FY11 budget plan folds ed tech into new program
Originally published: February 2, 2010
Last updated: February 2, 2010 - 9:59pm
President Barack Obama's proposed budget for fiscal year 2011 calls for sweeping changes to programs within the Department of Education, including a restructuring of federal education technology grants.
Under Obama's budget plan, the Enhancing Education Through Technology (EETT) program -- the largest single source of federal funding for school technology hardware, software, and professional development -- would be consolidated along with several other grant programs into a new initiative called Effective Teaching and Learning for a Complete Education. This new initiative would focus on improving teaching and learning within three areas: Literacy, STEM (science, technology, engineering, and math), and Well-Rounded Education (arts, foreign languages, civics and government, history, geography, economics, financial literacy, and other subjects). According to Dept of Education officials, the new initiative would "include a focus on integrating technology into instruction and using technology to drive improvements in teaching and learning" throughout all three areas. Most of the money would be awarded through competitive grants to state and local education agencies, but Dept of Education also would set aside money for national activities, such as grants to support research and technical assistance, grants to "strengthen the use of technology in the core academic subjects"; and a competitive grant program to encourage the development of "high-quality digital educational content for children." The three components of the Effective Teaching and Learning initiative would receive a combined $1.015 billion in FY11 funding under the president's proposal, an increase of $95 million over what the programs that make up this new initiative received in FY10. But it's unclear from the plan how much of this $1.015 billion would be spent on education technology in particular.
Links to Sources
- Login or register to post comments
- Email this page
Ratings
Login to rate this headline.
