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Philantropy. The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation

SEATTLE — The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation yesterday announced 15 grants totaling more than $19.5 million to support the development and testing of prototype classroom assessments and instructional tools in math and literacy to help educators better prepare all students for success beyond high school. The investments are part of the foundation’s support of the effort to build a coherent system of consistent college- and career-ready standards, aligned assessments, and teaching tools to strengthen teacher effectiveness and dramatically improve student achievement.

The assessments and instructional tools will be aligned with the college- and career-ready standards for math and literacy that are being developed by 48 states in coordination with the National Governors Association and the Council of Chief State School Officers. These standards will provide clear and consistent guidelines for teachers, school leaders, and parents on what students need to know at each grade level to be prepared to succeed at college-level work. The accompanying assessments will help to respond to the demand for teaching tools that meet the standards bar.

“These states have shown great leadership and commitment, working together to develop consistent, clear college- and career-ready standards,” said Vicki L. Phillips, Director of Education, College-Ready, at the foundation. “Providing teachers with the resources and support they need to teach creatively and effectively is the next step. Innovative and well-designed classroom assessments will provide vital feedback to help teachers target their instruction and prepare all students for success beyond high school.”

Projects in this phase of the work are focused in two key areas: (1) the development of prototype math and literacy assessments and instructional tools, including model lesson units, and (2) research and field testing to ensure the assessments and tools are effective, aligned with standards, and internationally benchmarked. Organizations receiving grants include programs at the University of California at Berkeley and the University of California at Los Angeles, the University of Texas at Austin, school districts and networks, curriculum developers, and leading nonprofits working to improve education for all students.

“The federal Race to the Top fund gives states powerful new incentives to invest in more robust assessment systems that can provide a clearer picture of student learning and teacher effectiveness,” said Carina Wong, Deputy Director, Education, at the foundation. “This is a great opportunity for innovations in classroom assessment that can be shared across states while still allowing for local flexibility in how to teach.”

Sites selected to pilot this first phase of math assessments are Charlotte-Mecklenburg, N.C.; Hamilton County, Tenn.; New York City; and six Kentucky school districts working with the state’s Prichard Committee for Academic Excellence. Assessments also will be field tested at the Denver School of Science and Technology and in participating schools in the Cristo Rey and National Council of La Raza networks.

In both math and literacy, the foundation’s goal is to support the creation of different forms of assessment and support materials that teachers, districts, and states can use. Once the research is completed and the materials validated, the foundation will work with its partners to refine the assessments and make them universally available. In math, the prototype assessments developed by the foundation’s partners will emphasize real-world problem solving and the ability to reason coherently. In literacy, assessments and materials will be developed to enable teachers across all academic subjects—not just English/language arts—to reinforce the skills students need to succeed in college, focusing on the ability to comprehend complex texts and write in ways that demonstrate that understanding.

The grants announced today advance the foundation’s efforts to help ensure all young people in the United States graduate from high school ready for college and obtain an education beyond high school that prepares them to succeed in the global economy. Since 2000, the foundation has invested $5 billion to prepare all students—particularly low-income and minority youth—to succeed in college, career, and life.

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