Politics K12

Politics K-12

Your education road map to state and federal politics

Michele McNeil covered education and state government in Indiana for a decade before joining Education Week as a state policy reporter in June 2006. Alyson Klein, who reports on federal education policy, joined the staff in February 2006 after nearly two years at Congress Daily.

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November 3, 2009

Previewing Obama's Speech in Wisconsin

Barack Obama will stop in Wisconsin tomorrow--one year and one day after being elected to the presidency--in advance of a key vote expected Thursday in the state legislature that could put Wisconsin in a better position to compete for the Race to the Top Fund.

Obama will cheer on the legislature as it considers a proposal to lift the ban on using student test scores for teacher evaluations, which would lift the so-called "data firewall" that stands between any state and being eligible for a slice of $4 billion in Race to the Top grants.

In a conference call today, White House Domestic Policy Council Director Melody Barnes said the Obama Administration is taking direct credit for spurring education-reform moves in several states--including similar data firewall actions in California and Indiana, and efforts to improve the charter school climates in Illinois, Louisiana, Tennessee, Connecticut, Delaware, Indiana, Ohio and Rhode Island.

Obama is expected to praise states for taking these steps, and encourage Wisconsin to follow along. Barnes did not mention anything about legislation in the Wisconsin legislature to allow the mayor of Milwaukee to take over the city's schools. That's something Obama's Education Secretary, Arne Duncan, champions.

If you'll remember from the draft regulations on Race to the Top, while not having a data firewall is a must for Race to the Top, a state's charter school environment is just part of the larger overall criteria by which states will be judged.

However, any of this could change as the U.S. Department of Education continues to make changes after receiving a slew of comments.

Barnes wouldn't even give us a hint as to what changes are coming for Race to the Top. And as to when we might see final regulations, applications, and how the criteria will be weighted, she said the administration isn't at a "final, final" place yet.

So stay tuned here for final, final regulations.

Ed Department to Mass.: No Violation on Stabilization Spending

From guest blogger Catherine Gewertz:

About a month ago, the U.S. Department of Education's inspector general's office issued a memorandum that used Pennsylvania, Connecticut, and Massachusetts as examples of how states may be violating the spirit—if not the letter—of the law on using State Fiscal Stabilization Fund money. The states cried foul, noting that their plans for spending the money had been duly approved by the department, and that they had done nothing wrong. (See our story.)

Massachusetts Secretary of Education Paul Reville wrote to the Ed Department, expressing concern that the memo seemed to suggest that his state had violated the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act's maintenance-of-effort provision. He also said he was concerned that it could harm the state's chances of getting money from the stimulus program's Race to the Top Fund.

Deputy Secretary Anthony W. Miller wrote back to Reville this week, saying that the department knows of no evidence, and "does not claim," that Massachusetts violated the ARRA. He also said that while federal officials "might consider" a state's reduction in education funding when considering its Race to the Top application, its chances of getting that money wouldn't necessarily be affected. Besides, he said, it doesn't seem that Massachusetts reduced the proportion of total state revenue it spends on education from one year to the next.

"Although we have taken steps to discourage States from reducing education funding, we fully recognize that SFSF funds are intended to help stabilize State and local budgets in order to minimize and avoid reductions in education and other essential services and that, under the current economic climate, States are forced to make difficult budgetary decisions and choices on the extent of State support for education and other vital public services," Miller wrote.

(Hey, that sounds a lot like what the three states said when they were named in the IG's memo.)

October 30, 2009

VP Biden on Stimulus: 325,000 Educator Jobs Created or Saved

UPDATE: The wait for the first stimulus reports is over. Recovery.gov now has an updated interactive map, plenty of statistics and charts, and spreadsheets available for download. You could spend hours clicking on the dots on the interactive maps, trying to make sense of it all--and if you do see anything noteworthy, please leave a comment. I'll be digging through this data for a story next week, so check back here for updates. In the meantime, catch up on what VP Joe Biden had to say about the stimulus package in my earlier post below.

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While we're waiting for the first quarterly stimulus spending reports to be posted online later today, we'll have to take Vice President Joe Biden's word for how successful the program's been.

In a press conference today, Biden said 640,239 jobs have been created or saved as a direct result of the economic-stimulus package. Of those, 325,000 were jobs in education. The spending reports, which are supposed to be online sometime between 2 p.m. and 3 p.m., will detail not just information about jobs saved, but also how states spent the first dollars of the stimulus package.

California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, a Republican who appeared with Biden, said California has used the $7.1 billion in education stimulus funds it's received so far to save 62,000 education-related jobs. That's more than half of the 100,000 jobs in all sectors that the stimulus package has saved in California, according to the governor. (In total, the state has gotten $12.5 billion of its $50 billion in stimulus money so far.)

"Those teachers would have been gone if it hadn't been for the stimulus money," the Republican governor said.

Maryland Gov. Martin O'Malley's numbers weren't nearly as impressive (given how small Maryland is compared to California.) The Democratic governor, who also appeared with Biden, said the stimulus has saved 14,000 jobs so far in that state. He didn't spell out how many of those were education jobs.

UPDATE: Also worth noting is that union leaders--including the AFT's Randi Weingarten and the NEA's Dennis Van Roekel--were in attendance. In fact, NEA member Richard Bigelow, a teacher at Stonewall Jackson Middle School in Orlando, Fla., got a starring role in the video the White House showed before the press conference began. You can watch the video, which is, predictably, a rah-rah stimulus montage:


October 29, 2009

The Politics of Stimulus Reporting

Tomorrow, the public will get its first look at how states, school districts, and other recipients of federal stimulus funding have spent the first dollars from the $787 billion American Recovery and Reinvestment Act . The first quarterly spending reports will be posted on Recovery.gov sometime in the morning.

As you peruse the reports, would you email me or leave a comment if you see anything noteworthy? We'll be combing through them trying to figure out what it all means.

Already, news reports are calling into question just how accurate the reporting will be, particularly when it comes to estimating the number of jobs saved or created because of the stimulus package. This is particularly important for education, because the data already shows that teaching jobs are some of the biggest beneficiaries.

The White House tried to get out in front of the news, declaring earlier this month, before the reports were made public, that the stimulus saved 250,000 education jobs so far. But local media reports, including one in The Indianapolis Star, described how misleading those numbers could be. Yesterday, the Associated Press did an in-depth examination of the jobs reported in the first data that was released, from contractors who received federal stimulus money—and declared that the number of jobs saved was overstated by thousands. The White House, which clearly has a dog in this hunt, quickly fired back and slammed the story, providing a fact-check of its own.

Given how politically charged these jobs numbers are, the reports out tomorrow will be heavily scrutinized by all sides. Although the feds tried to give hard-and-fast rules on how to count the number of jobs saved or created, people in different states and agencies had to use their own interpretation in applying the rules. And so there's plenty of room for error.

October 28, 2009

Spec. Ed. Stimulus Dollars: This Issue Isn't Going Away

Way back in the spring, my colleague Christina Samuels wrote this story about how the U.S. Department of Education is taking a hard line with districts that aren't meeting the requirements of the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act.

Apparently, districts that aren't in compliance with the IDEA have to make sure they target special education dollars made available under the stimulus package to improving their programs for students with disabilities. They can't reduce their own contributions, as they normally would be able to under the law, now that the federal share has increased.

It's a very complex, technical issue, but one that has major implications for both school districts' spending and services to students in special education. And it doesn't seem to be going away. The Education Department just put out this letter spelling out its position on the issue. According to Christina's story, advocates for districts say this interpretation wasn't Congress' intent. But the department is clearly not backing down.

October 19, 2009

How Big Is the Stimulus Funding Cliff?

$16.5 billion.

That's the amount of money that 36 states combined will need to find, somewhere, to get back to their 2008 K-12 funding levels after stimulus money runs out. That amounts to about 10 percent of these 36 states' combined budgets, according to my own calculations of figures presented in a White House report out yesterday on the impact of the stimulus package on education jobs.

This is the funding cliff that states and school districts have been warned about.

States will need to replace this money at a time when the national economy only now is showing glimmers of a recovery, and state tax collections are still tanking by record amounts. Of course, when it comes time for states to write their budgets for fiscal 2011 and beyond, they have the ability to move money around, or rob other programs to help fill in K-12 budget gaps. But will there be enough money to go around? Looking at the size of these gaps, probably not.

Some states have a bigger cliff than others. California wows with its sheer dollar amount. Its fiscal 2010 K-12 state spending is $32.9 billion, or 14 percent less than it was two years ago. ($5 billion in stimulus money filled in that gap.) But proportionately, other states are in just as bad, or worse, shape.

Oregon reduced state funding by half-a-billion dollars in fiscal 2010, or 16 percent below fiscal 2008 levels. Illinois reduced its state contribution to education this fiscal year by nearly $600 million, or 14 percent. Utah reduced its contribution by $300 million, or 13 percent, below 2008 levels. All of those holes were filled, or will be filled, with money from the State Fiscal Stabilization Fund, the largest single chunk of stimulus money available to states for education.

As state policymakers face frightening budget gaps, folks are getting desperate. In Kentucky, state legislators are considering raiding the "rainy day" funds of individual school districts, which includes money raised from local property taxes. That's unprecedented in the state--and maybe in the country.

A recent report by the Education Department's inspector general called attention to this problem, maintaining that the real effect of the State Fiscal Stabilization Fund was to reduce a state's own funding contribution to schools, rather than prod states to invest more in K-12 education. Even the IG, however, acknowledged this was allowable under the law.

In a White House press briefing yesterday, Domestic Policy Council Director Melody Barnes acknowledged the funding cliff. But she had no solution for those states that are quickly approaching a steep funding drop-off. Here's the relevant Q-and-A.

Q ... When this money, the federal dollars from the Reinvestment and Recovery Act, run out, will it then be up to the states to come up with the revenue to keep these jobs in operation?

MS. BARNES: That's something that we were quite cognizant of when we were putting the [stimulus law] together. We wanted to make sure that we were stimulating the economy, and at the same time, that we would be able to sustain the increases that were on track. I mean, all of this, remember, is to be put in the context of the economy starting to come back, for states to be able to support these jobs and to support the increases that have been put on the table. So the idea was to provide that shot, as I also mentioned, to start to provide and to incentivize the kinds of reforms that we wanted to see moving forward, but not to fall off a cliff when the two-year period was over.

White House: Stimulus Saved 250,000 Education Jobs So Far

A new report out from the White House Domestic Policy Council estimates that the stimulus package has saved or created 250,000 education jobs so far—most of them probably teachers. (UPDATE: And a good chunk of them are from California. Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger reported today that 62,204 of these education jobs, or nearly 25 percent of the estimated total, were saved or created in his state.)

The White House has the distinct advantage of being able to look at the first quarterly stimulus reports that states and other recipients of stimulus funds filed with the federal government before anyone else. The rest of us get to look at the reports when they're made public on Recovery.gov Oct. 30.

Even so, much of the 23-page report rehashes data from the already public applications states submitted to gain access to their stabilization funds—data that shows most states said they would use the money to backfill cuts they made, or were going to make, to K-12 education. The White House also drew on anecdotal reports from the media to highlight jobs that were saved in specific school districts. In a press release, the White House says that the stimulus package has enabled states to restore nearly all of their projected education budget shortfalls for fiscal 2009 and 2010. Of course, things are still projected to get much worse for states, based on latest tax collections data.

In the press release, Education Secretary Arne Duncan says: "Early feedback from states also tells us that many districts are using stimulus dollars in ways that will move us beyond the status quo."

Given that most of the money has so far been used to get state K-12 funding levels up to the status quo, it will be most interesting to see what states and school districts report spending their money on. (UPDATE 2: Read Andy Smarick's take on this issue, too.)

September 23, 2009

Ed. Dept.: 4 States Are Ripe for Stimulus Slip-Ups

Buried deep within the latest GAO report on states' use of economic-stimulus funds is some interesting insight into how the U.S. Department of Education is trying to minimize the potential for fraud and misuse of money.

The first step, apparently, is to identify "high risk" states and give them intensive technical assistance to help them implement good practices in using stimulus funds. According to the report (advance to page 61 of the PDF document), states were selected because of things "such as the number of monitoring or audit findings in the state and the level of turnover in education leadership within the state."

The four states that got the stimulus equivalent of their names written on the chalkboard are: California, Illinois, Michigan, and Texas. The District of Columbia and Puerto Rico also made the list.

The department will provide these states and territories with both financial and programmatic expertise, which could include on-site visits, according to the report by the Government Accountability Office, the investigative arm of Congress.

These six potential troublemakers have been identified as posing risks to a variety of programs, meaning the Education Department is concerned about their use of all stimulus aid, from State Fiscal Stabilization Fund money to smaller grant programs.

The department has also identified an additional 12 states as "high risk" when it comes to use of Title I funds—based on previous monitoring findings, state coordinator turnover, and size of the Title I allocation. They are: Arkansas, Colorado, Delaware, Florida, Idaho, Louisiana, Massachusetts, Missouri, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, and Oklahoma.

It's apparently a good thing that the Education Department is closely monitoring Illinois and California, because GAO already found cash-management problems with those two states. (Fast forward to page 65 of the PDF document.) Illinois, for example, is apparently sending State Fiscal Stabilization Fund money to local school districts before they're prepared to spend the funds, which is a red flag for auditors.

And some school districts in California have large pots of stimulus funds just sitting around after the state drew down 80 percent of its Title I funds and immediately sent the money to districts, apparently before they were ready to spend it. (The Education Department's inspector general raised red flags about this general issue in California in March.) This time, GAO auditors surveyed 10 districts in California that had received the largest amounts of Title I funds and found that seven had not spent any of these funds and that all 10 reported large cash balances--ranging from $4.5 million to about $135 million.

UPDATED: Gates Spreading 'Race to the Top' Help to All States

The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, which handpicked 15 states for $250,000 each in funding to help them prepare their Race to the Top Fund applications, is going to offer assistance to the remaining 35 states—if they meet eight education reform criteria.

That's according to a memo Vicki Phillips, the foundation's director of education, college ready, sent yesterday to the National Governors Association and the Council of Chief State School Officers.

But before states can get an unspecified amount of money, they must meet eight criteria (outlined in Phillips' memo) that mirror the criteria by which the U.S. Department of Education has proposed judging applications for $4 billion in aid under the education-reform competition.

The Gates Foundation criteria includes whether states have signed onto the NGA-CCSSO common standards effort, whether they have alternative routes to teacher certification, and whether they have no firewall barring the use of student achievement data in teacher evaluations.

Chris Williams, a spokesman for the foundation, said he couldn't say how much money states might receive, either individually or collectively. He also wouldn't elaborate on why the Gates Foundation decided to open up its resources to the rest of the country.

However, Phillips' email gives a clue, indicating that whatever the National Governors Association and the Council of Chief State School Officers said to foundation officials in response to the Chosen 15 was effective. In her email, Phillips indicates the change was the result of "much discussion and careful consideration of your feedback."

UPDATE: Dane Linn, the education division director of the NGA's Center for Best Practices, said that there was concern—especially in this economic downturn—that some states would have an advantage over others. "We are really pleased that Gates will make investments that will put everyone on equal footing," he said this morning. "We've got to create national momentum. We can't have reform in just [a few] states."

The foundation's initial Chosen 15 were: Arkansas, Arizona, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, and Texas.

After these states were chosen, there was a lot of discussion in the ed policy world that these 15 had an early edge in Race to the Top.

It's clear these states are still foundation favorites. Phillips' email says: "These states...are poised to successfully scale reform efforts that can dramatically improve student achievement. Accordingly, these states will be targets for further foundation investment provided they continue to follow through on these commitments."

UPDATE: I should point out that Gates is going to use the Arabella Legacy Fund to serve as the middleman for this grant. This is a grant management group that Gates has used before for some of its global health initiatives. Arabella staff will be the ones to run what seems to be the official warm-up to the Race to the Top—they will, on behalf of Gates, review the grant proposals from the states, answer questions, make the awards, and execute contracts.

September 22, 2009

What Happened to that Facilities Money in the Stimulus?

Remember the compromise Congress came up with on school facilities in order to pass the economic-stimulus package? Proponents decided to ditch the billions in school construction grants to win support from moderate lawmakers for the overall stimulus. Instead, school districts were allowed to use a portion of their State Fiscal Stabilization Fund money (whatever was leftover after backfilling cuts) for school modernization, along with a whole bunch of other options.

Have any of them actually been able to take advantage of that? As we've written before, most of the $39 billion in state stabilization funding went to make up for cuts states had made to K-12 and higher education.

So far, it appears that just three states - Arkansas, Oklahoma, and West Virginia - have been able to use a portion of the governor's share of state stabilization money for school modernization and repair, according to a preliminary analysis by the very knowledgeable folks at the 21st Century School Fund, which advocates for school facilities funding, particularly for districts that serve low-income students.

Of course, not all the state stabilization money has flowed just yet, so there could be more school modernization spending down the road. But my guess is that it will be in states that are in comparatively good financial shape, since others will need the money just to make up for what they've lost.

That leaves the school construction bonding authority in the stimulus. States are just beginning to spend one large piece of that, the $22 billion in school construction bonds. Some advocates are worried that needy school districts won't be able to take advantage of the bonds because they can't even put up the principle.

But Bob Canavan, of Rebuild America's Schools, a coalition that advocates for school facilities, tells me that the bonds are very popular. In fact, out in California, school districts submitted proposals for over $3 billion worth of projects, even though the state has an allocation of just $700 million for the bonds. The Golden State is holding a lottery to decide who gets the funding, which may be more efficient, but doesn't take need into account, some advocates say.

Right now, Congress is trying to get some grant money for school facilities, both in the Senate version of next year's education spending bill and in the "bombshell" student loan bill.

But many GOP lawmakers and some moderate Democrats contend the feds have other school responsibilities to take care of first, such as special education. And they're worried that if Congress starts putting up funding for facilities, school districts and states may stop doing it themselves.

I'm exploring how much the stimulus has helped schools with construction, and I'm looking for some local examples. If you're a superintendent or administrator who has been helped (or wish you had) by the school construction money in the stimulus, please email me or, better yet, post in the comments section. And if you're skeptical of the federal role in school construction, I want to hear from you, too.

UPDATE: The original version of this blog post listed two different states, Wyoming and North Dakota, as having used the governor's share of the state stabilization money for school facilities. But an Education Week analysis and the 21st Century Schools Fund found that it was actually West Virginia and Oklahoma.

September 4, 2009

Quick: Name the 4 States That Haven't Spent an Ed Stimulus Dime

Alaska, Louisiana, New Hampshire, New Mexico.

These four haven't drawn down any of the money that's been made available to them via state stimulus grants, according to the latest spending report from the U.S. Department of Education. (You can check out edweek.org's nifty interactive follow-the-money map here.) This means these states haven't spent any of their special education, Title I, stabilization fund, education technology, or other smaller grants, such as vocational rehabilitation. Note the zeros in the "outlay" category in the department's report.

You'll note on the Education Department's spending report that, within these states, a portion of grants to other entities, such as higher education institutions and local school districts, have been spent.

What's interesting is that even South Carolina, where Gov. Mark Sanford unsuccessfully tried to refuse stimulus money, has spent some of its share.

September 1, 2009

Innovation Grants—Grab 'em While You Can

By guest blogger Erik Robelen:

As school districts, charter operators, and other nonprofits anxiously await further details from the Education Department on the $650 million Investing in Innovation Fund, Congress appears disinclined to pony up much, if any, extra money down the road to keep the program going.

President Obama had asked for an additional $100 million in fiscal 2010 to extend the program, first created under the federal economic-stimulus law earlier this year. The House responded by offering up all of $3 million in the budget bill for the Education Department it passed in late July. And that was pretty generous compared with the Senate Appropriations Committee, which did not provide one dime of new money for the program in the budget bill it passed days later.

Department officials provided some early clues to the direction of what they’re now calling the “i3” program during a symposium last month. But a variety of people I’ve spoken with say there are still far more questions than answers about the program. Detailed guidance is expected in coming weeks.

