[quote]The Obama administration plans to send a wide-ranging overhaul of the No Child Left Behind education law to Congress on Monday, arguing that the c..."/>

REAL WORLD EVENT DISCUSSIONS

Obama to push 'No Child Left Behind' overhaul

POSTED BY: NIKI2
UPDATED: Tuesday, March 16, 2010 09:25
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Monday, March 15, 2010 8:52 AM

NIKI2

Gettin' old, but still a hippie at heart...


Quote:

The Obama administration plans to send a wide-ranging overhaul of the No Child Left Behind education law to Congress on Monday, arguing that the current legislation has pushed schools to lower their standards to meet federal requirements.

The 8-year-old law was one of the signature policies of the Bush administration. It set up a regimen of state reading and math tests for students in third through eighth grades, intended to identify failing schools. But critics have said the Bush administration never properly funded the effort and that states needed more flexibility in meeting those goals.

During his weekly radio address Saturday, President Obama said his administration's proposed overhaul will "set a high bar -- but we also provide educators the flexibility to reach it."

"Under these guidelines, schools that achieve excellence or show real progress will be rewarded, and local districts will be encouraged to commit to change in schools that are clearly letting their students down," he said.

During his 2008 presidential campaign, Obama said the law's goal was "the right one," but the legislation "has significant flaws that need to be addressed." And Education Secretary Arne Duncan told CNN last week that educators have "lowered the bar" to meet No Child Left Behind standards.

"We've had low expectations -- not because it's the right thing educationally, not because it's the right thing for our economy. We did it because of political pressure," Duncan said.

The Department of Education has identified 11 states it said lowered math standards. But several of those states have disputed that conclusion, and it was not clear whether any reduced their standards so that their scores would look better.

The administration's "Blueprint for Reform" shifts the focus from singling out underperforming schools to fostering a "race to the top" to reward successful reforms. The proposed revisions promise that low-performing schools that fail to improve will be asked to show "dramatic change," but states and school districts be held accountable for those shortcomings as well.

It supports the expansion of public charter schools and calls for giving states and school districts additional flexibility in how they spend federal dollars, "as long as they are continuing to focus on what matters most -- improving outcomes for students." And it also allows them to use federal grant funds to change the way teachers and principals are paid, "to provide differentiated compensation and career advancement opportunities to educators who are effective in increasing student academic achievement," among other considerations.

But the newly published "blueprint" immediately came under fire from the nation's largest teachers union, the National Education Association, which said it was "disappointed" by Obama's proposals.

"We were expecting more funding stability to enable states to meet higher expectations," the union's president, Dennis Van Roekel, said in a statement issued over the weekend. "Instead, the 'blueprint' requires states to compete for critical resources, setting up another winners-and-losers scenario. We were expecting school turnaround efforts to be research-based and fully collaborative. Instead, we see too much top-down scapegoating of teachers and not enough collaboration."

The Obama administration's $50 billion proposed education budget adds $3 billion in funding to help schools meet these revised goals, with the possibility of an additional $1 billion if the overhaul plan passes Congress.

http://www.cnn.com/2010/POLITICS/03/15/obama.education/index.html?hpt=
T2


Will be interesting to see where it goes. Certainly NCLB has been controversial, and many say it doesn't work and makes things worse...not to mention it's underfunded. I learned a lot about it by researching on Google:
Quote:

the law's main Democratic architects, Sen. Edward Kennedy of Massachusetts and Rep. George Miller of California, continue to defend the law as an essentially positive program for schools.

The Bush Administration is trying to use NCLB to promote an aggressive agenda of privatization, including attempts to revive a voucher movement that has been defeated in every state referendum where people had a chance to vote. For Bush, education reform is an "outreach" issue. He came into office as a dubiously-elected President with historically low levels of support among African Americans and a well-deserved anti-poor, pro-business image. Education is one of the few areas that allows a Republican President to posture, however disingenuously, as an ally of poor communities of color, especially those that have been badly served by public education.

