ࡱ> ] bjbj L eec- v  O*k****++++L3/+'26:U6U6U67`7$!8vxxxxxx$*E*;77;;**U6U6H[A[A[A;*U6*U6v[A;v[A[A>>6+$<58)9[A9c:585858@585858';;;;585858585858585858  ): Notice of Grant Opportunity Expanded Learning Program Activities Continuation Grant: Pilot Year 3 September 1, 2019 August 31, 2020 19-EK52-H05 Dr. Lamont O. Repollet, Ed.D. Commissioner Carolyn J. Marano Assistant Commissioner Division of Student Support Kathleen Ehling Director Office of Fiscal and Data Services Kelly Williams Director Office of Student Support Services February 2019 Application Due Date: May 2, 2019 CFDA 84.287C NEW JERSEY DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION P.O. Box 500 Trenton, NJ 08625-0500  HYPERLINK "http://www.state.nj.us/education" \o "http://www.state.nj.us/education" http://www.state.nj.us/education  STATE BOARD OF EDUCATION STATE BOARD OF EDUCATION ARCELIO APONTE.............................................................................. Middlesex President KATHY A. GOLDENBERG. Burlington Vice President MARY BETH BERRY...................................................................... Hunterdon ELAINE BOBROVE.......................................................................... Camden FATIMAH BURNAM-WATKINS................................................... Union RONALD K. BUTCHER .. Gloucester JACK FORNARO..... Warren MARY ELIZABETH GAZI Somerset NEDD JAMES JOHNSON Salem ERNEST P. LEPORE .... Hudson ANDREW J. MULVIHILL. Sussex JOSEPH RICCA, Jr. Morris SYLVIA SYLVIA-CIOFFI.. Monmouth Dr. Lamont Repollet, Acting Commissioner Secretary, State Board of Education It is a policy of the New Jersey State Board of Education and the State Ƶ that no person, on the basis of race, color, creed, national origin, age, sex, handicap or marital status, shall be subjected to discrimination in employment or be excluded from or denied benefits of any activity, program or service for which the department has responsibility. The department will comply with all state and federal laws and regulations concerning nondiscrimination. TABLE OF CONTENTS When responding to this Notice of Grant Opportunity (NGO), grantees must use the Electronic Web Enabled Grant (EWEG) online application system which can be accessed at  HYPERLINK "http://homeroom.state.nj.us/" \o "http://homeroom.state.nj.us/" http://homeroom.state.nj.us/. Please refer to the New Jersey Ƶ, Discretionary Grants web page at  HYPERLINK "http://www.nj.gov/education/grants/discretionary" \o "http://www.nj.gov/education/grants/discretionary" http://www.nj.gov/education/grants/discretionary for more information. SECTION 1 : GRANT PROGRAM INFORMATION PAGE 1.1 Description of the Grant Program......................................1 1.2 Eligibility to Apply.....................................................2 1.3 Federal Compliance Requirements (DUNS, SAM) ...3 1.4 Statutory/Regulatory Source and Funding.................4 1.5 Dissemination of This Notice.....................................6 1.6 Technical Assistance..................................................6 1.7 Application Submission.............................................6 1.8 Program and Fiscal Reporting Requirements............7 1.9 Assessment of Statewide Program Results................7 1.10 Reimbursement Requests...........................................13 1.11 Compliance and Continuous Quality Improvement...14 1.12 Audit Reports.............................................................14 SECTION 2: PROJECT GUIDELINES 2.1 Project Design Considerations...................................16 2.2 Project Requirements.................................................21 2.3 Budget Design Considerations...................................34 2.4 Budget Requirements.................................................35 SECTION 3: COMPLETING THE APPLICATION 3.1 General Instructions for Applying.............................40 3.2 Review of Application...............................................40 3.3 Application Component Checklist.............................40 NGO APPENDICES: Appendix 1 Eligible Applicant Appendix 2 Verification of Joint Application Appendix 3 Documentation of School Eligibility Appendix 4 Final Comprehensive 3-year Evaluation Report Outline Appendix 5 Audit Information Form (Upload and email) Appendix 6 State Mandated Goals and Objectives Appendix 7 and 7A Documentation of Required Collaboration Appendix 8 Program Statement of Assurances Appendix 9 Nonpublic Equitable Participation Summary and Affirmation of Consultation Form Appendix 10 Project Staff Responsibilities Appendix 11 Budget Development Instructions Appendix 12 Electronic Web-Enabled Grant System (EWEG) Tips SECTION I: GRANT PROGRAM INFORMATION DESCRIPTION OF THE GRANT PROGRAM The New Jersey Ƶ (Ƶ) will continue support for the Expanded Learning Program Activities (ELPA) program, a federally funded pilot project. Supported under section 4205(a) of Title IV, Part B, 21st Century Community Learning Centers (21st CCLC) program, as authorized in the Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA), this pilot project will provide $250,000 for a 12-month program year. This program was designed to support enrichment and engaging academic activities that are included as part of an expanded learning program that: 1) provides students at least 300 additional program hours before, during, or after the traditional school day; 2) supplements but does not supplant regular school day requirements; and 3) is carried out by entities that meet the federal priority requirements. It is intended to support high-quality activities that assist students who are most at-risk of academic failure. This project offers flexibility to the eligible entities in providing a program that meets the needs of the students while enhancing existing programming through collaboration and partnerships. The purpose is to provide activities and instruction for enrichment as part of a well-rounded education, while encouraging instructional support staff to collaborate, plan, and engage in professional development within and across grades and subjects. However, this funding is not just more of the same. It should involve careful planning by the eligible grantee to ensure that the proposed activities will be implemented to improve student achievement and ensure a well-rounded education that prepares students for college and careers. New Jerseys Vision The vision for New Jerseys ELPA program is two-fold: 1) develop a minimum 300 hours of high quality out-of-school time programming; and 2) offer flexibility in the program design. Ultimately, the Ƶ intends to fund quality expanded learning activities that occur before, during, and afterschool; on weekends and holidays; and in the summer that are operated by knowledgeable and creative staff in partnership with schools and community agencies. To ensure program activities will have a positive impact on student achievement and career and college readiness, the Ƶ expects all programs to integrate the following strategies: Align project activities with school-day learning through intentional planning and on-going communication with school-day staff (both public and non-public); Support regularly-scheduled communication between school-day staff and program staff; Create a youth-centered environment, including planning with participating youth to design learning experiences that are relevant and interesting to them; Provide opportunities for experiential learning, problem solving, self-direction, creativity, exploration, and expression, by using a guided-inquiry approach to promote perseverance, curiosity, leadership, responsibility, and self-confidence; Establish a summer program that engages youth in learning and reduces the potential for summer learning loss; Create and maintain partnerships that produce tangible resources and will directly benefit participants; and Offer families of youth served by the program opportunities for literacy and related educational development. The September 1, 2019 through August 31, 2020 is the third and final year for this project. NOTE: Awards will be issued on an annual basis contingent on continued program eligibility, program performance and availability of federal funds. ELIGIBILITY TO APPLY Eligibility to apply for this ELPA continuation grant is limited to the currently-funded agency listed in Appendix 1, East Orange School District. Henceforth in this document, East Orange School District is referred to as grantee. The grantee must maintain the configuration per the year-one original application. If the grantee wishes to add partnerships, eligibility is contingent on a submission of a joint application that consists of at least one local educational agency (LEA), which includes charter schools, educational service commissions, jointure commissions and special services school districts receiving funds under Title I, Part A and another eligible entity listed below. The grantee must complete the Verification of Joint Application form (Appendix 2): Another LEA (must meet the low-income threshold below); Nonpublic school (must meet the low-income threshold below); Community-based organization; City or county government agency; Faith-based organization; For-profit organization; Institutions of higher education; or Indian tribes or tribal organizations (as such terms are defined in section 4 of the Indian Self-Determination and Education Act (25U.S.C. 450(b)). The grantee must continue to offer services schoolwide in grades three through 12, who primarily attend schools that: are implementing comprehensive support and improvement activities or targeted support and improvement activities under section 1111(d) or other schools determined by the local educational agency to be in need of intervention and support to improve student academic achievement and other outcomes; and enroll students who may be at risk for academic failure, dropping out of school, involvement in criminal or delinquent activities, or who lack strong positive role models; and the families of those participants must also be served through the program. For the 2019-2020 school year, schools implementing comprehensive support and improvement activities or targeted support and improvement activities are listed on the Comprehensive Support Network website at  HYPERLINK "/education/csn/" \o "/education/csn/" /education/csn/. In determining a school in need of intervention and support (see number 1 above) the Ƶ will permit the grantee agency to: Target students who attend schools with a minimum of 30% of its population from low-income families; or Submit a description of its selection process, which must include state or district data that supports the selection, as an upload in EWEG. Low-income families are defined as those families whose children are eligible for free lunch and/or free milk as documented in the districts most recent Application for School State Aid. Grantees seeking to serve additional students from schools not documented in their year-one or subsequent continuation applications, must scan and upload the Documentation of School Eligibility form (Appendix 3) into EWEG. The grantee is required to serve a minimum of 100 students to be eligible for funding. The grantee is not permitted to divest more than 20% of the total grant award to any single entity, including but not limited to partners, collaborators or sub-grantees. At a minimum, grantees must maintain direct control of 51% of the total grant award during the entire grant cycle. Additionally, the grantee is not allowed to divest oversight of the program administration or implementation to another agency, this includes, but is not limited to, existing 21st CCLC programs and other agencies in a sub-grant process. These funds may not be used as a pass-through to another agency to operate an ELPA program. NOTE: The Ƶ reserves the right to determine continuation of funding based on the grantees ability to make substantial progress toward meeting the objectives set forth in its approved application (see EDGAR at 34 C.F.R. 75.253). FEDERAL COMPLIANCE REQUIREMENTS (DUNS, SAM) In accordance with the Federal Fiscal Accountability Transparency Act (FFATA), all grant recipients must have a valid DUNS number and must also be registered with the System for Award Management (SAM), the successor to the Central Contractor Registration (CCR) database. DUNS numbers are issued by Dun and Bradstreet and are available for free to all entities required to register under FFATA. To obtain a DUNS number, go to  HYPERLINK "http://fedgov.dnb.com/webform/" \o "http://fedgov.dnb.com/webform/" http://fedgov.dnb.com/webform/. To register with the SAM database, go to  HYPERLINK "http://www.sam.gov/" \o "http://www.sam.gov/" www.sam.gov. The grantee is required to submit their DUNS number and expiration date of their SAM registration as part of the EWEG application and must certify that they will ensure that their SAM registration will remain active for the entire grant period. The grantee must also print the Entity Overview page from their  HYPERLINK "http://www.sam.gov/" \o "http://www.sam.gov/" www.sam.gov profile (which displays their DUNS number and street address with ZIP+4 code), and upload a scan of the page using the UPLOAD tab. FFATA Executive Compensation Disclosure Criteria In the preceding fiscal year, if an grantee: Received at least $25 million in annual gross revenues from federal awards; and, If at least eighty (80) percent of the grantees annual gross revenues came from federal awards; The grantee is required to disclose the name and total compensation of the five (5) most highly compensated officers of the grantee as part of the grant application. This information is to be entered using the appropriate EWEG tab (Admin). The term federal award includes federal contracts, sub-contracts, grants, and sub-grants. No award will be made to a grantee not in compliance with FFATA. STATUTORY/REGULATORY SOURCE AND FUNDING The grantees project must be designed and implemented in conformance with all applicable state and federal regulations. The ELPA program is 100% federally-funded under the Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA), Title IV, Part B (CFDA 84.287C). The Ƶ will provide $250,000 to fund one application to continue operating a program that will offer 300 hours of enrichment and engaging activities before, during, or afterschool; or on weekends or holidays; and in the summer for a minimum of 100 students. The grantee is required to maintain the partnership configuration as in year one. These services must supplement but not supplant regular school day requirements. The grantee is required to offer services schoolwide. The continuation pilot project will begin September 1, 2019 and end August 31, 2020 based upon the availability of federal funds. Final awards are subject to the availability of Title IV funds. The grantee is informed that this grant does not allow any carry-over funding. The grantee is expected to complete the goal(s) and objectives laid out in the approved grant application, complete implementation activities established in its grant agreement, and make satisfactory progress toward the completion of its approved action plan. Failure to do so may result in the withdrawal by the Ƶ of the grantees eligibility for the continuation of grant funding. In addition, the Ƶ will remove ineligible, inappropriate or undocumented costs from funding consideration. The grantee is reminded that the federal funding language, which will be forwarded, must be prominently displayed on all printed and electronic program materials. Additionally, the grantee must ensure that the program is listed on the agency website to assist in marketability and recognition of the program. The actual number of students served is subject to monitoring and verification by the Ƶ. Ƶ requires an average daily attendance (ADA) of 70% of the programs total level of service. The grantee must submit the ADA for each funded local program through quarterly required reporting. Average daily attendance is calculated by taking the sum of each students total days present from the program start date divided by the number of days the afterschool program operated since the start date. Cost Justification All costs must be reasonable and necessary to carry out the program, and directly linked to the size and scope of the program and to specific goals, objectives, and activities. Supplemental Funds These funds can be used only to supplement and not supplant, federal, state or local funds. Failure to demonstrate the aforesaid will result in the reduction of the requested award amount. Final awards are subject to the availability of Title IV, Part B funds. Matching There are no matching requirements; however, the Ƶ reserves the right to change programmatic or fiscal requirements in subsequent years. Once a grantee reports any matching funds, it is expected that they would achieve the same level of match for each subsequent year of funding. If an grantee reported matching funds in the original year, the grantee must achieve each of the following criteria: Provide a budget narrative describing the matching funds within the Match Narrative Section in EWEG; Identify the matching funding source within the Match Narrative Section in EWEG; Provide a detailed narrative of activities or services to be provided by the matching funds within the Match Narrative Section and Project Activity Plan; and Complete the Matching Funds Summary and Expenditure Report form (within EWEG) with their application. The grantee is reminded that the matching funds may not exceed the amount of the grant award and cannot be derived from other federal or state funds; however, all or any portion of the match may be in the form of in-kind contributions. The grantee is encouraged to demonstrate their ability to transition from primary reliance on federal funds to becoming self-sustaining programs. NOTE: Ƶ reserves the right to change programmatic or fiscal requirements in subsequent years. 