Tag Archive: obama


Obama to seek $5 billion to transform teaching profession (Reuters)

(Reuters) – U.S. Education Secretary Arne Duncan will deliver a scathing critique of teacher training colleges on Wednesday as he unveils a $5 billion initiative to transform the teaching profession from top to bottom.

In remarks scheduled for delivery at 3:30 p.m. EST (2030 GMT), Duncan will argue that the profession needs to become more selective, offer more consistent training, evaluate teacher effectiveness more critically and reward the best teachers with salaries on par with doctors and lawyers.

“Many of our schools of education are mediocre at best. Many teachers are poorly trained and isolated in their classrooms,” Duncan will say in remarks prepared for an online town hall meeting with educators.

“No other profession carries a greater burden for securing America's future. And no other profession deserves more respect,” added Duncan, who once headed Chicago's public schools.

But his ambitious goals may run into major roadblocks.

President Barack Obama's administration wants states to compete for a share in $5 billion in federal grants to overhaul their teacher training colleges and create new standards for teacher evaluations. But that fund is subject to congressional approval, and Republicans have already served notice they intend to fight new spending initiatives.

All four Republican candidates seeking to challenge Obama in November's election have called for greatly reducing the federal role in education.

On the state level, it is unclear where legislators will find the resources to raise teacher salaries or offer sizeable bonuses to the most effective teachers, as Duncan has repeatedly urged. Many states have cut tens of millions in funding for primary and secondary education in recent years as they grapple with enormous budget deficits.

Duncan's rebuke of teacher colleges is also likely to arouse opposition from the institutions themselves. His description of many schools as ineffective rankles teacher educators such as Michael Morehead, dean of New Mexico State University's College of Education.

'MISPERCEPTION'

In recent years, Morehead said teacher colleges had dramatically boosted their standards. Decades ago, he said, anyone with even a mediocre grade-point average in high school could get into a teacher college, flounder through the courses and yet still graduate as a teacher.

Now, he said, many schools were more selective in their admissions and required hundreds of hours of apprenticeship, or student teaching, before granting a diploma. Many states also require teachers to pass one or more licensing exams before taking charge of a classroom.

“It's certainly a misperception” that teacher colleges are failing, Morehead said. “Yet that's what is consistently expressed.”

But Tim Knowles, who directs the University of Chicago's Urban Education Institute, said reforms in teacher education were sorely needed. About half of new teachers who go to work in urban schools leave the profession within five years. Many of them complain they were not prepared for their responsibilities. Knowles said some new teachers had spent as little as six weeks in apprenticeships before being put in front of their own classrooms.

Knowles said he hoped the Obama initiative would prod states to rank teacher colleges by how well they prepare their graduates, how long those graduates remain in the teaching profession and how much impact they have on their students, as measured by standardized test scores.

Otherwise, he said, it was hard to tell how effective they were. “Right now, it's a total free-for-all,” he said.

The Obama initiative is called RESPECT, an acronym for Recognizing Educational Success, Professional Excellence and Collaborative Teaching.

The American Federation of Teachers, a national teachers' union, has issued a general statement of support for Obama's education reform policies but has not commented on the specific details of the Duncan proposal.

(Reporting By Stephanie Simon in Denver; Editing by Peter Cooney)

Obama to seek $5 billion to transform teaching profession
(Reuters)

Obama calls for focus on vocational training (Reuters)

(Reuters) – President Barack Obama on Monday proposed substantial new spending on education with a $69.8 billion education budget heavily focused on boosting vocational training, both at the high-school and college level.

Overall, Obama asked for an increase of 2.5 percent, or $1.7 billion, in discretionary spending on education as part of his fiscal 2013 budget proposal to Congress.

The centerpiece of the education budget was an $8 billion Community College to Career Fund, which aims to train 2 million workers for jobs in fields such as high-tech manufacturing, clean energy and healthcare.

The initiative would encourage partnerships between two-year colleges and local businesses to identify in-demand skills and develop courses that help build them. It would also finance online and in-person training for up to 600,000 aspiring entrepreneurs.

The fund would require congressional approval, which is far from assured. In 2009, when Obama called for an aggressive $12 billion investment in community colleges Congress allocated just $2 billion.

This time, Congressional Republicans vowed as soon as the budget was released to block big spending on new programs, calling for a focus on deficit reduction instead.

