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"Reality Left Behind" -- Another Excellent Editorial
- To: ca-resisters@interversity.org
- Subject: "Reality Left Behind" -- Another Excellent Editorial
- From: Peter Farruggio <pfarr@cal.berkeley.edu>
- Date: Sat, 13 Jan 2007 13:15:47 -0800
From: Bob Schaeffer <bobschaeffer@earthlink.net>
REALITY LEFT BEHIND: "NO CHILD" PROGRAM NEEDS REFORM
Bradenton (FL) Herald Editorial
January 12, 2006
Democrats who now control Congress have taken steps to strengthen
ethics rules and to cut runaway spending that has thrown the federal
budget horribly out of balance during the last six years. They're
working on raising the minimum wage. And they must wrestle with
President Bush's bid to send more troops to Iraq in a "surge" aimed
at suppressing insurgents long enough for Iraqi troops to take
control of Baghdad and other hotspots.
But one important domestic item that has made few headlines is the
No Child Left Behind Act. This misguided bit of political meddling
into the education process is up for renewal, and Congress should
either drastically reform it or kill it off before it does more damage.
Bush's NCLB Act is based on the flawed premise that a school's
performance and success in educating our youth can be measured
solely through a test that basically assumes one size fits all. But
any educator knows that this is contrary to the real world, where
children come to education from vastly different places and learn in
vastly different ways.
Yet NCLB expects educators to push all children through at
pre-determined levels at the same time and penalizes with sanctions
those who are unable to do so. The failure label that attaches to
both students and teachers as a result of NCLB can be more harmful
to future academic success than the factors that caused failure in
the first place. It doesn't take many messages about failure to
cause a student to simply give up.
Certainly, it is a noble goal to commit to leaving no child behind,
academically. But it is almost criminal to set up a system that
expects students to perform at the same levels regardless of their
differences and then condemns those schools not meeting that level
without exception.
Like the Florida Comprehensive Achievement Test, NCLB is treated as
a pass-fail system instead of a diagnostic tool to track student
progress. That's because it was designed by bureaucrats for
political purposes rather than by professional educators who
understand how to teach.
NCLB also is flawed as an accountability gauge because it ignores
the single most important factor in a child's life: the home and
family environment. How can a child be expected to concentrate in
class when he or she may have little or no adult supervision at
home, or faces domestic violence on a regular basis, or even has no
home to go to? Their primary focus is survival, not NCLB or FCAT.
A whole-family approach such as that being tried at Samoset
Elementary, where parents are encouraged to attend night classes for
English competency or GED advancement, will bring better results in
the long run. Most kids will watch their parents and key adult role
models for clues about behavior. If they see them reading books and
taking classes, they are more likely to model that behavior.
All members of Congress should spend a week in a classroom back home
that would likely "fail" the NCLB regime before they decide the
program's future. Talk with that teacher. Meet each student and see
how much many of them care. And then think about what will encourage
them to stay in school and learn: an "F," or a program that invests
in finding the best education plan for their future.
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