UNITED STATES
                       SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                             Washington, D.C. 20549

                                   FORM N-CSR

                   CERTIFIED SHAREHOLDER REPORT OF REGISTERED
                         MANAGEMENT INVESTMENT COMPANIES

Investment Company Act file number 811-02424

                        Van Kampen Strategic Growth Fund
               (Exact name of registrant as specified in charter)

              1221 Avenue of the Americas, New York, New York 10020
               (Address of principal executive offices) (Zip code)

                                 Ronald Robison
              1221 Avenue of the Americas, New York, New York 10020
                     (Name and address of agent for service)

Registrant's telephone number, including area code: 212-762-4000

Date of fiscal year end: 8/31

Date of reporting period: 8/31/06


Item 1. Report to Shareholders.

The Fund's annual report transmitted to shareholders pursuant to Rule 30e-1
under the Investment Company Act of 1940 is as follows:

       Welcome, Shareholder

       In this report, you'll learn about how your investment in Van Kampen
       Strategic Growth Fund, formerly Emerging Growth Fund, performed during
       the annual period. The portfolio management team will provide an overview
       of the market conditions and discuss some of the factors that affected
       investment performance during the reporting period. In addition, this
       report includes the fund's financial statements and a list of fund
       investments as of August 31, 2006.

       THIS PIECE MUST BE PRECEDED OR ACCOMPANIED BY THE FUND'S PROSPECTUS. THE
       PROSPECTUS CONTAINS INFORMATION ABOUT THE FUND, INCLUDING THE INVESTMENT
       OBJECTIVES, RISKS, CHARGES AND EXPENSES. PLEASE READ THE PROSPECTUS
       CAREFULLY BEFORE INVESTING.

       MARKET FORECASTS PROVIDED IN THIS REPORT MAY NOT NECESSARILY COME TO
       PASS. THERE IS NO ASSURANCE THAT A MUTUAL FUND WILL ACHIEVE ITS
       INVESTMENT OBJECTIVE. FUNDS ARE SUBJECT TO MARKET RISK, WHICH IS THE
       POSSIBILITY THAT THE MARKET VALUES OF SECURITIES OWNED BY THE FUND WILL
       DECLINE AND THAT THE VALUE OF FUND SHARES MAY THEREFORE BE LESS THAN WHAT
       YOU PAID FOR THEM. ACCORDINGLY, YOU CAN LOSE MONEY INVESTING IN THIS
       FUND.

<Table>
<Caption>
                                                                    
         ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
            NOT FDIC INSURED             OFFER NO BANK GUARANTEE              MAY LOSE VALUE
         ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                   NOT INSURED BY ANY FEDERAL GOVERNMENT AGENCY               NOT A DEPOSIT
         ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</Table>


Performance Summary as of 8/31/06

PERFORMANCE OF A $10,000 INVESTMENT

This chart compares your fund's performance to that of the Russell 1000(R)
Growth Index from 8/31/96 through 8/31/06. Class A shares, adjusted for sales
charges.
(LINE GRAPH)

<Table>
<Caption>
                                                              VAN KAMPEN STRATEGIC GROWTH FUND      RUSSELL 1000 GROWTH INDEX
                                                              --------------------------------      -------------------------
                                                                                           
8/96                                                                        9424                              10000
                                                                           10274                              10728
                                                                            9918                              10792
                                                                           10104                              11603
                                                                            9863                              11375
                                                                           10438                              12173
                                                                            9585                              12090
                                                                            9042                              11436
                                                                            9404                              12195
                                                                           10314                              13076
                                                                           10762                              13599
                                                                           11905                              14801
8/97                                                                       11727                              13935
                                                                           12703                              14621
                                                                           11899                              14080
                                                                           11727                              14678
                                                                           11968                              14843
                                                                           11825                              15286
                                                                           13114                              16436
                                                                           13873                              17092
                                                                           14028                              17328
                                                                           13406                              16836
                                                                           14593                              17866
                                                                           14146                              17748
8/98                                                                       11469                              15084
                                                                           12720                              16242
                                                                           12796                              17548
                                                                           13825                              18884
                                                                           16124                              20587
                                                                           17687                              21796
                                                                           16465                              20799
                                                                           18493                              21896
                                                                           18577                              21924
                                                                           17814                              21251
                                                                           19531                              22739
                                                                           19343                              22015
8/99                                                                       20083                              22374
                                                                           20361                              21904
                                                                           22620                              23558
                                                                           26167                              24828
                                                                           32848                              27410
                                                                           32795                              26125
                                                                           43345                              27402
                                                                           41318                              29364
                                                                           36254                              27966
                                                                           32457                              26560
                                                                           36525                              28573
                                                                           35698                              27381
8/00                                                                       41051                              29862
                                                                           38999                              27037
                                                                           35299                              25758
                                                                           27968                              21962
                                                                           29115                              21268
                                                                           28554                              22737
                                                                           24422                              18876
                                                                           22302                              16823
                                                                           23893                              18951
                                                                           23397                              18672
                                                                           22683                              18239
                                                                           21584                              17783
8/01                                                                       20025                              16328
                                                                           17906                              14699
                                                                           18272                              15470
                                                                           19464                              16957
                                                                           19627                              16925
                                                                           19167                              16625
                                                                           18068                              15935
                                                                           18569                              16487
                                                                           17901                              15141
                                                                           17312                              14775
                                                                           15940                              13408
                                                                           14442                              12671
8/02                                                                       14358                              12709
                                                                           13491                              11391
                                                                           13973                              12436
                                                                           14214                              13111
                                                                           13106                              12205
                                                                           12962                              11908
                                                                           12958                              11853
                                                                           13180                              12074
                                                                           13945                              12967
                                                                           14905                              13614
                                                                           14905                              13802
                                                                           15318                              14146
8/03                                                                       15805                              14498
                                                                           15258                              14343
                                                                           16594                              15149
                                                                           16774                              15307
                                                                           16756                              15836
                                                                           16997                              16159
                                                                           17132                              16263
                                                                           16951                              15960
                                                                           16399                              15775
                                                                           16765                              16070
                                                                           17155                              16271
                                                                           16009                              15352
8/04                                                                       15833                              15277
                                                                           16292                              15422
                                                                           16561                              15662
                                                                           17451                              16201
                                                                           17929                              16836
                                                                           17280                              16276
                                                                           17628                              16448
                                                                           17294                              16149
                                                                           16668                              15842
                                                                           17632                              16609
                                                                           17795                              16547
                                                                           18565                              17356
8/05                                                                       18476                              17132
                                                                           18917                              17211
                                                                           18393                              17044
                                                                           19228                              17779
                                                                           19311                              17724
                                                                           20466                              18036
                                                                           19858                              18007
                                                                           20127                              18273
                                                                           20382                              18248
                                                                           19033                              17629
                                                                           19126                              17560
                                                                           18347                              17227
8/06                                                                       18277                              17764
</Table>

<Table>
<Caption>
                                                                                    I SHARES    R SHARES
                           A SHARES            B SHARES            C SHARES          SINCE       SINCE
                        since 10/02/70      since 04/20/92      since 07/06/93      10/16/00    10/01/02
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                  W/MAX               W/MAX               W/MAX
                         W/O      5.75%      W/O      5.00%      W/O      1.00%       W/O         W/O
AVERAGE ANNUAL          SALES     SALES     SALES     SALES     SALES     SALES      SALES       SALES
TOTAL RETURNS          CHARGES   CHARGES   CHARGES   CHARGES   CHARGES   CHARGES    CHARGES     CHARGES
                                                                        

Since Inception        14.36%    14.17%    10.27%    10.27%     8.68%     8.68%      -11.09%      7.04%
10-year                 6.85      6.22      6.19      6.19      6.05      6.05           --         --
5-year                 -1.81     -2.96     -2.56     -2.85     -2.55     -2.55        -1.56         --
1-year                 -1.08     -6.77     -1.85     -6.76     -1.83     -2.81        -0.84      -1.26
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</Table>

PERFORMANCE DATA QUOTED REPRESENTS PAST PERFORMANCE, WHICH IS NO GUARANTEE OF
FUTURE RESULTS, AND CURRENT PERFORMANCE MAY BE LOWER OR HIGHER THAN THE FIGURES
SHOWN. FOR THE MOST RECENT MONTH-END PERFORMANCE FIGURES, PLEASE VISIT
VANKAMPEN.COM OR SPEAK WITH YOUR FINANCIAL ADVISOR. INVESTMENT RETURNS AND
PRINCIPAL VALUE WILL FLUCTUATE AND FUND SHARES, WHEN REDEEMED, MAY BE WORTH MORE
OR LESS THAN THEIR ORIGINAL COST.

The returns shown in this report do not reflect the deduction of taxes that a
shareholder would pay on fund distributions or the redemption of fund shares.
Performance of share classes will vary due to differences in sales charges and
expenses. Average annual total return with sales charges includes payment of the
maximum sales charge of 5.75 percent for Class A shares, a contingent deferred
sales charge of 5.00 percent for Class B shares (in year one and declining to
zero after year five), a contingent deferred sales charge of 1.00 percent for
Class C shares in year one, and combined Rule 12b-1 fees and service fees of up
to 0.25 percent for Class A shares and up to 1.00 percent for Class B and C
shares. The since inception and 10-year returns for Class B shares reflect the
conversion of Class B shares into Class A shares eight years after purchase. The
since inception returns for Class C shares reflect the conversion of Class C
shares into Class A shares ten years after purchase. Class I Shares are offered
without any sales charges on purchases or sales and do not include combined Rule
12b-1 fees and service fees. Class I Shares are available for purchase
exclusively by investors through (i) tax-exempt retirement plans with assets of
at least one million dollars (including 401(k) plans, 457 plans, employer
sponsored 403(b) plans, profit sharing and money purchase plans, defined benefit
plans and non-qualified deferred compensation plans), (ii) fee-based investment
programs with assets of at least one million dollars and (iii) institutional
clients with assets of at least one million dollars. Class R Shares are offered
without any sales charges on purchases or sales. The combined Rule 12b-1 fees
and service fees for Class R Shares is up to 0.50 percent. Class R Shares are
available for purchase exclusively by investors through certain tax-exempt
retirement plans (including 401(k) plans, 457 plans, employer sponsored 403(b)
plans, profit sharing and money purchase pension plans, defined benefit plans
and non-qualified deferred compensation plans) held in plan level or omnibus
accounts. Figures shown above assume reinvestment of all dividends and capital
gains.

The Russell 1000 Growth Index measures the performance of those Russell 1000
companies (the 1000 largest U.S. companies) with higher price-to-book ratios and
higher forecasted growth values. The index does not include any expenses, fees
or sales charges, which would lower performance. The index is unmanaged and
should not be considered an investment. Source for index performance: Lipper
Inc.
                                                                               1


Fund Report

FOR THE 12-MONTH PERIOD ENDED AUGUST 31, 2006

Effective August 15, 2006, the Van Kampen Emerging Growth Fund was renamed the
Van Kampen Strategic Growth Fund. The Fund's investment objective will remain
capital appreciation. The Fund's investment adviser seeks to achieve the Fund's
investment objective by investing primarily in a portfolio of common stocks of
companies considered by the Fund's investment adviser to be strategic growth
companies.

MARKET CONDITIONS

Although conditions had been supportive for growth investors in the first eight
months of the 12 months ended August 31, 2006, a more challenging backdrop arose
in the final months of the period. In 2005, the economy held to a moderate pace
and corporate profits were generally healthy, even after the unprecedented
devastation to the Gulf Coast in August and September. Amid the ongoing economic
strength and rising inflationary pressures, the Federal Open Market Committee
(the "Fed") continued to raise the federal funds target rate at each of its
meetings during the period (and did not pause the increases until August 2006).
The stock market rallied strongly in October and November of 2005 as consumer
data rebounded and energy prices retreated from the highs set in the initial
aftermath of the hurricanes. January also reflected renewed optimism among
investors, and the higher growth segments of the stock market were among the
beneficiaries of the brighter sentiment.

However, with the housing market beginning to show signs of weakness in early
2006, investors grew apprehensive about the Fed's ability to keep inflation in
check without causing a recession. Stock returns turned more muted following
January's rally. In May, stocks suffered a dramatic sell-off in reaction to
comments from the Fed that allowed for additional monetary tightening.
Volatility increased considerably in the next few months due to a "reactionary"
environment created by investors responding to any Fed language. By the end of
the period, however, stocks rebounded. Nonetheless, fears persisted about
whether the Fed raised rates too high and to what extent the economy will slow.

The uncertainty overhanging the markets turned out to be a difficult hurdle for
growth stocks as investors became more risk averse in the market's more
turbulent months. Anticipating a slower economy, investors began rotating out of
economically sensitive, or cyclical, sectors such as energy, industrials and
materials, and into more defensive sectors such as health care and consumer
staples. Following several years of underperformance, large-capitalization
stocks, in which the fund primarily invests, outpaced small- and mid-caps during
the 12-month period.

 2


PERFORMANCE ANALYSIS

The fund returned -1.08 percent for the 12 months ended August 31, 2006 (Class A
shares, unadjusted for sales charges). In comparison, the fund's benchmark, the
Russell 1000(R) Growth Index, returned 3.68 percent for the period.

TOTAL RETURN FOR THE 12-MONTH PERIOD ENDED AUGUST 31, 2006

<Table>
<Caption>
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                           RUSSELL
                                                           1000(R)
      CLASS A   CLASS B   CLASS C   CLASS I   CLASS R   GROWTH INDEX
                                                 

      -1.08%    -1.85%    -1.83%    -0.84%    -1.26%        3.68%
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
</Table>

The performance for the five share classes varies because each has different
expenses. The fund's total return figures assume the reinvestment of all
distributions, but do not reflect the deduction of any applicable sales charges.
Such costs would lower performance. Past performance is no guarantee of future
results. See Performance Summary for standardized performance information and
index definition.

The more favorable market conditions of the reporting period's first eight
months helped the fund outperform the benchmark during that period. However, in
the more volatile conditions later in the period, the fund pulled back,
resulting in an overall underperformance for the 12 months as a whole. Broadly
speaking, both stock selection and sector allocation hampered relative
performance. Select energy positions lost ground as oil and natural gas prices
eased from their record highs. The fund's underweight in consumer staples--one
of the market's better performing areas during the period--detracted from
relative results, as did the fund's limited or lack of exposure to some of the
benchmark's better performing consumer staples stocks.

In contrast, other areas of the fund's portfolio performed well. Our stock
selection and an overweight in the telecommunication services sector was a
positive influence on relative performance. Stock selection in information
technology was also a contributor to gains, with particular strength in the
fund's exposure to the computer hardware industry.

There is no guarantee that any sectors mentioned will continue to perform as
discussed herein or that securities in such sectors will be held by the fund in
the future.

