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Also tagged in: Air pollution, Air pollution control, Alabama, Alternative energy sources, Appropriations, Architecture and the disabled, Asbestos, Authorization, Bicycles, Biomass energy, Budgets, Building construction, Business, Buy American, Carbon dioxide, Charter schools, Child health, Child safety, Children, Competitive bidding, Congress, Congressional reporting requirements, Construction industries, Construction workers, Criminal justice, Criminal justice information, Data banks, Department of Education, Disabled, Economic assistance, Education, Education of the disadvantaged, Educational technology, Electronic government information, Elementary and secondary education, Elementary education, Emergency management, Emissions trading, Employee selection, Energy, Energy conservation, Energy conservation in buildings, Energy efficiency, Environmental protection, Executive departments, Federal aid to education, Federal aid to Indians, Foreign aid, Fungi, Geothermal resources, Government contractors, Government information, Government lending, Government paperwork, Government publicity, Hazardous substances, Hurricanes, Identification of criminals, Illegal aliens, Immigrant education, Immigration, Indian education, Indians, Indoor air pollution, Iron, Iron and steel industry, Labor, Lead, Louisiana, Maintenance and repair, Marshall Islands, Medical care, Medicine, Micronesia, Minimum wages, Minorities, Minority business enterprises, Mississippi, Occupational health and safety, Oceania, Paints and varnishes, Pedestrians, Polychlorinated biphenyls, Poor children, Public contracts, Revolving funds, School buildings, School districts, School libraries, Science policy, Scientific education, Secondary education, Security measures, Small business, Solar energy, Standards, Steel, Subcontractors, Teachers, Technical education, Technology, Telecommunication, Trade, Transportation, Wages, Welfare, Wind power, Women, Women in business, Wood
Latest Action: 06/06/2008 - Received in the Senate. Bill TextTo direct the Secretary of Education to make grants to State educational agencies for the modernization, renovation, or repair of public school facilities, and for other purposes. 6/4/2008--Passed House amended. (There are 2 other summaries) 21st Century Green High-Performing Public School Facilities Act - Title I: Grants for Modernization, Renovation, or Repair of School Facilities - (Sec. 102) Requires the Secretary of Education to make grants to states for the modernization, renovation, or repair of public schools, including public charter schools, to make them safe, healthy, high-performing, and technologically up-to-date. Allocates grant funds among states on the basis of the relative portion of school improvement funds provided to local educational agencies (LEAs) in each state under part A of title I of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965. Reserves 1% of the grant funds for assistance to outlying areas and Indian [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Budgets, Child development, Child health, Child nutrition, Children, Communications, Continuing education, Curricula, Day care, Disabled, Education, Educational accountability, Educational facilities, Elementary and secondary education, English language, Eye care, Families, Federal aid to education, Federal aid to Indians, Food, Fringe benefits, Health policy, Hearing, Higher education, Indian education, Indians, Labor, Literacy programs, Medical care, Medical screening, Medical tests, Medicine, Minorities, Paraprofessional school personnel, Parent-school relationships, Preschool education, Recruiting of employees, School administration, Special education, Standards, Teacher education, Teacher salaries, Teacher supply and demand
Latest Action: 06/25/2008 - Subcommittee on Early Childhood, Elementary, and Secondary Education Discharged. Bill TextTo amend the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 to improve early education. 8/1/2007--Introduced. Providing Resources Early for Kids Act of 2007 or the PRE-K Act - Amends the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 to direct the Secretary of Education to award matching grants to states to enhance or improve state-funded preschool programs. Sets forth a grant formula favoring states that: (1) have curricula aligned with state early learning standards; (2) follow nationally-established best practices for class size and teacher-to-student ratios; (3) require each teacher to hold at least an associate degree in early childhood education or a related field; and (4) have a plan for meeting the requirement, within five years of receiving such grant, that teachers hold at least a baccalaureate degree in early childhood education or a related field. Directs the Secretary to establish a competitive process for awarding grants to other states that demonstrate [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Alabama, Budgets, Building construction, Charter schools, Colleges, Congress, Congressional investigations, Congressional reporting requirements, Construction costs, Continuing education, Disaster relief, Education, Educational accountability, Elementary and secondary education, Elementary education, Emergency management, Employee vacations, Federal aid to education, Floods, Florida, Fringe benefits, Higher education, Hospitals, Housing, Housing subsidies, Hurricanes, Labor, Louisiana, Maintenance and repair, Medical care, Medical education, Medicine, Mississippi, Nonprofit organizations, Paraprofessional school personnel, Private schools, Rating of teachers, Recruiting of employees, Relocation, Scholarships, School administration, School buildings, School districts, School personnel, Secondary education, Social services, Student loan funds, Teacher education, Teacher salaries, Teacher supply and demand, Texas
