Source: http://ift.tt/hFWySe - Tuesday, March 24, 2015
LOS ANGELES (AP) -- Former California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger is calling on Congress to preserve federal funding for after-school programs in a proposed reauthorization of the 2002 No Child Left Behind law. At a national summit in Los Angeles on Tuesday, Schwarzenegger will join education, business and law enforcement leaders in demanding that any bill maintain after-school funding. A House proposal would eliminate after-school centers designed to help children in low-income neighborhoods and 68 other programs in favor of a flexibility grant that would allow states to decide how to use funds. "I'm always worried when someone says, `It will give them more flexibility,'" Schwarzenegger said Monday in an interview with The Associated Press. "I think after-school money is for after-school programs." The bill is stalled while Senate leaders work on a bipartisan draft. An increasing number of children come from homes where both parents work, making after-school care a necessity for many families. In 1965, four in 10 children had more than one parent who worked; by 2014, that number had risen to more than six in 10. But skeptics of federally funded after-school initiatives point to U.S. Department of Education data showing that participants do not demonstrate improved academic outcomes. The most recent agency report found that almost none of the performance targets was met, with only 38.4 percent of elementary-school participants sho
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