                                                                               3


<Table>
<Caption>
TOP TEN HOLDINGS AS OF AUGUST 31, 2006
                                                             
Schlumberger, Ltd.                                                2.5%
Roche Holding AG                                                  2.2
Hewlett-Packard Co.                                               2.1
Cisco Systems, Inc.                                               2.1
America Movil S.A. de C.V., Ser L                                 2.0
PepsiCo, Inc.                                                     1.8
Celgene Corp.                                                     1.7
Monsanto Co.                                                      1.7
Akamai Technologies, Inc.                                         1.7
Cognizant Technology Solutions Corp., Class A                     1.6

<Caption>
SUMMARY OF INVESTMENTS BY INDUSTRY CLASSIFICATION AS OF AUGUST 31, 2006
                                                              
Pharmaceuticals                                                    6.7%
Communications Equipment                                           6.2
Oil & Gas Equipment & Services                                     6.0
Investment Banking & Brokerage                                     4.2
Biotechnology                                                      3.7
Aerospace & Defense                                                3.4
Wireless Telecommunication Services                                3.2
Computer Hardware                                                  3.1
Internet Software & Services                                       3.0
Department Stores                                                  2.9
Soft Drinks                                                        2.4
Managed Health Care                                                2.3
Application Software                                               2.3
Semiconductor Equipment                                            2.2
Integrated Oil & Gas                                               1.7
Apparel, Accessories & Luxury Goods                                1.7
Fertilizers & Agricultural Chemicals                               1.7
IT Consulting & Other Services                                     1.6
Health Care Equipment                                              1.6
Hotels, Resorts & Cruise Lines                                     1.4
Movies & Entertainment                                             1.4
Steel                                                              1.3
Specialty Stores                                                   1.3
Broadcasting & Cable TV                                            1.2
Agricultural Products                                              1.2
Electrical Components & Equipment                                  1.2
Construction & Farm Machinery & Heavy Trucks                       1.1
Life & Health Insurance                                            1.0
Specialized Finance                                                1.0
Data Processing & Outsourced Services                              1.0
Casinos & Gaming                                                   1.0
Computer & Electronics Retail                                      1.0
Health Care Services                                               1.0
Drug Retail                                                        0.9
Apparel Retail                                                     0.9
Brewers                                                            0.9
Oil & Gas Refining & Marketing                                     0.9
Construction & Engineering                                         0.9
Other Diversified Financial Services                               0.9
Food Retail                                                        0.9
</Table>

<Table>
                                                             
                                             (continued on next page)
</Table>

 4


<Table>
<Caption>
SUMMARY OF INVESTMENTS BY INDUSTRY CLASSIFICATION AS OF AUGUST 31, 2006
                                         (continued from previous page)
                                                              
Packaged Foods & Meats                                             0.9
Household Products                                                 0.8
Computer Storage & Peripherals                                     0.8
Air Freight & Logistics                                            0.8
Consumer Electronics                                               0.8
Restaurants                                                        0.7
Hypermarkets & Super Centers                                       0.7
Semiconductors                                                     0.7
Real Estate Management & Development                               0.7
Catalog Retail                                                     0.6
Life Sciences Tools & Services                                     0.6
Trading Companies & Distributors                                   0.6
Property & Casualty Insurance                                      0.5
Airlines                                                           0.5
Internet Retail                                                    0.3
Specialized REITS                                                  0.2
                                                                 -----
Total Long-Term Investments                                       92.5%
Short-Term Investments                                             7.1
Other Assets in Excess of Liabilities                              0.4
                                                                 -----
Net Assets                                                       100.0%
</Table>

Subject to change daily. Provided for informational purposes only and should not
be deemed as a recommendation to buy or sell the securities mentioned or
securities in the industries shown above. All percentages are as a percentage of
net assets. Van Kampen is a wholly owned subsidiary of a global securities firm
which is engaged in a wide range of financial services including, for example,
securities trading and brokerage activities, investment banking, research and
analysis, financing and financial advisory services.

                                                                               5


FOR MORE INFORMATION ABOUT PORTFOLIO HOLDINGS

       Each Van Kampen fund provides a complete schedule of portfolio holdings
       in its semiannual and annual reports within 60 days of the end of the
       fund's second and fourth fiscal quarters. The semiannual reports and the
       annual reports are filed electronically with the Securities and Exchange
       Commission (SEC) on Form N-CSRS and Form N-CSR, respectively. Van Kampen
       also delivers the semiannual and annual reports to fund shareholders, and
       makes these reports available on its public Web site, www.vankampen.com.
       In addition to the semiannual and annual reports that Van Kampen delivers
       to shareholders and makes available through the Van Kampen public Web
       site, each fund files a complete schedule of portfolio holdings with the
       SEC for the fund's first and third fiscal quarters on Form N-Q. Van
       Kampen does not deliver the reports for the first and third fiscal
       quarters to shareholders, nor are the reports posted to the Van Kampen
       public Web site. You may, however, obtain the Form N-Q filings (as well
       as the Form N-CSR and N-CSRS filings) by accessing the SEC's Web site,
       http://www.sec.gov. You may also review and copy them at the SEC's Public
       Reference Room in Washington, DC. Information on the operation of the
       SEC's Public Reference Room may be obtained by calling the SEC at (800)
       SEC-0330. You can also request copies of these materials, upon payment of
       a duplicating fee, by electronic request at the SEC's e-mail address
       (publicinfo@sec.gov) or by writing the Public Reference section of the
       SEC, Washington, DC 20549-0102.

       You may obtain copies of a fund's fiscal quarter filings by contacting
       Van Kampen Client Relations at (800) 847-2424.

 6


HOUSEHOLDING NOTICE

       To reduce fund expenses, the fund attempts to eliminate duplicate
       mailings to the same address. The fund delivers a single copy of certain
       shareholder documents to investors who share an address, even if the
       accounts are registered under different names. The fund's prospectuses
       and shareholder reports (including annual privacy notices) will be
       delivered to you in this manner indefinitely unless you instruct us
       otherwise. You can request multiple copies of these documents by either
       calling (800) 341-2911 or writing to Van Kampen Investor Services at 1
       Parkview Plaza, P.O. Box 5555, Oakbrook Terrace, IL 60181. Once Investor
       Services has received your instructions, we will begin sending individual
       copies for each account within 30 days.

PROXY VOTING POLICY AND PROCEDURES AND PROXY VOTING RECORD

       You may obtain a copy of the fund's Proxy Voting Policy and Procedures
       without charge, upon request, by calling toll free (800) 847-2424 or by
       visiting our Web site at www.vankampen.com. It is also available on the
       Securities and Exchange Commission's Web site at http://www.sec.gov.

       You may obtain information regarding how the fund voted proxies relating
       to portfolio securities during the most recent twelve-month period ended
       June 30 without charge by visiting our Web site at www.vankampen.com.
       This information is also available on the Securities and Exchange
       Commission's Web site at http://www.sec.gov.

                                                                               7


Expense Example

As a shareholder of the Fund, you incur two types of costs: (1) transaction
costs, including sales charges (loads) on purchase payments of Class A Shares
and contingent deferred sales charges on redemptions of Class B and Class C
Shares; and redemption fees; and (2) ongoing costs, including management fees;
distribution and service (12b-1) fees; and other Fund expenses. This example is
intended to help you understand your ongoing cost (in dollars) of investing in
the Fund and to compare these costs with the ongoing costs of investing in other
mutual funds.

The example is based on an investment of $1,000 invested at the beginning of the
period and held for the entire period 3/1/06 - 8/31/06.

ACTUAL EXPENSE

The first line of the table below provides information about actual account
values and actual expenses. You may use the information in this line, together
with the amount you invested, to estimate the expenses that you paid over the
period. Simply divide your account value by $1,000 (for example, an $8,600
account value divided by $1,000 = 8.6), then multiply the result by the number
in the first line under the heading entitled "Expenses Paid During Period" to
estimate the expenses you paid on your account during this period.

HYPOTHETICAL EXAMPLE FOR COMPARISON PURPOSES

The second line of the table below provides information about hypothetical
account values and hypothetical expenses based on the Fund's actual expense
ratio and an assumed rate of return of 5% per year before expenses, which is not
the Fund's actual return. The hypothetical account values and expenses may not
be used to estimate the actual ending account balance or expenses you paid for
the period. You may use this information to compare the ongoing cost of
investing in the Fund and other funds. To do so, compare this 5% hypothetical
example with the 5% hypothetical examples that appear in the shareholder reports
of the other funds.

Please note that the expenses shown in the table are meant to highlight your
ongoing costs only and do not reflect any transactional costs, such as sales
charges (loads) or contingent deferred sales charges or redemption fees.
Therefore, the second line of the table is useful in comparing ongoing costs
only, and will not help you determine the relative total costs of owning
different funds. In addition, if these transactional costs were included, your
costs would have been higher.

<Table>
<Caption>
                                                  BEGINNING         ENDING        EXPENSES PAID
                                                ACCOUNT VALUE    ACCOUNT VALUE    DURING PERIOD*
                                                ------------------------------------------------
                                                   3/1/06           8/31/06       3/1/06-8/31/06
                                                                         
Class A
  Actual......................................    $1,000.00        $  920.36          $5.08
  Hypothetical................................     1,000.00         1,019.91           5.35
  (5% annual return before expenses)
Class B
  Actual......................................     1,000.00           916.87           8.79
  Hypothetical................................     1,000.00         1,016.01           9.25
  (5% annual return before expenses)
Class C
  Actual......................................     1,000.00           916.82           8.79
  Hypothetical................................     1,000.00         1,016.01           9.25
  (5% annual return before expenses)
Class I
  Actual......................................     1,000.00           921.64           3.92
  Hypothetical................................     1,000.00         1,021.11           4.13
  (5% annual return before expenses)
Class R
  Actual......................................     1,000.00           919.10           6.34
  Hypothetical................................     1,000.00         1,018.61           6.67
  (5% annual return before expenses)
</Table>

*   Expenses are equal to the Fund's annualized expense ratio of 1.05%, 1.82%,
    1.82%, 0.81%, and 1.31% for Class A, B, C, I and R Shares, respectively,
    multiplied by the average account value over the period, multiplied by
    184/365 (to reflect the one-half year period).

Assumes all dividends and distributions were reinvested.

 8


Investment Advisory Agreement Approval

Both the Investment Company Act of 1940 and the terms of the Fund's investment
advisory agreement require that the investment advisory agreement between the
Fund and its investment adviser be approved annually both by a majority of the
Board of Trustees and by a majority of the independent trustees voting
separately.

On May 22, 2006, the Board of Trustees, and the independent trustees voting
separately, determined that the terms of the investment advisory agreement are
fair and reasonable and approved the continuance of the investment advisory
contract as being in the best interests of the Fund and its shareholders. In
making its determination, the Board of Trustees considered materials that were
specifically prepared by the investment adviser at the request of the Board and
Fund counsel, and by an independent provider of investment company data
contracted to assist the Board, relating to the contract review process. The
Board also considered information received periodically about the portfolio,
performance, the investment strategy, portfolio management team and fees and
expenses of the Fund. The Board of Trustees considered the contract over a
period of several months and the non-management trustees held sessions both with
the investment adviser and separate from the investment adviser in reviewing and
considering the contract.

In approving the investment advisory agreement, the Board of Trustees
considered, among other things, the nature, extent and quality of the services
provided by the investment adviser, the performance, fees and expenses of the
Fund compared to other similar funds and other products, the investment
adviser's expenses in providing the services and the profitability of the
investment adviser and its affiliated companies. The Board of Trustees
considered the extent to which any economies of scale experienced by the
investment adviser are shared with the Fund's shareholders, and the propriety of
existing and alternative breakpoints in the Fund's investment advisory fee
schedule. The Board of Trustees considered comparative advisory fees of the Fund
and other investment companies and/or other products at different asset levels,
and considered the trends in the industry versus historical and projected assets
of the Fund. The Board of Trustees also reviewed the benefit to the investment
adviser of receiving research paid for by Fund assets and the propriety of such
arrangements. The Board of Trustees evaluated other benefits the investment
adviser and its affiliates derive from their relationship with the Fund. The
Board of Trustees reviewed information about the foregoing factors and
considered changes, if any, in such information since its previous approval. The
Board of Trustees discussed the financial strength of the investment adviser and
its affiliated companies and the capability of the personnel of the investment
adviser, and specifically the strength and background of its portfolio
management personnel. The Board of Trustees reviewed the statutory and
regulatory requirements for approval and disclosure of investment advisory
agreements. The Board of Trustees, including the independent trustees,

                                                                               9


evaluated all of the foregoing and does not believe any single factor or group
of factors control or dominate the review process, and, after considering all
factors together, has determined, in the exercise of its business judgment, that
approval of the investment advisory agreement is in the best interests of the
Fund and its shareholders. The following summary provides more detail on certain
matters considered but does not detail all matters considered.

Nature, Extent and Quality of the Services Provided. On a regular basis, the
Board of Trustees considers the roles and responsibilities of the investment
adviser as a whole and for those specific portfolio management, support and
trading functions servicing the Fund. The trustees discuss with the investment
adviser the resources available and used in managing the Fund. The Fund
discloses information about its portfolio management team members and their
experience in its prospectus. The trustees also discuss certain other services
which are provided on a cost-reimbursement basis by the investment adviser or
its affiliates to the Van Kampen funds including certain accounting,
administrative and legal services. The Board has determined that the nature,
extent and quality of the services provided by the investment adviser support
its decision to approve the investment advisory contract.

Performance, Fees and Expenses of the Fund. On a regular basis, the Board of
Trustees reviews the performance, fees and expenses of the Fund compared to its
peers and to appropriate benchmarks. In addition, the Board spends more focused
time on the performance of the Fund and other funds in the Van Kampen complex,
paying specific attention to underperforming funds. The trustees discuss with
the investment adviser the performance goals and the actual results achieved in
managing the Fund. When considering a fund's performance, the trustees and the
investment adviser place emphasis on trends and longer-term returns (focusing on
one-year, three-year and five-year performance with special attention to
three-year performance) and, when a fund's weighted performance is under the
fund's benchmark, they discuss the causes and where necessary seek to make
specific changes to investment strategy or investment personnel. The Fund
discloses more information about its performance elsewhere in this report and in
the Fund's prospectus. The trustees discuss with the investment adviser the
level of advisory fees for this Fund relative to comparable funds and other
products advised by the adviser and others in the marketplace. The trustees
review not only the advisory fees but other fees and expenses (whether paid to
the adviser, its affiliates or others) and the Fund's overall expense ratio. The
Fund discloses more information about its fees and expenses in its prospectus.
The Board has determined that the performance, fees and expenses of the Fund
support its decision to approve the investment advisory contract.

Investment Adviser's Expenses in Providing the Service and Profitability. At
least annually, the trustees review the investment adviser's expenses in
providing services to the Fund and other funds advised by the investment adviser
and the profitability of the investment adviser. These profitability reports are
put

 10


together by the investment adviser with the oversight of the Board. The trustees
discuss with the investment adviser its revenues and expenses, including among
other things, revenues for advisory services, portfolio management-related
expenses, revenue sharing arrangement costs and allocated expenses both on an
aggregate basis and per fund. The Board has determined that the analysis of the
investment adviser's expenses and profitability support its decision to approve
the investment advisory contract.

Economies of Scale. On a regular basis, the Board of Trustees considers the size
and growth prospects of the Fund and how that relates to the Fund's expense
ratio and particularly the Fund's advisory fee rate. In conjunction with its
review of the investment adviser's profitability, the trustees discuss with the
investment adviser how more (or less) assets can affect the efficiency or
effectiveness of managing the Fund's portfolio and whether the advisory fee
level is appropriate relative to current and projected asset levels and/or
whether the advisory fee structure reflects economies of scale as asset levels
change. The Board has determined that its review of the actual and potential
economies of scale of the Fund support its decision to approve the investment
advisory contract.

Other Benefits of the Relationship. On a regular basis, the Board of Trustees
considers other benefits to the investment adviser and its affiliates derived
from its relationship with the Fund and other funds advised by the investment
adviser. These benefits include, among other things, fees for transfer agency
services provided to the funds, in certain cases research received by the
adviser generated from commission dollars spent on funds' portfolio trading, and
in certain cases distribution or service related fees related to funds' sales.
The trustees review with the investment adviser each of these arrangements and
the reasonableness of its costs relative to the services performed. The Board
has determined that the other benefits received by the investment adviser or its
affiliates support its decision to approve the investment advisory contract.

