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Politics K-12 kept watch on education policy and politics in the nation鈥檚 capital and in the states. This blog is no longer being updated, but you can continue to explore these issues on edweek.org by visiting our related topic pages: , .

Education Funding

What Obama鈥檚 Stimulus Had for Education That the Coronavirus Package Doesn鈥檛

By Andrew Ujifusa 鈥 March 31, 2020 2 min read
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Remember the last time we had a big federal stimulus for education? The 2009 American Recovery and Reinvestment Act ended up being a lot smaller than the coronavirus aid package President Donald Trump signed last week, but it included much more money for education in coping with the impact of the Great Recession. And it also teed up President Barack Obama鈥檚 education agenda for his two terms.

For those of you who weren鈥檛 following the 2009 stimulus, that year 澳门跑狗论坛 broke down the education pieces of it in a handy pie chart. Here it is:

Let鈥檚 pause for a moment to remember that the third round of coronavirus aid Trump signed into law, and the $13.5 billion in aid earmarked solely for K-12 education, may not be the last time schools get federal assistance to deal with the fallout. (.)

Again, perhaps the biggest difference between the 2009 stimulus and the coronavirus relief money is the size. Whereas states got 11 years ago, they鈥檙e getting about $31 billion in the new stabilization fund.

The majority of the 2009 stabilization cash鈥$48.6 billion鈥攚ent out to states by formula for early learning, K-12, and postsecondary education. The remaining money? It was earmarked for Race to the Top and the Investing in What Works and Innovation programs.

Speaking of which, another significant disparity between the two stimulus packages is how much flexibility there is at a general level. Whereas the 2009 stimulus earmarked different amounts of funding for a total of 14 different programs and priorities (if you count 鈥渙ther鈥), governors and school districts have more discretion about how to use coronavirus aid in the new CARES Act.

The CARES Act lists 12 different allowable uses for the $13.5 billion earmarked for school districts. But these categories are written broadly, such as 鈥渁ny activity鈥 authorized by the Every Student Succeeds Act, as well as internet connectivity, mental health supports for students, and training staff on minimizing the spread of infectious diseases, among other things. And the roughly $3 billion set aside for governors to distribute to K-12 and higher education in the stabilization fund doesn鈥檛 have much in the way of strings attached either.

Final point: We mentioned at the start that the 2009 stimulus didn鈥檛 just shore up education budgets; its unprecedented windfall of education aid also helped the Obama administration put financial muscle behind its priorities. Those priorities focused on areas like standards and accountability.

The CARES Act doesn鈥檛 take the same approach. It鈥檚 hard to see discrete elements of a Trump education policy agenda driving current coronavirus aid鈥 although with plans for 鈥渕icrogrants.鈥 And education groups are already jockeying about what comes next in the anticipated fourth round of coronavirus relief.

Photo: President Barack Obama, sitting next to 6th-grader Osman Yaya, spoke at Anacostia Library in Washington during in a live 鈥渧irtual field trip鈥 with middle school students in 2015. (Susan Walsh/AP)

A version of this news article first appeared in the Politics K-12 blog.