Posts Tagged ‘Congress’

Education Jobs Fund Not in Senate Supplemental Appropriations Bill

Tuesday, May 25th, 2010

Congress Daily is reporting that Senator Tom Harkin, chairman of the Senate Labor, HHS, and Education Appropriations subcommittee, will not offer an amendment to the FY10 supplemental appropriations bill that would include the $23 billion education jobs fund due to a lack of Republican support. Harkin said that he was “confident that a clear majority of senators would support such an amendment,” but that getting 60 votes would not be possible. Since the funding will not be included in the Senate version, the education funding will have to be worked out when the bill is conferenced by the House and Senate. Harkin said he will keep pushing for this money.

The chairman of the House Appropriations Committee, Dave Obey, does still intend to include the education jobs fund in its supplemental appropriations bill. The committee is scheduled to markup the bill on Thursday. Last week we sent out an action alert urging you to contact your Representatives and asking them to support the inclusion of the education jobs fund in the House emergency supplemental appropriations bill.  Please call your member of Congress today!

Chairman Obey will hold a press conference tomorrow with House Education and Labor Chairman George Miller and Education Secretary Duncan  to discuss the education jobs fund.


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Legislative Update: Education Jobs Fund, America COMPETES Act

Friday, May 21st, 2010

Education Jobs Fund

We have been updating you over the last several weeks about the status of the Education Jobs Fund in both the House and the Senate.  To recap, both chambers are proposing a $23 billion jobs fund to protect teachers’ jobs, programs and essential services.  The House Appropriations Committee plans to markup the House version of the emergency supplemental appropriations bill soon.  It is Chairman Obey’s preference that this bill include the $23 billion education jobs fund.  However, he will only put the $23 billion in the supplemental bill if he believes there is sufficient support to pass it on the House floor. In the Senate, Sen. Tom Harkin, chairman of the Labor, HHS, and Education subcommittee plans to introduce the education jobs fund as an amendment on the floor during their vote on the emergency supplemental appropriations.

Earlier this week we sent out an action alert urging you to contact your Representatives and asking them to support the inclusion of the education jobs fund in the House emergency supplemental appropriations bill. We had originally heard that the bill would be marked up after the Memorial Day recess, but the latest word is that the markup is scheduled for next Thursday, May 27th. Please call your member of Congress today!

America COMPETES Act

Two weeks ago we told you that the House intended to consider the America COMPETES Act before the Memorial Day recess. The AP is now reporting that Republicans have “united to derail” the reauthorization of the bill. The bill was brought up for a vote under the House’s suspension process, which limits floor debate, prohibits all floor amendments, and requires a two-thirds vote for final passage, however the bill failed by a vote of 261-148.

Rep. Ralph Hall of Texas, ranking Republican member of the House Science and Technology Committee said the bill “continues to take us in a much more costly direction and authorizes a number of new programs which have little to do with prioritizing investments” in science and technology.

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House ESEA Hearing Highlights CTE as a Turnaround Model

Thursday, May 20th, 2010

On Wednesday the House Education and Labor Committee held a hearing on “Research and Best Practices on Successful School Turnaround” which looked at ways to turn around the lowest performing schools which produce the highest numbers of dropouts. In his opening remarks, Chairman George Miller (CA) stated that one of the biggest problems to be addressed in the reauthorization of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act is dropouts. He was critical of the interventions available in No Child Left Behind as well as the Administration’s four proposed turnaround models. He said that the three things that schools and districts need are data, extended learning time and community support.

In his testimony, Dr. Daniel King, Superintendent of Pharr-San Juan-Alamo Independent School District (PSJA), spoke about the CTE-based strategies he has used to reduce the dropout rate from almost double the state average to less than half the state average in just two years. The district was able to use grant money to open a T-STEM Early College High School where students can earn up to 60 college credit hours (the equivalent of an Associate degree) while still in high school.

Some of the lessons learned by PSJA include:

The district was recently declared a state model for district turnarounds by Texas Governor Rick Perry and Texas Commissioner of Education Robert Scott and was awarded $2,000,000 grant to scale up their efforts.

