Description: Tags: Budget08-Factsheet
Description: Tags: Budget08-Factsheet
Description: Tags: Budget08-Factsheet
Education Budget:
Building On Progress
“Because we acted, students are performing better in
reading and math, and minority students are closing the
achievement gap. Now the task is to build on the success.”
-- President George W. Bush
February 2007
No Child Left Behind Act
After five years of the No Child Left Behind Act, educators and
policymakers have learned more about how to improve student
achievement than ever before. Across the country, test scores are up and
the achievement gap is narrowing. As NCLB comes up for
reauthorization, we must strengthen and build on this progress by
focusing new resources to meet the greatest needs, including improving
the performance of high school students and fixing troubled and
underperforming schools. The President’s Budget increases total funding
for NCLB by $1.2 billion, to $24.5 billion, a 41% increase since 2001.
This includes:
Before No Child Left Behind, parents were given few options when their
child’s school underperformed. Now, low-income families in Title I schools
may qualify for free tutoring and the choice to attend another public
school or public charter school. Nearly 450,000 students have chosen
this path. Still, the demand for more choices and change is growing. The
President’s FY 2008 Education Budget invests $500 million to help
states turn around the performance of chronically underperforming
schools, and $300 million to provide new options, including public and
private school choice, for students in those underperforming schools.
Our schools helped make the 20th century the American Century. But in
the 21st, the rest of the world is catching up. U.S. graduation rates are
slipping relative to other developed nations, due in large part to lagging
scores in science and math, the new currencies of the world economy.
We must give our students the technical and problem-solving skills to
succeed in this competitive global marketplace. Integral to this effort is
the President’s American Competitiveness Initiative, elements of which
will receive $365 million under the President’s FY 2008 Budget, to help
strengthen math and science instruction so our students can stay on the
right academic track. This includes:
Math Now for Elementary School and Math Now for Middle
School Programs—$250 million
These programs will employ proven, research-based instructional
methods—based in part on findings of the National Math Panel—to
help ensure that all children can take and pass algebra and other
advanced courses.
February 2007
Helping Students with Disabilities
February 2007
A college degree, once merely desirable, has become essential to many
Americans’ future. Last year, Secretary Spellings launched an Action Plan
for Higher Education to improve the performance of our colleges and
universities, making them more accessible, affordable and accountable.
The President’s FY 2008 Budget provides $21 billion over the next five
years to ensure that higher education continues to be on the leading
edge of America’s competitiveness. This includes:
February 2007