Latest Action: 06/27/2007 - Referred to the Subcommittee on Early Childhood, Elementary, and Secondary Education. Bill TextTo provide grants to recruit new teachers, principals, and other school leaders to, and retain and support current and returning teachers, principals, and other school leaders employed in, public elementary and public secondary schools, and to help higher education, in areas impacted by Hurricane Katrina or Hurricane Rita, and for other purposes. 3/7/2007--Introduced. Revitalizing New Orleans by Attracting America's Leaders Act of 2007 or the RENEWAAL Act of 2007 - Directs the Secretary of Education to award grants to Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama for their use in providing competitive subgrants to local educational agencies (LEAs) that serve areas in which a major disaster was declared due to Hurricane Katrina or Rita. Gives priority to LEAs having the highest percentage of schools with teacher-student ratios of at least 25 to 1 or closed due to the hurricanes. Requires each LEA subgrantee to use the funds to: (1) provide annual bonuses to teachers and school [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Budgets, Child development, Children, Congressional reporting requirements, Continuing education, Curricula, Disabled, Education, Education of the disadvantaged, Elementary and secondary education, Families, Family services, Federal aid to education, Foster home care, Government information, Government paperwork, Government trust funds, Higher education, Homeless, Illiteracy, Parent-school relationships, Poor children, Preschool education, School administration, Social services, Special education, Student transportation, Teacher education, Transportation, Welfare
Latest Action: 05/11/2007 - Sponsor introductory remarks on measure. (CR S6021) Bill TextA bill to assist States in making voluntary high quality full-day prekindergarten programs available and economically affordable for the families of all children for at least 1 year preceding kindergarten. 5/11/2007--Introduced. Prepare All Kids Act of 2007 - Amends the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1981 to direct the Secretary of Health and Human Services to establish a Prekindergarten Incentive Fund from which matching grants shall be awarded to states and, through them, subgrants to qualified prekindergarten providers to establish, expand, or enhance voluntary high quality full-day prekindergarten programs serving children ages three through five. Requires prekindergarten providers to target children from families with incomes at or below 200% of the poverty line and provide them with program services free of charge. Directs state grantees to set aside: (1) at least 10% of a grant for quality early childhood development programs for children ages zero [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Academic performance, Accounting, Administrative remedies, Air pollution, Alabama, Alaska, Architecture and the disabled, Armed forces, Arts, Auditing, Authorization, Black colleges, Budgets, Business, Child abuse, Child development, Child health, Child nutrition, Child welfare, Children, Church and education, Commemorations, Communications, Community and school, Conflict of interests, Congressional tributes, Continuing education, Cost effectiveness, Criminal justice, Criminal justice information, Curricula, Decision making, Defense policy, Dental care, Department of Health and Human Services, Disabled, Disasters, Distance education, Education, Education of the disadvantaged, Educational accountability, Educational planning, Educational research, Educational statistics, Educational surveys, Educational tests, Elementary and secondary education, Elementary education, Emergency management, Employee selection, English language, Environmental protection, Executive departments, Executive reorganization, Exercise, Eye care, Families, Family services, Federal aid to education, Federal officials, Federal-territorial relations, Financial statements, Floods, Foster home care, Government and the press, Government employees, Government information, Government paperwork, Government publicity, Governmental investigations, Graduate education, Grandparents, Health policy, Higher education, Hispanic Americans, Homeless, Housing, Humanities, Hurricanes, Identification of criminals, Illiteracy, Indian children, Indian education, Indians, Indigenous peoples, Indoor air pollution, Infants, Informed consent (Medical law), Job training, Labor, Language and languages, Law, Lawyers, Learning, Legal fees, Libraries, Literacy programs, Louisiana, Marshall Islands, Mathematics, Medical care, Medicine, Micronesia, Migrant education, Military housing, Military pay, Minorities, Minority education, Mississippi, Motor