As part of the department’s fiscal 2010 budget request, it said the $100 million in new money would support “(1) the evaluation of promising new initiatives and approaches to determine if they are suitable for scaling up; (2) expanding the implementation of effective practices across districts and states; (3) supporting the development of 'model districts' that use multiple evidence-based strategies to increase student achievement; and (4) leveraging partnerships with the private sector and the philanthropic community to develop, scale up, document, and disseminate best practices for improving student achievement.”

Meanwhile, Congress seems more amenable to making legislative changes the administration has sought for the i3 program. Both the House budget bill for the Education Department and the version passed by the Senate Appropriations Committee include that language.

(To view the language directly, go here. Click on the third version of H.R. 3293. Scroll down to the "General Provisions" link, the last one, under "Title III, Department of Education." Then scroll down to Section 307.)

I'm still waiting for comments from the Education Department, but one change appears to offer more wiggle room regarding which districts or schools would be eligible to apply for the grants. Essentially, it provides some extra flexibility on the academic-performance requirements for those wishing to apply. My colleague Michele McNeil has previously reported that the department is seeking this change to avoid disqualifying many districts.

There are a couple of other changes, too, including one that says the organization that acts as the “fiscal agent” for a grant under the program “may make subgrants to one or more of the other entities in the partnership.”

Education policy veteran Christopher T. Cross, a former assistant secretary of education under President George H.W. Bush, tells me this language is pretty important, and he suggests it’s a good idea.

“It extends the capability of the department so that they’re not having to manage everything that is done with the money, so that they can, for example, make bets on people who they would have confidence in [who] could then make successful bets,” Mr. Cross.

What do you think of the amending language? Let us know, by posting your comments below.

Also, as Michele previously reported, the Education Department is apparently concerned that the annual appropriations process—which can drag on for months—may not be the best vehicle for quickly amending the stimulus law. It’s apparently hoping to attach the amendment to some other legislation. No word yet on how that’s going.

Gov. Moonbeam Assails Proposed Race to the Top Rules

from former guest blogger Lesli A. Maxwell, now resident blogger at District Dossier.

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Remember a few weeks back when we told you that Jerry Brown, California's attorney general, would likely have to offer his legal opinion on whether the state's law restricts using student data to evaluate teachers -- criticized repeatedly by Education Secretary Arne Duncan -- would render the Golden State ineligible for Race to the Top Fund grants?

Well, Brown, a likely front-runner in the Democratic primary for governor next year, decided to wade into the whole matter by submitting some very interesting, highly critical comments on the proposed RttT rules. (Hat tip to Anthony Cody, an Oakland science teacher who blogs over at Teacher Magazine).

For some reason, though, Brown doesn't directly address whether he thinks California should be considered eligible. He, instead lays out, sometimes dramatically, seven quibbles, many of them philosophical, and not so subtly suggests to Duncan that "a little humility would be in order" since no less than "the impressionable minds of the children of America" are at stake.

Brown also calls the philosophy behind Duncan's RttT rules "command and control," and tells the secretary that he senses in the draft rules a "technocratic bias and an uncritical faith in the power of social science."

Wowzers! No telling if Brown's comments will sway the brain trust in Duncan's shop to rewrite any rules, but they sure make for some fun reading.

Funny how just a few weeks ago, Brown's staff didn't know anything about RttT and whether the AG would be asked to review the state's firewall law when I called them to inquire. No doubt that Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger's convening of a special session over this whole issue got Brown's attention.

photo credit: http://www.californiagovernors.ca.gov

August 31, 2009

Race to the Top Comments Are In

Schools and the StimulusThe U.S. Department of Education's Race to the Top program director, Joanne Weiss, has a big job on her hands now that hundreds of comments have been filed on the 19 criteria that the department proposes to use in awarding $4 billion in competitive grants. I've read most of the comments, and folks raise tons of good questions that showcase just how difficult it is try to apply one set of criteria to 50 different states. The comments also foreshadow how difficult it will be to fairly judge these states, which have different constitutions and governance structures, different politicians, and operate in different contexts.

There are the predictable comments, such as from states without charter schools that object to that being used as one of the criteria on which states will be judged. Plenty of others are objecting to the components of the criteria that seek to improve teacher and principal effectiveness. And the National Conference of State Legislatures, predictably, wants to be recognized in the criteria for the role its members have in education policy.

Weiss has said that the department will take time to read each comment and make any changes to the proposed criteria, with the goal being to have the final regulations done by October or early November.

Consider this a brief summary of other comments, organized around common themes.

Paperwork burden: Several state officials say that the documentation required for the application could be overly burdensome. They want more clarification on the department's requirement that states obtain memoranda-of-understanding from participating school districts (as in all of them?) And many think that requiring a state's attorney general to sign off on the interpretation of state laws that are used as evidence for meeting a criteria will take too long. Education chiefs in Massachusetts and Florida suggested that each education department's chief legal counsel could do that job. The National Governors Association thinks the attorney-general requirement should be removed altogether. (And the NGA also says that some governors object to the requirement that the state board of education president must sign on to the Race to the Top Fund application).

"Participating LEAs": States and education groups are curious as to whether they can award the second half of their Race to the Top funds to a select group of school districts, or if they have to dole out money to all of them. (The first half of the money is doled out per the Title I formula.) States are making it clear that they may want to direct their Race to the Top money to a select group of schools where the most good can be done.

IEPs: Many states, special education advocacy groups, and even U.S. Rep. George Miller, the California Democrat and chairman of the House education committee, object to language about how states should measure achievement for special education students. The criteria call for using students' Individualized Education Programs (IEPs) as a gauge for measuring their achievement in non-tested subjects. All point out that IEPs are meant to set goals, not to measure student achievement.

Transparency and accountability: Many states (such as Washington, Colorado, Texas, Kentucky), want to know, going in, what the scoring rubric will be on meeting the criteria, and whether failing to meet a single criterion will knock a state out of the running. They want to know which criteria will be given the most weight, and how the peer reviewers will be picked. The Coalition for Student Achievement wants the Education Department to post all of the state applications online, even before they're approved. And the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation wants the education department to hold back some of a winning state's grant money as leverage to make sure the state delivers on its reform plan.

Common standards: The NGA and the Council of Chief State School Officers, which are partnering in the common standards effort, point out that the time line for states to adopt common standards is far more aggressive in the Education Department's criteria than in the agreement reached by states. (The states agreed to adopt standards within three years; the criteria call for them to be adopted in just one year.) In addition, the department's criteria call for all standards to be "identical" across states, whereas the states have agreed that 85 percent of their standards should match.

Early learning: State officials from Colorado and Kentucky, along with foundations such as The Pew Charitable Trusts, are encouraging the Education Department to ask states to integrate early learning and pre-K programs into their Race to the Top applications.

August 28, 2009

Clock's Ticking on Race to the Top Comments

The deadline for comments on the Race to the Top guidance is rapidly approaching, so hurry up and get your critiques in.

Then, if you haven't already, be sure to read my colleague Steve Sawchuk's story on NEA's comments.

And, (almost) hot off the presses, four education redesign-oriented groups have teamed up on a list of Race to the Top comments. They include the Center for American Progress, Democrats for Education Reform, the Ed Trust, and the Education Equality Project.

The groups recommend, among other ideas, that the Department of Education:

*Ask states how K-12 dollars are distributed, not just about how much they spend, to make sure poor and minority kids get their fair of the funding

*Require the state's top higher education official to sign off on its application. Their approval would be a sign that the state's standards really are "college-ready" and would show that universities are prepared to help with teacher professional development.

*Call on states to go beyond the National Assessment of Educational Progress in reporting progress at closing the achievement gap. That's necessary partly because there are no mandatory, state-by-state results on NAEP at the high school level in reading and math, like there are for fourth and eighth grade. Instead, states should also be required to take a look at how their kids are progressing on state tests, the advocates say.

The groups also have some ideas for the State Fiscal Stabilization Fund guidance, which are worth taking a look at.

After you've checked them out, be sure to post any comments on the comments.

August 26, 2009

Arne Duncan's $3.5 Billion Lever for Turning Around Failing Schools

Education Secretary Arne Duncan today spelled out how he wants states to spend $3.5 billion in Title I school improvement money over the next three years.

This grant funding ($3 billion from the economic-stimulus package and $546 million from fiscal 2009 appropriations) will flow to states based on the Title I formula for aid to disadvantaged students, but states will have discretion in how they award the money. The U.S. Department of Education, in its regulations, however, prescribes how the money would be awarded. States would award grants to districts that agree to adopt one of these four models (with some exceptions):

*Turnaround Model: This would include among other actions, replacing the principal and at least 50 percent of a school's staff, adopting a new governance structure and implementing a new or revised instructional program.

*Restart Model: School districts would close failing schools and reopen them under the management of a charter school operator, a charter management organization, or an educational management organization selected through a rigorous review process. A restart school would be required to admit, within the grades it serves, any former student who wishes to attend.

*School Closure: The district would close a failing school and enroll the students who attended that school in high-achieving schools in the district.

*Transformational Model: Districts would address four specific areas: 1) developing teacher and school leader effectiveness, which includes replacing the principal who led the school prior to commencement of the transformational model, 2) implementing comprehensive instructional reform strategies, 3) extending learning and teacher planning time and creating community-oriented schools, and 4) providing operating flexibility and sustained support.

In a nod to how important Duncan thinks school leadership is, all of these would put the school principal on the chopping block.

It's also worth noting school districts have a big incentive to adopt the "turnaround" or "restart" model. If they choose one of those two models, the regulations would allow states to seek a waiver to allow those districts to restart the NCLB school improvement clock and no longer be required to provide public school choice or supplemental education services.

This money could be a significant lever for school improvement, especially since Duncan has made turning around the lowest-performing 5 percent of schools a priority.

It's important to put this dollar amount in perspective. It is almost as big as the $4 billion Race to the Top Fund, and it's far bigger than the new i3 Investing in Innovation Fund. Also, the fiscal 2009 appropriation for school improvement grants is just $546 million.

What do you think of these proposed regulations?

August 25, 2009

Can the Stimulus Spur Reform and Avert Layoffs...

Schools and the Stimulus...all at the same time?

Not really.

August 21, 2009

Colorado Circulates Race to the Top Petition

Schools and the Stimulus
If the competition for a slice of the $4.35 billion Race to the Top Fund were a K-12 class, Colorado would be the kid sitting right up front, wearing gigantic glasses, furiously taking notes, and leaping up to answer every single one of the teacher's questions.

The latest effort? A petition, sent to folks in Colorado, urging them to endorse the state's bid.

Here's the crux of their argument, as outlined by Lt. Gov. Barbara O'Brien, who's spearheading the state's effort:

We have enacted some of the nation's most robust data-measurement policies so that students and teachers can determine what works -- and what doesn't. We fulfilled our promise to get young children off to a smart start by expanding high-quality preschool programs and full-day kindergarten. We have implemented the Colorado Achievement Plan For Kids -- a complete 21st century review and alignment of what we teach and how we assess student knowledge from preschool to graduate school. And we have initiated Colorado ASCENT, a groundbreaking statewide fifth-year program that allows students to earn a high school and associates degree simultaneously. These are just a handful of the future-oriented education reforms we have brought to Colorado. Imagine how much more our schools, teachers, and students can accomplish with additional federal funding.

Of course, the application process hasn't even been finalized. And Colorado, like every other state, hasn't been specific yet about what it would do with the money. The email says that the petition is being financed by the re-election campaign of Gov. Bill Ritter, a Democrat.

August 20, 2009

California Lawmakers Racing Back for Race to the Top

If you live in California, you may have a front row seat for the most tense showdown in education policy this fall.

Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, a Republican, is calling a special session to make sure the state can get a slice of the $4.35 billion Race to the Top grant money.

As I'm sure you'll recall, California, New York, and Wisconsin were basically eliminated from the competition at the starting gate because they have laws that prohibit linking student and teacher test score data.

Now it looks like Schwarzenegger is ready to scrap the law so that his state can get much needed funds. By early October, he wants to see legislation that would:

*Link student achievement and teacher performance data

*Repeal California’s charter school cap – which his statement calls "an unnecessary barrier to innovation"

*Expand public school choice

*Step up turnaround efforts at the 5 percent of schools in the state that consistently fail to meet benchmarks

*Give extra pay to "teachers who are consistently doing the toughest jobs. Alternative pay schedules highlight effective teaching practices and create incentives to improve our education system."(Hard to say whether that means merit pay or extra money for working with the neediest populations or in hard-to-staff subjects.)

*Change how the state uses data to measure student, teacher, and school performance. (The specifics on that should be interesting.)

Schwarzenegger may face an uphill battle. The California Teachers Association has been staunchly in favor of the law, because it doesn't want to see student test-score data used as a factor in teacher evaluations. And it'll be interesting to see the union's reaction to some of the other proposals, such as alternative pay and lifting the cap on charters.

From Schwarzenegger's statement, it looks like the political positioning has already begun. He's using the Obama administration for political cover. That might help give his proposals a boost with the Democratically controlled legislature and with voters in one of the bluest states in the country.

Here's a snippet from his statement:

I stand with President Obama and Secretary Duncan in pushing these education reforms not only to ensure California is eligible and competes for billions in Recovery education dollars, but because I believe they will help provide a better education for California’s children. California and its education system have felt the effects of the economic downturn and with every child in every classroom depending on us – I call on the legislature to ensure California leads the Race to the Top.

Lesli Maxwell, our resident California expert, said special sessions in the Golden State don't happen often, so lawmakers tend to stay focused on the task at hand. They don't have to abide by all the pesky rules and deadlines that govern regular sessions. And, perhaps most importantly, all legislation takes effect within 90 days, not by the end of the calendar year, as during a normal session.

I'm sure Secretary of Education Arne Duncan, who has been bemoaning the state's data "firewall" for months, and Rep. George Miller, the chairman of the House Education and Labor Committee, a California lawmaker who has been very disparaging of his home state's law, are high-fiving as we speak.

UPDATE: Miller put out a statement calling the move an "important step forward to push for real reform for every child in California and, if done correctly, to provide more transparency that will end the educational inequities and improve classrooms all across the state."

Duncan Tells Districts, Nonprofits What He's After With Innovation Fund

Schools and the Stimulus
Attention nonprofits and school districts: Dust off those bold ideas for "expanding islands of excellence."
In prepared remarks for a speech today in Washington, U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan outlined some specifics on just how that $650 million in "innovation" money made available under the stimulus will be doled out.

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The program has a catchy new name: The Investing in Innovation Fund (i3 for short, which is much snappier than the World War I Fund, the program's nickname when it was tentatively titled the What Works and Innovation Fund).

The first notice on the grants will be published in the fall, and the initial round of funding will start going out in early 2010. Successful applicants will have a track record of improving student achievement, graduation rates, and student matriculation.

They'll be proposing ideas that can be scaled up and sustained, which means they'll have to have some other source of private or public dollars. Grants can go to districts and nonprofits, including colleges, turnaround specialists, charter schools, companies, and others.

And grants for "proven programs" will likely be bigger than those for "promising but untested" programs, Duncan said in prepared remarks. There will be three categories of grants:

*Pure Innovation grants of up to about $5 million to try out interesting ideas.

*Strategic Investment grants of up to around $30 million for programs that need more research or capacity to scale up.

*Grow What Works grant, which can be as big as $50 million for programs that have already proven themselves and ready to grow and expand.

Since the fund itself is just $650 million, I'm betting there aren't going to be too many programs or districts that are going to get a grant from those last two categories. I'm guessing there aren't going to be 13 maximum Grow What Works grants and nothing else.

But it seems there are already some "teacher's pet" programs that could make a serious play for those last two categories. In his speech, Duncan signaled out the Teaching Fellows program and said Mastery Charters, Green Dot, and Academy for Urban School Leadership are doing a good job spearheading turnarounds of failing schools.

And he devoted a pretty sizable portion of his speech to praising Wendy Kopp, then a Princeton undergraduate, for starting Teach for America.

Michele will have more later, so check Edweek.org early and often.

Credit: Christopher Powers/Education Week

August 19, 2009

Stimulus Webinar: Check it Out!

Schools and the Stimulus
Hungry for more details on the most-watched slice of the stimulus? You're in luck. Edweek.org is holding a webinar tomorrow at 2 p.m. on the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act and, in particular, the $4.35 billion Race to the Top Fund grant program.

Guests will include Joanne Weiss, Race to the Top director at the U.S. Department of Education, and Susan A. Gendron, Maine’s commissioner of education and board president of the Council of Chief State School Officers. Politics K-12's own Michele McNeil will be moderating.

You can preregister and watch it live. And if you miss it, the webinar will be available on demand.

August 14, 2009

States Get $40 Million in Stimulus Help

For states grappling with the complex and burdensome administrative and reporting requirements that go along with the federal stimulus package, help is one the way.

Proposed rules published to be published in the Federal Register on Monday would allow states to set aside a small portion of their stimulus funding from special education and Title I for administering those two programs. The percentages states are allowed to keep range from .1 percent to .5 percent, but amount to at least $200,000 for even the smallest states, and up to $1.5 million for the biggest.

States have been griping about the need for some more administrative resources for months. But districts may be less enthusiastic about the change, since they say they need all the stimulus cash they can get. (Read all about it in this story).

Find out how much your state gets in the chart at the end of this press release.

August 12, 2009

Gates Gives 15 States an Edge in Race to the Top

In the $4.35 billion Race to the Top Fund competition, 15 states are getting an important, early boost courtesy of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.

The foundation has hand-picked these states to receive up to $250,000 each to hire consultants to help them fill out their applications. (McKinsey & Co. and The Bridgespan Group are two examples of consulting firms states are considering.)

The 15 states are: Arkansas, Arizona, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, and Texas.

These states represent either those in which Gates is already invested—or that the foundation thinks are on the right path to reform. Word about Gates' involvement in Race to the Top has been simmering for weeks now—and it's not secret to states getting the money—but the Foundation still isn't saying anything official.

Given how complex and lengthy the Race to the Top application process is, and how many different criteria states need to address, many will likely struggle to get everything done in time for Phase 1. (Applications will be due before the end of the year.) So having some high-powered consultants to help could make a big difference.

August 11, 2009

A 'Lockbox' Around Stimulus Reforms?

Schools and the StimulusIn a short video narrated by my colleague and Politics K-12 guest blogger Dakarai Aarons, Detroit Federation of Teachers President Keith Johnson raises the idea of a "lockbox" on education and financial reform.

He was referring to the big changes going on in Detroit Public Schools, as chronicled by Dakarai in this must-read story. Johnson said that whatever education and budgetary reform initiatives that the district's state-appointed emergency financial manager helps implement need to be carried through by his successors. Or, as he described in the video embedded below, these reforms need to be "lockboxed."

In a much different sense, U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan is asking states and other school districts to embark on transformative change, too. And he's using the Race to the Top program as his instrument to leverage this change. But soon, we're going to start seeing new education chiefs, governors, and state board of education members take the helm. They may be from different political parties -- and they may, or may not, have had a role in deciding how to use a Race to the Top grant or other stimulus money for education reform.

Can, or should, stimulus reforms be lockboxed?

Decline and Fall from Education Week on Vimeo.

Race to the Top Application: Huge Time Thief?

Schools and the StimulusStates that want a piece of the $4.35 billion Race to the Top Fund will have to roll up their sleeves and put in some manpower.

According to the U.S. Department of Education's criteria, it's going to take states a total of 642 hours to complete the applications.

That means that it would take two staff members, working full-time on just the Race to the Top criteria and nothing else, about two months.

The time requirements, advocates say, might be particularly tough on rural states that just don't have a lot of extra capacity. (Of course, some lucky states—such as Kentucky—seem to be getting a hand from the Gates Foundation with filling out their applications).

The time crunch could have an even bigger impact on districts that have to provide states with much of the information, advocates say. Again, that might be particularly tricky for rural districts that don't have a lot of personnel to devote to the applications.

