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Administration Now Promoting Incentive Fund for Teachers

By Bess Keller 鈥 May 17, 2005 3 min read
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President Bush鈥檚 top education lieutenants have given more attention lately to what would be a major boost to federal aid for improving teacher quality. But some call the proposed $500 million program to change the way teachers are paid a tough sell in Congress, and even tougher because administration officials waited until spring to raise its profile.

The Teacher Incentive Fund envisioned by the administration would give the states $450 million in the coming fiscal year to reward effective teachers, especially those who work in high-poverty schools. Under the program, an additional $50 million would be earmarked for helping states, districts, and nonprofit groups design performance-pay systems that could serve as models.

鈥淚f we expect results for every child, we must support teachers who are getting the job done in America鈥檚 toughest classrooms,鈥 Secretary of Education Margaret Spellings declared in a speech last month. Both she and Raymond J. Simon, the Department of Education鈥檚 acting deputy secretary, have mentioned the fund in speeches or congressional testimony over the past two months.

But some who like the idea criticize the administration for failing to champion it earlier.

鈥淭hey鈥檝e waited too long to make this a priority,鈥 said Andrew J. Rotherham, the director of education policy at the Progressive Policy Institute, a Washington think tank affiliated with the Democratic Leadership Council. He noted that Mr. Bush in his State of the Union Address in January did not spotlight teacher quality.

Mr. Rotherham said a push to increase the number of skilled teachers in the neediest schools perfectly complements the achievement standards set under the No Child Left Behind Act.

The current budget includes almost $3 billion that could be spent on the goals set forth for the fund, but most of it is now used for programs that predate the accountability system of the Bush administration鈥檚 signature education law.

Money Is Tight

鈥淚f you really want to leverage change, you have to put new money on the table,鈥 Mr. Rotherham argued. 鈥淢ost of the money [currently in the budget] is flowing through existing funding streams,鈥 such as for smaller classes.

But other observers, notably the nation鈥檚 largest teachers鈥 union, favor augmenting those streams. 鈥淲hy do we need another program?鈥 said Joel Packer, a lobbyist for the 2.7 million-member National Education Association.

鈥淚t鈥檚 an interesting kind of irony,鈥 Mr. Packer added. 鈥淎s opposed to simply putting more money in programs [the Bush administration and its supporters] created, they want to put money in this more narrow one.鈥

The NEA endorses the concept of more money for the most difficult teaching assignments, but it generally opposes linking pay to student achievement.

Whatever legislators think about the wisdom of setting up the new fund, finding money for it is expected to be tough. The president has proposed a nearly 1 percent cut to the Education Department鈥檚 discretionary spending, and the fiscal 2006 budget blueprint passed by Congress last month suggests that lawmakers are not inclined to increase Mr. Bush鈥檚 bottom-line number for purposes other than the most politically popular programs, such as vocational education and college scholarships. (鈥淏udget Resolution Removes Extra Education Money,鈥 May 4, 2005.)

A Republican staff member for the House subcommittee that oversees education spending, headed by Rep. Ralph Regula, R-Ohio, said Mr. Regula might be more interested in pilot programs that alter the way teachers are paid, rather than in a huge new pot of money.

鈥淚f there is sufficient evidence that this is something we should support a little bit more,鈥 the aide said, 鈥渢hen we could look into a new authorization.鈥

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