vehicle safety, Museums, Nonprofit organizations, Obesity, Oceania, Palau Islands, Parent and child, Parent-school relationships, Parental consent, Parents, Physical education and training, Physical examinations, Politics and government, Pregnant women, Preschool education, Preventive medicine, Public contracts, Recruiting of employees, Religion, Rural affairs, Rural education, Salaries, Scholarships, School buildings, School buses, School districts, School health programs, Science policy, Scientific education, Secondary education, Social services, Special education, Sports, Standards, State and local government, State politics and government, Stress (Psychology), Student enrollment, Student loan funds, Student transportation, Teacher education, Teacher salaries, Teacher supply and demand, Teachers, Teaching, Telecommunication, Texas, Transportation, Transportation safety, Travel costs, Welfare, Welfare eligibility, Women
Latest Action: 12/12/2007 - Signed by President. Bill TextTo reauthorize the Head Start Act, to improve program quality, to expand access, and for other purposes. 12/12/2007--Public Law. (There are 5 other summaries) (This measure has not been amended since the Conference Report was filed in the House on November 14, 2007. The summary of that version is repeated here.) Improving Head Start for School Readiness Act of 2007 - Amends the Head Start Act (the Act) to revise and reauthorize Head Start programs. (Sec. 2) Includes among the aims of Head Start programs children's growth in language, literacy, mathematics, science, social and emotional functioning, creative arts, physical skills, and approaches to learning. (Sec. 3) Includes community-based organizations and financial literacy training within the definitions of Head Start delegate agencies and family literacy services, respectively. Adds definitions of Head Start deficiencies, homeless children, institutions of higher education,[...] show full description
Also tagged in: Academic performance, Building construction, Child development, Children, Communications, Congressional reporting requirements, Construction costs, Continuing education, Curricula, Education, Education of the disadvantaged, Educational accountability, Educational tests, Elementary and secondary education, English language, Families, Federal aid to education, Higher education, Illiteracy, Literacy programs, Parent-school relationships, Preschool education, School buildings, Standards, Teacher education, Teacher salaries, Teachers, Welfare
Latest Action: 07/19/2007 - Sponsor introductory remarks on measure. (CR S9616-9617) Bill TextA bill to set the United States on track to ensure children are ready to learn when they begin kindergarten. 7/19/2007--Introduced. Ready to Learn Act - Amends the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 to authorize the Secretary of Education to award competitive matching grants to states and, through them, subgrants to schools, child care entities, Head Start programs, or other community-based prekindergarten providers for full day voluntary prekindergarten programs that prepare four-year olds for school. Requires that such programs: (1) first serve children whose family income is no higher than 200% of the poverty level or who are limited English proficient; (2) ensure that, within two years of grant receipt, each classroom is taught by a teacher who has at least a baccalaureate degree in early childhood education or such a degree and specialized training in early childhood development; (3) use curricula that are aligned with state early learning standards;[...] show full description
Also tagged in: Budgets, Continuing education, Data banks, Disabled, Education, Education of the disadvantaged, Educational accountability, Educational research, Educational statistics, Educational tests, Electronic government information, Elementary and secondary education, Elementary education, Federal aid to education, Government information, Government publicity, Higher education, Labor, Licenses, Private schools, Rating of teachers, Recruiting of employees, School districts, Science policy, Secondary education, Special education, Student enrollment, Teacher education, Teacher salaries, Teacher supply and demand, Technology, Telecommunication, Welfare
Latest Action: 10/01/2007 - Read twice and referred to the Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions. Bill TextA bill to amend title V of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 to reduce class size through the use of highly qualified teachers, and for other purposes. 