But the common ground that really gave birth to NCLB was the standards movement. And this traces back to the first education, President George Bush the elder, and to the Governor's Education Summits promoted by then-Arkansas Governor Bill Clinton.


One of the more amazing things about NCLB is how the most intrusive education law in the history of federal policy, which now has Washington mandating test score targets for every school in the country, could be passed by an Administration that regularly presents itself as a deregulating enemy of big government. NCLB represents a virtual nationalization of control over local schools, and its highly prescriptive and punitive sanctions are the kind of wrongheaded social engineering by Washington that political leaders like the President have supposedly railed against for years.

http://www.rethinkingschools.org/special_reports/bushplan/hoax.shtml

Here's some of the articles I found about why it doesn't work:

Quote:

We are now in year five of No Child Left Behind (NCLB). Once hailed as a historic new federal commitment to leave no child behind, today NCLB inspires fear and loathing from coast to coast — and beyond. Puerto Rico and Hawaii hate it too.

Every one of the 50 states has introduced legislation rejecting all or part of NCLB. Several have filed lawsuits against it. More than 10,000 schools have been put on NCLB's infamous list of "schools in need of improvement" and face an escalating series of sanctions that address neither their needs nor their challenges. Thousands more will be added to the list in the next few years as increasing numbers of schools are squeezed in the tightening vise of unreachable "adequate yearly progress" (AYP) test targets and inadequate resources. This year more than a quarter of all public schools (nearly 23,000) failed to reach AYP. Missing AYP two years in a row earns a spot on the list.

Today, NCLB is almost as unpopular as the administration and Congress that created it. With the law coming up for reauthorization in 2007, debate is heating up about whether we need Band-Aids to "fix" NLCB or a bulldozer to bury it.

http://www.rethinkingschools.org/special_reports/bushplan/band203.shtm
l


Quote:

The screws of high-stakes "accountability" are tightening on high school students. On Jan. 12, President Bush announced his new "high school initiative" to expand high-stakes testing through the 11th grade under No Child Left Behind (NCLB). Under this new initiative, high school students would be tested in two high school grades in reading and mathematics. Their scores would be calculated into a school's adequate yearly progress (AYP) goals for test score improvement. Ironically, even while the Bush administration is pushing to cut programs that assist low-income students and students of color, the new "high school initiative" allocates $250 million of the FY2006 budget to fund these new tests.

High-stakes standardized tests like the ones Bush is proposing can only mean big trouble for small schools. All other arguments about testing aside, small schools are extremely "volatile" when it comes to measuring their progress statistically through standardized test scores. To be volatile in a statistical sense means that you may be subject to wild swings in test scores from year-to-year, grade-to-grade, and school-to-school.

http://www.rethinkingschools.org/special_reports/bushplan/vola194.shtm
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Bound and Talent Search are only some of the good programs the Bush administration has placed on the chopping block. The DOE proposes cutting the following programs (all dollars are in millions):

Alcohol Abuse Reduction programs in high schools: $32.7

Even Start programs that support "family literacy" and early childhood education in low- income communities: $225.1

Gaining Early Awareness and Readiness for Undergraduate Programs (GEARUP) that help low-income elementary and secondary school students prepare for college: $306.5

National Writing Project, which supports K-16 teacher training in effective writing and literacy practices: $20.3

Safe and Drug-Free Schools and Communities State Grants: $437.4

School Dropout Prevention: $4.9

Smaller Learning Communities, programs that support the breaking up of large, comprehensive high schools into smaller school-within-a-school organization: $94.5

State Grants for Incarcerated Youth Offenders: $21.8

Literacy Programs for Prisoners: $5.0

Foreign Language Assistance: $17.9

Thurgood Marshall Legal Educational Opportunity Program, which helps provide low-income students of color with support to access and complete law school: $3.0

Women's Educational Equity: $3.0

Federal Perkins Loans : $66.1

And this is just a partial list. There are other proposed cuts as well, ones that seem particularly paradoxical in the wake of the NCLB's stated commitment to quality education. For instance, even with all the focus on developing and maintaining a qualified teacher in every classroom, the administration wants to cut "Teacher Quality Enhance-ment" monies to save $68.3 million.

http://www.rethinkingschools.org/special_reports/bushplan/clos193.shtm
l
fall and again in the spring, the government administered a standardized literacy and math test to all children in the Head Start program. It's being given again this year. Four-year-olds are asked to count objects, name alphabet letters and simple geometrical shapes, understand directions, characterize facial expressions, and identify animals, body parts, and other objects in pictures.

