EL Funding And Compliance
Title III
A Title III plan is documentation of activities that a local education agency (LEA) plans to conduct with funds received under Title III of the Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA). Only LEAs receiving Title III funds are required to submit a Title III plan. This plan should not be confused with activities conducted by the LEA to meet federal requirements under Lau v. Nichols. Title III plan should not be confused with an LEA’s English language service delivery program. The English language service delivery program describes all activities being planned/carried out to meet the needs of English learners (ELs).
The deadline to submit the Title III Plan is July 1st (or next business day if July 1st is on the weekend).
- Title III - Allowable Use Of Funds
- Title III - Approval Process For LEAs
- Title III - Hints To Draft A Plan
- Title III - Non-Regulatory Guidance: ELs and Title III
- Title III - Planning EL Activities
- Title III - Requirements
- Title III - Teacher Fluency Certification
- Title III - Tips For Drafting A Successful Plan
Lau Plan
"There is no equality of treatment merely by providing students with the same facilities, textbooks, teachers, and curriculum; for students who do not understand English are effectively foreclosed from any meaningful education." - Lau v. Nichols (1974)
What is a Lau Plan?
A Lau plan is an equal access plan that protects ELs. The plan describes what a school district will do:
- to identify its ELs
- to design an effective program reflective of their needs
- to employ appropriate English-as-a-second-language or bilingual personnel (or both),
- to align the instruction of ELs to state and local content standards
- to provide ongoing authentic assessments to ascertain their growth in English language proficiency and in the comprehension of academic content.
A Lau plan is a "working document" that should be revisited frequently.
Essential components of a Lau plan include the legal foundation, student assessments, an instructional plan, parental involvement, qualified personnel, a coordination plan, a budget, adjunct services, and other possible considerations.
Additional Resources
- Accountability For ELs Under ESEA
- Civil Rights Obligations To EL Students And Parents
- Consultations With Private Schools
- Dear Colleague Letter (Jan. 2015) - EL Students And Parents
- Educational Services For Immigrant And Recently Arrived Students
- ELs And ESSA - What Educators Need To Know
- Ensuring ELs Can Participate Meaningfully And Equally In Educational Programs
- Evaluating The Effectiveness Of A District's EL Program
- Guide For Low-Incidence Districts
- Translation And Interpretation Requirements
- Undocumented Students And Social Security Numbers
- Universities With State Approved ESOL Programs (In the subject area box, scroll to K-12 section and choose English Language Learners K-12)