No Child Left Behind
An Archived EdLog News Strand
Welcome
to Designed Instruction's archived news strand on NCLB, from EdLog!
It's been years now since No
Child Left Behind became law, and yet the debate continues. Though
this EdLog strand is no longer being updated, the article links are still
functional, and the content of the linked articles remains useful for
understanding NCLBits changes, struggles, successes, and difficulties
from 2003-2007. Postings are in chronological order, starting with the
most recent.
Feds
to override state charter caps?
States have traditionally set their own limits, but soon it may be out
of their hands. Some believe that if Congress pursues Bush's idea, the
charter override will likely pass constitutional muster... Chicago
Sun-Times (1/26/07)
Department
of Ed plans to toughen, not weaken, the law
A $4,000 voucher for students attending failing public schools to attend
private ones? Teachers sent to lower-performing schools despite union
contracts? Report cards that compare state tests scores with performance
on national exams? Read on... Chicago
Tribune (1/25/07)
President
Bush delivers State of the Union Address: "The No Child Left Behind
Act has worked for America's children -- and I ask Congress to reauthorize
this good law. "
January 23, 2007: Democrats have the majority. The President urges reauthorization.
What will be the outcome? Read this EdLog
special.
Fewer
than 100 "dangerous schools," or so they say...
Though NCLB requires identification of dangerous schools, many states
do not require reporting of all crimes. The result? Our kids are safe.
Hmmm... USA
TODAY (1/18/07)
Alliance
between Bush and Democrats in the works?
Read on... The
Washington Times (1/12/07)
Changes
due to NCLB
Though many don't agree, some believe there have certainly been changes
brought about by NCLB. Read this article, on the five-year anniversary
of the law's signing... USA
TODAY (1/8/07)
Reauthorization
in 2007?
The bid is up for reauthorization of NCLB, and the rhetoric is becoming
heated. Put the "money into the teachers, teaching them how to be
better assessors, and building in methods for spot checking and getting
feedback," urges Monty Neill, director of FairTest and chairman of
a coalition called the Forum on Educational Accountability. Michael Petrilli,
vice president for national programs and policy of the Thomas B. Fordham
Foundation, says he would keep the goals of NCLB, but put the federal
government's effort into setting strong national standards instead of
the widely varying state standards that currently exist, then have the
states and districts figure out on their own how to get students to meet
those standards. Meanwhile, the U.S. Department of Education asks critics
to be patient. Read on... The
Christian Science Monitor (1/7/07)
NCLB
a fraud
Or so argues East Rochester (N.Y.) School District schools chief Howard
Maffucci. Maffucci claims that, as in the 1983 A Nation at Risk
report, schools are being made a scapegoat for the nation's troubles,
and that the law should be scrapped... Rochester
Democrat and Chronicle (New York) (12/21/07)
Trying
to revive the challenge
Plaintiffs include nine school districts in Michigan, Texas and Vermont,
and NEA affiliates in those states and in Connecticut, Illinois, Indiana,
New Hampshire, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Utah. The request? Revive the lawsuit
demanding additional federal funding. The suit was dismissed in November
2005, when a federal judge asked why states and districts that did not
wish to participate did not just walk away from it... The
Boston Globe/Associated Press (11/28/07)
Parents
at odds with NCLB rule on military recruiters
Though NCLB policy requires high schools to share student contact information
with military recruiters, parents and teens may "opt out" of
having such information released. Few know, and some mean to set that
straight... USA
TODAY (11/2/07)
No
more NCLB in Kansas?
Stay tuned over the next few months as the Kansas Board of Education studies
the option of pulling out of NCLB along with the federal funds attached...
Journal-World
(Lawrence, Kansas) (9/15/06)
Policy
changes with respect to limited-English learners
The U.S. Department of Education gives states permission to omit test
scores of newly enrolled, limited-English kids when grading schools. Read
the White House press release... Whitehouse
News (Washington, DC) (9/13/06)
Why,
it's like Ivory soap!
Education Secretary Margaret Spellings strongly supported No Child Left
Behind and said the law needs little in the way of revisions. "I
talk about No Child Left Behind like Ivory soap: It's 99.9 percent pure
or something," Spellings told reporters. "There's not much needed
in the way of change," reports the Associated Press... Washington
Post/Associated Press (8/30/06)
"Not
everything that counts can be counted, and not everything that can be
counted counts." - Albert Einstein
When "accountability" is considered to be more than a word or
a set of numbers... Pittsburgh
Post-Gazette (8/28/06)
Does
it depend on what you know?
Critics of NCLB point to a recent Gallup Poll showing that 58 percent
of Americans believe the five-year-old No Child Left Behind law has either
harmed or had no effect on schools, compared with just over a quarter
who believe it has helped. The poll's director, Lowell Rose, even goes
so far as to say that, "Systematically, the public rejects every
strategy in it." Others claim the poll, co-authored by the Phi Delta
Kappa teachers' association, carries data that may bear a closer look
-- 45 percent of respondents said they know very little about the bill,
and of those who did report some knowledge, opinions were split: 42 percent
reported a favorable impression, and only 47 percent reported an unfavorable
one... U.S.