1.5 DISSEMINATION OF THIS NOTICE The Office of Student Support Services (OSSS) will make this notice available to the eligible grantee. This NGO will be available on the Ƶs website at  HYPERLINK "http://www.state.nj.us/njded/grants/discretionary/" \o "http://www.state.nj.us/njded/grants/discretionary/" http://www.state.nj.us/njded/grants/discretionary. 1.6 TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE Technical assistance will be provided upon request from the grantee. 1.7 APPLICATION SUBMISSION The Ƶ administers discretionary grant programs in strict conformance with procedures designed to ensure accountability and integrity in the use of public funds and, therefore, will not accept late applications. The responsibility for a timely submission resides with the grantee. The Application Control Center (ACC) must receive the complete application through the online Electronic Web Enabled Grant (EWEG) system at  HYPERLINK "http://homeroom.state.nj.us/" \o "http://homeroom.state.nj.us/" http://homeroom.state.nj.us no later than 4:00 P.M. on THURSday, May 2, 2019. Without exception, the ACC will not accept, and the Office of Grants Management cannot evaluate for funding consideration, an application received after this deadline. Complete applications are those that include all elements listed in Section 3.3, Application Component Checklist, of this notice. Applications received by the due date and time will be screened to determine whether they are, in fact, eligible for evaluation. The Ƶ reserves the right to reject any application not in conformance with the requirements of this NGO. Paper copies of the grant application will not be accepted in lieu of the EWEG application system. Each eligible grantee must have a logon ID and password to access the system. School districts (LEAs) should contact their districts Homeroom Administrator (formerly the Web User Administrator), who will complete the registration. Non-LEA agencies should send an email request to the EWEG Help Desk at  HYPERLINK "mailto:eweghelp@doe.nj.gov" eweghelp@doe.nj.gov. At least 24 to 48 hours are needed to enable EWEG set-up for users. The grantee is urged to request access well in advance of the application due date. Questions regarding access to EWEG may be directed to  HYPERLINK "mailto:eweghelp@doe.nj.gov" eweghelp@doe.nj.gov. The grantee is advised to plan appropriately to allow time to address any technical challenges that may occur. Additionally, the grantee should run a consistency check at least 24 hours before the due date to determine any errors that might prevent submission of the application. Running the consistency check does not submit the application. When the consistency check runs successfully, a submit button will appear. Once the submit button is clicked, the application may not be edited, additional information may not be submitted, and the application can no longer be accessed or returned. Please note that the submit button in the EWEG system will disappear as of 4:00 PM on the due date. The grantee is advised not to wait until the due date to submit the application online as the system may be slower than normal due to increased usage. Applications submitted by FAX cannot be accepted under any circumstances. 1.8 PROGRAM AND FISCAL REPORTING REQUIREMENTS Grant recipients are required to submit quarterly program and fiscal progress reports. For additional information regarding post-award reporting requirements, please review the Grant Recipients Manual for Discretionary Grants, Part Seven, which is available online at  HYPERLINK "https://www.state.nj.us/education/grants/discretionary/apps/" \o "https://www.state.nj.us/education/grants/discretionary/apps/" https://www.state.nj.us/education/grants/discretionary/apps/. All reports will be submitted through the online EWEG system. Program and fiscal reports for this program will be due through EWEG as follows: Program/Fiscal ReportQuarterly Reporting PeriodDue Date1st QuarterSeptember 1, 2019 December 31, 2019January 31, 2020Interim September 1, 2019 March 31, 2020April 26, 20203rd QuarterSeptember 1, 2019 June 30, 2020July 31, 2020FinalSeptember 1, 2019 August 31, 2020October 31, 2020 The grantee will be required to submit the above reports through the online EWEG system at  HYPERLINK "http://homeroom.state.nj.us/" \o "http://homeroom.state.nj.us/" http://homeroom.state.nj.us on the dates specified above. Accompanying the program report, the grantee is required to submit a narrative summary of activities conducted during the reporting period. This summary may be submitted as an upload within EWEG. Statewide assessment scores will be a required upload into EWEG with the final quarterly report. All programs must create a list with the NJSMART number for each student who attended your program for 30 days or more and provide their statewide assessment scale score for math and English/language arts by site. After the final report is reviewed and approved, at all 4 levels in EWEG, a payment will be issued, if funds were due to the agency. Additional Program Reports Grant recipients are also required to submit the following information by the designated timelines. Please refer to Section 1.9, Assessment of Statewide Program Results, for additional information. ReportReporting PeriodDue Date *Youth Pre-SurveyOctober November DecemberETRS Staff SurveyDecember January January Youth Post-Survey February March MarchETRS 1September January FebruaryETRS 2September April MayPARS21Monthly15th of each monthFederal ReportingSeptember AugustCollected 3x/year (see Section 1.9)Final 3-year Comprehensive Evaluation Report September 2017 August 31, 2020October 31, 2020 *Dates are estimations. Actual due dates will be released one the contract begins. 1.9 ASSESSMENT OF STATEWIDE PROGRAM RESULTS The evaluation of New Jerseys ELPA program requires both a statewide process and a local evaluation. The statewide evaluation is conducted by the Ƶs contracted evaluator, American Institute for Research (AIR). The local evaluation is conducted by an evaluator contracted by the grantee working in conjunction with program staff. Both levels of program evaluation focus on accountability, program improvement and dissemination of identified best practices. The Ƶs comprehensive evaluation of this grant program will include a Department review of state and federal data, quarterly reports, monitoring reports, and local-level data to measure the progress of local programs. The grantee is required to comply with all components of the comprehensive evaluation, which may include, but are not limited to, submission of additional reports or data. The data obtained through the multi-tier comprehensive evaluation will be used for continuous improvement and to inform the Ƶs monitoring of programs and reporting to the United States Ƶ (USDE). Federal Evaluation Since 1993, the USDE developed specific measures for the activities funded under Title IV, Part B, 21st Century Community Learning Center. Since the ELPA is an allowable program under the 21st CCLC, the following measures are required by federal law under the Government Performance and Results Act (GPRA) and are in place to assess programs performance and effectiveness. This federal law requires all federal agencies to develop strategic plans describing their overall goals and objectives, annual performance plans containing quantifiable measures of their progress, and performance reports describing their success in meeting those standards and measures. The grantee must develop their own goals, objectives and indicators of success, that are aligned with these federal GPRA measures. The GPRA measures are: Program Goal: To establish community learning centers that help students in high-poverty, low-performing schools meet academic achievement standards; to offer a broad array of additional services designed to complement the regular academic program; and to offer families of students opportunities for educational development. Objective 1: Participants in 21st Century Community Learning Center programs will demonstrate educational and social benefits and exhibit positive behavioral changes. Objective 2: 21st Century Community Learning Centers will offer high-quality enrichment opportunities that positively affect student outcomes such as school attendance and academic performance, and result in decreased disciplinary actions or other adverse behaviors. Objective 3: Improve the operational efficiency of the program.  If you are interested in understanding the federal 21st CCLC GPRA measures, you can go to  HYPERLINK "http://www2.ed.gov/programs/21stcclc/performance.html" \o "http://www2.ed.gov/programs/21stcclc/performance.html" http://www2.ed.gov/programs/21stcclc/performance.html. Statewide Evaluation The American Institute for Research (AIR) is responsible for evaluating the overall impact of activities provided under 21st CCLC pursuant to the ESSA. The components of the state-level evaluation include an assessment of grantee progress towards achieving the state-mandated goals and objectives; impact on youth and their families; and effectiveness of the states administration of the program. During the grant period, the state-level evaluator administers staff surveys, manages ETRS data collection, and analyzes qualitative and quantitative data. Additionally, AIR will provide a series of webinars and presentations that support quality improvement efforts, including regional Planning with Data sessions that will be conducted in August 2020. The ELPA grantee is expected to develop a local level evaluation plan, perform all statewide evaluation activities and cooperate with the state-level evaluator during the grant period. Local Level Evaluation The grantee is required to hire an external evaluator to evaluate the overall impact of the ELPA program on the participants, both student and parents. Each grantee must undergo an annual local level evaluation to assess its progress toward achieving its goal of providing high-quality opportunities for academic enrichment. Federal legislation requires that the local evaluation is based on the factors included in the Measures of Effectiveness pursuant to Title IV, Part B, Sec.4205 (b)(1). The Measures of Effectiveness are: An assessment of objective data regarding the need for before-school and afterschool (or summer recess) programs and activities in the schools and communities; An established set of performance measures aimed at ensuring the availability of high-quality academic enrichment opportunities; Based upon evidence-based research that the program or activity will help students meet the challenging State academic standards and any local academic standards; Aligned with the regular academic program of the school and the academic needs of participating students and include performance indicators and measures described in section 4203(a)(14)(A); and Necessary for the measurement of student success. Additionally, the results of the evaluation must be: 1) used to refine, improve, and strengthen the program or activity, and to refine the performance measures; 2) made available to the public upon request, with public notice of such availability provided; and 3) used by the State to determine whether a grantee is eligible to be renewed. If awarded, in subsequent years, it is expected that the local-level evaluation will be designed to support a comprehensive longitudinal analysis report on the impact of the ELPA program on the participants (both student and families) and the school community environment. This report must be submitted to the Ƶ at the end of the three year grant cycle, which would be October 31, 2020. The final three year cumulative report will include, at a minimum: an analysis of the development of the program over the past three years; identification of significant trends over the past three years; a description of the impact of the program on students and families over the past three years; and a summary of progress on the attainment of the goals and objectives and corresponding local-level indicators over the past three years. The grantee must review Appendix 4 for an outline of the required report. More information will be available to the grantee. The Ƶ reserves the right to request the return of dispersed funds if the report is deemed insufficient and unsatisfactory. Local-level Evaluator To ensure an objective on-going evaluation, all grantee agencies must hire an external evaluator to develop and implement an evaluation plan for the local ELPA program. In general, an evaluator is someone who has received formal training in research and/or evaluation and has experience in conducting evaluations of similar programs. Based on recommendations from the USDE, Ƶ is providing guidance on selecting local evaluators. The grantee should ensure they follow their agency policy when soliciting for services. In the absence of agency policy, Ƶ recommends the following: 1) contact similar programs that have successfully implemented and evaluated their program for suggestions; 2) contact local colleges and universities, specifically, faculty in departments of sociology, social work, education, community psychology, public health, and in university-based research centers often have training and experience in program evaluation; and/or 3) contact professional associations, such as the American Evaluation Association. Although the grantee must submit a quote with this NGO, they should not enter into any agreements with the evaluator, until after notification regarding the acceptance or denial of this NGO. As with all contracts/vendors, the grantee should interview their local evaluator prior to entering into any agreement. The grantee will receive additional information to assist in the selection and procuring of an appropriate evaluator. Typically, an external program evaluator will be responsible for, but not limited to, the following: Facilitating the implementation of action research methodology and documentation of the process, findings, and outcomes; Evaluating local program administration and performance, based upon the states mandated goals and objectives and the grantees indicators; Meeting with the program administrator at least once a month; Attending all mandated Ƶ evaluator trainings (tentatively scheduled in August); Supporting the collection and analysis of data needed to complete interim and final evaluation reports; Developing timelines for data collection, analysis and reporting that are reflective of the requirements of this NGO; Reviewing and analyzing data, including PARS21, ETRS, school report cards, assessment scores, etc.; Identifying student outcomes and trends; Providing recommendations for the purpose of ensuring program improvement; Assisting program staff in designing and/or revising program and record-keeping forms and/or systems; and, Identifying strategies for informing advisory board, parents, school-day staff, program staff, and other key stakeholders of conclusions and recommendations drawn from the evaluation. The grantee agency must obtain and submit one quote from an external program evaluator with their application for funding. The external evaluator may not be a current vendor or employee of the agency. The quote must include information regarding the scope of the evaluation, deliverables, and costs. Additionally, the grantee must attach the evaluators resume or curriculum vitae. Please refer to Section 2, Project Guidelines, of this NGO for submission instructions. Data Collection Systems The Ƶ utilizes three specific data collection systems to support a comprehensive evaluation of this program. The systems are the Program Activity Review System (PARS21), the federal Annual Performance Reporting (APR) system, and the Evaluation Template and Reporting System (ETRS). The grantee is responsible for entering all required data directly into each system manually. Each system has a specific purpose and deadline which are detailed below. Program Activity Review System (PARS21) PARS21 collects information about youth activities, parent activities, staff, students, collaborators, partners, and assessment data (state, local and federal). Due to the intensity and accuracy necessary to enter data into PARS21, grantees must regularly enter data. The PARS21 data must be entered by the 15th of each month for the prior month (i.e., all data for September must be entered by October 15). The Ƶ will conduct a review of PARS21 attendance data on November 30, 2019 to determine if each grantee has maintained the level of service approved in its application. The level of service is defined as the number of youth participating in the program for 30 days or more during the school year. This review will analyze data submitted between September and November 2019 to confirm the actual number of students attending the program for 30 days or more. All student NJSMART numbers are required to be entered in PARS under the State Student Id for each student. All programs must create a list with the NJSMART number for each student who attended the program for 30 days or more and provide the students statewide assessment scale score for math and English/language arts by site. This list will be a required upload into EWEG with the final report. Award amounts may be reduced based on this review for the current year or consecutive years. Participants who have