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<StrategicPlan><id></id><Name>Open Government Plan</Name><Description>This Open Government Plan for the Department of Education articulates
Secretary Arne Duncan&#8217;s response to the Office of Management and Budget&#8217;s
Open Government Directive (OMB M-10-06). The Open Government
Directive requires Departments and Agencies to document specific steps that
will achieve the transparency, participation, and collaboration goals of
President Obama and his Administration. More importantly, this plan
expresses the values that are held by the Secretary and that permeate this
Department concerning the role of transparency and citizen-centered
government.</Description><OtherInformation>The Department of Education (ED) embraces the principles of increased
transparency, participation and collaboration as essential to accomplishing
its mission. By focusing on practices and opening the gates to data, we
anticipate the creation of new information and knowledge that will help to
promote student achievement and preparation for global competitiveness by
fostering educational excellence and ensuring equal access.</OtherInformation><StrategicPlanCore><Organization><Name>Department of Education</Name><Acronym>ED</Acronym><Identifier>_d54d2432-5be5-11df-a9e9-9f847a64ea2a</Identifier><Description></Description><Stakeholder><Name>Anthony W. Miller</Name><Description>Deputy Secretary</Description></Stakeholder></Organization><Vision><Description></Description><Identifier>_d54d3440-5be5-11df-a9e9-9f847a64ea2a</Identifier></Vision><Mission><Description></Description><Identifier>_d54d38be-5be5-11df-a9e9-9f847a64ea2a</Identifier></Mission><Value><Name></Name><Description></Description></Value><Goal><Name>Transparency, Participation, and Collaboration in Programs</Name><Description></Description><Identifier>_d54d3d5a-5be5-11df-a9e9-9f847a64ea2a</Identifier><SequenceIndicator>II.</SequenceIndicator><Stakeholder><Name></Name><Description></Description></Stakeholder><OtherInformation></OtherInformation><Objective><Name>Game Changing Reforms</Name><Description>Provide incentives to States to implement large-scale, system-changing reforms that improve student achievement, close achievement gaps, and increase graduation and college enrollment rates.</Description><Identifier>_d54d419c-5be5-11df-a9e9-9f847a64ea2a</Identifier><SequenceIndicator>II.A</SequenceIndicator><Stakeholder><Name>States</Name><Description></Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder><Name>Students</Name><Description></Description></Stakeholder><OtherInformation>The Race to the Top program, a $4.35 billion fund created under
the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (ARRA), is
the largest competitive education grant program in U.S. history,
warranting unprecedented transparency and participation to
ensure the best possible results. The $4 billion for the Race to
the Top Fund is designed to provide incentives to States to
implement large-scale, system-changing reforms that improve
student achievement, close achievement gaps, and increase
graduation and college enrollment rates.

As the Department embarks on an unprecedented level
of flexible, collaborative technical assistance with grantees, we
will continue to work to not only support our grantees, but to
share their lessons nationwide. As part of their grants, States
are required to make any work developed with the funds freely
available to others. States may do this by posting their work on
a web site that we identify (unless the work is otherwise
protected by law or agreement as proprietary information).</OtherInformation></Objective><Objective><Name>Race to the Top Assessment</Name><Description>Provide valid and instructionally useful assessments that provide accurate information about what students know and can do.</Description><Identifier>_d54d42fa-5be5-11df-a9e9-9f847a64ea2a</Identifier><SequenceIndicator>II.B</SequenceIndicator><Stakeholder><Name></Name><Description></Description></Stakeholder><OtherInformation>The Race to the Top Assessment Program is a $350 million grant
competition designed to fill an urgent need in the nation&#8217;s
educational system. It seeks to provide valid and instructionally
useful assessments that provide accurate information about what
students know and can do. These assessments will be anchored
in standards designed to enable every student to gain the
knowledge and skills needed to succeed in college or the
workplace by the time he or she graduates from high school.
These grants will support the work of consortia of States that
develop and implement common, high-quality assessments
aligned with common college- and career-ready K-12 standards.
The use of common assessments based on common standards
will promote a culture of higher expectations as well as
collaboration on best practices. States will use these
assessment systems to expand instructional practice and support
continuous improvement that meaningfully improves school and
educator effectiveness and enhances program impact.</OtherInformation></Objective><Objective><Name>Listening and Learning Tour</Name><Description>Visit all 50 states to hear from parents, students, and citizens about No Child Left Behind and education reform</Description><Identifier>_d54d4566-5be5-11df-a9e9-9f847a64ea2a</Identifier><SequenceIndicator>II.C</SequenceIndicator><Stakeholder><Name>Parents</Name><Description></Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder><Name>Students</Name><Description></Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder><Name>Citizens</Name><Description></Description></Stakeholder><OtherInformation>This past year Secretary Duncan and senior staff visited all 50
states on a Listening and Learning Tour to hear from parents, 
students, and citizens about No Child Left Behind and education
reform. Americans were invited to join the discussion online.
They took the lessons they learned from across America and
included them in the Blueprint for Reform: The Reauthorization
of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act.
The blueprint for revising the ESEA asks states to adopt collegeand
career-ready standards and rewards schools for producing
dramatic gains in student achievement. The proposal challenges
the nation to embrace educational standards that would put
America on a path to global leadership.
The blueprint provides incentives for states to adopt academic
standards that prepare students to succeed in college and the
workplace and create accountability systems that measure
student growth toward meeting the goal that all children
graduate and succeed in college.</OtherInformation></Objective><Objective><Name>Investing in Innovation (i3)</Name><Description>Provide support to local educational agencies (LEAs), and nonprofit organizations</Description><Identifier>_d54d4764-5be5-11df-a9e9-9f847a64ea2a</Identifier><SequenceIndicator>II.D</SequenceIndicator><Stakeholder><Name>Local Educational Agencies (LEAs)</Name><Description></Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder><Name>Nonprofit Organizations</Name><Description></Description></Stakeholder><OtherInformation>i3 is an innovative grant fund established as part of the
American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (ARRA). It
provides support to local educational agencies (LEAs), and
nonprofit organizations in partnership with (a) one or more LEAs
or (b) a consortium of schools.
Applicants must address one of the four areas that are driving
the Obama administration&#8217;s school reform agenda:
&#8226; Supporting effective teachers and principals;
&#8226; Improving the use of data to accelerate student
achievement;
&#8226; Complementing the implementation of standards and
assessments that prepare students for success in college
and careers; and
&#8226; Turning around persistently low-performing schools.
Unlike other federal grant programs where evidence is a
selection criterion, in the i3 program evidence is a formal 
eligibility requirement. The i3 regulations also include specific
definitions for what constitutes strong evidence and moderate
evidence and will award three types of grants based on these
three levels of evidence. Development grants will require a
reasonable hypothesis and will be aimed at helping develop fresh
ideas, Validation grants will require moderate evidence and will
be aimed at validating and spreading promising programs on a
State or regional scale, and Scale Up grants will require strong
evidence and will be aimed at bringing proven programs to
national, regional, or State scale. The Department expects to
make Development grants of up to $5 million each; Validation
grants of up to $30 million each; Scale Up grants of up to $50
million each. Complete information on the i3 program can be
found at the Investing in Innovation Fund (i3) web site.
In keeping with the innovative nature of this program, i3 has
modeled transparency principles throughout its development.
The Department published the notice of proposed priorities (NPP)
to obtain public comment, hosted webinars following the NPP
publication to answer questions, and held pre-application
meetings in three cities (Denver, Baltimore, and Atlanta) to
further engage the public in the competition. These sessions
were also made available via webinar. Approximately 1000
people attended the meetings, with an additional 2000
participants via webinar.
The Department has applied transparency principles to the peer
review process. An Open Call was made for peer reviewers,
including visible posting on ED.gov, and approximately 1000
applications have been received for peer reviewer positions.
To further support innovation, the Office of Innovation and
Improvement has launched the Open Innovation Portal, a public
forum for all who wish to participate in creating opportunities for
partnership and local private and public funding. This web portal
connects grant applicants, stakeholders, funders and other
participants to cultivate innovative ideas related to education.
Through this portal, the Department hopes that partnerships will
develop that will accelerate the development, identification, and
broad use of innovative products, practices, and processes to
improve education in schools. 
The Open Innovation Portal, available at
http://innovation.ed.gov, provides a public forum for all who
wish to participate in creating opportunities for partnership and
local private and public funding &#8211; potentially multiplying many
times over the federal funding opportunity. The portal allows
the posting, commenting and scoring of ideas. It carries
additional features such as inclusion of video clips, idea
leaderboards and challenges from non-profit partners.
As of March 29, 2010, the Open Innovation Portal has 2851
members. A total of 76 ideas have been submitted, with 88%
having received at least one question, answer, or comment. An
active network is developing, with 716 network requests, 455
private messages, 254 idea questions, and 74 idea comments.
The Department is encouraged by the early success of this
innovative collaboration tool.</OtherInformation></Objective><Objective><Name>National Education Technology Plan</Name><Description>Release a draft of the National Educational Technology Plan: &quot;Transforming American Education:  learning Powered by Technology.&quot;</Description><Identifier>_d54d4a0c-5be5-11df-a9e9-9f847a64ea2a</Identifier><SequenceIndicator>II.E</SequenceIndicator><Stakeholder><Name></Name><Description></Description></Stakeholder><OtherInformation>On March 3, 2010, the Department released a draft of the
National Educational Technology Plan: &quot;Transforming American
Education: Learning Powered by Technology.&quot;
This plan was prepared for the Office of Educational Technology
by leading researchers and practitioners. It represents their best
ideas about how we can bring forward our schools&#8212;making them
centers of learning designed to close the gap between the
technology-rich and exciting experiences that dominate students'
lives outside of school while preparing them for success in
today's competitive global marketplace.