                                                                              11


VAN KAMPEN STRATEGIC GROWTH FUND

PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS -- AUGUST 31, 2006

<Table>
<Caption>
                                                              NUMBER OF
DESCRIPTION                                                    SHARES         VALUE
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                    
COMMON STOCKS  92.5%
AEROSPACE & DEFENSE  3.4%
Lockheed Martin Corp. ......................................   800,000    $   66,080,000
Precision Castparts Corp. ..................................   700,000        40,908,000
Raytheon Co. ...............................................   800,000        37,768,000
                                                                          --------------
                                                                             144,756,000
                                                                          --------------
AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS  1.2%
Archer-Daniels-Midland Co. .................................  1,200,000       49,404,000
                                                                          --------------

AIR FREIGHT & LOGISTICS  0.8%
C.H. Robinson Worldwide, Inc. ..............................   750,000        34,365,000
                                                                          --------------

AIRLINES  0.5%
AMR Corp. (a)...............................................  1,000,000       20,650,000
                                                                          --------------

APPAREL, ACCESSORIES & LUXURY GOODS  1.7%
Coach, Inc. (a).............................................   750,000        22,642,500
Polo Ralph Lauren Corp. ....................................   500,000        29,495,000
VF Corp. ...................................................   300,000        20,967,000
                                                                          --------------
                                                                              73,104,500
                                                                          --------------
APPAREL RETAIL  0.9%
AnnTaylor Stores Corp. (a)..................................  1,000,000       39,800,000
                                                                          --------------

APPLICATION SOFTWARE  2.3%
BEA Systems, Inc. (a).......................................  2,250,000       30,892,500
Citrix Systems, Inc. (a)....................................   750,000        23,010,000
SAP AG--ADR (Germany).......................................   900,000        42,966,000
                                                                          --------------
                                                                              96,868,500
                                                                          --------------
BIOTECHNOLOGY  3.7%
Celgene Corp. (a)...........................................  1,750,000       71,207,500
Gilead Sciences, Inc. (a)...................................  1,100,000       69,740,000
Vertex Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a)............................   500,000        17,225,000
                                                                          --------------
                                                                             158,172,500
                                                                          --------------
BREWERS  0.9%
Anheuser-Busch Cos., Inc. ..................................   800,000        39,504,000
                                                                          --------------

BROADCASTING & CABLE TV  1.2%
Comcast Corp., Class A (a)..................................  1,500,000       52,500,000
                                                                          --------------

CASINOS & GAMING  1.0%
Las Vegas Sands Corp. (a)...................................   600,000        41,886,000
                                                                          --------------

CATALOG RETAIL  0.6%
Coldwater Creek, Inc. (a)...................................  1,000,000       27,470,000
                                                                          --------------
</Table>

 12                                            See Notes to Financial Statements


VAN KAMPEN STRATEGIC GROWTH FUND

PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS -- AUGUST 31, 2006 continued

<Table>
<Caption>
                                                              NUMBER OF
DESCRIPTION                                                    SHARES         VALUE
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                    
COMMUNICATIONS EQUIPMENT  6.2%
Cisco Systems, Inc. (a).....................................  4,000,000   $   87,960,000
Corning, Inc. (a)...........................................  1,250,000       27,800,000
Harris Corp. ...............................................   400,000        17,568,000
Motorola, Inc. .............................................  2,000,000       46,760,000
Nokia Oyj--ADR (Finland)....................................  2,000,000       41,760,000
QUALCOMM, Inc. .............................................  1,100,000       41,437,000
                                                                          --------------
                                                                             263,285,000
                                                                          --------------
COMPUTER & ELECTRONICS RETAIL  1.0%
Circuit City Stores, Inc. ..................................  1,750,000       41,317,500
                                                                          --------------

COMPUTER HARDWARE  3.1%
Apple Computer, Inc. (a)....................................   600,000        40,710,000
Hewlett-Packard Co. ........................................  2,500,000       91,400,000
                                                                          --------------
                                                                             132,110,000
                                                                          --------------
COMPUTER STORAGE & PERIPHERALS  0.8%
SanDisk Corp. (a)...........................................   600,000        35,352,000
                                                                          --------------

CONSTRUCTION & ENGINEERING  0.9%
Fluor Corp. ................................................   450,000        38,889,000
                                                                          --------------

CONSTRUCTION & FARM MACHINERY & HEAVY TRUCKS  1.1%
Manitowoc Co., Inc. ........................................   500,000        22,100,000
Trinity Industries, Inc.....................................   800,000        26,688,000
                                                                          --------------
                                                                              48,788,000
                                                                          --------------
CONSUMER ELECTRONICS  0.8%
Garmin Ltd. (Cayman Islands) (a)............................   700,000        32,732,000
                                                                          --------------

DATA PROCESSING & OUTSOURCED SERVICES  1.0%
Alliance Data Systems Corp. (a).............................   500,000        25,270,000
Global Payments, Inc. ......................................   450,000        17,122,500
                                                                          --------------
                                                                              42,392,500
                                                                          --------------
DEPARTMENT STORES  2.9%
J.C. Penney Co., Inc. ......................................  1,000,000       63,040,000
Kohl's Corp. (a)............................................  1,000,000       62,510,000
                                                                          --------------
                                                                             125,550,000
                                                                          --------------
DRUG RETAIL  0.9%
CVS Corp. ..................................................  1,200,000       40,260,000
                                                                          --------------

ELECTRICAL COMPONENTS & EQUIPMENT  1.2%
Emerson Electric Co. .......................................   600,000        49,290,000
                                                                          --------------

FERTILIZERS & AGRICULTURAL CHEMICALS  1.7%
Monsanto Co. ...............................................  1,500,000       71,160,000
                                                                          --------------

FOOD RETAIL  0.9%
Safeway, Inc. ..............................................  1,250,000       38,662,500
                                                                          --------------
</Table>

See Notes to Financial Statements                                             13


VAN KAMPEN STRATEGIC GROWTH FUND

PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS -- AUGUST 31, 2006 continued

<Table>
<Caption>
                                                              NUMBER OF
DESCRIPTION                                                    SHARES         VALUE
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                    
HEALTH CARE EQUIPMENT  1.6%
Baxter International, Inc. .................................  1,000,000   $   44,380,000
Hologic, Inc. (a)...........................................   500,000        21,590,000
                                                                          --------------
                                                                              65,970,000
                                                                          --------------
HEALTH CARE SERVICES  1.0%
Laboratory Corp. of America Holdings (a)....................   600,000        41,052,000
                                                                          --------------

HOTELS, RESORTS & CRUISE LINES  1.4%
Hilton Hotels Corp. ........................................  1,000,000       25,470,000
Starwood Hotels & Resorts Worldwide, Inc. ..................   650,000        34,619,000
                                                                          --------------
                                                                              60,089,000
                                                                          --------------
HOUSEHOLD PRODUCTS  0.8%
Colgate-Palmolive Co. ......................................   600,000        35,916,000
                                                                          --------------

HYPERMARKETS & SUPER CENTERS  0.7%
Costco Wholesale Corp. .....................................   650,000        30,413,500
                                                                          --------------

INTEGRATED OIL & GAS  1.7%
Marathon Oil Corp. .........................................   600,000        50,100,000
Suncor Energy, Inc. (Canada)................................   300,000        23,274,000
                                                                          --------------
                                                                              73,374,000
                                                                          --------------
INTERNET RETAIL  0.3%
Nutri/System, Inc. (a)......................................   250,000        12,420,000
                                                                          --------------

INTERNET SOFTWARE & SERVICES  3.0%
Akamai Technologies, Inc. (a)...............................  1,800,000       70,560,000
Google, Inc., Class A (a)...................................   150,000        56,779,500
                                                                          --------------
                                                                             127,339,500
                                                                          --------------
INVESTMENT BANKING & BROKERAGE  4.2%
Bear Stearns Co., Inc. .....................................   400,000        52,140,000
Charles Schwab Corp. .......................................  2,750,000       44,852,500
E*TRADE Financial Corp. (a).................................  1,600,000       37,744,000
Goldman Sachs Group, Inc. ..................................   300,000        44,595,000
                                                                          --------------
                                                                             179,331,500
                                                                          --------------
IT CONSULTING & OTHER SERVICES  1.6%
Cognizant Technology Solutions Corp., Class A (a)...........  1,000,000       69,910,000
                                                                          --------------

LIFE SCIENCES TOOLS & SERVICES  0.6%
Applera Corp.--Applied Biosystems Group.....................   800,000        24,520,000
                                                                          --------------

LIFE & HEALTH INSURANCE  1.0%
Prudential Financial, Inc. .................................   600,000        44,046,000
                                                                          --------------

MANAGED HEALTH CARE  2.3%
Humana, Inc. (a)............................................   700,000        42,651,000
Sierra Health Services, Inc. (a)............................   400,000        17,160,000
</Table>

 14                                            See Notes to Financial Statements


VAN KAMPEN STRATEGIC GROWTH FUND

PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS -- AUGUST 31, 2006 continued

<Table>
<Caption>
                                                              NUMBER OF
DESCRIPTION                                                    SHARES         VALUE
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                    
MANAGED HEALTH CARE (CONTINUED)
WellPoint, Inc. (a).........................................   500,000    $   38,705,000
                                                                          --------------
                                                                              98,516,000
                                                                          --------------
MOVIES & ENTERTAINMENT  1.4%
Walt Disney Co. ............................................  2,000,000       59,300,000
                                                                          --------------

OIL & GAS EQUIPMENT & SERVICES  6.0%
FMC Technologies, Inc. (a)..................................   400,000        23,528,000
Grant Prideco, Inc. (a).....................................  1,000,000       41,530,000
Oceaneering International, Inc. (a).........................   600,000        21,582,000
Schlumberger, Ltd. .........................................  1,750,000      107,275,000
TETRA Technologies, Inc. (a)................................   600,000        16,686,000
Weatherford International, Ltd. (a).........................  1,000,000       43,000,000
                                                                          --------------
                                                                             253,601,000
                                                                          --------------
OIL & GAS REFINING & MARKETING  0.9%
Frontier Oil Corp. .........................................  1,200,000       39,240,000
                                                                          --------------

OTHER DIVERSIFIED FINANCIAL SERVICES  0.9%
J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. ....................................   850,000        38,811,000
                                                                          --------------

PACKAGED FOODS & MEATS  0.9%
Campbell Soup Co. ..........................................  1,000,000       37,570,000
                                                                          --------------

PHARMACEUTICALS  6.7%
Allergan, Inc. .............................................   400,000        45,824,000
AstraZeneca PLC--ADR (United Kingdom).......................   700,000        45,598,000
Novartis AG--ADR (Switzerland)..............................  1,000,000       57,120,000
Roche Holding AG--ADR (Switzerland).........................  1,000,000       92,015,100
Shire PLC--ADR (United Kingdom).............................   850,000        43,562,500
                                                                          --------------
                                                                             284,119,600
                                                                          --------------
PROPERTY & CASUALTY INSURANCE  0.5%
W.R. Berkley Corp. .........................................   600,000        21,000,000
                                                                          --------------

REAL ESTATE MANAGEMENT & DEVELOPMENT  0.7%
CB Richard Ellis Group, Inc., Class A (a)...................  1,200,000       27,600,000
                                                                          --------------

RESTAURANTS  0.7%
Starbucks Corp. (a).........................................  1,000,000       31,010,000
                                                                          --------------

SEMICONDUCTOR EQUIPMENT  2.2%
Lam Research Corp. (a)......................................   850,000        36,371,500
MEMC Electronic Materials, Inc. (a).........................  1,500,000       58,020,000
                                                                          --------------
                                                                              94,391,500
                                                                          --------------
SEMICONDUCTORS  0.7%
Integrated Device Technology, Inc. (a)......................  1,750,000       30,152,500
                                                                          --------------
</Table>

See Notes to Financial Statements                                             15


VAN KAMPEN STRATEGIC GROWTH FUND

PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS -- AUGUST 31, 2006 continued

<Table>
<Caption>
                                                              NUMBER OF
DESCRIPTION                                                    SHARES         VALUE
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                    
SOFT DRINKS  2.4%
Hansen Natural Corp. (a)....................................   800,000    $   22,016,000
PepsiCo, Inc. ..............................................  1,200,000       78,336,000
                                                                          --------------
                                                                             100,352,000
                                                                          --------------
SPECIALIZED FINANCE  1.0%
Chicago Mercantile Exchange Holdings, Inc. .................   100,000        44,000,000
                                                                          --------------

SPECIALIZED REIT'S  0.2%
Host Hotels & Resorts, Inc. ................................   397,930         8,969,342
                                                                          --------------

SPECIALTY STORES  1.3%
Office Depot, Inc. (a)......................................  1,500,000       55,260,000
                                                                          --------------

STEEL  1.3%
Allegheny Technologies, Inc. ...............................   550,000        31,542,500
Nucor Corp. ................................................   500,000        24,435,000
                                                                          --------------
                                                                              55,977,500
                                                                          --------------
TRADING COMPANIES & DISTRIBUTORS  0.6%
WESCO International, Inc. (a)...............................   400,000        23,400,000
                                                                          --------------

WIRELESS TELECOMMUNICATION SERVICES  3.2%
America Movil S.A. de C.V., Ser L--ADR (Mexico).............  2,250,000       83,947,500
American Tower Corp., Class A (a)...........................  1,500,000       53,790,000
                                                                          --------------
                                                                             137,737,500
                                                                          --------------

TOTAL LONG-TERM INVESTMENTS  92.5%
  (Cost $3,552,968,405)................................................    3,943,658,442

REPURCHASE AGREEMENT  7.1%
State Street Bank & Trust Co. ($301,248,000 par collateralized by U.S.
  Government obligations in a pooled cash account, interest rate of
  5.10%, dated 08/31/06, to be sold on 09/01/06 at $301,290,677)
  (Cost $301,248,000)..................................................      301,248,000
                                                                          --------------

TOTAL INVESTMENTS  99.6%
  (Cost $3,854,216,405)................................................    4,244,906,442
OTHER ASSETS IN EXCESS OF LIABILITIES  0.4%............................       16,393,878
                                                                          --------------

NET ASSETS  100.0%.....................................................   $4,261,300,320
                                                                          ==============
</Table>

Percentages are calculated as a percentage of net assets.

(a) Non-income producing security as this stock currently does not declare
    dividends.

ADR--American Depositary Receipt

 16                                            See Notes to Financial Statements


VAN KAMPEN STRATEGIC GROWTH FUND

FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

Statement of Assets and Liabilities
August 31, 2006

<Table>
                                                           
ASSETS:
Total Investments (Cost $3,854,216,405).....................  $ 4,244,906,442
Cash........................................................              409
Receivables:
  Investments Sold..........................................      174,711,016
  Dividends.................................................        1,658,707
  Fund Shares Sold..........................................        1,281,074
  Interest..................................................           42,677
Other.......................................................          595,018
                                                              ---------------
    Total Assets............................................    4,423,195,343
                                                              ---------------
LIABILITIES:
Payables:
  Investments Purchased.....................................      140,870,815
  Fund Shares Repurchased...................................       13,214,555
  Distributor and Affiliates................................        3,615,508
  Investment Advisory Fee...................................        1,645,283
Accrued Expenses............................................        1,900,900
Trustees' Deferred Compensation and Retirement Plans........          647,962
                                                              ---------------
    Total Liabilities.......................................      161,895,023
                                                              ---------------
NET ASSETS..................................................  $ 4,261,300,320
                                                              ===============
NET ASSETS CONSIST OF:
Capital (Par value of $.01 per share with an unlimited
  number of shares authorized)..............................  $ 9,297,246,108
Net Unrealized Appreciation.................................      390,690,115
Accumulated Net Investment Loss.............................         (602,271)
Accumulated Net Realized Loss...............................   (5,426,033,632)
                                                              ---------------
NET ASSETS..................................................  $ 4,261,300,320
                                                              ===============
MAXIMUM OFFERING PRICE PER SHARE:
  Class A Shares:
    Net asset value and redemption price per share (Based on
    net assets of $2,727,515,171 and 69,208,083 shares of
    beneficial interest issued and outstanding).............  $         39.41
    Maximum sales charge (5.75%* of offering price).........             2.40
                                                              ---------------
    Maximum offering price to public........................  $         41.81
                                                              ===============
  Class B Shares:
    Net asset value and offering price per share (Based on
    net assets of $1,237,695,632 and 37,036,235 shares of
    beneficial interest issued and outstanding).............  $         33.42
                                                              ===============
  Class C Shares:
    Net asset value and offering price per share (Based on
    net assets of $238,425,012 and 6,954,377 shares of
    beneficial interest issued and outstanding).............  $         34.28
                                                              ===============
  Class I Shares:
    Net asset value and offering price per share (Based on
    net assets of $55,616,868 and 1,390,787 shares of
    beneficial interest issued and outstanding).............  $         39.99
                                                              ===============
  Class R Shares:
    Net asset value and offering price per share (Based on
    net assets of $2,047,637 and 52,392 shares of beneficial
    interest issued
    and outstanding)........................................  $         39.08
                                                              ===============
</Table>

*   On sales of $50,000 or more, the sales charge will be reduced.