10/1/2007--Introduced. Facilitating Outstanding Classrooms Using Size reduction Act (FOCUS Act) - Amends the Elementary and Secondary Education Act to require the Secretary of Education to award formula grants to states for allocation to their local educational agencies (LEAs) to: (1) reduce class size, particularly in the early elementary grades, by using highly qualified teachers; and (2) create a continuum of small classes from kindergarten through third grade for all their students. Permits LEAs to use such funds to recruit highly qualified teachers, test new teachers, and provide professional development that enables teachers to teach effectively in their content areas. Requires 80% of an LEA's allocation to be based on its proportion of the state's low-income students, with the remainder [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Academic performance, Budgets, Child health, Child nutrition, Children, Communications, Community and school, Continuing education, Day care, Education, Educational accountability, Educational counseling, Educational planning, Educational research, Educational statistics, Educational tests, Elementary and secondary education, Elementary education, Families, Federal aid to education, Food, Government information, Government paperwork, Governmental investigations, Health education, Health policy, Higher education, Information services, Lifestyle, Medical care, Medicine, Obesity, Parent-school relationships, Performance measurement, Physical education and training, Physical fitness, Preschool education, School administration, School health programs, Secondary education, Sports, Standards, Teacher education
Latest Action: 10/17/2007 - Sponsor introductory remarks on measure. (CR S12990-12991) Bill TextA bill to amend the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 to improve standards for physical education. 10/17/2007--Introduced. Fitness Integrated with Teaching Kids Act or the FIT Kids Act - Amends the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 to require annual state and local educational agency report cards to include specified information on school health and physical education programs. Includes the promotion of healthy, active lifestyles by students within ESEA grant programs that support school counseling, smaller learning communities, community learning centers, and parental involvement in their childrens' education. Revises the professional development program for teachers and principals to include training for physical and health education teachers, and training on improving students' health habits and participation in physical activities. Directs the Secretary of Health and Human Services to fund a study by the National Academy of [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Academic performance, Actions and defenses, Administrative remedies, Books, Budgets, Business, Citizenship education, Communications, Computer software, Computers, Congress, Congressional reporting requirements, Curricula, Democracy, Department of Education, Education, Educational accountability, Educational counseling, Educational equalization, Educational planning, Educational research, Educational statistics, Educational technology, Electronic government information, Elementary and secondary education, Elementary education, Environmental protection, Executive departments, Families, Federal aid to education, Government information, Government paperwork, Government publicity, Humanities, Industrial production, Injunctions, Internet, Judicial opinions, Labor, Labor productivity, Language arts, Law, Legal fees, Mathematics, Parent-school relationships, Periodicals, Politics and government, Public schools, Reading, Rural affairs, Rural education, School administration, School buildings, School districts, School libraries, School personnel, Science policy, Scientific education, Secondary education, Standards, Students, Teachers, Teaching, Teaching materials, Technology, Telecommunication, Textbooks, Urban affairs, Urban education
Latest Action: 10/17/2007 - Sponsor introductory remarks on measure. (CR S13000) Bill TextA bill to provide for educational opportunities for all students in State public school systems, and for other purposes. 10/17/2007--Introduced. Student Bill of Rights - Directs the Secretary of Education to make annual determinations as to whether each state's public school system provides all its students with educational resources to succeed academically and in life. Requires such education to enable students to: (1) acquire knowledge and skills necessary for responsible citizenship; (2) meet challenging academic achievement standards; and (3) compete and succeed in a global economy. Requires each system to do so by: (1) providing specified fundamentals of educational opportunity to students at each public elementary and secondary school; (2) providing educational services in school districts that receive funds for disadvantaged students that are at least comparable to educational services provided in school districts not receiving such funds; and (3) complying with [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Academic performance, Arts, Budgets, Child development, Children, Citizenship education, Colleges, Communications, Community and school, Compensatory education, Congressional reporting requirements, Continuing education, Curricula, Data banks, Disabled, Dropouts, Education, Education of the disadvantaged, Educational accountability, Educational counseling, Educational innovations, Educational planning, Educational research, Educational tests, Electronic government information, Elementary and secondary education, Elementary education, English language, Families, Federal aid to education, Federal aid to research, Government information, Government paperwork, Government publicity, Higher education, History, Humanities, Indian education, Indians, Labor, Language arts, Literacy programs, Mathematics, Minorities, Nonprofit organizations, Parent-school relationships, Performance measurement, Politics and government, Rating of teachers, Reading, Recruiting of employees, Research and development, Research and development facilities, Research centers, Research grants, School discipline, School districts, Science policy, Scientific education, Secondary education, Social services, Special education, Teacher education, Teacher supply and demand, Technology, Telecommunication, Welfare
