Pee Dee Consortia Gets Grant For Initiative

COLUMBIA-Grants for the South Carolina Community Block Grant for Education Pilot Program were awarded to seven initiatives throughout the state, with fifteen participating districts and additional community partners, including local Head Start and First Steps partnerships. This one-year block grant program is a matching grants initiative designed to encourage sustainable partnerships among South Carolina school districts and community groups. The General Assembly and Governor approved the grant in the state budget to improve children’s readiness for kindergarten by enhancing the quality of state-funded full day 4K programs and instruction. Over the past three years, applicants have requested $7.6 million in funding with $4 million allocated from fiscal year 2015-16 through fiscal year 2017-18.
For fiscal year 2017-18, $1 million was awarded to the following districts:
• Cherokee School District: $206,857
• Chesterfield School District: $105,613
• Lancaster County School District: $126,923
• York School District One: $97,250
• Pee Dee Consortia of school districts including Florence 1, Florence 2, Florence 3, Florence 4, Dillon 3, Dillon 4, Marion, Darlington and Pee Dee Head Start: $187,350
• Consortia of Spartanburg School Districts 3 and 7: $128,724
• McCormick School District: $147,283.
The Pee Dee Consortia is a regional initiative that has grown from the partnership of Florence 1 and Florence 2 to include eight additional Pee Dee districts and Head Start. While the awarded projects’ strategies and approaches vary, all focus on enhancing children’s learning and the quality of the interactions between teachers and their students. Young children’s relationships with teachers predict future emotional, social and academic success. In studies of teacher-child relationships, children who had a secure relationship with their preschool and kindergarten teachers demonstrated good peer interactions and positive relationships with teachers and peers in elementary school.
“The demand is evident in the $9.3 million districts have requested over the past four years. The outcomes show significant, replicatable improvements in children learning,” said Christopher Leventis Cox, chair of the grants committee that decided final grant awards. “We are grateful the General Assembly has allocated funding. It’s critical we continue to encourage innovation that can impact young children’s learning while supporting educators and kindergarten readiness.”
The grants committee is an independent group of educators and business leaders who review and make the final decision.
Per a proviso in the state budget, the Executive Director of the Education Oversight Committee is charged with reviewing and reporting on the results of the funded programs. Upon the completion of an evaluation, the Education Oversight Committee will disseminate a report with project outcomes, lessons learned and best practices in 2018.The SC Education Oversight Committee is an independent, non-partisan group made up of 18 educators, business persons, and elected leaders. Created in 1998, the committee is dedicated to reporting facts, measuring change, and promoting progress within South Carolina’s education system.

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