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No Child Left Behind Law: Half Of All U.S. Public Schools Fail Federal Standards

No Child Left Behind

DORIE TURNER   12/15/11 08:25 AM ET   AP

ATLANTA — Nearly half of America's public schools didn't meet federal achievement standards this year, marking the largest failure rate since the much-criticized No Child Left Behind Law took effect a decade ago, according to a national report released Thursday.

The Center on Education Policy report shows more than 43,000 schools – or 48 percent – did not make "adequate yearly progress" this year. The failure rates range from a low of 11 percent in Wisconsin to a high of 89 percent in Florida.

The findings are far below the 82 percent failure rate that Education Secretary Arne Duncan predicted earlier this year but still indicate an alarming trend that Duncan hopes to address by granting states relief from the federal law. The law requires states to have every student performing at grade level in math and reading by 2014, which most educators agree is an impossible goal.

"Whether it's 50 percent, 80 percent or 100 percent of schools being incorrectly labeled as failing, one thing is clear: No Child Left Behind is broken," Duncan said in a statement Wednesday. "That's why we're moving forward with giving states flexibility from the law in exchange for reforms that protect children and drive student success."

State's scores varied wildly. For example, in Georgia, 27 percent of schools did not meet targets, compared to 81 percent in Massachusetts and 16 percent in Kansas.

That's because some states have harder tests or have high numbers of immigrant and low-income children, center officials said. It's also because the law requires states to raise the bar each year for how many children must pass the test, and some states put off the largest increase until this year to avoid sanctions.

The numbers indicate what federal officials have been saying for more than a year – that the law, which is four years overdue for a rewrite, is "too crude a measure" to accurately depict what's happening in schools, said Jack Jennings, president of the Washington, D.C.-based center. An overhaul of the law has become mired in the partisan atmosphere in Congress, with lawmakers disagreeing over how to fix it.

"No Child Left Behind is defective," Jennings told The Associated Press. "It needs to be changed. If Congress can't do it, then the administration is right to move ahead with waivers."

Waivers fix the immediate problem but likely will make it much more difficult for parents to understand how schools are rated because progress will no longer be based on just one test score.

Under the 11 waivers already filed, states are asking to use a variety of factors to determine whether they pass muster and to choose how schools will be punished if they don't improve.

Those factors range from including college-entrance exam scores to adding the performance of students on Advanced Placement tests.

At least 39 states, plus Washington, D.C. and Puerto Rico, have said they will file waivers, though it is unclear how many will get approved.

Republicans in Congress say Duncan and President Barack Obama are using the waivers to push a "backdoor education agenda" that will ultimately let schools off the hook.

"The law needs to be fixed and it needs to be fixed in Congress and not by executive action," House education committee Chairman John Kline, a Republican from Minnesota, said in September after Obama announced the waivers.

Under No Child Left Behind, states that have tough standards are punished and schools that make progress but don't hit benchmarks get treated the same as schools that see performance dip, Jennings said.

"A lot of educators saw the weaknesses in No Child Left Behind even when it was rolled out – that this day and time would come," said Georgia schools Superintendent John Barge. "It's kind of a train wreck that we all see happening."

___

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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Calilover Calilover
tolerate tolerance
01:53 PM on 12/23/2011
If the school system FORCED each student to REDISTRIBUTE THEIR HIGHER GRADES TO THOSE WITH LOWER GRADES

WOULDNT ALL THINGS BE SOLVED??

you go obama u da man
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Calilover Calilover
tolerate tolerance
01:48 PM on 12/23/2011
Still trying to blame Bush while in the 3rd term of Obamas presidency makes us look bad
foresure
Brash and Harsh
11:58 PM on 12/19/2011
Just once, just once, it would be wonderful for a teacher would list out, in simple one or two sentecne paragraphs what could be done to improve schools. Apparently the only ideas they can come up with are:

1. More salary

2. Less work

3. No accountability

I would gladly accept the challenge if a teacher were to politely, without vitriol, without defensiveness to ask me to list the ideas that I have.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Kimpeach
Progressive Independent and proud of it!
10:00 AM on 12/20/2011
"sentecne"
foresure
Brash and Harsh
11:27 AM on 12/20/2011
Kimpeach:

I want to congratulate you on your excellent example of teacher thinking.