In keeping with the Open Government Initiative, ED has
published the draft on the Department's Web site at National
Education Technology Plan 2010. The public has been invited to
review it, comment on it, and to refine it. ED welcomes
suggestions about ways to accelerate the development and
adoption of tools and resources that merge education and
technology as well as incentives to help spark innovation, scaling
of the most effective products, and continuous improvement.</OtherInformation></Objective><Objective><Name>Financial Transparency of American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA)</Name><Description>Demand accountability and transparency regarding this massive infusion of federal funds into the public education system. </Description><Identifier>_d54d4cd2-5be5-11df-a9e9-9f847a64ea2a</Identifier><SequenceIndicator>II.F</SequenceIndicator><Stakeholder><Name></Name><Description></Description></Stakeholder><OtherInformation>Historically, the federal government accounts for only 9 percent
of total U.S. public education spending annually, with state and
local governments providing the remaining 91 percent of
funding, and states maintaining primary authority over education
spending. As a result of the 2008 recession, however, state and
local governments faced severe revenue shortfalls, limiting their
ability to fund education at previous levels given balancedbudget
restrictions. The American Recovery and Reinvestment
Act of 2009 (ARRA) created the one-time $48.6 billion State
Fiscal Stabilization Fund (SFSF) to address this crisis. Both
ARRA and the Department demand accountability and
transparency regarding this massive infusion of federal funds
into the public education system. For example, the Department
posted all SFSF applications and amendments to ensure
stakeholders are informed on a State&#8217;s use of the program
funds. The Department intends to build on this experience to
create a new level of transparency regarding state education
spending on an on-going basis.
First, the Department is shining an unprecedented spotlight on
the flow of ARRA funds at both the state and program level. All
ARRA agencies are required to submit weekly spending updates
by program to Recovery.gov. The Department of Education has
gone above and beyond this requirement by aggregating this
data into formats more meaningful to education stakeholders.
Weekly reports of obligations and outlays for each state by
program, and for each program by state, are posted at:
http://www.ed.gov/policy/gen/leg/recovery/reports.html
Second, the Department is providing unprecedented
transparency into the education funding requirement that states
use federal funding to support state and local funding,  
maintaining overall support rather than allowing funds to be
shifted elsewhere (Maintenance of Effort or MOE). For SFSF,
each State must assure that it will provide, for each of fiscal
years (FYs) 2009 through 2011, at least the levels of support for
elementary and secondary education and for public institutions
of higher education as it provided for FY 2006. If a State is
unable to maintain the required levels of support for education,
it may apply for and obtain a waiver of the MOE requirements if
it is able to demonstrate that it has not reduced the percentage
of total State revenues spent on education. Examples of how
the MOE compliance effort ensures transparency include:
&#8226; All SFSF applications and amendments are posted at:
http://www.ed.gov/programs/statestabilization/resources.
html
&#61607; Requests for MOE waivers and status of the waiver
applications are posted at:
http://www.ed.gov/programs/statestabilization/applicant.h
tml
&#8226; All SFSF Guidance and Monitoring Plans are posted at:
http://www.ed.gov/programs/statestabilization/applicant.h
tml
Finally, ARRA provided a new level of transparency into the
spending of federal funds at a granular level via the required
Section 1512 Quarterly Reporting by recipients regarding ARRA
awards, spending, and job creation. These data are compiled
and posted by the Recovery, Accountability, and Transparency
Board on Recovery.gov. To serve the financial transparency
needs of education stakeholders, however, the Department
aggregates these data at the state level by program and the
program level by state. The posted data include the detailed
jobs narratives provided by each state on jobs created with SFSF
funds, allowing an unprecedented window into the use of funds
by state and by program. The Department&#8217;s Section 1512
reports are posted at:  http://www.ed.gov/policy/gen/leg/recovery/spending/impact2.ht
ml
The Department intends to build on these ARRA practices to
enhance the transparency of all of its grant programs at the
state level, in conjunction with the upcoming guidance on federal
spending information, including sub-award collection.</OtherInformation></Objective><Objective><Name>College.gov</Name><Description>Create a comprehensive online resource with the help and tools students need to get started.</Description><Identifier>_d54d4ebc-5be5-11df-a9e9-9f847a64ea2a</Identifier><SequenceIndicator>II.G</SequenceIndicator><Stakeholder><Name>Federal Student Aid (FSA) </Name><Description></Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder><Name>High School Students</Name><Description></Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder><Name>Families of High School Students</Name><Description></Description></Stakeholder><OtherInformation>College.gov conveys the Department&#8217;s strong belief that
postsecondary education is an achievable goal for anyone,
regardless of income, ethnicity, age or gender. This unique Web
site motivates students with inspirational stories and information
about planning, preparing and paying for college. With students&#8217;
input and participation, College.gov was created for high school
students and their families as a comprehensive online resource
with the help and tools students need to get started. College.gov
seeks to build an online community that fosters hope, highlights
the opportunity of education beyond high school and empowers
users with clearly defined resources to reach their college
dreams.
The College.gov team has worked to bring transparency,
participation and collaboration to this online experience. Before
beginning work on the project, a &#8220;listening tour&#8221; was held to
gauge the needs of citizens. Students and families from across
the country revealed that they needed answers to the most basic
questions on attaining education beyond high school. Students
said that wanted to hear from and be inspired by others like
them. Through focus groups and usability testing, the target
audience&#8217;s voice is continuously heard on matters of site design,
content and features. User feedback is extremely valued. Every
user-submitted suggestion is logged, discussed by the team, and
then considered during the change management process. A
short survey on the site allows the team to monitor satisfaction
levels, and these responses always trend favorable. All survey
data and site metrics are documented and analyzed each month
to identify areas for improvement.</OtherInformation></Objective></Goal><Goal><Name>Strategic Action Plan for Transparency</Name><Description>Continue to improve transparency to allow greater insight into internal processes and plans and ensure a constant, open dialogue with our stakeholders.</Description><Identifier>_d54d504c-5be5-11df-a9e9-9f847a64ea2a</Identifier><SequenceIndicator>III</SequenceIndicator><Stakeholder><Name></Name><Description></Description></Stakeholder><OtherInformation>While the Department feels that it has made some great strides in
transparency over the past year, we recognize that there are
continuous improvements we can make that will allow greater insight
into internal processes and plans and ensure a constant, open dialogue
with our stakeholders. Below are listed several new and ongoing
efforts by the Department to ensure we are indeed fulfilling our
responsibilities to members of the public to maintain transparency.</OtherInformation><Objective><Name>Flagship Initiative - ED Data Express</Name><Description>Provide a web site designed to improve the public&#8217;s ability to access and explore high value State-level data collected by the Department&#8217;s Office of Elementary and Secondary Education (OESE).</Description><Identifier>_d54d5308-5be5-11df-a9e9-9f847a64ea2a</Identifier><SequenceIndicator>III.A</SequenceIndicator><Stakeholder><Name></Name><Description></Description></Stakeholder><OtherInformation>The President&#8217;s Goals in Education are:
&#8226; for the United States to become number one in the world in
the percentage of population with a college degree by 2020;
and
&#8226; for the United States to significantly reduce gaps in high
school graduation and college access and success by 2020.
In order to achieve these goals, accurate, timely and reliable
information is needed -both to make changes to drastically improve
our education system and measure progress against the President&#8217;s
goals. For example:
&#8226; Parents need to know the strengths and weakness of the schools
in their community when compared to each other and their
neighboring communities.
&#8226; Teachers need to know which instructional methods meet the
needs of their students and which interventions are most
effective in addressing difficult problems.
&#8226; School administrators and policy makers need to know which
programs are most effective in improving outcomes for students
so programs that work can be scaled up and those that aren&#8217;t as
effective can be improved or discarded.
&#8226; Researchers need access to information to help determine what
works and what does not, identify areas where more information
is needed, and drive innovative ideas to improve outcomes for
students.
As technology rapidly transforms and improves the ability to share
information and use it to improve outcomes for students, we must
ensure individual privacy continues to be protected, people understand
what the information means, and data is used appropriately.
A combination of strategic actions will be taken as part of the
Transparency in Education Initiative, such as its work on ED Data
Express to improve access to high-value Department data and
developing and implementing more robust technical assistance and
guidance for ensuring privacy is protected.

ED Data Express is a web site designed to improve the public&#8217;s ability
to access and explore high value State-level data collected by the
Department&#8217;s Office of Elementary and Secondary Education (OESE).
The site is in the final stages of development and focuses mainly on
data reported by States on key K-12 grant programs funded by OESE.
The site currently includes data from EDFacts, Consolidated State
Performance Reports (CSPR), State Accountability Workbooks, and the
National Center for Education Statistics (NCES).
ED Data Express utilizes a web-enabled database application that
allows users to select a particular data element (or set of data
elements) and view it in several different ways. The site includes
current and previous year data on student performance,
demographics, accountability, and some statistical components. Data 
can be viewed in three ways: a state profile page, a data element
explorer, and a build-a-table page. The state profile pages include
charts and tables with key data for each state. The data element
explorer allows users to view a single element across all states, both
graphically and in a table. The state table page allows users to build
customized tables by selecting specific indicators and specific states.
In additional to the data viewing tools, the site includes an &#8220;about&#8221;
page with information about the collections and guidance for
appropriate use, a page with definitions of important terms, a
frequently asked questions page, and links to other education data
resources.
The site is designed to be interactive and to present the data in a
clear, easy to use way, with options to download information into Excel
or manipulate the data within the web site. Members of the general
public, grantees, stakeholder groups, media, and Department of
Education personnel, who are interested in K-12 grant-related data,
are envisioned as its primary users. As such, the site is designed to
accommodate different interests and types of users. For example,
someone interested in quick information about a single state can view
the state profile page for a general overview. Someone who is
interested in information about a particular data element or who wants
the flexibility to build a custom query can use the data element
explorer or state tables tool. The three tools incorporate graphs and
charts to help users visualize the data. Future versions of the site will
include additional data visualization tools, such as a mapping feature
and enhanced graphing tools. ED Data Express is not intended to
meet the needs of individuals, researchers, or organizations looking to
do complex analyses; for that reason it provides links to NCES tools,
so that users who are interested in using full and complete statistics
on the condition of education in the United States may obtain that
data. NCES is the primary federal entity for collecting and analyzing
data related to education in the U.S. and other nations.
ED Data Express is also designed to interface with social networking
applications, such as Facebook and Digg, to better share information in
these newly emerging channels. As the public adopts new ways to
access and use information, the more the Department can adapt and 
share information via these new channels, the more success we will
have in reaching our audiences and addressing their interests.
OESE expects to launch the site internally in early June 2010 and
launch the site publically by July 1, 2010 contingent upon final
Departmental clearance and approval.
