rhode
Island's action plan for preparing all the state's children to be lifelong learners,
productive workers, and responsible citizens. Governor Lincoln C. Almond charged the Rhode
Island Goals 2000 Panel, with the active collaboration of the Board of Regents, to develop
this critical policy document. Completed in 1996, its clear agenda of high educational
standards, meaningful student assessments, and accountability for school improvement
serves as a guide for all of the state's education efforts.
In 1997, the General Assembly and the governor assured major implementation support for
the CES by enacting the Rhode Island Student Investment Initiative, popularly known as
Article 31. This law focuses on the need to improve student performance and provides key
resource support in the form of targeted investments. Each year since 1997 has seen this
support continued.
In January 2002, the federal
No Child Left Behind
Act was signed into law. This law has had a profound impact on
education policy in Rhode Island. Among the most significant
provisions of the law are:
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The requirement that all students attain proficiency in
English language arts, mathematics, and science by the year
2014
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The requirement that every class be taught by a “highly
qualified teacher”
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The mandate that parents be allowed to transfer their
children out of schools deemed to be “persistently unsafe”
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The establishment of a series of sanctions that apply to
high-poverty schools, requiring that parents be allowed to
transfer their children from schools that miss annual targets
for two years in a row and that students in schools that miss
targets for three years in a row receive free “supplemental
educational services.”
To comply with the law, RIDE completely revised
the state’s accountability system for public schools:
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In conjunction with three other New England states, RIDE is
in the process of developing “grade-level
expectations” (GLEs) in the three core subjects for all
grades
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RIDE is expanding the
state
assessment system to test students in all grades 3 through
8, plus one high-school grade
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RIDE will add a science assessment to the state assessment
system
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Through its Accountability Plan, RIDE has changed the way
by which schools are classified – establishing annual
statewide targets for each school level and requiring that
schools (and districts) meet these targets for all students
and for eight groups of students, plus targets for
participation, attendance, and graduation rates.
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RIDE has implemented procedures for intra-district school
choice and has approved a list of providers of supplemental
educational services
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RIDE had revised the procedure for
teacher certification
and is developing criteria for determining that a teacher is
“highly qualified” under federal law.
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RIDE has developed a definition of persistently unsafe
schools and has implemented procedures to allow parents to
transfer their children from these schools.
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RIDE has expanded its
school, district, and state report cards to include all information required by federal law.