attended the program for 30 days or more are the only participants who will be counted towards the programs participation rate. The Ƶ reserves the right to reduce funding award amounts or withhold payments to any program that does not meet an appropriate level of service. Annual Performance Report (APR) System During this grant cycle, the USDE will also require annual data to be reported through the federal APR system. Its important to note that the USDE 21st CCLC program collects national data for programming that occurs from July 1 through June 30. The USDE will collect basic information about the characteristics associated with 21st CCLC funded programs and the outcomes they were able to achieve as a result of providing services to students and adult family members attending their programs. Information collected may include: (1) data about the progress made in meeting project objectives; and (2) data that addresses the federally-defined performance indicators for the 21st CCLC program. Grantees will be required to enter data directly into the system. Reports from PARS21 will provide grantees with the necessary data for completion. Grantees may be required to collect additional data if requested by the USDE. The data is tentatively scheduled to be collected as listed below: Data PeriodSystem OpenDue DateNotesFall 2019May 2020Tentatively 2 months after releaseFall is defined as from September 1 through December 31Spring 2020August 2020Tentatively 1 month after releaseSpring is defined as January 1 through the end of the academic school yearSummer 2020March 2021Tentatively 1 month after releaseSummer is defined as the last day of academic school year through August 31 Further details will be shared with the grantee once received from USDE. The due date may change based on USDE guidance. Evaluation Template and Reporting System (ETRS) The online 21st CCLC Evaluation Template and Reporting System (ETRS) was developed to facilitate consistent prompt reporting about program practices and goals, and is used to support various evaluation efforts. Information is due twice a year. Information is provided by the grantees for each site active during the program period, and entered directly into ETRS. Some of the data requires coordination with local evaluators. The ETRS is separated into three main sections: 1) Program Operations, 2) Goals, and 3) Conclusions and Recommendations. Grantees will be encouraged to access the ETRS early in the project period to review the required information. Grantees should review deadlines identified in section 1.8 of this NGO. Staff/Student Surveys During the project period, the Ƶ will disseminate information to the program administrators regarding required surveys. The surveys are necessary to demonstrate the impact of 21st CCLC programs on student academic, self-management, and interpersonal skills, in addition to staff practices and approaches to implementing activities. All programs are required to ensure a minimum of an 85% return of the surveys. Since surveys may be administered throughout the program year, it is up to the program administrators to ensure that this minimum response rate is maintained. More information will be forthcoming. 1.10 REIMBURSEMENT REQUESTS Payment of grant funds is made through a reimbursement system. Reimbursement requests for any grant funds the local project has expended are made through the EWEG system. Reimbursement requests may begin once the application has been marked Final Approved in the EWEG system, and the grantee has accepted the award by clicking on the Accept Award button on the Application Select page and completing the Grant Acceptance Certificate information. Payments cannot be processed until the award has been accepted in EWEG. This grant program is federally funded. Federal funds have an expiration date after which grant funds, even appropriately spent, cannot be reimbursed. It is the responsibility of the awarded agency to avoid forfeiting grant funds by creating and submitting reimbursement request and report by the requested deadlines. The date to submit the last reimbursement request is August 14, 2020. If approved, the last reimbursement request should be paid by end of September or early October. Please keep in mind that the EWEG system cannot process both Reimbursement Requests and Final Reports simultaneously. Only one (1) reimbursement request may be submitted per month. In order to receive a reimbursement at the beginning of the following month, applicants, if awarded, must submit a monthly request no later than the 15th of the month. The requests may include funds that will be expended through the last calendar day of the month in which reimbursement is requested. If the grantees request is approved by the Ƶ program officer, the grantee should receive payment approximately the 10th of the following month. Electronic Payments In order to receive electronic payments from the State of New Jersey, the New Jersey Department of Treasury requires the grantee to submit the Electronic Payment Authorization for Automatic Deposits (ACH Credits) form and the W-9/Vendor Questionnaire form directly to the Department of Treasury. These forms can be found on the Department of Treasury website at  HYPERLINK "http://www.state.nj.us/treasury/omb/forms" \o "http://www.state.nj.us/treasury/omb/forms" http://www.state.nj.us/treasury/omb/forms. Please contact vendor control at (609) 633-8183 or via email to  HYPERLINK "mailto:AAIUNIT@treas.nj.gov" AAIUNIT@treas.nj.gov or contact the Office of Management and Budget at 609-292-1865 with any questions regarding these forms. Forms must be submitted to Treasury concurrently with the EWEG application, however please DO NOT submit these forms with this NGO. NOTE: The Ƶ will not approve any reimbursement request(s), if a program has any outstanding report(s), including but not limited to the federal Annual Performance Report, AIR Staff Survey, AIR Youth Survey or the federal teacher survey. 1.11 COMPLIANCE AND CONTINUOUS QUALITY IMPROVEMENT All programs will receive two separate on-site visits during their first and third year of funding. The types of on-site visits are: 1) a program quality visit and 2) a compliance monitoring visit. Additionally, programs that have been identified as at-risk due to low level of service or program or fiscal irregularities may also receive an on-site visit. Program quality visits are considered targeted technical assistance for continuous quality improvement of the program. The program quality visits will be conducted by the contracted technical assistance provider, utilizing the NJ Quality Standards for Afterschool self-assessment tool. During the quality visit, the technical assistance provider, in collaboration with the grantee, will develop strategies to address any areas in need of improvement. Ƶ will not collect the self-assessment tool; however, the grantee should maintain a record of the program quality visit. All on-site compliance monitoring visits are conducted by Ƶ staff and generally occur between November and April. The purpose of the on-site compliance monitoring visit is to assess the programs implementation, effectiveness and progress towards the achievement of program indicators, goals, and objectives. Additionally, the Ƶ will assess the agencys adherence to the requirements outlined in the approved contractual agreement. Ƶ will utilize the Ƶ Compliance Monitoring Tool, which project directors may download from the grantee only website. Both programmatic and fiscal documentation will be reviewed. Any non-compliant findings from the on-site compliance monitoring visit will require a corrective action plan. 1.12 AUDIT REPORTS Recipients of specific federal and/or state grant funds are required to have an annual audit performed in accordance with the Single Audit Act, Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Awards, Subpart F and State Circular 15-08-OMB. The ELPA grant program is subject to this requirement. The State of New Jersey policy regarding grant recipients is as follows: 1. Recipients that expend $750,000 or more in federal and/or state funds within their fiscal year must have an annual organization-wide audit performed in accordance with the Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Awards for any fiscal year period beginning after December 26, 2014. 2. Recipients that expend less than $750,000 in federal and/or state funds within their fiscal year, but expend $100,000 or more in state and/or federal funds must have either a financial statement audit performed in accordance with Government Accounting Standards or a program-specific audit performed in accordance with the Act, Amendments, Subpart F-Audit Requirements of the Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles and Audit Requirements for Federal Awards. Although Subpart F-Audit Requirements allows specific provisions for biennial audits; State policy continues to require all audits to be performed on an annual basis. 3. Audit reports for recipients requiring an annual organization-wide audit as indicated in No. 1 above, must include the auditors comments on internal controls over state grants and state aid, compliance with material terms and conditions of state grant agreements, state aid programs, and applicable laws and regulations and the system review report (peer review). 4. Non-LEA recipients of the ELPA grant must complete the Audit Information Form (Appendix 5) and submit with this NGO. 5. Audit reports for recipients requiring either a financial statement audit performed, or a program-specific audit as indicated in No. 2 must include a Schedule of Expenditures of Federal and State Awards and the system review report (peer review). Non-LEA grantees are required to submit a Schedule of Expenditures and the peer review with this application. 6. Audit reports are the responsibility of the grant recipient. The financial statements may be prepared by the business administrator, or other financial personnel, however, the statements must be certified by an independent auditor. 7. Failure to comply with these audit requirements could jeopardize your eligibility for future grant funding. Consult your business administrator and independent auditor regarding these requirements. Any agency that has not had an audit done for each year it has received more than $500,000 (prior to December 26, 2014) or more than $750,000 (after December 26, 2014) in federal or state funds will be out of compliance with federal regulations. Audit Due Dates For grantees with a fiscal year ending June 30, the audit report is due annually in March. For those grantees with a fiscal year ending December 31 the audit report is due annually in September. SECTION 2: PROJECT GUIDELINES The intent of this section is to provide the grantee with the framework within which it will plan, design, and develop its proposed project to meet the purpose of this grant program. Before preparing applications, the grantee is advised to review Section 1.1, Description of the Grant Program, of this NGO to ensure a full understanding of the states vision and purpose for offering the program. Additionally, the information contained in Section 2 will complete the grantees understanding of the specific considerations and requirements that are to be considered and/or addressed in their project. When submitting an application, the agency must use the Electronic Web-Enabled Grants (EWEG) online application system located at  HYPERLINK "http://homeroom.state.nj.us/" \o "http://homeroom.state.nj.us/" http://homeroom.state.nj.us/. Please refer to Section 1.7 for further details. 2.1 PROJECT DESIGN CONSIDERATIONS The grantee is expected to conform to the general scope of the program design that was outlined and approved in their year-one applications. However, the grantee must consider implementing program design modifications for the purpose of ensuring continuous program improvement, as supported by the following: Prior program implementation experiences (successes, challenges, etc.); Program evaluation reports and outcome data; Student, parent, and teacher surveys; Focus group data; Advisory board recommendations; Child care licensing standards; New Jersey Student Learning Standards; NJ Quality Standards for Afterschool; Ƶ recommendations; Monitoring reports; Local level evaluation outcomes and recommendations; National best practice standards; and Partner and/or collaborator consultations. Additionally, programs must carefully plan and develop a program that encourages daily participation. Regular attendance by all students is expected in order to achieve significant improvement in student outcomes. If the grantee requested priority consideration in their year one application, they must continue to adhere to the priority considerations. This may include one or more of the following: priority school partnership, equitable distribution or matching. To further support enrichment and engaging academic activities that are included as part of an expanded learning program, the grantee must ensure that the program design: 1) provides students at least 300 additional program hours before, during, or after the traditional school day; 2) supplements but does not supplant regular school day requirements; and 3) is carried out by entities that meet the federal priority requirements. Program Design This NGO provides for expanded learning opportunities for activities and instruction for enrichment as part of a well-rounded education. The grantee has flexibility in designing the 300 hour program which should be based on enrichment needs of youth and families in the community they intend to serve. At a minimum, the design must include 80 hours of summer enrichment, 50 hours of enrichment activities, during the academic year and the remaining minimum balance of 170 hours used throughout the year. While funds may be used for a variety of supportive activities, it is expected that the program is not just more of the same; but rather, it should involve careful planning by the eligible entity to ensure that the programs or activities will be used to improve student achievement and ensure a well-rounded education that prepares students for college and careers. Again, these funds are to be used to supplement, and not supplant federal, state, local or other funds. However, a drop-in tutoring design is not an approvable option for this NGO. Attendance Since the design of the ELPA projects may vary by grantee, it is important that the grantee plan for an average daily attendance (ADA) of 70% of the programs total level of service. The grantee must submit the ADA for each site through required quarterly reporting. Average daily attendance is calculated by taking the sum of each students total days present from the program start date divided by the number of days the afterschool program operated since the start date. While the number of days may vary, regular attendance is required. Match Consideration Once a grantee reports any matching funds, those funds or in-kind contributions are subject to reporting and monitoring requirements. It is expected that the grantee will maintain the same level of match, identified in year 1, for the duration of the three-year grant. If awarded, points will be added to the Budget Section. If the grantee requested to receive up to three additional points for matching, in the first year application, they must complete each of the following criteria: Provide a budget narrative describing the matching funds within the Match Narrative section; Identify the matching funding source within the Match Narrative section; Provide a detailed narrative of activities or services to be provided by the matching funds within the Match Narrative section and Project Activity Plan; and Complete the Matching Funds Summary and Expenditure Report form (within EWEG) with their application. 