Obama Budget Touts Selective Boosts in Ed. Funding

U.S. Senate Budget Committee assistant Kathleen Llewellyn unloads copies of President Barack Obama’s 2013 budget request for Congressional staff on Feb. 13 in Washington.
—Alex Wong/Getty Images

Education takes a marquee spot in President Barack Obama’s last, otherwise austere, election-year budget request Requires Adobe Acrobat Reader , with his spending plan calling for new investments in community colleges, money to prevent teacher layoffs, investment in school facilities, and funds to spur state action on teacher quality.

But the fiscal year 2013 budget proposal—which also emphasizes the administration’s signature competitive-grant programs while flat-funding key formula grants, such as Title I aid to districts—faces an almost-certain dead end in Congress, where Republicans are seeking to squelch the federal role in K-12 policy and rein in spending.

The president unveiled his $3.8 trillion budget in a speech at Northern Virginia Community College, in Annandale, which emphasized the importance of education and training to the nation’s economic recovery—a central theme of his administration’s message going...

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Correction: 
A previous version of this story reported that Teach for America and the National Board for Professional Teaching Standards had been awarded grants under the Title II set-aside. While both programs have applied for the grants, the winners have not yet been announced.

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