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Obama, Romney have similar viewpoints on education

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In pressing for his education policies, President Barack Obama has provoked strong opposition from many union activists nationwide. They argue that the administration’s chosen reforms are unproven at best, are unfair to teachers and put too much emphasis on standardized testing.

To persuade states to go along with reforms favored by the administration, Obama and Duncan used a powerful tool: money. At a time when states were facing budget crises, the administration set up competitive grant programs.

School improvement funds, for example, required specific actions at struggling campuses.

Separately, Race to the Top rewarded states for adopting particular policies, including new teacher evaluation systems. Most states complied, to varying degrees, whether they received grants or not.

States also adopted policies in exchange for relief from then-President George W. Bush’s signature education initiative, No Child Left Behind. Under that law, schools not on track to have all students academically proficient by 2014 have been labeled failures and faced serious sanctions.

“The benchmark we’ve used in my administration,” Obama said in a recent interview with NBC News, “is to say, ‘We’re going to give more money to those schools that are serious about reform, but we’re not going to let people make excuses and suggest that it’s just a money problem.’ ”

A report last month from the conservative, Washington, D.C.-based American Enterprise Institute praised Obama for being able to force changes on unions without them mobilizing effectively against him.

The unions aren’t abandoning the incumbent, in large part because he came through for teachers in a way that Romney has criticized.

Obama and congressional Democrats pushed through nearly $100 billion in one-time K-12 funding, including more than $50 billion in economic-stimulus dollars and $25 billion to educate low-income students and disabled students. Another $10 billion was added for a fund designated to save education jobs.

Those efforts preserved an estimated 160,000 education jobs, according to the National School Boards Association. The Obama administration puts the figure at nearly three times higher.

The largesse came at the cost of adding to the federal deficit. Republican critics have charged that the funding maintained or expanded ineffective, often bloated education bureaucracies and that the one-time dollars postponed necessary cutbacks.

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