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Legislative Update: Appropriations, Education Jobs Bill

Friday, May 14th, 2010

House May Cut Education, Health and Labor Funding by $3.5 Billion

Rep. David Obey (WI), chairman of the House Appropriations Committee, said in a hearing on Wednesday that $3.5 billion would be cut from President Barack Obama’s budget request for education, health and labor programs. Obey stated that the need to cut the deficit is being promoted by members from both sides of the aisle and that while many of the requests for additional health, education and labor funding should be funded on their merits, that would not be possible given the political climate.

Administration Lends Support to Education Jobs Bill

Yesterday, Secretary of Education Arne Duncan sent a letter to congressional leadership supporting Sen. Harkin’s education jobs bill aimed at helping states and school districts save jobs during the next school year. The Secretary is urging Congress to include $23 billion in supplemental appropriations to preserve education jobs.

Melody Barnes, director of the President’s Domestic Policy Council, also posted a statement on WhiteHouse.gov that calls on Congress to include the education jobs funding in the supplemental appropriations bills. She says, “Our teachers are vital to our nation’s success and if we don’t act now and act boldly, we will not only endanger the future of tens of millions of students but threaten to undermine the recovery of our economy.”

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Update on Education Jobs Bill

Thursday, May 13th, 2010

The Senate Appropriations Committee will markup the emergency supplemental appropriations bill this afternoon.  Staffers for Sen. Tom Harkin, chairman of the Labor, HHS, and Education subcommittee have revealed that Harkin plans to introduce S. 3206, Keep Our Educators Working Act of 2010, as an amendment on the floor. While there is no definitive timeline for when that will happen, the Senate could take up the supplemental on the floor as early as next week.  However, timing depends on completion of other bills, such as the financial reform bill, the tax extenders bill, and extension of Unemployment benefits and COBRA health insurance subsidies.

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Legislative Update: America COMPETES Act, Education Jobs Bill

Friday, May 7th, 2010

House Committee Approves America COMPETES Act

Last week the House Committee on Science and Technology marked up H.R. 5116, America COMPETES Reauthorization Act of 2010, and approved it by a vote of 29 to 8. Originally authorized in 2007, the reauthorized bill seeks to strengthen science, technology, engineering and math (STEM) education in order to maintain the United States’ global economic leadership. The bill would coordinate STEM programs across federal agencies and encourage more participation by females and underrepresented groups. The bill would also focus on the challenges faced by rural school districts, which often have less access to high speed Internet and lab resources.

The bill now goes to the full House for approval. Chairman Bart Gordon’s (TN) goal is to get the legislation through the House before the Memorial Day recess. Yesterday, the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation also held a hearing to consider the reauthorization of the America COMPETES Act.

The bill has been endorsed by several business leaders including the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, the Business Roundtable and the National Association of Manufacturers.

Education Jobs Fund

Senator Tom Harkin told Congressional Quarterly May 4 that a Senate floor vote on S. 3206, Keep Our Educators Working Act of 2010, may come in the next few weeks, but “there is not a committed time for a vote.”

The Education Commission of the States has put together a resource that provides a chart of the approximate amount of funding each state could receive under the education jobs fund and the approximate number of education jobs created or saved by the fund. Both of these charts break down the estimates by secondary and postsecondary distributions. 

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Latest ESEA Hearings Focus on High Schools and Teachers

Wednesday, May 5th, 2010

Yesterday, both the Senate and House education committees held hearings related to the reauthorization of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act. The Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee heard from witnesses during Improving America’s Secondary Schools about the importance of stemming the dropout rate, especially identifying at-risk students and using interventions before a student ever reaches high school. Some of the suggestions for helping students succeed in high school included improving adolescent literacy, teacher effectiveness, charter schools, early college high schools, and career academies.

Witnesses stated that while investment in the early grades is important, funding must continue to flow to the middle and high school grades because as the curriculum gets harder, students will need additional supports. Others suggested exposing students to college campuses as early as sixth grade to raise expectations and show students that being a college student is something they can aspire to.