Latest Action: 10/24/2007 - Read twice and referred to the Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions. Bill TextA bill to provide grants to States to ensure that all students in the middle grades are taught an academically rigorous curriculum with effective supports so that students complete the middle grades prepared for success in high school and postsecondary endeavors, to improve State and district policies and programs relating to the academic achievement of students in the middle grades, to develop and implement effective middle school models for struggling students, and for other purposes. 10/24/2007--Introduced. Success in the Middle Act of 2007 - Directs the Secretary of Education to make matching grants to states, based on their proportion of poor children aged 5 to 17, to: (1) implement state middle school needs analyses and, on the basis of such analyses, improvement plans that describe what students must master to successfully complete the middle grades and succeed in academically rigorous high school coursework; and (2) award competitive matching subgrants to local educational [...] show full description
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Latest Legislation - View All
Also tagged in: Art, Budgets, Child abuse, Child development, Child health, Child nutrition, Children, Communications, Congress, Congressional reporting requirements, Continuing education, Criminal justice, Curricula, Day care, Disabled, Education, Education of the disadvantaged, Educational accountability, Elementary and secondary education, Elementary education, Families, Federal aid to education, Food, Government information, Government paperwork, Health policy, Higher education, Homeless, Humanities, Immigrant education, Immigration, Indian children, Indian education, Indians, Juvenile delinquency, Labor, Language and languages, Learning, Literacy programs, Mathematics, Medical care, Medicine, Mental health services, Migrant education, Minorities, Music, Paraprofessional school personnel, Parent-school relationships, Preschool education, Public service advertising, Reading, Recruiting of employees, School districts, School health programs, Special education, Student records, Student transportation, Teacher education, Teacher salaries, Teacher supply and demand, Transportation, Welfare
Latest Action: 03/13/2008 - Sponsor introductory remarks on measure. (CR 3/14/2008 S2142) Bill TextA bill to provide for Kindergarten Plus programs. 3/13/2008--Introduced. Kindergarten Plus Act of 2008 - Authorizes the Secretary of Education to award competitive grants to states to provide Kindergarten Plus (K+) programs of voluntary full days of kindergarten during the summer before and the summer after their traditional kindergarten school year. Directs the Secretary to ensure, to the extent possible, that each grant is of sufficient size to enable the state to provide K+ to all eligible students served by the local educational agencies (LEAs) within the state with the highest concentrations of eligible students. Makes children eligible to participate in such programs if they are: (1) five-years old or will be eligible to attend kindergarten at the beginning of the next school year; (2) from a family with an income at or below 185% of the poverty line; and (3) not already served by a high-quality program in the summer before or the summer after the child enters [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Accreditation (Education), Budgets, Child development, Children, Congressional reporting requirements, Continuing education, Curricula, Day care, Disabled, Education, Education of the disadvantaged, Elementary and secondary education, Families, Federal aid to education, Fringe benefits, Government information, Government paperwork, Higher education, Labor, Parent-school relationships, Preschool education, Salaries, Scholarships, Special education, Student aid, Teacher education, Teacher supply and demand, Transportation, Welfare
Latest Action: 01/15/2008 - Referred to the Subcommittee on Early Childhood, Elementary, and Secondary Education. Bill TextTo assist States in establishing a universal prekindergarten program to ensure that all children 3, 4, and 5 years old have access to a high-quality full-day, full-calendar-year prekindergarten education. 11/1/2007--Introduced. Universal Prekindergarten Act - Directs the Secretary of Health and Human Services to provide grants to a designated state agency for development of universal prekindergaten programs for all children three, four, and five years old in the state. Requires the state to: (1) match federal funds by at least 20%; and (2) submit with its grant application a plan to establish, coordinate, and implement a statewide universal prekindergarten program. Authorizes state agencies to set aside up to 5% of a grant for ongoing professional development activities for teachers and staff of prekindergarten programs that wish to participate.