2.2 PROJECT REQUIREMENTS Each eligible organization that receives an award may use the funds to carry out a broad array of engaging and enriching activities (including activities during summer/winter/spring recess periods) that advance academic achievement and social, behavioral, and physical development. To maintain consistency with the regulations set forth by USDE and Ƶs belief that there are diverse and multiple paths for youth achievement, the Ƶ has established minimum program requirements. The grantee is required to adhere to and implement the project requirements as set forth in this section of the application. The Ƶ will permit an eligible entity to use funds to provide expanded learning program activities that support high-quality programming through enrichment and engaging academic activities as described under ESSA legislation, section 4205(a). These activities would be included as part of an expanded learning program that provides students at least 300 additional program hours before, during, or after the traditional school day; supplement but do not supplant regular school day requirements; and are carried out by eligible grantees. JOINT APPLICATION A grantee must submit a joint application that consists of at least one local educational agency (LEA), which includes charter schools, educational service commissions, jointure commissions and special-services school districts receiving funds under Title I, Part A and another eligible entity listed in section 1.2 of this NGO. A grantee must complete the Verification of Joint Application form (Appendix 2). Submission of this form is a condition of award under this grant program. One form is required for each partner associated with the application. Partnerships formed with key organizations that provide high-quality services increase the likelihood of sustainability as a result of the investment that each organization contributes. The Ƶ requires the grantee to develop partnerships with a variety of agencies to ensure the development of a comprehensive program. Partnerships among out-of-school time (OST) programs, schools, and the community have been recognized as a feature of high-performing programs and can play a critical role when programs decide to implement new, evidence-based practices or activities. Stakeholders may include public and private coalitions that will bring together leaders and supporters to pursue the goals and objectives of this NGO. Additionally, quality partnerships provide sufficient program resources and enable programs to sustain funding after the end of the cycle of grant funding. The grantee must include the following requirements in the program design: At a minimum, quarterly meetings between the grantee and its partners to review progress toward program goals and each agencys continued role and responsibility; and Partners must provide tangible program resources, such as curriculum, facilities, staffing, equipment, etc., that are directly related to the goals and outcomes of the program. Responses to this section must be submitted in the Joint Application section. Program Abstract The project abstract is a one-page summary (250-300 words) of your proposed projects need, purpose, and projected outcomes. The grantee must indicate the start and end date of their programs, along with the hours of operation. Responses to this section must be submitted in the Abstract section. Target Population The grantee may serve youth in grades three through 12 and adult family members of those youth. These funds cannot be used to provide services in Kindergarten to grade two, as well as community members at large. Regular attendance by all participants is expected in order to achieve significant improvement in participant outcomes. The grantee must carefully plan and develop a program that encourages regular participation. The grantee must respond to each of the following: Provide a complete description of the target population being served at each program site, including youth demographic information such as grade levels, ethnic and racial background, economic status, and the number of public and nonpublic participants receiving services. Include the number of students to be served at each site. Include the number of students to be served during the summer at each site. Describe how the grantee agency will provide a safe and easily accessible facility. Identify and provide specific accommodations, modifications, supplementary aids, and services that are necessary to serve participants with disabilities. Describe the recruitment and retention plans. Describe how the grantee agency will disseminate information about the center to the community. Responses to this section must be submitted in the Target Population section. PROJECT DESCRIPTION The Ƶs expectation is that all out of school time programs will be comprehensive in nature. Program Components The grantee must implement activities in each of the following six (6) categories: academic remediation; academic enrichment; positive youth development; cultural and arts; health, nutrition, fitness and physical activity; and parental involvement. The grantee is required to submit a weekly schedule of activities for each program site. The following list of eligible activities are pursuant to Section 4205 (a)(1): academic enrichment learning programs, mentoring programs, remedial education activities, and tutoring services, that are aligned with the challenging State academic standards and any local academic standards; and local curricula that are designed to improve student academic achievement; well-rounded education activities, including such activities that enable students to be eligible for credit recovery or attainment; literacy education programs, including financial literacy programs and environmental literacy programs; services for individuals with disabilities; programs that provide afterschool activities for students who are English learners that emphasize language skills and academic achievement; cultural programs; programs that support a healthy and active lifestyle, including nutritional education and regular, structured physical activity programs; telecommunications and technology education programs; expanded library service hours; programs that provide assistance to students who have been truant, suspended, or expelled to allow the students to improve their academic achievement; drug and violence prevention programs and counseling programs; programs that build skills in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (referred to in this paragraph as STEM), including computer science, and that foster innovation in learning by supporting nontraditional STEM education teaching methods; and programs that partner with in-demand fields of the local workforce or build career competencies and career readiness and ensure that local workforce and career readiness skills are aligned with the Carl D. Perkins Career and Technical Education Act of 2006 (20 U.S.C. 2301 et seq.) and the Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (29 U.S.C. 3101 et seq.). Responses to this section must be submitted in the Project Description section. Please note that a grantee is not required to provide all of these activities. Project-Based Activities Project-based learning is most often characterized by a series of activities with a sustained focus over time and linked to an outcome of significance a performance, product, or service that is highly valued by the students as well as a broader community. These activities are generally a group effort that often moves beyond the walls of the classroom or afterschool, into the community for research, internships, presentations, etc. It is expected that these activities have clear goals that often embrace academic and social dimensions simultaneously. Additionally, the programs should provide for on-going review of the process with frequent opportunities for students to receive and provide feedback as the work is developing as well as final evaluation from peers, instructors, and the public, including self-assessment. Responses to this section must be submitted in the Project Description section. Inquiry-Based Learning Out-of-school time programs are well-suited to implement strategies that support inquiry-based learning. Engaging participants in active learning by simply asking them questions that spark their intellect, pushing them past the surface of the subject matter and promoting higher-order thinking is essential to implementing inquiry-based learning. Programs are required to develop afterschool activities that are experiential, interactive, hands on, learner directed, and related to the real world while remaining grounded in academic learning goals. The grantee must describe how they intend to design activities that guide participants in finding the answers themselves and encourage them to ask new questions along the way, while also providing participants with time to think, investigate and problem solve before answering questions. Responses to this section must be submitted in the Project Description section. Summer Programming The grantee is required to operate a summer program that engages youth in learning and reduces the potential summer learning loss. The program must operate for a minimum of 80 hours. If the program has multiple sites, the summer program may be combined to one site; however, the program must offer the summer program to all participants served during the school year. The grantee must completely describe their summer program, including the number of students, sites, number of weeks, types of activities, etc. Responses to this section must be submitted in the Project Description section. Social-Emotional Learning According to the Collaborative for Academic, Social, and Emotional Learning (CASEL), social and emotional learning (SEL) is the process through which children and adults acquire and effectively apply the knowledge, attitudes, and skills necessary to understand and manage emotions, set and achieve positive goals, feel and show empathy for others, establish and maintain positive relationships, and make responsible decisions. More and more evidence has demonstrated that afterschool programs have an impact on the social-emotional learning of youth that are engaged in a high quality program. A recent article written by the American Institute for Research for Schools Out Washington suggest that afterschool programs may want to engage in some or all of the following to ensure key skills like, self-confidence, positive states of mind, positive social behaviors, etc. are achieved: Provide professional development for staff on how to make program activities S.A.F.E. that is, sequenced, active, focused and explicit. Participate in existing quality improvement activities or advocate for additional funding related to quality improvement and then use that funding to create strong quality assessment and improvement practices. Conduct regular youth satisfaction surveys to gauge how engaged youth feel in the program. If engagement is low, implement strategies to foster a sense of belonging and fun in the program. Bolster youth participation by identifying what youth like and do not like about the program and making changes to match their needs and interests. Be intentional. Identify which skills the program targets. Make choices. Think about program activities. Decide on key social and emotional competencies the program truly targets and measure those not the universe of social and emotional skills that exist. Programs are required to develop an environment that is supportive of SEL. Whether through the design of activities, staff to student interactions or staff training, SEL practices are relevant to the overall culture of the program. For more information on SEL visit  HYPERLINK "https://www.state.nj.us/education/students/safety/sandp/sel/" \o "https://www.state.nj.us/education/students/safety/sandp/sel/" https://www.state.nj.us/education/students/safety/sandp/sel/. Responses to this section must be submitted in the Project Description section. Intentional Planning, Coordination, and Communication with School-Day Aligning school day (both public and non-public) learning with afterschool activities through intentional planning and on-going communication between school-day and program staff will enhance participants academic and social progress and skills development. Afterschool programs are optimal for providing engaging, hands-on experiences, enabling participants to apply, reinforce, and extend skills and concepts taught in school. Intentional planning provides the staff of afterschool program, school-day, participants with a way to maximize their time and instruction. Afterschool programs and schools have the shared mission of helping youth achieve success; as such, collaboration between the two can be beneficial. Regular communication can help identify the needs and strengths of individual participants and those strategies that are most effective in raising achievement. An additional strategy that is effective in ensuring intentional planning and coordination is building the capacity of staff through professional development. Joint professional development for both school-day and afterschool staff equips staff to support youth learning and develops a positive and welcoming environment for staff and participants. Ensuring opportunities for staff to share or turn-key the information further strengthens their capacity and in turn increases participant academic success. Responses to this section must be submitted in the Project Description section. Programs are expected to embed the following practices within their program: Identify the linkage of program activities to the New Jersey Core Curriculum Content Standards in language arts, math and the Next Generation Science Standards. The grantee must allow special consideration to the English/language arts capacities and the mathematical practices; Document the linkage with the school-day through lesson plans, progress reports, and regularly-scheduled meetings; Ensure the afterschool program staff participate in school meetings and committees, such as professional learning communities and school improvement teams; Designate a regular school-day staff person (at each school site) to coordinate communication with the afterschool program to help them support school needs; Assist youth with the development of skills that support classroom instruction, such as learning how to plan, take notes, and develop an outline; Coordinate with the school to identify appropriate staff for the program and hire classroom teachers who demonstrate success during the school-day; Link professional development to identified school-based goals and learning objectives; and Provide joint training for both school-day and afterschool staff on relevant out-of-school time topics, including training on how children and youth learn and develop, how to establish appropriate learning environments, and emphasize cross-curricular content. Parental Involvement Describe how the program intends to offer parents an opportunity to provide input on all facets of the program design and implementation, including asking for input on what and how activities should be provided for them and their children. Additionally, describe how the program will formally inform parents of childs progress in the program; formally invite parents to attend events/meetings at the program; and regularly meet with parents individually or as a group. The Department expects that programs will have implemented a minimum of one (1) parental involvement activity a month. This information must be entered within PARS21 to document the activity. Responses to this section must be submitted in the Project Description section. Off-site Educational Activities (Field Trips) All off-site activities must be educational in nature, age-appropriate, and relevant to the goals and objectives of the program. The grantee must submit a detailed description of anticipated off-site educational activities with this competitive application. The description should include information regarding the specific activity and the educational benefit of the proposed activity. This information should be included in the Project Description section and included in the program site chart, under the appropriate component(s). Any field trip not documented in the approved grant application must have prior approval from the grantees assigned program officer, after receiving the grant award. The grantee is required to provide a minimum of two (2) off-site field trips (1 during the school year and 1 in the summer). Responses to this section must be submitted in the Project Description section. GOALS, OBJECTIVES, INDICATORS AND EVALUATION The grantee is required to adopt the state-mandated goals and objectives (see Appendix 6) and create program-specific indicators. Performance indicators are quantifiable performance measurements used to define success factors and measure progress toward the achievement of program goals and objectives. Each indicator must specify a time frame when that objective will be achieved; identify the clients and needs served; specify what will be achieved; and identify the expected level of performance. In this section, the grantee is required to develop performance indicators that are developed using the S.M.A.R.T. method: Specific. That is, they tell how much (e.g., 40%) of what is to be achieved (e.g., what behavior of whom or what outcome) by when (e.g., by 2020)? Measurable. You have identified the level of performance expected in order to indicate successful achievement of the objective and indicator. Achievable. Not only are the objectives and indicators themselves possible, it is likely that your organization will be able to achieve them. Relevant. Your organization has a clear understanding of how these objectives and indicators fit in with the overall vision of this contract. Timed. Your organization has developed a timeline (a portion of which is made clear in the objectives) by which they will be achieved. Responses to this section must be submitted on the Goals, Objective, Indicators and Evaluation section. Program Evaluation State Level Evaluation: The grantee must describe how they intend to ensure that appropriate program staff will continually input data into the PARS21 state database; participate in on-site monitoring; complete required state quarterly reports; complete federal data collection; and participate in state-level evaluation activities. Local Level Evaluation: The grantee must demonstrate that they will use best practices, including research or evidence-based practices, to provide educational and related activities that will complement and enhance academic performance, achievement, postsecondary and workforce preparation, and positive youth development of the students. It is expected that the grantee will comply with all components of the comprehensive statewide evaluation plan, as described in Section 1.9. Each grantee is required to fully describe its program implementation strategies, findings, and outcomes and utilize the findings of its local evaluation efforts to continuously improve its program. Accordingly, the local evaluation must: Define and use indicators to measure the progress towards meeting the state-mandated goals/objectives, e.g., academic and behavioral outcomes (see Goals, Objectives, and Indicators section of this NGO); Describe the impact of the