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Fwd: [oaklandteachers] Pushing NCLB renewal


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Begin forwarded message:

From: Jim Mordecai <jim2812@yahoo.com>
Date: Wed Feb 6, 2008 7:27:21 AM US/Pacific
To: oaklandteachers@lists.riseup.net
Subject: [oaklandteachers] Pushing NCLB renewal
Reply-To: oaklandteachers@lists.riseup.net



From Edweek online

Published Online: February 4, 2008
Published in Print: February 6, 2008

Key Democrats Join President in Seeking to Revive NCLB Renewal
By David J. Hoff




Washington
President Bush and key members of Congress said last week that they want to
jump-start the reauthorization of the No Child Left Behind Act. But the success
of their efforts may depend on their ability to work together.

The president called on Congress to reauthorize the 6-year-old law, one of his
most important domestic accomplishments, during his State of the Union address.


“Members of Congress: The No Child Left Behind Act is a bipartisan
achievement,” Mr. Bush said in his Jan. 28 speech. “It is succeeding. And
we owe it to America’s children, their parents, and their teachers to
strengthen this good law.”

Democratic leaders on education said they are restarting their efforts to renew
the law and plan to move quickly. But the frayed relationship between Democrats
and the president over issues such as NCLB funding and accountability measures
may make it hard for them to work together, said Rep. George Miller, D-Calif.,
the chairman of the House Education and Labor Committee.

Rep. Miller said that the Bush administration had been “very critical” of
the draft bill that he and his Republican counterpart released for discussion
last year, and that the criticism had contributed to last fall’s postponement
of work on an NCLB bill. Meanwhile, Rep. Miller’s Democratic colleagues are
upset that President Bush hasn’t proposed budgets with enough money to fully
finance the law, he added.

“The track record [on NCLB spending] has poisoned the well with members of
Congress,” Rep. Miller said in an interview.

Senate at Work
Rep. Miller said he and Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass., the chairman of the
Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee, are working to send a
reauthorization bill to the president this spring. The Senate education panel
is planning to mark up, or amend and vote on, a bill in March, said Melissa
Wagoner, the spokeswoman for committee Democrats.

As federal legislators work to reauthorize the law, the most recent version of
the Elementary and Secondary Education Act first passed in 1965, they face
several significant policy questions. Should Congress keep the law’s goal
that all students be proficient in reading and mathematics by the end of the
2013-14 school year? Should the law continue to rely primarily on annual test
results of students in grades 3-8, and once in high school, to track schools’
and districts’ success in reaching the proficiency goal? Should the federal
government underwrite teacher pay-for-performance experiments in school
districts?

Congressional leaders acknowledge that it may be difficult to generate answers
to all of those questions that can elicit widespread support.

In the interview, Rep. Miller said it “would be preferable” to craft a
bipartisan bill, but he didn’t commit to seeking GOP support for the next
version.

Moreover, the factions that have formed over big NCLB policy questions don’t
always cluster neatly along party lines, congressional aides said at a Capitol
Hill panel discussion last week.

“This is like a jigsaw puzzle the size of a football field,” Alice Johnson
Cain, Rep. Miller’s senior adviser on K-12 policy, said at the Jan. 31 event.
“The edges are done, and we’re still filling out the inside.”

Lighting a Fire
But the divisions could drive different factions toward a deal, said Carmel
Martin, the Democratic counsel of the Senate education committee.

Although people may disagree on some policy issues, there’s consensus across
both parties that Congress needs to fix the law’s problems, Ms. Martin said
at the panel discussion, sponsored by the Aspen Institute’s Commission on No
Child Left Behind, a private group that issued extensive recommendations for
revising the law.

The divisions may “make it complicated,” she said, but it also may stop it
from becoming a partisan fight.

While Congress tries to work out the details of the law’s future, education
advocates are pressing them to make decisions soon.

Congress should act to take advantage of the emerging consensus that the
federal government should hold schools and districts accountable for student
achievement and that it should help districts intervene, said Tommy G.
Thompson, a former governor of Wisconsin and the U.S. secretary of health and
human services during President Bush’s first term. Mr. Thompson, a
Republican, is the co-chairman of the Aspen Institute’s NCLB panel. The other
co-chairman expressed a similar sentiment.

“We’re trying to light a fire here,” said Roy E. Barnes, a Democrat and
former governor of Georgia. “We hope there will be something to mark up and
move.”

Vol. 27, Issue 22, Pages 20-21

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Kathy wrote:
What if NCLB provided funding for schools based on the four core curriculum
instead of just reading and math. In Houston County Ga. primary grades focus on
only those two subjects. In the case of my 5th grade son, during the first
semester his class received three days of social studies or science (those
classes are rotated every six weeks) He only received three days of instruction
because of ADVANCE and computer. I would like to see NCLB utilize some sort of
sliding scale to award extra funding for schools, not districts, that show
progress in all four areas of the core curriculum.
For us to focus solely on math and reading simply means that "other" areas of
the academia and the child's cognitive development suffer. The only
accountability system parents have is to review the scores on high stakes tests
in Georiga. If one examines the high school exit exam for social studies and
science, you will understand my concern. Scores normally are higher for reading
and math because that is where the focus is, and that is only due to federal
and state accountability. Can you imagine what our great nation might become if
we really taught social studies and science too?
2/6/2008 10:11 AM EST on EdWeek

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