The House Education and Labor Committee addressed issues around teachers and leaders in Supporting America’s Educators: The Importance of Quality Teachers and Leaders which recognized the 300,000 potential layoffs that school personnel face this coming year. Witnesses focused primarily on teacher evaluations, professional development and teacher training.

Regarding the issue of teacher effectiveness, witnesses suggested that teacher evaluations were inappropriate at measuring true progress and that because incentives, like pay scale and tenure, are based on advanced degrees and years of experience, the system does not evaluate what makes a teacher effective. Others stated that teacher training needs to be continuous and take cues from other professions like medicine where the basic skills are not learned on the job but are required before certification is granted.

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Chairman Obey Will Not Seek Re-election

Wednesday, May 5th, 2010

Rep. ObeyChairman of the House Appropriations Committee, Dave Obey, will not seek re-election in Wisconsin’s 7th Congressional District this November. As chair of the appropriations committee Obey oversees more than $1 trillion in annual federal spending. “There is a time to stay and a time to go. And this is my time to go,” Obey said at a press conference on Capitol Hill today.

Obey has held his congressional seat since April 1969, when he replaced Melvin Laird, who stepped down to become President Richard Nixon’s defense secretary.

Obey is the 17th Democrat to announce that they will leave at the end of this session of Congress. He is the highest-ranking House Democrat to retire and is the chamber’s third-longest-serving Democrat. Twenty Republicans are also leaving their positions to retire or run for higher office.

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Legislative Update: Education Jobs Fund, Financial Literacy Bill

Friday, April 30th, 2010

Contact Congress about the Keep Our Educators Working Act

As we told you earlier this month, Sen. Tom Harkin (IA) introduced S. 3206, the Keep Our Educators Working Act of 2010 which would provide $23 billion for an “Education Jobs Fund,” modeled after the State Fiscal Stabilization Fund that was established in the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act.

I just returned from a meeting where we heard that Sen. Harkin needs help relating to Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (NV) and other Senators about the importance of funding to help states and school districts fund education jobs and provide on the job training during a time of financial crisis.

You can share with them the financial situation in your state and why additional funding is needed to retain teachers and other education positions. Please urge them to support S. 3206, the Keep Our Educators Working Act of 2010.

Financial Education in the Classroom Act

On Wednesday, Congressman Michael Castle (DE) introduced H.R. 5165, the Financial Education in the Classroom Act.  The goal of this act is to improve the financial literacy for students in grades K-12 by strengthening the existing financial and economic education section currently under Title V of ESEA.  The bill would establish a competitive grant program for states who demonstrate a commitment to bringing financial literacy education to their schools.  Subgrants would then be awarded by States to school districts who partner with groups in the community to achieve student financial literacy through the teaching of personal financial management skills and the basic principles involved with earning, spending, saving, investing, credit, and insurance.

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ESEA Reauthorization Hearing: Standards and Assessments

Thursday, April 29th, 2010

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At yesterday’s Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee hearing, “ESEA Reauthorization: Standards and Assessments,” much of the focus was on common core standards, college and career readiness, computer adaptive testing and multiple measures.

In his opening statement, Chairman Tom Harkin (IA) stressed the need for high standards in part because the cost of remediation for students entering postsecondary is in the billions, and more than 50 percent of high school students entering the workforce do not have the skills they need to do their jobs. Ranking member Michael Enzi (WY) agreed that students need to be held to high standards that prepare them for college and careers. He also stated that it is important for states to use various assessment models that measure higher order skills and 21st century skills that employers value.

Regarding college and career readiness, Dr. Cynthia Schmeiser of ACT told the committee that they believe that college readiness and career readiness are one in the same – the math and reading skills that students need to enter their first year of postsecondary are identical to the math and reading skills high school graduates need to enter the workforce. This definition differs from NASDCTEc’s.  We believe that while there is overlap between the knowledge and skills individuals need to successfully transition into postsecondary education and into the workforce, additional competency will be needed depending on the path a student chooses.

During the question and answer portion of the hearing, much of the dialogue was related to CTE:

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