Center for American Progress Center for American Progress
Issues Domestic Education

More Equity and Less Red Tape

Rethinking the Comparability and Compliance Provisions in Title I of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act

SOURCE: AP/Nati Harnik

Middle schooler Jesse Jasso copies a word off the board during an English language learners class.

Read the full report (pdf)

Title I of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act is the largest federal program that provides support for poor students. Important Title I provisions aim to ensure that funds are spent on poor children and that districts fairly serve poor schools.

Yet, as implemented today, these provisions do little to make funding fairer, and they impose significant red tape on districts and schools. This is especially troubling given the thrust of the No Child Left Behind Act. If the federal government is going to ask high-poverty schools to succeed in educating poor children, then it needs to make sure those schools get a fair share of resources. And if it is going to make strong demands for results, then it needs to give school districts the flexibility to achieve them. The federal government cannot tell school systems to achieve great things and then tie their hands about how to do it, or consume their energies in endless bean-counting exercises.

The combination of thick red tape and thin equity in Title I today suggests a possible reform: demand greater fairness in the allocation of state and local dollars, but then offer greater freedom about how federal dollars are spent. Congress could tighten the “comparability” requirement in current law, which should drive equity, but doesn’t. It should at the same time weaken or eliminate the “supplement, not supplant” requirement, which creates needless red tape and shouldn’t. The next administration could also relax some of the regulatory bookkeeping requirements that add to districts’ burdens without improving educational quality.

This tradeoff would increase the pressure for equity, but on its face, it would reduce the demands for compliance. One question that would remain is whether a more aggressive comparability requirement, focused on dollars rather than “services,” would cause a new set of administrative and political headaches. Beefing up comparability should not create the heavy-handed mandates that eliminating “supplement, not supplant” aimed to take away. Without surveying all the design challenges regarding comparability, the paper concludes with some recommendations for how a stronger comparability provision could be managed on the ground.

The paper aims to stir further debate about arcane but critical aspects of federal education law.

Read the full report (pdf)

To speak with our experts on this topic, please contact:

Print: Suzi Emmerling (foreign policy and security, energy, education, immigration)
202.481.8224 or semmerling@americanprogress.org

Print: Jason Rahlan (health care, economy, civil rights, poverty)
202.481.8132 or jrahlan@americanprogress.org

Radio: John Neurohr
202.481.8182 or jneurohr@americanprogress.org

TV: Andrea Purse
202.741.6250 or apurse@americanprogress.org

Web: Erin Lindsay
202.741.6397 or elindsay@americanprogress.org

Subscribe to RSS Feeds

RSS IconSite-Wide and Issue-Specific RSS Feeds

Related Articles

Teacher Incentive Fund Gets Respect , by Raegen Miller

Union and District Partnerships to Expand Learning Time, by Melissa Lazarín, Isabel Owen

Expanded Student Learning Time Show and Tell

Turning Around High-Poverty Schools

Integrating Security, by Lawrence J. Korb, Sean Duggan, Laura Conley

Also by Robert Gordon

Did Liberals Cause the Sub-Prime Crisis?, April 7, 2008

Criminal Intent, March 25, 2008

Smaller classes: the wrong investment for city schools, December 13, 2007