All four Republicans vying to stand against Obama in the November presidential election have also demanded a much smaller role in education for the federal government.

Several pricey initiatives in Obama's proposed budget were likely to be popular with middle-class voters. They included making permanent a tax credit that some 9 million taxpayers use to offset the cost of college tuition; scrapping a scheduled hike in interest rates on student loans; and increasing Pell Grants for low-income students attending college.

Obama also repeated his call from the State of the Union address last month for colleges to present more transparent information about tuition costs, average student loan debt, graduation rates and how well graduates fare in the job market.

Education Secretary Arne Duncan said the College to Career initiative relied on community colleges developing strong relationships with local employers, who could help design courses and degree programs to “train workers for skills that businesses are looking for right now.” The businesses would also be expected to offer apprenticeships.

Duncan cited as models community colleges in Nevada that are ramping up nursing programs to meet local demand and schools in Florida that cater to a growing fashion industry. “It's really important that this not be driven by us in Washington,” but be based on local business needs, Duncan said.

Federal job-training programs, however, don't always work as advertised. A federal audit released a few months ago found serious hitches in a Labor Department program to train workers for clean-energy jobs as part of the economic stimulus bill.

The agency received $500 million to train 115,000 workers, but as of June 30, 2011, just 26,000 workers had completed training and only 8,000 of them had found work, according to the U.S. Office of Inspector General. A Labor Department spokeswoman said that the program had ramped up considerably in recent months.

In primary and secondary schools, Obama is pushing to expand his signature Race to the Top initiative. The competitive grant program prods states to take dramatic steps such as wiping out traditional teacher tenure protections so that administrators have more flexibility to fire teachers who are performing poorly.

The new budget called for pumping a further $850 million into Race to the Top. Some of that money would be set aside for individual school districts, rather than states. And some would be directed to programs that serve the nation's youngest students, by getting low-income and at-risk three- and four-year olds ready for kindergarten.

Obama also asked Congress to direct $1.1 billion to improve vocational and technical education at the secondary-school level. He proposed spending a further $1 billion on high-school “career academies” that train future workers in industries such as health care or information technology.

Until recently, vocational education wasn't popular in reform circles because “there was a worry that poor or minority kids were being pushed into that track and a feeling that college should be for everyone,” said Michael Petrilli, an educational policy analyst with the Fordham Institute. “We're seeing the pendulum swing back now.”

(Reporting By Stephanie Simon; Editing by David Storey)

Obama calls for focus on vocational training
(Reuters)

Florida offers look at problems with education law (AP)

MIAMI – By almost any measure, Norma Butler Bossard Elementary is a top performing school in Miami: It has consistently been rated an `A’ by the state, and students have achieved high scores on Florida’s standardized math and reading exams.

Yet when it comes to the federal No Child Left Behind law, the school hasn’t lived up to expectations. Last year, 79 percent of students had to be at grade level in reading and 80 percent in math. Overall, the students exceeded those goals. But two groups — English language learners and the economically disadvantaged — did not.

“This is a crystallization of the challenge,” said Miami-Dade Schools Superintendent Alberto Carvalho.

Responding to an outcry from the states and congressional inaction on rewriting the law, President Barack Obama on Thursday told 10 states, including Florida, that they will be freed from the strictest elements of the law, including the requirement that all students be up to par in math and reading by 2014. In exchange for flexibility, states had to present individualized plans aimed at ensuring all students leave school ready for college and career. The plans must set new achievement targets, rewarding high performing schools and focusing on those that are struggling.

“We can combine greater freedom with greater accountability,” Obama said at the White House.

Florida, home to several of the nation’s largest school districts, offers a look into what went wrong with the law and why states are now clamoring for relief.

No Child Left Behind was signed into law by former President George W. Bush a decade ago with the intention of closing the vast achievement gaps between poor and affluent students, whites and minorities. A key part of the legislation requires states to set annual benchmarks for the percentage of students scoring proficient in math and reading on state standardized exams, leading up to 100 percent proficiency in 2014.

Each school is held accountable for the performance of every student group — minorities, English learners, and the poor — in meeting those benchmarks.

If any one of those groups does not meet the targets, the school falls out of compliance. Schools that don’t meet the goals for two consecutive years are labeled “in need of improvement,” and a series of corrective steps comes into play, including student transfers to a higher performing school, providing tutoring, replacing staff or even closing.