Also tagged in: Academic performance, Arts, Budgets, Child development, Children, Citizenship education, Colleges, Communications, Community and school, Compensatory education, Congressional reporting requirements, Continuing education, Curricula, Data banks, Disabled, Dropouts, Education, Education of the disadvantaged, Educational accountability, Educational counseling, Educational innovations, Educational planning, Educational research, Educational tests, Electronic government information, Elementary and secondary education, Elementary education, English language, Families, Federal aid to education, Federal aid to research, Government information, Government paperwork, Government publicity, Higher education, History, Humanities, Indian education, Indians, Labor, Language arts, Literacy programs, Mathematics, Minorities, Nonprofit organizations, Parent-school relationships, Performance measurement, Politics and government, Rating of teachers, Reading, Recruiting of employees, Research and development, Research and development facilities, Research centers, Research grants, School discipline, School districts, Science policy, Scientific education, Secondary education, Social services, Special education, Teacher education, Teacher supply and demand, Technology, Telecommunication, Welfare
Latest Action: 10/24/2007 - Read twice and referred to the Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions. Bill TextA bill to provide grants to States to ensure that all students in the middle grades are taught an academically rigorous curriculum with effective supports so that students complete the middle grades prepared for success in high school and postsecondary endeavors, to improve State and district policies and programs relating to the academic achievement of students in the middle grades, to develop and implement effective middle school models for struggling students, and for other purposes. 10/24/2007--Introduced. Success in the Middle Act of 2007 - Directs the Secretary of Education to make matching grants to states, based on their proportion of poor children aged 5 to 17, to: (1) implement state middle school needs analyses and, on the basis of such analyses, improvement plans that describe what students must master to successfully complete the middle grades and succeed in academically rigorous high school coursework; and (2) award competitive matching subgrants to local educational [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Academic performance, Budgets, Child health, Child nutrition, Children, Communications, Community and school, Continuing education, Day care, Education, Educational accountability, Educational counseling, Educational planning, Educational research, Educational statistics, Educational tests, Elementary and secondary education, Elementary education, Families, Federal aid to education, Food, Government information, Government paperwork, Governmental investigations, Health education, Health policy, Higher education, Information services, Lifestyle, Medical care, Medicine, Obesity, Parent-school relationships, Performance measurement, Physical education and training, Physical fitness, Preschool education, School administration, School health programs, Secondary education, Sports, Standards, Teacher education
Latest Action: 10/17/2007 - Sponsor introductory remarks on measure. (CR S12990-12991) Bill TextA bill to amend the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 to improve standards for physical education. 10/17/2007--Introduced. Fitness Integrated with Teaching Kids Act or the FIT Kids Act - Amends the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 to require annual state and local educational agency report cards to include specified information on school health and physical education programs. Includes the promotion of healthy, active lifestyles by students within ESEA grant programs that support school counseling, smaller learning communities, community learning centers, and parental involvement in their childrens' education. Revises the professional development program for teachers and principals to include training for physical and health education teachers, and training on improving students' health habits and participation in physical activities. Directs the Secretary of Health and Human Services to fund a study by the National Academy of [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Academic performance, Actions and defenses, Administrative remedies, Books, Budgets, Business, Citizenship education, Communications, Computer software, Computers, Congress, Congressional reporting requirements, Curricula, Democracy, Department of Education, Education, Educational accountability, Educational counseling, Educational equalization, Educational planning, Educational research, Educational statistics, Educational technology, Electronic government information, Elementary and secondary education, Elementary education, Environmental protection, Executive departments, Families, Federal aid to education, Government information, Government paperwork, Government publicity, Humanities, Industrial production, Injunctions, Internet, Judicial opinions, Labor, Labor productivity, Language arts, Law, Legal fees, Mathematics, Parent-school relationships, Periodicals, Politics and government, Public schools, Reading, Rural affairs, Rural education, School administration, School buildings, School districts, School libraries, School personnel, Science policy, Scientific education, Secondary education, Standards, Students, Teachers, Teaching, Teaching materials, Technology, Telecommunication, Textbooks, Urban affairs, Urban education