See Notes to Financial Statements                                             17


VAN KAMPEN STRATEGIC GROWTH FUND

FINANCIAL STATEMENTS continued

Statement of Operations
For the Year Ended August 31, 2006

<Table>
                                                           
INVESTMENT INCOME:
Dividends (Net of foreign withholding taxes of $373,282)....  $  29,554,154
Interest....................................................     10,510,935
                                                              -------------
    Total Income............................................     40,065,089
                                                              -------------
EXPENSES:
Distribution (12b-1) and Service Fees (Attributed to Classes
  A, B, C and R of $7,703,290, $15,626,988, $2,975,428 and
  $9,084 respectively)......................................     26,314,790
Investment Advisory Fee.....................................     22,445,316
Shareholder Services........................................     17,494,631
Custody.....................................................        294,128
Legal.......................................................         84,068
Trustees' Fees and Related Expenses.........................         81,224
Other.......................................................      1,987,240
                                                              -------------
    Total Expenses..........................................     68,701,397
    Less Credits Earned on Cash Balances....................        168,580
                                                              -------------
    Net Expenses............................................     68,532,817
                                                              -------------
NET INVESTMENT LOSS.........................................  $ (28,467,728)
                                                              =============
REALIZED AND UNREALIZED GAIN/LOSS:
Realized Gain/Loss:
  Investments...............................................  $ 602,319,275
  Foreign Currency Transactions.............................         (1,253)
                                                              -------------
Net Realized Gain...........................................    602,318,022
                                                              -------------
Unrealized Appreciation/Depreciation:
  Beginning of the Period...................................    983,647,706
                                                              -------------
  End of the Period:
    Investments.............................................    390,690,037
    Foreign Currency Translation............................             78
                                                              -------------
                                                                390,690,115
                                                              -------------
Net Unrealized Depreciation During the Period...............   (592,957,591)
                                                              -------------
NET REALIZED AND UNREALIZED GAIN............................  $   9,360,431
                                                              =============
NET DECREASE IN NET ASSETS FROM OPERATIONS..................  $ (19,107,297)
                                                              =============
</Table>

 18                                            See Notes to Financial Statements


VAN KAMPEN STRATEGIC GROWTH FUND

FINANCIAL STATEMENTS continued

Statements of Changes in Net Assets

<Table>
<Caption>
                                                             FOR THE            FOR THE
                                                           YEAR ENDED         YEAR ENDED
                                                         AUGUST 31, 2006    AUGUST 31, 2005
                                                         ----------------------------------
                                                                      
FROM INVESTMENT ACTIVITIES:
Operations:
Net Investment Loss....................................  $   (28,467,728)   $   (17,488,296)
Net Realized Gain......................................      602,318,022        357,194,610
Net Unrealized Appreciation/Depreciation During the
  Period...............................................     (592,957,591)       552,654,268
                                                         ---------------    ---------------

NET CHANGE IN NET ASSETS FROM INVESTMENT ACTIVITIES....      (19,107,297)       892,360,582
                                                         ---------------    ---------------

FROM CAPITAL TRANSACTIONS:
Proceeds from Shares Sold..............................      511,765,322        613,922,178
Cost of Shares Repurchased.............................   (1,593,108,658)    (2,300,768,487)
                                                         ---------------    ---------------
NET CHANGE IN NET ASSETS FROM CAPITAL TRANSACTIONS.....   (1,081,343,336)    (1,686,846,309)
                                                         ---------------    ---------------
TOTAL DECREASE IN NET ASSETS...........................   (1,100,450,633)      (794,485,727)
NET ASSETS:
Beginning of the Period................................    5,361,750,953      6,156,236,680
                                                         ---------------    ---------------
End of the Period (Including accumulated net investment
  loss of $602,271 and $564,170, respectively).........  $ 4,261,300,320    $ 5,361,750,953
                                                         ===============    ===============
</Table>

See Notes to Financial Statements                                             19


VAN KAMPEN STRATEGIC GROWTH FUND

FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS

THE FOLLOWING SCHEDULE PRESENTS FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS FOR ONE SHARE OF THE FUND
OUTSTANDING THROUGHOUT THE PERIODS INDICATED.

<Table>
<Caption>
                                                        YEAR ENDED AUGUST 31,
CLASS A SHARES                         --------------------------------------------------------
                                         2006        2005        2004        2003        2002
                                       --------------------------------------------------------
                                                                        
NET ASSET VALUE, BEGINNING OF THE
  PERIOD.............................  $  39.84    $  34.14    $  34.08    $  30.96    $  43.18
                                       --------    --------    --------    --------    --------
  Net Investment Loss (a)............      (.12)        -0-(c)     (.16)       (.18)       (.17)
  Net Realized and Unrealized
    Gain/Loss........................      (.31)       5.70         .22        3.30      (12.05)
                                       --------    --------    --------    --------    --------
Total from Investment Operations.....      (.43)       5.70         .06        3.12      (12.22)
                                       --------    --------    --------    --------    --------
NET ASSET VALUE, END OF THE PERIOD...  $  39.41    $  39.84    $  34.14    $  34.08    $  30.96
                                       ========    ========    ========    ========    ========

Total Return (b).....................    -1.08%      16.70%        .18%      10.08%     -28.30%
Net Assets at End of the Period
  (In millions)......................  $2,727.5    $3,240.5    $3,663.9    $4,222.8    $4,310.2
Ratio of Expenses to Average
  Net Assets.........................     1.09%       1.14%       1.08%       1.15%       1.06%
Ratio of Net Investment Loss to
  Average
  Net Assets.........................     (.29%)      (.00%)      (.46%)      (.61%)      (.44%)
Portfolio Turnover...................      109%        100%        177%        180%        230%
</Table>

(a) Based on average shares outstanding.

(b) Assumes reinvestment of all distributions for the period and does not
    include payment of the maximum sales charge of 5.75% or contingent deferred
    sales charge (CDSC). On purchases of $1 million or more, a CDSC of 1% may be
    imposed on certain redemptions made within eighteen months of purchase. If
    the sales charges were included, total returns would be lower. These returns
    include combined Rule 12b-1 fees and service fees of up to .25% and do not
    reflect the deduction of taxes that a shareholder would pay on Fund
    distributions or the redemption of Fund shares.

(c) Amount is less than $.01.

 20                                            See Notes to Financial Statements


VAN KAMPEN STRATEGIC GROWTH FUND

FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS continued
THE FOLLOWING SCHEDULE PRESENTS FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS FOR ONE SHARE OF THE FUND
OUTSTANDING THROUGHOUT THE PERIODS INDICATED.

<Table>
<Caption>
                                                        YEAR ENDED AUGUST 31,
CLASS B SHARES                         --------------------------------------------------------
                                         2006        2005        2004        2003        2002
                                       --------------------------------------------------------
                                                                        
NET ASSET VALUE, BEGINNING OF THE
  PERIOD.............................  $  34.05    $  29.40    $  29.57    $  27.07    $  38.04
                                       --------    --------    --------    --------    --------
  Net Investment Loss (a)............      (.37)       (.25)       (.38)       (.36)       (.41)
  Net Realized and Unrealized
    Gain/Loss........................      (.26)       4.90         .21        2.86      (10.56)
                                       --------    --------    --------    --------    --------
Total from Investment Operations.....      (.63)       4.65        (.17)       2.50      (10.97)
                                       --------    --------    --------    --------    --------
NET ASSET VALUE, END OF THE PERIOD...  $  33.42    $  34.05    $  29.40    $  29.57    $  27.07
                                       ========    ========    ========    ========    ========

Total Return (b).....................    -1.85%      15.82%       -.57%       9.24%     -28.84%
Net Assets at End of the Period
  (In millions)......................  $1,237.7    $1,731.5    $2,010.4    $2,346.3    $2,395.2
Ratio of Expenses to Average
  Net Assets.........................     1.85%       1.90%       1.85%       1.91%       1.82%
Ratio of Net Investment Loss to
  Average
  Net Assets.........................    (1.05%)      (.76%)     (1.23%)     (1.37%)     (1.20%)
Portfolio Turnover...................      109%        100%        177%        180%        230%
</Table>

(a) Based on average shares outstanding.

(b) Assumes reinvestment of all distributions for the period and does not
    include payment of the maximum CDSC of 5%, charged on certain redemptions
    made within one year of purchase and declining to 0% after the fifth year.
    If the sales charge was included, total returns would be lower. These
    returns include combined Rule 12b-1 fees and service fees of up to 1% and do
    not reflect the deduction of taxes that a shareholder would pay on Fund
    distributions or the redemption of Fund shares.

See Notes to Financial Statements                                             21


VAN KAMPEN STRATEGIC GROWTH FUND

FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS continued
THE FOLLOWING SCHEDULE PRESENTS FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS FOR ONE SHARE OF THE FUND
OUTSTANDING THROUGHOUT THE PERIODS INDICATED.

<Table>
<Caption>
                                                          YEAR ENDED AUGUST 31,
CLASS C SHARES                              -------------------------------------------------
                                             2006      2005      2004      2003        2002
                                            -------------------------------------------------
                                                                       
NET ASSET VALUE, BEGINNING OF THE
  PERIOD..................................  $34.92    $30.16    $30.34    $27.75      $ 39.00
                                            ------    ------    ------    ------      -------
  Net Investment Loss (a).................    (.38)     (.25)     (.39)    (.36)         (.42)
  Net Realized and Unrealized Gain/Loss...    (.26)     5.01       .21      2.95       (10.83)
                                            ------    ------    ------    ------      -------
Total from Investment Operations..........    (.64)     4.76      (.18)     2.59       (11.25)
                                            ------    ------    ------    ------      -------
NET ASSET VALUE, END OF THE PERIOD........  $34.28    $34.92    $30.16    $30.34      $ 27.75
                                            ======    ======    ======    ======      =======

Total Return (b)..........................  -1.83%    15.78%     -.59%     9.33%(c)   -28.85%
Net Assets at End of the Period
  (In millions)...........................  $238.4    $332.8    $430.2    $570.1      $ 629.0
Ratio of Expenses to Average
  Net Assets..............................   1.85%     1.90%     1.85%     1.91%        1.82%
Ratio of Net Investment Loss to Average
  Net Assets..............................  (1.05%)    (.75%)   (1.23%)   (1.34%)(c)   (1.20%)
Portfolio Turnover........................    109%      100%      177%      180%         230%
</Table>

(a) Based on average shares outstanding.

(b) Assumes reinvestment of all distributions for the period and does not
    include payment of the maximum CDSC of 1%, charged on certain redemptions
    made within one year of purchase. If the sales charge was included, total
    returns would be lower. These returns include combined Rule 12b-1 fees and
    service fees of up to 1% and do not reflect the deduction of taxes that a
    shareholder would pay on Fund distributions or the redemption of Fund
    shares.

(c) Certain non-recurring payments were made to Class C Shares, resulting in an
    increase to the Total Return and Ratio of Net Investment Loss to Average Net
    Assets of .03%.

 22                                            See Notes to Financial Statements


VAN KAMPEN STRATEGIC GROWTH FUND

FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS continued
THE FOLLOWING SCHEDULE PRESENTS FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS FOR ONE SHARE OF THE FUND
OUTSTANDING THROUGHOUT THE PERIODS INDICATED.

<Table>
<Caption>
                                                          YEAR ENDED AUGUST 31,
CLASS I SHARES                               -----------------------------------------------
                                              2006      2005      2004      2003      2002
                                             -----------------------------------------------
                                                                      
NET ASSET VALUE, BEGINNING OF THE PERIOD...  $40.33    $34.47    $34.33    $31.10    $ 43.27
                                             ------    ------    ------    ------    -------
  Net Investment Income/Loss (a)...........    (.01)      .07      (.08)     (.11)      (.07)
  Net Realized and Unrealized Gain/Loss....    (.33)     5.79       .22      3.34     (12.10)
                                             ------    ------    ------    ------    -------
Total from Investment Operations...........    (.34)     5.86       .14      3.23     (12.17)
                                             ------    ------    ------    ------    -------
NET ASSET VALUE, END OF THE PERIOD.........  $39.99    $40.33    $34.47    $34.33    $ 31.10
                                             ======    ======    ======    ======    =======

Total Return (b)...........................   -.84%    17.00%      .41%    10.39%    -28.13%
Net Assets at End of the Period (In
  millions)................................  $ 55.6    $ 55.0    $ 31.8    $ 33.9    $  29.8
Ratio of Expenses to Average Net Assets....    .84%      .90%      .84%      .90%       .81%
Ratio of Net Investment Income/Loss to
  Average Net Assets.......................   (.03%)     .20%     (.21%)    (.36%)     (.19%)
Portfolio Turnover.........................    109%      100%      177%      180%       230%
</Table>

(a) Based on average shares outstanding.

(b) Assumes reinvestment of all distributions for the period. These returns do
    not reflect the deduction of taxes that a shareholder would pay on Fund
    distributions or the redemption of Fund shares.

See Notes to Financial Statements                                             23


VAN KAMPEN STRATEGIC GROWTH FUND

FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS continued
THE FOLLOWING SCHEDULE PRESENTS FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS FOR ONE SHARE OF THE FUND
OUTSTANDING THROUGHOUT THE PERIODS INDICATED.

<Table>
<Caption>
                                                                               OCTOBER 1, 2002
                                                                                (COMMENCEMENT
                                                  YEAR ENDED AUGUST 31,         OF INVESTMENT
CLASS R SHARES                                 ----------------------------    OPERATIONS) TO
                                                2006        2005      2004     AUGUST 31, 2003
                                               -----------------------------------------------
                                                                   
NET ASSET VALUE, BEGINNING OF THE PERIOD.....  $39.58      $34.02    $34.04         $29.94
                                               ------      ------    ------         ------
  Net Investment Loss (a)....................   (.19)        (.04)     (.24)          (.24)
  Net Realized and Unrealized Gain/Loss......   (.31)        5.60       .22           4.34
                                               ------      ------    ------         ------
Total from Investment Operations.............   (.50)        5.56      (.02)          4.10
                                               ------      ------    ------         ------
NET ASSET VALUE, END OF THE PERIOD...........  $39.08      $39.58    $34.02         $34.04
                                               ======      ======    ======         ======

Total Return (b).............................  -1.26%(c)   16.34%     -.06%         13.69%*
Net Assets at End of the Period (In
  millions)..................................  $  2.0      $  2.0    $ 20.0         $   .5
Ratio of Expenses to Average Net Assets......   1.27%(c)    1.37%     1.33%          1.41%
Ratio of Net Investment Loss to Average Net
  Assets.....................................   (.47%)(c)   (.11%)    (.65%)         (.85%)
Portfolio Turnover...........................    109%        100%      177%           180%
</Table>

*   Non-Annualized

(a) Based on average shares outstanding.

(b) Assumes reinvestment of all distributions for the period. These returns
    include combined Rule 12b-1 fees and service fees of up to .50% and do not
    reflect the deduction of taxes that a shareholder would pay on Fund
    distributions or the redemption of Fund shares.

(c) The Total Return, Ratio of Expenses to Average Net Assets, and Ratio of Net
    Investment Loss to Average Net Assets reflect actual 12b-1 fees of less than
    .50%.