News & World Report (8/23/06)
And
yet, none made it...
The requirement of all states was to have "highly qualified"
teachers in every core academic class by the end of last school year.
None made it. In fact, according to a recent review released by the U.S.
Department of Education, most of the action plans are not even complete...
The
Boston Globe /Associated Press (8/17/06)
Maine
expects extra questions to turn trick
By adding additional items to its statewide reading and math assessments,
Maine feels its tests will more closely to state standards, and that the
federal government will finally approve the state's testing system...
Portland
Press Herald (Maine) (7/24/06)
34
states have problems, according to feds
In addition to the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico, 34 states have
significant problems with their tests, according to the U.S. Department
of Education. Ten states get full approval, and two are rejected... USA
TODAY (7/7/06)
Not
the way a partnership is run
Nebraska Education Commissioner Doug Christensen lashes out at the U.S.
Department of Education for rejecting his state's assessment system...
Lincoln
Journal Star (Neb.) (7/5/06)
We'll
talk about it...
April's Associated Press report that the scores of nearly 2 million students
are being ignored in adequate yearly progress reports prompts U.S. Deputy
Education Secretary Ray Simon to say that state officials will be summoned
to a conference this fall to review how and why they are excluding students...
The
Boston Globe/Associated Press (6/13/06)
"Opt-out"
box for military recruitment in CA
Schools in CA now required to add an "opt out" box to emergency
contact forms for parents who wish their child's contact information left
off of lists schools send to military recruiters. Is it protection from
overly aggressive recruiters, or a strike at the heart of the military?
Read on... San
Francisco Chronicle (5/26/06)
Rough
on rural schools
NCLB "highly qualified teacher" requirements create difficult
staffing dilemmas, especially in mountain regions and Indian reservations...
The
Arizona Republic (Phoenix) (5/24/06)
What
about us?
Currently under NCLB, states and schools are not required to include science
assessments as part of the formula for determining AYP. Though no action
can be taken on the Science Accountability Act until Congress begins
work to reauthorize NCLB next year, read the PDF about the proposed
bill to phase in annual science assessments for students in grades 3-8
beginning in 2009-2010... NSTA
(5/23/06)
Lawmakers
give thumbs up
Though student scores on national measures have not changed, lawmakers
feel that NCLB has been a positive force in school reform. Testing requirements
expand to include science in 2008... TIME
(5/22/06)
Comparisons
on student results on NAEP and state exam results reveal disparities
Do differences raise questions regarding validity at both state and national
levels? Read on... The
Boston Globe/Associated Press (3/3/06)
Garbage
in, garbage out?
Not his words, but the question Thomas Toch of the Education Sector poses
still remains: Are NCLB requirements forcing states to have tests developed
so rapidly and with so little thought that they cannot trust the results
to help inform practice or to reliably determine levels of student achievement?
Read the report
at the Education Sector.
No
dice in for NEA and Michigan
In response to the National Education Association and the state of Michigan's
claim that the federal government imposed illegal unfunded mandates on
states and local school districts, a federal judge writes, "If Congress
meant to prohibit 'unfunded mandates' in the NCLB, it would have phrased
(the law) to say so clearly and unambiguously." How will Connecticut
fare in its suit? Stateline.org
(11/30/05)
Individual
rather than group?
A new NCLB program will allow some states an opportunity to measure student
progress based on individual instead of group performance. Read as Hawaii
considers applying... Honolulu
Star-Bulletin (11/23/05)
Demand
rises, incentives loom, and loopholes abound
What is highly qualified? State officials grapple with recruiting challenges
and NCLB's upcoming Summer 2006 deadline that all core academic teachers
be highly qualified... U.S.
News and World Report (9/12/05)
New
rules for military recruiters
Seattle's School Board sets new requirements for recruiters that visit
campuses in their district, including wearing uniforms, equal visitation
to all high schools, and the need to make appointments in advance. Violators
could be banned from schools, show up in uniform and visit all high schools
with the same frequency... Seattle
Post-Intelligencer (9/8/05)
So
what is highly qualified?
The debate continues among state leaders, NCLB proponents, and those being
judged -- teachers. Read on... USA
TODAY/Associated Press (8/22/05)
Achievement
gap a problem in U.K. also
And it's being targeted. Through mentoring and tutoring, British school
leaders hope to raise black male students' test scores... The
Guardian (London) (8/21/05)
Discontent
grows
As many as five new states -- Maine, Minnesota, Nevada, New Jersey, and
Virginia -- could join states (Connecticut, Utah, and Colorado) that have
already planned lawsuits or passed state legislation countering NCLB...
The Christian
Science Monitor (8/19/05)
As
bar is raised, more schools miss the mark
As states raise student expectations as much as 10% toward 2014 achievement
goals, ten states show increase in the number of schools that land on
the "needs improvement" list... Stateline.org
(8/12/05)
Truth
in recruiting?
What do you need to know about NCLB's requirement that schools provide
students' contact information to military recruiters? Is it your kid?
