In a watershed moment for his administration on education policy, President Donald Trump on Tuesday signed the , the first legislation Trump鈥檚 signed that makes significant changes to federal education law itself.
The legislation is a reauthorization of the Carl D. Perkins Career and Technical Education Act, a $1.2 billion program last overhauled by Congress in 2006. The new law allows states to set their own goals for career and technical education programs without the education secretary鈥檚 approval, requires them to make progress toward those goals, and makes other changes to federal CTE law.
Trump celebrated the bill signing at a 鈥淧ledge to America鈥檚 Workers鈥 event on Tuesday in Florida designed to showcase the administration鈥檚 focus on workforce development.
In a speech at Tampa Technical High School in Tampa, Fla., after the official bill signing at the White House, Trump said the new CTE law would contribute to the 鈥渂ooming economy.鈥
Thanks to the law, Trump told the crowd, 鈥淢ore than 11 million students and workers will have greater access to better training and more jobs.鈥
Career and technical education is attracting new attention and support, but it鈥檚 also facing new challenges as programs try to evolve to meet changing labor force demands.
Early in his presidency, Trump approved congressional resolutions that and a separate . So this isn鈥檛 the first act of Congress focused on education he has signed.
But there has been little to no progress on revamping other major education programs in Congress, whether they鈥檙e Trump priorities or otherwise:
- Lawmakers have repeatedly rejected a push by Trump and U.S. Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos to create new federally funded school choice initiatives, such as a $1 billion public school choice program using Title I aid typically directed at low-income students.
- Similarly, Congress hasn鈥檛 shown an interest in making dramatic cuts to the U.S. Department of Education like Trump and DeVos have called for in two education budget proposals so far.
- Work on overhauling the Higher Education Act has stalled, even though a GOP-backed higher education bill awaits action by the full House. Sen. Lamar Alexander, R-Tenn., made an HEA overhaul a top priority at the start of the 115th Congress, but to no avail so far.
- There鈥檚 been no tangible progress on revamping laws like the Individuals With Disabilities Education Act and the Head Start Act that are long overdue for reauthorization.
The Trump administration made reauthorizing Perkins a priority this year, and to push senators to approve a bill. Shortly thereafter, the Senate education committee considered and unanimously passed a Perkins reauthorization bill, which was written by Sen. Bob Casey, D-Pa., and Sen. Mike Enzi, R-Wyo.
Last week, the Senate then passed the legislation, and the as amended by the Senate.
Business groups, the National Governors Association, and education groups like the Council of Chief State School Officers praised Congress鈥 quick work on CTE legislation over the past month. However, advocacy groups like Advance CTE and the Association for Career and Technical Education indicated that they believed the reauthorization was a mixed bag鈥攖he groups worried, for example, that the legislation could lead to states setting 鈥渦nambitious鈥 goals for CTE, and more paperwork for school leaders to deal with.
CTE educators are tackling a series of tough issues. Tennessee, for example, is trying to close down 鈥渄ead-end pathways鈥 in favor of programs that teach more sophisticated technology skills.
And there are growing concerns that some CTE courses of study limit access and don鈥檛 reach a diverse set of students.