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December 07, 2005

10,000 Teachers, 10 Million Minds Science and Math Scholarship Act

Introduced in the House December 6, 2005

Summary

The bill implements most of the K-12 science education recommendations of the National Academy of Sciences (NAS) report, Rising Above the Gathering Storm: Energizing and Employing America for a Brighter Economic Future.  It establishes a scholarship program at the National Science Foundation (NSF) to provide scholarships to science, math and engineering students who commit to become science or math teachers at elementary and secondary schools; authorizes summer teacher training institutes at NSF and the Department of Energy (DOE) to improve the content knowledge and pedagogical skills of in-service science and math teachers; establishes a master’s degree program at NSF for in-service science and mathematics teachers; and established training programs at NSF for preparing science and math teachers to teach Advanced Placement and International Baccalaureate courses in science and math.

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Authorization of Appropriations
for K-12 Science Education Bill:
Augustine Report Recommendations

Dollars (in millions)
Program [agency]FY 2007FY 2008FY 2009FY 2010FY 2011Total
Teacher scholarships [NSF] 85 220 400 590 690 1985
Summer teacher institutes [NSF] 37 92 110 110 110 459
Summer teacher institutes [DOE] 3 8 10 10 10 41
Master's Degree programs [NSF] 200 400 600 600 600 2400
AP IP teacher training [NSF] 92 153 219 296 357 1117
K-12 Curricular materials [NSF] 30 31 32 33 34 160
Total4479041371163918016162

Sectional Contents of Bill

Section 1 is the table of contents.

Section 2 contains definitions used in the bill.

Title I - Science Scholarships

Section 101 is the short title of the bill.

Section 102 contains findings that relate the bill to the NAS report findings and recommendations.

Section 103 states the policy objective of the bill, which is to increase by 10,000 annually the number of capable K-12 science and math teachers.

Section 104 establishes a scholarship program administered by NSF with the following features:

  • Provides competitive awards to institutions of higher education (or consortia of such institutions) that (1) establish cross-department faculty teams (science, math and engineering faculty along with education faculty) to develop courses of instruction leading to baccalaureate degrees in fields of science, math and/or engineering and also preparing graduates to become certified and licensed to teach in a K-12 classroom, and (2) enter into agreements with private sector entities to support paid summer internships for scholarship recipients.
  • Requires the distribution of awards among institutions of different sizes and geographic locations.
  • Requires awardees to provide professional development and mentoring support to scholarship recipients, before and after matriculation.
  • Sets scholarship amounts at the cost of attendance at particular institutions, not to exceed $20,000 per year, and provides up to 4 years of scholarship support for any individual.
  • Requires scholarship recipients to commit to teaching for up to 5 years following graduation (the period of teaching commitment is based on the number of years of scholarship support), reduces the commitment by one year for individuals who teach at high-need schools, and converts the scholarships to student loans if the teaching commitment is not met.

Section 105 creates a trust fund to accept gifts and donations for funding scholarships under section 104.

Section 106 authorizes $85 million for NSF for FY 2007, $220 million for FY 2008, $400 million for FY 2009, $590 million for FY 2010, and $690 million for FY 2011.  This assumes ramping up to 10,000 new scholarships per year by year 3 at an average of $15,000 each and ramping up institutional awards over 3 years to $100 million per year.  A steady state of 40,000 active scholarships and 10,000 graduates per year is reached in year six.  The appropriations required will depend on actual cost of attendance for scholarship recipients and the level of trust fund contributions.

Title II - Science and Math Teacher Programs

Section 201 authorizes summer institutes at NSF and DOE:

  • The NSF program is created by expanding the existing Teacher Institutes for the 21st Century program (currently 8 awards of $1 million each), which is a component of the Math and Science Partnerships program.  This program, which is an intensive multi-year professional development program focused on preparing master teachers, is expanded by increasing the number of awards and by allowing grantees to operate 1 to 2 week summer institutes in order to reach a larger number of teachers per the Augustine report recommendation.
  • The DOE provision authorizes the existing Laboratory Science Teacher Professional Development program at an increased funding level (currently $1.8 million; 105 teachers per year).  This is a more intensive program than a normal summer institute (4-8 weeks, first year and 2-8 weeks for next 2 years) where teachers are hosted at national labs for 3 summers ($800 per week stipend plus travel and per diem) and maintain contact/interaction with their lab hosts during the school year.
  • Authorizes $37 million for NSF for FY 2007, $92 million for FY 2008, and $110 million per year for FY 2009 through FY 2011.  This assumes 92% of the estimated 50,000 teacher per year in the program (at steady state after ramp up) are supported under the NSF program and the remainder under the DOE program.
  • Authorizes $3 million for DOE for FY 2007, $8 million for FY 2008, and $10 million per year for FY 2009 through FY 2011.

