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Hope Street Group today released an analysis of education reform measures in the House and Senate versions of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA).

 

"We know what we need to build a true 21st century education system," said executive director Monique Nadeau. "And this package has the potential to jumpstart that effort."

    The report examines the ways in which the two versions address reform, accountability, and innovation – the core of Hope Street Group's education platform.

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Hope Street Group has likened our pressing national challenges - particularly around the recovery legislation - to "fixing the car while driving it," an evocative metaphor underscoring the somewhat counterintuitive nature of such a feat.

 

Blogging at Huffington Post, Hope Street Group leader and contributor Hoyt Hilsman picks up on the thread of our recent statement and expounds on the imperative to see the long-term forest for the short-term trees.

The challenge of "fixing a car while we're driving it" is to make sure that we don't let the economy crash, while at the same time making the fundamental repairs necessary to keep it running well into the future. And while there is no good reason to delay passage of an economic stimulus package -- which would send the economy into a ditch -- we need to make room in the package has the kind of long-term reconstructive features that will lead to jobs and other kinds of economic opportunities for all Americans well into the future.

So where do we go from here? Nothing about this process is going to be easy - that's the bad news. The good news is that we appear to have leadership that isn't afraid to tackle something this tough and far-reaching, even in the face of a true crisis. That's the kind of foresight we'll need to achieve true and lasting economic opportunity.

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Hope Street Group Executive Director Monique Nadeau authored the following Letter to the Editor of the Washington Post, in response to a February 3, 2009 column entitled "$100 Billion and No Change Back":

 

When it comes to education, Richard Cohen's assertion (Feb. 3) that the economic recovery package contains no change is not quite accurate.

    The House bill in particular has strong reform language: requiring states ensure that our neediest students have access to effective teachers; requiring states that receive part of the $79B state fiscal stabilization fund to follow spending guidelines; and providing funding for teacher incentive pay programs, charter school facilities, and improvements in state longitudinal data systems and assessments. Both the House and Senate bills also highlight and reward innovation, and allow the Secretary to reserve funding each year for grants based on success in increasing student achievement.

    The bill also protects innovative programs already underway across the nation. Mr. Cohen rightly points out that the federal government cannot micromanage 50 states and thousands of school districts. What it can do is take steps to accelerate these reforms, and help share what's working.

    Although there are many more problems to tackle, this is a welcome start. The education components of the final recovery package must strike a balance between tackling the short term crisis while addressing the long-term needs. If the proposed reform measures make it into the final package, it will demonstrate that the administration is serious about taking a new approach to one of the toughest problems facing the country.

    Monique Nadeau
    Executive Director
    Hope Street Group
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Hope Street Group released a statement today on the reform elements of the recovery legislation in Congress:

    "We know how critical it is to address the short term crisis," said Executive Director Monique Nadeau. "But if we don't start at the same time to strengthen the true drivers of economic opportunity, we risk bouncing from crisis to crisis."

    "We're in the unfortunate position of having to fix the car while we're driving it."

    Hope Street Group's Economic Opportunity Index has identified education and health care as the two largest economic drivers; its American Dream Agenda lays out the policy solutions necessary for strengthening both.