| Established: | October 17, 1979 |
| Activated: | May 4, 1980 |
| Secretary: | Margaret Spellings |
| Deputy Secretary: | Raymond Simon |
| Budget: | Discretionary: $56.0 billion (2006) Mandatory: $13.4 billion (2006) |
| Employees: | 4,487 (2004) |
Its functions were previously in the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare which was divided into the Department of Education and Department of Health and Human Services when President Carter signed the Department of Education Organization Act into law on October 17, 1979. It began operation on May 4, 1980. It is administered by the United States Secretary of Education.
It is by far the smallest cabinet-level department, with almost 4,500 employees. The agency's official acronym is ED (and not DOE, which refers to the United States Department of Energy.)
A previous Department of Education was created in 1867, but was soon demoted to an Office in 1868. Its creation a century later in 1979 was controversial and opposed by many in the Republican Party, who saw the department as unwanted federal bureaucratic intrusion into local affairs. Throughout the 1980s, the abolition of the Department of Education was a part of the Republican Party platform, but Bush Republican administrators by the late 1980s declined to implement this idea. By the mid-1990s, with President Clinton's equal support similar to President Bush, there was little leadership for the demotion of the department.
The elevation of the Department to cabinet status was controversial. President Reagan sought to eliminate it as a cabinet post but did not go through with the threat. Under President George W. Bush, the Department has primarily focused on elementary and secondary education, through its focus on the "No Child Left Behind" law, while considerably marginalizing higher education.
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"United States Department of Education".
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