Promoting Transparency - 
All information contained on ED Data Express is currently publically
accessible in State-specific files. However, it is published in various
places on the Department&#8217;s web site, mostly in a PDF format. The
information is difficult to find, burdensome to update, and frequently is
released with significant delays. The burden of compiling and using
the data in this format is very high, since a user must open every
State&#8217;s PDF file and manually consolidate the information into a file
that can be used for analysis. A design goal of ED Data Express is to
provide an innovation with a clear &#8220;relative advantage&#8221; over the
current process that is simple to use and provides various ways of
viewing the data. In ED Data Express, the information is consolidated
into one location, and users can quickly select the information they
need, view it several different ways, and download it into Excel for
further analysis. With the data more readily accessible and easy to
explore, the site will facilitate the ability of States and grantees to
learn from one another, and help the Department learn how to share
information properly with people who want to look at data, but are less
familiar with its use than researchers.
Promoting Participation - 
The increased accessibility and ease of use improves the ability of
people to view, consider, and use the State-reported data. It enables
the public and grantees to identify States that may be getting better 
results or using different approaches, thus helps to inform their own
decision-making and program development.
In addition, the ED Data Express web site includes a user feedback
survey that allows OESE to receive ratings, comments, and
suggestions from users about the site. The survey tool is flexible, so
that OESE can add different questions to encourage continued
feedback and dialogue. OESE has discussed the web site at EDFacts
and NCES conferences, and will continue to use those opportunities to
discuss the site and solicit suggestions from attendees. OESE is also
planning to meet with the EDFacts team&#8217;s EIMAC Standing Task Force,
which is a group of approximately ten SEA representatives (some of
which are EDFacts coordinators). EDFacts uses this task force as a
&#8220;sounding board&#8221; for major new initiatives that they have proposed.
OESE believes that this group could be a useful partner, especially in
moving forward with the launch of the site and for future
enhancements.
Promoting Collaboration - 
OESE partnered with the Office of Planning, Evaluation, and Policy
Development (OPEPD) EDFacts team on this project to more efficiently
obtain the relevant data, receive assistance in the design of the site,
and to use the EDFacts Metadata and Process System (EMAPS) to
facilitate the collection and upload of data elements embedded in
documents (e.g., Consolidated State Applications). OESE is working
closely with NCES staff on the design of the Ed Data Express site, and
will utilize their technical expertise to appropriately balance the site
simplicity with the need to properly display data and document data
sources and limitations. OESE met with the Office of the General
Council (OGC) and the Family Policy Compliance Office (FPCO), the
office tasked with administering the Family Education Privacy Rights
Act (FERPA) (a law that requires protection of student records) and will
continue to work with them to ensure that the site is consistent with
statutory and regulatory responsibilities regarding privacy,
confidentiality, security, or other restrictions. The process has
included collaboration with Office of the Chief Information Officer 
(OCIO) to use Department web servers and meet IT security
standards. Finally, OESE has held conversations with other grantmaking
offices that are interested in making their grant program data
more readily accessible.
OESE will gather quantitative information on site usage by tracking
numbers of web page hits. Additionally, OESE will use its Grantee
Satisfaction Survey to solicit feedback from grantees. The Grantee
Satisfaction Survey is an ongoing, government-wide survey that
includes a series of benchmarked questions that are comparable
across agencies. It also allows agencies to include program specific
questions; OESE is taking advantage of this tool to collect input on 11
major grant programs, including several of the Recovery Act grant
programs. Questions about ED Data Express will be added to this
survey to examine the Department&#8217;s use of technology and its success
in making State-reported data more accessible and easy to explore.
The Department views ED Data Express as a first step rather than a
finished product. The experience and lessons learned via OESE&#8217;s
launch of Ed Data Express will offer a new and exciting way of learning
how best to publish grant program related data for general audiences.
As the site matures and expands, the governance structure for Ed
Data Express will also need to evolve. To start that process, at the
request of OESE, EDFacts created a working group within the
Department&#8217;s Data Governance Board (that includes representatives of
the other grant-making offices and key program support offices) to
begin conversations about the sustained management and support of
ED Data Express.</OtherInformation></Objective><Objective><Name>Electronic Data</Name><Description>Timely publishing of electronic data.</Description><Identifier>_d54d5506-5be5-11df-a9e9-9f847a64ea2a</Identifier><SequenceIndicator>III.B</SequenceIndicator><Stakeholder><Name></Name><Description></Description></Stakeholder><OtherInformation></OtherInformation></Objective><Objective><Name>Data.gov</Name><Description>Move our datasets to Data.gov as quickly as practicable.</Description><Identifier>_d54d5704-5be5-11df-a9e9-9f847a64ea2a</Identifier><SequenceIndicator>III.B.1</SequenceIndicator><Stakeholder><Name></Name><Description></Description></Stakeholder><OtherInformation>Data produced by government agencies are often hard to
find or are published in proprietary formats of limited
utility. As a result, a wealth of information remains untapped by the ingenuity and creativity of the American
people. Data.gov is a citizen-friendly platform that
provides access to Federal datasets. With a searchable
data catalog, Data.gov helps the public find, access, and
download non-sensitive Government data and tools in a
variety of formats.
We are currently moving our datasets to Data.gov and will
continue to do so as quickly as practicable.
The National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) has
been the traditional source of high-value4 data at the
Department of Education.
Recently, the Federal Student Aid Data Center was
launched to provide a centralized source for information
and data related to the federal financial assistance
programs. Many of the high-value datasets are released
simultaneously on both the FSA Data Center and Data.gov.
The entire high-value public use data collection of the
NCES is currently available online either at NCES.ed.gov or
at Data.gov. All new public use data sets are posted to
Data.gov when they are released. At time of this
document&#8217;s publication, we currently have the following
available at Data.gov (we have included examples of the
types of questions these data sets are intended to
answer):
&#8226; Common Core of Data, School District Finance Survey, SY 2006-07, FY
2007
What kinds of distance education courses are provided
in the U.S.? What is known about the availability and
use of these courses? How they are delivered to
students? What policies govern them?
&#8226; FAFSA Application Volume 
How many students took the first step toward applying
for college financial assistance by filling out the FAFSA
(Free Application for Federal Student Aid)? How many
students in each state filled it out? What is the
breakdown (number of students who filled it out) by
postsecondary institution?
&#8226; Postsecondary Education Quick Information System (PEQIS)
This file contains data from a quick-response survey
using the Postsecondary Education Quick Information
System (PEQIS). It provides national estimates on
postsecondary education topics (e.g., distance
education, dual-enrollment) among 2-year and 4-year
Title IV eligible, degree-granting institutions.
&#8226; Trends in International Mathematics and Science Study (TIMSS)
How do U.S. students (in 4th and 8th grades) perform
in mathematics and science compared to students other
countries? What factors may be related to achievement
in these subject areas?
Additionally, NCES is in the processes of posting the
following datasets to Data.gov:
NCES Data Releases Scheduled from 2/1/2010 to 6/30/2010
&#8226; 2008-09 Common Core of Data Elementary and Secondary Education
School level nonfiscal data file [Format: tab-separated values text files
(.txt)]
&#8226; 2008-09 Common Core of Data Elementary and Secondary Education
Agency (school district) level nonfiscal data file [Format: tab-separated
values text files (.txt)]
&#8226; 2008-09 Common Core of Data Elementary and Secondary Education State
level nonfiscal data file [Format: tab-separated values text files (.txt)]
&#8226; Fiscal Year 2008 Common Core of Data Elementary and Secondary
Education State Fiscal (National Public Education Finance Survey) data file
[Format: tab-separated values text files (.txt)]
&#8226; 2007-08 Common Core of Data Elementary and Secondary Education State
level dropout and graduation data file [Format: tab-separated values text
files (.txt)]
&#8226; 2007-08 Common Core of Data Elementary and Secondary Education
Agency (school district) level dropout and graduation data file [Format:
tab-separated values text files (.txt)] 
&#8226; Final revised 2007-08 Common Core of Data Elementary and Secondary
Education State level nonfiscal data file [Format: tab-separated values
text files (.txt)]
&#8226; Fall 2008 Integrated Postsecondary Data system (IPEDS) Enrollments
[Format: csv files]
o Enrollments by race/ethnicity, gender, attendance status, and
level of student
o Enrollments by age category, gender, attendance status, and level
of student
o Enrollments by residence and migration of first-time freshman
o Enrollments by total entering class and retention rate
o Major field of study, race/ethnicity, gender, attendance status, and
level of student 2008
o Total entering class and retention rates
&#8226; 2008 Integrated Postsecondary Data system (IPEDS) Graduation Rates
for the 2002 Cohort at 4 year institutions and the 2005 cohort at 2 year
institutions and less than 2 year institutions [Format: csv files]
o Graduation rate data for cohort year 2002 (4-year) and cohort
year 2005 (2-year) institutions
o Graduation rate data for cohort year 2005 (less-than-2-year
institutions)
&#8226; Fiscal Year 2008 Integrated Postsecondary Data system (IPEDS) Financial
Statistics [Format csv files]
o Public institutions - GASB 34/35
o Public institutions - GASB 34/35 (Component units using FASB)
o Public institutions - GASB 34/35 (Component units using GASB)
o Private not-for-profit institutions or Public institutions using FASB
o Private for-profit institutions
&#8226; Beginning Postsecondary Students (BPS) 2004 cohort of entering students
as of 2009
o Create tables and graphs quickly and efficiently using Quick Stats
[Data tool]
o Create complex tables and run linear &amp; logistic regressions using
DAS 2.0 [Data tool]
&#8226; Fast Response Survey System (FRSS89) Technology-based Distance
Education for Public Elementary and Secondary School Students, 2004-05
[Format: ASCII flat file]
&#8226; Fast Response Survey System (FRSS92) Educational Technology in U.S.