Latest Action: 10/17/2007 - Sponsor introductory remarks on measure. (CR S13000) Bill TextA bill to provide for educational opportunities for all students in State public school systems, and for other purposes. 10/17/2007--Introduced. Student Bill of Rights - Directs the Secretary of Education to make annual determinations as to whether each state's public school system provides all its students with educational resources to succeed academically and in life. Requires such education to enable students to: (1) acquire knowledge and skills necessary for responsible citizenship; (2) meet challenging academic achievement standards; and (3) compete and succeed in a global economy. Requires each system to do so by: (1) providing specified fundamentals of educational opportunity to students at each public elementary and secondary school; (2) providing educational services in school districts that receive funds for disadvantaged students that are at least comparable to educational services provided in school districts not receiving such funds; and (3) complying with [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Academic performance, Alcoholism, Apprenticeship, Budgets, Business, Business and social problems, Career education, Child development, Child health, Child nutrition, Child welfare, Children, Church and education, Church and social problems, Community and school, Compensatory education, Congressional reporting requirements, Continuing education, Criminal justice, Drug abuse, Drugs and youth, Education, Education of the disadvantaged, Educational accountability, Educational statistics, Educational tests, Elementary and secondary education, Elementary education, English language, Families, Federal aid to education, Food, Government information, Government paperwork, Health policy, Higher education, Homeless, Housing, Job training, Juvenile delinquency, Literacy programs, Medical care, Medicine, Mental health services, Mentoring, Nonprofit organizations, Parent-school relationships, Performance measurement, Religion, School discipline, School districts, School security, Secondary education, Service learning, Social services, Student transportation, Teacher education, Transportation, Welfare, Youth services, Youth violence
Latest Action: 10/04/2007 - Referred to the House Committee on Education and Labor. Bill TextTo amend the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 to foster community involvement, and for other purposes. 10/4/2007--Introduced. Working to Encourage Community Action and Responsibility in Education Act or the WE CARE Act - Amends title I (Improving the Academic Achievement of the Disadvantaged) of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 to require states and local educational agencies (LEAs) to assess the nonacademic factors affecting student academic performance and work with other public, private, nonprofit, and community-based entities to address those factors. Requires the annual report cards issued by states and LEAs to include additional performance data, including information on their efforts to increase community and parental involvement in students' education. Establishes a new program requiring the Secretary of Education to award matching grants to LEAs for the development and implementation of community involvement policies [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Budgets, Continuing education, Data banks, Disabled, Education, Education of the disadvantaged, Educational accountability, Educational research, Educational statistics, Educational tests, Electronic government information, Elementary and secondary education, Elementary education, Federal aid to education, Government information, Government publicity, Higher education, Labor, Licenses, Private schools, Rating of teachers, Recruiting of employees, School districts, Science policy, Secondary education, Special education, Student enrollment, Teacher education, Teacher salaries, Teacher supply and demand, Technology, Telecommunication, Welfare
Latest Action: 10/01/2007 - Read twice and referred to the Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions. Bill TextA bill to amend title V of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 to reduce class size through the use of highly qualified teachers, and for other purposes. 10/1/2007--Introduced. Facilitating Outstanding Classrooms Using Size reduction Act (FOCUS Act) - Amends the Elementary and Secondary Education Act to require the Secretary of Education to award formula grants to states for allocation to their local educational agencies (LEAs) to: (1) reduce class size, particularly in the early elementary grades, by using highly qualified teachers; and (2) create a continuum of small classes from kindergarten through third grade for all their students. Permits LEAs to use such funds to recruit highly qualified teachers, test new teachers, and provide professional development that enables teachers to teach effectively in their content areas. Requires 80% of an LEA's allocation to be based on its proportion of the state's low-income students, with the remainder [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Academic performance, Arts, Budgets, Citizenship education, Colleges, Communications, Community and school, Compensatory education, Continuing education, Curricula, Data banks, Disabled, Dropouts, Education, Education of the disadvantaged, Educational accountability, Educational planning, Educational research, Educational tests, Elementary and secondary education, Elementary education, English language, Families, Federal aid to education, Federal aid to research, Government information, Government paperwork, Government publicity, Higher education, History, Humanities, Labor, Language arts, Literacy programs, Mathematics, Nonprofit organizations, Parent-school relationships, Politics and government, Reading, Recruiting of employees, Research and development, Research and development facilities, Research centers, Research grants, School districts, Science policy, Scientific education, Secondary education, Social services, Special education, Teacher education, Teacher supply and demand, Technology, Welfare
