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Long USA Today Article on NCLB Anniversary
- To: ARN Main List <arn-l@interversity.org>, arn2-strategy <arn2-strategy@yahoogroups.com>
- Subject: Long USA Today Article on NCLB Anniversary
- From: Bob Schaeffer <bobschaeffer@earthlink.net>
- Date: Mon, 08 Jan 2007 11:29:46 -0500
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HOW BUSH EDUCATION LAW HAS CHANGED OUR SCHOOLS
USA Today -- January 8, 2007
by Greg Toppo
The walls are speaking these days at Stanton Elementary School in
Philadelphia, and they're talking about test scores.
Post-It notes with children's names tell the story of how, in just five
years, a federal law with a funny name has changed school for everyone.
"We spend most of our days talking about or looking at data," principal
Barbara Adderley says.
Test scores run her week.
She meets with kindergarten teachers on Monday, first-grade teachers on
Tuesday and so on. The meetings begin with a look at each teacher's
"assessment wall," filled with color-coded Post-Its representing each
pupil and whether he or she is making steady progress in basic skills.
Once students master a skill, the Post-Its move up the wall.
"If they don't move, then we have to talk about what's happening,"
Adderley says.
What's driving the talk? President Bush's landmark education law, dubbed
No Child Left Behind.
A cornerstone of Bush's domestic agenda and one of his few truly
bipartisan successes, it took what was once a fairly low-key funding
vehicle (it was known as the Elementary and Secondary Education Act
before Bush borrowed the catchy name from the Children's Defense Fund)
and turned it into a vast — and contentious — book of federal mandates.
At its simplest, the law aims to improve the basic skills of the
nation's public school children, particularly poor and minority students.
At Stanton, it seems to have made a difference. In 2003, fewer than two
in 10 kids here met state reading standards; by 2005, about seven in 10 did.
The law turns 5 years old today.
It faces a tough future as Congress prepares to reauthorize it — a group
of 100 education, religion and civil rights leaders today announces an
effort calling for "major changes."
Is it improving education nationwide? It's too early to tell — many
schools didn't get around to enacting most of its more than 1,000 pages
of regulations until two or three years ago. U.S. Education Secretary
Margaret Spellings says the law wasn't being fully implemented in all 50
states until 2006.
But one thing is certain: No Child Left Behind has had a major influence
on the daily experience of school for millions of kids. Here are five
big ways it's changing schools.
It's driving teachers crazy
Here's a pretty safe rule of thumb: Start in the classroom and travel up
the educational food chain. The further you travel, the more you'll find
that people like the law. Mention it to most teachers and they'll just
roll their eyes. Many principals tolerate it. Ask a local
superintendent, a state superintendent or a governor and the assessment
gets rosier as their suit gets more expensive.
Carmen Meléndez quit her job as a bilingual language arts teacher at an
elementary school last spring in Orange County, Fla., after the law
prompted her principal to institute 90-minute reading blocks and a
scripted curriculum — in the process making individualized instruction
impossible. Meléndez also found that she couldn't teach poetry anymore.
"It was insane," she says. "The kids were all jaded. They were tired —
they hated school."
Most of the frustration, teachers will tell you, comes from the stress
of mandated math and reading tests. The law requires that virtually all
children be tested each year starting in third grade — and it doles out
growing penalties if schools don't raise scores each year. Naturally,
test day in most schools is fraught with tension.
"They're 8 years old, and they're so worried about a passing score,"
Meléndez says. "I think that's inhumane."
Dianne Campbell, director of testing and accountability in Rockingham
County, N.C., told the American School Board Journal in 2003 that
administrators discard as many as 20 test booklets on exam days because
children vomit on them.
Also, many state rating systems (which often predated No Child Left
Behind) now end up celebrating the same schools the federal law slams.
Longstreet Elementary School in Daytona Beach, Fla., has scored high on
the state ratings for five years, but Longstreet is one of 21 Volusia
County schools due for "corrective action" this year under the law.
"Our parents are thrilled at what happens at our school — and a lot of
what happens at our school has nothing to do with No Child Left Behind,"
says counselor Bill Archer.
Jack Jennings of the Center on Education Policy, a Washington education
research group, says some of the testing actually helps drive better
instructional strategies and, in that respect, is helpful. But he says
teachers tell him they're overwhelmed by the sheer volume of testing,
which can last six weeks in some schools.