I would never have thought that one could exemplify the teacher's "defensive crouch", with just a touch of bullying as well as you have.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Kimpeach
Progressive Independent and proud of it!
11:32 AM on 12/20/2011
You missed my point. So it's not surprising that you have such a bias viewpoint on education and teaching. Your viewpoint that does not have any research backing and/or lacks common sense! You are an adult and I treat you like one. My students are children and I protect them from 'adults' like you. See the difference?
foresure
Brash and Harsh
01:12 PM on 12/20/2011
Kimpeach:

You really have outdone yourself. I protect them from 'adults' like you.

That was lower and nastier than the even the most hostile teachers have expressed before. A real keeper.

You have set a very high bar for other teachers. Let's see what the can do.

You might want to Google the KIPP program. It is merely based on commen sense, and it works.
foresure
Brash and Harsh
01:13 PM on 12/20/2011
Kimpeach:

Sorry typo: "common" not commen.
03:31 PM on 12/19/2011
It's not an either or problem. If you want quality teachers you have to offer a competitive salary. Also, if you want quality students they need to study more. As much as it offends our sensibilities these days, not all ethno-cultural groups have identical attitudes toward education.

http://dese.mo.gov/news/2010/act.htm
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Calilover Calilover
tolerate tolerance
01:52 PM on 12/23/2011
"competitive salaries"

well you drink at the well of the taxpayers and there are trillions$$ of other demands by the government, you cant pay the amount YOU DEEM GOOD ENOUGH

it really comes down to the parents at home and what THEY DEMAND OF THEIR CHILDREN
01:07 PM on 12/19/2011
If teachers did to students what the government does to schools we'd all be screaming NO FAIR!

Yes, Timmy got a 95 on the spelling test but he needed to get a 97 to beat his previous score so he failed. Sorry Timmy!
08:35 PM on 12/17/2011
Ah, yes..that old "BALANCED SCORECARD"! I personally believe this does not belong in schools!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
stopnlisten
Hitch your wagon to a star!
01:50 PM on 12/16/2011
Will all of the politicians, parents with bad school experiences, and money hoarding businesses please get out of the way and let the teachers please run the show? We didn't get out Master's degree and stay in this field for nothing!
Tired of being yanked around by incompetent yahoos.
foresure
Brash and Harsh
11:38 PM on 12/19/2011
stoopnlisten:

It's really too bad that none of the principals and administrators have M.Ed degrees. We know if that were the case, and teachers were relieved of all accountability, things would be much, much better.

It's all those politicians and businessness people who are running the day to day operation of the schools, that is clearly the problem.

And the audacity of the public, to expect anything other than failure!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
stopnlisten
Hitch your wagon to a star!
01:47 PM on 12/16/2011
From day one we said it was set up to fail. Not until it hit the more affluent neighborhoods did people sit up and pay attention. This program was made for private business to get their hands on government contracts (privatizing schools) and it sold a lot of standardized tests to friends of Dubya'.
Look up McGraw of McGraw -Hill. The tests and standards are poor and armchair teachers are running the show.
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poeticjustice4all
Past = Prologue
04:58 PM on 12/16/2011
Yes, and from Day One you've set out to see that it fails.

In the meantime, a generation of students has been lost.

Aren't you so proud of yourself and your failure!
Allthosewhowander
My micro-bio is a microclimate
02:03 PM on 12/17/2011
An underfunded, undrealistic program that was set in motion by the former president of the United States set everybody up for failure. It was okay with many people that inner city schools were failing based on NCLB. Teachers in those schools, knew all along that this law was doing more harm than good, and bandwagoners like you have had plenty of NCLB "data" to use against us. Do you have the slightest clue how standardized testing actually breaks a schools population into smaller subgroups, with many schools having 12+ different student groups? Do you have any idea that when a child with learning disabilities takes the test, he/she is expected to take the exact same test in the exact same way as other students, and the teaching support that he/she has had all year to help them make some positive progress is taken away by the rules of testing? Do you have any idea that a school will be called a failure, if one of the subgroups does not pass the test? A generation of students, and true learning has been lost to teaching to the test, as mandated by NCLB. Do you have any idea about anything, armchair educator?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Kimpeach
Progressive Independent and proud of it!
10:04 AM on 12/20/2011
From day one, teachers were the only ones fighting NCLB because they knew it was wrong! Where were the parents in all of this? As the poster stated, when the standards started to impact schools in rich areas- only did people become concerned.