The department's draft regulations ask states and other stakeholders to comment on the paperwork burden, so we'll see if that's a recurring theme once the comments start rolling in.

My co-blogger, Michele, is working on a story about this issue of capacity, and is looking for more perspectives. So, what do you think? Are there too many hoops to jump through? Or is this a good way to set a high bar early on the process, in that if you want a Race to the Top grant, you're really going to have to log some time?

August 6, 2009

Has Ed. Dept. Dissed State Legislators in Race to the Top?

One important criteria on which states would be judged in the Race to the Top competition is the extent to which they get support for their education reform proposals from key stakeholders.

In the proposed criteria, the U.S. Department of Education counts among stakeholders: charter school authorizers, teachers' unions, foundations, school districts, and community groups. Though these groups wouldn't have veto power, their support will be judged as part of a state's application. But to even submit an application, a governor must get a sign-off from the state's education chief and the president of the state's board of education, according to the department's draft of the Race to the Top guidelines.

The department seems to have left off a key constituency whose support is required in any significant education reform push: state legislators.

You know, those are the guys and gals who make laws and pass budgets (including K-12 appropriations). But you'd be hard-pressed to find the words "legislator" or "legislature" (when pertaining to a state) in a search of the dozens of pages of proposed criteria.

Much of the education reform that Education Secretary Arne Duncan and Crew envision can't happen without the state legislature, which determines how much money will go to public schools and sets policy and law on everything from whether there should be a cap on charter schools in the state to what kind of authority a state education department has to turn around failing schools. Sometimes, the most powerful people in education reform in a state are the chairs of the House or Senate education committees.

What's more, state legislators will likely play a crucial role after a state wins Race to the Top funding. While half of the award money will go to school districts based on the Title I formula, the remaining dollars will be spent according to the state's Race to the Top plan. But most, if not all, state constitutions give the power of appropriations to state legislatures (with some exceptions, like in emergencies). So what if a governor pitches a plan to the department to spend the money on a merit-pay plan for teachers, wins the award based on this plan, but the legislature won't play along?

Even a token nod to this group of people would seem to be advisable. Perhaps when the department comes out with its final criteria, adding state legislators to the list of "key stakeholders" in the criteria would be a first step.

August 5, 2009

More Innovation Fund Details

Schools and the Stimulus
Jim Shelton, the Education Department's assistant deputy secretary for innovation and improvement, who will be spearheading the process for doling out $650 million in Investing in Innovation grants to be made available under the economic-stimulus package, gave state and local officials a clearer picture of what he's looking for on a conference call today.

The official word on the Innovation grants isn't available yet. But Shelton, in a call with other top Education Department officials, said the department would be looking at student graduation, student matriculation, and student achievement in doling out the grants.

And he said the department also would be weighing the sustainability of each project, the likelihood of the project being continued after the grant has dissipated, and the scalability of the project. It appears that he wants models with staying power that can be replicated elsewhere.

He said the grants would follow a similar time line to the Race to the Top Fund, with two closing dates: one in the winter and one in the spring.That sounded to me like there will be two rounds of funding.

Shelton said that "applicants must also include private partnerships that will produce matching funds." That sounded to me like districts should have the ability to find some matching funds, but it was tough to tell for sure from Shelton's wording. It's possible that the department may just want districts to specify whether they'll be able to get matching funds or not.

Still, Shelton's statement raised the eyebrows of one rural official, who pointed out on the call that it's going to be a lot tougher for rural schools to get local matching funds. Shelton said that the department is aware of the issue and is trying to figure out a way to help rural districts deal with it.

Joanne Weiss, who is overseeing the $4.35 billion Race to the Top fund, which is meant to reward states that are making progress on school improvement, teacher distribution and in other areas, stressed that states should get buy-in from districts on their plan. She suggested that states enter into a "memorandum of understanding" with local districts.

One official asked whether states could target specific high-need districts in their applications. Weiss said that was a great point and suggested the questioner put it in writing so the department could respond to it through official channels.

One listener from California asked whether districts would be eligible for innovation money even if the state isn't eligible or doesn't get a grant. (I guess this official had heard something about that fire wall issue involving the use of data.) The answer was an emphatic, "Yes."

Another official asked if states could work on their applications in groups, even though they have to apply individually. The department folks said that would be fine.

Secretary of Education Arne Duncan let Shelton and Weiss do most of the talking. But he kicked off the call with a warning about the H1N1 flu virus. He said that some schools may need to close if the virus kicks back up in the fall. The U.S. Department will be issuing guidance on the flu this Friday, he said.

And Duncan stressed that schools should expand online learning and correspondence course options so that kids don't miss out on learning, even if a school is closed because of the flu.

August 4, 2009

Poll: Will Race to the Top Change State Data Laws?

Now that U.S. Department of Education has made it clear that states must tear down their data firewalls in order to get a piece of the $4.35 billion Race to the Top fund, do you think California and New York will change their laws to be eligible?
Yes, both will
No, neither of them will
Possibly one or the other will
No, they don't really need to because New York's law sunsets in 2010, and California's districts can still link teacher-and-student data, even if the state can't
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August 3, 2009

Just Because the Ed. Dept. Speeds Up Stimulus Funding...

Schools and the Stimulus
...doesn't mean states and school districts will spend their money faster.

The U.S. Department of Education announced today that it is releasing nearly $11.4 billion in Title I, special education, and vocational rehabilitation funding a month early to "help save jobs and drive reform," according to a press release. Rather than getting these stimulus funds at the end of September, states and school districts will have access to the money around Sept. 1.

But as we've written before, states have been slow to draw down their allocations. As of July 24, states had only drawn down about 22 percent of their available stimulus funds. So don't think this will necessarily unleash a flood of cash into states.

July 29, 2009

The Obama Administration's Love-Hate Relationship With Calif.

From guest blogger Lesli A. Maxwell:

California officials have been sweating bullets since President Barack Obama singled outthe state last week as likely to be shut out of winning grants in the $4.35 billion Race to the Top (RTTT) competition later this year, unless education leaders there become willing to drop the firewall that right now prohibits the use of student test scores to size up teachers.

Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger has pledged to use his influence to rewrite state law around this issue. And yesterday, state schools chief Jack O'Connell parachuted into the Long Beach Unified School District where leaders have been using student data to evaluate instructional strategies and program effectiveness.

O'Connell wanted to make the case that the state law in question doesn't bar such uses of student data at the school district level, even though he acknowledged that Long Beach Unified is rare for doing so. The Times story refers to a 2006 state law that bars student test scores from being used to evaluate teachers at the state level.

Any California experts out there care to jump in and tell us what exactly state law allows, and what it doesn't, when it comes to student-achievement data and teacher evaluations?

Ironically, President Obama cited Long Beach Unified, a nationally acclaimed district that has won the Broad Prize for Urban Education, in his first major education address in March for "using data to track how much progress a student is making and where that student is struggling." I'm sure school leaders there would be bummed if their state was shut out of RTTT money.

July 27, 2009

Unanswered Race to the Top Questions

Friday's unveiling of the criteria for the Race to the Top awards answered a lot of questions about how the U.S. Department of Education is going to dole out $4 billion in competitive grants.

But a lot of questions remain, at least as far as we're concerned:

1. Given that the applications require signatures from the governor and the chief and the state board of education president, what if one is particularly obstinate and won't sign on? Not all chiefs and governors have gotten along, after all. South Carolina would be a top contender for testing this rule.

2. Who is the department going to find to judge these things? They want "peers" who are education experts in their fields, but so many of these folks work in or for states. University professors might be key here.

3. The list of people and entities that the department wants to see support from, regarding a state's application, is lengthy and exhaustive. From every participating local school district to teachers' unions to charter school organizers to the state attorney general (when state laws are being presented as evidence of having a policy in place.) You can find the list on page 36 of the proposed rules. Does the department really want hundreds of letters and/or signatures?

4. Given the department's focus on turning around large numbers of low-performing schools, which are concentrated in urban areas, do states with mostly rural populations have a shot at this money? And in states with big urban centers that win the money, will rural schools lose out?

What questions do you have about Race to the Top?

July 24, 2009

Obama Himself Approved Data-Firewall Absolute

Only two things can render a state ineligible for Race to the Top grants.

And only one of them is a biggie: the student-teacher data firewall issue.

This effectively means New York, California, and Wisconsin, at the very least, are ineligible for Race to the Top—or will at least have some explaining to do. They have laws on the book that essentially bar the use of student-achievement data in some teacher-evaluation decisions.

Whether to elevate any criteria to the category of "must have," and if so, which ones, was apparently the subject of a lot of discussion among education department staffers. Should the charter-school cap issue be make-it or break-it? Should another teacher-quality measure get top billing?

When Education Department staff members finally settled on the data firewall rule, which would effectively knock out two states with giant student populations and powerful Congressional delegations, I'm told that education staffers took it up to those above their pay grades.......

To Obama Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel, and eventually, to the president himself. And Obama, apparently, didn't need much convincing.

Ed. Dept. Clarifies 'Assurances' for Round 2 Stimulus Funding

Even as folks are busily digesting the Race to the Top draft application, the U.S. Department of Education has released even more information on the stimulus.

There are new proposed requirements on just how states should show progress toward those four education-improvement-oriented "assurances" spelled out in the stimulus law: improving teacher quality and distribution, revamping state data systems, turning around struggling schools, and bolstering standards and assessments.

If you'll remember, states must promise to get to work on those "assurances" in order to get a piece of the State Fiscal Stabilization Fund, which is meant to help states make up for previous cuts to K-12 and higher education.

The department has already given out much of Round 1 of the funding, but this guidance will apply to Round 2. Most the requirements seem to be asking for information from states, which would help the department get a picture of where they stand on the four key areas.

My colleague, Steve Sawchuk, has the goods on the very interesting teacher quality requirements over at Teacher Beat. So check it out.

But there are some interesting pieces on the other three assurances:

*On data systems: The stimulus law embraced the Data Quality Campaign's description of a high-quality data system, so it's no surprise to see that states must explain their process and timeline for implementing those elements, under the requirements. States must also explain whether they are sharing information with teachers about how much their students progress.

*On standards and assessments: The draft says that states should supply information on the extent to which they are working to "enhance" their assessments, including for English-language learners and students in special education.

And it also says states should explain how they are using "multiple measures from multiple sources" in gauging student achievement. I'm wondering if that will have implications for No Child Left Behind renewal ... will states eventually have to use multiple measures in their accountability systems?

The draft also asks states to report how many students graduate from high school in four years and go on to a pursue college or technical training. States must also specify whether they are working with other states to revamp their assessments.

*School Improvement:The department is asking for a lot of information on charter schools here, including the number of charters allowed to operate in the state, the number actually operating, and the number and identity of any charters that have closed in recent years. States must also detail how they are working with schools in corrective action, meaning that they have been chronically struggling to meet achievement targets for years.

That's my preliminary take, but the draft is about 116 pages long, so I'm sure I missed something. What jumped out at you? E-mail me or better yet, hit up the comments section.

Friday Reading List: The All Race to the Top Edition

The most talked about, written about, and speculated about part of the stimulus, the $4.35 billion Race to the Top fund, is getting top billing across the edu-blogsphere today.

The coverage comes in advance of a big rollout of the application process for the grants, which are meant to reward states that make progress on particular areas of school reform, at the U.S. Department of Education today. (Politics K-12's own Michele McNeil will be there. And oh yeah, also President Barack Obama).

After you're done reading Michele's excellent story on the applications, check out these good reads:

Over at Flypaper, Mike Petrilli, a former Bush administration official, has a great post, explaining why the application process embraces a Washington to the Rescue Approach. Bonus: It's accompanied by a picture of a horse with a carrot up its nose (yes, he somehow ties that back to ed policy).

At Gotham Schools, Elizabeth Green explores New York's chances of getting a piece of the RTT pie, given that it has a data firewall (which takes states out of the running, according to the guidance). And at Eduwonk, former Clintonite Andy Rotherham has a good overall analysis and even suggests some states to watch. And at Swift & Changeable, Charlie Barone has a very cool chart, showing why this is a big chunk of change, even compared with some of the foundations' largess.

And check out USA Today, the Washington Post (which also features an interview with Obama), the Associated Press, and The New York Times.

Finally, over at This Week in Education, edu-media critic Alexander Russo gives his take on all the coverage.

UPDATE: Duncan continued his full-court press this morning, holding a call with regional reporters about the Race to the Top program. Not surprisingly, most of the questions boiled down to "Will my state be eligible?"

For instance, reporters from New York and Wisconsin asked whether states would have enough time to remove their data "firewalls" and to be able to qualify. Duncan said the grants would be doled out in two rounds, extending the time frame a bit. And a Nebraska reporter asked whether states with a lot of rural schools would be able to qualify for the grants. In much of the department's rhetoric, there's been a focus on urban schools. Duncan said there would be an emphasis on rewarding good teachers for being willing to teach in hard-to-staff schools, which are in both urban and rural areas.

My colleague, Steve Sawchuk, managed to sneak in a substantive question about whether it's essential for teachers' unions to sign off on applications. He'll have Duncan's answer later today at Teacher Beat.

July 23, 2009

The Race to the Top Is On

The Education Department has unveiled proposed criteria for deciding who will get a slice of the $4 billion Race to the Top fund.

Check out the details here.

I'll be tweeting tomorrow's event at the Education Department (so long as technology cooperates), so follow me over at the Politics K-12 twitter feed.

And, some are speculating that President Obama may even make an appearance. It's an important enough subject that he sat down with the Washington Post to talk about it, even emphasizing that politics won't play a part in awarding the grants. Think Ohio.

Race to the Top Application Details: Coming Soon?

The word on the street (and by street, I mean twitter) is that the Race to the Top application process is going to be announced as soon as tomorrow. (The folks at the Thomas B. Fordham Institute, a think-tank in Washington, are saying it outright.)

The $4.35 billion Race to the Top program, which was created under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, is meant to reward states that make significant progress on teacher quality and distribution, standards and assessments, school improvement, and tracking student progress through data systems.

Folks are wondering just how serious the Education Department is about some of the things it has proposed to take into account in allocating the grants, such as lifting those charter caps, tearing down that data firewall, and just who will have to sign off on the applications. (Superintendents? State chiefs? Unions?)

If the buzz is right, we'll find out soon enough.

July 22, 2009

History Lessons Offer Caution on Stimulus Spending

The Education Department's Office of Inspector General offers an interesting history lesson today that seeks to foreshadow just how states and school districts will misspend their stimulus dollars.

And if history is any lesson, there will be stimulus-related waste and fraud.

The OIG has audited its audits, looking for patterns in 41 investigations from 2002 until the present that found pervasive problems either in the spending or financial internal controls. These audits found $1.6 billion in either questioned costs or funds at risk of fraud because of internal-control weaknesses. In addition, another 13 audits ended in criminal prosecutions. That amounts to a little less than 1 percent of the total amount of money (or $193.7 billion) that the Education Department administered in the federal programs that were the subject of these audits. Of dourse, these were the fraud and spending problems that auditors were able to find, document, and prove. The amount of waste and fraud is probably much higher.

There were common problems that auditors uncovered in states' and school districts' handling of federal money that don't bode well for the spending of some $100 billion in stimulus. These problems included unallowable or undocumented expenses, supplanting and not supplementing funds, and problems with inventory control.

The OIG made recommendations to the Education Department for helping states and local school districts better track stimulus money, and most of it centered on better training.

July 16, 2009

Ed. Dept. to Arizona on Stimulus: Not So Fast

The U.S. Department of Education and Arizona are in a stand-off over money from the State Fiscal Stabilization Fund, as state officials accuse the feds of delaying the release of stimulus funds. That forced Arizona to borrow some $130 million to make a payment to schools. Read all about the kerfluffle here.

The most interesting thing, to me, is how this all started. Turns out, there's a fraud and accountability alert built into the stimulus reporting system that's akin to credit card fraud protection (which often results in a call from your credit card company when a funny charge appears to be going through). Arizona officials, within the last several days, attempted to draw down from their $681 million stimulus allocation more than $400 million—which is an unusually high amount, especially in a state that hadn't drawn down a single dollar of stimulus money so far, says ED's Sandra Abrevaya. That unusually high amount triggered some sort of alert to ED officials, who called Arizona officials to ask what they were using that money for.

Turns out, ED officials say, Arizona wasn't planning to use it for education purposes, as promised in its application and as required by the stimulus law. Instead, state officials planned to use the money to plug general budget holes.

The feds and state officials hope to resolve this in a conference call today. Stay tuned.

July 10, 2009

GAO: Most Districts Not Spending Stimulus on Reform

From guest blogger Dakarai I. Aarons:

The Obama Administration has said the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act would not only help drag the economy out of the doldrums, but also lead efforts to make the nation better equipped and more competitive in a global economy.

Or as U.S. Education Secretary Arne Duncan so often puts it, the economic-stimulus funding should be used to save jobs and drive reform.

But a report by the Government Accountability Office, released this week to Congress, shows those hopes for big improvement initiatives in the area of education haven't yet materialized. That's particularly true when it comes to the $48.6 billion State Fiscal Stabilization Fund, the biggest single pot of education-related stimulus funding.

Instead of focusing on the kinds of efforts Duncan has been traversing the country to promote, school district officials said they were planning to use the money primarily to avert layoffs, bolster professional development, and make up for any budget holes caused by cuts in state education funding.

School leaders in Flint, Mich., for example, said they simply didn't have enough money to start thinking about reform:

"In Flint, Michigan, officials reported that SFSF funds will be used to cope with budget deficits rather than to advance programs, such as early childhood education or repairing public school facilities. According to the Superintendent of Flint Community Schools, the infrastructure in Flint is deteriorating, and no new school buildings have been built in over 30 years. Flint officials said they would like to use SFSF funds for renovating buildings and other programs, but the SFSF funds are needed to maintain current education programs."

Even if schools wanted to use the state fiscal stabilization money for reform, the report found, many district leaders said they found directions on how to do so unclear.

“Officials in many school districts we visited reported having inadequate guidance from their state on using SFSF funding, making reform efforts more difficult to pursue. School district officials in most states we visited reported they lacked adequate guidance from their state to plan and report on the use of SFSF funding.”

The GAO is expected to release these stimulus updates every 60 days or so, and we'll keep you posted on what they find.

July 7, 2009

Draft Guidance on Title I Waivers Is Out

By guest blogger Erik Robelen:

Better read this fast and start commenting. The Education Department this afternoon released draft guidance offering more details on the waivers states and districts may seek from Title I requirements as they spend the $10 billion made available under the economic-stimulus law for that program.

Those wishing to submit comments to the department on the guidance have until next Monday, July 13, to do so. That's right, folks: Just six days.

The 46-page document deals with a variety of issues, from the law's school choice and supplemental education services provisions to "maintenance of effort" and professional development requirements. As I understand it, the department has already indicated most of the types of waivers it would consider--such as set-asides required for the provision of supplemental educational services and free transportation for public school choice--but this draft document attempts to flesh those out.

However, it also offers a new area for waivers.

"In addition to the waivers referenced in prior documents, through this Guidance, the Secretary is also inviting requests for a waiver that would permit an LEA with one or more schools in improvement to offer [supplemental educational services], in addition to public school choice, to eligible students in Title I schools in the first year of school improvement," the draft says.

Happy Reading.

July 2, 2009

Early Look at Duncan's NEA Speech

In his fourth and final speech on the education reform "assurances" that are featured in the economic stimulus package, Education Secretary Arne Duncan walked into the lion's den NEA convention in San Diego today and called for merit pay for teachers.

It's reminiscent of the National Education Association's big summer confab last year, when Barack Obama was just a presidential candidate, getting booed by some delegates for mentioning performance pay.

My colleague Stephen Sawchuk, who is in San Diego, will have much more on this speech (including whether Duncan gets booed) over at the Teacher Beat.

According to prepared remarks, Mr. Duncan took on some of the prized benefits of being a teacher: tenure, the salary schedule, and union protection.

