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NCLB Reauthorization Stalls
- To: ARN-l@interversity.org
- Subject: NCLB Reauthorization Stalls
- From: George Sheridan <learn@jps.net>
- Date: Sun, 02 Dec 2007 23:05:55 -0800
Education law's overhaul stalls in Congress
Proposals draw rancor amid calls for change.
By Halimah Abdullah - McClatchy Newspapers
Published Sunday, December 2, 2007
Story appeared in MAIN NEWS section, Page A1
http://www.sacbee.com/111/story/535803.html
WASHINGTON ? Five years after President Bush's
signature education program became law, No Child
Left Behind is at a crossroads.
Proposals that could drastically alter how
children in the nation's public schools are
educated have stalled for months in the Senate
and House education committees. The wrangling
over the law, which demands that every child be
"proficient" ? working at grade level in reading
and math ? by 2014, has grown so rancorous that
Congress is unlikely to reauthorize or change the
program this year. NCLB will renew automatically if Congress fails to act.
But as the 2008 political campaign intensifies,
education changes are likely to be eclipsed by
debates over the economy, health care and the
Iraq war ? and by more partisan political posturing.
There's bipartisan agreement, however, that No
Child Left Behind is due for an overhaul.
"All across the country, teachers, school
administrators, school board members and parents
are voicing their concerns with the law," said
Rep. George Miller, D-Martinez, chairman of the
House Education and Labor Committee. "They don't
think it makes sense to stay the course. They
don't think it makes sense to preserve the status
quo. They think the law needs significant improvements, and they are right."
Critics charge that NCLB takes a
one-size-fits-all approach that ignores different
education standards, challenges and practices among the states:
? Education experts criticize states' differing
proficiency standards. Even if a teacher in
Wisconsin ? which has a low proficiency standard,
according to a recent study by the Thomas B.
Fordham Institute, a Washington-based education
organization ? helps his eighth-grade reading
students meet state targets, they still might lag
behind their peers from a state such as South
Carolina, which has a higher standard, on national tests.
? Roughly 40 percent of schools that should have
faced sanctions, such as a state takeover, for
repeatedly failing to help poor students reach
proficiency targets through the 2005-2006 school
year avoided the law's toughest consequences,
according to a Government Accountability Office report this year.
? Detractors say the law's heavy reliance on
standardized testing doesn't fully gauge student
progress. However, proposals to use additional
achievement measures, such as graduation rates
and scores in subjects such as history, have met
staunch resistance from those who worry about lowered standards.
? Nearly everyone involved thinks that more must
be done to close the so-called achievement gaps
among racial and ethnic minorities, students with
disabilities, students who speak limited English,
poor children and their peers.
But proposals to expand the use of portfolios of
student work to help gauge the progress of
mentally challenged children and to implement
portfolio use for those who speak little English
have met skepticism from those who worry about
attempts to hide poor student performance.
Experts worry that some schools also have figured
out ways to sidestep counting groups of
low-performing students, thereby boosting overall test scores.
? By all accounts, NCLB's biggest success is the
way the law highlights the performance of
underachieving children and holds schools and
districts accountable for every student's
progress. But while some states and districts
have ramped up attendance in math and reading
programs to help all children succeed, education
advocates worry that these efforts come at the
expense of gifted children who ace standardized tests.
? Many states and lawmakers think the federal
government reneged on promises of funding to meet
the law's requirements and vow not to support any
measure that doesn't guarantee adequate funding.
According to the U.S. census, the nation's school
districts spend roughly $8,200 per student each
year. But a study by the Education Trust, a
nonprofit education advocacy group in Washington,
D.C., found that on average the nation spends
$900 less per child on students in poor districts
than it does on students in more affluent districts.
? Teachers' unions are waging a high-profile
battle against proposals to tie pay raises to
improvement in students' test scores.
More than 60 House Republicans have co-sponsored
a measure by Rep. Peter Hoekstra, R-Mich., that
would give states the right to opt out of NCLB.
Many freshman members of Congress on both sides
of the aisle promised during their campaigns to overhaul or get rid of the law.
Over the past few years, lawmakers in at least a
dozen states have threatened to opt out of NCLB.
In the House draft of its NCLB reauthorization,
revisions include changing how kids' math and
reading test scores are counted; increasing the
role of graduation rates and other measures of
achievement in determining whether a school or
district has made adequate yearly progress;
eliminating funding gaps between rich and poor
districts; giving children credit for making some
progress even if they don't meet targets; and,
possibly most controversially, tying students'
test improvement to performance pay raises for teachers.
The Senate Education Committee's draft, portions
of which were released last month, steered clear
of thorny issues such as teacher pay and
accountability, but addressed overhauling the
nation's so-called "dropout factories," secondary
schools with graduation rates of less than 60 percent.
However, proposals to tie teachers' pay raises
and competitive grants to improvements in their
students' test scores are what galvanized
teachers' unions to turn up the pressure on Washington lawmakers.
"You don't turn dull and mediocre teachers into
classroom wizards by holding a sword of terror
over their heads," said Jonathan Kozol, a veteran
educator, activist and author. "If you want to
provide merit pay based on a broader range of
success, then it might have some effect in
attracting good teachers into these schools."
George Sheridan
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