It is hard to discern why the Bush administration insisted on the test over the objections of most leading early-childhood experts and even members of its own Head Start advisory panel.

Perhaps it is nothing more than a reflexive decision of administration ideologues who see tests and more tests as the solution to every conceivable educational problem—or worse, a way to expose the academic failures they fundamentally believe to plague the public school system in America.

http://www.rethinkingschools.org/special_reports/bushplan/tots192.shtm
l
gold in them there tests.

Thanks to the testing mandated by the federal No Child Left Behind (NCLB) legislation, private companies are mining the testing field with all the power their accountants, test-makers, and marketers can muster.

States are likely to spend $1.9 billion to $5.3 billion between 2002 and 2008 to implement NCLB-mandated tests, according to the non-partisan Government Accounting Office (GAO).

Those GAO figures cover just the direct costs of six years of developing, scoring, and reporting the tests—which is performed under contract with private companies. Add in indirect costs, such as the amount of classroom teacher time devoted to coordinating and giving the tests and, increasingly, preparing students with ongoing "practice" tests, and testing experts say the figure could be 8 to 15 times higher.

The amount of education money devoted to standardized tests is only part of the problem. Invariably, the private testing companies that control standardized testing operate behind closed doors with little to no public accountability. They function as subsections of multinational conglomerates that view the U.S. testing industry as just one tentacle of publishing and entertainment empires that span the globe.

"There's very little oversight of the testing industry," notes Walt Haney, an education professor at Boston College and a senior researcher at its National Board on Educational Testing and Public Policy (NBETPP). "In fact, there is more public oversight of the pet industry and the food we feed our dogs than there is for the quality of tests we make our kids take."
http://www.rethinkingschools.org/special_reports/bushplan/test192.shtm
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Ten Reasons NCLB is a Hoax.

Here's why I think NCLB is hoax:

1. The massive increase in testing that NCLB will impose on schools will hurt their educational performance, not improve it.

2. The funding for NCLB does not come anywhere near the levels that would be needed to reach even the narrow and dubious goal of producing 100% passing rates on state tests for all students by 2014.

3. The mandate that NCLB imposes on schools to eliminate inequality in test scores among all student groups within 12 years is a mandate that is placed on no other social institution, and reflects the hypocrisy at the heart of the law.

4. The sanctions that NCLB imposes on schools that don't meet its test score targets will hurt poor schools and poor communities most.

5. The transfer and choice provisions of NCLB will create chaos and produce greater inequality within the public system without increasing the capacity of receiving schools to deliver better educational services.

6. These same transfer and choice provisions will not give low-income parents any more control over school bureaucracies than food stamps give them over the supermarkets.

7. The provisions about using scientifically-based instructional practices are neither scientifically valid nor educationally sound and will harmfully impact classrooms in what may be the single most important instructional area, the teaching of reading.

8. The supplemental tutorial provisions of NCLB will channel public funds to private companies for ideological and political reasons, not sound educational ones.

9. NCLB is part of a larger political and ideological effort to privatize social programs, reduce the public sector, and ultimately replace local control of institutions like schools with marketplace reforms that substitute commercial relations between customers for democratic relations between citizens.

10. NCLB moves control over curriculum and instructional issues away from teachers, classrooms, schools and local districts where it should be, and puts it in the hands of state and federal education bureaucracies and politicians. It represents the single biggest assault on local control of schools in the history of federal education policy.