On tenure:

"When an ineffective teacher gets a chance to improve and doesn’t—and when the tenure system keeps that teacher in the classroom anyway—then the system is protecting jobs rather than children. That’s not a good thing. We need to work together to change that."

On teacher evaluations:

"...to remove student achievement entirely from evaluation is illogical and indefensible."

On teacher pay:

"We’re asking Congress for more money to develop compensation programs 'with' you—and 'for' you—not 'to' you—programs that will put money in the pockets of your teachers and support personnel by recognizing and rewarding excellence."

Duncan also emphasized the importance of improving the quality of school and district leadership, calling on those leaders to accept the same new education-reform demands as teachers.

And if you need a refresher on Duncan's previous speeches on the assurances, read about his standards speech here, data here, and low-performing and charter schools here.

July 1, 2009

States Get $2.7 Billion in Early Stimulus Aid

Consider this a Happy New Fiscal Year gift from the U.S. Department of Education.

Education Secretary Arne Duncan and crew announced today that $2.7 billion in government services funding from the State Fiscal Stabilization Fund is going out early. (Vice President Joe Biden let the cat out of the bag around noon, during an update on the recovery act.) This government services money is the smaller, $8.8 billion portion of the larger $48.6 billion stabilization fund that's discretionary—funds governors can choose to use for things such as K-12 education, public safety, or any other pressing budget needs.

Federal officials were holding back $2.7 billion in government services funding, and one-third of the rest of the stabilization fund money, to make sure states spent the first round wisely. Though the government services money is going out a couple of months early, the rest of the stabilization money will still be kept for safe-keeping, until being released in the fall.

For the majority of states that have approved stabilization fund applications, they'll get their money, about $2.4 billion, today—the start of new fiscal years in most states. For those states with pending applications, they'll get their money as soon as the applications are approved.

And, by the way, every state made the department's July 1 4:30 p.m. EDT deadline for submitting their application. Texas was the last one in the door, at 4:12 p.m.

The department decided to accelerate the money after hearing that states are facing increasing budgetary pressure, even though two-thirds of the stabilization fund money has already gone out.

In a statement, Duncan said: “To date, the Department has done everything possible to get stimulus funds out the door quickly and effectively, including approving Phase I applications within 10 days. This money, which represents the final third of the government services fund, provides maximum flexibility for states to save jobs and drive reform.”

Important to remember is that just because the education department releases the money doesn't mean states immediately start spending it. The latest spending report from the department as of June 26 shows that of the $45.5 billion in overall stimulus money that's been obligated to states, only $8.7 billion of it has been drawn down by states.

June 29, 2009

Eight States Procrastinate as Stimulus Deadline Nears

Schools and the StimulusThe clock is ticking toward the July 1 deadline for states to submit their applications for the State Fiscal Stabilization Fund—the $48.6 billion pie that's meant to prop up states' K-12 education budgets. Education Secretary Arne Duncan is scheduled to hold a conference call with media tomorrow to talk about this (and some higher ed stuff as well.)

As of today, the Education Department has approved 37 applications (including District of Columbia and Puerto Rico), with seven still pending. So which eight states are dragging their feet, using every last hour of their time?

• Kentucky
• Louisiana
• Missouri
• Montana
• Oklahoma
• Texas
• Vermont
• Wyoming

June 26, 2009

Stim 2: The Stimulus Strikes Back?

Schools and the Stimulus

Another stimulus package could very possibly be Coming Soon to a Congress Near You, at least if Warren Buffett has his way.

Buffett, the gazillionaire investor who has advised President Barack Obama on economic issues, told Bloomberg television that he thinks the country may need a second jolt of federal funding if the unemployment rate keeps rising. In a news conference earlier this week, Obama said Washington should give the $787 billion package, passed in February, a little longer to work before considering a sequel to the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act.

But back when the legislation was under consideration in the House Appropriations Committee, U.S. Rep. David R. Obey, D-Wis., the panel's chairman, floated the possibility of another stimulus.

And school districts are already looking forward to some lean times after the stimulus money, which covers fiscal years 2009 and 2010, goes away.

"Fiscal year 2011 is looking very precarious," said Anthony Bent, the superintendent of the Shrewsbury, Mass., school district.

June 24, 2009

How Can Duncan Compete With Gov. Sanford's Argentinian Tango?

If you're CNN, and you have a choice between broadcasting two live events, would you choose A or B?

A: A live briefing with Education Secretary Arne Duncan about student financial aid forms getting simpler.

B: A live press conference featuring a contrarian Republican governor who went missing for a few days, was eventually thought to be hiking the Appalachian Trail, but was actually in Buenos Aires carrying out an affair with an Argentinian.

Needless to say, Duncan's White House briefing—which CNN was going to carry live—got trumped by South Carolina Gov. Mark Sanford. If you'll remember, Gov. Sanford had some harsh words for Duncan in the kerfluffle over the state stabilization fund. But from now on, it's unlikely Duncan will have to put up with any more snippy letters from Sanford, who has much bigger things to worry about.

June 23, 2009

Office of Managment and Budget Puts Out Reporting Requirements

Schools and the StimulusThe White House Office of Management and Budget last night released guidance for states on how to calculate the impact of stimulus dollars, including how recovery dollars are being spent and how many jobs have been saved. You can read the guidance for yourself here.

One state official I talked to said she finds the guidance confusing, as least as it applies to education.

Betsy Carpentier, deputy superintendent of innovation and support in South Carolina, called the reporting requirements confusing and "pie in the sky". One of her chief complaints? The OMB doesn't explain how to calculate jobs saved that aren't year-round (such as many teaching positions). She's hoping the Council of Chief State School Officers will help states figure out how to work with the requirements.

Tom Gavin, an OMB spokesman, said the guidance was developed with input from state officials and includes a formula for less-than-12-month employees. He also said OMB will hold a series of town hall meetings and engage in other outreach efforts to help state officials better understand the guidance.

One thing I noticed: The guidance doesn't include reporting requirements on student outcomes. Gavin said that the guidance is too broad-based for that, since it covers stimulus money from a range of agencies.

"It's not just education guidance," he said. It applies to programs "that are disparate in mission, you couldn't come up with a metric that would cover watersheds and students."

June 18, 2009

Duncan (Gently) Threatens Pennsylvania Over Stimulus Funds

The AP's Libby Quaid has an interesting story about how Education Secretary Arne Duncan has put in writing a threat we've heard before: that if states play shell games with the economic-stimulus money intended to help stabilize their budgets, they may be at a competitive disadvantage when it comes time to award the $5 billion in competitive stimulus grants under his control. Pennsylvania is considering cutting K-12 education, using stimulus money to fill in the resulting gap, while leaving its "rainy day" fund largely intact. Read Duncan's letter here. And listen to him talk about the larger issue in this interview with EdWeek from March.

But Duncan's threat to Pennsylvania policymakers may turn out to be an empty one. Here's why:

Does Duncan—who readily admits in his stump speeches that Washington does not have all of the answers—know better than the budget experts in individual states? Sometimes, depleting a rainy day fund is a bad idea. For example, bond-rating agencies look at a state's savings in awarding bond ratings--a healthy rainy day fund usually means a better bond rating. A higher bond rating lowers borrowing costs for states, which can save money for other things.

Second, a lot of states are talking about or doing what Pennsylvania is talking about doing. Texas is another notable example. Applications approved so far show most states are using their State Fiscal Stabilization Fund money to backfill cuts. And if you look at the latest fiscal report from the associations representing the nation's governors and state budget officers (advance to page 52 of the PDF), you'll see that many states are projecting that they'll end fiscal 2010 with money still in their "budget stabilization" or rainy day funds. Many of these same states have cut K-12 education. That's a lot of states to potentially take out of the running. Will Duncan and Team Stimulus be able to distinguish which states really, really needed to cut education versus those that didn't?

Note in Duncan's letter that states will be asked about (and not necessarily judged on) how they used their stabilization fund money. And, he says a state may be "negatively impacted" by such decisions. What's more, it's important to remember that the stimulus law, as approved by Congress, contains loopholes that allow states to move money around—and potentially away from—intended purposes.

Texas Democrats Not Happy About Stimulus Shell Games

Schools and the StimulusTexas Democrats are fighting what's perhaps a noble, albeit losing, battle over State Fiscal Stabilization Fund money that's designed to help prop up states' K-12 education budgets.

Texas Gov. Rick Perry and fellow Republicans have figured out, like a lot of other states, that even if you don't really need to cut education, you can cut K-12 anyway and fill the cuts with federal stimulus money, thereby freeing up money for other government programs that would have been spent on education.

In one case, Democrats fought a valiant and creative fight as members of the Texas congressional delegation threatened to withhold their votes on a war-spending bill if Congress didn't amend the law to stop Texas' planned use of education-stimulus dollars. But that maneuver was ultimately unsuccessful.

June 16, 2009

Sen. Coburn's 100 Top Wasteful Stimulus Projects Include School Spending

To counter President Obama's 100 stimulus success stories, Republican Sen. Tom Coburn, of Oklahoma, has come out with his own Top 100 list—of wasteful or questionable spending.

School districts and school-related projects are not spared scrutiny, either. What education-related projects made his hit-list?

* Detroit Public Schools, getting some $530 million in stimulus funding despite a severe budget and financial mismanagement crisis. To be fair, much of the stimulus money is being doled out by existing education formulas (such as through Title I), or by new formulas (such as for the State Fiscal Stabilization Fund) that Congress itself created. This one is marked No. 28 in the report.

* $10 million to be used for school lunch equipment and education technology in Oshkosh, Wisc. That's No. 35. What the report doesn't say is that Congress actually approved a $100 million line-item just for school lunch equipment. Are school districts supposed to let that money go to waste?

*$550,000 for a new skate park and tennis court and basketball renovations for Jenks Junior High School in Rhode Island. This one probably comes closest to violating Vice President Joe Biden's commandment that thou shalt not build any swimming pools with stimulus money.

* California, for not encouraging school districts to rehire employees. While this may go against the main mission of the stimulus—to save jobs and jump-start the economy—hasn't Sen. Coburn heard of the funding cliff? Even the U.S. Department of Education is warning districts against falling off that cliff. This is No. 81 in the report.

*$215,000 for new bike paths in Durango, Colo. to keep kids who walk to school from walking along the street. This is No. 98.

June 15, 2009

Deadlines Announced for Race to the Top Grants

Schools and the StimulusThe U.S. Department of Education has now laid out very specific deadlines for states vying for a piece of the Race to the Top fund, a pool of discretionary economic-stimulus money that Secretary of Education Arne Duncan will get to dole out to the states. Billed as a "national competition," the grants will be distributed in two rounds—to give states that miss out the first time around a crack at the second phase.

Applications will be due in December and June. So states that have charter school caps, for instance, have a year (as Duncan might say) to get their act together and lift those caps!

It looks like these deadlines will apply only to the $4 billion in state grants, not to the $350 million that's been set aside for new assessments, nor for the $650 million in innovation grants available to school districts and nonprofit groups.

The deadlines are:

Late July: The Department will publish a notice of proposed rule making in the Federal Register, inviting public comment for 30 days on the proposed grant application and the criteria for evaluating the states' applications.

October: Notice inviting applications will be published in the Federal Register.

December: Phase 1 applications will be due.

March 2010: Phase 1 grants awarded, winners announced.

June 2010: Phase 2 applications will be due.

September 2010: Phase 2 grants awarded, winners announced.

June 14, 2009

Duncan Offers $350 million in Stimulus Money for New Tests

Schools and the StimulusThe U.S. Department of Education will use a portion of the $4.35 billion Race to the Top Fund to help states work on developing assessments, Secretary of Education Arne Duncan told governors in North Carolina tonight. They were gathered for an education symposium sponsored by the National Governors Association and the James B. Hunt Jr. Institute for Educational Leadership and Policy.

The details are still being worked out, but he said $350 million of the $4.35 billion in Race to the Top money set aside for states will go to the project. (The $650 million in innovation grants will still go to local districts and nonprofits.) And it sounds like Duncan is hoping that at least some states will work together on creating the tests.

Really good tests will cost more than the fill-in-the-bubble variety, Duncan told the governors, and it'll be too much money for any one state to do on its own. So the feds are going to put up part of the funding and Duncan is hoping that states will choose to collaborate with one another.

But, in prepared remarks, he stressed that the feds won't be the ones driving the bus:

Some people may claim that a commonly-created test is a threat to state control – but let’s remember who is in charge. You are. You will create these tests. You will drive the process. You will call the shots.

And he said he wants states to also work together on so-called formative assessments, which help teachers gauge where their kids are:

This is a growth area for the testing industry, which may worry that assessments used across multiple states will be bad for business, even if it’s the right thing for kids.
However, it’s not my job to worry about their business. My job is to worry about kids...

The $350 million for assessments means that Race to the Top state grant funding is now down to $4 billion. States can either collaborate with one another or apply on their own for the grants, Duncan said. And he reiterated that the funding will be doled out in two rounds. States that lose out the first time are eligible for Round 2.

Duncan also said he wants to rewrite the No Child Left Behind Act to make sure that it rewards states for raising their standards. These lines, included tonight, have become part of his NCLB stump speech.

As states come together around higher common standards, I want to flip it – and be tighter about the goals – but more flexible in how you can meet them. I trust states and districts to find the way – and I don’t trust Washington to tell you how to do it. You have the ideas, the leadership, and the ability. I’m here to support you.

And, as he has before, Duncan gave a big pat on the back to the 46 states that have pledged to consider common standards.

So let’s be clear: this effort is being led by governors and chief state schools officers. This is your work and this is your agenda. Federal law does not mandate national standards. It empowers states to decide what kids need to learn and how to measure it.

In case you haven't already noticed, the whole Washington-Isn't-On-Your-Back thing was a major theme of the speech. But Duncan may have stepped on that a little bit when he repeated his call for states to, pretty please, lift their charter cap.

As you might remember, Duncan is doing a round of speeches on each of the four "assurances" spelled out in the stimulus package - the ones that states must promise they'll improve on to get a major piece of the stimulus funding. This one was obviously standards and assessments. He's already done data systems.

Duncan also gave us a preview of the two final stops in the Assurances Tour:

He'll be talking about turning around low performing schools—another assurance—at an event with charter school advocates next week. Interesting pick of audience there...might indicate that he is going to push for more continually failing schools to be reconstituted as charters.

And Duncan said that he will be outlining his vision for teacher and principal quality in a speech to the National Education Association in July, a gutsy move considering that the speech will more likely than not mention performance pay, a policy the union isn't a huge fan of.

UPDATE: The Associated Press did a good story on the speech that you can read here. In an interview with AP, Duncan explained that providing resources for the tests is a good way to keep the standards movement going. Establishing standards will be relatively cheap, Duncan told AP.

But tests will be a "very heavy lift financially," Duncan said. "Having real high standards is important, but behind that, I think in this country we have too many bad tests... If we're going to have world-class international standards, we need to have world-class evaluations behind them."

June 11, 2009

More on State Data Laws and the Stimulus

Schools and the Stimulus As we mentioned yesterday, Secretary of Education Arne Duncan is talking tough about the need for state data systems to include some sort of indicator that can be used to tie teachers to their students' performance.

Who knows whether it will happen in California, Duncan's new poster child for the issue. But the situation in Arizona may be promising for proponents of the idea, at least according to the state schools chief, Tom Horne.

I asked Horne last week (while reporting this story) whether he thought the state would actually be able to squeeze some reform out of the stimulus money, given Arizona's dire fiscal situation.

He said he thought that the law gave him leverage to add a teacher indicator to the state's data system, and the cost won't be high. According to Horne, the proposal has been languishing in the state legislature for a while. Now “schools are going to have to do it,” he said. "That’s going to be a big change” because principals can use the data to better target professional development, Horn said.

If it happens, don't be surprised if Duncan gives Arizona a little love in his data-system stump speech.

June 8, 2009

The Math Behind 135,000 Education Jobs Saved

Schools and the StimulusThe White House promised today that the economic stimulus package will create or save 600,000 jobs nationally over the next 100 days.

And 135,000 of those jobs are education jobs, the Obama administration claims. You can see a state-by-state breakdown in this White House PowerPoint presentation, on slide 5.

So how did the U.S. Department of Education come up with that 135,000-job estimate?

According to the Education Department, officials added together all of the Title I, IDEA and state fiscal stabilization fund money each state is going to get. Then, they multiplied that amount by 68.3 percent — or historically, according to the department, the percentage of state school funding that goes to school personnel. Then, they took the national-average teacher salary (plus benefits) of $69,000 to figure out how many jobs that translated into.

This seems like a very simplistic way of figuring out how many jobs the stimulus is saving or creating. But trying to answer that question also seems like an impossible task. What do you think of the math behind the numbers?

Duncan Still Squeezing States on Charters

Schools and the StimulusFrom guest blogger Lesli A. Maxwell:

Education Secretary Arne Duncan is keeping up his high-profile pressure campaign on states he deems unfriendly to charter schools.

This afternoon, in a conference call with education reporters (and some charter school groups), he explained once again that states that don't allow charters to open and those that impose caps on the number of schools will be at a "competitive disadvantage" when he starts to dole out $4.35 billion in Race to the Top discretionary grant dollars later this year.

He wasn't willing, however, to be terribly specific about how much weight he'll assign to states' charter friendliness. Only that "we’re going to have an absolutely simple, and transparent application process," with "a clear series of questions and clear points assigned."

He did say that those states still at work on improving their stance toward charters could have a crack at Race to the Top money next year because he'll award grants in two rounds: the first with an application deadline of Dec. 1 of this year, and the second likely next spring.

So for states like Maine, where charter schools so far have lost their battle to open, and Tennessee, where restrictive enrollment policies and a 50-school cap are in place, there are a few extra months to improve their standing with Secretary Duncan.

South Carolina Gov. Mark Sanford: Unleashed

Schools and the StimulusSouth Carolina Gov. Mark Sanford, a Republican who has been told by his state Supreme Court to submit an application for the stimulus program's state fiscal stabilization fund, has finally done so. The cover letter alone is worth a read. Here are some highlights:

On the stimulus in general: "A monumentally terrible idea..."

On submitting this application: "I''m signing these documents under duress..."

Perhaps his most compelling point (although still a great, quotable line) is on whether governors can really be held accountable for the stimulus program's "assurances": "In reviewing this application, for me it again highlighted the absurdity of ramrodding federal dollars into the states when I suspect more governors than myself have little ability or wherewithal to say with certainty that these and other conditions under the law can, or will be, carried out. In this case it makes something of a mockery of the law itself..."

Duncan to States: Test Scores and Teacher Evaluations Do Mix

Schools and the Stimulus
In the first in a planned series of four speeches about the Education Department's top reform priorities, Secretary Arne Duncan told education researchers today that innovation and new practices must be supported by evidence-based research. And, what's more, he took states to task for enacting laws barring student test scores from being used in teacher-evaluation decisions.

Debbie Viadero, who covers and blogs about research for EdWeek, called in to say that Duncan, in particular, singled out New York and California for having such state laws.

But the problem goes deeper than those two states. According to the latest update from the Data Quality Campaign, 17 states have no plans to create a unique teacher-identifier number and link that number to student achievement data. My colleague Stephen Sawchuk, who blogs over at the Teacher Beat, has explored this issue in depth.

In his speech to the Institute for Education Sciences, Duncan urged researchers to work on improving accountability models based on student achievement growth on test scores and developing fair models of compensating teachers and other school staff based on the achievement of their students. Ultimately, he added, the data should be used to ensure that students are on track to graduate and to succeed in college, according to an Education Department press release.

Duncan's planned series of speeches is built around the four "assurances" that are included in the federal economic stimulus law. The assurances say that states must make progress in turning around low-performing schools, building better longitudinal data systems, recruiting and retaining effective teachers, and implementing more rigorous college- and career-ready standards. States must show such progress, or a plan for progress, to get their share of the $48.6 billion State Fiscal Stabilization Fund. In addition, Duncan has said he will use a state's progress on the assurances to help him make decisions on who gets the billions of dollars in Race to the Top funding under his control.