 24                                            See Notes to Financial Statements


VAN KAMPEN STRATEGIC GROWTH FUND

NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- AUGUST 31, 2006

1. SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES

Van Kampen Strategic Growth Fund (formerly Emerging Growth Fund) (the "Fund") is
organized as a Delaware statutory trust, and is registered as a diversified
open-end management investment company under the Investment Company Act of 1940
(the "1940 Act"), as amended. The Fund's investment objective is capital
appreciation. The Fund commenced investment operations on October 2, 1970. The
Fund offers Class A Shares, Class B Shares, Class C Shares, Class I Shares and
Class R Shares. Each class of shares differs by its initial sales load,
contingent deferred sales charges, the allocation of class-specific expenses and
voting rights on matters affecting a single class.

    The following is a summary of significant accounting policies consistently
followed by the Fund in the preparation of its financial statements. The
preparation of financial statements in conformity with U.S. generally accepted
accounting principles requires management to make estimates and assumptions that
affect the reported amounts of assets and liabilities and disclosure of
contingent assets and liabilities at the date of the financial statements and
the reported amounts of revenues and expenses during the reporting period.
Actual results could differ from those estimates.

A. SECURITY VALUATION Investments in securities listed on a securities exchange
are valued at their last sales price as of the close of such securities
exchange. Equity securities traded on NASDAQ are valued at the NASDAQ Official
Closing Price. Listed and unlisted securities for which the last sale price is
not available are valued at the mean of the bid and asked prices. For those
securities where quotations or prices are not available, valuations are
determined in accordance with procedures established in good faith by the Board
of Trustees. Short-term securities with remaining maturities of 60 days or less
are valued at amortized cost, which approximates market value.

B. SECURITY TRANSACTIONS Security transactions are recorded on a trade date
basis. Realized gains and losses are determined on an identified cost basis.

    The Fund may invest in repurchase agreements, which are short-term
investments whereby the Fund acquires ownership of a debt security and the
seller agrees to repurchase the security at a future time and specified price.
The Fund may invest independently in repurchase agreements, or transfer
uninvested cash balances into a pooled cash account along with other investment
companies advised by Van Kampen Asset Management (the "Adviser") or its
affiliates, the daily aggregate of which is invested in repurchase agreements.
Repurchase agreements are fully collateralized by the underlying debt security.
The Fund will make payment for such securities only upon physical delivery or
evidence of book entry transfer to the account of the custodian bank. The seller
is required to maintain the value of the underlying security at not less than
the repurchase proceeds due the Fund.

C. INCOME AND EXPENSES Dividend income is recorded on the ex-dividend date and
interest income is recorded on an accrual basis. Income and expenses of the Fund
are allocated on a pro rata basis to each class of shares, except for
distribution and service fees and incremental transfer agency costs which are
unique to each class of shares.

D. FEDERAL INCOME TAXES It is the Fund's policy to comply with the requirements
of Subchapter M of the Internal Revenue Code applicable to regulated investment
companies

                                                                              25


VAN KAMPEN STRATEGIC GROWTH FUND

NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- AUGUST 31, 2006 continued

and to distribute substantially all of its taxable income to its shareholders.
Therefore, no provision for federal income taxes is required.

    The Fund intends to utilize provisions of the federal income tax laws which
allow it to carry a realized capital loss forward for eight years following the
year of loss and offset such losses against any future realized capital gains.
During the current fiscal year, the Fund utilized capital losses carried forward
of $600,993,070. At August 31, 2006, the Fund had an accumulated capital loss
carryforward for tax purposes of $5,426,033,632, which will expire according to
the following schedule.

<Table>
<Caption>
AMOUNT                                                          EXPIRATION
                                                           
$2,673,535,919..............................................  August 31, 2010
 2,752,497,713..............................................  August 31, 2011
</Table>

    At August 31, 2006, the cost and related gross unrealized appreciation and
depreciation were as follows:

<Table>
                                                           
Cost of investments for tax purposes........................  $3,854,216,405
                                                              ==============
Gross tax unrealized appreciation...........................  $  521,512,626
Gross tax unrealized depreciation...........................    (130,822,589)
                                                              --------------
Net tax unrealized appreciation on investments..............  $  390,690,037
                                                              ==============
</Table>

E. DISTRIBUTION OF INCOME AND GAINS The Fund declares and pays dividends
annually from net investment income and from net realized gains, if any.
Distributions from net realized gains for book purposes may include short-term
capital gains, which are included in ordinary income for tax purposes. There
were no distributions paid during the years ended August 31, 2006 and 2005.

    Due to inherent differences in the recognition of income, expenses, and
realized gains/losses under U.S. generally accepted accounting principles and
federal income tax purposes, permanent differences between book and tax basis
reporting have been identified and appropriately reclassified on the Statement
of Assets and Liabilities. A permanent book and tax difference relating to a net
operating loss in the amount of $28,462,389 was reclassified from accumulated
net investment loss to capital. A permanent book and tax difference relating to
the Fund's investment in other regulated investment companies totaling $31,509
was reclassified to accumulated net realized loss from accumulated net
investment loss. Additionally, a permanent book and tax difference relating to
the recognition of net realized losses on foreign currency transactions totaling
$1,253 has been reclassified from accumulated net realized loss to accumulated
net investment loss.

    As of August 31, 2006, there were no distributable earnings on a tax basis.

F. EXPENSE REDUCTIONS During the year ended August 31, 2006, the Fund's custody
fee was reduced by $168,580 as a result of credits earned on cash balances.

G. FOREIGN CURRENCY TRANSLATION. The market value of foreign securities, forward
foreign currency contracts and other assets and liabilities denominated in a
foreign currency are translated into U.S. dollars at the mean of the quoted bid
and ask prices of such currencies against the U.S. dollar. Purchases and sales
of portfolio securities are translated at the rate of

 26


VAN KAMPEN STRATEGIC GROWTH FUND

NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- AUGUST 31, 2006 continued

exchange prevailing when such securities were acquired or sold. The cost of
securities is determined using historical exchange rates. Gains and losses on
the sale of securities are not segregated for financial reporting purposes
between amounts arising from the changes in exchange rates and amounts arising
from changes in the market prices of securities. Realized gain and loss on
foreign currency includes the net realized amount from the sale of foreign
currency and the amount realized between trade date and settlement date on
securities transactions. Income and expenses are translated at rates prevailing
when accrued.

2. INVESTMENT ADVISORY AGREEMENT AND OTHER TRANSACTIONS WITH AFFILIATES

Under the terms of the Fund's Investment Advisory Agreement, the Adviser will
provide investment advice and facilities to the Fund for an annual fee payable
monthly as follows:

<Table>
<Caption>
AVERAGE DAILY NET ASSETS                                      % PER ANNUM
                                                           
First $350 million..........................................     .575%
Next $350 million...........................................     .525%
Next $350 million...........................................     .475%
Over $1.05 billion..........................................     .425%
</Table>

    For the year ended August 31, 2006, the Fund recognized expenses of
approximately $83,900 representing legal services provided by Skadden, Arps,
Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP, counsel to the Fund, of which a trustee of the Fund
is a partner of such firm and he and his law firm provide legal services as
counsel to the Fund.

    Under separate Accounting Services and Chief Compliance Officer (CCO)
Employment agreements, the Adviser provides accounting services and the CCO
provides compliance services to the Fund. The costs of these services are
allocated to each fund. For the year ended August 31, 2006, the Fund recognized
expenses of approximately $216,100 representing Van Kampen Investments Inc.'s or
its affiliates' (collectively "Van Kampen") cost of providing accounting
services to the Fund, as well as, the salary, benefits and related costs of the
CCO and related support staff paid by Van Kampen. Services provided pursuant to
the Accounting Services and CCO Employment agreement are reported as part of
"Other" expenses on the Statement of Operations.

    Van Kampen Investor Services Inc. (VKIS), an affiliate of the Adviser,
serves as the shareholder servicing agent for the Fund. For the year ended
August 31, 2006, the Fund recognized expenses of approximately $14,734,200
representing transfer agency fees paid to VKIS. Transfer agency fees are
determined through negotiations with the Fund's Board of Trustees.

    Certain officers and trustees of the Fund are also officers and directors of
Van Kampen. The Fund does not compensate its officers or trustees who are
officers of Van Kampen.

    The Fund provides deferred compensation and retirement plans for its
trustees who are not officers of Van Kampen. Under the deferred compensation
plan, trustees may elect to defer all or a portion of their compensation.
Amounts deferred are retained by the Fund and to the extent permitted by the
1940 Act, as amended, may be invested in the common shares of those funds
selected by the trustees. Investments in such funds of $468,881 are included in
"Other" assets on the Statement of Assets and Liabilities at August 31, 2006.
Appreciation/depreciation and distributions received from these investments are
recorded with an offsetting increase/decrease in the deferred compensation
obligation and do not affect the net

                                                                              27


VAN KAMPEN STRATEGIC GROWTH FUND

NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- AUGUST 31, 2006 continued

asset value of the Fund. Benefits under the retirement plan are payable upon
retirement for a ten-year period and are based upon each trustee's years of
service to the Fund. The maximum annual benefit per trustee under the plan is
$2,500.

    For the year ended August 31, 2006, the Fund paid brokerage commissions to
Morgan Stanley DW Inc., an affiliate of the Adviser, totaling $845,183.

    For the year ended August 31, 2006, Van Kampen, as Distributor for the Fund,
received net commissions on sales of the Fund's Class A Shares of approximately
$532,578 and contingent deferred sales charge (CDSC) on redeemed shares of
approximately $2,054,147. Sales charges do not represent expenses to the Fund.

3. CAPITAL TRANSACTIONS

For the years ended August 31, 2006 and 2005, transactions were as follows:

<Table>
<Caption>
                                          FOR THE                           FOR THE
                                         YEAR ENDED                        YEAR ENDED
                                      AUGUST 31, 2006                   AUGUST 31, 2005
                               ------------------------------    ------------------------------
                                 SHARES            VALUE           SHARES            VALUE
                                                                    
Sales:
  Class A....................    9,539,369    $   395,313,593     12,472,853    $   464,652,022
  Class B....................    2,047,020         72,463,766      3,127,612         99,846,035
  Class C....................      394,163         14,361,191        557,074         18,330,399
  Class I....................      677,738         28,589,018        687,736         27,130,096
  Class R....................       25,099          1,037,754        107,735          3,963,626
                               -----------    ---------------    -----------    ---------------
Total Sales..................   12,683,389    $   511,765,322     16,953,010    $   613,922,178
                               ===========    ===============    ===========    ===============
Repurchases:
  Class A....................  (21,666,389)   $  (899,288,527)   (38,447,135)   $(1,432,628,270)
  Class B....................  (15,868,735)      (558,115,587)   (20,649,292)      (661,781,906)
  Class C....................   (2,967,859)      (107,402,540)    (5,292,533)      (173,958,855)
  Class I....................     (651,419)       (27,373,544)      (244,651)        (9,293,759)
  Class R....................      (22,588)          (928,460)      (645,499)       (23,105,697)
                               -----------    ---------------    -----------    ---------------
Total Repurchases............  (41,176,990)   $(1,593,108,658)   (65,279,110)   $(2,300,768,487)
                               ===========    ===============    ===========    ===============
</Table>

4. REDEMPTION FEE

The Fund will assess a 2% redemption fee on the proceeds of Fund shares that are
redeemed (either by sale or exchange) within seven days of purchase. The
redemption fee is paid directly to the Fund. For the year ended August 31, 2006,
the Fund received redemption fees of approximately $10,200 which are reported as
part of "Cost of Shares Repurchased" on the Statement of Changes in Net Assets.
The per share impact from redemption fees paid to the Fund was less than $0.01.

5. INVESTMENT TRANSACTIONS

During the period, the cost of purchases and proceeds from sales of investments,
excluding short-term investments, were $5,210,781,077 and $6,531,478,829,
respectively.

 28


VAN KAMPEN STRATEGIC GROWTH FUND

NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- AUGUST 31, 2006 continued

6. DISTRIBUTION AND SERVICE PLANS

Shares of the Fund are distributed by Van Kampen Funds Inc. (the "Distributor"),
an affiliate of the Adviser. The Fund has adopted a distribution plan pursuant
to Rule 12b-1 under the 1940 Act, as amended, and a service plan (collectively,
the "Plans") for Class A Shares, Class B Shares, Class C Shares, and Class R
Shares to compensate the Distributor for the sale, distribution, shareholder
servicing and maintenance of shareholder accounts for these shares. Under the
Plans, the Fund will incur annual fees of up to .25% of Class A average daily
net assets, up to 1.00% each of Class B and Class C average daily net assets and
up to .50% of Class R average daily net assets. These fees are accrued daily and
paid to the Distributor monthly.

    The amount of distribution expenses incurred by the Distributor and not yet
reimbursed ("unreimbursed receivable") was approximately $12,541,200 and
$1,432,200 for Class B and Class C Shares, respectively. These amounts may be
recovered from future payments under the distribution plan or CDSC. To the
extent the unreimbursed receivable has been fully recovered, the distribution
fee is reduced.

7. LEGAL MATTERS

The Adviser and certain affiliates of the Adviser are named as defendants in a
derivative action which additionally names as defendants certain individual
trustees of certain Van Kampen funds. The named investment companies, including
the Fund, are listed as nominal defendants. The complaint alleges that
defendants caused the Van Kampen funds to pay economic incentives to a
proprietary sales force to promote the sale of Van Kampen funds. The complaint
also alleges that the Van Kampen funds paid excessive commissions to Morgan
Stanley and its affiliates in connection with the sales of the funds. The
complaint seeks, among other things, the removal of the current trustees of the
funds, rescission of the management contracts for the funds, disgorgement of
profits by Morgan Stanley and its affiliates and monetary damages. This
derivative action was coordinated with a direct action alleging related
violations of defendants' statutory disclosure obligations and fiduciary duties
with respect to the payments described above. In addition, this derivative
action was stayed by agreement of the parties pending rulings on the motion to
dismiss the direct action and the motion to dismiss another derivative action
brought by the same plaintiff that brought this derivative action, alleging
market timing and late trading in the Van Kampen funds. In April 2006, the court
granted defendants' motion to dismiss the direct action. In June 2006, the court
granted defendants' motion to dismiss the market timing action. Accordingly, the
stay on this action was lifted. Plaintiff and defendants have agreed that this
action should be dismissed in light of the rulings dismissing the two cases
discussed above. The Court has approved a notice to shareholders regarding the
dismissal, which is located at the back of this Report.

8. INDEMNIFICATIONS

The Fund enters into contracts that contain a variety of indemnifications. The
Fund's maximum exposure under these arrangements is unknown. However, the Fund
has not had prior claims or losses pursuant to these contracts and expects the
risk of loss to be remote.

                                                                              29


VAN KAMPEN STRATEGIC GROWTH FUND

NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- AUGUST 31, 2006 continued

9. NEW ACCOUNTING PRONOUNCEMENT

In July 2006, the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) issued
Interpretation 48, Accounting for Uncertainty in Income Taxes--an interpretation
of FASB Statement 109 (FIN 48). FIN 48 clarifies the accounting for income taxes
by prescribing the minimum recognition threshold a tax position must meet before
being recognized in the financial statements. FIN 48 is effective for fiscal
years beginning after December 15, 2006. The impact to the Fund's financial
statements, if any, is currently being assessed.

 30


VAN KAMPEN STRATEGIC GROWTH FUND

REPORT OF INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM

To the Shareholders and Board of Trustees of Van Kampen Strategic Growth Fund:

    We have audited the accompanying statement of assets and liabilities of Van
Kampen Strategic Growth Fund (formerly the Van Kampen Emerging Growth Fund) (the
"Fund"), including the portfolio of investments, as of August 31, 2006, and the
related statement of operations for the year then ended, the statements of
changes in net assets for each of the two years in the period then ended, and
the financial highlights for each of the five years in the period then ended.
These financial statements and financial highlights are the responsibility of
the Fund's management. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on these
financial statements and financial highlights based on our audits.