And guess what? Obama's RTTT will fail too because its not about education---its about test and profit for the very few!
foresure
Brash and Harsh
11:40 PM on 12/19/2011
stopnlisten:

Indeed, it is the years and years and years of producing D.Ed's that should be put to better use.
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poeticjustice4all
Past = Prologue
01:27 PM on 12/16/2011
If teachers are so unhappy -- why are they still stubbornly lodged in the system? With each bitter complaint they make, teachers further identify themselves to be the cause of the failure.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
stopnlisten
Hitch your wagon to a star!
10:43 AM on 12/17/2011
Bad experience in school? Transparent.
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poeticjustice4all
Past = Prologue
11:19 AM on 12/17/2011
"From day one we said it was set up to fail."
foresure
Brash and Harsh
11:46 PM on 12/19/2011
poeticjustice4all

You are fanned. You can expect a great deal of personal attacks. Note, that almost every teacher who writes on this site complain. I call it whining.

The only suggestions that they have for improvement are three:

a) More pay for teachers.

b) Less work for teachers

c) No accountability for teachers

Many whine bitterly about the incompetent administrators, who are actually former teachers.

In answer to your question as to why they stay.

a) They feel, perhaps correctly, that they have no saleable skills outside the public school classroom.

b) Almost all of them have very strong tenure.

c) They are paid an average middle class wage for 12 month work, and only have to work nine and a half months.

Let the insults reign down.

For positive ideas see: The KIPP program. See: Adams City high school free breakfast.

poetic, you will note that teachers never, ever, suggest anything other than the three things I listed above.
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poeticjustice4all
Past = Prologue
12:32 AM on 12/20/2011
F & F.

Also I am looking into this Adams City High School program. I have just recently become aware of it.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
02:47 PM on 12/20/2011
a) I don't care about the pay. I knew what I was getting into when I became a teacher.
b) Yeah. There's a lot of paperwork and creating lessons but I don't mind it.
c) The only people that I'm accountable to are the students in my class. They deserve the best learning experience that I can provide for them.

Why I stay
a) Although I could have been successful in the business sector, I would not have been fulfilled. I enjoy working with students.
b) Tenure?! Ha! Not in my state.
c) I coach. A 9.5 month job yes, but complete with an average of 10 - 13 hour days.

I'm not sure what the solution is and there probably isn't one that can satisfy everyone but I know that the kids are the ones that are suffering due to the extreme testing and that is what upsets me. Yes, we must hold them to high standards but there are extenuating circumstances that must be taken into account when measuring student success.

No insults....just trying to tell the other side of the story.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ariel Bonzai
Naked is the best disguise.
11:24 AM on 12/16/2011
In decade NcLB has been in place ,educators have taught to tests rather than students aware that standardized testing material has little relevance and even less accuracy when it comes to determining students ' abilities & teachers' performance. Clearly, tests are weapon used against teachers while marginalizing students. Notably, Duncan stopped short of apologies to those who've been impacted by blasted bubble sheets--LAUSD's tragic& illegal revelations in LAT for example.
No mention of testmakers exploiting NCLB w/ static tests @ whopping $10 a pop--a poorly written, culturally biased and woefully unsecured excuse to demonize teachers working in the nation's high-need schools w/ poor nonnative speakers, mostly veterans, who should sue. He admits tests are dysfunctional, finally our outcry is heard but will anyone listen since philanthropists have sunk sharp greedy teeth into public education? Will displaced teachers be returned to former positions? What about whistleblowers in Atlanta stained by false allegations? Will Scholastic keep superintendents on payroll? Will Duncan investigate what may be worse than conflicts of interest? Will he stop Eli Broad from suing LAUSD to ratify evaluations based on scores?
Allthosewhowander
My micro-bio is a microclimate
02:52 PM on 12/16/2011
The Broad Academy is pushing more and more self promoting business men and politicians into administrative jobs in school districts. It has been trickling down across the nation. To see evidence of this, I have to look no further than my current, site based, administrator who will be at my school long enough to promote his own agenda, regardless of the needs of the students, community, or teachers, and then he will move into an overpaid position at the district level, and leave our school in shambles for somebody else to clean up.
10:23 AM on 12/16/2011
"Yeah, that old system is totally broken. I've got a much better one. We throw billions of dollars in the air, and the first states to trample teachers unions will get it."
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Katmandu01
04:16 PM on 12/16/2011
If you've got a problem with teachers' unions, then please explain to me why the school systems in Canada and Finland continue to outperform the American school system, in spite of the fact that the teachers' unions (more correctly called professional associations) in those countries have a lot more power and influence than anywhere in the US.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
I am just saying
Don't take MY money & buy YOU stuff I can't afford
07:19 PM on 12/16/2011
Because the school systems here have to deal with a lot of students that couldn't care less whether they get an education or not and parents of those students that don't care either. That is the basic problem in a nutshell. However, with this mandate they are forced to 'dumb down' their teaching to include them. The solution is NOT more power for the unions which does nothing to help teach the students. In fact, the problem is made even more pronounced because there are way too many hands in the fire! The unions make it virtually impossible to get rid of a teacher that doesn't want to teach and just wants a paycheck (yes I have met several of them face to face). Many have given up real education in favor of just 'teaching the test."