program on students and families, e.g., student attendance and engagement during the school-day and afterschool, parental involvement, and parent participation and skills acquired by parents; Special consideration should be given to assessing the knowledge and skills that promote career and college readiness such as critical thinking, problem-solving, perseverance, collaboration, creativity and communication. Assess the efficacy of the local administration and implementation of the approved program, e.g., recruitment and retention of staff and students, program staff instruction and engagement, maintenance of collaborations and partnerships, intentional planning, student attendance, linkage to the school day (both public and non-public), breadth of program offerings, and progress towards sustainability; and Describe the action research steps taken and the program improvements implemented. The grantee is required to refine, improve, and strengthen the program and to refine the local performance measures, as appropriate. Thus, in future years, if awarded, the grantee must describe how the previous years evaluation data will inform the upcoming years program design. The grantee must list what types of data that will be collected, the frequency of collection and the related objectives. Additionally, the grantee must describe how the local level evaluation findings will be used to provide feedback to stakeholders and project staff while also informing future program direction. Responses to this section must be submitted in the Evaluation section. Professional Development It is the intention of this NGO to enhance staff capacity through professional development for both school-day and afterschool staff on relevant OST time topics. As mentioned above, professional development is a strategy to ensure intentional collaboration and linkage to the school-day. Providing joint professional development equips staff with skills necessary to implement a quality afterschool program that supports youth learning, engages staff, and encourages new ideas and creativity. In an effort to ensure linkage with the school day, the grantee is required to adhere to the professional development requirements listed below as part of the design of the program: The grantee is required to conduct a minimum of one staff orientation and one in-service training which all program staff are required to attend. Training topics must be aligned with the goals and objectives of the program and should be tailored to each programs areas of focus. The grantee may allocate funds for expenses related to consultant fees to conduct the trainings. Project directors are required to attend all Ƶ project directors meetings, trainings, and technical assistance workshops, which occur 1 per quarter. During the 3-year grant cycle, each grantee may be required to present, at least once, at The Soaring Beyond Expectations: A Statewide Afterschool Celebration. This annual conference is held locally in New Jersey and open statewide. Responses to this section must be submitted in the Professional Development section. Stakeholders The grantee is required to engage the community throughout the life of the grant. The grantee must describe how they intend to engage and inform all stakeholders about the ELPA program to increase the overall impact of this program. Additionally, the grantee must identify structured opportunities for youth participants to influence the format or content of program offerings based on their interests, preferences, and/or satisfaction, and share responsibilities with staff on program governing bodies. The grantee must include examples of project-based learning undertaken in small groups and which take more than one day to complete and acknowledge the achievements, contributions, and responsibilities of young people. Responses to this section must be submitted in the Stakeholder section. Collaborations The grantee is required to develop and maintain effective collaborations within the community among diverse agencies to strengthen the variety of services that the program can offer and allow for more efficient use of local resources. The grantee must complete the Documentation of Required Collaboration forms found in Appendix 7 & 7A for each collaborator and upload the forms in EWEG. Responses to this section must be submitted in the Stakeholder section. N.J. Quality Standards for Afterschool The N.J. Quality Standards for Afterschool (NJQSA) is a resource available to all afterschool programs as a self-assessment and continuous quality improvement tool. The grantee should become familiar with these standards and utilize them as a resource throughout the year. If awarded, all first year grantees will be required to complete the Program Activity, Administration and Human Relations sections of the quality assessment tool. In years two and three, grantees must select any two sections from the NJQSA with the understanding that by year three all sections will be completed. Although the quality assessment tool will not be collected by Ƶ, the grantee is required to maintain documentation of the review by program staff and the completion of the accompanying assessment tool by April 30, 2020. This process may be divided among staff at the agencys discretion and should include multiple staff members. For example, a program section can be divided amongst staff whose responsibilities are specific to certain areas. Additional information on these standards can be found at  HYPERLINK "http://www.njsacc.org/qualityStandards/index.php" \o "http://www.njsacc.org/qualityStandards/index.php" http://www.njsacc.org/qualityStandards/index.php. Responses to this section must be submitted in the Sustainability section. Assurances In an effort to maintain consistency among all New Jersey out-of-school time programs, all the grantee must read and sign the Program Statement of Assurances (Appendix 8). Submission of this form is a condition of award under this grant program. Nonpublic Participation Grantees who served non-public students during the prior year must maintain active collaboration and communication with the appropriate nonpublic school officials throughout the program year. If the grantee is expanding to another site, it must provide equitable participation to nonpublic schools in the new geographic area. Grantees serving students in nonpublic schools must consult with participating nonpublic schools prior to preparing the application, as documented by the Nonpublic Equitable Participation Summary and Affirmation of Consultation, the Documentation of Nonpublic School Participation and the Nonpublic School Requirements listed within EWEG. Grantees are required to upload the Nonpublic Equitable Participation Summary and Affirmation of Consultation Form (Appendix 9). PROJECT ACTIVITY PLAN The grantee must describe the proposed activities that will be implemented to achieve each state mandated goal and objective and result in the attainment of the performance indicators. The Project Activity Plan must directly support the budget, as it will serve as the basis for the proposed expenditures. Activities described must be specific and measurable and directly relate to the goal and objective. For example, the following is an unacceptable activity: Meetings with community partners, community entities, collaborators. A more acceptable activity would be: The project director will meet with community entities, partners, and collaborators on a quarterly basis. For consistency purposes, please ensure that all activities are documented within the appropriate objective. The grantee should refer to Appendix 6, State Mandated Goals and Objectives, for a list of state mandated objectives. Listed below are general categories of activities most common for programs and the appropriate objective where they should be listed. This list is not exhaustive. These are general categories and you should not use these categories within the project activity plan, as you are required to be more specific when describing the activity. Objective 1.1 partner/collaborator/advisory/student meetings; Objective 1.2 intentional planning, thematic activities; summer programming, inquiry-based activities, project based activities, and off-site activities; Objective 1.3 professional development and trainings; Objective 1.4 academic, recreational, cultural, arts activities and daily snacks; Objectives 1.5 youth development activities and social, emotional and character development activities; Objective 2.1, 2.2, 2.3 family involvement activities; and, Objective 3.1, 3.2, 3.3, 3.4 evaluation, including: implementation of action-research. Within the EWEG Project Activity Plan section, the grantee must select the period in which the activity will be implemented. If the activity is ongoing or recurring, select each period in which the activity will take place. Responses to this section must be submitted in the Project Activity Plan section. Responses to this section must be submitted in the Project Activity Plan section. Service Start and End Dates In an effort to ensure quality and continuity of care, the Ƶ is requiring all programs to have services available as of October 1, 2019. The grantee must indicate the exact start and end dates within the application. Responses to this section must be submitted in the Abstract and the Status Report section. NOTE: Failure to begin by October 1, 2019 will result in a withholding of grant payments and may result in a reduced award or termination of the grant. Attendance Considerable thought and planning between the grantee agency and its local program site(s) must occur to ensure proper management of this program. Regular attendance by all students is expected in order to achieve significant improvement in student outcomes. Ƶ requires an average daily attendance (ADA) of 70% of the programs total level of service. The grantee must submit the ADA for each local program site through quarterly required reporting. Average daily attendance is calculated by taking the sum of each students total days present from the program start date divided by the number of days the afterschool program operated since the start date. Responses to this section must be submitted in the Abstract and the Status Report section. Program Hours of Operation The program must operate for a total of 300 hours per program year, which is September through August. The grantee must ensure a minimum of 80 hours to be provided during a summer enrichment program to reduce summer learning loss and a minimum of 50 hours, during the academic year, for enrichment activities as identified in the program components section of this NGO. Responses to this section must be submitted in the Abstract section and the Status Report section. NOTE: For grantees operating multiple sites, please note that the requirements listed above must be applied to each program site. Staffing and Certification Requirements In order to effectively perform the administrative responsibilities of this federally-funded grant program, the Ƶ requires that each program adhere to the minimum requirements outlined below. The grantee have flexibility in the establishment of their staffing patterns; however, the Ƶ will review and approve the management plan, including staffing, based on what is necessary and reasonable to implement the project and adhere to program requirements. It is expected that the grantee maintain a staff to student ratio of 1:15 for all activities, including physical activities. The grantee should review Appendix 10. The Ƶ reserves the right to require changes based on our review. All programs are required to identify a project director who will serve as the agencys primary point of contact with the Ƶ program officer responsible for the grant program. This person must be employed by the grantee agency and is responsible for managing the administrative functions of this program. Programs are required to have regular meetings with staff at each site to ensure appropriate linkage with school-day activities. Programs must utilize certified teachers to implement the academic remediation component activities, specifically in math and language arts. Programs are not required to hire school-day teachers for all activities offered. Programs may utilize personnel from community agencies, youth workers or other experts in the field of out-of-school time programming. Depending on the size and frequency of the program, one (1) site coordinator is suggested for each site. The site coordinator must fulfill all responsibilities detailed in Appendix 10 for their respective program sites. A teacher or part-time project director may serve as the site coordinator, if the person works a sufficient number of hours to fulfill all of the responsibilities. Due to the various data systems requiring data-entry, the grantee must budget for a data-entry staff person, detailed in Appendix 10. Other project staff may fulfill data-entry activities, if employed for a sufficient number of hours to fulfill all of the responsibilities. A project director may not fulfill this position. Responses to this section must be submitted in the Status Report section. Background Checks The grantee is required under state law to submit Child Abuse Record Information (CARI) forms to the Department of Children and Families, Office of Licensing, for all staff members and volunteers who regularly interact with youth participants. Additionally, the grantee is required under state law to submit Criminal History Record Information (CHRI) forms to the Department of Human Services for all staff members and volunteers who regularly interact with youth participants. An LEA grantee may utilize the current checks provided through district employment, however its important to note that this may change in the future. For additional information on CARI, contact the Department of Children and Families, Office of Licensing at 1-(877) 667-9845. For additional information on CHRI, contact the Department of Human Services, CHRI Unit at 1-(609) 633-3761. Responses to this section must be submitted in the Status Report section. Child Care Licensing Pursuant to N.J.S.A. 30:5B-1-15, supplemented by P.L. 1992, c.95, the afterschool and summer programming for children up to age 13 are required to be a licensed child care center. All programs must adhere to the requirements pursuant to New Jersey Administrative Code (N.J.A.C.) 10:122, Manual of Requirements for Child Care Centers, under the New Jersey Department of Children and Families. Local educational agencies (LEAs) must contact the licensing office to determine their status, as they may no longer be exempt from this state law. Submission of a copy of the agencys child care license or receipt of a temporary license is a condition of award under this grant program. Please refer to the website at  HYPERLINK "http://www.state.nj.us/dcf/providers/licensing/laws/" \o "http://www.state.nj.us/dcf/providers/licensing/laws/" http://www.state.nj.us/dcf/providers/licensing/laws/ or contact the Department of Children and Families, Office of Licensing at 1-(877)-667-9845. Responses to this section must be submitted in the Status Report section. Emergency Protocols The grantee must adhere to the following emergency protocols and maintain the following documentation at each program site: An emergency readiness plan that includes policies and procedures for early dismissal, inclement weather, health emergencies, building security breaches and other urgent situations; Emergency contact information for each participating student, which includes a minimum of two emergency contact persons, in addition to the parent/guardian; A list of persons, authorized by the parents/guardians, to whom the site can release the child; A procedure for verifying the identity of the person to whom the child is released, if other than the parent/guardian; and Information detailing chronic health conditions for all participants and procedures for the care of any participant who becomes ill during the program. Responses to this section must be submitted within the Status Report section. NOTE: All information should also be readily accessible when program activities occur off-site. Transportation The grantee is required to provide transportation for participants to and from the program site and home or pre-arranged site. In the event that participants are transported to a location other than their home, the grantee must obtain written parental consent. The grantee must also obtain written parental consent for participants who walk to and from the program site. It is the responsibility of the grantee agency to ensure the safety of each child to and from the program site. Responses to this section must be submitted within the Status Report section. NOTE: The grantee must transport participants in accordance with all applicable state laws and regulations. Daily Nutritious Snack While snacks are required when programming occurs outside of the regular school day, these funds may not be used to purchase those snacks or any other food for any participants, child or adult. Ƶ strongly encourages programs to determine their eligibility for the following federal nutrition programs: snack from the National School Lunch Program, snacks and full meals from the CACFP At-Risk Afterschool Meal Program, as well as the Summer Food Service Program for summer programs. These programs are administered by the NJ Department of Agriculture. If programs do not qualify for the above nutrition programs, they must utilize other sources of funding to provide daily snacks. For more information on USDA snack requirements, please visit  HYPERLINK "http://www.nj.gov/agriculture/divisions/fn/childadult/school_snack.html" \o "http://www.nj.gov/agriculture/divisions/fn/childadult/school_snack.html" http://www.nj.gov/agriculture/divisions/fn/childadult/school_snack.html. Responses to this section must be submitted within the Status Report section. 