    We conducted our audits in accordance with the standards of the Public
Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States). Those standards require that
we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the
financial statements and financial highlights are free of material misstatement.
We were not engaged to perform an audit of the Fund's internal control over
financial reporting. Our audits included consideration of internal control over
financial reporting as a basis for designing audit procedures that are
appropriate in the circumstances, but not for the purpose of expressing an
opinion on the effectiveness of the Fund's internal control over financial
reporting. Accordingly, we express no such opinion. An audit also includes
examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting the amounts and disclosures in
the financial statements and financial highlights, assessing the accounting
principles used and significant estimates made by management, and evaluating the
overall financial statement presentation. Our procedures included confirmation
of securities owned as of August 31, 2006, by correspondence with the custodian
and brokers or by other appropriate auditing procedures where replies from
brokers were not received. We believe that our audits provide a reasonable basis
for our opinion.

    In our opinion, the financial statements and financial highlights referred
to above present fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of the
Van Kampen Strategic Growth Fund at August 31, 2006, the results of its
operations for the year then ended, the changes in its net assets for each of
the two years in the period then ended, and the financial highlights for each of
the five years in the period then ended in conformity with U.S. generally
accepted accounting principles.

                                                           /s/ Ernst & Young LLP
Chicago, Illinois
October 13, 2006

                                                                              31


VAN KAMPEN STRATEGIC GROWTH FUND

BOARD OF TRUSTEES, OFFICERS AND IMPORTANT ADDRESSES

BOARD OF TRUSTEES

DAVID C. ARCH
JERRY D. CHOATE
ROD DAMMEYER
LINDA HUTTON HEAGY
R. CRAIG KENNEDY
HOWARD J KERR
JACK E. NELSON
HUGO F. SONNENSCHEIN
WAYNE W. WHALEN* - Chairman
SUZANNE H. WOOLSEY

OFFICERS

RONALD E. ROBISON
President and Principal Executive Officer

DENNIS SHEA
Vice President

J. DAVID GERMANY
Vice President

AMY R. DOBERMAN
Vice President

STEFANIE V. CHANG
Vice President and Secretary

JOHN L. SULLIVAN
Chief Compliance Officer

JAMES W. GARRETT
Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer

INVESTMENT ADVISER

VAN KAMPEN ASSET MANAGEMENT
1221 Avenue of the Americas
New York, New York 10020

DISTRIBUTOR

VAN KAMPEN FUNDS INC.
1221 Avenue of the Americas
New York, New York 10020

SHAREHOLDER SERVICING AGENT

VAN KAMPEN INVESTOR SERVICES INC.
P.O. Box 947
Jersey City, New Jersey 07303-0947

CUSTODIAN

STATE STREET BANK
AND TRUST COMPANY
One Lincoln Street
Boston, Massachusetts 02111

LEGAL COUNSEL

SKADDEN, ARPS, SLATE,
MEAGHER & FLOM LLP
333 West Wacker Drive
Chicago, Illinois 60606

INDEPENDENT REGISTERED

PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM

ERNST & YOUNG LLP
233 South Wacker Drive

Chicago, Illinois 60606

*   "Interested persons" of the Fund, as defined in the Investment Company Act
    of 1940, as amended.
 32


VAN KAMPEN STRATEGIC GROWTH FUND

TRUSTEE AND OFFICER INFORMATION

The business and affairs of the Fund are managed under the direction of the
Fund's Board of Trustees and the Fund's officers appointed by the Board of
Trustees. The tables below list the trustees and executive officers of the Fund
and their principal occupations during the last five years, other directorships
held by trustees and their affiliations, if any, with Van Kampen Investments,
the Adviser, the Distributor, Van Kampen Advisors Inc., Van Kampen Exchange
Corp. and Investor Services. The term "Fund Complex" includes each of the
investment companies advised by the Adviser as of the date of this Annual
Report. Trustees serve until reaching their retirement age or until their
successors are duly elected and qualified. Officers are annually elected by the
trustees.

INDEPENDENT TRUSTEES:

<Table>
<Caption>
                                                                                  NUMBER OF
                                            TERM OF                                FUNDS IN
                                           OFFICE AND                                FUND
                              POSITION(S)  LENGTH OF                               COMPLEX
NAME, AGE AND ADDRESS          HELD WITH      TIME     PRINCIPAL OCCUPATION(S)     OVERSEEN    OTHER DIRECTORSHIPS
OF INDEPENDENT TRUSTEE           FUND        SERVED    DURING PAST 5 YEARS        BY TRUSTEE   HELD BY TRUSTEE
                                                                                
David C. Arch (61)            Trustee      Trustee     Chairman and Chief             71       Trustee/Director/Managing
Blistex Inc.                               since 2003  Executive Officer of                    General Partner of funds
1800 Swift Drive                                       Blistex Inc., a consumer                in the Fund Complex.
Oak Brook, IL 60523                                    health care products
                                                       manufacturer. Director of
                                                       the Heartland Alliance, a
                                                       nonprofit organization
                                                       serving human needs based
                                                       in Chicago. Director of
                                                       St. Vincent de Paul
                                                       Center, a Chicago based
                                                       day care facility serving
                                                       the children of low
                                                       income families. Board
                                                       member of the Illinois
                                                       Manufacturers'
                                                       Association.

Jerry D. Choate (68)          Trustee      Trustee     Prior to January 1999,         71       Trustee/Director/Managing
33971 Selva Road                           since 1999  Chairman and Chief                      General Partner of funds
Suite 130                                              Executive Officer of the                in the Fund Complex.
Dana Point, CA 92629                                   Allstate Corporation                    Director of Amgen Inc., a
                                                       ("Allstate") and Allstate               biotechnological company,
                                                       Insurance Company. Prior                and Director of Valero
                                                       to January 1995,                        Energy Corporation, an
                                                       President and Chief                     independent refining
                                                       Executive Officer of                    company.
                                                       Allstate. Prior to August
                                                       1994, various management
                                                       positions at Allstate.
</Table>

                                                                              33


<Table>
<Caption>
VAN KAMPEN STRATEGIC GROWTH FUND
TRUSTEE AND OFFICER INFORMATION continued
                                                                                  NUMBER OF
                                            TERM OF                                FUNDS IN
                                           OFFICE AND                                FUND
                              POSITION(S)  LENGTH OF                               COMPLEX
NAME, AGE AND ADDRESS          HELD WITH      TIME     PRINCIPAL OCCUPATION(S)     OVERSEEN    OTHER DIRECTORSHIPS
OF INDEPENDENT TRUSTEE           FUND        SERVED    DURING PAST 5 YEARS        BY TRUSTEE   HELD BY TRUSTEE
                                                                                
Rod Dammeyer (65)             Trustee      Trustee     President of CAC, L.L.C.,      71       Trustee/Director/Managing
CAC, L.L.C.                                since 2003  a private company                       General Partner of funds
4350 LaJolla Village Drive                             offering capital                        in the Fund Complex.
Suite 980                                              investment and management               Director of Quidel
San Diego, CA 92122-6223                               advisory services. Prior                Corporation, Stericycle,
                                                       to February 2001, Vice                  Inc., Ventana Medical
                                                       Chairman and Director of                Systems, Inc., and GATX
                                                       Anixter International,                  Corporation, and Trustee
                                                       Inc., a global                          of The Scripps Research
                                                       distributor of wire,                    Institute. Prior to
                                                       cable and communications                January 2005, Trustee of
                                                       connectivity products.                  the University of Chicago
                                                       Prior to July 2000,                     Hospitals and Health
                                                       Managing Partner of                     Systems. Prior to April
                                                       Equity Group Corporate                  2004, Director of
                                                       Investment (EGI), a                     TheraSense, Inc. Prior to
                                                       company that makes                      January 2004, Director of
                                                       private investments in                  TeleTech Holdings Inc.
                                                       other companies.                        and Arris Group, Inc.
                                                                                               Prior to May 2002,
                                                                                               Director of Peregrine
                                                                                               Systems Inc. Prior to
                                                                                               February 2001, Director
                                                                                               of IMC Global Inc. Prior
                                                                                               to July 2000, Director of
                                                                                               Allied Riser
                                                                                               Communications Corp.,
                                                                                               Matria Healthcare Inc.,
                                                                                               Transmedia Networks,
                                                                                               Inc., CNA Surety, Corp.
                                                                                               and Grupo Azcarero Mexico
                                                                                               (GAM).

</Table>

 34


<Table>
<Caption>
VAN KAMPEN STRATEGIC GROWTH FUND
TRUSTEE AND OFFICER INFORMATION continued
                                                                                  NUMBER OF
                                            TERM OF                                FUNDS IN
                                           OFFICE AND                                FUND
                              POSITION(S)  LENGTH OF                               COMPLEX
NAME, AGE AND ADDRESS          HELD WITH      TIME     PRINCIPAL OCCUPATION(S)     OVERSEEN    OTHER DIRECTORSHIPS
OF INDEPENDENT TRUSTEE           FUND        SERVED    DURING PAST 5 YEARS        BY TRUSTEE   HELD BY TRUSTEE
                                                                                
Linda Hutton Heagy (58)       Trustee      Trustee     Managing Partner of            71       Trustee/Director/Managing
Heidrick & Struggles                       since 1995  Heidrick & Struggles, an                General Partner of funds
233 South Wacker Drive                                 executive search firm.                  in the Fund Complex.
Suite 7000                                             Trustee on the University
Chicago, IL 60606                                      of Chicago Hospitals
                                                       Board, Vice Chair of the
                                                       Board of the YMCA of
                                                       Metropolitan Chicago and
                                                       a member of the Women's
                                                       Board of the University
                                                       of Chicago. Prior to
                                                       1997, Partner of Ray &
                                                       Berndtson, Inc., an
                                                       executive recruiting
                                                       firm. Prior to 1996,
                                                       Trustee of The
                                                       International House
                                                       Board, a fellowship and
                                                       housing organization for
                                                       international graduate
                                                       students. Prior to 1995,
                                                       Executive Vice President
                                                       of ABN AMRO, N.A., a bank
                                                       holding company. Prior to
                                                       1990, Executive Vice
                                                       President of The Exchange
                                                       National Bank.

R. Craig Kennedy (54)         Trustee      Trustee     Director and President of      71       Trustee/Director/Managing
1744 R Street, NW                          since 1995  the German Marshall Fund                General Partner of funds
Washington, DC 20009                                   of the United States, an                in the Fund Complex.
                                                       independent U.S.
                                                       foundation created to
                                                       deepen understanding,
                                                       promote collaboration and
                                                       stimulate exchanges of
                                                       practical experience
                                                       between Americans and
                                                       Europeans. Formerly,
                                                       advisor to the Dennis
                                                       Trading Group Inc., a
                                                       managed futures and
                                                       option company that
                                                       invests money for
                                                       individuals and
                                                       institutions. Prior to
                                                       1992, President and Chief
                                                       Executive Officer,
                                                       Director and member of
                                                       the Investment Committee
                                                       of the Joyce Foundation,
                                                       a private foundation.

Howard J Kerr (70)            Trustee      Trustee     Prior to 1998, President       71       Trustee/Director/Managing
14 Huron Trace                             since 2003  and Chief Executive                     General Partner of funds
Galena, IL 61036                                       Officer of Pocklington                  in the Fund Complex.
                                                       Corporation, Inc., an                   Director of the Lake
                                                       investment holding                      Forest Bank & Trust.
                                                       company. Director of the
                                                       Marrow Foundation.
</Table>

                                                                              35


<Table>
<Caption>
VAN KAMPEN STRATEGIC GROWTH FUND
TRUSTEE AND OFfiCER INFORMATION continued
                                                                                  NUMBER OF
                                            TERM OF                                FUNDS IN
                                           OFFICE AND                                FUND
                              POSITION(S)  LENGTH OF                               COMPLEX
NAME, AGE AND ADDRESS          HELD WITH      TIME     PRINCIPAL OCCUPATION(S)     OVERSEEN    OTHER DIRECTORSHIPS
OF INDEPENDENT TRUSTEE           FUND        SERVED    DURING PAST 5 YEARS        BY TRUSTEE   HELD BY TRUSTEE
                                                                                

Jack E. Nelson (70)           Trustee      Trustee     President of Nelson            71       Trustee/Director/Managing
423 Country Club Drive                     since 1995  Investment Planning                     General Partner of funds
Winter Park, FL 32789                                  Services, Inc., a                       in the Fund Complex.
                                                       financial planning
                                                       company and registered
                                                       investment adviser in the
                                                       State of Florida.
                                                       President of Nelson Ivest
                                                       Brokerage Services Inc.,
                                                       a member of the NASD,
                                                       Securities Investors
                                                       Protection Corp. and the
                                                       Municipal Securities
                                                       Rulemaking Board.
                                                       President of Nelson Sales
                                                       and Services Corporation,
                                                       a marketing and services
                                                       company to support
                                                       affiliated companies.

Hugo F. Sonnenschein (65)     Trustee      Trustee     President Emeritus and         71       Trustee/Director/Managing
1126 E. 59th Street                        since 2003  Honorary Trustee of the                 General Partner of funds
Chicago, IL 60637                                      University of Chicago and               in the Fund Complex.
                                                       the Adam Smith                          Director of Winston
                                                       Distinguished Service                   Laboratories, Inc.
                                                       Professor in the
                                                       Department of Economics
                                                       at the University of
                                                       Chicago. Prior to July
                                                       2000, President of the
                                                       University of Chicago.
                                                       Trustee of the University
                                                       of Rochester and a member
                                                       of its investment
                                                       committee. Member of the
                                                       National Academy of
                                                       Sciences, the American
                                                       Philosophical Society and
                                                       a fellow of the American
                                                       Academy of Arts and
                                                       Sciences.

Suzanne H. Woolsey, Ph.D.     Trustee      Trustee     Chief Communications           71       Trustee/Director/Managing
(64)                                       since 1999  Officer of the National                 General Partner of funds
815 Cumberstone Road                                   Academy of                              in the Fund Complex.
Harwood, MD 20776                                      Sciences/National                       Director of Fluor Corp.,
                                                       Research Council, an                    an engineering,
                                                       independent, federally                  procurement and
                                                       chartered policy                        construction
                                                       institution, from 2001 to               organization, since
                                                       November 2003 and Chief                 January 2004 and Director
                                                       Operating Officer from                  of Neurogen Corporation,
                                                       1993 to 2001. Director of               a pharmaceutical company,
                                                       the Institute for Defense               since January 1998.
                                                       Analyses, a federally
                                                       funded research and
                                                       development center,
                                                       Director of the German
                                                       Marshall Fund of the
                                                       United States, Director
                                                       of the Rocky Mountain
                                                       Institute and Trustee of
                                                       Colorado College. Prior
                                                       to 1993, Executive
                                                       Director of the
                                                       Commission on Behavioral
                                                       and Social Sciences and
                                                       Education at the National
                                                       Academy of
                                                       Sciences/National
                                                       Research Council. From
                                                       1980 through 1989,
                                                       Partner of Coopers &
                                                       Lybrand.
</Table>

 36


VAN KAMPEN STRATEGIC GROWTH FUND

TRUSTEE AND OFFICER INFORMATION continued

INTERESTED TRUSTEE:*

<Table>
<Caption>
                                                                                  NUMBER OF
                                                                                  FUNDS IN
                                            TERM OF                                 FUND
                                           OFFICE AND                              COMPLEX
                              POSITION(S)  LENGTH OF                              OVERSEEN
NAME, AGE AND ADDRESS          HELD WITH      TIME     PRINCIPAL OCCUPATION(S)       BY       OTHER DIRECTORSHIPS
OF INTERESTED TRUSTEE            FUND        SERVED    DURING PAST 5 YEARS         TRUSTEE    HELD BY TRUSTEE
                                                                               
Wayne W. Whalen* (67)         Trustee      Trustee     Partner in the law firm       71       Trustee/Director/
333 West Wacker Drive                      since 1995  of Skadden, Arps, Slate,               Managing General
Chicago, IL 60606                                      Meagher & Flom LLP, legal              Partner of funds in
                                                       counsel to funds in the                the Fund Complex.
                                                       Fund Complex.                          Director of the
                                                                                              Abraham Lincoln
                                                                                              Presidential Library
                                                                                              Foundation.
</Table>

*   Mr. Whalen is an "interested person" (within the meaning of Section 2(a)(19)
    of the 1940 Act) of certain funds in the Fund Complex by reason of he and
    his firm currently providing legal services as legal counsel to such funds
    in the Fund Complex.