Public Schools, Fall 2008 [Format: ASCII flat file]
&#8226; Fast Response Survey System (FRSS93) Educational Technology in Public
School Districts, Fall 2008 [Format: ASCII flat file]
&#8226; Fast Response Survey System (FRSS 95) Teachers' Use of Educational
Technology in U.S. Public Schools [Format: ASCII flat file]
&#8226; Fast Response Survey System (FRSS 96) Alternative Schools and Programs
for Students At Risk of Educational Failure, 2007-08 [Format: ASCII flat
file]</OtherInformation></Objective><Objective><Name>eRulemaking</Name><Description>Participate in Regulations.gov.</Description><Identifier>_d54d59e8-5be5-11df-a9e9-9f847a64ea2a</Identifier><SequenceIndicator>III.B.2</SequenceIndicator><Stakeholder><Name></Name><Description></Description></Stakeholder><OtherInformation>To facilitate the public&#8217;s involvement in the Department&#8217;s
rulemaking process, the Department participates in
Regulations.gov, an electronic, single, Government-wide 
access point that enables the public to submit comments
on different types of federal regulatory documents and to
read and respond to comments submitted by other
members of the public during the public comment period.
Regulations.gov improves the public&#8217;s access to and
participation in rulemaking by providing one central
electronic location to search, retrieve, and read all federal
regulatory material. Through this site, the public can view
a description of regulations currently open for comment,
read the full text of these documents and any supporting
regulatory documents, and submit comments to the
appropriate federal agency. The public uses
Regulations.gov to access Department of Education
proposed, interim final, and final regulations, as well as a
limited number of our other regulatory documents
requesting public comment. We anticipate that the
Department will expand its use of the system to include an
increased number of regulatory documents in the future.
A recent search of Regulations.gov showed that the
Department of Education has received and posted more
than 6,300 public submissions on 980 notices and 100
rulemakings.</OtherInformation></Objective><Objective><Name>IT Dashboard</Name><Description>Show the public how federal IT investments are performing.</Description><Identifier>_d54d5c4a-5be5-11df-a9e9-9f847a64ea2a</Identifier><SequenceIndicator>III.B.3</SequenceIndicator><Stakeholder><Name></Name><Description></Description></Stakeholder><OtherInformation>The IT Dashboard launched in 2009, with a goal of
showing the public how federal IT investments are
performing. At this point, the information in the
Dashboard provides a portion of the information necessary
to support decisions regarding the Department&#8217;s IT
portfolio. As the amount of information in the Dashboard
grows, we foresee a time when results of public review will
be one of the evaluation criteria used for decisions
regarding how we spend IT dollars.
Internally, the visual presentation of information in the
Dashboard is valuable as a tool to allow senior executives
in the Department to quickly recognize key characteristics
of the overall portfolio. As additional views are developed, 
we can have effective discussions about the impact and
results of investment decisions.
We have added steps in our operational IT management
processes to ensure the Dashboard is populated with
current information. Going forward we will seek ways to
incorporate comments, suggestions, risks and issues
received from the public into our governance and capital
planning processes.
We will respond timely, thoroughly and transparently to
any feedback received through the IT Dashboard. As
appropriate, we will modify our agency processes to
address weaknesses that may be identified. We will route
specific suggestions for improvement or ideas that affect
the portfolio through our Enterprise Architecture
processes.
OMB is currently using the IT Dashboard as a way for
federal agencies to submit their IT investment data.
Agencies will update their IT investment data monthly and
submit their complete data for every budget year,
beginning with 2011. OMB plans to expand the amount of
data and extend the analytical capabilities of the IT
Dashboard over time.
The IT Dashboard is available at USAspending.gov.</OtherInformation></Objective><Objective><Name>Recovery.gov</Name><Description>Address the issue of presenting our data in a user-friendly format to ensure its use by the widest possible variety of stakeholders.</Description><Identifier>_d54d5e48-5be5-11df-a9e9-9f847a64ea2a</Identifier><SequenceIndicator>III.B.4</SequenceIndicator><Stakeholder><Name></Name><Description></Description></Stakeholder><OtherInformation>American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA)
The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009
(ARRA) requires an unprecedented level of transparency
into government spending. In particular it mandates:
&#8226; The creation of &#8220;a web site on the Internet to be
named Recovery.gov, to foster greater accountability
and transparency in the use of funds made available
in this Act.&#8221; Recovery.gov is operated by the
Recovery Accountability and Transparency Board, 
which was also created by the Recovery Act.
http://www.recovery.gov
&#8226; The creation of an agency-specific Recovery
webpage located within the Agency site and
identified on the home page.
http://www.ed.gov/policy/gen/leg/recovery/
&#8226; Weekly reporting by Agencies on obligations,
outlays, and activities
&#8226; Quarterly reporting by Recipients on awards,
spending, jobs impact, and project status.
The Department of Education has been an active
participant in the development and on-going evolution of
these sites and tools since their inception. As a result of
these initiatives, education stakeholders can now track on
a weekly basis the speed with which the Department is
awarding its ARRA funding and the extent to which States
are putting this money to work. This provides a new level
of accountability for federal and state education spending.
At the local level, parents and community members can
enter the zip code of their local school district, identify
exactly how much ARRA funding has been awarded and
spent to date, and scrutinize vendor payments over
$25,000, holding local officials accountable for their
decisions.
As the Department gains experience with the new level of
transparency provided via Recovery.gov, ED continues to
address the issue of presenting its data in a user-friendly
format to ensure its use by the widest possible variety of
stakeholders. In doing so, ED has gone beyond the
requirements of recovery.gov in the following areas:
&#8226; Weekly ARRA spending to date is posted on
ED.gov/recovery with detailed state and programlevel
detail. This provides the appropriate level of
aggregation to help citizens understand the flow of
funds in their state to different programs, and for
program advocates to understand state-level 
differences in flow of funds for the program in
question.
&#8226; Section 1512 award, spending, and jobs reporting
data are posted on ed.gov/recovery at the state and
program level. This allows citizens to assess their
State&#8217;s progress in using ARRA funds to save or
create jobs, and allows policymakers to evaluate the
impact of different ED ARRA programs relative to job
creation.
This enhanced level of transparency for ARRA programs,
and the attention to both the availability and accessibility
of the information presented has set a new standard of
transparency for the Department. The next step for the
Department is to apply these principles to all programs,
not just to Recovery Act programs. In particular, FFATA
sub-award reporting implementation will be critical to
achieving greater transparency into education funding at
the local level.</OtherInformation></Objective><Objective><Name>USASpending.gov</Name><Description>Provide full disclosure to the public of all entities or organizations receiving federal funds.</Description><Identifier>_d54d617c-5be5-11df-a9e9-9f847a64ea2a</Identifier><SequenceIndicator>III.B.5</SequenceIndicator><Stakeholder><Name></Name><Description></Description></Stakeholder><OtherInformation>The Federal Funding Accountability and
Transparency Act of 2006 (S. 2590) is an Act of
Congress that requires the full disclosure to the public of
all entities or organizations receiving federal funds
beginning in fiscal year (FY) 2007. The purpose of the Act
is to provide the public with information about how their
tax dollars are spent in greater detail in order to build
public trust in government and credibility in the
professionals who use these dollars.
The Act requires a single searchable web site, accessible
by the public for free that includes the following
information for each federal award:
1. the name of the entity receiving the award;
2. the amount of the award; 
3. information on the award including transaction type,
funding agency, etc;
4. the location of the entity receiving the award;
5. a unique identifier of the entity receiving the award.
Federal awards include grants, sub-grants, loans, awards,
cooperative agreements and other forms of financial
assistance as well as contracts, subcontracts, purchase
orders, task orders, and delivery orders. The legislation
does not require inclusion of individual transactions below
$25,000 or credit card transactions before October 1,
2008.
The searchable web site USAspending.gov was launched
in December 2007, and is maintained by the Office of
Management and Budget. The site provides citizens the
ability to look at contracts, grants, loans, and other types
of spending across many agencies. The data available on
USAspending.gov is provided by the Federal Assistance
Awards Data System (FAADS) and the Federal
Procurement Data System (FPDS).
The majority of grant, loan and some procurement data
are also submitted by agencies. An updated version of the
USAspending.gov Guidance was issued on June 1, 2009;
which defines award reporting requirements necessary to
comply with both the Federal Funding Accountability and
Transparency Act (FFATA) and the American Recovery and
Reinvestment Act (Recovery Act). The updated guidance
required federal agencies to report data on their awards in
never-before-required timeliness and detail. In June 2009,
USAspending.gov began processing agency file
submissions twice per month, on the 5th and the 20th,
instead of once per month. Data on the web site is
generally refreshed in the first and third week of every
month.
The latest guidance is available at the following link: M-09-
19, Guidance on Data Submission under the Federal
Funding Accountability and Transparency Act (FFATA).</OtherInformation></Objective><Objective><Name>EDFacts</Name><Description>Put performance data at the center of policy, management and
budget decisions for all K-12 educational programs.</Description><Identifier>_d54d649c-5be5-11df-a9e9-9f847a64ea2a</Identifier><SequenceIndicator>III.B.6</SequenceIndicator><Stakeholder><Name></Name><Description></Description></Stakeholder><OtherInformation>EDFacts is a U.S. Department of Education initiative to put
performance data at the center of policy, management and
budget decisions for all K-12 educational programs.
EDFacts centralizes performance data supplied by K-12
state educational agencies (SEAs) with other data assets,
such as financial grant information, within the Department
to enable better analysis and use in policy development,
planning and management. The purpose of EDFacts is to:
&#8226; Place the use of robust, timely performance data at
the core of decision and policymaking in education.
&#8226; Reduce state and district data burden and streamline
data practices.
&#8226; Improve state data capabilities by providing
resources and technical assistance.
&#8226; Provide data for planning, policy, and management
at the federal, state, and local levels.
Until now EDFacts has only been available to Department
and State analysts. In the interest of transparency the
Department plans to make these data publicly available for
the first time and will start by moving five datasets to
Data.gov this fiscal year:
1) Schools in need of improvement since 2004-05
2) Districts in need of improvement since 2004-05
3) Statewide assessment results in reading since 2003-
04
4) Statewide assessment results in mathematics since
2003-04
5) District level graduation rates reported under ESEA
for 2006-07 and 2007-08</OtherInformation></Objective><Objective><Name>Federal Student Aid (FSA) Data Center</Name><Description>Promote transparency and increase self-service opportunities for
our customers and stakeholders.</Description><Identifier>_d54d66e0-5be5-11df-a9e9-9f847a64ea2a</Identifier><SequenceIndicator>III.B.7</SequenceIndicator><Stakeholder><Name></Name><Description></Description></Stakeholder><OtherInformation>In September 2009, Federal Student Aid established the
FSA Data Center, a centralized, on-line source for FSA
programmatic data. The Data Center, available at
www.FSADataCenter.ed.gov , compiles information from
across the Department in an effort to promote 
transparency and increase self-service opportunities for
our customers and stakeholders. The site is intended to
estimate customer needs and proactively provide
information to them in a useful and easily accessible way.