2.3 BUDGET DESIGN CONSIDERATIONS The organization designated as the grantee agency in the original application must remain the grantee agency and must be accountable for all fiscal and program oversight. It is critical for the grantee to develop strong collaborations that will enable them to leverage private resources to sustain the program beyond the period for which grant funds are available. The grantees budget must be well-considered, necessary for the implementation of the project, remain within the funding parameters contained in the NGO, and demonstrate prudent use of resources. Once the objectives that will guide the work in the implementation phase of the grant have been prioritized, begin to develop the details of the budget that will be necessary to carry out each activity. The budget will be reviewed to ensure that costs are customary and reasonable for implementation of each project activity. The grantee must provide a direct link for each cost to the goal, objectives and activities in the Project Activity Plan that provides programmatic support for the proposed cost. In addition, the grantee must provide documentation and details sufficient to support each proposed cost. Ƶ will especially review budget line items to determine percentage of administrative costs and ensure that they, like all costs, are reasonable and necessary. These line items may include administrative salaries, fringe benefits, office supplies and office equipment. The Ƶ reserves the right to require a reduction should it be determined that the administrative costs are excessive and unreasonable. Guidance on constructing a grant budget may be found in the Pre-award Manual for Discretionary Grants document, which can be accessed at  HYPERLINK "http://www.state.nj.us/education/grants/discretionary/apps/" \o "http://www.state.nj.us/education/grants/discretionary/apps/" http://www.state.nj.us/education/grants/discretionary/apps/. The budget submitted as part of the application is for the current grant period only. The Ƶ will remove from consideration all ineligible costs, as well as costs not supported by the Project Activity Plan. The grantee will have an opportunity to make pre-award revisions, however the Ƶ is not required to provide repeated opportunities for revisions or to permit reallocation of the funds previously requested for costs that have not been approved or have been disallowed. Grantees should consider required trainings, transportation expenses, and evaluation costs when preparing budget detail forms. The actual amount awarded will be contingent upon the grantees ability to provide support for its proposed budget upon application and ultimately will be determined by the Ƶ, through the pre-award revision process. Programs may charge fees for activities; however, the program must be equally accessible to all students targeted for services, regardless of their ability to pay. As such, programs that charge fees may not prohibit any family from participating for financial reasons. Additionally, programs must offer a sliding scale fee and scholarships for those who cannot afford the program. Program income collected from fees must be used to fund additional costs consistent with the grant application and cannot be carried over into any subsequent years. 2.4 BUDGET REQUIREMENTS In constructing the budget, please note that all costs must be reasonable and necessary to implement program activities. Additionally, the budget entries must demonstrate clear and specific links to the project activity plan. The grantee must provide sufficient explanation of budgeted costs, including the calculation detail (cost-basis). Programs that charge fees must obtain prior approval from the Ƶ through their program officer. If approval is granted, the grantee will be required to submit a program income report with the quarterly and final fiscal reports. Programs that charge fees must obtain prior approval from the Ƶ through their program officer. If approval is granted, the applicant will be required to submit a program income report with the quarterly and final fiscal reports. Program income generated without prior approval from the Ƶ must be deducted from the funds awarded under the Federal grant. For additional information regarding the program income report, please visit  HYPERLINK "http://www.nj.gov/njded/grants/discretionary/management/" \o "http://www.nj.gov/njded/grants/discretionary/management/" www.nj.gov/njded/grants/discretionary/management/. If the applicant elects to apply for the Match priority consideration, its important to note that the match funds may not exceed the amount of the grant award. The grantee are not permitted to divest more than 20% of the total grant award to any single entity, including but not limited to partners, collaborators or sub-grantees. At a minimum, the grantee must maintain direct control of 51% of the total grant award during the entire grant cycle. Additionally, the grantee are not allowed to divest oversight of the program administration or implementation to another agency, this includes, but is not limited to, existing programs and other agencies in a sub-grant process. These funds may not be used as a pass-through to another agency to operate this program. Through an amendment process the department may authorize a modification to an approved application. This process requires substantial programmatic and fiscal review by the Ƶ. The grantee must have a compelling programmatic justification and rationale for the need for the amendment requested. Any change requested must be in keeping with the intent, goals, and objectives of the NGO. The last day for the grantee to submit an amendment is May 29, 2020. To reduce the number of pre-award revisions under the Budget section of EWEG, please review the Budget Development Instructions document in Appendix 11 for additional details as you construct your budget. The grantee must adhere to the Ƶ required provisions of N.J.A.C. 6A:23A-7, School District Travel Policies and Procedures. These provisions contain additional requirements concerning prior approvals, as well as expenditures related to travel. It is strongly recommended that the grantee work with their fiscal manager when constructing the budget. The Ƶ applies the N.J.A.C. restrictions uniformly to all grantees. Unless otherwise specified, the following restrictions apply to all grant programs: No reimbursement for in-state overnight travel (meals and/or lodging); No reimbursement for meals on in-state travel; Mileage reimbursement may not exceed $.31 per mile; and, Other ineligible costs are listed in the section below. The grantee must ensure that it meets all of the requirements listed below: 1. Transportation Cost for transportation must be reasonable and necessary for the program. Vehicles may not be purchased; however, any grantee may choose to contract with a service provider or annually lease a vehicle. 2. Background Checks Criminal background checks are required for all program staff with direct contact with students, as indicated in the child care licensing laws. The fee required for a Child Abuse Record of Information (CARI) and Criminal History Record of Information (CHRI) are allowable costs that may be included in the program budget. For additional information, please visit the New Jersey Department of Children and Families (DCF) website at  HYPERLINK "http://www.state.nj.us/dcf/reporting/record/" \o "http://www.state.nj.us/dcf/reporting/record/" http://www.state.nj.us/dcf/reporting/record/. For additional information on the CHRI, please visit  HYPERLINK "http://www.state.nj.us/education/educators/crimhist/" \o "http://www.state.nj.us/education/educators/crimhist/" http://www.state.nj.us/education/educators/crimhist/. 3. Professional Development The grantee may budget grant funds for expenses related to consultant fees, registration costs, travel, meals, and lodging in accordance with state regulations. 4. Supplement not Supplant Grantees must use program funds to supplement and not supplant other federal, state, and local funds to provide programs and activities allowable under this grant program. 5. Evaluation The grantee must obtain and submit one quote from an external program evaluator with their application for funding. The external evaluator may not be a current vendor or employee of the agency. The quote must include information regarding the scope of the evaluation, deliverables, and costs. Additionally, the grantee must attach the evaluators resume or curriculum vitae. Please refer to Section 2, Project Guidelines, of this NGO for submission instructions. The grantee must budget sufficient funds to cover the costs to complete the required evaluation, including costs for the external (non-employee) program evaluator and administrative support personnel responsible for PARS21 data entry. 6. Maintenance of Effort (MOE) ELPA programs are subject to a Maintenance of Effort (MOE) requirement, which is the same requirement that is applied to Title I, Part A. Under the MOE requirement, an ELPA program may receive its full award, only if the Ƶ determines that the projects LEA partners combined fiscal effort per pupil or aggregate expenditures of state and local funds for free public education in the preceding fiscal year was not less than 90% of the combined fiscal effort or aggregate expenditures for the second preceding fiscal year. If the LEA fails to meet the 90% level, the Ƶ must reduce the projects award by the exact percentage by which the LEA failed to meet the 90% level. The Ƶ will verify the MOE requirement for LEAs during the award process. For more information about this, please contact the Office of Grants Management at (609) 376-9089. 7. Use of Funds for Nonpublic Schools Pursuant to EDGAR 76.650 - 76.662, when providing benefits to nonpublic school students with federal funds, the following must be addressed: The applicant must maintain administrative control over all funds and property. (No funds can flow directly to the nonpublic school via a subgrant). Funds cannot be used for construction of nonpublic school facilities. The grantee may place equipment and supplies in the nonpublic school for the period of time needed for the grant. The grantee must ensure that the materials are used only for the purposes of the grant and can be removed, by the lead grantee, from the nonpublic school without remodeling the nonpublic school facility. Funds must be used to meet specific needs of students and staff. (Funds cannot supplant benefits normally provided by the nonpublic school). Funds may be used to pay for services of an employee of the nonpublic school if the employee performs the services outside of his or her regular hours and the employees performs the services under the supervision of the grantee. All benefits provided, including equipment and materials, must be secular, neutral and non-ideological. (IASA, Sec 14503) Eligible Costs Grant funds may be used by the grantee for the following costs that directly support the activities described in the application: Salaries and benefits for program staff, including but not limited to custodial, security, and nursing staff, that are reasonable and necessary; Purchase of curricula, project materials, and supplies for grant-funded project activities, including computer software and on-line resources; Professional development and training in support of grant-funded projects and services; Fees for Child Abuse Record Information (CARI) and Criminal History Record Information (CHRI); Identification, selection, and orientation of grant-funded staff; Transportation services for project participants to participate in grant-funded activities; Reasonable and necessary services and accommodations associated with serving disabled students; Computer(s) for the purpose of program administration and implementation; Other grant related expenses (e.g., printing, telephones, postage, travel, rent) that are necessary to perform grant administrative functions; and Indirect costs. Indirect costs represent the expenses of doing business that are not readily identified with a particular grant function or activity, but are necessary for the general operation of the organization and the conduct of activities it performs. Indirect costs may be requested in the budget from the grantee that either 1) have a current federally negotiated indirect cost rate agreement; or 2) have never received a federally negotiated indirect cost rate agreement. The actual indirect cost rate that may be used in budgeting is a de minimis rate, which is subject to the requirements of the grant program. If indirect costs are requested, care must be taken to ensure that costs that would be considered an indirect cost are not included in the budgeted as a direct cost. Please refer to 2 CFR Part 200.414 for additional information ( HYPERLINK "http://www.ecfr.gov/" \o "http://www.ecfr.gov/" www.ecfr.gov). The indirect cost dollar amount that you budget in your application must be the same dollar amount as the maximum, allowable indirect cost dollar amount calculated by EWEG in your application. If you want to budget a lesser dollar amount, reduce the rate amount that you insert in the RATE box under the INDIRECT COST tab. For the grantee with a current federally negotiated indirect cost rate agreement, they must scan and upload a copy of their indirect cost rate agreement. As this program is subject to a supplement, not supplant requirement, the grantee with an approved restricted indirect cost rate must use that rate; the grantee with rate agreements that do not include a restricted indirect cost rate are limited to 8% MTDC. For the grantee that have never received a federally negotiated indirect cost rate agreement, they must scan and upload a signed statement as part of the application. This statement must attest to the fact that the organization has never received a federally negotiated indirect cost rate agreement, and that the grantee is requesting the use of a de minimis indirect cost rate. This statement must be signed by the Chief Executive Officer or designee of the organization. The de minimis rate is 8% MTDC, as this program is subject to a supplement, not supplant requirement. LEAs without an approved indirect cost rate are limited to the state median-approved indirect cost rate applicable to this program. NOTE: Out-of-state travel not documented in the approved grant application requires prior approval from the grantees program officer. Ineligible Costs Funds provided under this grant may not be used for the following costs: Food, including snacks and refreshments, for project participants, both children and families, or staff meetings , including required orientation, professional development trainings, scheduled in-service trainings and advisory board meetings; Vehicle purchases; Supplanting local, state, or federal funds already designated for grant-related activities; Construction or capital improvements; Religious practices or programs; such as religious instruction, worship, or prayer; Costs that are not directly related to the implementation of grant activities; Membership to associations or organizations; In-state overnight meals and/or lodging; Meals on in-state travel; and Mileage reimbursement in excess of $.31 per mile. NOTE: Ineligible costs, as well as costs not supported by the activity plan, will be removed from consideration. SECTION 3: COMPLETING THE APPLICATION 3.1 GENERAL INSTRUCTIONS FOR APPLYING To apply for a grant under this NGO, you must prepare and submit a complete application. Your agency must submit an ELPA continuation application using the online EWEG system found at  HYPERLINK "http://homeroom.state.nj.us/" \o "http://homeroom.state.nj.us/" http://homeroom.state.nj.us/. Paper copies of the application will not be accepted. The grantee should refer to Appendix 12 for general tips on completing the application online through the EWEG system. 3.2 REVIEW OF CONTINUATION APPLICATIONS Ƶ staff will review the continuation grant application on the basis of quality and comprehensiveness, including consistency with the comprehensive project plan selected and approved in the application under the initiating multi-year NGO. Applications will also be reviewed for completeness, accuracy and appropriateness of response to each of the items identified in Section 2. Additionally, final awards will be based on the grantees program and fiscal performance through on-site and desk monitoring, quarterly reports, local and state level evaluations (including PARS21 data entry and accuracy), adequate and efficient use of federal funds and other areas deemed appropriate by the Ƶ. The grantee is reminded that the opportunity to make pre-award revisions will be limited. It is up to the grantee to submit timely and thorough responses to any requests made by Department staff. If the grantee delay responses or are unresponsive to requests, the grant award may be rescinded. Please be advised that in accordance with the Open Public Records Act P.L. 2001, c. 404, all applications for discretionary grant funds received September 1, 2003 or later, as well as the evaluation results associated with these applications, and other information regarding the competitive grants process, will become matters of public record upon the completion of the evaluation process, and will be available to members of the public upon request. 