Section 202 establishes a master’s degree program for science and math teachers administered by NSF with the following features:

  • Provides competitive awards to institutions of higher education that develop and implement master’s degree programs for in-service math and science teachers, who attend on a part-time basis and who will be able to complete the degree requirements within 2 years.  Awards support costs of course development, cost of attendance of teachers, and acquisition of computer and networking equipment needed for instruction, possibly including online course offerings.
  • Requires the distribution of awards among institutions of different sizes and geographic locations.
  • Authorizes $200 million for NSF for FY 2007, $400 million for FY 2008, and $600 million per year for FY 2009 through FY 2011.  This assumes ramping up to a program that will reach 50,000 teachers over 5 years.

Section 203 establishes a teacher training program administered by NSF to prepare science and math teachers to teach Advanced Placement and International Baccalaureate courses with the following features:

  • Provides competitive awards to institutions of higher education to develop the training programs, cover the cost of attendance for participating teachers, and acquire needed educational materials and equipment (online learning is an option).
  • Requires the distribution of awards among institutions of different sizes and geographic locations to achieve the goal of reaching teachers in schools where few or no Advanced Placement and International Baccalaureate science or math courses are offered.
  • Gives priority to applicants obtaining commitments from the private sector to offer bonuses to teachers for each student they teach who passes an Advanced Placement and International Baccalaureate science or math course.
  • Authorizes $92 million for NSF for FY 2007, $153 million for FY 2008, $219 million for FY 2009, $296 million for FY 2010, and $357 million for FY 2011.  This assumes ramping up to approximately 30,000 teachers per year using the NAS estimates, but not including costs of incentive or bonus payments for teachers (assumes such costs will come from private sector contributions).

Section 204: (1) establishes a national panel of experts to identify and collect K-12 science and mathematics teaching materials that have been demonstrated to be effective and to recommend the development of new materials in areas where effective materials do not exist; (2) directs NSF and the Department of Education to develop ways to disseminate effective materials and support efforts to develop new materials, in accordance with the recommendations of the national panel; and (3) authorizes NSF’s Instructional Materials Development activity at the FY 05 level of $30 million (the activity was cut by 33% for FY 06) and provides 3% increases for the next 4 years.

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Comparison With the Academy Recommendations

The following table compares the provisions of H.R. 4434 to the recommendations made by the Augustine Committee in its report:

Augustine Report Recommendations

H.R. 4434

Recommendation A-1: 10,000 4-year (up to $20,000 per year) scholarships for science, math and engineering majors to become science and math teachers. Grants of $1 million per year for up to 5 years to institutions of higher education to establish integrated 4-year undergrad programs leading to a bachelor’s degree in science, math or engineering with teacher certification. FY 2007, $110 million.

H.R. 4434 tracks A-1 provisions. Establishes program at National Science Foundation (NSF); requires grantees to set up undergrad educational program and provide scholarships. FY 2007, $85 million.

Recommendation A-2a: One- to two-week summer teacher institutes. FY 2007, $40 million.

H.R. 4434 directs NSF to expand existing Teacher Institutes for the 21st Century program to include one- to two-week summer teacher institutes. FY 2007, $37 million.


H.R. 4434 directs DOE to expand existing Laboratory Science Teacher Professional Development program (longer than standard teacher institutes with continued interactions during school year). FY 2007, $3 million.

Recommendation A-2b: Two-year, part-time master’s degree programs for science and math teachers. FY 2007, $46 million.

H.R. 4434 tracks A-2 recommendation by establishing the program at NSF. FY 2007, $200 million (the initial National Academies estimate for the cost of this program, since dropped to $46 million).

Recommendation A-2c: Train 70,000 teachers to teach Advanced Placement/International Baccalaureate (AP/IB) courses and 80,000 to teach pre-AP/IB courses in math and science. FY 2007, $100 million.

H.R. 4434 tracks A-2 recommendation by expanding existing Teacher Professional Continuum program at NSF. FY 2007, $92 million.

Recommendation A-2d: Provide K-12 curricular materials modeled on world-class standards. FY 2007, $20 million.

H.R. 4434 requires NSF to establish a national panel to identify and collect materials demonstrated to be effective and, in consultation with DEd, to develop ways to disseminate effective materials. It also increases funding authorized for NSF’s long-standing Instructional Materials Development activity. FY 2007, $30 million (+$5 million above FY 2006 actual).

For a comparison to Senate legislation and the President's competitiveness initiative, download this chart prepared by the Democratic staff.