This isn't the first time Duncan's put a little bully in his bully pulpit. He's put states on notice that charter school caps that limit the growth of these nontraditional public schools are not his idea of innovation or reform.

New Jersey Advocacy Groups Didn't Get Their Stimulus Way

Schools and the StimulusThe U.S. Department of Education announced Friday, in grand fashion, (meaning not just through a press release, but a site visit as well), that it was granting New Jersey's application for state fiscal stabilization funds. This comes despite the protests of advocacy groups, which have numerous problems with the application itself, and the education department's whole stimulus process. Apparently, their arguments didn't work.

June 4, 2009

South Carolina Cleared to Get Stimulus Aid

From contributing blogger Erik Robelen:

It’s official. South Carolina can now get a boatload of federal aid, some $700 million, largely designated for education under the economic-stimulus law. The state Supreme Court today ruled unanimously that Republican Gov. Mark Sanford must apply for the money.

The court found that the state’s General Assembly had authority in passing its state budget plan, which assumed use of money from the state fiscal-stabilization fund, to order the governor to formally seek the money. The governor had contended that he had the sole authority to request the federal aid. He said earlier this month that he would not appeal the ruling.

Sanford, who is thought to be mulling a run for president in 2012, has attracted national attention with his criticism of the stimulus package. He insisted that he would forgo the state fiscal-stabilization money unless it could be used to pay down state debt, a request the White House flatly rejected.

“While we recognize and respect Governor Sanford’s sincerely held beliefs concerning the [federal-stimulus law], those convictions do not alter the ministerial nature of the legal duty now before him,” the court said in its opinion.

“What I’m hearing today is a big sigh of relief from local school districts,” South Carolina's Superintendent of Education Jim Rex said in a statement. “This ruling—and the governor’s pledge not to appeal it—gives them assurances that federal help is coming.”

June 2, 2009

Transparency Watch: Stimulus App Secrecy Bugs Advocacy Groups

Schools and the StimulusSeveral education advocacy organizations are riled up—as they probably should be—about a gap in the "transparency" of stimulus funds that I pointed out weeks ago. The U.S. Department of Education is refusing to make available the applications states submit for the state stabilization fund part of the stimulus package. The department only makes them public once they're approved. This does not permit the public to see beforehand what a state promised to do with its stimulus money, so that it can be compared with what a state ended up agreeing to do after any negotiations with the feds. What's more, you can't even see the original application after everything's been finalized.

The New Jersey-based Education Law Center, the New York-based Campaign for Fiscal Equity and the Alliance for Quality Education, and the Georgia School Funding Association sent a letter to the department urging much better transparency regarding the stabilization fund. By not making the submitted applications public while they are still being considered, taxpayers, parents, and other members of the public can't review them or comment on them, the letter points out.

"The lack of basic procedures to ensure accountability, openness and public participation by both states and USDOE is deeply concerning," David G. Sciarra, the executive director of the Education Law Center, told me in an email.

In fact, the New Jersey folks sent another letter today asking U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan & Co. to reject the state's application because it doesn't fully meet state school funding formula increases, especially in light of a new decision last week in the long-running Abbott case. Of course, I can't point you to New Jersey's stabilization fund application because the education department isn't making it public. This is the first time, that I'm aware of, that someone has petitioned the department to reject an application.

At least when it comes to these applications, one could question whether the education department is living up to those "unprecedented" levels of transparency that President Obama has touted.

June 1, 2009

Stimulus Musings: Stabilization Fund, Reading First, and More

Schools and the Stimulus

All is not well in Stimulus Land:

California made a $2.3 billion accounting error, relating to K-12 education spending, on its state stabilization fund application, ProPublica keenly notes. (Although this may be one of those bank errors in your favor, because this error looks like it will help California with its maintenance of effort requirements.)

And speaking of the stabilization fund, Pennsylvania's situation illustrates why some states haven't turned in their applications yet. Seems like the U.S. Department of Education is starting to think about a contingency plan in case all states can't—or don't—make the July 1 deadline.

Local school districts, for better or for worse, are apparently applying the lessons of Reading First to the stimulus, writes Mike Petrilli.

May 27, 2009

Why States Aren't Rushing to the Stimulus Stabilization Fund

Schools and the StimulusThe U.S. Department of Education has been quietly, and now more openly, grousing about how slow states have been in applying for state stabilization funds under the economic stimulus package. Other folks are taking note and also questioning states' slow progress.

The deadline for applying for stabilization funds is July 1. So far, 19 states have been approved. At least 30 applications have been received. (UPDATE: That 30 figure includes the 19 applications that have already been approved.)

Well, late last month, the National Governors Association hosted states' stimulus czars from across the country, and I got to pose this question to a few of them: What's taking you guys so long? They laughed, as if the federal officials just don't get it. Here are some of the reasons it's taking so long, according to these czars:

* Legislative sessions have only recently started wrapping up, and most of those sessions involve budget work and serious discussions about what to do with stimulus money. In fact, the National Conference of State Legislatures session calendar shows that most states didn't start adjourning until late April or this month. Some go into June. Its hard to fill in budget numbers on the stabilization fund application if the budget isn't done.

* Governors, who must apply for the funds, have to promise things in these applications, such as making progress on data collection and removing charter caps. Apparently, governors are taking these promises seriously. Plus, governors are responsible for a lot more stimulus funding--education- and non-education-related--than just the stabilization funds.

* While school districts might want the money this very minute, states might not have the same sense of urgency. They probably wouldn't be applying the stabilization fund money until their fiscal 2010 budgets. Most states' budget years start July 1. That's still weeks away.

May 21, 2009

Stimulus Funds Can't Rescue California Now

The $4 billion in state fiscal stabilization fund money headed to California is barely going to make a dent in the state's budget mess after voters rejected a package of amendments earlier this week that would have capped state spending and freed up more money for schools.

The state is now facing a $21 billion budget deficit.

The result for K-12 education? Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger said schools may have to close seven days early this year, and tens of thousands of teachers will be laid off. And if you think it's easy to avoid such draconian cuts, then play this "budget challenge" game from a California nonprofit.

The second round of stabilization fund money, to be awarded this fall, will mean an additional $2 billion for schools. But even after all of this stabilization money is sent to California, the state's budget will hardly be stable. This is very bad news for California schools. Perhaps states that aren't in such deep budget trouble (think Wyoming and Texas) would be willing to forgo their stabilization fund monies. After all, states aren't exactly rushing to the till.

Today's Hot Ticket: Our Stimulus Webinar

Have a burning question about the stimulus? You're in luck — Michele and I will be doing a webinar today at 1 p.m. We'll do an overview on the different parts of the law, the guidance that's yet to come, and take your questions. You can watch it all right here on edweek.org. And it's free (although registration is required).

May 18, 2009

Ed. Dept. to States: Stimulus Money Available! Act Now!

Schools and the Stimulus
Secretary of Education Arne Duncan has billions in state-stabilization funding burning a hole in his pocket. And he's urging states to apply to pick up their checks before he runs out and spends the cash on extra-long suits and a basketball court for 400 Maryland Ave.

In all seriousness, it sounds like the Education Department is getting a little antsy. After all, the $32.6 billion in state-stabilization money available in the first round was intended to be sent out quickly to help save jobs, stimulate the economy, and restore school programs that might be on the chopping block.

But, according to a statement the department released this morning, just under $13 billion of that money has been allocated.

So far, it has gone to 13 states: California, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Maine, Minnesota, Mississippi, Nevada, New York, Oregon, South Dakota, Utah, and Wisconsin. Puerto Rico and another nine states have applied: Idaho, Indiana, Iowa, Massachusetts, North Carolina, Rhode Island, Tennessee, Virginia, and Washington.

Put another way, of the 52 applications that need to be submitted, 29 remain outstanding.

Note that the states in arguably the most dire fiscal straits—California, Florida, and Nevada—are among those that have received their funds. The stragglers include some states in comparatively good financial shape, such as Texas and Wyoming.

So is lack of need the main reason some states are taking their time? That's possible, but hard to imagine in most cases.

Any ideas?

May 12, 2009

New Construction: Allowable under the Stimulus, but not Encouraged

The U.S. Department of Education is changing its tune on whether state stabilization fund money can—and should—be used to pay for new school construction.

In April, the department issued its first round of guidance on the stabilization fund, declaring that new school construction was, indeed, an allowable use of funds (because of a big loophole in the stimulus legislation.) But yesterday, the department backed off. In a big way. Not only is the department discouraging states and school districts from using stabilization fund money for new construction (renovations and repairs are okay), officials strongly hinted that any state or district that does so will be penalized when it comes time for the department to award Race to the Top money.

So what happened between April 1 and now?

Apparently, Republicans have been squawking about the department's guidance for a while, most recently in a meeting last week on a House bill on the 21st Century High Performing Public Schools Act. During the congressional debate on the stimulus package, school construction was a huge bone of contention for most Republicans and some moderate Democrats, who didn't want a big chunk of stimulus money to go for new construction. So a $14 billion (in the House) and $16 billion (in the Senate) line item for new construction got zeroed out.

First Inspector General Stimulus Audits Coming to a State Near You

Schools and the StimulusThe U.S. Department of Education has identified four states that can expect stimulus-related audits by its Office of Inspector General: California, Illinois, New York, and Texas.

The department flagged these four states in its newest weekly report, under a "major planned action." There aren't any more details, except that these will be "initial" audits, and the OIG has been fairly mum on its auditing strategy.

Course, there isn't a whole lot to audit yet. Most money hasn't even made it down to the district level.

May 11, 2009

Arne Duncan Focuses on the Lowest Performing Schools

At a Brookings Institution event today, Education Secretary Arne Duncan put aside a lot of the rhetoric he's been pushing lately on the "Race to the Top" to focus on those languishing at the bottom.

He seems to want to direct our attention to a less-talked-about pot of money—the $3 billion in Title I funding that's set aside as school improvement grants for the lowest performing schools. Coupled with $1.5 billion in the fiscal 2010 federal budget, that means low-performing schools have available to them almost as much as is in the $5 billion Race to the Top fund, he told the packed crowed.

Duncan wants to target the lowest 1 percent of schools—those schools where student achievement hasn't improved in years—to be eligible for new staff and leadership. In fact, he seems intent on seeing 5,000 of the nation's worst schools closed and reopened within five years.

That may be an ambitious goal. After all, the new Coalition for Student Achievement (made up of leaders from the Broad and Gates foundations, along with other education advocates) declared that a measure of success would be whether 500 schools are closed by 2012.

April 28, 2009

Transparency Watch: ED's Lobbying Disclosures Now Online

Schools and the Stimulus
In a story for our latest issue of Education Week, I raised some red flags about transparency in spending stimulus money. I pointed out that the U.S. Department of Education had not posted online communications between lobbyists and agency officials as required by a March 20 directive from President Obama.

Now it has.

You'll see two files (only one link seems to be working right now) detailing these communications. (UPDATE: A tech-savvy reader of the blog discovered the correct link for the one that doesn't work, so click here.) Props to Education Department officials for the level of detail in the April 23 document, which details a call or meeting of some sort between five Education Department officials and four lobbyists (representing ACT, the Alliance for Excellent Education, the Knowledge Alliance, and the National Staff Development Council.) It's unclear whether there were non-lobbyists involved in this discussion, but regardless, they all discussed the state stabilization fund and the data metrics that the Education Department wants in exchange for the remaining one-third of the stabilization-fund money.

And, I'm not sure if we've heard this before, but the Education Department plans to require states to provide the data—or their plans to make the data available within the next two years—by September 30, 2009.

April 22, 2009

Duncan in the WSJ: Money as the Lever of Change

Education secretary Arne Duncan seems to be getting even tougher on states who may be playing financial shell games with their state stabilization fund money, declaring in an op-ed in today's Wall Street Journal: "If they divert money intended for education to noneducational purposes, we may deny future funding or even seek to recover misspent funds."

While Duncan has certainly said he would deny future funding (e.g. Race to the Top funding), I'm hard pressed to remember when he's actually threatened to get the money back. In fact, in an edweek.org interview with him last month, I asked him specifically whether he'd ask for the money back, and he dodged that question (focusing on getting it right on the front-end.)

Perhaps he's tired of reading newspaper pieces like this one from Texas.

In the op-ed, Duncan wonders whether the country will have the collective political will to make tough choices. It will be interesting to see how Duncan handles these tough choices, too. In the op-ed, he talks of making options available to parents, whether those choices are charters, or "some other model." So far, he certainly hasn't made a very strong case for keeping the much-discussed D.C. voucher program.

Or how will Duncan handle tough choices about how involved teachers' unions (who Duncan says are more committed that ever before to change) should be in spending stimulus money, as my colleague on the Teacher Beat Stephen Sawchuk discusses.

Duncan sums his thoughts up with this: "We must close the achievement gap by pursuing what works best for kids, regardless of ideology."

April 21, 2009

California is the First on the First Round

So California is the big winner in the 50-state-sweepstakes of who is first to get the initial round of state fiscal stabilization money.

The Golden State's Prize: Nearly $4 billion in stimulus money for schools.

Actually, there isn't much of a contest here. States have already gotten a portion of the Title I and special education money they're slated to receive under the economic stimulus package. And although the process of applying for state stabilization money was a little trickier, the Department of Education promised a quick turnaround on the first batch of money.

California was quickly followed by Illinois, which got $1.4 billion, and South Dakota, which got $85.4 million.

The funding is meant to help stave off layoffs and programmatic cuts, as well as make progress on key reforms, including improving teacher quality and distribution, developing top-notch data systems, boosting standards, and revamping assessments. States will have to provide more detail to tap their second round of stabilization funding, due out later this year.

Secretary of Education Arne Duncan has said he'll be looking to see how far states get on those reforms before deciding who is eligible for grants under the $4.35 billion Race to the Top fund, which is supposed to go to the best of the best.

But it's hard to say just how much money California will have left to reshape its K-12 system. Four billion dollars sounds like a lot ... but, actually, district officials determined that it isn't even enough to save thousands of teachers' jobs in Los Angeles, although it did spare many.

Do you think it's realistic to expect that states in super-dire economic circumstances (California, Florida, Nevada) are going to have the resources to change much of anything?

April 15, 2009

UPDATE Transparency Watch: South Dakota Gets a Gold Star (and Calif. too!)

Schools and the Stimulus
The U.S. Department of Education has revealed in their weekly reports updated today that four states—as of April 10—have submitted their applications for the state fiscal stabilization fund. These applications are important because they show a state's commitments to use the money as intended (to prop up local education budgets) and to make progress on key education reforms.

They are: California, Illinois, Maine, and South Dakota.

In this blog's continuing efforts to monitor the "unprecedented levels of transparency" surrounding the stimulus package, I've tried to get copies of these applications.

Of the four states, only one has put their application online (that I've been able to find.) South Dakota. So kudos to the state and Republican Gov. Mike Rounds (since governors are the ones officially submitting these applications.) If you know of any other applications available online, please leave a comment or email me. UPDATE: An eagle-eye reader pointed me to California's application, which you can find on the state's department of education Web site here. So make that two states.

It should be noted that Illinois' lack of transparency, so far, comes even though the state put out a press release, in conjunction with the U.S. Department of Education, touting education secretary Arne Duncan's visit yesterday to the state and their planned use of stabilization fund dollars. After two calls to the governor's office over the past two days, a call to the state's commerce department (which is handling the stimulus package apparently) and an email to the commerce department's press officer, I still haven't gotten anybody to email me their application.

The federal education department, for their part, says that although they've committed to making approved applications public, they were undecided (as of yesterday) as to whether submitted applications would be public. It seems as though it would be important to see what a state originally promised to do in relation to stabilization fund money, and what ended up being in their "approved" application. Though in many instances the two could be the same thing, that may not always be the case.

April 9, 2009

Transparency Watch: Dead Ends Along the Money Trail

Schools and the Stimulus

There are grand promises from the Obama administration that the $787 billion in stimulus funding will be spent with "unprecedented levels of transparency." And in a recent edweek.org interview with Education Secretary Arne Duncan, I asked him whether a parent would be able to follow the money all the way from the federal government down to the school level. He said:

There's never been such transparency. Recovery.gov is the Web site.We'll be tracking state-by-state and district-by-district how money is being spent.

Well, now that some $44 billion is starting to flow out of the ed department's doors, it's time to start putting this "unprecedented" transparency to the test.

During Duncan's visit to the Bruce Randolph School in Denver yesterday, the principal announced the school had already received about $200,000 in stimulus money, and must decide how to spend it by Friday.

So I decided to follow the money—backward. Since everything seems to hinge on these recovery Web sites, I started at Colorado's official recovery Web site. Besides a general chart listing education as one category for stimulus funds, I could find no mention of any education funding coming into the state under the Web site's categories of "news", "accountability board", "jobs and projects", "helping people", "resources", and "contact." For good measure, I made sure the Colorado Department of Education didn't have any specific information (they didn't).

Hitting a roadblock, I turned to the U.S. Department of Education's recovery web portal to see if I could find traces of money flowing to Colorado. Buried under "agency reports" are weekly reports in Excel spreadsheet format that detail money flowing out the door. (Are Excel spreadsheets really the best way to be transparent to the general public, many of whom may not have experience with this format?) The latest information from April 7 indicates that the department has spent $11 billion so far—but the information is in broad categories such as special education, Title I, or student financial assistance, with no state-by-state information.

The federal government's main stimulus Web portal, recovery.gov, has an "accountability and transparency" section containing links to the members of the new federal accountability board, and to reports by inspectors general. Nothing on the flow of money. A separate section on "agency progress and resources" contains the same weekly reports on agency websites, and links back to the agency's recovery Web sites. Still, no trace of money flowing to Colorado.

So far, all levels of government are failing the transparency test because, besides a mention in a news story, there's no evidence that money has made its way to Colorado school districts. So far, this unprecedented transparency involves some nice-looking Web sites with spreadsheets showing large chunks of money going out the door. That's not exactly living up to Duncan and Obama's promises. To be sure, it's early. Money has only recently started flowing. But an early test of the transparency claim shows there's a long way to go.

April 1, 2009

Conditions on Stimulus: Teacher Evaluation, Charter Caps, and More

The new stimulus guidance is up, and the most significant directives from the education department center on the data that must be collected under the conditions of accepting money from the state stabilization fund. These are surely going to raise some eyebrows.

Highlights:

*States must collect data on the number and percentage of teachers and principals rated at each performance level in each district's teacher-evaluation system, and on the number and percentage of teacher and principal evaluation systems that require evidence of student-achievement outcomes. (A signal that the department is serious about boosting teacher effectiveness.)

*States must report the number and percentage of students by school who graduate high school and go on to complete at least one year’s worth of college credit (as applicable to a degree) within two years. (Do all states have this capability?)

*States must report whether they allow charter schools and whether there is a cap restricting the number of such schools, the number of charter schools currently operating in the state, and the number of charter schools closed within the last three years for academic reasons. (President Obama just called for states to lift caps on charter school capacity and expansion.)

UPDATE: Over at Teacher Beat, my colleague Steve Sawchuk offers insight into why the provisions on teacher-evaluation reporting are a big deal.


March 31, 2009

The Stimulus Fraud Detectives

The Government Accountability Office wants everyone to know they're on high stimulus fraud alert.

In a press release issued earlier this week, the GAO is asking everyone from private citizens to government workers to be on the lookout for fraud, and to report it via the FraudNet system. FraudNet is an email, phone, and fax system that takes tips confidentially—and then GAO officials, who represent the investigative arm of Congress, will pursue the leads.

Given that $100 billion of the $787 billion from the stimulus package is going to education, there's bound to be fraud even in the K-12 arena. Earl Devaney, who leads the new Recovery Act Transparency and Accountability Board (unfortunately called the RAT Board for short), has pretty much guaranteed some fraud. Apparently, the industry-standard for fraud is 7 percent. In the stimulus package, that means there's the potential for $7 billion in waste and fraud in education spending alone.