3.3 APPLICATION COMPONENT CHECKLIST Documents listed below in the Required ( column must be included as part of your EWEG application. Please make note of Appendix 12, Electronic Web-Enabled Grants System (EWEG) Tips, to reduce errors within the EWEG system. When uploading documents into EWEG be sure to properly label each document with the title of the form and not the appendix number. Please note that once a document is uploaded into EWEG it cannot be deleted, thus it will be a part of the final submission. Use the checklist to ensure that all required components have been completed. Required (()FormEWEG TAB/SUBTAB(EWEG Admin (Contacts, Allocation, Assurance, Board Approval, DUNS and FFATA)(EWEG Narrative (Update, Target Population, Project Description, Goals/Objectives, Professional Development, Stakeholders, Sustainability, Evaluation, Nonpublic, Activity Plan, Status Report) (EWEGBudget(blank)EWEG Match Narrative (as appropriate)(blank)EWEGMatching Funds Summary Tab (as appropriate)(blank)(blank)*The following documents are to be scanned and uploaded in the EWEG Application, as PDF files, prior to submission. With the exception of the evaluation quote, weekly schedule and child care license, all forms are included as Appendices in this NGO.(UPLOADVerification of Joint Application (Appendix 2) (UPLOADDocumentation of School Eligibility (Appendix 3) (UPLOADAudit Information Form (Appendix 5)(UPLOADState Mandated Goals and Objectives (Appendix 6)(UPLOADDocumentation of Required Collaboration (Appendix 7 & 7A) (UPLOADProgram Statement of Assurances (Appendix 8) (UPLOADNonpublic Equitable Participation Summary and Affirmation of Consultation Form (Appendix 9)(UPLOADLocal External Evaluation Quote including Evaluators Resume or Curriculum Vitae UPLOADChild Care License (as appropriate)(UPLOADAcademic year schedule of program activities for each program site (UPLOADSummer schedule of program activities for each program site(UPLOADCopy of grantees federally negotiated indirect cost rate OR a signed statement requesting the use of a de minimis indirect cost rate subject to the conditions set forth in the NGO. (Scan/Upload)(UPLOADEntity Overview page from the  HYPERLINK "http://www.sam.gov/" \o "http://www.sam.gov/" www.sam.gov website. (This is the page that shows your agencys name, address with 4-digit extension zip code, DUNS number, and CCR expiration date, which must be a date that comes after the start date of the grant program.) Applicant Agency: _____________________________ Appendix 1 ELIGIBLE APPLICANT APPLICANT AGENCYAward AmountMatch PercentageEast Orange School District$250,0000% Applicant Agency: _____________________________ Appendix 2 VERIFICATION OF JOINT APPLICATION (Please duplicate for each partnering agency. Form is required for all partners including applicant agency) This document is to be completed by all applicants as evidence of the required partnership. Applicant Agency Name:____________________________________________________ Type of agency/organization:  FORMCHECKBOX  local educational agency receiving funds under Title I Part A; or  FORMCHECKBOX  one other eligible entity as indicated in Section 1.2 Name of partnering agency/organization:____________________________________________ Contact Person Name and Title: _____________________________________________ Address: ________________________________________________________________ County: _________________ Telephone#: ___________________ Fax #: ____________ Email Address: ________________________________________________ Type of agency/organization:  FORMCHECKBOX  local educational agency receiving funds under Title I Part A; or  FORMCHECKBOX  one other eligible entity as indicated in Section 1.2 I certify that the partnering agency/organization listed above:  FORMCHECKBOX  (1) has met the definition of an eligible entity as listed in Section 1.2 of this notice of grant opportunity;  FORMCHECKBOX  (2) is submitting only one joint application with eligible entities consisting of not less than one local educational agency receiving funds under Title I, part A; and one other eligible entity;  FORMCHECKBOX  (3) will enroll students who may be at risk for academic failure, dropping out of school, involvement in criminal or delinquent activities, or who lack strong positive role models and their families;  FORMCHECKBOX  (4) certifies that the activities proposed in the application are, as of the date of the submission of the application, not accessible to students who would be served; or would expand accessibility to high-quality services that may be available in the community;  FORMCHECKBOX  (5) agrees to provide data to the applicant for the purposes of the local and state evaluations of the program;  FORMCHECKBOX  (6) is not a current 21st Century Community Learning Center (21st CCLC) program and will not submit an application for the 21st CCLC program funds until the third and final year of the ELPA grant, if awarded. Waiver:  FORMCHECKBOX  If a rural LEA applicant, receiving funds under Title I Part A, demonstrates that they are unable to partner with a community-based organization in reasonable geographic proximity (i.e., within 15 miles of the LEA) and of sufficient quality to meet the requirements within this priority, they may be eligible to apply. Applicant still must meet #3-6 above. _________________________________________________________ Print Name of Applicant Agency Chief School Administrator or CEO __________________________________________________________ _________________ Signature of the Applicant Agency Chief School Administrator or CEO Date The undersigned agency is committed to ensuring that it will act in full support of the program through the provision of activities, services, and/or resources. In addition, the agency will provide data to the applicant for the purposes of the local and state evaluations of the program. _________________________________________________________ Print Name of Partnering Agency Chief School Administrator or CEO __________________________________________________________ _________________ Signature of the Partnering Agency Chief School Administrator or CEO Date Applicant Agency: _____________________________ Appendix 3 DOCUMENTATION OF SCHOOL ELIGIBILITY Please copy and complete for each school the applicant proposes to serve. Applicant Agency Name: _____________________________________________________  FORMCHECKBOX  Check this box if this school will be the site where activities will take place. Name of School: _________________________________________________________ Address: _________________________________________________________ Phone: (___) _____________ Fax: (___) ________________________ District: _________________________________________________________ County: _________________________________________________________ I certify that the school listed above meets the following eligibility requirement, under ESSA:  FORMCHECKBOX  (1) Currently listed as a comprehensive support and improvement or targeted support and improvement school. This can be found at  HYPERLINK "/education/csn/" \o "/education/csn/" /education/csn/; OR  FORMCHECKBOX  (2) Schools determined by the local educational agency to be in need of intervention and support to improve student academic achievement and other outcomes. If this box is checked, the applicant must upload a description, including local and/or state data, which supports this designation. In determining if a school is in need of intervention and support, the Ƶ will permit the applicant agency to: Target students who attend schools with a minimum of 30% of its population from low-income families; or Submit a description of its selection process, which must include state or district data that supports the selection, as an upload in EWEG. Name of Chief School Administrator (Print): ____________________________________ Signature of Chief School Administrator: _______________________________________ Date: __________________ Applicant Agency: _____________________________ Appendix 4 FINAL COMPREHENSIVE 3-YEAR EVALUATION REPORT OUTLINE The final evaluation must include, but is not limited to, the following sections: Introduction Background and description of program (hours of operation, site locations); and Description of target population (grade levels, ethnic and racial background, economic status, students with disabilities and non-public school/student participation). Program Implementation Range and intensity of all required program components and detailed activities; Staff specialties and certifications; and Summary of accomplishments in program development and implementation with acknowledgement of changes in program design/implementation from previous years. Measures and Outcomes Use quantitative and qualitative data to: Analyze trends (e.g., attendance, parent involvement, teacher rating, activity and subject categories addressed); Make comparisons with state, national and federal standards; Determine progress toward achieving the state goals and objectives; Determine the level of achievement of each local level indicator identified in the previous NGO; Describe youth and family outcomes; and Make comparisons of impact across program years, grade levels, sites to: determine common characteristics and achievements, and identify program strengths and weaknesses. Summary and Conclusions Major accomplishments; Review and status of recommendations from previous program year evaluation; and Plans to sustain and continue the program. Program Description Report, as a separate attachment (4 pages maximum), must also be included, which details a description of: the grantee agency; established collaborations and/or partnerships and their contributions; total population serviced (including non-public school students, if any); characteristics of the student population (looking at students who have attended the program for at least 70 days or more); enrollment, recruitment, and retention efforts; program components (activities) offered; average program and administrative costs5; staffing and professional development offered; linkages to school-day staff and activities; coordination with other federal, state, or local programs; and sustainability progress and achievement. Applicant Agency: _____________________________ Appendix 5 AUDIT INFORMATION FORM To be completed by all non-LEA grantees Audit requirements and the type of audit are solely based on the totals of all state and federal grant expenditures incurred during the recipients 12-month fiscal year. The grantee is required to submit a schedule of expenditures (see Appendix5A) and the Auditor System Review (Peer Review). The Peer Review must be within 3 years of the agency fiscal year. To determine your agencys audit requirements all non-LEA applicants must submit the following information: Name of Grantee Agency: _____________________________________________________ Agency Federal Tax ID #: ______________________________________________ Agency Fiscal Year Ended: ______________________________________________ Agency Fiscal Contact: _________________________________________________ Contact Person Name and Title: ____________________________________________________ Telephone #: ___________________ Email Address: __________________________________ Name of Agency Auditing Firm: _________________________________________________ Contact Person Name and Title: ___________________________________________________ Telephone #: ___________________ Email Address: __________________________________ Name of Grantee CEO or CFO (Print): ____________________________________________________ Signature Grantee CEO or CFO: _______________________________________ Date: ___________ Please include this form with your 21st CCLC application and send via email to Haydee Perez-Livingston at  HYPERLINK "mailto:haydee.perez@doe.nj.gov" haydee.perez@doe.nj.gov Applicant Agency: _____________________________ Appendix 6 STATE MANDATED GOALS AND OBJECTIVES Instructions: Applicants are required to adopt the state-mandated goals and objectives. These goals and objectives are aligned with the federal Government Performance and Results Act (GPRA) measures, which are found in Section 1.9. Each applicant must create one or more program-specific performance indicators for each of the mandated goals and objectives. Performance indicators are quantifiable performance measurements used to define success factors and measure progress toward the achievement of your programs goal and are directly correlated to the implementation activities created in the Project Activity Plan. When numbering the indicators below, please follow the following format: Indicator 1.1a; Indicator: 1.1b; Indicator 1.2 a; Indicator 1.2b, etc. Applicants are required to upload this completed document into EWEG. Goal 1: To provide high-quality educational and enrichment programs that will enable students to improve academic achievement and promote positive behavior and appropriate social interaction with peers and adults. Objective 1.1: Grantees will establish and maintain partnerships and collaborative relationships with schools, families, youth, and the community to enhance students access to a variety of learning opportunities. Objective 1.2: Grantees will adopt intentional strategies and research-based practices designed to support student skill building and mastery, both academically and from a youth development perspective. Objective 1.3: Grantees will adopt practices to support the orientation, training, and development of afterschool staff in the adoption and use of intentional strategies and research based practices to ensure program quality. Objective 1.4: Students regularly participating in the program will be positively impacted in terms of performance on state assessments in language arts and mathematics. Objective 1.5: Students regularly participating in the program will demonstrate improved school-day attendance, decreased disciplinary actions or other adverse behaviors, improved social-emotional functioning, and the development of 21st century skills. Goal 2: To implement activities that promote parental involvement and provide opportunities for literacy and related educational development to the families of participating students. Objective 2.1: The agency will establish collaborative relationships that offer opportunities for literacy and related educational activities to the families of participating students. Objective 2.2: Parents participating in grant-funded activities will increase their involvement in the education of children under their care. Objective 2.3: Grantees will adopt intentional strategies to communicate to parents and adult family members about program goals and objectives, activities, and their childs experience in the program. Goal 3: To measure participants progress and program effectiveness through monitoring and evaluating. Objective 3.1: Throughout the grant period, the grantee will continually assess program quality and effectiveness and use this information to support quality improvement. Objective 3.2: Grantees will work to obtain data on students in-school progress in the areas of academic achievement, behavior, and social development and use this information to inform the design and delivery of programming. Objective 3.3: Throughout the grant period, the grantee will adopt measures as needed within the program when data is not available from other sources to assess (a) youth engagement in program activities; (b) the academic and/or social-emotional needs of participating youth; and (c) program impact. Objective 3.4: The grantee will measure the impact of the program on family members of participating students. The CSA/CEO of _________________________________ (applicant agency name) assures that the State mandated goals and objectives were reviewed, understood and adopted. _____________________________________________ Print Name of Applicant CSA or CEO _____________________________________________ Signature of Applicant CSA or CEO ___________________ Date Applicant Agency: _____________________________ Appendix 7 DOCUMENTATION OF REQUIRED COLLABORATION (Please duplicate for each collaborating agency/organization.) This document is to be signed and submitted with the grant application as evidence of the collaboration between the applicant and the agency/organization with whom the applicant has or will coordinate in the planning and execution of services outlined in the grant application. Name of collaborating agency/organization:__________________________________________ Contact Person Name and Title: _____________________________________________ Address: _________________________________________________________________ County: _________________Telephone #: ___________________ Fax #: _______________ Email Address: ________________________________________________ Type of agency/organization (Please check the appropriate agency type): ___ Charter School ___ Institution of Higher Education ___ City or county government agency ___ County Government ___ For-profit organization ___ Institutions of higher education ___ Business/Corporation___ Community-based organization ___ Faith-based organization ___ Nonpublic school; ___ Indian tribes or tribal organizations (as such terms are defined in section 4 of the Indian Self Determination and Education Act (25U.S.C.450(b)).  