Sentences with phrase «house education version»

Here's how the New Hampshire House Education version of the ESA program would work:

Not exact matches

The House version of the plan makes several changes to the tax code aimed at generating revenue by raising rates on higher education.
The House version of the bill, the «Improving Nutrition for America's Children Act,» was approved last month by the Education and Labor Committee but the full House has yet to take it up.
The House's version of the tax reform bill passed last week, and the Senate's version — which notably lacks those education cuts — passed Saturday.
MIDDLEBURY When former President Barack Obama made universal pre-K education a national goal and a household term during his 2008 campaign for the White House, many of the state's educrats responded with an effort to adopt a one - size - fits - all public education version for the Green Mountain State.
The breakdown of that number is not clear, but the House version contained $ 2 billion more for research grants; $ 900 million for three infrastructure programs, including a revived $ 200 million extramural facilities competition; and $ 100 million for two education programs.
The lame - duck House of Representatives today accepted a stripped - down Senate version of the America COMPETES Act, a bill to strengthen research, education, and innovation at several federal agencies.
Last Tuesday, House and Senate conferees, considering each chamber's version of the fiscal 1984 education appropriations bill, agreed to cut nie's fiscal 1983 budget of $ 55.6 million by 13 percent, to $ 48.2 million.
Lawmakers on the U.S. Senate education committee and more than a dozen House members met in a conference committee Wednesday to begin reconciling two bills — one a Republican - only measure that barely passed the U.S. House of Representatives in July, and the other a Senate version that cleared the U.S Senate with big, bipartisan support a few days later.
As debate over the reauthorization of federal vocational - education programs began in the Senate last month, groups representing state education agencies were lobbying to preserve a strong state role they say is threatened in the House version of the bill.
Reflecting bipartisan consternation over the rising price of a college education and other postsecondary issues, the House education committee voted unanimously today to send its version of a bill to reauthorize the Higher Education Act to the fueducation and other postsecondary issues, the House education committee voted unanimously today to send its version of a bill to reauthorize the Higher Education Act to the fueducation committee voted unanimously today to send its version of a bill to reauthorize the Higher Education Act to the fuEducation Act to the full House.
XXThe Senate Appropriations Committee approved its version of an education, labor, and health and human services spending bill on Sept. 3, while its counterpart in the House passed its version of the funding measure in July.
The House and the Senate plan to vote this week on a quickly crafted compromise version of the «education savings account» bill that Republicans hope will force President Clinton to reverse his opposition to it.
Provisions: House version would provide $ 23.2 billion for Department of Education programs, a $ 3.6 billion cut from fiscal 1995.
On a day when party labels had the other chamber in turmoil, a surprisingly unified House overwhelmingly passed a version of President Bush's education reform plan last week that would for the first time tie federal aid to school performance on annual math and reading tests.
But unlike the House, the Senate panel is writing a bipartisan education bill, and it is unclear whether the Title I proposal will be in the final version.
Testimony of IDRA presented for the House Public Education Committee, August 8, 2017 See PDF version Thank you for allowing the... read more
The Education and the Workforce Committee in the U.S. House of Representatives voted out of committee its version of an ESEA reauthorization bill (H.R. 5) on June 19, 2013.
The legislation is still being discussed in the state House and education advocates believe a forthcoming House - backed version of the bill may shift the power to local boards, although the legislation's fate is unclear at this point.
PLEASE NOTE: The House version has been sent to the RULES COMMITTEE - a standard ploy to prevent a piece of legislation from being debated and called for a Vote.State Rep. Linda Chapa LaVia, Chair of the House Elementary / Secondary Education Committee joined her Latino Caucus coleagues at Monday's Press Conference, but needs to be supported and encouraged to work with Rep. Sims to get his bill sent to her Committee.
«DPI was never in love... with charter schools,» Sen. Tillman (R - Randolph) said in a Senate Education Committee hearing on Tuesday as he introduced to fellow lawmakers a gutted version of House Bill 334, which would transfer the Office of Charter Schools out of the Department of Public Instruction, placing it under the State Board of Education.
The House Education Committee is about to adopt language for the next version of the federal Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA) / No Child Left Behind (NCLB).
The House version has more generous funding for P - 12 education overall, so separate estimates make sense for each chamber.
The House and Senate passed versions of a reauthorization of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act, but differences must still be worked out by a conference committee, whose members have not been chosen yet.