Florida had passed significant education reforms shortly before No Child Left Behind went into effect, including an A-to-F school grading system based on student performance on the Florida Comprehensive Assessment Test. After 2002, there were two separate school evaluations — the state’s and the one provided through No Child Left Behind.

Increasingly, those painted two contrasting pictures of a school’s progress.

While the number of schools in Florida that earned an `A’ on the state’s annual report card has steadily increased, the number meeting No Child Left Behind requirements has dramatically decreased. Last year, just 10 percent of Florida elementary, middle and high schools met the annual proficiency benchmarks required under the federal law.

“Are we saying over 90 percent of schools are `failing?’” Florida Education Commissioner Gerard Robinson said. “The answer is no.”

In many of the schools, just one group of students was behind. At Miami’s Norma Butler Bossard Elementary, a majority Hispanic school, 78 percent of poor students scored at grade level in reading — one point behind the No Child Left Behind target. English language learners lagged behind by nine points in reading and two in math. The majority, however, were performing above the goals set by the law.

“It was confusing to parents and students and teachers when you get two sets of criteria and two sets of grades,” said Wayne Blanton, executive director of the Florida School Boards Association. “You begin to wonder which one’s real.”

Then there are schools like Holmes Elementary, a school in a struggling neighborhood north of Miami’s downtown. Just 18 percent of students were at grade level in math in the 2002-03 school year. By last year, that number had jumped to 65 percent — a 47 percentage point percent increase. Yet students had still not caught up to the rising numbers expected under No Child Left Behind and the school had been in danger of being closed next year.

“That is an iconic school in Miami,” Carvalho said. “The previous performance was not acceptable and we changed everything about that school.”

Closing it, he said, “would have been extinguishing the beacon of hope.”

Robinson is reluctant to say No Child Left Behind didn’t work — he praised it for shining a light on the performance of all student subgroups — but says that over time, it rubbed up against the state’s accountability system.

“It just didn’t make any sense,” he said.

Many also say the 2014 goal to have all students proficient in math and reading is unrealistic.

“There’s always going to be children that need additional help and there’s always going to be children who are ahead of the curve,” Blanton said. “It was treating every single class of students exactly the same.”

District leaders are hoping that under the waiver a school’s long-term progress will be taken into account and that they’ll have more flexibility on interventions. Under the current law, districts that repeatedly fail to meet the benchmarks are required to set aside federal money to pay for outside tutoring. But many researchers say that’s been ineffective.

“The results are not there,” Carvalho said.

Carvalho said that another big burden of the law was providing transportation for students in failing schools to one that is higher performing. With larger percentages of schools falling out of compliance with the law, opportunities to transfer were vanishing.

“It becomes very tough to accommodate students,” he said.

Florida Gov. Rick Scott said he was enthusiastic about the opportunity to have more local control.

“Anytime we can do that where we get to make our own decisions because we know how to take care of our own children that’s a big positive,” he said.

___

Associated Press writers Bill Kaczor in Tallahassee and Tamara Lush in Tampa contributed to this report.

Florida offers look at problems with education law
(AP)

Leaving ‘No Child’ law: Obama lets 10 states flee (AP)

WASHINGTON – It could be the beginning of the end for No Child Left Behind.

The goal was lofty: Get all children up to par in math and reading by 2014. But the nation isn’t getting there, and now some states are getting out.

In a sign of what’s to come, President Barack Obama on Thursday freed 10 states from some of the landmark law’s toughest requirements. Those states, which had to commit to their own, federally approved plans, will now be free, for example, to judge students with methods other than test scores. They also will be able to factor in subjects beyond reading and math.

“We can combine greater freedom with greater accountability,” Obama said from the White House. Plenty more states are bound to take him up on the offer.

While many educators and many governors celebrated, congressional Republicans accused Obama of executive overreach, and education and civil rights groups questioned if schools would be getting a pass on aggressively helping poor and minority children — the kids the 2002 law was primarily designed to help.

The first 10 states to be declared free from the education law are Colorado, Florida, Georgia, Indiana, Kentucky, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New Jersey, Oklahoma and Tennessee. The only state that applied for the flexibility and did not get it, New Mexico, is working with the administration to get approval.