March 19, 2009

'Dear Arne' Letters Start Flowing

When you've got control over $100 billion, and 50 states to deal with, you're bound to get lots of questions and complaints about the money. Letters from governors and other policymakers about the stimulus package have already started flowing into Education Secretary Arne Duncan's mailbox.

What follows is the Politics K-12 oversimplified translation for a sampling of these official letters:

* Dear Arne: We don't have time to wait for official forms and guidance! Nobody's gambling in our casinos and we are about out of money! Sincerely, Nevada Gov. Jim Gibbons, in a March 18 letter requesting a waiver from one of the stimulus law's requirements.

* Dear Arne: Pick me! Pick me! We've got merit pay in Minnesota already, so make it easy on yourself and just give us your $4.35 billion in incentive funds. Sincerely, Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty, in a March 13 letter urging the secretary to look at his state's Q Comp model for teacher compensation.

* Dear Arne: Gov. Don Carcieri isn't playing fair with stimulus money! Make him share. Sincerely, Providence, R.I. mayor David N. Cicilline, in a March 11 letter complaining that the governor's funding formula unjustly takes away money from his city's schools.

And for good measure, let's include South Carolina Gov. Mark Sanford's letter to President Obama, asking a second time for flexibility in using stimulus money, this time to pay off school construction debt:

*Dear Barack: Do you remember what happened last time South Carolina didn't get its way? Sincerely, Mark, in a March 17 letter.

March 17, 2009

South Carolina's Governor vs. Obama, Round 2

Gov. Mark Sanford of South Carolina, a Republican, continues to do battle with the White House over his state's right to use the stimulus funds. (Didn't his state secede from the union over state's rights in 1860?)

Undeterred by an initial rejection from the Obama administration to use stimulus money to pay down South Carolina's state debt, he's trying again—this time with an argument that may be a bit more compelling.

Today, he's asking, more specifically, for the right to use stimulus money to pay down the state's school construction debt.

"This would immediately free up over $162 million in debt service in the first two years and save roughly $125 million in interest payments over the next 13 years, which could then be directed towards other education purposes," Sanford said in his letter to Obama. No word yet on a response.

And, for good measure, he's asking the President to call off the Democratic National Committee attack ad, which started running this week in Columbia, S.C. The ad is pasted below:

Short-Term Money, Long-Term Gains?

Schools and the Stimulus

From guest blogger Dakarai Aarons:

Urban superintendents and school board members who were in Washington this week for meetings of the Council of the Great City Schools got lots of face time with Secretary of Education Arne Duncan, who called the group his "home team." The former Chicago superintendent said he'd fight for whatever districts need to turn the stimulus money into lasting reform.

“You guys are the heart of my work,” he said during a lunchtime talk to the group on Sunday. Making drastic changes to chronically underperforming schools, building strong data systems, and rethinking teacher compensation are all core elements of driving change, he said.

The next day, federal officials gave a presentation on the stimulus money in which one slide called for districts to “use short-term funding to invest in reform that drives long-term results for students, schools and school systems.”

But how does a district hire people to help drive the reforms, the superintendents asked, while knowing money may not be available for that staff after stimulus funds dry up? They also peppered officials with concerns about how to account for money used in the state stabilization fund and how to track spending on interventions and initiatives that use multiple sources of funding. Stimulus funds must be tracked separately, and quarterly reports will ask for not only what was spent, but what the results were, including the number of jobs created or saved.

Duncan said his optimism is driven in part by the change he saw in Chicago after the district was awarded a grant from the federal Teacher Incentive Fund. The grant, which helped initiate performance pay for teachers, changed the conversation in the Windy City forever, he said.

The secretary said he thinks teachers in hard-to-staff areas, like math and science, should probably be paid more and that districts will have to do more to convince the country’s best young people to not only join the teaching profession, but stay for the long haul.

Duncan told school leaders he would be looking for creativity when the department turns later in the year toward dispensing discretionary money. “If you use it only to close staffing gaps, that might disqualify you,” he said.

And the secretary promised to use his bully pulpit to “embarrass” states and school districts if they aren’t working together to use the money wisely. “(The public) is going to watch every dollar,” he said.

Department officials recommend school leaders check www.ed.gov frequently over the next few weeks, as they prepare to release more answers to frequently asked questions. In the meantime, those who have questions about using stimulus dollars are encouraged to send an e-mail to oese@ed.gov.

March 16, 2009

Duncan: Districts That Use Stim Money Well Could Get More Stim Money

Schools and the Stimulus
Last week it was the Council of Chief State School Officers.

This week, Secretary of Education Arne Duncan and some members of Team Stimulus met with the Council of the Great City Schools, headed up by Michael Casserly (one of Arne's Fave Five lobbyists) to talk about the stimulus money and the Obama education plan.

The meeting, which featured Valerie Jarrett, a top Obama education adviser whose mother is now working with Duncan on pre-K issues, was closed to the press.

But, in remarks afterward, Duncan said that states and districts had better put their formula funding and state stabilization money to good use if they want to be competitive for the Race to the Top grants ($4.35 billion) and What Works and Innovation grants ($650 million), as well as the $200 million in Teacher Incentive Fund money.

Though relatively small, those pots of money have attracted a lot of attention.

"We're going to reward states and districts that are willing to challenge the status quo and get dramatically better," Duncan said. "If [the money] is simply being used to perpetuate the status quo, that would basically eliminate those states and those districts from further competition."

Duncan also hit two priorities his boss talked about last week: extending learning time and "incenting" excellent teachers to work in some of the most challenging schools.

Afterwards, I chatted with Candy Olson, a school board member from Tampa. She said folks were particularly interested in how to the Department wants states to spend one-time cash infusions for Title I and special education provided under the stimulus and how superintendents should work with governors and other state officials in developing plans for the stimulus cash.

March 10, 2009

Chiefs Talk Stimulus and Standards With Duncan & Co.

Schools and the Stimulus
Michele is out covering the Council on Chief State School Officers meeting today, which featured a visit from President Barack Obama, Secretary of Education Arne Duncan, and some top Education Department officials.

There's lots of buzz about Obama's speech this morning, the Department's guidance on the economic stimulus package, and the stimulus generally.

At least one state chief, Jim Rex, in South Carolina, is worried about the backlash of some GOP govs toward the stimulus funds. Rex said that if South Carolina Gov. Mark Sanford doesn't accept the stimulus money, it could mean that the state would be ineligible for Duncan's "Race to the Top" funds, for which both the governor and state chief must apply.

"The governor is likely not going to be very cooperative," Mr. Rex told chiefs and Duncan. Later Rex said in an interview with Michele that he would be talking to the governor in the next couple of days to convince him South Carolina needs access to the race to the top funds.

"I'm cautiously optimistic," Rex said.

State chiefs are also getting antsy about the accountability provisions on the stimulus funding, which specify that states must keep careful, detailed records on spending.

Iowa chief Judy Jeffrey talked about the "fear factor."

"We always want to make sure we have clarity at the front end so at the back end when we are audited we have really prepared ourselves," she said.

Education Department advisers said they will be working to pull lessons learned from the Department's current Inspector General, and from the Department of Housing and Urban Development's experiences with disaster relief.

And Arkansas chief Ken James said the General Accountability Office has notified 16 states that they're going to be going in and auditing them ASAP. (No word on which ones, though).

There was also considerable discussion of more uniform, rigorous standards--a major theme of President Obama's speech today, his first major policy speech on education.

"The idea of 50 different benchmarks is not the way for us to move forward," said Jon Schnur, who is serving as a consultant to the Obama administration. He called common standards a "national priority." But whether it's one set of standards, or a consortia of two or three, either way is beneficial, he said.

And Duncan made it sound like the Department is going to use the "Race to the Top" funding to prod states to develop more uniform standards.

"I don't want 12 great proposals from 12 great states," Duncan said. "This doesn't change the national conversation."

It also sounds like Duncan is worried about how the $10 billion in Title I money provided under the stimulus will be spent. "I worry about putting good money after bad," he said.

Outgoing New York state commissioner Rick Mills said that it might be easier for 50 states to agree on a common set of standards now that the President and the Secretary of Education have put momentum behind the idea.

"If we get 25, or 20, or 15 states, people are going to see that the train is moving and say, 'Let's get on,' " he said.

Schnur also filled the group in on some details of the 150-district teacher pay plan outlined in Obama's speech. Schnur said it will be targeted to high-needs school systems. He also said there will be "real commitment to early reading" in Obama's fiscal year 2010 budget. (Could that be something to replace Reading First?)

And Schnur hinted that there could be changes coming to teacher quality provisions that could to offer more "transparency" to language in the stimulus that calls for highly effective teachers to be better distributed.

March 7, 2009

UPDATED: Stimulus Documents: Strings Attached to Stabilization Funds

Though the Department of Education hasn't released stimulus guidance officially to the media, ed officials apparently sent some important stimulus information to other folks late yesterday afternoon that details how a big chunk of the $100 billion in education stimulus money will flow. These documents made their way to Politics K-12. We'll keep you posted when we hear something more officially.

UPDATE: It appears the guidance is official, as it's now up on the education department's web site. Read the press release from Saturday here.

But in the meantime, a quick scan of this apparent guidance reveals some important policy choices—and logistical decisions—the Ed Department has made. First, a state won't get all of its stabilization funds at once. Instead, 67 percent will go out within two weeks of a state submitting its application. The rest won't go out until the department has approved the state's plan to comply with the law's assurances that states take steps to increase teacher quality, build better data systems, improve standards and assessments, and turn around failing schools.

Also, it looks like 50 percent of Title I funds and special education funds will be available by the end of March.

Interestingly, the guidance goes out of its way to emphasize that this is short-term money, and that districts and states should use it for shorter-term investments, so there isn't a "funding cliff". But on the flip side, the guidance makes clear that the stimulus funds' goals are to help create or maintain jobs. (Those two priorities seem in conflict, since hiring or keeping a teacher is more of a long-term investment.)

The overview document is here. Stabilization fund guidelines are here. Title I guidelines are here. And special education guidelines are here.

March 3, 2009

Stimulus Questions Answered, Round 5: What's in it for Charters and Private Schools?

Schools and the Stimulus
Yup, we're still answering your stimulus questions. You can read Round 1, Round 2, and Round 3, and Round 4.
Has there been any clarification as to whether or not federal money will be available for independent schools?

There's no money in the bill specifically for private or independent schools. But some private schools that serve students in special education do receive funding under the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act, which received about $12 billion in the stimulus. And, as we wrote here, any funds left over in the stabilization fund after states "backfill" their education budgets can go to any program authorized under the Elementary and Secondary Schools Act (and a number of other federal education laws). That would include Title V of ESEA, which is intended to support innovative programs. Private schools can indirectly benefit. And, we don't know yet what the grant criteria will be for the $625 million in innovations grants. That money is supposed to go to non-profits (which some private schools are) that partner with school districts or with a consortia of schools.

I should point out though, that there is a specific prohibition in the bill that says none of the money can go to provide financial assistance to students to attend private elementary or secondary schools. Which I'm taking to mean "no vouchers."

Is there anything in the stimulus package to help charter schools?

Much of the money flows through existing formulas, such as Title I or IDEA, so any public charter school that benefits now from the formula will get a piece of the stimulus. The stabilization fund is used first to backfill cuts through the state's school funding formula, so as long as the charter school gets money through the state’s funding formula, it would get money through the stabilization as well. Given the nature of the Education Department's innovation fund, it’s likely charter schools would be good candidates for those grants as well. Charter schools may also be eligible for school bonding monies, including an expanded New Markets Tax Credit, which charter schools have already tapped. There's also a $100 million pot of money through the USDA for school food equipment, and we're still trying to figure out if charters can access that. We'll update you on that later. Read more about the stimulus and charter schools here.

Regarding special education, do you know of any accommodations for Maintenance of Effort that would allow districts to use the money to pay for programs that already exist?

Thanks to EdWeek's Christina Samuels, who blogs over at On Special Education, for answering this one. The maintenance of effort provisions that currently exist within the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act will apply to stimulus funds. That means that you can't take all of your stimulus money and use that to pay for your current special education programs. There is SOME flexibility in the 2004 reauthorization of the IDEA to "supplement, not supplant" provisions, though. If the federal government allocates more money to a district from one year to the next, the district is allowed to take the difference between the two allocations, halve it, and use that figure to reduce their own funding requirements. So, if a district received $1 million in federal funds for a fiscal year, and $1.5 million the next fiscal year, the district is allowed to reduce its local funding requirements by $250,000. But it's important to note there are other ways to use stimulus money, without expanding programs and without having to maintain that effort the next year, when the money likely disappears. For example, a one-time expenditure on educational technology wouldn't be a program expansion, and wouldn't be subject to maintenance of effort.

Union Leaders on NCLB and the Stim

Schools and the Stimulus
Right after the stimulus bill, which contained a whopping $115 billion in new education money, passed the House, I asked Rep. George Miller, D-Calif., the chairman of the House Education and Labor Committee, how the super-sized spending plan would impact reauthorization of the No Child Left Behind Act. You can check out his answer, and some pretty interesting reader comments, here.

Well, last week, I asked the same question of two other folks who are going to play a very important role in the reauthorization debate: Randi Weingarten, the new president of the American Federation of Teachers and Dennis Van Roekel, the new president of the National Education Association.

Neither of them were in their positions back in August 2007 when Miller introduced his ill-fated discussion draft.

Both started off by saying they were grateful to Congress and the administration for stemming what could have been a massive tidal wave of teacher layoffs.

Weingarten, who recently penned a Washington Post editorial calling for national standards, said she sees the stimulus funding, first and foremost, as a "life-line" to schools that have been battered by the economic storm.

"If you are in the trenches like our members are in the trenches, you see what these kinds of cuts could have meant," she said.

It doesn't sound like she would necessarily equate the money in the stimulus with the No Child Left Behind Act.

"Funding issues between [the stimulus] and NCLB [is] really an apples and oranges comparison," she said "This is replacing money that was lost, it's not a net increase" for most school districts. (Check out Michele's take on winners-and-losers in the funding formula here).

Van Roekel had a similar message.

"The 60 billion [in the state stabilization fund] just filled a hole," he said. "It's not new money." He said the increases for Title I and special education "definitely have an impact" but that "we also have to do things inside that system to change" the kinds of supports kids get, including expanding pre-kindergarten programs, which President Barack Obama called for in his budget. And he said, Congress should still rework the accountability system at the center of the law, putting less emphasis on high stakes tests.

"We need to spend the money on research to find a good solid system that measures student learning," he said.

Still, Weingarten said, the money could have a major impact on future funding debates.

"If the money is well spent and if we're able to maintain and improve educational outcomes for kids" which she defines as getting students prepared for the college and the workforce, "We will make a powerful case that money matters. ... If the money is wisely spent then there's a real shot at making the case" for some of the funding to become part of a new baseline.

Weingarten did agree that the NCLB landscape has shifted, but it sounded to me like, in her view, that had as much to do with the change in administration as it does with the stimulus.

"The debate about reauthorizing the ESEA will be different now than it was under the Bush administration," Weingarten said. "Rep. Miller was in an untenable position. He was trying to come up with a compromise that would" pass muster with the Bush administration, rather than trying to find "the best education policy solutions."

When I spoke to Miller, he told me he thought that the nation was more open to incentive pay, one of the issues that drew the loudest criticism back when the discussion draft was released.

Van Roekel reiterated NEA's general position on alternative pay, which is basically that it's okay for teachers to get more money than their colleagues for talking on certain extra tasks, like earning National Board Certification.

Weingarten reminded me that she had been open to "differential pay" for teachers as head of New York's United Federation of Teachers and helped craft a plan that drew praise from Miller.

She didn't say that she was ready to embrace merit pay tied to test scores (if she had, that would have been game-changing breaking news and you wouldn't be reading about it in the very bottom of a blog item).

Instead she said, "I always am very leery of anyone who thinks that any of these things is a silver bullet," She said that she's a supporter of reducing class size but doesn't think that alone will completely change the direction for troubled school systems. "I would put performance pay in that same category it’s not a panacea just like class size is not a panacea."

February 27, 2009

Stimulus Questions Answered, Round 4: More on What the Money Can be Used For

Schools and the Stimulus
We're still fielding your stimulus questions. Check out Round 1, Round 2, and Round 3.

1. There's money for "school improvement" that the National Education Association is breaking down to show how much will go to each state. What can that money be used for?

The school improvement money is part of a program originally authorized under the No Child Left Behind Act that’s meant to help states revamp schools that are struggling to meet the goals of the law. Like Title I and IDEA, it’s a formula-program, so everyone gets a piece. In doling out the money, states are supposed to give priority to districts that have the greatest need and a commitment to closing the achievement gap. The program received $3 billion in the stimulus package, and it’s slated to get over $500 million under the fiscal year 2009 spending bill being considered in Congress. That’s a whole lot of cash, considering that the program wasn’t funded at all until fiscal year 2007. In fiscal year 2008, it got just $491 million total.

2. Where can non-profit organizations get more information with regard to the following funds referenced online by Rep. Miller: "At the urging of Rep. George Miller, D-Calif., chairman of the House Education and Labor Committee, the [stimulus package] sets aside $650 million for school districts or districts in partnership with nonprofit groups. This could include charter schools or other programs with a track record of boosting achievement."

This goes back to that $650 million fund Michele wrote about here. It’s important to note that the non-profits that receive these funds must partner one or more districts and schools. It seems that Duncan and his team want to focus on efforts that can be researched and "scaled up." As to which non-profits exactly are eligible…that’s a question that the education secretary may answer when he releases guidance on how to apply for the fund.

3. Many school districts have cut transportation in an effort to keep the cuts away from the classroom. Can stimulus money be used to restore (backfill) transportation cuts?

That's a great question, and one that an advocate for local districts who I spoke to extensively about the stimulus outlined as an area of concern. It's my understanding that transportation is not an allowable use of the state stabilization funds because it isn't authorized under any of the federal education laws that are supposed to govern state stabilization dollars, which I wrote about here.

4. Has the department put out any more detailed information on how much money each state is getting, or how exactly the process will work?

The department now has its own "recovery" web page and just today we checked and found information detailing how much money each state will get from the stabilization fund. Title I and IDEA estimates, which have been up for awhile here. We’re still awaiting word on when official guidance will be available for states and school districts.

February 25, 2009

Stimulus Money: 30-45 Days Away

Schools and the Stimulus

Education Secretary Arne Duncan and Team Stimulus told state chiefs today that they can expect the first set of stimulus money to become available within 30 to 45 days, and that formal guidance from the department—the nitty gritty details on how all of this is going to work—will be out next week.

That was the gist of today's Q-and-A meeting at the White House with Duncan (who was joined at the end by Vice President Joe Biden) and state chiefs. Thirty-six of them made the trip in, while three states sent designees. Education chiefs from the U.S. territories, including Northern Mariana Islands, also had a strong showing.

Disclaimer: Select members of the press (including yours truly) were allowed into the meeting only to hear closing remarks. But we were allowed to ask questions afterward of the meeting's attendees.

Based on who was sitting nearest to Duncan at the meeting and who he singled out as his helpers, it's becoming clearer who's actually making the important decisions on how the stimulus money will be administered. In addition to Duncan, the strategic apex of Team Stimulus seems to be: adviser Jon Schnur, Chief Operating Officer Tony Miller, special assistant Ann Whalen, senior counselor Margot Rogers, and assistant secretary on policy Carmel Martin. UPDATE: I forgot to include senior adviser Mike Smith in the list.

It's likely that the first set of money available will be formula dollars—such as part of the $13 billion that will flow through Title I. Since formulas for disbursing the money already exist, that's an easy place to start.

The message Duncan and Biden conveyed is that a lot is expected from chiefs, and their schools, in exchange for this money.

"We're going to have a much higher bar than other folks [receiving stimulus money]," Duncan told the chiefs. "We need to create jobs, and we need to get dramatically better."

Biden pledged the administration's continued support—so long as all of this money translates into results.

"This is going to be an education administration," Biden said. "But we want to begin to change the script, demand more of everyone. We expect a hell of a lot more."