                                                                              37


VAN KAMPEN STRATEGIC GROWTH FUND

TRUSTEE AND OFFICER INFORMATION continued

OFFICERS:

<Table>
<Caption>
                                                        TERM OF
                                                       OFFICE AND
                                    POSITION(S)        LENGTH OF
NAME, AGE AND                        HELD WITH            TIME     PRINCIPAL OCCUPATION(S)
ADDRESS OF OFFICER                     FUND              SERVED    DURING PAST 5 YEARS
                                                          
Ronald E. Robison (67)        President and            Officer     President of funds in the Fund Complex since September 2005
1221 Avenue of the Americas   Principal Executive      since 2003  and Principal Executive Officer of funds in the Fund Complex
New York, NY 10020            Officer                              since May 2003. Managing Director of Van Kampen Advisors
                                                                   Inc. since June 2003. Director of Investor Services since
                                                                   September 2002. Director of the Adviser, Van Kampen
                                                                   Investments and Van Kampen Exchange Corp. since January
                                                                   2005. Managing Director of Morgan Stanley and Morgan Stanley
                                                                   & Co. Incorporated. Managing Director and Director of Morgan
                                                                   Stanley Investment Management Inc. Chief Administrative
                                                                   Officer, Managing Director and Director of Morgan Stanley
                                                                   Investment Advisors Inc. and Morgan Stanley Services Company
                                                                   Inc. Managing Director and Director of Morgan Stanley
                                                                   Distributors Inc. and Morgan Stanley Distribution Inc. Chief
                                                                   Executive Officer and Director of Morgan Stanley Trust.
                                                                   Executive Vice President and Principal Executive Officer of
                                                                   the Institutional and Retail Morgan Stanley Funds. Director
                                                                   of Morgan Stanley SICAV. Previously, Chief Global Operations
                                                                   Officer of Morgan Stanley Investment Management Inc. and
                                                                   Executive Vice President of funds in the Fund Complex from
                                                                   May 2003 to September 2005.

Dennis Shea (53)              Vice President           Officer     Managing Director of Morgan Stanley Investment Advisors
1221 Avenue of the Americas                            since 2006  Inc., Morgan Stanley Investment Management Inc., the Adviser
New York, NY 10020                                                 and Van Kampen Advisors Inc. Chief Investment Officer-Global
                                                                   Equity of the same entities since February 2006. Vice
                                                                   President of Morgan Stanley Institutional and Retail Funds
                                                                   since February 2006. Vice President of funds in the Fund
                                                                   Complex since March 2006. Previously, Managing Director and
                                                                   Director of Global Equity Research at Morgan Stanley from
                                                                   April 2000 to February 2006.

J. David Germany (52)         Vice President           Officer     Managing Director of Morgan Stanley Investment Advisors
25 Cabot Square                                        since 2006  Inc., Morgan Stanley Investment Management Inc., the Adviser
Canary Wharf                                                       and Van Kampen Advisors Inc. Chief Investment Officer -
London, GBR E14 4QA                                                Global Fixed Income of the same entities since December
                                                                   2005. Managing Director and Director of Morgan Stanley
                                                                   Investment Management Ltd. Director of Morgan Stanley
                                                                   Investment Management (ACD) Limited since December 2003.
                                                                   Vice President of Morgan Stanley Institutional and Retail
                                                                   Funds since February 2006. Vice President of funds in the
                                                                   Fund Complex since March 2006.
</Table>

 38


<Table>
<Caption>
VAN KAMPEN STRATEGIC GROWTH FUND
TRUSTEE AND OFFICER INFORMATION continued
                                                        TERM OF
                                                       OFFICE AND
                                    POSITION(S)        LENGTH OF
NAME, AGE AND                        HELD WITH            TIME     PRINCIPAL OCCUPATION(S)
ADDRESS OF OFFICER                     FUND              SERVED    DURING PAST 5 YEARS
                                                          

Amy R. Doberman (44)          Vice President           Officer     Managing Director and General Counsel - U.S. Investment
1221 Avenue of the Americas                            since 2004  Management; Managing Director of Morgan Stanley Investment
New York, NY 10020                                                 Management Inc., Morgan Stanley Investment Advisors Inc. and
                                                                   the Adviser. Vice President of the Morgan Stanley
                                                                   Institutional and Retail Funds since July 2004 and Vice
                                                                   President of funds in the Fund Complex since August 2004.
                                                                   Previously, Managing Director and General Counsel of
                                                                   Americas, UBS Global Asset Management from July 2000 to July
                                                                   2004 and General Counsel of Aeltus Investment Management,
                                                                   Inc. from January 1997 to July 2000.

Stefanie V. Chang (39)        Vice President           Officer     Executive Director of Morgan Stanley Investment Management
1221 Avenue of the Americas   and Secretary            since 2003  Inc. Vice President and Secretary of funds in the Fund
New York, NY 10020                                                 Complex.

John L. Sullivan (51)         Chief Compliance         Officer     Chief Compliance Officer of funds in the Fund Complex since
1 Parkview Plaza              Officer                  since 1996  August 2004. Prior to August 2004, Director and Managing
Oakbrook Terrace, IL 60181                                         Director of Van Kampen Investments, the Adviser, Van Kampen
                                                                   Advisors Inc. and certain other subsidiaries of Van Kampen
                                                                   Investments, Vice President, Chief Financial Officer and
                                                                   Treasurer of funds in the Fund Complex and head of Fund
                                                                   Accounting for Morgan Stanley Investment Management Inc.
                                                                   Prior to December 2002, Executive Director of Van Kampen
                                                                   Investments, the Adviser and Van Kampen Advisors Inc.

James W. Garrett (37)         Chief Financial Officer  Officer     Executive Director of Morgan Stanley Investment Management.
1221 Avenue of the Americas   and Treasurer            since 2006  Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer of Morgan Stanley
New York, NY 10020                                                 Institutional Funds since 2002 and of Funds in the Fund
                                                                   Complex from January 2005 to August 2005 and since September
                                                                   2006.
</Table>

                                                                              39


                          Notice to Fund Shareholders

    As previously disclosed, a derivative action was filed on behalf of the Fund
against the Fund's investment adviser, broker-dealer, distributor, and Trustees.
The complaint alleges that defendants violated federal securities laws and state
laws in connection with certain economic incentive programs. The case is pending
before the Honorable Richard Owen, United States District Judge in the Southern
District of New York. Defendants have filed a motion to dismiss the complaint in
its entirety on numerous grounds, and that motion is still pending.

    On April 18, 2006, Judge Owen dismissed a separate lawsuit against Morgan
Stanley and all of the same corporate defendants that are named in the
derivative action. The Morgan Stanley suit related to the same incentive
programs that are at issue in the derivative action, and asserted many of the
same legal claims. In his decision, Judge Owen found that the programs do not
violate federal law, and that defendants had made the appropriate disclosures
concerning the programs. The plaintiffs in the Morgan Stanley suit did not
appeal from the decision, and that decision is now final.

    In light of this decision by Judge Owen -- as well as several other
decisions by other judges in the Southern District of New York and certain other
courts that have dismissed similar complaints against other investment funds --
plaintiff in the derivative action has determined that the suit would be
unsuccessful, if pursued further. Accordingly, plaintiff has asked Judge Owen to
dismiss the action. No attorneys' fees will be paid by defendants and no
consideration will be paid to the named plaintiff.

    All investors in the Fund are hereby provided notice of this proposed
dismissal. If you object to the proposed dismissal, your objection must be
mailed no later than November 29, 2006, in writing, to the Honorable Richard
Owen, United States District Judge, United States Courthouse, Room 640, 500
Pearl Street, New York, NY 10007-1312. Copies of the objection must also be
mailed to Denise Davis Schwartzman, Esquire, Chimicles & Tikellis LLP, 361 West
Lancaster Avenue, Haverford, PA 19041; and Richard A. Rosen, Esquire, Paul,
Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison LLP, 1285 Avenue of the Americas, New York,
NY 10019-6064.


  Van Kampen Strategic Growth Fund

  An Important Notice Concerning Our U.S. Privacy Policy



  We are required by federal law to provide you with a copy of our Privacy
  Policy annually.

  The following Policy applies to current and former individual clients of Van
  Kampen Investments Inc., Van Kampen Asset Management, Van Kampen Advisors
  Inc., Van Kampen Funds Inc., Van Kampen Investor Services Inc. and Van
  Kampen Exchange Corp., as well as current and former individual investors in
  Van Kampen mutual funds, unit investment trusts, and related companies.

  This Policy is not applicable to partnerships, corporations, trusts or other
  non-individual clients or account holders, nor is this Policy applicable to
  individuals who are either beneficiaries of a trust for which we serve as
  trustee or participants in an employee benefit plan administered or advised
  by us. This Policy is, however, applicable to individuals who select us to
  be a custodian of securities or assets in individual retirement accounts,
  401(k) accounts, 529 Educational Savings Accounts, accounts subject to the
  Uniform Gifts to Minors Act, or similar accounts.

  Please note that we may amend this Policy at any time, and will inform you
  of any changes to this Policy as required by law.

  WE RESPECT YOUR PRIVACY

  We appreciate that you have provided us with your personal financial
  information. We strive to maintain the privacy of such information while we
  help you achieve your financial objectives. This Policy describes what
  non-public personal information we collect about you, why we collect it, and
  when we may share it with others.

  We hope this Policy will help you understand how we collect and share
  non-public personal information that we gather about you. Throughout this
  Policy, we refer to the non-public information that personally identifies
  you or your accounts as "personal information."

  1. WHAT PERSONAL INFORMATION DO WE COLLECT ABOUT YOU?

  To serve you better and manage our business, it is important that we collect
  and maintain accurate information about you. We may obtain this information
  from applications and other forms you submit to us, from your dealings with
  us, from consumer reporting agencies, from our Web sites and from third
  parties and other sources.

                                                      (continued on next page)

  Van Kampen Strategic Growth Fund

  An Important Notice Concerning Our U.S. Privacy Policy  continued

  For example:

   --  We may collect information such as your name, address, e-mail address,
       telephone/fax numbers, assets, income and investment objectives through
       applications and other forms you submit to us.

   --  We may obtain information about account balances, your use of
       account(s) and the types of products and services you prefer to receive
       from us through your dealings and transactions with us and other
       sources.

   --  We may obtain information about your creditworthiness and credit
       history from consumer reporting agencies.

   --  We may collect background information from and through third-party
       vendors to verify representations you have made and to comply with
       various regulatory requirements.

   --  If you interact with us through our public and private Web sites, we
       may collect information that you provide directly through online
       communications (such as an e-mail address). We may also collect
       information about your Internet service provider, your domain name,
       your computer's operating system and Web browser, your use of our Web
       sites and your product and service preferences, through the use of
       "cookies." "Cookies" recognize your computer each time you return to
       one of our sites, and help to improve our sites' content and
       personalize your experience on our sites by, for example, suggesting
       offerings that may interest you. Please consult the Terms of Use of
       these sites for more details on our use of cookies.

  2. WHEN DO WE DISCLOSE PERSONAL INFORMATION WE COLLECT ABOUT YOU?

  To provide you with the products and services you request, to serve you
  better and to manage our business, we may disclose personal information we
  collect about you to our affiliated companies and to non-affiliated third
  parties as required or permitted by law.

  A. INFORMATION WE DISCLOSE TO OUR AFFILIATED COMPANIES. We do not disclose
  personal information that we collect about you to our affiliated companies
  except to enable them to provide services on our behalf or as otherwise
  required or permitted by law.

  B. INFORMATION WE DISCLOSE TO THIRD PARTIES. We do not disclose personal
  information that we collect about you to non-affiliated third parties except
  to enable them to provide services on our behalf, to perform joint marketing
  agreements with

                                                           (continued on back)

  Van Kampen Strategic Growth Fund

  An Important Notice Concerning Our U.S. Privacy Policy  continued

  other financial institutions, or as otherwise required or permitted by law.
  For example, some instances where we may disclose information about you to
  non-affiliated third parties include: for servicing and processing
  transactions, to offer our own products and services, to protect against
  fraud, for institutional risk control, to respond to judicial process or to
  perform services on our behalf. When we share personal information with
  these companies, they are required to limit their use of personal
  information to the particular purpose for which it was shared and they are
  not allowed to share personal information with others except to fulfill that
  limited purpose.

  3. HOW DO WE PROTECT THE SECURITY AND CONFIDENTIALITY OF PERSONAL
  INFORMATION WE COLLECT ABOUT YOU?

  We maintain physical, electronic and procedural security measures to help
  safeguard the personal information we collect about you. We have internal
  policies governing the proper handling of client information. Third parties
  that provide support or marketing services on our behalf may also receive
  personal information, and we require them to adhere to confidentiality
  standards with respect to such information.

  The Statement of Additional Information includes additional information
  about Fund trustees and is available, without charge, upon request by
  calling 1-800-847-2424.

                                                         Van Kampen Funds Inc.
                                                              1 Parkview Plaza
                                                                 P.O. Box 5555
                                               Oakbrook Terrace, IL 60181-5555

                                                             www.vankampen.com

                  Copyright (C)2006 Van Kampen Funds Inc. All rights reserved.
                                                             Member NASD/SIPC.

                                                        16, 116, 216, 516, 316
                                                                 EMG ANR 10/06
  (VAN KAMPEN INVESTMENTS SHINE LOGO)                       RN06-02890P-Y08/06


Item 2. Code of Ethics.

(a) The Fund has adopted a code of ethics (the "Code of Ethics") that applies to
its principal executive officer, principal financial officer, principal
accounting officer or controller, or persons performing similar functions,
regardless of whether these individuals are employed by the Fund or a third
party.

(b) No information need be disclosed pursuant to this paragraph.

(c) Not applicable.

(d) Not applicable.

(e) Not applicable.

(f)

     (1) The Fund's Code of Ethics is attached hereto as Exhibit 12A.

     (2) Not applicable.

     (3) Not applicable.

Item 3. Audit Committee Financial Expert.

The Fund's Board of Trustees has determined that it has three "audit committee
financial experts" serving on its audit committee, each of whom are
"independent" Trustees: Rod Dammeyer, Jerry D. Choate and R. Craig Kennedy.
Under applicable securities laws, a person who is determined to be an audit
committee financial expert will not be deemed an "expert" for any purpose,
including without limitation for the purposes of Section 11 of the Securities
Act of 1933, as a result of being designated or identified as an audit committee
financial expert. The designation or identification of a person as an audit
committee financial expert does not impose on such person any duties,
obligations, or liabilities that are greater than the duties, obligations, and
liabilities imposed on such person as a member of the audit committee and Board
of Trustees in the absence of such designation or identification.



Item 4. Principal Accountant Fees and Services.

(a)(b)(c)(d) and (g). Based on fees billed for the periods shown:

2006



                           REGISTRANT   COVERED ENTITIES(1)
                           ----------   -------------------
                                  
AUDIT FEES .............   $69,000                N/A
NON-AUDIT FEES
   AUDIT-RELATED FEES ..   $     0         $  706,000(2)
   TAX FEES ............   $ 2,300(3)      $   75,537(4)
   ALL OTHER FEES ......   $     0         $  749,041(5)
TOTAL NON-AUDIT FEES ...   $ 2,300         $1,530,578
TOTAL ..................   $71,300         $1,530,578


2005



                           REGISTRANT   COVERED ENTITIES(1)
                           ----------   -------------------
                                  
AUDIT FEES .............   $66,700               N/A
NON-AUDIT FEES
   AUDIT-RELATED FEES ..   $     0          $280,000(2)
   TAX FEES ............   $ 2,000(3)       $ 58,688(4)
   ALL OTHER FEES ......   $     0          $655,125(5)
TOTAL NON-AUDIT FEES ...   $ 2,000          $993,813
TOTAL ..................   $68,700          $993,813


N/A- Not applicable, as not required by Item 4.

