http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-bush13jan13,1,5892820.story?coll=la-headlines-nation&ctrack=1&cset=true THE NATION
High Schools in Need of Testing, Bush Says
The president seeks to build on his No Child Left Behind law with his latest initiative.
By Nick Anderson
Times Staff Writer
January 13, 2005
FALLS CHURCH, Va. — Three years after he signed a landmark education law that strengthened oversight of elementary and middle schools, President Bush on Wednesday called for a mandatory battery of reading and math tests in the ninth, 10th and 11th grades.
He also proposed $1.5 billion in federal aid for high schools.
<snip>The president's allies acknowledge his education agenda is likely to face tough questions in the new Congress, with some conservative Republicans among the skeptics. Bush's new plan also could be hurt by an embarrassment the Education Department suffered last week with the revelation that it had paid $240,000 to conservative television commentator Armstrong Williams to promote No Child Left Behind. The payment drew ridicule from the left and the right and spurred calls for independent investigations into whether the agreement with Williams violated laws prohibiting the use of government funds for propaganda.<snip>
Under Bush's plan, the federal testing requirement for high school would triple, to three years, from the current one year.
Bush's $1.5-billion proposal, which expands on many ideas he put forward at his renominating convention in September, included:
• A new $500-million federal merit-pay fund for teachers who excel in low-income schools.
• An increase to $200 million, from the current annual fund of $25 million, for a remedial reading program for teenagers.
• $250 million to help states pay for new testing.
• $269 million for mathematics and science instruction.
• $52 million to help develop Advanced Placement and International Baccalaureate programs in low-income schools.
• $45 million for incentives to help students take more rigorous courses.<snip>