Read on... The
Christian Science Monitor (8/18/05)
On
going forward...
The Economist suggests that President Bush's plans for education are proving
to be successful, and that these successes pose new challenges for Democrats
and for those in the education establishment that have resisted reform
thus far... The
Economist (7/21/05)
Department
of Ed seeks to provide tutoring guidance
New nonregulatory guidelines may help districts ascertain extent of appropriateness
with which outside tutoring agencies are handling their tasks... San
Francisco Chronicle/Associated Press (6/13/05)
Can
a state force English-only testing any longer?
A number of California schools plan to find out. They are filing suit
against the state of California, which only allows testing in English.
NCLB conversely contains a provision that allows schools to test students
in their native languages for up to five years... San
Diego Union-Tribune (6/1/05)
Foreign
vs. Failing. That is the question...
So, is it okay for foreign tutors to get NCLB monies, or should it go
to teachers at the same school who managed to make the "needs improvement"
list to begin with? Read on... The
Christian Science Monitor (5/23/05)
NEA
Sues
The National Education Association files suit along with school districts
in Texas, Vermont, and Michigan. The purpose? Force the federal government
to pay costs of the NCLB regulations so we don't have to pay for it with
our tax dollars. What? Is there something we're missing? Read more...
National Education Association
(4/20/05)
Spellings
announces more "common sense" approach to No Child Left Behind
Spellings plans to stay true to NCLB's mission to raise achievement, but
take into account each state's unique situation. The special education
regulations are the first example of new policy. Read more... Whitehouse
News (Washington, DC) (4/7/05)
NCLB
funding tutoring services in India?
The ultimate outsource... Sify
(New Delhi/Chennai) (3/8/05)
Fixing
the formula in California
California and federal officials close in on compromise that reduces the
number of schools that don't meet the mark. Still, not enough "subgroups"
are taking the test. Read about the arrangement... San
Francisco Chronicle (San Francisco) (3-9-05)
And
Bill Gates has the answers
In a speech at the National Governors Association education summit in
Washington, Bill Gates blasts U.S. education, saying it was "obsolete"
and that he was "ashamed" and "appalled"... The
Seattle Times (2/27/05)
State
legislatures criticize NCLB, think they have answers
The National Conference of State Legislatures (NCSL) seeks more flexibility,
claiming NCLB hinders improvement efforts. In contrast, this collection
of legislators and their task force co-chairsSenators from NY and
MNthink they have the answers. Read about the group, get their report,
and read their recommendations... NCSL
(Washington/Denver) (2/23/05)
It's
the budget, stupid...
We've heard the budget complaints about NCLB numerous times, but read
this opinion by Robert Gordon of the Center for American Progress... CBS
News (2/15/05)
Margaret
Spellings sworn in as new U.S. Secretary of Education
Bush: "She will be an outstanding Secretary of Education." Read
the President's speech... Whitehouse
News (Washington, DC) (1/31/05)
Singin' songs, and a-carryin' signs
Teachers launch music CD that blasts NCLB with tunes that sound like
the 60s... The
Christian Science Monitor (Boston) (12-28-04)
President
nominates new Secretary of Education
Margaret Spellings, a longtime advisor and early architect of NCLB,
succeeds Paige as the new Secretary of Education. Read or listen to
Bush's statement... Whitehouse
News Release (Washington) (11-17-04)
Comparing
and debating views
Differing stancesan election primer... San
Francisco Chronicle (San Francisco) (10-8-04)
Neither
wind nor rain
President's brother says Florida state tests will go forward, hurricanes
or not... St.
Petersburg Times (St. Petersburg) (9-22-04)
Kerry
idea considered clever and credible
A teacher/author's opinion on candidate John Kerry's proposal to link
teacher pay to student achievement... The
Washington Monthly (Washington) (July, 2004)
Lawsuit?
What lawsuit?
A year after the NEA teacher's union threatened to file a lawsuit
against the federal government, not one state has signed on, and still
no suit is filed... USA
TODAY/Associated Press (Washington) (6-27-04)
Dialogue
missing
NCLB's "requirement" for better dialogue between schools
and parents is not happening in most cases. Parents wonder if anyone
is listening... The
Christian Science Monitor (Boston) (6-1-04)
Trends
in parents' reactions to NCLB
Polls may indicate increasing opposition to NCLB, and this could spell
trouble during election... The
Christian Science Monitor (Boston) (4-8-04)
More
relaxation, this time on testing
Paige announcing changes that allow schools to meet 95% requirement
through an average over time of all students taking the reading and
math tests... USA
TODAY/Associated Press (Washington) (3-29-04)
New
rules allow more latitude
New rules from the feds allow states and districts greater flexibility
in implementing NCLB's highly qualified teacher provisions... NSTA
Legislative Updates (Arlington) (3-22-04)
Testing
mandates narrowing the curriculum
While many support the increased accountability and consistency, others
claim that the selection of subjects to be tested is defining the
curriculum, and doing so too narrowly... Seattle
Post-Intelligencer (Seattle) (3-4-04)
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