| Funds made available to local
educational agencies under section 5112 shall be used for
innovative assistance programs, which may include any of the
following:
(1) Programs to recruit, train, and hire highly qualified
teachers to reduce class size, especially in the early
grades, and professional development activities carried out
in accordance with title II, that give teachers, principals,
and administrators the knowledge and skills to provide
students with the opportunity to meet challenging State or
local academic content standards and student academic
achievement standards.
(2) Technology activities related to the implementation
of school-based reform efforts, including professional
development to assist teachers and other school personnel
(including school library media personnel) regarding how to
use technology effectively in the classrooms and the school
library media centers involved.
(3) Programs for the development or acquisition and use
of instructional and educational materials, including
library services and materials (including media materials),
academic assessments, reference materials, computer software
and hardware for instructional use, and other curricular
materials that are tied to high academic standards, that
will be used to improve student academic achievement, and
that are part of an overall education reform program.
(4) Promising education reform projects, including magnet
schools.
(5) Programs to improve the academic achievement of
educationally disadvantaged elementary school and secondary
school students, including activities to prevent students
from dropping out of school.
(6) Programs to improve the literacy skills of adults,
especially the parents of children served by the local
educational agency, including adult education and family
literacy programs.
(7) Programs to provide for the educational needs of
gifted and talented children.
(8) The planning, design, and initial implementation of
charter schools as described in part B.
(9) School improvement programs or activities under
sections 1116 and 1117.
(10) Community service programs that use qualified school
personnel to train and mobilize young people to measurably
strengthen their communities through nonviolence,
responsibility, compassion, respect, and moral courage.
(11) Activities to promote consumer, economic, and
personal finance education, such as disseminating
information on and encouraging use of the best practices for
teaching the basic principles of economics and promoting the
concept of achieving financial literacy through the teaching
of personal financial management skills (including the basic
principles involved with earning, spending, saving, and
investing).
(12) Activities to promote, implement, or expand public
school choice.
(13) Programs to hire and support school nurses.
(14) Expansion and improvement of school-based mental
health services, including early identification of drug use
and violence, assessment, and direct individual or group
counseling services provided to students, parents, and
school personnel by qualified school-based mental health
services personnel.
(15) Alternative educational programs for those students
who have been expelled or suspended from their regular
educational setting, including programs to assist students
to reenter the regular educational setting upon return from
treatment or alternative educational programs.
(16) Programs to establish or enhance prekindergarten
programs for children.
(17) Academic intervention programs that are operated
jointly with community-based organizations and that support
academic enrichment, and counseling programs conducted
during the school day (including during extended school day
or extended school year programs), for students most at risk
of not meeting challenging State academic achievement
standards or not completing secondary school.
(18) Programs for cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR)
training in schools.
(19) Programs to establish smaller learning communities.
(20) Activities that encourage and expand improvements
throughout the area served by the local educational agency
that are designed to advance student academic achievement.
(21) Initiatives to generate, maintain, and strengthen
parental and community involvement.
(22) Programs and activities that expand learning
opportunities through best-practice models designed to
improve classroom learning and teaching.
(23) Programs to provide same-gender schools and
classrooms (consistent with applicable law).
(24) Service learning activities.
(25) School safety programs, including programs to
implement the policy described in section 9507 and which may
include payment of reasonable transportation costs and
tuition costs for such students.
(26) Programs that employ research-based cognitive and
perceptual development approaches and rely on a
diagnostic-prescriptive model to improve students' learning
of academic content at the preschool, elementary, and
secondary levels.
(27) Supplemental educational services, as defined in
section 1116(e).
The innovative assistance programs shall be
(A) tied to promoting challenging academic achievement
standards;
(B) used to improve student academic achievement; and
(C) part of an overall education reform strategy.
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