(1)  Covered Entities include the Adviser (excluding sub-advisors) and any
     entity controlling, controlled by or under common control with the Adviser
     that provides ongoing services to the Registrant.

(2)  Audit-Related Fees represent assurance and related services provided that
     are reasonably related to the performance of the audit of the financial
     statements of the Covered Entities' and funds advised by the Adviser or its
     affiliates, specifically attestation services provided in connection with a
     SAS 70 Report.

(3)  Tax Fees represent tax advice and compliance services provided in
     connection with the review of the Registrant's tax.

(4)  Tax Fees represent tax advice services provided to Covered Entities,
     including research and identification of PFIC entities.

(5)  All Other Fees represent attestation services provided in connection with
     performance presentation standards and assistance with compliance policies
     and procedures.



(e)(1) The audit committee's pre-approval policies and procedures are as
follows:

                              JOINT AUDIT COMMITTEE
                          AUDIT AND NON-AUDIT SERVICES
                       PRE-APPROVAL POLICY AND PROCEDURES
                                     OF THE
                                VAN KAMPEN FUNDS

              AS ADOPTED JULY 23, 2003 AND AMENDED MAY 26, 2004(1)

1.   STATEMENT OF PRINCIPLES

     The Audit Committee of the Board is required to review and, in its sole
discretion, pre-approve all Covered Services to be provided by the Independent
Auditors to the Fund and Covered Entities in order to assure that services
performed by the Independent Auditors do not impair the auditor's independence
from the Fund.(2)

     The SEC has issued rules specifying the types of services that an
independent auditor may not provide to its audit client, as well as the audit
committee's administration of the engagement of the independent auditor. The
SEC's rules establish two different approaches to pre-approving services, which
the SEC considers to be equally valid. Proposed services either: may be
pre-approved without consideration of specific case-by-case services by the
Audit Committee ("general pre-approval"); or require the specific pre-approval
of the Audit Committee ("specific pre-approval"). The Audit Committee believes
that the combination of these two approaches in this Policy will result in an
effective and efficient procedure to pre-approve services performed by the
Independent Auditors. As set forth in this Policy, unless a type of service has
received general pre-approval, it will require specific pre-approval by the
Audit Committee (or by any member of the Audit Committee to which pre-approval
authority has been delegated) if it is to be provided by the Independent
Auditors. Any proposed services exceeding pre-approved cost levels or budgeted
amounts will also require specific pre-approval by the Audit Committee.

     For both types of pre-approval, the Audit Committee will consider whether
such services are consistent with the SEC's rules on auditor independence. The
Audit Committee will also consider whether the Independent Auditors are best
positioned to provide the most effective and efficient services, for reasons
such as its familiarity with the Fund's business, people, culture, accounting
systems, risk profile and other factors, and whether the service might enhance
the Fund's ability to manage or control risk or improve audit quality. All such
factors will be considered as a whole, and no one factor should necessarily be
determinative.

     The Audit Committee is also mindful of the relationship between fees for
audit and non-audit services in deciding whether to pre-approve any such
services and may determine for each fiscal year, the appropriate ratio between
the total amount of fees for Audit, Audit-related and Tax services for the Fund
(including any Audit-related or Tax service fees for Covered Entities that were
subject to pre-approval), and the total amount of fees for certain permissible
non-audit services classified as All Other services for the Fund (including any
such services for Covered Entities subject to pre-approval).

     The appendices to this Policy describe the Audit, Audit-related, Tax and
All Other services that have the general pre-approval of the Audit Committee.
The term of any general pre-approval is 12 months from the date of pre-approval,
unless the Audit Committee considers and provides a different period and states
otherwise. The Audit Committee will annually review and pre-approve the services
that may be provided by the Independent Auditors without obtaining specific
pre-approval from the Audit Committee. The Audit Committee will add to or
subtract from the list of general pre-approved services from time to time, based
on subsequent determinations.

     The purpose of this Policy is to set forth the policy and procedures by
which the Audit Committee intends to fulfill its responsibilities. It does not
delegate the Audit Committee's responsibilities to pre-approve services
performed by the Independent Auditors to management.

- ----------
(1)  This Joint Audit Committee Audit and Non-Audit Services Pre-Approval Policy
     and Procedures (the "Policy"), amended as of the date above, supercedes and
     replaces all prior versions that may have been amended from time to time.

(2)  Terms used in this Policy and not otherwise defined herein shall have the
     meanings as defined in the Joint Audit Committee Charter.









     The Fund's Independent Auditors have reviewed this Policy and believes that
implementation of the Policy will not adversely affect the Independent Auditors'
independence.

2.   DELEGATION

     As provided in the Act and the SEC's rules, the Audit Committee may
delegate either type of pre-approval authority to one or more of its members.
The member to whom such authority is delegated must report, for informational
purposes only, any pre-approval decisions to the Audit Committee at its next
scheduled meeting.

3.   AUDIT SERVICES

     The annual Audit services engagement terms and fees are subject to the
specific pre-approval of the Audit Committee. Audit services include the annual
financial statement audit and other procedures required to be performed by the
Independent Auditors to be able to form an opinion on the Fund's financial
statements. These other procedures include information systems and procedural
reviews and testing performed in order to understand and place reliance on the
systems of internal control, and consultations relating to the audit. The Audit
Committee will monitor the Audit services engagement as necessary, but no less
than on a quarterly basis, and will also approve, if necessary, any changes in
terms, conditions and fees resulting from changes in audit scope, Fund structure
or other items.

     In addition to the annual Audit services engagement approved by the Audit
Committee, the Audit Committee may grant general pre-approval to other Audit
services, which are those services that only the Independent Auditors reasonably
can provide. Other Audit services may include statutory audits and services
associated with SEC registration statements (on Forms N-1A, N-2, N-3, N-4,
etc.), periodic reports and other documents filed with the SEC or other
documents issued in connection with securities offerings.

     The Audit Committee has pre-approved the Audit services in Appendix B.1.
All other Audit services not listed in Appendix B.1 must be specifically
pre-approved by the Audit Committee (or by any member of the Audit Committee to
which pre-approval has been delegated).

4.   AUDIT-RELATED SERVICES

     Audit-related services are assurance and related services that are
reasonably related to the performance of the audit or review of the Fund's
financial statements or, to the extent they are Covered Services, the Covered
Entities' financial statements, or that are traditionally performed by the
Independent Auditors. Because the Audit Committee believes that the provision of
Audit-related services does not impair the independence of the auditor and is
consistent with the SEC's rules on auditor independence, the Audit Committee may
grant general pre-approval to Audit-related services. Audit-related services
include, among others, accounting consultations related to accounting, financial
reporting or disclosure matters not classified as "Audit services"; assistance
with understanding and implementing new accounting and financial reporting
guidance from rulemaking authorities; agreed-upon or expanded audit procedures
related to accounting and/or billing records required to respond to or comply
with financial, accounting or regulatory reporting matters; and assistance with
internal control reporting requirements under Forms N-SAR and/or N-CSR.

     The Audit Committee has pre-approved the Audit-related services in Appendix
B.2. All other Audit-related services not listed in Appendix B.2 must be
specifically pre-approved by the Audit Committee (or by any member of the Audit
Committee to which pre-approval has been delegated).

5.   TAX SERVICES

     The Audit Committee believes that the Independent Auditors can provide Tax
services to the Fund and, to the extent they are Covered Services, the Covered
Entities, such as tax compliance, tax planning and tax advice without impairing
the auditor's independence, and the SEC has stated that the Independent Auditors
may provide such services. Hence, the Audit Committee believes it may grant
general pre-approval to those Tax services that have historically been provided
by the Independent Auditors, that the Audit Committee has reviewed and believes
would not impair the independence of the Independent Auditors, and that are
consistent with the SEC's rules on auditor independence. The Audit Committee
will not permit the retention of the



Independent Auditors in connection with a transaction initially recommended by
the Independent Auditors, the sole business purpose of which may be tax
avoidance and the tax treatment of which may not be supported in the Internal
Revenue Code and related regulations. The Audit Committee will consult with
Director of Tax or outside counsel to determine that the tax planning and
reporting positions are consistent with this policy.

     Pursuant to the preceding paragraph, the Audit Committee has pre-approved
the Tax Services in Appendix B.3. All Tax services involving large and complex
transactions not listed in Appendix B.3 must be specifically pre-approved by the
Audit Committee (or by any member of the Audit Committee to which pre-approval
has been delegated), including tax services proposed to be provided by the
Independent Auditors to any executive officer or trustee/director/managing
general partner of the Fund, in his or her individual capacity, where such
services are paid for by the Fund (generally applicable only to internally
managed investment companies).

6.   ALL OTHER SERVICES

     The Audit Committee believes, based on the SEC's rules prohibiting the
Independent Auditors from providing specific non-audit services, that other
types of non-audit services are permitted. Accordingly, the Audit Committee
believes it may grant general pre-approval to those permissible non-audit
services classified as All Other services that it believes are routine and
recurring services, would not impair the independence of the auditor and are
consistent with the SEC's rules on auditor independence.

     The Audit Committee has pre-approved the All Other services in Appendix
B.4. Permissible All Other services not listed in Appendix B.4 must be
specifically pre-approved by the Audit Committee (or by any member of the Audit
Committee to which pre-approval has been delegated).

     A list of the SEC's prohibited non-audit services is attached to this
policy as Appendix B.5. The SEC's rules and relevant guidance should be
consulted to determine the precise definitions of these services and the
applicability of exceptions to certain of the prohibitions.

7.   PRE-APPROVAL FEE LEVELS OR BUDGETED AMOUNTS

     Pre-approval fee levels or budgeted amounts for all services to be provided
by the Independent Auditors will be established annually by the Audit Committee.
Any proposed services exceeding these levels or amounts will require specific
pre-approval by the Audit Committee. The Audit Committee is mindful of the
overall relationship of fees for audit and non-audit services in determining
whether to pre-approve any such services. For each fiscal year, the Audit
Committee may determine the appropriate ratio between the total amount of fees
for Audit, Audit-related, and Tax services for the Fund (including any
Audit-related or Tax services fees for Covered Entities subject to
pre-approval), and the total amount of fees for certain permissible non-audit
services classified as All Other services for the Fund (including any such
services for Covered Entities subject to pre-approval).

8.   PROCEDURES

     All requests or applications for services to be provided by the Independent
Auditors that do not require specific approval by the Audit Committee will be
submitted to the Fund's Chief Financial Officer and must include a detailed
description of the services to be rendered. The Fund's Chief Financial Officer
will determine whether such services are included within the list of services
that have received the general pre-approval of the Audit Committee. The Audit
Committee will be informed on a timely basis of any such services rendered by
the Independent Auditors. Requests or applications to provide services that
require specific approval by the Audit Committee will be submitted to the Audit
Committee by both the Independent Auditors and the Fund's Chief Financial
Officer, and must include a joint statement as to whether, in their view, the
request or application is consistent with the SEC's rules on auditor
independence.

     The Audit Committee has designated the Fund's Chief Financial Officer to
monitor the performance of all services provided by the Independent Auditors and
to determine whether such services are in compliance with this Policy. The
Fund's Chief Financial Officer will report to the Audit Committee on a periodic
basis on the results of its monitoring. A sample report is included as Appendix
B.7. Both the Fund's Chief Financial Officer and management will immediately
report to the chairman of the Audit Committee any breach of this Policy that
comes to the attention of the Fund's Chief Financial Officer or any member of
management.



9.   ADDITIONAL REQUIREMENTS

     The Audit Committee has determined to take additional measures on an annual
basis to meet its responsibility to oversee the work of the Independent Auditors
and to assure the auditor's independence from the Fund, such as reviewing a
formal written statement from the Independent Auditors delineating all
relationships between the Independent Auditors and the Fund, consistent with
Independence Standards Board No. 1, and discussing with the Independent Auditors
its methods and procedures for ensuring independence.

10.  COVERED ENTITIES

     Covered Entities include the Fund's investment adviser(s) and any entity
controlling, controlled by or under common control with the Fund's investment
adviser(s) that provides ongoing services to the Fund(s). Beginning with
non-audit service contracts entered into on or after May 6, 2003, the Fund's
audit committee must pre-approve non-audit services provided not only to the
Fund but also to the Covered Entities if the engagements relate directly to the
operations and financial reporting of the Fund. This list of Covered Entities
would include:

     -    Van Kampen Investments Inc.

     -    Van Kampen Asset Management

     -    Van Kampen Advisors Inc.

     -    Van Kampen Funds Inc.

     -    Van Kampen Investor Services Inc.

     -    Morgan Stanley Investment Management Inc.

     -    Morgan Stanley Trust Company

     -    Morgan Stanley Investment Management Ltd.

     -    Morgan Stanley Investment Management Company

     -    Morgan Stanley Asset & Investment Trust Management Company Ltd.

(e)(2) Beginning with non-audit service contracts entered into on or after May
6, 2003, the audit committee also is required to pre-approve services to Covered
Entities to the extent that the services are determined to have a direct impact
on the operations or financial reporting of the Registrant. 100% of such
services were pre-approved by the audit committee pursuant to the Audit
Committee's pre-approval policies and procedures (included herein).

(f) Not applicable.

(g) See table above.

(h) The audit committee of the Board of Trustees has considered whether the
provision of services other than audit services performed by the auditors to the
Registrant and Covered Entities is compatible with maintaining the auditors'
independence in performing audit services.

Item 5. Audit Committee of Listed Registrants.

(a) The Fund has a separately-designated standing audit committee established in
accordance with Section 3(a)(58)(A) of the Exchange Act whose members are: R.
Craig Kennedy, Jerry D. Choate, Rod Dammeyer.

(b) Not applicable.

Item 6. Schedule of Investments.

Please refer to Item #1.

Item 7. Disclosure of Proxy Voting Policies and Procedures for Closed-End
Management Investment Companies.



Not applicable.

Item 8. Portfolio Managers of Closed-End Management Investment Companies.

Not applicable.

Item 9. Purchases of Equity Securities by Closed-End Management Investment
Company and Affiliated Purchasers.

Not applicable.

Item 10. Submission of Matters to a Vote of Security Holders.

Not applicable.

Item 11. Controls and Procedures.

(a) The Fund's principal executive officer and principal financial officer have
concluded that the Fund's disclosure controls and procedures are sufficient to
ensure that information required to be disclosed by the Fund in this Form N-CSR
was recorded, processed, summarized and reported within the time periods
specified in the Securities and Exchange Commission's rules and forms, based
upon such officers' evaluation of these controls and procedures as of a date
within 90 days of the filing date of the report.

(b) There were no changes in the registrant's internal control over financial
reporting that occurred during the second fiscal quarter of the period covered
by this report that has materially affected, or is reasonably likely to
materially affect, the registrant's internal control over financial reporting.

Item 12. Exhibits.

(1) The Code of Ethics for Principal Executive and Senior Financial Officers is
attached hereto.

(2)(a) A certification for the Principal Executive Officer of the registrant is
attached hereto as part of EX-99.CERT.

(2)(b) A certification for the Principal Financial Officer of the registrant is
attached hereto as part of EX-99.CERT.



SIGNATURES

Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and the
Investment Company Act of 1940, the registrant has duly caused this report to be
signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.

(Registrant) Van Kampen Strategic Growth Fund


By: /s/ Ronald E. Robison
    ---------------------------------
Name: Ronald E. Robison
Title: Principal Executive Officer
Date: October 19, 2006

Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and the
Investment Company Act of 1940, this report has been signed by the following
persons on behalf of the registrant and in the capacities and on the dates
indicated.


By: /s/ Ronald E. Robison
    ---------------------------------
Name: Ronald E. Robison
Title: Principal Executive Officer
Date: October 19, 2006


By: /s/ James W. Garrett
    ---------------------------------
Name: James W. Garrett
Title: Principal Financial Officer
Date: October 19, 2006