Since Congress enacted No Child Left Behind (NCLB) in January 2002 at
the behest of President George W. Bush there has been no shortage of
criticism from both the right and the left. Much of this has been
well-deserved, as the program created a massive new network of
bureaucracy without producing significant results. In fact, one could
argue that the only real positive consequence of NCLB was that it
brought attention to the pitiful state of American education. Otherwise
it left much to be desired.
Aware of some of the inadequacies of the program, Secretary of Education
Margaret Spellings announced new proposed regulations to "strengthen and
clarify No Child Left Behind." The regulations address several problems
with the program. They would: demand school systems be accountable for
results and transparent in their reporting to parents and the public by
posting student test scores on national reading and math tests alongside
state test scores, require that States publish data from the Nation's
Report Card alongside data from their own tests for students (so that
they do not exclude too many scores from minority students), allow
schools to use multiple types of questions and multiple assessments
within a subject area to measure progress (as opposed to the current
emphasis on a single test in each area), provide parents with timely
information about tutoring options available to help students improve,
and ensure the inclusion of all sub-groups of students (generally those
from impoverished backgrounds and those in specific minority groups) in
each State's accountability system.
In addition, Secretary Spellings proposed the creation of a new National
Technical Advisory Council, "made up of experts in the fields of
education standards, accountability systems, statistics and
psychometrics," to advise the Department of Education on "highly complex
and technical issues and ensuring state standards and assessments are of
the highest technical quality."
Among the new proposals the one which has garnered the most attention
would establish a uniform measurement of graduation and dropout by 2013
among all 50 States to measure more accurately how many high-school
freshmen graduate in four years. Currently States calculate graduation
rates by their own standards, and many have been criticized for
understating, through rather disingenuous measurements, the number of
students who do not receive a diploma.
Most of these proposed new regulations are, in theory, good ideas. The
problem is that education was and will remain a local issue in spite of
the Federal Government's attempts to micromanage every elementary and
secondary school in the country. The variety and quantity of student
and teacher needs are too numerous for the Federal Government adequately
to address them. In fact, these proposals do little more than shuffle
students through a monotonous, homogenous factory. There is no
creativity; no focus upon improving the quality of local curricula and
teaching; no flexibility for students whose interests may be as diverse
as automobile mechanics, ancient history, biology, music or agriculture;
and no ability to adapt to the needs of local communities. In short,
everything valuable about local control of education is missing. It is
what is missing, not what is included, that is necessary to improve
American education.
Instead of a one-size-fits-all bureaucratic education plan, what we need
are higher standards in the classroom, meaningful discipline, a return
to rigorous curricula (including proper grammar instruction, the study
of foreign languages and a return to primary sources in history rather
than watered-down textbooks), better teachers, more parental and
community involvement and greater flexibility to address local needs.
These would begin the process of reforming American education. As it
stands, it is highly unlikely that that expectations saddled to NCLB
will be fulfilled.
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