OPS Title I Director:
Ms. Tina L. Forté 531-299-0247 Email: tina.forte@ops.org
U.S. Mail: Title I, Omaha Public Schools Teacher Administrative Center 3215 Cuming Street Omaha, NE 68131-2024
Title 1 Schools 2020-2021 school year list.
Title I is a major contributor to the education of many youth in the Omaha Public School district. The program has been in existence for more than 40 years, yet some may not be aware of the many ways it assists the education of our youth.
Title I, Part A came into existence as a section of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA) of 1965. As the largest federal assistance program for our nation's schools, it provides funds for reading/language arts and math curriculum to students in impoverished areas who are at risk of failing to meet state standards. Federal funds from the U.S. Department of Education are given to State Education Agencies (SEA), which then direct those funds to Local Education Agencies (LEA). Private schools, state agencies for neglected and delinquent youth, and homeless shelters also receive federal Title I monies.
According to the U.S. Department of Education's Web site, Title I reaches approximately 12.5 million students in both public and private schools nationwide. Of that number, 77% of the students served are in grades Pre-K through 12. Ninety percent of U.S. school districts and approximately half of all public schools receive some Title I, Part A funds. Those funds can be administered through two types of programs. LEA's may offer a school wide program in which the whole school is served, or a targeted assistance program.
A schoolwide program's objective is to improve academic achievement, related to State/District standards, throughout the whole school. Targeted assistance programs identify specific students who are the most "at-risk" of failing or not achieving State/District standards and designs methods to help those students.
Regardless of which type of program an LEA uses, all Title I programs offer special features, including:
•Additional teachers and paraprofessionals
•Additional training for school staff
•Extended time for instruction
•Smaller class sizes
•In-services/workshops provided for parents
Title I also assists, through the use of Transition Plans, preschool students entering kindergarten from various early childhood programs such as, but not limited to, Head Start.
The Title I program in the Omaha Public School District is the largest in the state of Nebraska, with 49 school buildings spanning the grades of kindergarten through twelve. All Title I schools are currently served through the Schoolwide model. The amount of funds given to a particular school is based on the number of students receiving free and reduced lunches. Title services are also received in 30 private schools in the Omaha area. Those students are served with a targeted assistance program. Twenty-two social service agencies throughout the Metro area are also served.
Accountability is monitored through the State Accountability Framework known as AQUEST. Schools struggling to meet State Academic Achievement Standards can be labeled as Comprehensive Support for Improvement (CSI) Schools or Targeted Support for Improvement (TSI) Schools.
Further information may be found on the U.S. Department of Education Web site, https://www.ed.gov, search word, "Title I".
ELEMENTARY & SECONDARY EDUCATION
Title I Delinquency
Prevention and Intervention Programs for Children and Youth who are Neglected, Delinquent, or At-Risk*
(A) PURPOSE- It is the purpose of this part —
(1) to improve educational services for children and youth in local and State institutions for neglected or delinquent children and youth so that such children and youth have the opportunity to meet the same challenging State academic content standards and challenging State student academic achievement standards that all children in the State are expected to meet;
(2) to provide such children and youth with the services needed to make a successful transition from institutionalization to further schooling or employment; and
(3) to prevent at-risk youth from dropping out of school, and to provide dropouts, and children and youth returning from correctional facilities or institutions for neglected or delinquent children and youth, with a support system to ensure their continued education.
(B) PROGRAM AUTHORIZED- In order to carry out the purpose of this part and from amounts appropriated under section 1002(d), the Secretary shall make grants to State educational agencies to enable such agencies to award subgrants to State agencies and local educational agencies to establish or improve programs of education for neglected, delinquent, or at-risk children and youth.
*- Source US Department of Education
Title I is aimed at helping private school children who live in participating public school attendance areas and who are failing or most at risk of failing to meet the state's challenging student academic achievement standards. Title I is required to provide eligible private school children, their teachers, and their families with Title I educational services or benefits that are equitable to those provided to eligible public school children, their teachers, and their families.
Matt Rohlfsen
Curriculum Instruction and Support-Title I
531-299-9633
NonPublic Title I Schools