The National Center on Education and the Economy (NCEE) is an American not-for-profit education research, advocacy, and educator professional learning organization based in Washington, DC,[1][2][3] that first formed in 1988 as the Carnegie Forum on Education and the Economy.
NCEE has a history of contributing to influential research reports[4][5] on public education in the United States and advocating for large-scale education reform[6] based on its international benchmarking research[7] on high-performing, equitable education systems around the world.[8][9] Its framework and model is presented in the Blueprint for a High-Performing Education System.
Its funders include the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, the Annie E. Casey Foundation, the Stupski Foundation, and the Wallace Foundation.[6][21]
NCEE's mission is, "To analyze the implications of changes in the international economy for American education, formulate an agenda for American education based on that analysis and seek wherever possible to accomplish that agenda through policy change and development of the resources educators would need to carry it out."[22]
History
Its precursor, the Carnegie Forum on Education and the Economy, was established by the Carnegie Corporation of New York in 1985.[23][non-primary source needed] The National Board for Professional Teaching Standards was established in response to a 1986 report by Marc Tucker, "A Nation Prepared: Teachers for the 21st Century." This Board established the NCEE in 1988 with Tucker as founder, CEO, and president[24][5] and based first in Rochester, New York.
NCEE also participated in the National Skill Standards Board for the U.S. Department of Labor.[13]
NCEE launched the National Institute for School Leadership (NISL) in 1999 as an educator professional learning and leadership development program.[26][27]
In 2010, NCEE organized a pilot program with a $1.5 million planning grant from the Gates Foundation, that helped NCEE "work with states and districts" develop their Early College High School (ECHS) programs, through which students could take a mixture of high school and college classes, and receive both a high school diploma and up to two years of college credits. The goal was to insure that "students have mastered a set of basic requirements" and to reduce the "numbers of high school graduates who need remedial courses when they enroll in college."[28][29][30][31][32]
NCEE's Center on International Education Benchmarking (CIEB) funds and conducts research to identify education strategies from countries that have top-performing education systems and whose students score well on the Programme for International Student Assessment, among other metrics.[33]
NCEE was a consultant for the Kirwan Commission as it developed the Blueprint for Maryland's Future[34] passed by the Maryland State Legislature in 2020,[35] which included NCEE's "9 Building Blocks for a World-Class Education System" as a component of its work.[36][37][38][39] It has also worked with the Pennsylvania state education department to create a superintendent leadership program.[16]