To that end, in creating the Data Center, we reviewed
routine requests received through the press, from the Hill
or through the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) and
produced a series of new data reports to respond to the
most common requests. For example, we created the
Programmatic Volume Reports, which provide users both
federal student loan and grant data by school on a
quarterly basis. In addition, customers can easily access
application, school, lender, guaranty agency, and default
data as well as the Ensuring Continued Access to Student
Loans Act (ECASLA) Loan Purchase Program Activity
Reports on the Data Center.
As our programs evolve and the needs of our customers
change, we will continuously review the data we produce
and update the site accordingly. In the months ahead, we
plan to begin posting Clery Act reviews, foreign gifts
information and FSA contracts. As these data become
available, we will register it with the Data.gov Web site.</OtherInformation></Objective><Objective><Name>National Center for Education Statistics (NCES)</Name><Description>Collect and analyze data related to education in the United States and other nations.</Description><Identifier>_d54d6a0a-5be5-11df-a9e9-9f847a64ea2a</Identifier><SequenceIndicator>III.B.8</SequenceIndicator><Stakeholder><Name>National Center for Education Statistics (NCES)</Name><Description></Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder><Name>Institute of Education Sciences (IES)</Name><Description>The scientific arm of the U.S. Department of Education.</Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder><Name>Education Policymakers</Name><Description></Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder><Name>Education Data Users</Name><Description></Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder><Name>Educators</Name><Description></Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder><Name>Educational Organizations</Name><Description></Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder><Name>Federal Education Officials</Name><Description></Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder><Name>State Education Officials</Name><Description></Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder><Name>Local Education Officials</Name><Description></Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder><Name>Congress</Name><Description></Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder><Name>The news media</Name><Description></Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder><Name>Researchers</Name><Description></Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder><Name>Students</Name><Description></Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder><Name>Parents</Name><Description></Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder><Name>The General Public</Name><Description></Description></Stakeholder><OtherInformation>The National Center for Education Statistics (NCES), one of
the principal federal statistical agencies, is the primary
federal entity for collecting and analyzing data related to
education in the United States and other nations. NCES is
located within the Institute of Education Sciences (IES),
the scientific arm of the U.S. Department of Education.
The mission of NCES is to collect, analyze, report, and
disseminate education information and statistics in a
manner that
o meets the highest methodological standards;
o is timely, relevant, and useful to practitioners,
researchers, policymakers, and the public; 
o is objective, secular, neutral, and non-ideological;
and
o is free of partisan political influence and racial,
cultural, gender, or regional bias.
NCES publishes public-use and restricted-use datasets and
reports that describe, estimate, forecast, or analyze
education statistics and ensure that all users have
equitable and timely access to data. NCES statistics are
used to track progress and trends, identify problems and
opportunities for policy improvement, and manage and
monitor programs.
With more than 20 survey programs, NCES covers
education topics from birth through adulthood using crosssectional
databases, longitudinal studies, and
assessments. In addition, NCES coordinates participation
in international assessments, administers quick-response
surveys on pressing policy issues, assists state and local
education agencies in improving their statistical systems,
manages grants to develop statewide longitudinal data
systems across the nation, and reviews and reports on
education activities in the U.S. and foreign countries.
NCES has a Statistical Standards Program that consults
and advises on methodological and statistical aspects
involved in the design, collection, and analysis of education
data. NCES program staff also provides consultation and
advice to other organizations and agencies, and to other
offices within the Department of Education as the need
arises. This program publishes and updates the NCES
Statistical Standards and monitors and administers
restricted-use data licenses for Center&#8217;s data products.
NCES activities include:
o Provide consistent, reliable, complete, and accurate
indicators of education status and trends.
o Report timely, useful, and high-quality data to
education policymakers and data users. 
o Publish reports to distribute educational statistics to
a wide audience.
o Provide data in the form of data files and web tools
available for research and analysis.
o Work with state and local education agencies on
issues of data collection, maintenance, and analysis.
o Assures compliance with Section 183 of the
Education Sciences Reform Act, (ESRA) which
prohibits the release of personally identifiable
information by the Department, and includes felony
criminal penalties, including imprisonment.
NCES serves:
o Educators and educational organizations
o Federal, state, and local education officials
o Congress
o The news media
o Researchers
o Students
o Parents
o The general public
You can find additional information about NCES at the National Center
for Education Statistics (NCES) Home Page, a part of the U.S.
Department of Education.</OtherInformation></Objective><Objective><Name>Participation and Collaboration Communities</Name><Description>Use a number of technologies to encourage public participation and collaboration. </Description><Identifier>_d54d6c9e-5be5-11df-a9e9-9f847a64ea2a</Identifier><SequenceIndicator>III.C</SequenceIndicator><Stakeholder><Name></Name><Description></Description></Stakeholder><OtherInformation>The Department is using a number of technologies to encourage
public participation and collaboration. We highlighted college.gov
at the beginning of this plan and describe several others below.
While this is the future direction of the Department, it is just the
beginning. Online communities are already becoming
commonplace &#8211; a trend we expect to continue and accelerate.
Some of these communities will be long term &#8211; like college.gov &#8211;
and others may be special purpose focus groups that come into
being to solve a problem and dissolve at the end of their need. If
transparency allows visibility then these tools can provide the
rich participation and collaboration experiences needed online to
support communities?.</OtherInformation></Objective><Objective><Name>Public Participation at ED.gov</Name><Description>Encourage public participation using web-based collaboration tools.</Description><Identifier>_d54d6ef6-5be5-11df-a9e9-9f847a64ea2a</Identifier><SequenceIndicator>III.C.1</SequenceIndicator><Stakeholder><Name></Name><Description></Description></Stakeholder><OtherInformation>The Department of Education encourages public
participation using web-based collaboration tools. The
Department of Education will continue to use web-based
tools available at ed.gov and other third-party offerings to
engage the public in a discussion on topics related to
education.
The Department of Education recently deployed Drupal, an
open-source web platform, in part to provide collaboration
opportunities. Through its modular architecture, Drupal
provides www.ed.gov capabilities such as public
commenting on web pages, voting on topics and discussion
forums.
In the future, ED will use a mixture of these tools to
encourage public feedback on education activities,
classroom and administrative best practices, high-value
data set releases and other special topics as they arise.
An example of public commenting on ed.gov web pages
can be found on the 2010 National Education Technology
Plan (http://www.ed.gov/technology/netp-2010). The
Office of Educational Technology published a draft of this
document online and invited the public to comment. The
plan describes how information and communication
technologies can help transform American education. It
provides concrete goals to inform state and local 
educational technology plans, and recommendations to
inspire research, development, and innovation. &#8220;We are
open to your comments,&#8221; Secretary Duncan said in a video
announcing the plan. &#8220;Tell us about how technology has
changed your school or classroom.&#8221;
Interested parties are able to attach comments specifically
on individual pages of the plan. As part of the feature,
participants are able to reply online to existing comments,
creating a forum for discussion. This targeted feedback is
being gathered and analyzed and will be contributory to
future drafts of the plan.
The ED.gov blog (http://www.ed.gov/blog) is another tool
used for gathering topical feedback. The blog features a
&#8220;Join the Conversation&#8221; section that highlights blog posts
where public feedback is encouraged. This extends
engagement opportunities such as the Department&#8217;s
&#8220;Listening and Learning Tour&#8221; events by providing an
additional venue for the public to participate in the open
discussion.
ED does not produce significant education materials;
however, we do maintain a one-stop website designed to
make it easy for teachers, parents, students, and citizens
to find education materials from ALL federal agencies. The
website, FREE, is one of ED&#8217;s most popular web offerings
because nearly all the 1,600 resources available there are
free for re-use. Federal Resources for Educational
Excellence is available at FREE -- http://www.free.ed.gov/.</OtherInformation></Objective><Objective><Name>Encouraging Office Participation at ED.gov</Name><Description>Provide streamlined methods for our offices to publish online content.</Description><Identifier>_d54d7572-5be5-11df-a9e9-9f847a64ea2a</Identifier><SequenceIndicator>III.C.2</SequenceIndicator><Stakeholder><Name></Name><Description></Description></Stakeholder><OtherInformation>Another reason for choosing Drupal as the ED.gov web
platform is that it provides streamlined methods for our
offices to publish online content. Shortly after this plan is
published, we will provide a new content management
system that makes it easier to keep office web pages
updated with current information and developments and
that includes RSS feeds. The goal is to encourage an
open, continuously-updating information hub powered by
the offices that make up our Department. This ability 
creates a stronger connection between our employees and
the stakeholders that rely on us.</OtherInformation></Objective><Objective><Name>OpenEducation.IdeaScale.com</Name><Description>Use IdeaScale to gather public feedback.</Description><Identifier>_d54d78e2-5be5-11df-a9e9-9f847a64ea2a</Identifier><SequenceIndicator>III.C.3</SequenceIndicator><Stakeholder><Name></Name><Description></Description></Stakeholder><OtherInformation>As part of the development of this plan, ED used
IdeaScale, along with other federal agencies, in February
and March of 2010 to gather public feedback. During that
period, over 100 ideas and 200 comments were collected
from the public. This feedback was reviewed and taken
into consideration for the formation of this plan.</OtherInformation></Objective><Objective><Name>Open Innovation Web Portal</Name><Description>Support the development of path-breaking new ideas, the validation of approaches that have demonstrated promise, and the scale-up of our nation&#8217;s most successful and proven education innovations.</Description><Identifier>_d54d7b62-5be5-11df-a9e9-9f847a64ea2a</Identifier><SequenceIndicator>III.C.4</SequenceIndicator><Stakeholder><Name></Name><Description></Description></Stakeholder><OtherInformation>The Department&#8217;s Investing in Innovation (i3) fund
supports the development of path-breaking new ideas, the
validation of approaches that have demonstrated promise,
and the scale-up of our nation&#8217;s most successful and
proven education innovations. The Open Innovation
Portal, available at http://innovation.ed.gov, provides a
public forum for all who wish to participate in creating
opportunities for partnership and local private and public
funding &#8211; potentially multiplying many times over the
federal funding opportunity. This web portal connects
grant applicants, stakeholders, funders, and other
participants to cultivate innovative ideas related to
education. The portal allows the posting, commenting and
scoring of ideas. It carries additional features such as
inclusion of video clips, idea leaderboards and challenges
from non-profit partners.</OtherInformation></Objective><Objective><Name>Employee Participation through OpenED</Name><Description>Establish a process through which every government worker can submit ideas on how to save money.</Description><Identifier>_d54d7efa-5be5-11df-a9e9-9f847a64ea2a</Identifier><SequenceIndicator>III.C.5</SequenceIndicator><Stakeholder><Name>PPSS Staff </Name><Description>To sustain and manage all operations of the OpenED
Forum, PPSS staff created a partnership between PPSS
(OPEPD) and OS and set up a Steering Committee of staff
representing both offices. PPSS staff run operations of
OpenED Forum and OS staff provide leadership and input
on operations.