"I don't think you can go into a teacher meeting in the country without
somebody bringing up No Child Left Behind," he says.
After five years, the law has even spawned an online petition that, as
of Sunday, had about 22,500 signatures of people urging Congress to
repeal it.
Along with his signature, teacher Mark Quig-Hartman of Vallejo, Calif.,
said: "I am well on my way to becoming an embittered and mediocre
teacher who heretofore considered teaching to be a profession, not a
job. I once loved what I did. I do not now, nor do my students; school
has become a rather grim and joyless place for all."
Teachers' unions have often been the law's loudest critics. One top
National Education Association official even entertained the NEA's 2004
conference in Washington by appearing onstage with an acoustic guitar
and singing a protest song with this unforgettable hook: "If we have to
test their butts off, there'll be no child's behind left."
And if you think it's just teachers who complain, think again: 2006 saw
even the law's most ardent supporters complaining, but for a very
different reason: They say states and school districts game the system
by lowering their standards.
Because the law allows each state to set its own pass/fail bar on skills
tests, "proficient" means something different depending on which state
you live in. The percentage of Missouri fourth-graders at or above
"proficient" in English is only 35%, but 89% of Mississippi
fourth-graders meet that state's standards. In math, only 39% of Maine
fourth-graders are proficient or better; in North Carolina, 92% are.
Philadelphia Public Schools CEO Paul Vallas jokes that to really improve
scores in his city, he could make classes smaller and modernize
buildings. "Or we can give everyone the Illinois test," he says.
It's narrowing what many schools teach
If nothing else, the law's first five years have proved the maxim "What
gets tested gets taught."
The law's annual testing requirements in math and reading have led many
schools to pump up the amount of time they spend teaching these two
staples — often at the expense of other subjects, such as history, art
or science.
Jennings found that 71% of districts are reducing time on other subjects
in elementary school.
"What we're getting under (the law) is a very strong emphasis on
building skills at the expense of history and literature and science,"
says researcher Thomas Toch of the Education Sector, a Washington think
tank.
Other critics say the law has created a "complexity gap." Children in
lower grades have made improvements — some impressive — in basic skills,
but the improvements vanish in middle school and beyond, when kids are
tested on more complex conceptual thinking.
Brown University researcher Martin West this fall compared federal data
from 2000 and 2004, and found that since No Child Left Behind,
elementary schools have spent, on average, 23 fewer minutes a week on
science and 17 fewer minutes on history. He also found that in states
that test history and science each spring, teachers spend about half an
hour more a week on each subject.
He also found, oddly, that after a large jump in the 1990s, schools
actually spend a few minutes less a week on math — but they still spend
more than twice as much time on math than on either history or science.
And they spend more than twice as much time on reading and language as
on math.
"Schools really do respond to the incentives that are provided to them,"
West says. "That places a huge premium on getting the incentives correct."
But he and others aren't quite ready to say the law is dumbing down school.
Researcher Jane Hannaway of the Urban Institute theorizes that improved
reading skills may help children understand other topics, even if
they're spending less class time on them.
She recently looked at Texas fourth-graders' standardized test scores
and found that they had some of the nation's highest marks in science —
even though they don't tackle science until fifth grade. One possible
theory? The children in Texas were simply able to read the test
questions better.
'Invisible' students get attention
Even opponents of No Child Left Behind grudgingly concede that, five
years out, the law has revolutionized how schools look at poor, minority
and disabled children in big cities, who often find themselves
struggling academically. It forces schools to look at test score data in
a whole new light, breaking out the scores into 35 or more "subgroups."
If even one group fails to make "Adequate Yearly Progress," or AYP, in a
year, the whole school is labeled as "in need of improvement."
Perhaps most significant, the law has given a handful of big-city
superintendents the political leverage to make radical changes — they
can now make the case that "federal requirements" make them necessary.
In Philadelphia, public schools CEO Paul Vallas invoked the law when, in
one school year, 2002-03, he replaced all of the city's elementary and
middle school math and language arts textbooks and hired Kaplan, the
test-prep company, to write a standardized core curriculum.
He pumped up full-day kindergarten and preschool — Philly students are
now 50% more likely to have attended preschool than before the law — and
instituted extended-day math and reading programs for struggling
students. "No Child Left Behind gave us the cover to do it," he says.