But how will the administration demand—not just ask for—more from schools? Especially when much of the $115 billion or so in K-12 education aid is flowing to states and districts with little or no strings?

I posed that question to Duncan, who was so on-message about needing to get "dramatically better" that he didn't explain how he would actually demand that.

The closest he got was in saying this: "Line-by-line we’re going to do everything we can to ask states to demonstrate to us what is going to change for students so we can dramatically close the achievement gap, so we can increase our high school graduation rates and ultimately our college graduation rates."

Note that he said "ask states," and not "demand."


February 24, 2009

Stimulus Questions Answered, Round 3: What Can I Do With My Money?

Schools and the Stimulus

Here's the third installment of answers to your stimulus questions. Check out Round 1 and Round 2.

How will the stimulus package address funds for Title IV (Safe and Drug-free Schools?)
Unlike Title I grants for disadvantaged students and money for special education, there isn’t a specific line item in the bill that covers Safe and Drug Free schools. But the short answers is that there might be some money in the bill for the program if districts have it left over and want to use it that way.

The longer answer: As you’ve probably heard, the bill includes $54 billion for a state stabilization fund that must first be used to “backfill” any cuts the state has already made in education. But, once those cuts are taken care of, the rest of the money in the fund flows to districts through the Title I formula. Districts are allowed to use it for any activity authorized under four different federal education laws, including the Elementary and Secondary Education Act, the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act, the Adult and Family Literacy Act, the Carl D. Perkins Career and Technical Education Act. They can also use it for modernization, renovation, or repair of public school facilities.

ESEA governs the safe and drug free schools program, which means those excess state stabilization dollars can go to that program. But districts would have to deem it a higher priority than any of the other possible uses. It doesn’t get its own dedicated pot of money.

Will the stimulus package offer any additional funding specifically for the Even Start Family Literacy Program (Title I, Part B)? Additionally, will the package include any additional funding for adult literacy and/or parenting education?

This goes along with the previous question. As with Safe and Drug Free Schools, there isn’t a separate pot of money in the stimulus for Even Start, but, since it’s authorized under ESEA, districts can use a portion of their leftover money from the state stabilization fund for Even Start activities. That money can also be used for adult literacy programs authorized under the Adult and Family Literacy Act, as outlined above.

Are there funds to support school modernization and construction in the stimulus bill?

Great question, since this was a bone of contention as the bill was being crafted. And it goes back, yet again, to those state stabilization dollars that aren’t being used to backfill state cuts. Within that $54 billion fund, the $39.5 billion slated for districts can be used for a host of education-related programs outlined above, including school modernization and repair. And within the state stabilization fund, there is also $8.8 billion that goes to governors. They can use it for pressing needs, such as public safety, but can also direct it to education, including school modernization.

Why do I keep saying “modernization” instead of construction? It’s important to note that new school construction is not supposed to be a paid for using stimulus dollars, but the money can be used for modernization, renovation, and repair.

In AZ full day kindergarten was cut. Will the stimulus help offer that again?

The state stabilization money is supposed to be used first to backfill any cuts made to education. If Arizona gets enough money from the federal government to make up for all the cuts it has already made, the program may be restored.

I’m not sure if the stimulus money will make Arizona whole. It may not, according to this story. By my calculations, using estimates posted here, it looks like the state is getting about $1.43 billion total in education money for fiscal year 2009. That includes nearly a billion from the state stabilization fund, which is meant to backfill cuts. And I read in this story that The Grand Canyon State faces a total deficit of $1.6 billion this year.

February 23, 2009

DFER's Guidance on the Guidance

The U.S. Department of Education is supposed to release guidance as soon as this week on how states and districts can tap and use the $100 billion in education funding in the stimulus.

But while you're waiting for the official word, check out this memo sent to Secretary Arne Duncan by Democrats for Education Reform, a political action committee, which also released a Wish List of Obama Appointees for Top Education Jobs.

As you might expect, the recommendations are pretty wonky, but they give a good indication of how the school reform crowd might want the feds to use the stimulus dollars to leverage change.

For instance, the group suggests that the Department be pretty strict in deciding which states get those Race to the Top grants. States that get those funds should be "going above and beyond" on making progress on the "assurances" spelled out in the law, they say.

And they say that states that get school improvement money available under the stimulus should show that they are providing "meaningful" transfer options as required under No Child Left Behind.

They also have some strong recommendations requiring that states give charter schools equal access to any funds used for modernization, repair, and renovation, and for using the school improvement funds provided under the bill to get states to jettison, or at least significantly overhaul, any caps on the number of charter schools.

Stimulus Questions Answered, Round 2: On Teachers

Schools and the Stimulus

Here's our second installment of answers to your stimulus questions. Read Round 1 here.

1. How will teacher salary be linked to student academic performance under this package? How will this impact "highly qualified" teacher criteria?

There's no explicit language in the stimulus package linking salary to student performance. However, the stimulus does provide an additional $200 million for the Teacher Incentive Fund under the U.S. Department of Education. This now-larger pot of money will be used, as it was before, to fund pay-for-performance programs in school districts. Read more about the program here. As to the second part of your question, one of the "assurances" that governors have to make to receive their chunk of the state stabilization money is to take steps to address equitable distribution of “highly qualified,” experienced, and in-field teachers across all schools, including in very poor schools. This has been a provision under the No Child Left Behind Act that hasn't been very well enforced, so it will be interesting to see what education secretary Arne Duncan does about this. I did ask Duncan specifically about the equitable teacher distribution provision during C-SPAN's Newsmakers show, and he seemed more inclined toward incentives than enforcement. Finally, the equitable-distribution requirement also asks states to “improve teacher effectiveness.” Although there are no details on how states should address teacher effectiveness; this is potentially a new direction for the federal government, which has not referenced the issue before. (Thanks to my colleague Stephen Sawchuk, who blogs over at Teacher Beat.)

2. My school district, like many, is interested in getting training in some continuous improvement initiatives to help advance student performance and hold down costs. The problem, of course, is getting the money for the training. The question is, will the new stimulus package provide monies for grants for schools to get innovative training to better their operations? If so, who would we contact, what would that type of grant be called, what is the range of the grant award, and when will it be available?

Your question illustrates that there will be a lot of money out there that can be used for a lot of different things. Ultimately, once the money trickles down to the district level, school districts will have a lot of discretion to decide how to spend the money. Some may choose to hire or re-hire teachers, some may purchase technology, or others may do the kind of professional development you're talking about. More specifically, your district may be able to tap the new Innovation Fund, which I explained more in depth here, in Questions 2 and 3.

3. Title II is referenced in the "School Improvement Programs" section. I would appreciate any explanation.

This part of the stimulus bill sets aside $650 million for Title II D, which is the EdTech program that helps districts train teachers on technology. The money will be distributed through the existing formula, which uses Title I to distribute grants to states, which then must distribute at least 95 percent of it to local districts. Please note that this is not the $3 billion teacher quality formula state grant program.

4. How much will go to keeping jobs (since it is stimulus) and how much will go toward No Child Left Behind?

I'm guessing you're talking about education-related jobs, such as teachers. It's really difficult to separate the two since teachers, administrators and instructional staff all are working to meet the goals and requirements under NCLB. Even though there are set formulas that determine how much of the money will go to states, and how the money will be distributed to districts, the districts will ultimately have a lot of discretion in determining how they spend their money. A lot of districts facing tough budget cuts will probably decide to re-hire teachers, but I've also heard from several districts that since this is one-time money, they might decide to use it on a one-time expense (such as buying computers.) After all, hiring or re-hiring a teacher is a long-term investment.

February 20, 2009

Stimulus Questions Answered, Round 1: How Much Money Will I Get?

Schools and the Stimulus

Yesterday, we invited your questions on the stimulus and have gotten dozens. So thank you! And keep them coming...we're going to try to get to all of them within the next several days or so. Here's our first round of answers:

1. How much will my state/district/school be getting from the stimulus?
There are two places to look for this--but please keep in mind these are just estimates. The House Education and Labor Committee has posted estimates by state and district here. These estimates are particularly useful because they break down allocations by program—such as Title I, IDEA, education technology, etc. The education department also has estimates up for Title I and IDEA, which vary slightly from the Congressional estimates. Find those here.

2. What are the specifics on the innovation fund? (It's being lumped in with the incentive funds in a lot of stimulus coverage).
The innovation fund is part of the $5 billion from the state stabilization fund that will go to the education department and Secretary Arne Duncan, who will award incentive and innovation grants. The innovation fund is worth $650 million. The recipients of the innovation funds will be local school districts, or a partnership between a nonprofit and one or more school districts or a nonprofit and a consortium of schools. These awards will be given out based on districts or other eligible entities that have made gains in closing the achievement gap, according to the law. School districts must also have met annual state performance measures for at least two years in a row, demonstrate academic achievement improvement for all groups of students, and make progress in a host of other things (graduation rate, high-quality teachers.) The districts must also demonstrate that they can get matching funds through partnerships with the private sector. Secretary Duncan has said he wants to use these awards, and the entire $5 billion fund, to push the "reform agenda." If you want to read the language, go to page 438 of this very large PDF of the stimulus bill.

3. How can districts, states, etc. access funds from the "race to the top" pot? Will there be a proposal process? What types of initiatives can this money be used for?
This is related to the question above. The $5 billion pot of money is what Secretary Duncan is calling his "race to the top" fund. I already detailed the smaller innovation fund in the answer above. The rest of the fund will be awarded as "incentive grants" to states. Governors will apply, the law spells out, and must show progress in four areas: maintaining state funding for education at 2006 levels, achieving equity in teacher distribution, improving data collection and use, and improving standards and assessment. Those four areas, incidentally, are areas where governors must "assure" they'll make progress when they take their bigger piece of the state stabilization fund. Duncan has said he'll use the smaller incentive grants to hold states accountable for that. In calls to reporters and public appearances, Duncan seems particularly interested in improving standards. UPDATED: Just wanted to expand on this answer. The department hasn't yet spelled out how districts and states can access these funds, which the law says shall be made available in fiscal 2010. We'll keep you posted on that.

4. Are states supposed to restore spending to FY08 levels or FY06 levels? The legislation says different things in different places.
To qualify for state stabilization funds, states must be able to use their own state money to fund schools up to the level they were doing so in 2006. Then, they must use their federal stabilization money to backfill any cuts they made past those levels, to restore funding to Fiscal 2008 levels. This is an issue for Florida, which will seek a waiver from that 2006 "maintenance of effort."

February 19, 2009

Stop Worrying, Florida

Schools and the Stimulus
The Sunshine State is one of a handful that says it can't meet the maintenance of effort requirements in the economic stimulus package, which mandate that states keep education funding at 2006 levels in order to receive the cash.

The law allows U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan to waive maintenance of effort requirements for states that are in particularly dire fiscal straits. On a conference call last week with the media, an Education Department consultant told a reporter from Florida that the department wasn't going to issue blanket waivers and was going to look at each state on a case-by-case basis.

But, seriously, I don't think Florida should be sweating this one. There's no way that President Obama is going to travel to economically struggling Fort Myers, Fla., to stump for the stimulus, appear with Gov. Charlie Crist—one of just a few prominent Republicans govs to make a big show of support for the super-sized spending package—and then deny the state access to its share of a huge chunk of the money.

And, then there's the matter of those 27 electoral votes and Florida's status as one of the swingiest swing states. Mr. Obama wants to be re-elected, after all, and letting the state lay off thousands of teachers isn't a good way to launch his 2012 campaign.

At least two of the other states likely to seek waivers, according to this story: Nevada, home to Senate President Harry Reid, and California, home to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, House Education, Labor Chairman George Miller, and Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, another gov who had the administration's back when others were crying foul about the cost of the measure.

Anything can happen, of course, but my guess? They'll be just fine too.

February 18, 2009

Send Us Your Stimulus Questions

Schools and the Stimulus

If you're trying to make sense of the $787 billion stimulus package, and what it means for education, Politics K-12 wants to help. Over the next few days, we'll be compiling a list of Frequently Asked Questions and answering them on the blog. No question is too detailed. After all, $100 billion in education funding is at stake. And if Alyson and I don't know the answers, we'll find someone who does.

Leave your question in the comment section below, or shoot us an e-mail. Our e-mail addresses are to the right, under our pictures.

February 13, 2009

Miller: Stimulus Changes the Conversation on NCLB

Schools and the Stimulus

The $100 billion for education programs in the federal economic-stimulus bill gives the new administration and the secretary of education "credibility" with the public and with educators, just as Congress is gearing up to reauthorize the No Child Left Behind Act, Rep. George Miller, D-Calif., the chairman of the House Education and Labor Committee, told me today.

"I really think this changes the conversation dramatically," Miller said. "I think it makes things a lot easier." Miller said he'd like to reauthorize the law, which many educators have criticized as underfunded, this calendar year.

The unprecedented boost for education in the stimulus "tells the country and the education world where the administration would like to go" on K-12 policy, he said. "They would really like to make a substantial change."

During last year's presidential election, education was largely drowned out on the campaign trail by such issues as the economy, the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, and health care.

But Miller said the stimulus shows that President Barack Obama sees schools as a top priority.

"From the first time I met Barack Obama he made it clear that education was a very, very important part of his growing up and that [he appreciated] the opportunity it provided for him," the committee chairman said.

Miller ran into a brick wall the last time he took a stab at renewing the No Child Left Behind Act. Back in August 2007, he introduced a discussion draft that drew criticism from all parts of the education spectrum, for being too complicated, too tough on schools, or not tough enough, and for including teacher incentive pay.

The draft never even became an official bill and progress on overhauling the law has been stalled ever since.

But Miller thinks that the education world may have become more accepting of policies that helped doom his past effort.

He acknowledged that the controversy's not over on issues like incentive pay. "There are still plenty of people who are skeptical of these things," he said, but added, "It's pretty clear there's a national conversation in support of changing the workplace" for teachers that includes performance pay and new strategies for recruitment and retention.

And Miller said that, during often tense negotiations over the stimulus, Arne Duncan, the incoming Secretary of Education, had plenty of chances to jettison the "reform" oriented pieces from the bill, but stuck by his guns.

"People knew what it would mean if these were accounts were funded" and appropriated money for them anyway, he said.

That sounded to me like Miller fully expects Congress to continue increased support for programs like the Teacher Incentive Fund, state data systems, and probably even Secretary Duncan's new "race to the top fund," which is aimed at rewarding states and districts who are boosting student achievement.

And, in our brief conversation, Miller really stressed the importance of state data systems, and emphasized that they're also a big priority for Duncan. Some educators, including in Miller's home state of California, are wary that state data systems could be used to tie teacher pay to student progress, but it sounds like the education chairman views them as a good way to measure student learning and wants to press full steam ahead.

House Passes Stimulus Measure

Schools and the StimulusIt's almost all over but the shouting.

Today the U.S. House of Representatives passed the final version of the stimulus package, which provides some $100 billion for education programs. The stimulus package passed 246-183. As with the original House bill, no Republicans voted in favor of the measure.

The measure now moves over to the Senate, where it is expected to pass sometime this evening. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan told reporters today that it looks like President Barack Obama will sign the bill on Monday.

There wasn't much beyond speechifying on the House floor today. It seems lawmakers have gotten their stimulus pro-con arguments down pat.

Rep. George Miller, D-Calif., the chairman of the House Education and Labor Committee, said that the bill will help school districts prevent staff reductions.

"Now school districts will know that they are going to [get] $13 billion in Title I ... that will help them reduce the number of people who will be unemployed if we do nothing," he said.

But Rep. Mike Pence, R-Ind., a leading conservative, said he didn't think the bill would do much to spur the slumping economy.

The bill "will not grow our economy. It will merely grow our government," he said.

February 12, 2009

Stimulus Details: States Must Share with Higher Ed

Schools and the Stimulus When it comes to the stimulus package, the devil's in the details. And we have some important details from House Democratic aides.

The $39.5 billion in the state fiscal stabilization fund for schools must first be used by states to backfill any cuts they have made to both K-12 and higher education, up to fiscal 2008 or 2009 levels. If a state doesn't have enough money to make K-12 and higher ed whole, then the money must be spread proportionally between the two. Money will flow to states based on the state's population, ages 5-24. Any leftover money after backfilling cuts will flow to K-12 districts based on existing Title I formulas and can be used for a host of things, including school modernization. New construction is not envisioned. House aides say it's hoped the money will go out before July 1.

States also must put in their own money (called maintenance-of-effort) to fund schools up to fiscal 2006 levels. But states can seek a waiver from the U.S. Department of Education in cases of severe financial hardship.

The $5 billion incentive fund, which will be under the control of education secretary Arne Duncan, will include $650 million for innovation grants to school districts that could serve as models for best practices. The innovation money will go to local districts, nonprofits, or consortia of school districts. The rest of the $5 billion incentive fund will go to states to fund projects such as improving assessments and equitable teacher distribution.

In all, the department will have a whopping $95 billion over two years to dole out once Title I, special education, teacher grants, higher education and other funding is factored in.

UPDATE:Check out the final bill at the House Appropriations Committee's Web site here.

February 11, 2009

UPDATE: Stimulus Deal, But Waiting for Details

Congressional leaders have announced a deal on the stimulus, Alyson reports in from the Hill. More to come as we sort out numbers on the school construction and state stabilization funds.

UPDATE: She's also hearing the numbers for school modernization and state stabilization could be a little higher than we previously reported. Apparently, school modernization funding may be the sticking point holding up a final agreement. Lawmakers from both chambers are convening to discuss the bill in a few minutes..stay tuned.

The Makings of a Stimulus Deal

As the stimulus bill heads toward a formal conference committee meeting at 3 p.m., the House and Senate are furiously trying to work out a deal. Of course, the big education questions are: Will school construction money be restored? And will states get a big chunk of their stabilization money back? And how will the stabilization money be distributed?

In fact, Alyson is headed to the Hill now for a 1:10 p.m. press conference with Rep. George Miller, the California Democrat who is the chairman of the House Education and Labor Committee, New York Congressman Chuck Rangel, and New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg. The trio will push for the $16 billion in school construction money that the Senate stripped out of the stimulus package.

The Miller bunch will be the latest big names to stick their necks out for school construction. Duncan did so yesterday, and President Obama the day before. It would be embarassing for the President, his education secretary, and key members of Congress to put on the full-court press and end up losing this fight.

In the meantime, other groups are putting out their last-ditch pushes to help craft the compromise. The National Head Start Association wants the full $2.1 billion the House included. The Education Trust, which advocates for low-income students, sent a letter to the Hill encouraging negotiators not to give too much latitude to the states, which have a "long history" of "shortchanging schools."

The National Governors Association, certainly a powerhouse player on the Hill on this topic given the level of state involvement in the stimulus, offers its own compromise suggestions that include allowing governors to spend half of the state incentive grants on critical needs outside of education. NGA recommends funding these incentive grants at the $7.5 billion level of the Senate, which is half what the House wanted. The NGA also recommends, given the organization's ongoing work with common standards, taking out a Senate provision that requires states to take steps to improve state academic standards per the America COMPETES Act. What's interesting to note is that, at least according to these documents, NGA appears neutral on the school construction money (since they don't mention it in their recommendations.) Check out a summary chart of NGA's recommendations here, and a more detailed explanation here.

On that note, If you want to find out how much school construction money is at stake for your state or school district, the nonprofit journalism organization ProPublica has a handy searchable database.

The GOP Governors' Stimulus Divide

The Great GOP Divide among governors was on display yesterday as Republican Florida Gov. Charlie Crist appeared with President Obama during a pep-rally stop in the Sunshine State to tout the economic stimulus package.

Florida's schools have been among the hardest hit across the country as cuts have forced them to lay off teachers and trim programs. Legislative leaders predict next year's state budget deficit could reach $5 billion, and already, the governor has pushed through a $2.5 billion package of cuts for this budget year and next.