After each house had passed their Common Core repeal bills, the House Education Committee had planned to take up the Senate's version for debate last Thurhouse had passed their Common Core repeal bills, the House Education Committee had planned to take up the Senate's version for debate last ThurHouse Education Committee had planned to take up the Senate's version for debate last Thursday.
The U.S. Senate approved the rewrite of the No Child Left Behind Act — the current version of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA)-- by a bipartisan margin of 85 - 12, mirroring the vote of 359 to 64 in the U.S. House of Representatives just days earlier.
The New Hampshire House Education Committee, however, recommended a considerably scaled - down version of the bill, which the New Hampshire House of Representatives passed last month by a vote on 184 - 162.
Although significantly scaled back relative to the New Hampshire Senate's universal eligibility, the New Hampshire House Education Committee's version of SB 193 would still likely make more than half of New Hampshire families eligible.
New York, NY — Today, a diverse set of 38 organizations from across the country urged the House and Senate Appropriations Subcommittees on Labor, HHS, Education & Related Agencies to provide strong funding for the School Leader Recruitment and Support Program (SLRSP)-- an updated version of the School Leadership Program (SLP) reauthorized in the bipartisan Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA).
In September both the house and senate versions of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA) are scheduled for a conference committee.
The House version also taxes tuition waivers — which allow many graduate students to attend school tuition - free — as income, raising the ire of students who said such a levy would make their education unaffordable.
The White House released a report that shows that school districts with large numbers of low - income students, including Los Angeles, Fresno and San Diego, stand to lose millions of dollars in federal funding under the House version of amendments to the nation's education law.
This was clear early last year when they were caught off - guard by the successful effort of Common Core opponents and movement conservatives to stop the passage of now - outgoing House Education and the Workforce Committee Chairman John Kline's first draft of what became ESSA, and just plain crystal after the passage of the final (and even worse) version.
Why Public School Parents Oppose H.R. 2218 and Our Recommendations for Improving the Charter School Bill A Parents Across America Position Paper on the «Empowering Parents Through Quality Charter Schools Act» July 5, 2011 Parents Across America (PAA), a grassroots organization representing public school parents from across the United States, opposes the current version of H.R. 2218, the Empowering Parents Through Quality Charter Schools Act, which was recently reported from the House Education and Workforce Committee.
Provisions of the bill were approved as an amendment to the House version of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA), HR 5, which passed the House last summer.
The Senate has passed a bipartisan version and, by a slim margin, Republicans in the House did, too, although conservatives are divided over what a new law should look like and even whether there should be a Department of Education.
Parents Across America (PAA), a grassroots organization representing public school parents from across the United States, opposes the current version of H.R. 2218, the Empowering Parents Through Quality Charter Schools Act, which was recently reported from the House Education and Workforce Committee.
Both the Republican Senate and House versions attempt to wrest control of education from the Federal government back to the states, where they feel it rightly belongs.
The dramatically Senate - revamped version that landed in the House Education Committee Thursday bore no resemblance, instead attempting to force traditional public schools to share more of their funds with charter schools.
The Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA) is the version of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA) reauthorization that has flown through conference committee and continues on its speedy trek to the House for an expected vote on December 02, 2015.
Even as the likelihood of passage remains as unlikely as it was back in March, when House Education and the Workforce Committee Chairman John Kline's plan was kiboshed amid opposition from movement conservatives within the Republican majority, there are still some who think that the version under consideration now could pass if Kline's colleague, Lamar Alexander, can get his plan into conferencing.
The House just barely passed a bill on a 218 - 213 vote that would go much further than the Senate's version in reducing the federal role in education.
Overall, the House version represents a dramatic departure from the current version of the federal K - 12 education law, and would turn much of the decision - making over to states.
Recall that the House passed the PROSPER Act, its version of a reauthorization of the Higher Education Act, out of committee late last year.
I often recommend keeping a master version of your resume that houses many of your career milestones, jobs, education / training details, and accomplishments.
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