Twenty-eight other states, the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico have signaled that they, too, plan to flee the law in favor of their own plans.

The government’s action on Thursday was a tacit acknowledgement that the law’s main goal, getting all students up to speed in reading and math by 2014, is not within reach.

The states excused from following the law no longer have to meet that deadline. Instead, they had to put forward plans showing they will prepare children for college and careers, set new targets for improving achievement among all students, reward the best performing schools and focus help on the ones doing the worst.

Obama said he was acting because Congress had failed to update the law despite widespread agreement it needed to be fixed.

“We’ve offered every state the same deal,” Obama said. “If you’re willing to set higher, more honest standards than the ones that were set by No Child Left Behind, then we’re going to give you the flexibility to meet those standards.”

The executive action by Obama is one of his most prominent in an ongoing campaign to act on his own where Congress is rebuffing him.

No Child Left Behind was one of President George W. Bush’s most touted domestic accomplishments, and was passed with widespread bipartisan support in Congress. It has been up for renewal since 2007. But lawmakers have been stymied for years by competing priorities, disagreements over how much of a federal role there should be in schools and, in the recent Congress, partisan gridlock.

The law requires annual testing, and districts were forced to keep a closer eye on how students of all races were performing — not just relying on collective averages. Schools that didn’t meet requirements for two years or longer faced increasingly harsher consequences, including busing children to higher-performing schools, offering tutoring and replacing staff.

Over the years, the law became increasingly unpopular, itself blamed for many ills in schools. Teachers and parents complained it led to “teaching to the test.” Parents didn’t like the stigma of sending their kids to a school labeled a failure when requirements weren’t met. States, districts and schools said the law was too rigid and that they could do a better job coming up with strategies to turn around poor performance.

A common complaint was that the 2014 deadline was simply unrealistic.

As the deadline approaches, more schools are failing to meet requirements under the law, with nearly half not doing so last year, according to the Center on Education Policy. Center officials said that’s because some states today have harder tests or have high numbers of immigrant and low-income children, but it’s also because the law requires states to raise the bar each year for how many children must pass.

The current law requires schools to use standardized tests in math and reading to determine student progress. The waivers announced Thursday do not excuse states from those requirements but instead give them the freedom to use science, social studies and other subjects in their measures of student progress.

The 10 states also now can include scores on college admission exams and other tests in their calculation of how schools are performing. They can be excused from penalties included in the federal law but had to come up with their own set of sanctions for low-performing schools.

For example, Georgia will replace the law’s pass-or-fail with a five-star rating system and will use end-of-course tests and Advanced Placement performance in its measure of students.

In Oklahoma, schools are to be taken over by the state if they consistently fail to meet standards.

Kentucky — the first state to formally ask the federal government to be excused from some requirements when Gov. Steve Beshear sent a letter to Washington last summer — will use ACT college-entrance exams and other assessments by that company in its measures.

The schools still have to focus on the subgroups of students outlined in the federal law, such as English language learners and students with disabilities.

Not everyone applauded Thursday’s announcement.

While No Child Left Behind isn’t perfect, said Jeanne Allen, president of the Center for Education Reform, it’s thrown a valuable spotlight on problem schools. She said giving districts and states more flexibility “without firm consequence” is not reform.

“If school district power were the answer to our education woes, our nation would be soaring high above the rest of the world in achievement. It is not, and it will not, until our leaders — just as the people they serve — face both rewards and sanctions for the education systems they govern,” Allen said.

Nancy Zirkin, executive vice president of the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights, said, “Our coalition will continue to play an active role in holding all 10 of these states and the Department of Education accountable for our children.”

But some educators also said Obama’s plan gives states flexibility with more clear and attainable goals.

Gene Wilhoit, executive director of the Council of Chief State School Officers, said under the waiver plan states essentially have a contractual relationship with the federal government to deliver on the approved plan.

“I think there is a legitimate concern or fear out there on the part of people that by giving these waivers, states might be `let off the hook’ in terms of accountability, and I think what you’ll find is just the opposite,” Wilhoit said. “They have raised the standards. They have put in place much more focused attention to the lowest performing, they have put in place professional development activities that didn’t exist prior, and they are holding those schools much more accountable.”