It is my understanding that the applicant listed above plans to submit an Extended Learning Program Activities application, available through the New Jersey Ƶ (Ƶ) to provide comprehensive afterschool programming services to eligible students and their families. Recognizing the need for such services, I am committed to ensuring that my agency/organization acts in full support of the proposed program through the provision of activities, services, and/or resources as a result of the collaborative effort between my agency/organization and the aforementioned applicant agency. In addition, my agency/organization will provide data or other information to the applicant for the purposes of documentation of services and the state evaluation of the program. Please check off the services that the collaborating agency will provide: ___ Provide programming/activity-related services ___ Provide paid staffing ___ Provide volunteer staffing ___ Provide in-kind donations ___ Provide goods/materials ___ Provide transportation ___ Provide technical assistance___ Provide services (referral, mental health counseling, social services) ___ Fundraising ___ Adult Education ___ Parent Education ___ Provide evaluation services ___ Other (please specify) _________________ ___________________________________________________ Print Name of Collaborating Agency/Organization CEO or CSA ___________________________________________________ _________________ Signature of Collaborating Agency/Organization CEO or CSA Date Applicant Agency: _____________________________ Appendix 7A DOCUMENTATION OF REQUIRED COLLABORATION (Please duplicate for each collaborating agency.) Name of collaborating agency/organization: ___________________________________ Applicants must answer each of the following questions for each collaborating agency: Is this Collaborator also a Partner Agency in the Contract? ___ Yes ___ No Estimate the value of in-kind contributions that will be made by this agency/collaborator Is this collaborating agency also a Sub-grantee in the Contract? ___ Yes ___ No If Yes, enter the dollar amount of the subcontract to be held by this agency/collaborator in the 2019-2020 contract year. ______ If Yes, provide the percentage (%) of the total award amount. ______ List below the address and contact information for each site of this program (duplicate as necessary). The site would be where the majority of activities are being provided. Site #1 Name: ______________________________ # of Students proposed: _____ District: __________________________________ County: ________________ Address: _________________________________________________________ Phone: (___) _____________ Fax: (___) ________________________ Site Contact Name: _________________________________________________________ Contact Email: _________________________________________________________ Site #2 Name: ______________________________ # of Students proposed: _____ District: __________________________________ County: ________________ Address: _________________________________________________________ Phone: (___) _____________ Fax: (___) ________________________ Site Contact Name: _________________________________________________________ Contact Email: _________________________________________________________ Site #3 Name: ______________________________ # of Students proposed: _____ District: __________________________________ County: ________________ Address: _________________________________________________________ Phone: (___) _____________ Fax: (___) ________________________ Site Contact Name: _________________________________________________________ Contact Email: _________________________________________________________ Applicant Agency: _____________________________ Appendix 8 PROGRAM STATEMENT OF ASSURANCES The ____________________________________________________ (applicant agency name) hereby assures that: The program will conduct activities in a safe and easily accessible facility. The program will ensure the safe transportation of students to and from the program. The program will provide equitable services to participating nonpublic schools as specified in the original approved application. The program was developed and will be implemented in active collaboration with the schools that participating students attend (including through the sharing of relevant data among the schools, such as NJSMART data), all participants of the eligible entity, and any partnership entities, are in compliance with applicable laws relating to privacy and confidentiality; and in alignment with the challenging State academic standards and any local academic standards. The program will target students who attend schools eligible for Title I schoolwide programs, students from low-income families or students from schools identified by an LEA to be in need of intervention and support and the families of those students. Funds under the program will be used for authorized programs and activities, and will not supplant federal, state, local, or non-federal funds. The program will conduct outreach activities to identify qualified children with disabilities who meet the eligibility criteria for participation in the centers programs. The program will provide accommodations, modifications, supplementary aids, and services for eligible children with handicaps/disabilities and their families that ensure their equal participation in, and benefit from, the programs/services/activities offered to non-handicapped children and their families. The program will comply with all components of the comprehensive statewide evaluation and a local level evaluation plan. The program will align activities with the challenging State academic standards. The program will identify and partner with external organizations, if available, in the community. The applicant will ensure that all services being provided are in accordance with all relevant New Jersey Administrative Code (N.J.A.C.) and New Jersey Statutes Annotated (N.J.S.A) requirements, including licensing requirements. The applicant will not divest more than 20% of the total grant award to any single entity, including but not limited to partners, collaborators or sub-grantees. ______________________________________ _______________________________________ Print Name of Applicant Agency CSA or CEO Signature of Chief School Administrator or CEO Date _______________ Applicant Agency: _____________________________ Appendix 9 NONPUBLIC EQUITABLE PARTICIPATION SUMMARY and AFFIRMATION of CONSULTATION FORM (Complete a form for each participating nonpublic school. Copy this form as necessary.) In the space below, the applicant agency is to briefly respond to each of the five items listed. Please ensure that what is described on this form is directly related to the components of timely and meaningful consultation and the equitable participation of nonpublic school students/teacher(s) in this grant program, as required (EDGAR 76.650-76.662). For each nonpublic school, this form must be signed and dated by the applicant CSA/CEO and the nonpublic school official. The applicant agency must submit with the grant application a copy of this form for each nonpublic school. Describe the consultation process that took place including meeting date, those in attendance and agenda. Describe the needs of the eligible nonpublic school students/teachers and how these needs have been/and will continue to be identified? What identified services will be provided? Explain how, when, where, and by whom the services will be provided. How and when will the services be assessed and how will the results of the assessment be used to improve the services? What is the amount of estimated grant funding available for the agreed upon services? RESPONSES: By our signatures below we agree that timely and meaningful consultation occurred before the LEA/applicant agency made any decision that affected the participation of eligible nonpublic school children, teachers or other educational personnel in the Extended Learning Program Activities. % Yes, we wish to participate in this grant opportunity % No, we do not wish to participate in this grant opportunity Name of Nonpublic School ___________________________________ _____________________________________ ___________________________________ Name of Nonpublic School Representative Name of Applicant Agency _____________________________________ ___________________________________ Nonpublic School Representative Signature Applicant Agency Signature and Date Date ___________________________________ Applicant Agency: ________________________________ Appendix 10 PROJECT STAFF RESPONSIBILITITES Outlined below are suggested responsibilities for the staffing requirements outlined under Section 2.2. Agencies must ensure that all project staff have sufficient time to perform these duties at a minimum. Applicants have flexibility in the establishment of their staffing patterns. However, the Ƶ will review the management plan, including staffing, based on what is necessary and reasonable to implement the project and adhere to program requirements. The Ƶ reserves the right to require changes based on this review. Project Administrator (director or coordinator) This person will be responsible for managing and implementing the educational program and budget described in the approved application to ensure that the agency meets its responsibilities to the Ƶ under the grant agreement in a timely manner. Responsibilities include, but are not limited to, the following: Ensuring program implementation and alignment with approved application (monitor program/budget appropriately); Completing necessary reports and submitting to state; Maintaining participant files, program forms, and applicable licenses; Developing attendance policy, calendar of activities; Meeting with key program staff, teachers, partners, collaborators, evaluator, etc. regularly; Coordinating advisory board meetings and ensuring implementation of sustainability plan; Supervising site coordinators, administrative staff and program volunteers; Conducting program orientation for staff, parents, students, volunteers, and key program staff; Developing and maintaining health and emergency plans/files; Attending mandated project directors meetings and required professional development trainings; and, Ensuring compliance with evaluation requirements (data-entry into federal and state data-collection systems). Site Coordinator This position is required for each site. This person will be responsible for the daily operation, coordination and delivery of services at the respective program sites. If an agency has only one site the program may opt to hire a site coordinator to assist the director in the administration and oversight of the program. Agencies have the discretion to amend the title of the program coordinator to suit its program structure. Responsibilities include, but are not limited to, the following: Ensuring staff and students are in assigned classrooms and have signed-in; ensure activities are delivered as intended; Overseeing drop off and pick up of students; Coordination and distribution of daily snacks; Ensuring field trip activities are completed as scheduled and that emergency contacts are accessible; and Communicating with school-day teachers regarding specific student needs. Administrative Support This position is required for all agencies. This person will be responsible for entering data into PARS21 and the federal reporting system, gathering registration forms, attendance sheets and other forms as required by program. Additionally, this person is responsible for other administrative tasks as deemed necessary by the project administrator. Applicant Agency: _____________________________ Appendix 11 Budget Development Instructions To reduce the number of pre-award revisions, please follow instructions below: In EWEG under the Salary tabs and in the Title of Position box, be sure to list the other benefits by type and percentage amount for positions that have other benefits such that the total of the individual other benefit percentage amounts equal the percentage amount shown in the Other Benefits box. For budget entries that represent administrative costs, be sure to check Administrative in the Cost section of that budget entry. For any budget entry that has both a program and administrative portion, create two budget entries, one for each. Be sure to check Program or Administrative in the Cost section. For example, the Project Directors salary is based on providing both program and administrative services to the grant. Be sure to explain what the amounts in the How Many and Cost per Unit boxes represent for the Supply, Equipment, and Other tabs budget entries. If the amounts in those boxes represent a calculation, describe that calculation in the Description box. Be sure the Description boxes also describe the cost of the item, the need for the item, and the items relation to the grant program. Mileage reimbursement budget entries must describe the relation to the grant of the traveler(s) and the grant-related purpose(s) of the travel, as well as a brief explanation of how the number of miles was calculated. Mileage must be a separate budget entry. When requesting conference travel costs such as airfare, lodging, and meals, create separate entries for each conference. Be sure to identify the relation of the grant to each traveler. (There should be a corresponding conference registration entry.) Insert this statement: gsa.gov rates will be used at the time of travel for all conference travel costs. Be sure to itemize the cost per person as follows: meals = cost per day times the number of days, round-trip coach air or rail fare = per person times the number of grant staff, and lodging = per room per night basis times the number of rooms times the number nights. Note that car rental at a conference is generally not allowed. Applicant Agency: _____________________________ Appendix 12 Electronic Web-Enabled Grants System (EWEG) Tips The following are tips for working in the EWEG system. Please take note as those will ease submission of your application. The following are tips for working in the EWEG system. Please take note as these will ease submission of your application. Do not use the Back button. This will cause a system error. It is always recommended that long narrative sections be typed in either Word or Note Pad, and copied and pasted into EWEG. Doing this, will prevent you losing the text that you worked hard to create, should something go wrong when you save the page. When copying and pasting from Word or Note Pad, be sure to check for special characters. Most notably, quotation marks, apostrophes, bullets and hyphens are the biggest culprits. Avoid using all of the other special characters (!@#$%^&*()~/<>{} and bullets). Do not try to use fancy formatting. It will only give you problems. Just be sure that the content is there in a concise and clear manner. The EWEG system is not compatible with the way Microsoft Word formats quotation marks, apostrophes, bullets and hyphens. Use the following procedure to resolve this problem. Remove the quotation marks, apostrophes, bullets and hyphens in the text that you want to copy and paste. Paste the text into EWEG. Working in EWEG, BEFORE YOU TRY TO SAVE THE PAGE, put the bullets, hyphens, apostrophes and quotation marks back in. You will notice that the apostrophes and quotation marks will now look different indicating that the problematic formatting has been removed. You should be able to save the page without getting an error message. When you click on a Tab to open a page, do not click on it more than once. Some of our pages take a while to open. If you click on the tab more than once, you will get a system error. Certain systems are just not compatible with EWEG. Most notably: MAC, hand-held devices, Notebooks, Safari, Google Chrome and Firefox. If you have these systems, please try to locate a different PC to use to enter your data. Also note that Internet Explorer versions higher than 7.0 should access the EWEG site in Compatibility Mode or you may have unexpected errors and will not be able to view all application pages.  Per ESSA, the term well-rounded education means courses, activities, and programming in subjects such as English, reading or language arts, writing, science, technology, engineering, mathematics, foreign languages, civics and government, economics, arts, history, geography, computer science, music, career and technical education, health, physical education, and any other subject, as determined by the State or local educational agency, with the purpose of providing all students access to an enriched curriculum and educational experience..  Fredericks, J.A., & Eccles, J. S. (2006). Is extracurricular activity participation associated with beneficial outcomes? Concurrent and longitudinal relations. Developmental Psychology, 42, 698-713; Mahoney, J. L., Cairns, B. D., & Farmer, T. (2003). Promoting interpersonal competence and educational success through extracurricular activity participation. Journal of Educational Psychology, 95, 409-418. Morrissey, K. M. & Werner-Wilson, R. J. (2005). The relationship between out-of-school activities and positive youth development: An investigation of the influences of communities and families. Adolescence, 40, 67-85; Pierce, K. M., Auger, A., & Vandell, D. L. (2013, April). Narrowing the achievement gap: Consistency and intensity of structured activities during elementary school. Paper presented at the Society for Research in Child Development Biennial Meeting, Seattle, WA.; Vandell, D. (2012). California afterschool outcome measures project field test of the online toolbox: Final report to California Ƶ. Irvine, CA: University of California Irvine; Durlak, J. A., Weissberg, R. P, & Pachan, M. (2010). A meta-analysis of after-school programs that seek to promote personal and social skills in children and adolescents. 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