The Steering Committee established a reading committee
for the purpose of reviewing the hundreds of ideas
submitted to the Forum.</Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder><Name>The Reading Committee</Name><Description>The OpenED Forum Reading Committee reviews and
manages the evaluation process of Forum postings for the
purpose of determining what ideas are beneficial that may
improve or enhance the work of the Department. The
Committee connects with the OpenED Steering Committee
throughout the review process to ensure concurrence
between both Committees and adherence to the goals of
OpenED Forum.
The Reading Committee consists of 7 members with 6
members selected from three different principal offices.
Each principal office designates a manager and nonmanager
staff member to represent their office. This
&#8220;mixed&#8221; membership provides a balance between levels of
leadership within the Department. The Reading
Committee serves for a period of six months after which a
new group of representatives from three other Principal
Operating Components (POCs) are designated to serve.</Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder><Name>Steering Committee</Name><Description>The Steering Committee determines the three POC&#8217;s that
will be asked to designate staff to work as the Reading
Committee for a period of six months. The Steering
Committee reviews the work of the Reading Committee
including its recommendations and POC reviews of ideas
considered for implementation. The Steering Committee
determines what ideas will be implemented and sends their 
recommendation to the Chief of Staff for approval. For
each idea implemented, the Steering Committee is
responsible for ensuring that the ED employee who
generated the original idea receives recognition by ED
leadership.
PPSS staff on the Steering Committee represents ED at the
government-wide ideation community run by the Assistant
Deputy Chief Technology Officer, Office of Science and
Technology Policy in the Executive Office of the President.
PPSS staff responds to emails and calls from employees
across ED related to the OpenED initiative. The Steering
Committee coordinates all ED-wide communications for
OpenED and advertises regularly to encourage
participation.</Description></Stakeholder><OtherInformation>OpenED&#8212;President Obama pledged to look for budgetcutting
ideas &#8220;from the bottom up,&#8221; saying he would
establish a process through which every government
worker could submit ideas on how to save money. In
February 2009, to heed the President&#8217;s call, Secretary
Duncan established in the Department the OpenED project
to help identify cost savings and improvements across the
agency.
OpenED is an established Department-wide employee idea
creation and collaboration project created and managed by
the Office of Planning, Evaluation and Policy Development,
Policy and Program Studies Service (PPSS), for the Office
of the Secretary (OS), Chief of Staff. Along with an email
account and hard-copy suggestion box, OpenED operates
an online forum that provides the opportunity for
employees to engage in ongoing, productive discussions
about ideas to enhance the work of the Department. The
Forum seeks to draw upon the institutional knowledge and
creativity of all ED employees to improve programs and
Department operations.
This IT application allows all employees access to the
system using their network authorization. Once in the
system, employees can enter an idea into the Forum and
other employees may read or comment on the new idea.
All entries are accessible and visible to each employee in
the agency. This open discussion typically leads to further
development of the idea or results in a better solution
surfacing relative to the topic. Employees can vote on
ideas in the Forum resulting in the most highly rated idea
(based on the greatest number of yes votes) rising to the
top of the list. Employees are encouraged to enter into
discussions and participate regularly in Forum discussions.
OpenED Forum can be accessed from connectED, the
Department&#8217;s Intranet web site.
To date, 1,124 employees (approximately 25 percent of ED
employees) have logged into OpenED Forum accumulating
a total of 8,519 visits to the site since its inception.
Currently, the Forum contains eight topics for discussion
that have generated approximately 250 new ideas,
producing 195 sublevel discussions about these ideas.
One topic alone received 62 new ideas, generating 72
sublevel postings. To date all ideas have been reviewed,
59 ideas were approved to send forward to ED senior
leaders for their approval and next steps. Senior leaders
provided responses to 25 ideas to date. These responses
are posted online in OpenED Forum and on ConnectED.
Sustainable governance structure:
To sustain and manage all operations of the OpenED
Forum, PPSS staff created a partnership between PPSS
(OPEPD) and OS and set up a Steering Committee of staff
representing both offices. PPSS staff run operations of
OpenED Forum and OS staff provide leadership and input
on operations.
The Steering Committee established a reading committee
for the purpose of reviewing the hundreds of ideas
submitted to the Forum.</OtherInformation></Objective><Objective><Name>Internal Processes</Name><Description>Improve internal processes.</Description><Identifier>_d54d81c0-5be5-11df-a9e9-9f847a64ea2a</Identifier><SequenceIndicator>III.D</SequenceIndicator><Stakeholder><Name></Name><Description></Description></Stakeholder><OtherInformation></OtherInformation></Objective><Objective><Name>Public Notifications</Name><Description>Notify the public of important events and information updates via its web site and other social media tools.</Description><Identifier>_d54d8562-5be5-11df-a9e9-9f847a64ea2a</Identifier><SequenceIndicator>III.D.1</SequenceIndicator><Stakeholder><Name>The Public</Name><Description></Description></Stakeholder><OtherInformation>The Department of Education notifies the public of important
events and information updates via its web site and other
social media tools. Below is a description of the tools currently
in use:
* Electronic newsletters &#8211; ED has multiple periodic electronic
newsletters that inform parents, teachers, education
stakeholders and other members. These electronic
newsletters are open to the public via ED&#8217;s opt-in policy in
which subscribers may stop delivery at any time. EDInfo,
ED Review, Education Innovator, IESNEws, Research e-
News, Thursdays Notes, Touching Base and PreventionED
are the currently available newsletters, and ED will
continue to create newsletters as new special topics are
indentified. For more information on ED&#8217;s electronic
newsletters, please visit:
http://www.ed.gov/news/newsletters/.
* ED.gov &#8220;Blog&#8221; &#8211; The ED.gov Blog is a primary tool for the
Department of Education to publish and promote up-todate information on agency and secretary events and news
headlines. In addition to publishing information, the blog
also allows for inclusion of videos, opportunities for public
commenting and electronic subscription via Really Simple
Syndication (RSS) features found in third-party blog
reading software. ED plans on extending its blog tools to
other offices within the Department. The main ED.gov
blog can be found at: http://www.ed.gov/blog/.
* Media releases &#8211; Frequently throughout the day, the
Department of Education releases newsworthy items via its
electronic press room. This section of ed.gov features
press releases, speeches, media advisories and the
Secretary&#8217;s weekly schedule. ED&#8217;s Press Room is located
at: http://www.ed.gov/news/landing.jhtml .
* Federal Register &#8211; The Department of Education frequently
publishes proposed and final regulations, announcements
and other documents in the Federal Register database
maintained by the Government Printing Office. ED updates
its web site to provide a listing of Federal Register notices
as well as provides a search capability. ED&#8217;s Federal
Register page is available at:
http://www.ed.gov/news/fedregister/
* Twitter &#8211; Twitter is an online social network tool that sends
status updates to subscribers. ED uses Twitter daily to
send important updates of Department activities. The
main ED Twitter feed is available at
http://twitter.com/usedgov and others listed at
http://www.ed.gov/about/overview/focus/socialmedia.
html.
* Facebook &#8211; Facebook is another online social network tool
which ED uses to send updates to subscribers. Facebook is
used daily to send important Department and Secretary
updates. The main ED Facebook page is
http://www.facebook.com/ED.gov and others are available
at http://www.ed.gov/about/overview/focus/socialmedia.
html.
* YouTube &#8211; YouTube is a video sharing service which ED
uses to distribute audio/video clips. ED&#8217;s YouTube channel
features taped stakeholder meetings, messages from
senior officials and other special topic features. The
YouTube channel for Education can be found at
http://www.youtube.com/usedgov.
* FedBizOpps.gov &#8211; ED posts synopses of proposed contract
actions as well as contract solicitations on FedBizOpps.gov,
which is the single point on the Internet where vendors
can access information needed to bid on government
contracts. Vendors wishing to do business with ED may
view synopses and download solicitations that they are
interested in bidding on.</OtherInformation></Objective><Objective><Name>Records Management for National Archiving</Name><Description>Develop and implement strategies and programs designed to ensure compliance with federal information management requirements.</Description><Identifier>_d54d8990-5be5-11df-a9e9-9f847a64ea2a</Identifier><SequenceIndicator>III.D.2</SequenceIndicator><Stakeholder><Name>Records Management and Privacy Division</Name><Description></Description></Stakeholder><OtherInformation>The Records Management and Privacy Division is
responsible for developing and implementing strategies
and programs designed to ensure compliance with federal
information management requirements
In performing its responsibilities, the Division:
&#8226; Serves as the Department&#8217;s principal authority and
representative on records management statutory,
regulatory and policy requirements to assure
compliance with National Archives and Records
Administration (NARA) directives.
&#8226; Serves as the Department&#8217;s primary liaison with OMB
and other agencies on inter-agency privacy safeguard
and breach notification initiatives.
&#8226; Develops clear and consistent business rules
(standards) for records management; administrative
safeguards for protecting personally identifiable
information; and risk-based information breach
notification actions.
&#8226; Provides guidance and instruction to Department staff
for the appropriate handling, maintenance, and
disposition of records.
