One year after his election, President Barack Obama is coaxing states across the country to rewrite education laws and cut deals with unions as they pursue his vision for school reform.
Obama is visiting Wisconsin, where lawmakers are poised to change a law to boost their state鈥檚 chances at $5 billion in education grants, the most money a president has ever had for overhauling schools.
Nine other states have taken similar steps, even though states can鈥檛 apply for the money yet and only a few states may end up getting grants.
鈥淲e鈥檙e seeing extraordinary progress,鈥 Education Secretary Arne Duncan said in an interview with The Associated Press. 鈥淚鈥檓 hopeful the pace of change will continue.鈥
Wisconsin lawmakers planned to vote Thursday to lift a ban on using student test scores to judge teachers. That helps clear the way for an Obama priority, teacher pay tied to student performance.
California lifted a similar ban last month. And before that, charter school restrictions or budget cuts were eased in eight states 鈥 Louisiana, Illinois, Tennessee, Delaware, Indiana, Ohio, Connecticut and Rhode Island.
Duncan had repeatedly warned that such restrictions would hurt a state鈥檚 chances at the money. The administration can鈥檛 really tell states and schools what to do, since education has been largely a state and local responsibility throughout the history of the U.S.
But Obama has considerable leverage in his nearly $5 billion competitive grant fund, dubbed the 鈥淩ace to the Top,鈥 that was set aside in the economic stimulus law.
No president has ever had that much money for schools at his discretion. Only Duncan 鈥 not Congress 鈥 has control over who gets it. And only some states, perhaps 10 to 20, will actually get the money.
Obama will use the trip to Wisconsin to call attention to the actions states are taking, one year after his election, to put his vision of reform in place, Melody Barnes, Obama鈥檚 domestic policy director, told reporters Tuesday.
Obama sees the test score data and charter schools, which are publicly funded but independent of local school boards, as solutions to the problems that plague public education.
The national teachers unions disagree. They say student achievement is much more than a score on a standardized test and say it鈥檚 a mistake to rely so heavily on charter schools.
鈥淒espite growing evidence to the contrary, it appears the administration has decided that charter schools are the only answer to what ails America鈥檚 public schools,鈥 the National Education Association, the largest teachers union, said in comments submitted to the Education Department.
The NEA added, 鈥淲e should not continue the unhealthy focus on standardized tests as the primary evidence of student success.鈥
At the state level, unions have made deals with lawmakers on test scores. In Wisconsin, the state teachers union agreed that test scores could be used to evaluate teachers 鈥 as long as they couldn鈥檛 be used to fire or discipline teachers.
Teachers unions are an influential segment of Obama鈥檚 Democratic base. Obama is encouraging states to get their support; the Education Department says a state can win extra points in the 鈥淩ace to the Top鈥 if unions support their efforts.
Charter schools and test scores fit into four broad goals that Obama wants states to pursue 鈥 tougher academic standards, better ways to recruit and keep effective teachers, a method of tracking student performance and a plan of action to turn around failing schools.
A state will have to meet a series of conditions to earn points and boost its chances. Applications will be available this month, and the first round of grants will be awarded early next year.