Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 108 Part 1.djvu/183

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.

PUBLIC LAW 103-227—MAR. 31, 1994 108 STAT. 157 1994, and such sums as may be necessary for each of the 4 succeeding fiscal years, to carry out section 220. TITLE III—STATE AND LOCAL EDUCATION SYSTEMIC IMPROVEMENT SEC. 301. FINDINGS. 20 USC 5881. The Congress finds that— (1) all students can learn and achieve to high standards and must realize their potential if the United States is to prosper; (2) the reforms in education from 1977 through 1992 have achieved some good results, but such reform efforts often have been limited to a few schools or to a single part of the educational system; (3) leadership must come from teachers, related services personnel, principals, and parents in individual schools, and from policymakers at the local. State, tribal, and national levels, in order for lasting improvements in student performance to occur; (4) simultaneous top-down and bottom-up education reform is necessary to spur creative and innovative approaches by individual schools to help all students achieve internationaly competitive standards; (5) strategies must be developed by communities and States to support the revitalization of all local public schools by fundamentally changing the entire system of public education through comprehensive, coherent, and coordinated improvement in order to increase student learning; (6) parents, teachers, and other local educators, and business, community, and tribal leaders must be involved in developing systemwide improvement strategies that reflect the needs of their individual communities; (7) State and local education improvement efforts must incorporate strategies for providing all students and families with coordinated access to appropriate social services, health care, nutrition, and early childhood education, and child care to remove preventeble barriers to learning and enhance school readiness for all students; (8) States and local educational agencies, working together, must immediately set about developing and implementing such systemwide improvement strategies if our Nation is to educate all children to meet their full potential and achieve the National Education Groals described in title I; (9) State and local systemic improvement strategies must provide all students with effective mechanisms and appropriate paths to the work force as well as to higher education; (10) businesses should be encouraged— (A) to enter into partnerships with schools; (B) to provide information and guidance to schools based on the needs of area businesses for properly educated graduates in general and on the need for particular workplace skills that the schools may provide; (C) to provide necessary education and training materials and support; and vttj?*^"^*^'^'*^