&#8226; Provides guidance and instruction to Department staff
regarding processes and procedures that protect
personally identifiable information from improper
disclosure, including information retained Privacy Act
Systems of Records (SORs) and information safeguarded
by the requirements of Section 208 of the EGovernment
Act of 2002.
&#8226; Develops and provides print and web-based training to
Department employees and contractors regarding the
unit's mission.
&#8226; Oversees the implementation and management of
Department-wide systems and databases that support
the successful and efficient handling of records and
privacy safeguards administration.
&#8226; Coordinates inter-agency development, review and
approval of Computer Matching Agreements (CMAs) in
support of the Department&#8217;s Data Integrity Board.
Information is available online at Regulatory Information
Management Services.</OtherInformation></Objective><Objective><Name>Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) Administration</Name><Description>Ensure a presumption of openness is applied to all decisions involving the FOIA by increasing awareness through training, proactive and discretionary release of records and increasing efficiency.</Description><Identifier>_d54d8c9c-5be5-11df-a9e9-9f847a64ea2a</Identifier><SequenceIndicator>III.D.3</SequenceIndicator><Stakeholder><Name></Name><Description></Description></Stakeholder><OtherInformation>In addition to publicizing the President&#8217;s FOIA
Memorandum and Attorney General&#8217;s FOIA Guidelines, the
Department of Education has taken many steps to ensure
a presumption of openness is applied to all decisions
involving the FOIA by increasing awareness through
training, proactive and discretionary release of records and
increasing efficiency.
Increasing Awareness through Training: The Department
of Education is developing a FOIA Training Curriculum with
modules focused on the various groups of employees and 
their specific responsibility for administering the FOIA, i.e.,
Program Office FOIA Coordinators, FOIA Public Liaisons,
new employees, and managers.
1) The &#8220;FOIA Overview Module,&#8221; the first module in
the series, will provide basic information about
the FOIA such as the FOIA&#8217;s purpose, guidelines,
exemptions, searches, and internal processes.
The goal is for the module to be disseminated to
new employees upon entry, and to all Department
employees, electronically, on an annual basis.
2) The development of the modules is in progress
and the &#8220;FOIA Overview&#8221; is expected to roll out
before the end of the fiscal year.
Developing Processes for Proactive and Discretionary
Releases of Records: The Department of Education has
developed processes for proactive and discretionary
releases of records. The Department has defined
&#8220;proactive release&#8221; as the release of information in
advance of a FOIA request; and defined &#8220;discretionary
release&#8221; as the release of information which legally can be
withheld but which the Department has decided, within its
discretion, to release.
The Department is identifying types of documents that
have been requested in previous years and now
proactively releases responsive documents into the public
domain via the FOIA e-Reading Room, in advance of
receiving a FOIA request. Annually, the Department
receives more than 700 requests for contracts, grant
applications, and information about federally funded
programs to include ARRA related documents. The
Department&#8217;s FOIA Service Center consults with senior
agency personnel, including the Office of Legislation and
Congressional Affairs, Office of Communication &amp;
Outreach, Contracts &amp; Acquisitions Management, Office of
General Counsel and relevant subject matter experts to
identify material for proactive release and in concert with
the Office of the Chief Information Officer to get these 
types of documents published in the FOIA e-Reading
Room.
In response to the Attorney General&#8217;s FOIA Guidelines, the
Department, through its two-level review process, works
to ensure that a foreseeable harm is linked to any
information falling within the scope of a discretionary
exemption and if no harm is found&#8212;or the Department
determines that the information may otherwise be
released&#8212;the information is discretionarily released.
Implementing a two-level quality review of documents not
fully-released: The Department conducts at least a twolevel
review of documents that are deemed NOT fully
releasable. During this second review, special attention is
focused on ensuring a foreseeable harm has been
established and segregated information is released. The
two-level review is believed to significantly decrease the
number of administrative appeals.
Populating the FOIA e-Reading Room in a manner to
ensure rapid distribution of information: The Department
populates the FOIA e-Reading Room with frequently
requested documents, proactively released documents,
and discretionarily released documents. Additionally, the
Department is providing access to these types of
documents and others, using hyperlinks, located in the e-
Reading Room, to lead requesters directly to program
offices&#8217; web sites making it easier for the public to locate
information.
The Department of Education&#8217;s FOIA Service Center has
taken steps to ensure that the system it uses for
responding to requests is effective and efficient. The FOIA
Service Center has addressed the key roles played by the
broad spectrum of agency personnel who work with FOIA
professionals by:
&#8226; Reviewing FOIA Policy: After a review of internal and
external policies, procedures, and workload, the
Department determined its FOIA regulation and agency
directive both need updating. The update will 
promulgate streamlined processes to eliminate
unnecessary bureaucratic hurdles, provide mandatory
requirements for program allocation of resource levels
to fulfill the FOIA workload, and establish mandatory
participation in training/meetings for FOIA
professionals. The regulation is in the final stages of
approval, and the FOIA Directive is expected to be
issued for Departmental clearance before the end of the
fiscal year.
&#8226; Evaluating the Agency&#8217;s FOIA case management
workflow system/procedures: The Department
currently uses a commercial off-the-shelf (COTS) case
management and workflow system with many features
and benefits. In an effort to ensure that the system for
responding to requests is effective and efficient, the
Department evaluated its use of various features. The
Department found that the use of features, such as the
redaction tool and electronic document file cabinet, has
transformed the work of FOIA processing from paper,
manual labor and needlessly repetitive tasks, to
automated processes commanded by menus and icons.
The Department system electronically stores, retrieves,
redacts, and prints documents for delivery to FOIA
requesters. It also keeps track of FOIA processing
statistics and fees, and generates reports on the
number, type, and disposition of FOIA requests
processed. The Department has augmented technology
and contractor support to achieve improvements at the
processing level.
&#8226; Identifying a FOIA IT contact within the FOIA Service
Center: In an effort to ensure FOIA professionals have
sufficient IT support for the FOIA case management
system, a FOIA Public Liaison has been designated as
the IT administrator for the case management workflow
system. Instead of calling the Department&#8217;s &#8220;Help
Desk,&#8221; for IT support, FOIA Coordinators are able to
resolve most electronic FOIA issues through a single
point of contact by calling the FOIA Service Center&#8217;s
Hotline number. 
The Department&#8217;s key FOIA processing metrics, the 2009
FOIA Annual Report, is posted on the Department&#8217;s FOIA
Homepage along with various other FOIA resources at:
http://www.ed.gov/policy/gen/leg/foia/foiatoc.html. The
2009 Annual Report is posted in machine-readable format
as required by the Open Government Directive.
Additionally, in concert with the Office of the Chief
Information Officer, the Department ensures its FOIA web
site is updated with many other user-friendly documents
as well as links to each program offices&#8217; FOIA e-Reading
Rooms.
The Department has a backlog. However, there is a
reduction in the total number of backlog cases since the
end of FY 2009. \
The Department of Education shows a 12 percent increase in the
number of requests where records have been released in full
when compared with the previous year&#8217;s Annual Report. In
2009, 720 records were released in full compared to 644 in
2008; 32 percent of requests received were released in full.
However, in 2009, 859 records were released in part compared
to 1,029 in 2008, which indicates a 17 percent decrease in the
number of requests partially released.
The Department of Education is taking at least three steps to
improve timeliness in responding to requests and to
administrative appeals by:
Improving FOIA Intake procedures: The Department&#8217;s FOIA
Service Center has created standard operating procedures to
ensure, at Intake, that only perfected requests are sent to a
program office for search and processing; requests are assigned
and electronically sent to the correct program office; and a
target date is issued for when the case should be completed.
Determinations regarding requests for fee waivers and expedited
processing are made and communicated to the requesters by the
Intake Team and issues are resolved before the case is assigned
to a program office.
Creating access to documents in advance of receiving FOIA
requests: The Department&#8217;s FOIA Service Center assists program
offices with populating the FOIA e-Reading Room with frequently
requested documents, proactively released documents, and
discretionarily released documents. The Department is providing
access to these types of documents using hyperlinks, located in
the e-Reading Room, to lead requesters directly to program
offices&#8217; web sites making it easier for the public to locate
information.
Increase Awareness of Department&#8217;s response to FOIA:
Monthly, the Department&#8217;s FOIA Service Center disseminates a
Department-wide monthly report of overdue cases. Since many
program offices use their own FOIA tracking mechanisms, the
dissemination of this report provides an opportunity to ensure
the integrity of the data within the case management workflow
system. The report highlights the Department&#8217;s total number of
overdue cases, overdue by program office, number of days,
average age and median age. Additionally, the FOIA Service
Center conducts bi-weekly appeals meetings to ensure new
appeals are acknowledged, tracked, and requirements for
documentation are forwarded to the Office of General Counsel
for review, i.e. documentation of search, justification for
withholding, etc.
The Department of Education is committed to assisting with the
new Office of Government Information Services&#8217; FOIA mediation
efforts.</OtherInformation></Objective><Objective><Name>Congressional Requests for Information</Name><Description>Coordinate all Department matters relating to Congress.</Description><Identifier>_d54d8f76-5be5-11df-a9e9-9f847a64ea2a</Identifier><SequenceIndicator>III.D.4</SequenceIndicator><Stakeholder><Name>Office of Legislation and Congressional Affairs (OLCA)</Name><Description></Description></Stakeholder><OtherInformation>The Department of Education's Office of Legislation and
Congressional Affairs (OLCA) has a wide range of
responsibilities, the most important of which is
coordinating all Department matters relating to Congress.
OLCA has a leadership role in planning, developing, and
implementing the Department's legislative goals and
strategies, notifying Congressional offices of grant awards
and Department initiatives, addressing appropriations and
budget matters, and monitoring the status of legislative
proposals.
OLCA's organizational structure consists of political
leadership that communicates the Administration's position
on educational issues, career staff for legislative policy that
advises on legislation, and congressional affairs staff that
aid in resolving constituent concerns.
OLCA also works with employees throughout the
Department to respond to written and oral inquiries from
individual members of Congress, prepare for legislative
hearings, and schedule and facilitate meetings between
members of Congress and ED senior officers.
The inquiries that are received by OLCA are tracked
through the Department's correspondence control system.
For each issue submitted through a congressional inquiry,
it is assigned to the appropriate principal office within the
Department for response. Congressional inquiries are
typically responded to within three to four weeks
depending on the complexity of the inquiry.