In the past three years, he also has dismissed 750 teachers who didn't
meet minimum standards the law put in place.
"We would have never been able to do that without the federal (Sword of)
Damocles hanging over our head," he says.
Superintendents in New York City, Chicago, San Diego and elsewhere have
made similar — and sometimes bigger — changes under the cover of No
Child Left Behind.
Spellings says the law has had similar effects nationwide. "It has built
an appetite to pay attention to kids who have been overlooked
previously," she says.
A few observers, such as Mike Petrilli, a former top Bush administration
official, say the law has been felt most keenly by suburban school
districts, where for years low achievers weren't a priority because
high-achieving kids could bring up the district average.
Petrilli, who now works for the Fordham Foundation, a conservative
Washington think tank, says the idea of breaking out poor and minority
kids' scores was "really revolutionary" in most suburbs.
It has prompted many suburban districts in places such as Montclair,
N.J.; Shaker Heights, Ohio; and Evanston, Ill., to form a co-op that
shares ways to help once-neglected minority kids.
"There's general agreement that (the law) has created more of a sense of
urgency," says education blogger and Virginia State Board of Education
member Andrew Rotherham.
What that looks like in individual schools varies, but in many,
"urgency" is not pretty.
"It really has brought the Hounds of Hell down on the schools of Prince
William County," says Betsie Fobes, a recently retired eighth-grade
algebra and pre-algebra teacher at Parkside Middle School in Manassas,
Va. "This AYP business is just killing us — absolutely killing us."
Parkside, which has seen a large Latino influx, didn't meet its goals
two years in a row — so now teachers must attend twice-weekly meetings,
often focused on testing. They've built in a tutorial period, and even
secretaries do their share of tutoring.
"The entire school is revolving pretty much around these kids who fit
into these subgroups," Fobes says.
It's making the school day longer
If a restaurant takes 12 eggs and makes a lousy omelette, will adding
another two eggs make it better?
If a school can't teach a child to read in seven hours, will eight do
the trick?
Under No Child Left Behind, the answer is: Probably yes.
The law requires schools that don't make adequate yearly progress to
offer free transfers to a better-performing public school.
If results don't improve the next year, the school must begin offering
free after-school tutoring — in many cases with classes taught by the
school's own teachers with whom the kids were failing during the school day.
William Bennett, Ronald Reagan's education secretary, invoked the egg
metaphor, and as it turns out, a lot of families — and teachers — are
willing to try the omelette. In the 2004-05 school year, 1.4 million
students were eligible for the tutoring, and about 17% took advantage of it.
Spellings says the tutoring is often provided by different teachers from
the ones a kid sees during the regular day. Perhaps more important, she
says, the law is forcing large districts such as Los Angeles to figure
out how to keep kids from needing tutoring in the first place.
"They're … sitting there thinking, 'What the heck? How can we have so
many kids who can't get to grade level in the course of the school day?
What needs to happen in the school day different?' "
It's changing how reading is taught
Forget everything else No Child Left Behind stands for. If it does
nothing else, advocates say, it will have improved poor kids' reading in
unprecedented ways. A few say it already has.
The law gives schools $1 billion a year to spend on reading and focuses
it, laser-like, on 5,600 schools that serve the nation's poorest 1.8
million kids. It starts with kids as soon as they enter school and, so
far, has trained 103,000 teachers on "scientifically based" reading
strategies heavy in phonics, step-by-step lessons and practice,
practice, practice.
And because many schools build their reading programs around what
primary grades do, it could affect millions more students' reading skills.
How could it fail? Easily, say critics such as Susan Ohanian. She points
to overly scripted reading curricula and a curious little reading test
called DIBELS, which makes it easy to rate children's reading skills, in
part by asking them to look at nonsense words; it then rates them on
their ability to read the words aloud — very quickly.
"I have never seen anything like this," says Ohanian, a former New York
teacher who blogs about education in general and No Child Left Behind in
particular. She bemoans the loss of teacher autonomy and says DIBELS is
one of its worst symptoms.
"I don't dispute that it's quick and easy and it's a tool — and if you
just used it that way, I probably wouldn't have a problem with it," she
says. But she adds: "They're using DIBELS to hold kids back in
kindergarten. And that's where it becomes really evil. Some kids are
just not ready for that skills stuff..
http://www.usatoday.com/news/education/2007-01-07-no-child_x.htm
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