Local ROE gets $79,000 in grants

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The Regional Office of Education for Bureau, Stark, and Henry counties was recently given $79,000 in grant money to be directed towards migrant education outreach and professional development on English as a Second Language instruction.

Nearly $400,000 in federal grants was awarded to the 24 Regional Offices of Education throughout the state. The grants will enable the local ROE’s to provide professional development to rural and small, local district staffs on ESL instruction. The grant will also enable the local districts to identify and serve migrant children.

“The money will not be disseminated out to the schools but will be used by the ROE to provide training and guidance for ESL students,” said Matt Vanover, spokesperson for the Illinois State Board of Education in Springfield.

Vanover said this is the second year for the ESL grant but the first year for the migrant schools grant.

According to a release, the number of Limited English Proficiency (LEP) students has increased dramatically over the past decade. In 1998, less than 26,000 LEP students were served in Illinois’ bilingual education programs. That number has increased to more than 160,000 students in 2006.

“We are committed to making sure that every child in Illinois has access to education and our LEP students are a growing segment that we have to be able to serve,” said State Superintendent of Education Christopher Koch. “These grants allow the Regional Offices to work locally, within their communities to make sure migrant and LEP students are properly identified and are getting the resources they need to be successful.”

Of the $79,000 given to the ROE office in Atkinson, $5,000 of that will be directed toward professional development, or ESL instruction. The professional development portion will assist the ROE office in providing rural districts with the knowledge and awareness of state and federal laws requiring the provision of ESL instruction.

The grant will also enable the ROE the ability to provide instruction on bilingual best practices to administrators, general education teachers, ESL teachers, bilingual teachers and teacher aides.

The money for both grant programs comes from federal No Child Left Behind funds.

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