The Federal Role in Education

What School Board Candidates Need to Know

Photo by Alejandro Barba on Unsplash

Overview

The U.S. Constitution does not mention education. As a consequence, the federal role in education is secondary to that of the states, almost all of which guarantee a tuition-free education in their constitutions. Perhaps the most important federal role is to ensure that states and local districts don’t discriminate in schools, a role it plays more or less assiduously depending on who is president.

History

In terms of K-12 education, the U.S. government mostly confined itself to gathering statistics and data until 1965. At that time most districts maintained separate and grossly underfunded schools for African American students and other students of color. Many simply refused to enroll students with disabilities. In 1965, as part of President Lyndon Johnson’s War on Poverty, Congress passed the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA), which did three big things:

● It sent money to states and districts to pay for what it called “compensatory” education for children of color and children living in poverty. The bulk of the money came from Title I of ESEA and was intended to supplement what was already being spent by the local and state governments. In addition, through the years, the Department of Education has provided grants to schools and districts to try new things such as “scientifically based” reading instruction.

● It established an office to enforce the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which prohibited discrimination on the basis of race, color, creed, or national origin (later amended to include sex, and age). Its role was enlarged with the Education for All Handicapped Children Act in 1975 (later becoming the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act) which said schools must provide schooling to children with disabilities in the “least restrictive environment” possible.

● It expanded data gathering and research. Eventually the federal government began assessing a large sample of children with what is known as the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) and later established the Institute for Educational Sciences.

From 1971 until 1988, all groups of students showed considerable progress in both math and reading on NAEP. In 1988 that progress stopped, and a considerable amount of research raised concerns about how federal funds were being used. In the 1990s a political push began for states to establish standards for learning. In 2002, when ESEA was reauthorized as No Child Left Behind (NCLB), Congress said that if states wanted Title I dollars, they had to demonstrate that children from low-income families, children of color, and students with disabilities were being taught to the same standards as other children. To do so, No Child Left Behind required states to assess children’s reading and math every year from third through eighth grade and once in high school, as well as science once in elementary and once in high school. States were required to report individual results to parents and school and district results to the public. Those results were reported not only overall but also broken out by student subgroup; in this way people could see how children who received free and reduced-price meals, for example, performed in comparison to children who didn’t. NCLB also put into place accountability mechanisms for those schools that did not show progress in teaching children of color and children from low-income backgrounds to read and do math. In 2015, ESEA was reauthorized as the Every Student Succeeds Act, which eased the rules on how states are required to hold schools accountable for results.

The Federal Role Today

● The U.S. Department of Education continues its original mission to gather and report information, statistics, and research about education.

● The federal government provides roughly 9 percent of all the money spent on public education. In 2023 the department will distribute $18 billion in Title I money. In order to help schools recover from COVID losses, Congress sent three waves of funding that added up to nearly $190 billion to states to distribute to school districts.

● The Office for Civil Rights continues to play the role of watchdog against discrimination. Recently it has focused on whether students of color and students with disabilities are subject to harsher discipline than white students and has investigated the bullying of gay and transgender students.

Questions to Ask in Your School District

Ask district officials: How are federal dollars used? Are they being used in the most effective ways to support the children who need the most help? Are there civil rights investigations in the district? What are the issues?

Ask teachers and principals: Are policies and procedures fair to all students? Are there students who need more support?

Ask students and parents: Do they have access to all the programs and services they are entitled to? Are there additional services they need?


For More Information:

Please Note: This is a living document that may be edited and changed from time to time.

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