Latest Action: 09/19/2007 - Referred to the Subcommittee on Early Childhood, Elementary, and Secondary Education. Bill TextTo provide grants to States to ensure that all students exit the middle grades prepared for success in a high school with an academically rigorous curriculum that prepares students for postsecondary education and the workplace. 8/3/2007--Introduced. Success in the Middle Act of 2007 - Directs the Secretary of Education to make matching grants to states, based on their proportion of poor children aged 5 to 17, to: (1) implement state middle school improvement plans that describe what students must master to successfully complete the middle grades and matriculate to an academically rigorous high school; and (2) award competitive matching subgrants to local educational agencies (LEAs) to develop and implement a comprehensive local middle school improvement plan for each eligible school. Favors LEAs with high proportions of poor children and eligible schools. Defines "eligible schools" as those where: (1) a majority of middle grade students matriculate to high [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Budgets, Child development, Child health, Child nutrition, Children, Communications, Continuing education, Curricula, Day care, Disabled, Education, Educational accountability, Educational facilities, Elementary and secondary education, English language, Eye care, Families, Federal aid to education, Federal aid to Indians, Food, Fringe benefits, Health policy, Hearing, Higher education, Indian education, Indians, Labor, Literacy programs, Medical care, Medical screening, Medical tests, Medicine, Minorities, Paraprofessional school personnel, Parent-school relationships, Preschool education, Recruiting of employees, School administration, Special education, Standards, Teacher education, Teacher salaries, Teacher supply and demand
Latest Action: 06/25/2008 - Subcommittee on Early Childhood, Elementary, and Secondary Education Discharged. Bill TextTo amend the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 to improve early education. 8/1/2007--Introduced. Providing Resources Early for Kids Act of 2007 or the PRE-K Act - Amends the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 to direct the Secretary of Education to award matching grants to states to enhance or improve state-funded preschool programs. Sets forth a grant formula favoring states that: (1) have curricula aligned with state early learning standards; (2) follow nationally-established best practices for class size and teacher-to-student ratios; (3) require each teacher to hold at least an associate degree in early childhood education or a related field; and (4) have a plan for meeting the requirement, within five years of receiving such grant, that teachers hold at least a baccalaureate degree in early childhood education or a related field. Directs the Secretary to establish a competitive process for awarding grants to other states that demonstrate [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Academic performance, Budgets, Building construction, Child health, Child nutrition, Children, Communications, Community and school, Continuing education, Drug abuse prevention, Education, Educational accountability, Educational counseling, Educational planning, Educational research, Educational statistics, Educational tests, Elementary and secondary education, Elementary education, Families, Federal aid to education, Food, Government information, Government paperwork, Governmental investigations, Health education, Health policy, Higher education, Information services, Lifestyle, Medical care, Medicine, Obesity, Parent-school relationships, Performance measurement, Physical education and training, Physical fitness, Public contracts, School administration, School buildings, School health programs, School security, Secondary education, Sports, Standards, Teacher education
Latest Action: 09/19/2007 - Referred to the Subcommittee on Early Childhood, Elementary, and Secondary Education. Bill TextTo amend the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 to improve standards for physical education. 7/31/2007--Introduced. Fitness Integrated with Teaching Kids Act or the FIT Kids Act - Requires state accountability systems, required under part A of title I of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 (ESEA), to measure not only student academic progress, but their progress toward a national goal of 150 minutes of weekly physical education in elementary school and 225 minutes of weekly physical education in middle and high schools. Amends the ESEA to require annual state and local educational agency report cards to include specified information on school health and physical education programs. Includes the promotion of healthy, active lifestyles by students within ESEA grant programs that support school counseling, safe and drug-free schools and communities, smaller learning communities, community learning centers, parental involvement in their [...] show full description
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