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Education Week (and its Politics K-12 blog), the Hechinger Report, the New America Foundation's Ed Money Watch, and the Massachusetts Business Alliance for Education have provided some excellent Race to the Top Phase 2 analysis.
Based on Phase 1 scores, reviews of Phase 2 applications, and other considerations, I believe Florida, Illinois, Rhode Island and South Carolina are locks for Phase 2 funding. [UPDATE (8/4/2010): One thing that should be concerning to Georgia is an extremely low level of district buy-in (14%) to its application. The only two other states below 50% buy-in are California (18%) -- by design -- and Pennsylvania (32%). As a result I've moved Georgia from a 'lock' to a 'strong' contender.]
Further, I think that Colorado, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Massachusetts, New York, North Carolina, Ohio and Pennsylvania have strong chances at winning Phase 2 funding. (That would place the remaining finalists -- Arizona, California, District of Columbia, Hawaii and New Jersey -- outside the winners' circle.) That said, which and how many states will eventually be funded from the remaining pot of $3.4 billion is largely contingent upon the successes of the Big Three, each eligible to win $700 million: Florida, New York and California. The presence of numerous $400 million eligible states in the mix also has the potential to limit the number of winners.
Let's look at a variety of scenarios, assuming in each case that Florida can bank on the $700 million. Of the three, I think New York has the next best shot at the dollars, with California's chances slightly less. In each case, I have listed the states in Phase One rank order (so feel free to replace any with your preference).
Scenario #1 (Florida only)
TOTAL = $3.375 billion 11 States
STATE Florida | MAX. AWARD $700,000,000 | PHASE 1 RANK 4 |
Georgia | $400,000,000 | 3 |
Illinois So. Carolina | $400,000,000 $175,000,000 | 5 6 |
Pennsylvania Rhode Island Kentucky | $400,000,000 $75,000,000 $175,000,000 | 7 8 9 |
Ohio | $400,000,000 | 10 |
Louisiana | $175,000,000 | 11 |
No. Carolina | $400,000,000 | 12 |
DC | $75,000,000 | 16 |
Scenario #2 (Florida & New York)
TOTAL = $3.425 billion 9 States
STATE Florida | MAX. AWARD $700,000,000 | PHASE 1 RANK 4 |
New York Georgia | $700,000,000 $400,000,000 | 15 3 |
Illinois So. Carolina | $400,000,000 $175,000,000 | 5 6 |
Pennsylvania Rhode Island Kentucky | $400,000,000 $75,000,000 $175,000,000 | 7 8 9 |
Ohio | $400,000,000 | 10 |
Scenario #3 (Florida, New York & California)
TOTAL = $3.325 billion 8 States
STATE Florida | MAX. AWARD $700,000,000 | PHASE 1 RANK 4 |
New York California Georgia | $700,000,000 $700,000,000 $400,000,000 | 15 27 3 |
Illinois So. Carolina | $400,000,000 $175,000,000 | 5 6 |
Rhode Island Kentucky | $75,000,000 $175,000,000 | 8 9 |
DC | $75,000,000 | 16 |
Scenario #4 (Max. Applicants w/ Florida)
TOTAL = $3.4 billion 12 States
STATE Florida | MAX. AWARD $700,000,000 | PHASE 1 RANK 4 |
Georgia | $400,000,000 | 3 |
Illinois | $400,000,000 | 5 |
So. Carolina | $175,000,000 | 6 |
Pennsylvania | $400,000,000 | 7 |
Rhode Island | $75,000,000 | 8 |
Kentucky | $175,000,000 | 9 |
Ohio | $400,000,000 | 10 |
Louisiana | $175,000,000 | 11 |
Massachusetts | $250,000,000 | 13 |
Colorado | $175,000,000 | 14 |
DC | $75,000,000 | 16 |
Unless Florida somehow manages to fall on its face in Phase 2, I don't think it is realistic to envision more than 12 applicants receiving funding -- and that would require one of the $400 million-eligible states (such as North Carolina or Ohio) to be eclipsed and knocked out by a smaller state ranked lower in Phase 1 (such as Colorado, Massachusetts and/or the District of Columbia) or by Maryland, which did not apply in Phase 1 [see Scenario #4]. So although the U.S. Department of Education has dangled the possibility of as many as 15 Phase 2 winners, I don't see realistically how we can get there.
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