Congressional Members can contact the office through
OLCA's main telephone line(s) at 202-401-1028 or 202-
401-0020. Electronic mail can be submitted to 
olca@ed.gov. Correspondence can also be mailed to 400
Maryland Avenue SW, Washington, D.C. 20202-3100.
OLCA is in daily contact with members of Congress. This
interaction ensures that the initiatives of Congress and the
Department are achieved. (About Office of Legislation and
Congressional Affairs )</OtherInformation></Objective></Goal><Goal><Name>ED Roadmap</Name><Description>Incorporate principles of openness into core agency missions.</Description><Identifier>_d54d93ae-5be5-11df-a9e9-9f847a64ea2a</Identifier><SequenceIndicator>IV</SequenceIndicator><Stakeholder><Name></Name><Description></Description></Stakeholder><OtherInformation>Building on the solid foundation put in place during this inaugural year
of Open Government, we will not stop here. Our next steps will shore
up this foundation and address sustainability by (1) institutionalizing
Open Government practices with standards and procedures to ensure
that these principles are adopted across the agency, and (2) ensuring
that the Open Government Plan continues to be strategically aligned
with the Agency&#8217;s mission as our strategic plan evolves and we work
with Congress to reauthorize the Elementary and Secondary Education
Act.</OtherInformation><Objective><Name>Core Principles</Name><Description>Institutionalize core principles across ED.</Description><Identifier>_d54d9728-5be5-11df-a9e9-9f847a64ea2a</Identifier><SequenceIndicator>IV.1</SequenceIndicator><Stakeholder><Name></Name><Description></Description></Stakeholder><OtherInformation>As the smallest Cabinetlevel
agency with just 4,100 full-time equivalent (FTE) staff, but the
fourth largest as measured by funding appropriation, the majority
of the Department&#8217;s resources are appropriately dedicated to the
program offices. These program office resources oversee grant
programs which means that central support staff resources are
limited. For Open Government to fully succeed at ED, the practices
developed over the past year must be internalized and
institutionalized at the program office level.</OtherInformation></Objective><Objective><Name>Standards for Grant Applications</Name><Description>Develop guiding standards for grant application transparency
that can be applied across programs.</Description><Identifier>_d54d9a20-5be5-11df-a9e9-9f847a64ea2a</Identifier><SequenceIndicator>IV,1.a</SequenceIndicator><Stakeholder><Name></Name><Description></Description></Stakeholder><OtherInformation>Every grant program is different, but all should be subject to transparency principles. 
ED has set a new standard for end-to-end transparency over the
last year. We posted initial and approved applications for the
State Fiscal Stabilization Fund and School Improvement Fund,
peer reviewer comments, as well as the scores for Race to the
Top applications. These programs invited state-level
participants, so the number of applications is relatively low.
Over the next few months, the Department will begin two
different but equally high-profile ARRA competitions - the
Investing in Innovation Fund (i3) and the revamped Teacher
Incentive Fund (TIF). We expect over 3000 applications for the
Investing in Innovation Fund and this large number of
applications will require the Department to evaluate and use a
different approach to achieve transparency on this scale. After
gaining experience applying transparency principles to these
diverse programs, the Department will develop a consistent set
of standards to implement across all grant programs, and
communicate best practices to aid in effective execution of those
standards. Our timeline is as follows.
o April &#8211; develop transparency policy for i3
o May-June &#8211; develop transparency policy for TIF
o September &#8211; publish competition results for both i3 and
TIF
o Oct &#8211; Dec 2010 &#8211; develop ED guiding standards and
procedures for competitive grant transparency, provide
examples of Best Practices representing the range of
approaches for achieving transparency for different types
of grants</OtherInformation></Objective><Objective><Name>Standards for Financial Fransparency</Name><Description>Develop guiding standards for financial transparency that can be
applied across programs.</Description><Identifier>_d54d9e44-5be5-11df-a9e9-9f847a64ea2a</Identifier><SequenceIndicator>IV.1.b</SequenceIndicator><Stakeholder><Name></Name><Description></Description></Stakeholder><OtherInformation>ED has provided significant
transparency into the flow of ARRA education grants to States
through weekly agency reporting and quarterly recipient
reporting. To further deliver transparency into state use of ED 
funding, this level of reporting will be applied to non-ARRA
programs on an on-going basis. Over the coming year, ED will
develop user-friendly approaches, similar to the current ARRA
weekly spending reports aggregated by state and by program, to
presenting the State and Program level funding already available
on USASpending.gov at a granular level similar. In addition, the
implementation of FFATA sub-award reporting will provide ED
with a new and more detailed source of transparency into the
flow of funds. When this information becomes available, ED will
work to aggregate this information in a format meaningful to ED
stakeholders, similar to the current quarterly ARRA Section 1512
reports posted on ED.gov. Our timeline is as follows.
o Oct &#8211; Dec 2010 Program spending report systems
developed and tested
o Oct &#8211; June 2011 FFATA sub-award reporting procedures
developed and implemented
o July 2011 - Dec 2011 FFATA sub-award reports developed
and tested</OtherInformation></Objective><Objective><Name>Web Content Procedures</Name><Description>Develop procedures for updating Web content at the office, initiative, and program level.</Description><Identifier>_d54da1b4-5be5-11df-a9e9-9f847a64ea2a</Identifier><SequenceIndicator>IV.1.c</SequenceIndicator><Stakeholder><Name></Name><Description></Description></Stakeholder><OtherInformation>ED's current web design and
content management workflow are barriers to effective use of
the web for many ED offices, initiatives, and programs. These
barriers are, in turn, barriers to open government. We aim to
lower these barriers through the adoption of a streamlined
approach to content management, using Drupal, and more
flexible templates for web pages. It will be easier for offices,
initiatives, and programs to post web content quickly and display
it more flexibly to meet their needs and their stakeholders'
needs. As a result, we expect to see more effective use of the
web spread throughout our agency. As this system is
implemented, we expect to see offices, initiatives, and programs
posting news, information about upcoming competitions and
workshops, slideshows from technical assistance workshops, 
schedules of upcoming events, and more. They will be able to
engage with citizens and stakeholders. To optimize execution of
this significant change, ED will take a phased approach, piloting
the program in a limited number of offices, then phasing it in
gradually, integrating learning with each successive
implementation.
Our timeline is as follows.
o May - Aug 2010: Pilot program Drupal transition
o Sep - Dec 2010: Phased transition to offices and
initiatives
o May - Jun 2011: Drupal available to all offices
and initiatives
o Sep - Dec 2011: Drupal (or alternative) available
to all programs</OtherInformation></Objective><Objective><Name>Content Sources</Name><Description>Rationalize program content sources.</Description><Identifier>_d54da4c0-5be5-11df-a9e9-9f847a64ea2a</Identifier><SequenceIndicator>IV.1.d</SequenceIndicator><Stakeholder><Name></Name><Description></Description></Stakeholder><OtherInformation>ED currently supports
both an annual paper published source of program information
(the Guide to Education Programs) and real-time, web-based
source of program information. This dual system is inefficient
and increases the risk of outdated information, threatening
transparency. Assuming resources are approved to fund this
project, ED will integrate these two programs in 2011.
o July - Sep 2010 Integration funding requested
o Oct - Mar 2011 Integration project underway</OtherInformation></Objective><Objective><Name></Name><Description>Address regulatory/statutory challenges affecting open government.</Description><Identifier>_d54da8e4-5be5-11df-a9e9-9f847a64ea2a</Identifier><SequenceIndicator>IV.1.a (sic)</SequenceIndicator><Stakeholder><Name></Name><Description></Description></Stakeholder><OtherInformation>Data Governance, including security, privacy
policy and IT Investment Management, is guided by a complex 
combination of laws, regulations, and directives that affect
multiple levels of government, institutions, and organizations.
The Department takes these requirements seriously and has
mature, operating governance structures that place controls over
all technology used to implement these initiatives. We will
augment existing governance structures to address new
challenges resulting from inconsistencies between the many
regulations affecting rule-making and the realities of social
networking and 21st century technology. ED will convene a
working group including OGC, OCIO and core program offices to
work with OMB OIRA to develop a consistent approach to these
issues at both the Agency and Federal level.
o July - Sep 2010 Working Group membership and charter
defined
o Sep - Dec 2010 Preliminary solutions identified
o Jan - Jun 2011 Final recommendation and implementation</OtherInformation></Objective><Objective><Name>Strategic Alignment</Name><Description>Ensure strategic alignment.</Description><Identifier>_d54dac68-5be5-11df-a9e9-9f847a64ea2a</Identifier><SequenceIndicator>IV.2</SequenceIndicator><Stakeholder><Name></Name><Description></Description></Stakeholder><OtherInformation>ED is currently at a pivotal point in its
history. With unprecedented sources of funding through ARRA we
are executing groundbreaking competitions including Race to the
Top, School Improvement Grants, Investing in Innovation Fund,
and Teacher Incentive Fund. We have proposed significant changes
to ESEA, our largest appropriation driving many of our core
programs. ED&#8217;s strategies will be fine-tuned as we gain experience
with these new programs, and the final structure of ESEA will have
significant implications for our Flagship Initiative. ED recommends
that this Open Government Plan be viewed as a living document,
continually subject to change as we gain experience with the
principles of transparency, participation, and collaboration, and as
the Agency&#8217;s core principles evolve with continued strategic
planning and ESEA reauthorization.
o Jul - Sep 2010 Review 2011 S&amp;A budget to ensure consistency
with Open Government Plan
o Sep 2010 Review current Open Government Plan to align with
final ED Strategic Plan and ESEA reauthorization status
o Oct - Dec 2010 Finalize objectives of Flagship Initiative</OtherInformation></Objective></Goal></StrategicPlanCore><AdministrativeInformation><StartDate>2010-04-07</StartDate><EndDate></EndDate><PublicationDate>2010-05-09</PublicationDate><Source>http://www2.ed.gov/about/plan.pdf</Source><Submitter><FirstName>Owen</FirstName><LastName>Ambur</LastName><PhoneNumber></PhoneNumber><EmailAddress>Owen.Ambur@verizon.net</EmailAddress></Submitter></AdministrativeInformation></StrategicPlan>