Minnesota educators think the state has a good chance to receive a chunk of some $4.35 billion in grants that the Obama administration plans to give to states to promote school innovation.
The "Race to the Top" grants are part of the federal stimulus package passed by Congress this spring. States compete against each other for the money, and experts say Minnesota's history as an education reformer that gets results means the state could win part of the pot of money.
"This could be in the hundreds of millions of dollars" for Minnesota, said Dan Weisberg, vice president of policy and general counsel for the New Teacher Project, a national education group that has rated Minnesota "competitive" in the fight for the funds. "This is not funding that is going to plug holes. It is going to fund real, aggressive reforms."
While the U.S. Department of Education has not given any indication of how many states might receive the money, experts predict that anywhere from 10 to 15 might get funding.
According to the Minnesota Department of Education, the money is being given to "encourage and reward states making dramatic education reforms."
States have to show they've done work on, and have dramatic ideas to improve, teacher effectiveness, the data they use to track students, the rules and tests that govern what each student learns, and how states turn around struggling schools.
In 1991, Minnesota was the first state in the nation to allow charter schools, and many Minnesota districts also run Gov. Tim Pawlenty's "Q Comp" program, which is meant to provide extra pay for the most effective teachers.
Minnesota also has education standards -- rules that dictate what content students are taught -- that are based on international standards. Many educators credit these standards with the state's high performance when compared nationally and internationally in math and science.