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Description: Tags: G3heahigh

The High School Equivalency Program (HEP) assists migrant and seasonal farmworker students in obtaining a high school equivalency certificate (GED) and entering postsecondary education, the military, or employment. The document outlines two objectives for the program: 1) An increasing percentage of participants will receive a GED, with a target of 68% in 2008. 2) An increasing percentage of those receiving a GED will enter postsecondary education, career positions, or the military, with the target of setting a baseline in 2006. It describes annual data collection and quality controls to track progress on these objectives.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
16 views

Description: Tags: G3heahigh

The High School Equivalency Program (HEP) assists migrant and seasonal farmworker students in obtaining a high school equivalency certificate (GED) and entering postsecondary education, the military, or employment. The document outlines two objectives for the program: 1) An increasing percentage of participants will receive a GED, with a target of 68% in 2008. 2) An increasing percentage of those receiving a GED will enter postsecondary education, career positions, or the military, with the target of setting a baseline in 2006. It describes annual data collection and quality controls to track progress on these objectives.

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anon-530059
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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HEA: High School Equivalency Program

FY 2008 Program Performance Plan


Strategic Goal 3
Discretionary
HEA, Title IV, Part A-5
CFDA 84.141: Migrant Education_High School Equivalency Program
84.141A: High School Equivalency Program
84.149: Migrant Education_College Assistance Migrant Program

Program Goal: To assist migrant and seasonal farmworker students in obtaining


the equivalent of a high school diploma and, subsequently, to
begin postsecondary education, enter military service, or obtain
employment.
Objective 1 of 2: An increasing percentage of HEP participants will receive their General
Educational Development (GED) diploma.
Measure 1.1 of 1: The percentage of High School Equivalency Program (HEP) participants
receiving a General Educational Development (GED). (Desired direction: increase)
Actual
Year Target Status
(or date expected)
1997 70 Measure not in place
1998 66 Measure not in place
1999 72 Measure not in place
2000 73 Measure not in place
2001 58 Measure not in place
2002 53 Measure not in place
2003 60 63 Target Exceeded
2004 60 65 Target Exceeded
2005 65 (October 2007) Pending
2006 66 (October 2008) Pending
2007 67 (October 2009) Pending
2008 68 (October 2010) Pending
2009 69 (October 2011) Pending
2010 70 (October 2012) Pending
Source. U.S. Department of Education, High School Equivalency Program, Grantee Performance Report.
Frequency of Data Collection. Annual
Data Quality. All grantees are made aware of annual grant performance reporting requirements. Data are
submitted in a grantee’s grant performance report (ED Form 524B) either as Program- (i.e., GPRA- HEP),
or Project- (i.e., applicant’s own) established performance measures. Results are collected 5-7 months
after a performance period begins, and again, as a Supplemental Update, 30 days after a performance
period ends. Data are analyzed quantitatively (raw, and percentage) and qualitatively (narrative
explanations of progress) and reviewed in relation to past data findings. Data is analyzed to determine
that it is valid and not measuring something other than the performance measure. Any noted anomaly in
data quality is communicated and clarified with the grantee.
Target Context. All grantees are funded during a single 12-month budget period, beginning on the
award date. Data showing progress against the performance target is available from all grantees from 18-
24 months following the close of the budget period. The data collection and reporting period varies based
on each grantee’s unique program schedule: some enroll a cohort with fixed start and end dates, others
use open enrollment, where students enter at any time and complete the program in different timeframes.

U.S. Department of Education 1 02/05/2007


As a consequence, the period of time when all activities funded by a budget cycle will vary and full data
collection may extend into subsequent budget periods.

Explanation. This is a long term measure. The calculation for this measure is the number of HEP
participants who receive the GED divided by the number of HEP participants funded to be instructionally
served.

Objective 2 of 2: An increasing percentage of HEP recipients of the GED will enter


postsecondary education programs, career positions, or the military.
Measure 2.1 of 1: The percentage of HEP GED recipients who enter postsecondary education
programs, career positions, or the military. (Desired direction: increase)
Actual
Year Target Status
(or date expected)
2004 76 Measure not in place
2006 Set a Baseline (April 2007) Pending
2007 BL+1PP (October 2009) Pending
2008 BL+2PP (October 2010) Pending
2009 BL+3PP (October 2011) Pending
2010 BL+4PP (October 2012) Pending
Source. U.S. Department of Education, High School Equivalency Program, grantee performance reports.
Frequency of Data Collection. Annual
Data Quality. All grantees are made aware of annual grant performance reporting requirements. Data are
submitted in a grantee’s grant performance report (ED Form 524B) either as Program- (i.e., GPRA- HEP),
or Project- (i.e., applicant’s own) established performance measures. Results are collected 5-7 months
after a performance period begins, and again, as a Supplemental Update, 30 days after a performance
period ends. Data are analyzed quantitatively (raw, and percentage) and qualitatively (narrative
explanations of progress) and reviewed in relation to past data findings. Data is analyzed to determine
that it is valid and not measuring something other than the performance measure. Any noted anomaly in
data quality is communicated and clarified with the grantee.
Target Context.

All grantees are funded during a single 12-month budget period, beginning on the award date. Data
showing progress against the performance target is available from all grantees from 18-24 months
following the close of the budget period. The data collection and reporting period varies based on each
grantee’s unique program schedule: some enroll a cohort with fixed start and end dates, others use open
enrollment, where students enter at any time and complete the program in different timeframes. As a
consequence, the period of time when all activities funded by a budget cycle will vary and full data
collection may extend into subsequent budget periods.

U.S. Department of Education 2 02/05/2007

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