In Colorado, Bridget Cole, a 4th grade teacher who was eating an egg salad sandwich with a group of student on a field trip to the Colorado state Capitol, said she was relieved to hear the news out of the White House.

“No Child Left Behind never changed how I taught. I know what my kids need. It’s easier for me to see where my kids need to be rather than pay attention to what the federal government tells me my kids need to be,” Cole said.

While the president’s action marks a change in education policy in America, the reach is limited. The populous states of Pennsylvania, Texas and California are among those that have not said they will seek waivers, although they could still do so.

Some states might wait to see if Obama wins re-election November, said Jeffrey Henig, professor of political science and education at Teachers College, Columbia University. Others might bet the administration “won’t be in a position to strongly clamp down on them for failure to meet progress goals that the administration has indirectly indicated it admits are unrealistic,” Henig said.

Education Secretary Arne Duncan said states without waivers will be held to the standards of No Child Left Behind because “it’s the law of the land.”

Until now, the issue of education has stayed largely out of the presidential race.

But Sen. Mike Enzi, R-Wyo., ranking member of the Senate committee with jurisdiction over education, said Obama was using education as a “political poker chip.”

“This action clearly politicizes education policy, which historically has been a bipartisan issue,” Enzi said. “It is time for the president to work with Congress on important issues like this instead of acting unilaterally.”

And when Rep. John Kline, R-Minn., the chairman of the House Education and the Workforce Committee, released new legislation Thursday that would rewrite No Child Left Behind, it included a provision that prohibits the education secretary from coercing states into adopting specific academic standards in exchange for a waiver.

Duncan maintained this week that the administration “desperately” wants Congress to fix the law.

In an election year in a divided Congress, action on Capitol Hill appears unlikely.

_____

Associated Press writers Dorie Turner in Atlanta, Kristen Wyatt in Denver, and Ken Miller in Oklahoma City contributed to this report.

___

Online:

Education Department flexibility: http://www.ed.gov/esea/flexibility

Leaving ‘No Child’ law: Obama lets 10 states flee
(AP)

Some states stay with education law, cite politics (AP)

PITTSBURGH – Some of the nation’s largest states are questioning whether the Obama administration’s offer to let them escape certain mandates of the No Child Left Behind law is a helping hand to improve education or a means to impose more federal control.

On Thursday, the administration freed 10 states from the strict requirements of the 2002 law championed by President George W. Bush, suggesting that would give them long-sought leeway to improve how they prepare and evaluate students. The law’s goal is for all children to be proficient in math and reading by 2014.

California, Pennsylvania, and Texas are among 11 states that haven’t asked for a waiver, although they could apply later. Pennsylvania’s top educator said the offer doesn’t make sense, in part because of political realities.

“What would happen if we had a new administration or a new law” next year, asked state Education Secretary Ron Tomalis, who worked in the U.S. Department of Education during Bush’s administration.

Tomalis said Pennsylvania is discussing alternatives to the waiver with the Obama administration.

“No one is saying that we should lower standards,” Tomalis said. “But you could have a very different federal law in 18 months.”

A spokeswoman for the Texas Education Agency also questioned whether a waiver makes sense now.

“We’d love to get the flexibility this would provide, but we’re worried about the strings attached,” said Debbie Ratcliffe, who added that Texas officials are concerned the federal government might eventually impose a national curriculum and a national system to test students’ abilities and evaluate teacher performance.

“We prefer state control,” Ratcliffe said.

In California, Tom Torlakson, the state superintendent of public instruction, has urged Congress to rework the law. He has said that his state already has a strong accountability system in place, and that meeting the requirements to get a waiver would appear to cost billions of dollars.

Education officials in Nebraska said Thursday that their state simply wasn’t prepared to submit a waiver by the February deadline, but hadn’t ruled out applying in the future.

“It’s a fairly detailed process in order to set it up,” said Brian Halstead, Nebraska’s deputy education commissioner.

Some states could decide to wait to see if Obama wins re-election November to seek a waiver, said Jeffrey Henig, professor of political science and education at Teachers College, Columbia University. Others could opt not to apply at all, betting the administration “won’t be in a position to strongly clamp down on them for failure to meet progress goals that the administration has indirectly indicated it admits are unrealistic,” Henig said.

But Henig also noted that when No Child Left Behind was passed, many states were simply willing to try something new.

“They didn’t imagine that it was going to pinch as hard as it was going to,” he said. “Now people know.”