OK, that's ten: But frankly this law is so bad, I needed 11, so here's #11 on my top ten list of reasons why NCLB is a fraud:

11. NCLB includes provisions that try to push prayer, military recruiters, and homophobia into schools while pushing multiculturalism, teacher innovation, and creative curriculum reform out.
http://www.rethinkingschools.org/special_reports/bushplan/hoax.shtml

Lots more can be found at http://www.rethinkingschools.org/special_reports/bushplan/index.shtml. Maybe I should take away those points I gave Bush for NCLB. Or maybe just accept it was a relatively good idea which ended up bing badly executed and underfunded, I dunno. Dunno if Obama's plan to revise it will make it better or worse, either.



"I'm just right. Kinda like the sun rising in the east and the world being round...its not a need its just the way it is." The Delusional "Hero", 3/1/10

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Monday, March 15, 2010 9:20 AM

RIVERDANCER


About damn time. I was expecting them to do away with this travesty a long time ago. Hopefully now our teachers can work with less hindrance, students can actually learn, the arts can ease their way back into the system to enrich everyone's lives, and I won't have to be worried and embarrassed about the future if I decide to teach, or if/when I have children who might be left to the mercy of the public school system.

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Monday, March 15, 2010 9:25 AM

NIKI2

Gettin' old, but still a hippie at heart...


I don't know. I'll wait and see. Given the ability of our government to fuck things up, only time will tell whether this "overhaul" will be a good thing or only make a bad thing worse!


"I'm just right. Kinda like the sun rising in the east and the world being round...its not a need its just the way it is." The Delusional "Hero", 3/1/10

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Monday, March 15, 2010 1:29 PM

KWICKO

"We'll know our disinformation program is complete when everything the American public believes is false." -- William Casey, Reagan's presidential campaign manager & CIA Director (from first staff meeting in 1981)


As George W. would say, you only have to ask yourself one question: "Is our children learnin'?"




"I supported Bush in 2000 and 2004 and intellegence [sic] had very little to do with that decision." - Hero, Real World Event Discussions


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Monday, March 15, 2010 2:43 PM

FREMDFIRMA



One of my main problems with it, and education funding in general, is how folk think dumping money on a problem can fix it if no one even has a clue of where to start.

It ain't how much that matters as much as when and where - case in point my nieces school spent a shitload of grant money on that damned surveillence system, which had an effect on the problems allright, they WENT UP...

Oh did I mention that *I* had to ship her the Algebra textbooks they could not afford because of this ?!
Which I paid for out of pocket, mind you.

I think the whole model and structure as-is currently... is totally boned and no amount of financial band aid is gonna stop the bleeding, which is why am so firmly behind an alternative education model (sudbury) which actually does seem to work - and frankly, it existed in micro form in many schools vo-tech programs (which were, mind you, tremendously successful, when they didn't get cut entire to shore up dumbass ideas which didn't!) for a long time prior to this.

-F

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Monday, March 15, 2010 5:34 PM

GEEZER

Keep the Shiny side up


Ranking schools on how well children do on tests ignores the fact that schools cannot educate children in a vacuum. In places where parents are absent or not involved, where there is no community involvement, where learning is considered 'not cool', where there is constant movement of kids in and out of school, where many of the kids have little or no proficiency in English, no matter what the schools do there are going to be lower scores.

If the parents and community don't get on the ball, the schools are bound to fail.

"Keep the Shiny side up"

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Tuesday, March 16, 2010 9:25 AM

NIKI2

Gettin' old, but still a hippie at heart...


I agree with both of you. Throwing money at a problem rarely solves it; on the other hand, creating "unfunded mandates" and what may be some good ideas, then not funding them, is even worse, in my opinion.

I agree about the testing, but I don't like the emphasis on testing no matter WHAT. Testing as it is done is, again, regurgitating what's been taught...I'd rather see kids encouraged to think for themselves. Same reason I am bothered by the replacing of "analyze" with "describe" in the proposed new Texas textbooks.

Testing is inherently flawed for the reasons you described, and more.


"I'm just right. Kinda like the sun rising in the east and the world being round...its not a need its just the way it is." The Delusional "Hero", 3/1/10

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