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Will the New Education R&D Bill Spark the Innovation Schools Desperately Need?

Federal lawmakers propose a DARPA-style research hub to fund breakthrough education innovations that traditional funding mechanisms have left behind

By Michael B. Horn · April 25, 2025, 6:00 AM UTCConnecticut Office of Workforce StrategyDaniel CurtisEducation R&dNew Essential Education Discoveries (need) Act
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Key takeaways

01

The NEED Act proposes a federally funded, DARPA-style National Center for Advanced Development in Education to support high-risk, high-reward education R&D.

02

Federal education R&D investment is modest compared to defense spending, limiting the pace of innovation in schools.

03

Scaling education innovations requires more than funding—it demands lab schools, flexible regulations, and model providers to bridge research and practice.

In a rare show of bipartisan cooperation, Senators Michael Bennet (D-CO) and John Cornyn (R-TX) have introduced the New Essential Education Discoveries (NEED) Act, aimed at revolutionizing how the U.S. invests in education innovation. The bill proposes a new National Center for Advanced Development in Education—akin to DARPA but for schools—within the Institute for Education Sciences. Its goal? To fund high-risk, high-reward education R&D that drives breakthrough learning models and technologies.

With rising college closures and education leaders seeking bold solutions post-COVID, the stakes for smarter R&D couldn’t be higher. Compared to the Department of Defense’s over $143 billion RDT&E spend, federal investment in education research and development is comparatively modest. But will this bill—and others like it—actually spark the innovation schools desperately need?

But will this bill—and others like it—actually spark the innovation schools desperately need?

Can a federally-funded innovation engine jumpstart education R&D—and what will it take to actually implement breakthrough ideas in schools?

In this episode of The Future of Education, host Michael Horn is joined by Daniel Curtis, Governor's Fellow at the Connecticut Office of Workforce Strategy, to unpack the promise and limits of this emerging effort to supercharge R&D in education.

Key takeaways from the conversation…

  • The Innovation Gap: Why education R&D remains dramatically underfunded—and how that shortfall stifles progress compared to sectors like healthcare and defense.
  • The DARPA Debate: What the proposed education innovation center could learn from DARPA—and why the analogy may fall short in a system with 14,000+ school districts.
  • What It'll Take to Scale: How model providers, lab schools, flexible regulations, and targeted funding could finally give innovations a fighting chance to thrive in U.S. schools.

Daniel Curtis is a policy strategist and education innovation expert currently serving as a Governor's Fellow at the Connecticut Office of Workforce Strategy. He has authored education research, supported high-impact policy initiatives, and led content production for influential platforms like The Future of Education and Future U podcasts. With prior experience as a high school teacher and consultant, he brings a unique blend of classroom insight, policy acumen, and cross-sector collaboration to advancing personalized learning and workforce development.

About the author

Michael B. Horn
Michael B. HornSpeaker, Writer & Advisor on the Future of Education, Clayton Christensen Institute

Michael Horn speaks and writes about the future of education and works with a portfolio of education organizations to improve the life of each and every student. He is the co-founder of and a distinguished fellow at the Clayton Christensen Institute for Disruptive Innovation, and host of the Future of Education podcast on MarketScale.

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About the Experts

MB
Michael B. Horn

Co-founder and Distinguished Fellow, Clayton Christensen Institute; Host, The Future of Education

Michael B. Horn is a co-founder and distinguished fellow at the Clayton Christensen Institute for Disruptive Innovation, where he focuses on education and healthcare. He is the host of The Future of Education podcast and has authored multiple books on disruptive innovation in education, including 'Disrupting Class.' Horn is widely cited as a thought leader on competency-based learning, online education, and school reform.

DC
Daniel Curtis

Governor's Fellow

Connecticut Office of Workforce Strategy

Daniel Curtis is a policy strategist and education innovation expert serving as a Governor's Fellow at the Connecticut Office of Workforce Strategy. He has authored education research, supported high-impact policy initiatives, and led content production for influential platforms including The Future of Education and Future U podcasts. He brings prior experience as a high school teacher and consultant.