Congressman Chris Van Hollen (D-MD) today announced that the House of Representatives today passed the Higher Education Opportunity Act Conference Report, a bipartisan bill to reauthorize the Higher Education Act. The bill included provisions from the Teach for America Act, legislation introduced by Representatives Chris Van Hollen (D-MD) and Mike Castle (R-DE).
The legislation authorizes funding for the Teach for America program to recruit, select, train, and support highly-qualified, recent college graduates to serve in high-need communities. Since its creation in 1990, more than 12,000 exceptional individuals have joined Teach for America and directly impacted the lives of over 2 million students across the country.
“Today’s bill will help close the achievement gap in our country,” said Van Hollen. “Teach for America recruits enthusiastic and highly qualified young people to teach in underserved communities and fosters the next generation of education leaders.”
“We are so incredibly grateful for Representative Van Hollen’s leadership in ensuring that Teach For America was authorized as part of the College Opportunity and Affordability Act of 2008 passed today by the House,” said Wendy Kopp, founder and CEO of Teach For America. “His tireless efforts to build broad bipartisan support for this legislation have come to fruition, marking a critical step forward in the effort to ensure that all children in this country, regardless of where they are born, have the opportunity to attain an excellent education. The passage of this legislation will allow Teach For America to expand its corps to 8,000 committed young teachers serving more than 500,000 economically disadvantaged students in 33 regions by 2010, and to continue to build a force of leaders who will work throughout their lives for educational excellence and equity."
This legislation authorizes $20 million in FY09 and $25 million in FY10 to help Teach for America expand its reach with 8,000 corps members serving 560,000 students in 33 communities.
The Senate is expected to pass the Conference Report this week.