Schools in Texas are among the worst I have seen for this. There you have many who speak little if any English but they are in the same teaching environment as those who know English as a first language so the teachers have to spend a lot of time trying to keep them up with everyone else, thus neglecting those who want to learn.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
I am just saying
Don't take MY money & buy YOU stuff I can't afford
07:19 PM on 12/16/2011
Another problem with the whole NCLB concept is you have placed people with no desire and/or the mental ability to do learn, in the same classroom with people who are ready, willing and able.

I myself have a child that is a straight A student and looking forward to college. She is being forced to take the exact same classes with students like my other child who can;t read above a third grade level, can't read cursive nor write it, can't tell time on an analog clock or watch, can't do most rudimentary math, etc. Not only can that child not do those things but has no desire whatsoever to learn them. Her only goal in going to school, when she can't find a way to get out of it, is purely social. Yet she is a senior, about ready to graduate with the same distinction, except GPA, as any other because schools are afraid not to pass her.

Can anyone explain to me what good this is doing? I most certainly can't see it.
foresure
Brash and Harsh
11:48 PM on 12/19/2011
-swift:

Replace the old with voluntary, full service, neighborhood boarding schools. Paid for from future savings in social support systems and penal systems.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mburgh
Come Back Samuel Gompers
09:58 AM on 12/16/2011
NCLB isn't broken, it never worked. A national disgrace that has left students diseducated under the Bush conspiracy empty-minded and passive. Get rid of it. Let teachers teach. End high-stakes testing.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
floresfamily9
Term limits for ALL elected offices
08:59 AM on 12/16/2011
It is possible to have an "A" school and NOT make AYP. It is a crazy system. At some point, there is not enough progress to be made.
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poeticjustice4all
Past = Prologue
01:19 PM on 12/16/2011
Yeah, that's the ticket. There's no more progress to be made!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
floresfamily9
Term limits for ALL elected offices
02:34 PM on 12/16/2011
AYP is about improving your score by a certain percentage every year. If your school is at 95%, you need to get to 98 or 99% to show improved progress. If you do NOT, you FAIL!
Allthosewhowander
My micro-bio is a microclimate
02:53 PM on 12/16/2011
Standardized test scores do not equal positive progress in schools.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
El Chingaso
Fighting for mental superiority...
06:10 AM on 12/16/2011
The dangerous environs of America's public schools. Didn't used to be that way.

Let the downfall of the U.S. roll on.
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flossophy
Liberalism is not liberal.
02:52 AM on 12/16/2011
This is a shame that the west has allowed education to decline to this level.
Allthosewhowander
My micro-bio is a microclimate
11:40 AM on 12/16/2011
When profiteers and politicians with no real connection to education are making decisions this is the outcome.
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flossophy
Liberalism is not liberal.
12:52 PM on 12/16/2011
I agree, the heavily entrenched, monopolistic teachers unions and ineffective administrations are able to purchase compliant politicians who offer the best benefits and insulate the bureaucracy from reform.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
07:16 AM on 12/18/2011
Decline? What other nation in the history of the world has even attempted to educate every single person living in the country( citizen and not alike,retarded and not alike,disciplined and not alike, etc) ? Perhaps the score are reflective of the wide net we have cast...and we have caught saome really dumb fish, but in the process we have caught some really bright ones too.
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flossophy
Liberalism is not liberal.
12:44 PM on 12/18/2011
Huh? We're nowhere near educating every person in this country... We've had 50-75% dropout rates in inner city districts for many years... this government-run education system has created an enormous undereducated underclass. It's a shame that the special interests have vigorously fought reform for decades.
10:12 PM on 12/19/2011
This nation has not attempted to educate every person. Our wonderful teachers have, but definitely not our government. The system is not designed for every child to succeed. It's designed to make the rich richer and keep the poors in their places.