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Re: FairTest reaction to Sec Spellings announcement of nclb 'differentiated accountability' pilot program
Perish the thought that a mere parent would know whether or not school
had improved for her child. Where is Manny when we need him to check
the mom's credentials?
Art
-----Original Message-----
From: MONICALUCIDO@comcast.net
To: arn-l@interversity.org
Sent: Wed, 19 Mar 2008 10:17 am
Subject: Re: [arn-l] FairTest reaction to Sec Spellings announcement of
nclb 'differentiated accountability' pilot program
There's no evidence from that one statement that NCLB did anything to
"improve"
that class. It could have just been in the lesson plans for
instruction. In
fact, how do we know if the focus on those subjects she mentions hasn't
gotten
WORSE. Maybe the depth was better before, and she's only focused on her
one
experience. Unless one has the "before" and "after" effects, to take
this quote
out of the context of the flow of the class over the years is useless.
Joe
-------------- Original message ----------------------
From: aburke5054@aol.com
By Maria Glod
Washington Post Staff Writer
Monday, March 17, 2008; Page B01
As Montgomery County ninth-grader Stephen Sabia reads "Romeo and
Juliet" and studies the Holocaust and World War II for honors history
and English, his mother credits an important ally in her years-long
drive to secure the best education possible for her son with Down
syndrome: the federal No Child Left Behind law. ...
Ricki Sabia, Stephen's mother, said the law "really pushed the
envelope
for expectations for Stephen. There is no more question of whether he
should be learning the same material as other kids. He's been exposed
to literature and other academics at a level I don't think he would
have without No Child Left Behind."
_________________________________________________________
This is why it's important to hold schools to high standards for all
children and this is why it's important to have accountability
mechanisms to back it up.
Tell Stephen and his mom again, Lucido and FairTest, how NCLB is all
a
plot to enrich the Business Roundtable and all it does is harm.
Art
-----Original Message-----
From: MONICALUCIDO@comcast.net
To: arn-l@interversity.org
Sent: Tue, 18 Mar 2008 4:01 pm
Subject: Re: [arn-l] FairTest reaction to Sec Spellings announcement
of
nclb 'differentiated accountability' pilot program
My, my, how sickly sweet she is through this whole thing. It has a
whole lot of
"I want to make this new version JUST palatable enough now, so that
the
wealthier districts/parents (which are rising in arms against NCLB)
with fewer
problems in 'achievement' will support this new scandalous version of
the NCLB".
A few points below:
Spellings: "Industries from medicine to commerce, from finance to
entertainment,
have leveraged data and accountability to improve efficiency and
effectiveness,
as well as customer service, satisfaction, and quality of life.
Together, we can
support the same transformation in education."
-Translation: Corporation$ will now be given the red carpet to come
on
in and
take over your "failing $chool$". They will be allowed to use
busine$$
practice$
in school$, even though there ha$ been no evidence to show that they
are any
better.
Spellings: "Of course, we will only achieve this goal if we continue
facing our
problems head on, instead of rejecting data and measurement because
they can
cause discomfort."
-Translation: We will continue to jab really pointy things into your
backside
until you give in and collapse the entire public school system under
a
program
of standardized teaching-testing-widget-producing. Oh, and here's a
band-aid for
that.
Spellings: "After all, don't our children deserve to benefit from the
same
spirit of possibility and innovation that has made our country great?"
-Translation: I don't read any research that shows real innovation
comes from
the freedom to think. Even though Scandinavian countries outperform
our
kids and
understand how the development of the human spirit is integral in
education, I
will choose to ignore that data. I also don't read U.S. History and
don't
acknowledge all of the success our schools HAVE made--without massive
corporate
influence. In fact, I may not know how to read. (I am
pre-programmed..zzzzzrt...crackle..pop...)
-------------- Original message ----------------------
From: "Monty Neill" <monty@fairtest.org>
> Sec Spellings has announced a pilot NCLB "differentiated
accountability
> plan" for up to 10 states. Spellings talk today is at
> http://www.ed.gov/news/pressreleases/2008/03/03182008.html and that
contains
> a link to the memo outlining the policy.
>
> Here is FairTest's react to this announcement:
>
> FairTest
> National Center for Fair & Open Testing
> <>for further information contact:
> Dr. Monty Neill (617) 864-4810
> Robert Schaeffer (239) 395-6773
>
>
> for immediate release, Tuesday, March 18, 2008
> SEC. SPELLINGS "DIFFERENTIATED ACCOUNTABILITY" PLAN
> IS "FUTILE EFFORT TO RESCUE A COLLAPSING LAW,"
> SCHEME IS EQUIVALENT TO "REARRANGING DECK CHAIRS ON TITANIC"
> REACTION OF NATIONAL CENTER FOR FAIR & OPEN TESTING
>
>
> Secretary of Education Margaret Spellings' plan to allow ten
states to
> pilot "Differentiated Accountability" approaches to comply with
federal "No
> Child Left Behind" mandates is a futile effort to rescue a
collapsing
law.
> Though it correctly recognizes that NCLB identifies far too many
schools as
> failing, the proposal is the political equivalent of rearranging
deck
chairs
> on the Titanic, not changing its misguided course. It will not slow
the
> ever-growing demand for complete overhaul.
> At its core, "No Child" is unworkable. It makes impossible
demands
> such as expecting all children to attain proficiency by 2014,
relies
too
> heavily on educationally destructive standardized tests which narrow
> curriculum while encouraging "drill-and-kill" test prep, and imposes
> counterproductive punishments.
> Simply imposing a state-by-state patchwork of new rules onto
the
> top-down federal bureaucracy created by "No Child Left Behind" will
not lead
> to improved education for the communities that most need it. Far
more
> fundamental changes, focusing on identifying the real causes of weak
> academic performance and building schools' capacity to address
them,
are
> required.
> FairTest initiated the Joint Organizational Statement on
NCLB,
a set
> of principles for overhauling the federal law, which has been
signed
by 143
> national education, civil rights, religious, parent, disability,
civic and
> labor groups. FairTest also facilitates the Forum on Educational
Assessment,
> which works to implement the Joint Statement.
>
> - - 3 0 - -
>
>
> The Joint Statement and other materials concerning NCLB, including
FairTest's
> six-year "Report Card" on the law's impact, are online at:
> http://www.fairtest.org
>
>
>
> Monty Neill, Ed.D.
> Deputy Director
> FairTest
> 342 Broadway
> Cambridge, MA 02139
> 617-864-4810 x 101; fax 617-497-2224
> monty@fairtest.org
> http://www.fairtest.org
> Donate: https://secure.entango.com/servlet/donate/MnrXjT8MQqk
>
> -------------------------------------------------------
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