From: Bob Schaeffer <bobschaeffer@earthlink.net>
Date: Sat Apr 21, 2007 4:56:56 AM US/Pacific
To: ARN Main List <arn-l@interversity.org>, arn2-strategy
<arn2-strategy@yahoogroups.com>
Subject: [arn2-strategy] Key NCLB Initiative Under Federal
Investigation
Reply-To: arn2-strategy@yahoogroups.com
<>KEY INITIATIVE OF "NO CHILD" UNDER FEDERAL INVESTIGATION
Washington Post -- April 21, 2007
by Amit R. Paley
The Justice Department is conducting a probe of a $6 billion reading
initiative at the center of President Bush's No Child Left Behind law,
another blow to a program besieged by allegations of financial
conflicts
of interest and cronyism, people familiar with the matter said
yesterday.
The disclosure came as a congressional hearing revealed how people
implementing the $1 billion-a-year Reading First program made at least
$1 million off textbooks and tests toward which the federal government
steered states.
"That sounds like a criminal enterprise to me," said Rep. George Miller
(D-Calif.), chairman of the House education committee, which held a
five-hour investigative hearing. "You don't get to override the law,"
he
angrily told a panel of Reading First officials. "But the fact of the
matter is that you did."
The Education Department's inspector general, John P. Higgins, Jr.,
said
he has made several referrals to the Justice Department about the
five-year-old program, which provides grants to improve reading for
children in kindergarten through third grade.
Higgins declined to offer more specifics, but Christopher J. Doherty,
former director of Reading First, said in an interview that he was
questioned by Justice officials in November. The civil division of the
U.S. attorney's office for the District, which can bring criminal
charges, is reviewing the matter.
Doherty, one of the two Education Department employees who oversaw the
initiative, acknowledged yesterday that his wife had worked for a
decade
as a paid consultant for a reading program, Direct Instruction, that
investigators said he improperly tried to force schools to use. He
repeatedly failed to disclose the conflict on financial disclosure
forms.
"I'm very proud of this program and my role in this program," Doherty
said in the interview. "I think it's been implemented in accordance
with
the law."
The management of Reading First has come under attacks from members of
both parties. Federal investigators say program officials improperly
forced states to use certain tests and textbooks created by those
officials.
One official, Roland H. Good III, said his company made $1.3 million
off
a reading test, known as DIBELS, that was endorsed by a Reading First
evaluation panel he sat on. Good, who owns half the company, Dynamic
Measurement Group, told the committee that he donated royalties from
the
product to the University of Oregon, where he is an associate
professor.
Two former University of Oregon researchers on the panel, Edward J.
Kame'enui and Deborah C. Simmons, said they received about $150,000 in
royalties last year for a program that is now packaged with DIBELS.
They
testified that they received smaller royalties in previous years for
the
program, Scott Foresman Early Reading Intervention, and did not know it
was being sold with DIBELS.
Members of the panel said they recused themselves from voting on their
own products but did assess their competitors. Of 24 tests approved by
the committee, seven were tied to members of the panel.
"I regret the perception of conflicts of interest," said Kame'enui,
former chairman of the committee, who now works at the department as
commissioner of the National Center for Special Education Research.
"But
there was no real conflict of interest being engaged in."
The intricate financial connections between Reading First products and
program officials extend beyond issues the committee explored
yesterday.
Another researcher, Sharon Vaughn, worked with Kame'enui, Simmons and
Good to design Voyager Universal Literacy, a program that Reading First
officials urged states to use. Vaughn was director of a center at the
University of Texas that was hired to provide states advice on
selecting
Reading First tests and books.
The publisher of that product, Voyager Expanded Learning, was founded
and run by Randy Best, a major Bush campaign contributor, who sold the
company in 2005 for more than $350 million. Now Best runs Higher Ed
Holdings, a company that develops colleges of education, where former
education secretary Roderick R. Paige is a senior adviser and G. Reid
Lyon, Bush's former reading adviser, is an executive vice president.
"I'm very disappointed and saddened by the information that was
provided
at the hearing today," said Lyon, who had been a strong defender of
Reading First, which he said had nothing to do with his new job. "The
issues appear much more serious than I had been led to understand."
Despite the controversy surrounding Reading First's management, the
percentage of students in the program who are proficient on fluency
tests has risen about 15 percent, Education Department officials said.
School districts across the country praise the program.
Members of both parties continue to support the goals of Reading First
even as they attack its management. Miller and Senate education
committee Chairman Edward M. Kennedy (D-Mass.) joined Republicans
yesterday in pledging to tighten restrictions on conflicts of interest
in No Child Left Behind.
Education Secretary Margaret Spellings, who declined to comment
yesterday, has said management problems with Reading First "reflect
individual mistakes." But Doherty said nearly every aspect of the
program was carefully monitored by the department and the White House,
where Spelling was Bush's top education adviser.
"This program was always firmly under the watch and control of the
highest levels of the government," Doherty said.
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