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Arne Duncan: Congress Needs To Act Now On School Money

DONNA GORDON BLANKINSHIP   07/10/10 07:50 PM ET   AP

Arne Duncan

DES MOINES, Wash. — U.S. Education Secretary Arne Duncan is urging Congress to act soon to increase education funding because cash-strapped states can't wait until the fall to determine if they must lay off thousands of teachers.

Duncan made his remarks Friday at a forum on innovation in education at Aviation High School in Des Moines, a small college prep school that focuses on science, technology and mathematics.

At the forum, U.S. Sen. Patty Murray said she hopes fellow lawmakers spent their Fourth of July break hearing from parents and teachers, like she did. Murray said if they got the message about how urgent the school budget crisis is, they will return to Washington, D.C., with the drive to find more money for schools.

A proposal to send billions more to the states has hit a number of roadblocks.

The U.S. House has proposed cutting money from Race to the Top and other Duncan initiatives in order to send $10 billion to the states to keep 140,000 teachers in the classroom, and about $5 billion to shore up the Pell Grant program, which helps low-income students pay for college.

Murray and Duncan both said many different proposals to pay for the emergency dollars are on the table.

"He and I have to go back to Washington and make this work," the senator said.

Several dozen teachers and others held signs and chanted outside the school to protest Race to the Top and demand changes in the upcoming overhaul of the No Child Left Behind act. Some people inside the auditorium also expressed skepticism about education reform.

"I'm very concerned. We have a lot of kids who don't know how to engage with schools like this," said Don Rivers, a Seattle man who works for an organization that monitors school improvement. Rivers is also a candidate for Congress in Washington's 7th district.

Students packed the non-air conditioned auditorium on a steamy summer afternoon for a chance to meet Duncan and show off their school, which is one of the state's most unique. They spoke of the way their teachers taught them to not be afraid of trying new things and skills they picked up while believing they were just building rockets or doing chemistry experiments.

"The only way to learn is by failing," said Navid Shafa, whose remark inspired adults on the stage and in the audience to talk about education innovation and the need for experimentation and potential failure.

Duncan said he was impressed by students and teachers at Aviation High School and would like to see a hundred more schools like it across the country.

"This is a model for the country, absolutely," he said, adding that the administration is interested in both charter schools and other innovative approaches.

State education officials see the school as an example of what they hope to accomplish if the state wins a grant from the competitive Race to the Top program.

Washington Gov. Chris Gregoire said that if Duncan sees how innovative some of Washington's public schools are, he'll recognize that creativity can live outside of charter schools. Washington state voters have voted repeatedly against charter schools.

Gregoire was at the National Governors Association meeting on Friday so U.S. Sen. Patty Murray brought Duncan to the south Seattle high school.

_____

Online:

Aviation High School: http://www.aviationhs.org/

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DES MOINES, Wash. — U.S. Education Secretary Arne Duncan is urging Congress to act soon to increase education funding because cash-strapped states can't wait until the fall to determine if they ...
DES MOINES, Wash. — U.S. Education Secretary Arne Duncan is urging Congress to act soon to increase education funding because cash-strapped states can't wait until the fall to determine if they ...
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03:13 PM on 07/12/2010
Privatize the entire education system and use the savings to build more bombs. We need to attend to our national security.
01:49 PM on 07/12/2010
Yes, get rid of Race to the Top and send the money to neediest schools. Get a real educator in charge of the education department­. Get all the rich boys out of the game-Bill Gates and the Waltons buying our schools so they can make them over in their corporate image. Outrageous­-now our schools are being run about unelected ruling elite just like Wall Street.
12:58 PM on 07/12/2010
If we would simply increase tax cuts for the top 5%, they would then find the charity in their hearts to fully fund all education from K-PhD for anybody who is willing to invest enough time, energy and effort to get it done.

The rich want a more highly educated populace so they can truly compete with the best and brightest instead of taking the easy road of polite chums throwing opportunit­y their way simply by virtue of their societal and economic place.

We're just nor giving them the chance to shine with our increasing­ly oppressive tax code.
11:14 AM on 07/12/2010
Solution? Close all state-run universiti­es. The private sector can handle the stupid system called American Education and make a profit from it.
12:53 PM on 07/12/2010
And if you can't afford $20,000 for tuition, you didn't deserve a college education anyway, I guess.
12:55 PM on 07/12/2010
$20,000??? That's about middle of the road. $35,000 - $50,000 is where most people I know have found themselves after the undergrad years.
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Jericho the Red
moderate before it was called liberal.
01:23 PM on 07/12/2010
but by making all universiti­es private run, then they can decide who is fit for education, also known as legacy brats.... Yup- let's have all higher education be private, so we can have more glen beck u's and jerry falwell uni's.. that way, we will really be able to compete with the real world.. EVERYONE deserves to be educated if they choose higher education.­. Educated, not regurgitat­ing the talking points of the day
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cjaco
09:37 AM on 07/12/2010
3.2 million teachers are against RttT and the privatizat­ion of public schools via Duncan/Oba­ma policies. Charter schools do not perform better than public schools - they serve to enrich the CMOs and expoit children and their teachers. This man is an incompeten­t corporatis­t who has been bought, and Obama has turned out to be just as bad as he sells out public schools to the highest bidder under the guise of reform. Perhaps we should elect a president who doesn't base his cabinet on how well they shoot hopes. If Duncan isn't made to resign, how about tar and feathers? :)
Some good reads:
http://voi­ces.washin­gtonpost.c­om/answer-­sheet/race­-to-the-to­p/senators­-confused-­about-cutt­in.html
http://www­.huffingto­npost.com/­joseph-a-p­alermo/mar­garet-spel­lings-arne­-d_b_63797­0.html?ref­=fb&src=sp­#sb=696232,b=­facebook
http://www­.latimes.c­om/news/op­inion/edit­orials/la-­ed-teacher­-20100712,­0,2449036.­story
http://www­.schoolsma­tter.info/­2010/07/bi­ll-gates-o­ligarchs-o­ligarch.ht­ml
http://voi­ces.washin­gtonpost.c­om/answer-­sheet/teac­hers/bill-­gates-trou­bling-invo­lveme.html
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09:21 AM on 07/12/2010
In Texas, money sent for education often gets diverted to privately owned "correctio­nal institutio­ns."