We need to offer accountability and standards in education. In 10 years, we should have the very best math and science programs in the world. Less money should be spent on bureaucracy and more should make it to the classroom.
We need a framework for legislation that will expand access and quality of education by focusing on the principles of fairness, accountability and affordability. We should hold schools to the highest standards, giving each child the opportunity to learn and live up to their greatest potential.
Reform education bureaucracy
It's not how much you spend its how you spend it.
America's children deserve the best education.
-- Today, the federal government spends more than $66 billion on K-12 education: more than $1,400 for every public school student in the United States. American taxpayers spend more than $440 billion annually on K-12 public education in the United States.
-- Over the past three decades, per-pupil education spending has doubled, but test scores have remained stagnant. The U.S. spends more money per student than any other nation in the world and yet is not first in education. Source: HERITAGE FOUNDATION
Local community leaders and parents know the education needs of children in their area better than distant federal bureaucrats. Control must be returned to those who best know a child's individual needs.
-- The A-Plus Act (H.R. 1539) Rep. Peter Hoekstra (R-MI) is sponsor and Rep. Tom Feeney a cosponsor -- This legislation gives states and localities the power and responsibility to determine their own education needs and policies. States may opt-out of No Child Left Behind's regulations, without losing federal funding, and instead maintain their own state assessment and accountability systems.
-- The Local Control of Education Act (H.R. 1857). Rep. John Culberson (R-TX) is sponsor and Rep. Tom Feeney a cosponsor -- This legislation gives the states the choice and responsibility to decide what is the best use of No Child Left Behind federal funding. This includes teacher evaluation and student performance.
Parents Deserve a Choice in the School their Child Attends
We need to implement reforms to transfer dollars and power back to state and local governments so that local policymakers can enact reforms that best suit local community needs.
-- The Empowering Parents Through Choice Act (H.R. 1486) Rep. Buck McKeon (R-CA) is sponsor -- This legislation implements the Promise Scholarship program to allow parents of students in failing schools to send their child to a private school, to send them to an out-of-district public school, or receive extensive tutoring.
We must attract high quality teachers to our schools for our children's education
-- Individual states should be able to set "alternative certification" guidelines and requirements for teachers (especially Math and Science) with practical experience.
-- The federal government should make it easier-not more difficult-for a NASA engineer or mathematician to teach science at a local school.
-- The 10,000 Teachers, 10 Million Minds Science and Math Scholarship Act (H.R. 362). Rep. Bart Gordon (D-TN) is sponsor. House passed and Rep. Feeney supported -- This legislation provides additional scholarships and training to math and engineering students and professionals in exchange for service as elementary and secondary school teachers.
We need to evaluate our teachers and reward academic achievements.
Those teachers that are most effective should be rewarded with appropriate compensation.
We must Emphasize Math and Science Achievements for the Future of our Children and National Security
-- International testing continues to demonstrate that American students are lagging behind their foreign peers in math and science.
-- Rather than add more federal programs to the hundreds that already exist, Congress should enact a "Grace Commission" type review of the programs to determine what works, what doesn't, and redirect efforts accordingly.