Given his state's dire straits—with a huge home foreclosure crisis and pockets of very high unemployment—it's no big surprise that Crist was one of four Republican governors to sign a letter in support of the stimulus package. (Crist may also be making sure the state can get a waiver from so-called "maintenance of effort" provisions that require the state to spend on schools what it spent in 2006 -- a tall order since school funding has been cut to levels lower than that year.) The others were Connecticut's Jodi Rell, Vermont's Jim Douglas, and California's Arnold Schwarzenegger. And it's no wonder Schwarzenegger has signed on—he's got a gigantic budget mess on his hands.

But lining up in opposition to the stimulus package are fellow Republican Govs. Sarah Palin of Alaska, Bobby Jindal of Louisiana, Haley Barbour of Mississippi, Rick Perry of Texas and Mark Sanford of South Carolina.

Of course, there's plenty of political ideology at work (a couple of those governors have national ambitions and Sanford, especially, is a hard-line budget hawk.) However, it's important to note that their budgets don't have the glaring budget gaps that others do. According to the latest report by the National Conference of State Legislatures, Alaska has a budget deficit worth about 4 percent of Palin's general fund budget, isn't reporting a budget deficit next budget year, and has billions in oil and natural gas profits in a special reserve fund. In Texas, Perry is in a similar position: His state also enjoys oil profits, isn't reporting a budget deficit now, and faces a shortfall of just 5 percent next budget year. Mississippi, under Barbour, is reporting a 4 percent budget deficit this year and none next year. Jindal, in Louisiana, has closed his budget deficit but does, potentially, face a double-digit one next year.

So, it may be a little easier to oppose the stimulus when your state—including your schools—aren't in desperate and immediate need of the money.

February 10, 2009

UPDATED: Senate Passes Slimmed-Down Stimulus

The U.S. Senate approved its "lite" version of a federal infusion of cash for education today by a vote of 61-37, with just three Republicans crossing the aisle to support an $838 billion economic stimulus measure that would provide some $80 billion for education programs.

That's less than the $140 billion for education in the $819 billion House stimulus measure, but still a sizable chunk of change, considering the Senate bill would have more money for education than the U.S. Department of Education's entire $59.2 billion discretionary budget.

The Senate's original bill contained about the same amount of education spending as the House legislation. But $16 billion was eliminated in grants for school construction, and direct aid to states for education was reduced, all as part of a compromise worked out by moderate lawmakers.

More details available in this story.

Update: Sounds like the positioning has already begun for conference and supporters of the billions in school construction funds are trying to get it back. The House version still includes $14 billion in school construction grants.

Rep. George Miller, D-Calif., the chairman of the House Education and Labor Committee, just released this statement:

“While I am glad the Senate has now joined the House in passing legislation to get our economy moving forward again, it appears the Senate bill creates about 400,000 fewer jobs than the House legislation. With more Americans losing their jobs by the day, we must make every effort to bring that figure up.

“As President Obama has said, one way we can do that is by restoring investments to modernize our nation’s schools and colleges. The $14 billion to repair, renovate and update public schools included in the House plan would create at least 315,000 more jobs than what the Senate bill generates. Modernizing our schools and colleges is a common-sense way we can quickly create jobs while helping our students get a 21st century education, and should get restored to this plan as negotiations move forward.”

Sounds pretty on-message, considering President Barack Obama's plug for school construction in last night's prime-time press conference, and Secretary of Education Arne Duncan's school visit today, in which he made a pitch for school construction.

Could be an uphill battle though. Republicans, and some moderate Democrats, have long argued that school construction is a state and local responsibility. They're worried that including money for the program in the stimulus bill could set a dangerous precedent.

February 9, 2009

Obama: Education Money Must Come With Reform

As Congress is poised to spend at least $80 billion on education programs—and possibly much more—President Barack Obama said in a prime-time news conference tonight that more money for education must be followed by more reform.

And he said he'd work in a bipartisan way to make sure that polices like expanding charter schools and removing ineffective teachers are put in place, along with the increased resources.

"I think there are areas like education where some in my party have been too resistant to reform and have argued only money makes a difference. And there have been others on the Republican side or the conservative side who said, 'No matter how much money you spend, nothing makes a difference, so let's just blow up the public school systems.' And I think that both sides are going to have to acknowledge we're going to need more money for new science labs, to pay teachers more effectively, but we're also going to need more reform, which means that we've got to train teachers more effectively, bad teachers need to be fired after being given the opportunity to train effectively, that we should experiment with things like charter schools that are innovating in the classroom, that we should have high standards."

The statement seemed to be a response to GOP lawmakers—and some Democrats—who say that the proposed stimulus package working its way through Congress pumps too much money into schools, without enough strings.

It's unlikely Obama's appeal will actually translate into more Republican votes for the super-sized stimulus package, but it does seem to signal that the president isn't planning to boost education spending without asking for something in return from the nation's school system.

Obama made it clear that he also considers federal funding of school construction to be a key economic stimulus and investment in the future, even though a huge chunk of the funding for school facilities is slated be stripped out of the Senate's bill as part of an agreement forged by moderate lawmakers to win passage of the measure.

"I visited a school down in South Carolina that was built in the 1850s," Obama said. "Kids are still learning in that school, as best they can. ... It's right next to a railroad. And when the train runs by, the whole building shakes and the teacher has to stop teaching for a while. The auditorium is completely broken down; they can't use it. So why wouldn't we want to build state-of-the-art schools with science labs that are teaching our kids the skills they need for the 21st century, that will enhance our economy, and, by the way, right now, will create jobs?"

The House bill includes about $14 billion in school construction spending, plus bonds to help finance school facilities. But $16 billion in money for school facilities was stripped out of the Senate's bill, as part of a compromise agreement worked out with Senate moderates. The Senate compromise version still includes the tax provisions for school construction bonds.

But Obama's high-profile support of the school construction funds could signal that his administration may fight for some money for grants to cover the cost of school facilities, in addition to the bonds provision, when the House and Senate eventually reconcile their versions of the bill in conference.

You can read a transcript of the press conference here.

Updated: Moderates' Amendment Scales Back Some Education Spending

This is shaping up to be a big week for education funding in the stimulus package.

The Senate is expected to hold procedural votes today to clear the way for passage of its slimmed down stimulus measure. And tonight, President Barack Obama is holding a news conference during which he is will likely to tout the plan's ability to reinvigorate the sluggish economy. (UPDATE: While you're waiting for this excitement, check out the video below from Saturday Night Live, which specifically mentions education funding in the stimulus package -- and the number of "stupid people running around ruining our economy." Or, for an even more stimulating use of your time, check out the 778-page text of the compromise amendment, now on the Senate Appropriations website. )

A summary of the much-talked about deal by congressional moderates, put together by Sens. Ben Nelson, D-Neb., and Susan Collins, R-Maine, was released late Friday.

The Senate is expected to vote on the compromise deal, and the whole bill, this week.

Although the numbers for education aren't as high as those in the original Senate Appropriations Committee measure, the proposed amendment would still provide a major boost for education.

The Senate's original bill would have provided between $120 billion and $140 billion for education. The amendment would dial that back to about $80 billion. That's still considerably more than the U.S. Department of Education's $59.2 billion discretionary budget for fiscal year 2008.

The amendment doesn't change the originally proposed spending for special education, untouched at $13 billion, and would provide $1 billion for education technology, the same level as in the original Senate measure. And it would reduce the $13 billion originally slated for Title I just slightly, to $12.4 billion.

The Senate cut the entire $16 billion in school construction grants, but left bonds that help finance school construction.

The state stabilization fund, which would have provided $79 billion in relief to local school districts would shrink down to $39 billion. That would include $7.5 billion to states as incentive grants as a reward for meeting certain education performance measures.

There are some other reductions from the Senate's original bill. The amendment would provide $1.05 billion for Head Start, reduced from $2 billion in the Senate's original bill, and $50 million for teacher quality state grants, reduced from $100 million.

You can download an excel spread sheet on the amendment at Sen. Nelson's Web site, here.

Republicans, most of whom are still planning to vote against the bill, said Saturday during floor debate that too much of the money goes to programs that don't stimulate the economy, a criticism levied against many of the K-12 programs in the bill.

"The bill is still comprised of wasteful spending," said Sen. Mike Johanns, R-Neb.

But Friday night, in introducing the bill, Sen. Collins said that programs, such as spending for special education would help avert layoffs and put financially-strapped school districts back on firmer fiscal footing.

It looks like the Senate has the votes to pass this amendment and the bill. And it's reported that President Obama has signed off on these changes.

We'll see if House lawmakers go along with it when conference negotiations begin next week.

February 6, 2009

Possible Senate Deal on Stimulus

The moderate Democrats and Republicans who are negotiating over a deal that would make cuts to the U.S. Senate's original economic-stimulus package are reportedly close to a tentative agreement.

I'm hearing rumors that, compared with the original Senate version released late last month, the deal now on the table would sizably scale back increases to education, even more than predicted as recently as yesterday. It appears, though, that the legislation would still provide a one-time boost in money for special education.

Yet it looks like the House Democrats, whose bill would provide between $120 billion for $150 billion, are getting worried. A spokeswoman for Rep. David Obey, D-Wis., sent this e-mail to reporters, referring to the $79 billion state stabilization fund that was in both the House and original Senate versions of the bill, much of which would go to education:

Rumors are that today the Senate is going to cut billions of dollars out of the state stabilization funds in the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act. These are the funds that help states preserve vital services and jobs as they face a budget crunch - it makes no sense to have states raising taxes and cutting spending at the same time that the federal government is trying to turn the economy around by cutting taxes and putting more money into the economy.

Sounds like the House lawmakers are already going on the offensive. More details as we have them...

February 5, 2009

Moderate Plan Would Slash Education Funding

I've heard from folks up on the Hill that an amendment to be introduced by Sens. Ben Nelson, D-Neb., and Susan Collins, R-Maine, could significantly scale back the nearly $140 billion education funding in the Senate's version of the proposed economic stimulus package.

The items targeted include at least $24.8 billion to be cut from the $79 billion State Stabilization Fund, $6.75 billion out of the more than $13 billion for special education, $6.5 billion from Title I out of $13 billion, and $50 million from the proposed $100 million Teacher Quality Enhancement grant program.

Advocates are worried the plan would block much needed aid for local districts.

"We are extremely disappointed that the bipartisan amendment would cut the only direct aid going to school districts” that could help avert layoffs and severe program reductions," said Mary Kusler, the assistant director of government relations for the American Associations of School Administrators. "By reducing their investment in [special education] and Title I they are only going to increase the burdens being felt by local districts as they work on their budgets for the coming school year."

I'm hearing that a number of centrist Democratic senators are willing to consider the package of cuts. Stay tuned.

February 3, 2009

UPDATED: Obama to 2nd Graders: What Does S-T-I-M-U-L-U-S Spell?

President Obama continued his pitch for the economic stimulus package today, even as the Senate debates the future of this mega-billion-dollar package.

His audience this afternoon, in addition to the media, was a class of 2nd graders at Capital City Public Charter School in Washington. (This, by the way, was a school Sara Mead of the New America Foundation suggested the president look at for his own kids.) This marks his first official school visit as president. And, as a colleague so astutely pointed out, his first visit is to a charter school. Is he making a statement?

According to the transcript, Obama said this (after reading to the 2nd graders):

"... we're very proud of what's been accomplished at this school and we want to make sure that we're duplicating that success all across the country...And the recovery and reinvestment act that we've put forward will provide billions of dollars to build schools and help with school construction. It will provide money to train teachers, especially in subjects like math and science that are so critical. And it will also give Secretary Duncan the resources he needs to reward excellent, innovative schools. And so we think it's really important for the country that we get that bill passed."

UPDATE: The pool report from the reporter following the president today contained some interesting tidbits:

*When asked to name his superheroes, Obama picked Spiderman and Batman.

*Obama read "The Moon Over Star" by Dianna Hutts, about Neil Armstrong's moon landing, to the class.

*Obama was asked about pets. He admitted he had a fish, but that it died. Michelle Obama chimed in: "the girls say we keep killing them."

*Before they left, the First Couple distributed books to the kids for their library. One was called "Mr. Peabody's Apples."

More Update:

Video courtesy MSNBC.com

Senators Tussle Over the Stimulus Funds

It's a busy day on the North side of the Capitol.

The Senate is debating its $888 billion version of the economic stimulus package, with an eye towards passing it by the end of the week and getting it to President Barack Obama for his signature And former Sen. Tom Daschle, D-S.C., pulled himself out of the running for Secretary of Health and Human Services because of problems with unpaid taxes.

So far, Republicans in the Senate seem to be echoing many of the arguments against the stimulus made by their colleagues in the House: That much of the spending goes to favored Democratic programs and won't create jobs.

But they are also arguing that there are very few strings attached to the money and that the administration, including, presumably, Secretary of Education Arne Duncan, will have a lot of unprecedented control over what happens to it.

“I’m not one who believes that Congress must always wait for the Executive Branch to lead," said Sen. Thad Cochran of Mississippi, the top Republican on the Appropriations Committee during floor debate. "But with regard to this bill we are giving the Executive Branch immense latitude in the disbursement of the spending it contains. We are doing so without any official request, and without any documentation that speaks to the issue of how this spending will stimulate the economy, or what the long term implications of the spending will be."

And apparently, at least one conservative Democrats is concerned that many of the programs in the stimulus package, including some of the education funds, aren't really going to spur the economy and create jobs immediatly. Sen. Ben Nelson of Nebraska told reporters from his home state on a conference call today that he is working with Sen. Susan Collins of Maine, a moderate Republican, to tweak the package, possibly through an amendment to be offered later this week.

Will Republican/conservative Democratic opposition derail the bill or seriously curtail the education funding? Possibly, but my guess is that it's not likely.

I think the debate over whether the funds will really generate job growth matters more in the context of what happens after the stimulus passes, presumably with most of the more $120 billion in education funding intact. If states, districts, and schools don't appear to be using the money wisely there will be a lot of "I told you so's" from the folks expressing concerns about the funds this time around. It will make Congress much more wary of boosting spending on education programs in the future.

Meanwhile, Daschle's decision means that President Obama will have to choose another HHS Secretary. That person will be responsible for overseeing the main federal early childhood program, Head Start. When a nominee is announced, we'll be sure to find out what Head Start and other pre-K advocates think.

January 30, 2009

Harkin Responds to Criticism of Senate Stimulus

Is the Senate stimulus anti-ed reform?

Mike Petrilli thinks so, but Sen. Tom Harkin, D-Iowa, who oversees the subcommittee that crafts education spending bills, indicates that's not the case.

The bill doesn't include the $200 million for the Teacher Incentive Fund grants, $250 million for state data systems, and separate funding for charter school facilities. Those provisions are in the House version of the measure and are embraced by many in the pro-accountability, no-excuses crowd.

Rep. George Miller, D-Calif., the chairman of the House Education and Labor Committee, who many consider the ultimate Democrat for Education Reform, is hoping those provisions make it through conference. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan said they are "hugely important" to him.

And just this week, some folks suggested that the stimulus would be a great vehicle for pushing through education redesign.

But Harkin seems to have a good argument for not including the programs in his chamber's version of the economic stimulus package—namely the bill is moving too fast to craft good policy and it's not palatable politically.

“The economic recovery bill should not be the vehicle for reauthorizing the No Child Left Behind Act," said Harkin in a statement emailed to Politics K-12. "That process will require many months, multiple hearings, and much debate to do the job right. Our deadline for completing this bill is President’s Day. It would be foolhardy, not to mention politically impossible, to try to enact major education reforms in that kind of timeframe."

And on those TIF funds, he said that it doesn't make sense to include the money for the program in a two-year stimulus since the grants under the program are doled out over five years

“I have no objection to this program," Harkin said in the statement. "I have included funding for TIF in the [education spending] bill for several years. And that’s where Congress should fund future increases for TIF – in regular appropriations bills, not the stimulus. TIF grants last 5 years. The stimulus bill covers just 2 years. If we increase funding for TIF in the stimulus, that gives us problems [later on], when we still have to cover continuation costs, but the stimulus money is gone. It makes more sense to fund an increase through the regular appropriations process.”

January 28, 2009

House Passes Stimulus With No GOP Support

The House of Representatives just passed its version of the stimulus package, which would provide some $120 billion for education programs, by a vote of 244-188. There weren't any significant changes to the education provisions in the bill, a Democratic congressional staffer told me. We wrote about the spending provisions of the bill here.

As part of the tax portion of the $819 billion measure, $22 billion in school construction bonds is to be spread out over fiscal years 2009 and 2010. And it includes a $1.4 billion expansion of the Qualified Zone Academy Bond program, which helps finance school construction.

During floor debate, Republicans said it would not do enough to provide an immediate jolt to the sputtering economy. Not a single Republican voted in favor of the bill, and just 11 Democrats opposed it.

Miller on the Stimulus

As the House of Representatives debated the $825 billion stimulus measure, which members are expected to vote on tonight, Rep. George Miller, D-Calif., the chairman of the House Education and Labor Committee, held a conference call with reporters to talk about the money for education in the stimulus package.

Republicans, including the Rep. Howard P. "Buck" McKeon of California, the top GOP member of the House education panel, have expressed concern that it might be tough to take programs like Title I and spending for students in special education back down to their current levels after the record increases in the stimulus.

Miller didn't say a permanent funding increase absolutely wouldn't happen. Instead he deferred to the Obama administration.

"The administration is telling us not to anticipate that this [increased amount] will be the baseline," he said.

And he told us that those ed-reformy programmatic choices—including a $200 million boost for the Teacher Incentive Fund, which doles out grants for performance pay, $250 million for state data systems, and a $25 million fund for charter school facilities—were sought by the Obama administration.

Those provisions didn't make it into the Senate bill, a development Mike Petrilli over at Flypaper bemoaned yesterday.

But Miller seems to think they'll stay in through conference.

"These are the priorities of President Obama," Rep. Miller said. "I believe they'll make it through and I hope they'll make it through.

January 27, 2009

Senate Appropriations Committee Approves Stimulus

The Senate Appropriations Committee today approved some $125 billion on education programs as part of a mammoth $825 billion economic stimulus package.

The bill was approved on a 21-9 vote, with some more moderate Republicans crossing over to vote with the Democrats. Other GOP lawmakers, however, argued that they were shut out of the process of crafting the bill and that the measure would do little to stimulate the stumbling economy.

The education provisions in the Senate bill are pretty similar to those in the House version of the measure, as I detailed here. Additionally, there's $16 billion for K-12 school construction and $2.1 billion for Head Start. You get can more details in this story on the Senate Appropriations meeting.

Meanwhile, President Barack Obama was up on Capitol Hill today to meet with GOP lawmakers to address their concerns with the bill.

It's likely to be tough sledding. Just yesterday, Rep. Howard P. "Buck" McKeon of California, the top Republican on the House Education and Labor Committee, released a statement lambasting the stimulus package, saying that it wouldn't do much to generate economic growth.

"American workers, families, and businesses desperately need an economic stimulus package. Unfortunately, that’s not what congressional Democrats are offering,” said Rep. McKeon in a statement. “Instead, their package is nothing more than a mega-sized supplemental spending bill that will saddle future generations with almost unimaginable debt."

And he argued that education programs, such as Pell Grants and Head Start, would see a major drop in funding after the money in the measure has been doled out.

Expect other Republicans, and maybe even some conservative Democrats, to make similar arguments when the full House of Representatives considers their version of the stimulus measure tomorrow.

Update: Mike Petrilli has a good post over at Flypaper saying that many of the provisions sought by "reform" minded lawmakers in the House version of the stimulus didn't make it into the Senate bill. And he makes an interesting point there.

The Senate measure doesn't contain money for the Teacher Incentive Fund, as we reported in our web story. And it doesn't include the $250 million for state data systems as in the House bill. And there isn't a separate $25 million fund for charter school facilities.

Does this spell a major split within the Democratic party, as Mike suggests in his post? Possibly. But Democrats helped put together the House measure in which all these programs originally appeared. So it may say more about differences in the House and Senate priorities than anything else. What do you think?