___

Associated Press writers Grant Schulte in Lincoln, Neb., and Will Weissert in Austin, Texas, contributed to this report.

Some states stay with education law, cite politics
(AP)

Obama gives education waivers to 10 states (AP)

WASHINGTON – President Barack Obama says his decision to free 10 states from the No Child Left Behind education law will give the flexibility they need to set high standards for students and hold schools accountable.

Obama spoke Thursday at the White House. He says he’s giving 10 states waivers from the strict and sweeping requirements. The states are getting leeway in exchange for promises to improve the way schools teach and evaluate students.

The president says states need to ensure that “every student should have the same opportunity to reach their potential.”

Obama says he’s acting because Congress failed to update the law, despite widespread agreement it needs to be fixed.

The 10 states are Colorado, Florida, Georgia, Indiana, Kentucky, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New Jersey, Oklahoma and Tennessee.

Obama gives education waivers to 10 states
(AP)

No Child Left Behind loses bite as Obama issues waivers (The Christian Science Monitor)

For 10 states, the chance to get No Child Left Behind off their backs has finally arrived, with President Obama announcing long-awaited waivers from some aspects of the federal education law Thursday.

The George W. Bush-era bipartisan law has widely been credited with bringing to light achievement gaps in which racial minority, low-income, disabled, and non-native English speaking students have been the most left behind. But it’s also been widely criticized for a one-size-fits all approach to accountability, with many states saying it’s an albatross.

“With the waivers, Obama has changed the landscape of accountability under No Child Left behind,” says Diane Stark Rentner, interim director of the Center on Education Policy in Washington.

RECOMMENDED: Six takeaways from the persistent achievement gap

The states that have so far received waivers through the US Department of Education are Colorado, Florida, Georgia, Indiana, Kentucky, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New Jersey, Oklahoma, and Tennessee.

They will now have flexibility to target resources on the lowest-performing schools. They will still be expected to test and report achievement data, but will no longer have to require all schools to improve at a certain rate to reach 100 percent proficiency in reading and math by 2014, as NCLB required.

That deadline “was a wonderful goal but really impossible to attain with an education system that is structured the way it is,” says Cynthia Brown, vice president for education policy at the Center for American Progress in Washington. “We’ve had so much reform momentum throughout the country over the last five or six years that it’s really important to adapt the law to … the willingness of states and districts to take on new ways of doing things.”

New Mexico has also applied for a waiver and is in discussions with the US Department of Education, and 28 other states have said they intend to apply for a second round of waivers later this month.

In exchange for flexibility, the states have to set standards to prepare students for college and careers and create plans to improve the effectiveness of teachers and principals.

In addition, their accountability systems must reward schools with high performance or significant gains in closing achievement gaps. By contrast, NCLB’s requirements were largely seen as punitive.

The waivers couldn’t have happened without the backdrop of the Common Core State Standards, which 45 states have voluntarily adopted, Ms. Rentner says. Partly through incentives from the federal government, such as the Education Department's Race to the Top grants, states have been agreeing to these more-rigorous standards designed to keep students globally competitive in the 21st century. This will make it easier to compare student performance across states, Rentner says.

“If we’re serious about helping our children reach their potential, the best ideas aren’t going to come from Washington alone,” Obama is expected to say Thursday, according to a White House press release. “Our job is to harness those ideas, and to hold states and schools accountable for making them work.”

Some concerns have been raised – particularly by civil rights groups — about how the waivers will play out in practice, and whether the states will truly be held accountable for the performance of some of the most disadvantaged students.

Another critique, from conservative observers and some Republican lawmakers, is that the Obama administration is overstepping its bounds by starting to dismantle NCLB through the waiver process.

“NCLB, for all its flaws, was crafted by the US Congress … [but] these waivers impose a a raft of new federal requirements that were never endorsed by the legislative branch,” says Frederick Hess, director of education policy studies at the American Enterprise Institute (AEI) in Washington. “Once this administration opens this door, it’s hard to imagine future administrations not building on this precedent.”

The chairman of the House Education and Workforce Committee, Rep. John Kline (R) of Minnesota, said Thursday morning at an AEI event, “This notion that Congress is sort of an impediment to be bypassed, I find very, very troubling in many, many ways.”

Congressman Kline also introduced on Thursday two Republican-written education bills designed to give more flexibility to states and school districts. Some Democratic lawmakers, including Rep. George Miller of California, the top Democrat on the education committee, have said Kline’s approach is a troubling departure from bipartisan attempts in recent years to rewrite the education law.

Many observers say that this year it’s unlikely Congress will be able to agree on a such a rewrite – already 5 years overdue.

• Associated Press material was used in this report.

RECOMMENDED: Six takeaways from the persistent achievement gap

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No Child Left Behind loses bite as Obama issues waivers
(The Christian Science Monitor)

Obama proposes money for math, science education (Reuters)

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – President Barack Obama will seek $80 million in new funding for a program to boost science and math education in U.S. schools, the White House said on Tuesday.

Obama, who is running for re-election in November at a time when the economy is voters' top concern, has sought to emphasize math and science education as one of the keys to a robust economic recovery.

Many U.S. business leaders have complained that a shortage of workers with strong math and science skills has forced them to look abroad.

Obama, who is hosting a science fair at the White House, plans to announce the new initiative at the event.

The aim is to train 100,000 teachers who would be able to share their expertise in science, technology, engineering and math with 1 million additional students over the next decade.

Obama will formally unveil the request in his proposed budget for fiscal year 2013 that he will present on February 13.

The request requires approval from Congress.

In addition to the $80 million in government funds Obama is proposing, philanthropic organizations and private companies have committed to providing $22 million, the White House said.

Organizations involved in the effort include the Carnegie Corporation of New York, Google, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, Freeport-McMoRan and the Michael and Susan Dell Foundation.

(Reporting By Caren Bohan; Editing by Sandra Maler)

Obama proposes money for math, science education
(Reuters)

Suggestions to Fix Higher Education (ContributorNetwork)

COMMENTARY | According to Time.com, President Barack Obama has a tough road ahead in convincing colleges and universities to lower tuition rates and increasing infrastructure costs for schools.

The article refers to Joni Finney, vice president of the National Center for Public Policy and Higher Education who advocates several potential cost-cutting options for colleges. These options include cutting less-effective programs, streamlining curricula, increasing the number of hours faculty teach and offering three-year, fast-paced programs to better-prepared students.

Cutting less-effective programs

Colleges and universities offer a plethora of free stuff that is often not utilized by the student body. Do student recreation centers need to offer every sport or activity, requiring a huge number of well-paid staff? Unlimited intramural and club options, as well as student and academic organizations, might require scores of paid staff to organize and manage, driving up tuition costs.

Streamlining curricula

While I support a well-rounded education, perhaps some general and diversity-type credits could be foregone for the sake of economy. Though I enjoyed my non-Western Civilization courses, learning about the history of Russia 1855-1991 and the history of modern China did cost a pretty penny. Less time in general courses and nonrelevant courses would save students time and money.

Increasing the number of hours faculty teach

Professors do too much research in our publish-or-perish culture of academia. How much of this research, especially outside of the hard sciences, is advancing fields of knowledge? As a graduate student I read too many articles that cited reams of similar research, indicating little current research was groundbreaking. Professors who teach two or three classes per week should not be making full-time salaries to be churning out repetitive academic jargon the rest of the time. Also, more classes taught by each professor equals fewer students delayed in graduating because of overfilled classes.

Offering faster-paced programs of study

Some students are ready to hit the ground running and should be allowed increased opportunities to test out of general classes. Students should be allowed to substitute certain classes of equal or greater rigor for required classes if the required classes are full. Juniors and seniors, for example, could be allowed to take a master's course if all usual required classes are locked for enrollment.

Suggestions to Fix Higher Education
(ContributorNetwork)

College presidents wary of Obama cost-control plan (AP)

WASHINGTON – Public university presidents facing ever-increasing state budget cuts are raising concerns about President Barack Obama’s plan to force colleges and universities to contain tuition prices or face losing federal dollars.

Illinois State University President Al Bowman says the reality is that deficits in many public schools can’t be easily overcome with simple modifications. Bowman says he’s happy to hear Obama call for state-level support of public universities but adds that, given the decreases in state aid, tying federal support to tuition is a product of “fuzzy math.”

Obama spelled out his proposal Friday at the University of Michigan.

College presidents wary of Obama cost-control plan
(AP)

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