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No Child Left Behind Anniversary: Education Law's Promise Falls Short After 10 Years

KIMBERLY HEFLING   01/ 7/12 02:17 PM ET   AP

WASHINGTON — The No Child Left Behind education law was cast as a symbol of possibility, offering the promise of improved schools for the nation's poor and minority children and better prepared students in a competitive world.

Yet after a decade on the books, President George W. Bush's most hyped domestic accomplishment has become a symbol to many of federal overreach and Congress' inability to fix something that's clearly flawed.

The law forced schools to confront the uncomfortable reality that many kids simply weren't learning, but it's primarily known for its emphasis on standardized tests and the labeling of thousands of schools as "failures."

Sunday marks the 10-year anniversary of the day Bush signed it into law in Hamilton, Ohio. By his side were the leaders of the education committees in Congress, Rep. John Boehner, R-Ohio, and Sen. Ted Kennedy, D-Mass. The bipartisanship that made the achievement possible in the months after the Sept. 11 attacks is long gone.

The same Senate committee approved a revamped education bill last year, but deep-rooted partisanship stalled the measure in the full Congress. In this election year, there appears little political will for compromise despite widespread agreement that changes are needed.

Critics say the law carries rigid and unrealistic expectations that put too much of an emphasis on tests for reading and math at the expense of a more well-rounded education.

Frustrated by the congressional inaction, President Barack Obama told states last fall they could seek a waiver around unpopular proficiency requirements in exchange for actions his administration favors. A vast majority of states have said they will go that route, seen as a temporary fix until lawmakers do act.

Like Obama, Republican presidential candidates have criticized the law. One, former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum, even saying he regrets voting for it.

"If you called a rally to keep No Child Left Behind as it is, not a single person would show up," said Democratic Sen. Michael Bennet of Colorado, Denver's former school superintendent.

The view was drastically different 10 years ago, when Bush took what was an uncommon stance for a conservative in seeking an aggressive federal role in forcing states and districts to tackle abysmal achievement gaps in schools.

He was able to get fellow Republicans such as Boehner, the current House speaker, and Democratic leaders on education such as Kennedy, who died in 2009, and Rep. George Miller, D-Calif., to join him. The mandate was that all students read and perform math on grade level by 2014.

"No longer is it acceptable to hide poor performance. No longer is it acceptable to keep results from parents," Bush said when he signed the legislation. "We're never going to give up on a school that's performing poorly; that when we find poor performance, a school will be given time and incentives and resources to correct their problems."

The law requires annual testing. Districts must keep and publish data showing how subgroups of students perform. Schools that don't meet requirements for two years or longer face increasingly tough consequences, from busing children to higher performing schools to offering tutoring and replacing staff.

The test results were eye-opening, recalled Miller, the top Democrat on the House Education and the Workforce Committee.

"People were stunned because they were always led to believe that things were going fine in this particular school. And the fact of the matter was, for huge numbers of students that was not the case," Miller said. "That led to a lot of anger, disappointment. That led to embarrassment. In many instances, the schools were being held out as exceeding in their mission, when it fact they were failing many, many of the children in those schools."

Under the law, watching movies and assigning irrelevant or no homework was no longer acceptable because suddenly someone was paying attention, said Charles Barone, a former aide to Miller who is director of federal policy with Democrats for Education Reform.

In low-performing urban schools, where teachers and principals once might have thrown up their hands and not known what to do, there was a new attitude along the lines of "we might not know what to do, but we've got to do something," said Eric Hanushek, a senior fellow in education at the Hoover Institution of Stanford University.

Both spoke at a recent forum on the law at the Thomas B. Fordham Institute.

But many teachers

and principals started to believe they were being judged on factors out of their control and in ways that were unfair.

Jennifer Ochoa, an eighth-grade literacy teacher in New York who works with low-performing students, said the law has hurt morale among educators as well as students, who feel they have to do well on a standardized test or are failures, no matter how much progress they make.

"Afterward, it didn't matter how far you came if you didn't make this outside goal," Ochoa said. "We started talking about kids in very different ways. We started talking about kids in statistical ways instead of human being terms."

How successful the law has been academically remains under debate.

Scores on a national assessment show significant gains in math among the fourth- and eighth-graders, with Hispanic and African-American fourth-graders performing approximately two grade levels higher today than when the law was passed, said Mark Schneider, the former U.S. commissioner of education statistics who now serves as vice president at the American Institutes for Research.

"You cannot dismiss these gains, and I think ... people just aren't willing to credit NCLB or accountability in general because of ideological and political preferences," Schneider said.

As the years went by, however, the growth has largely plateaued, Schneider said. Similar large gains were not shown in reading, and some experts say more progress was made in reading before the law was passed. There are still huge differences in the performance of African-American and Hispanic students compared with white students.

As the 2014 deadline draws closer, more schools are failing to meet federal standards, with nearly half not doing so last year, according to the Center on Education Policy. Center officials said that's because some states today have harder tests or have high numbers of immigrant and low-income children, but it's also because the law requires states to raise the bar each year for how many children must pass the test.

Some states had long put off the largest increases to avoid penalties.

In Washington, much of the political debate over the law centers on how much federal control the government should have. Some Republicans want to go so far as to close the Education Department and end federally-imposed annual testing.

Even among Democrats there's been some dissension. The Obama administration, for example, opposed the Senate bill passed in committee under the leadership of Sen. Tom Harkin, D-Iowa, because it said the measure didn't go far enough on accountability; Harkin said it wasn't a perfect bill, but compromise was necessary.

Many educators are now looking to other factors

such as online learning, an increased trend toward teacher evaluations tied to student performance, the federal Race to the Top competition that states have competed in, and the common core standards adopted in the vast majority of states as factors that could provide the next boost in education.

Sen. Lamar Alexander, a former education secretary, said he's hopeful Congress will do what's right and update No Child Left Behind, which became due for renewal in 2007.

"One of the things we ought to be able to do is fix No Child Left Behind," said Alexander, R-Tenn. "What we ought to do is set new realistic goals for it so that schools and schools can have those kinds of goals, and most importantly we need to move out of Washington and back to states and local communities decisions about whether schools and teachers are succeeding or failing."

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Associated Press writer Dorie Turner in Atlanta contributed to this report.

___

Kimberly Hefling can be followed at http://twitter.com/khefling

___

Online:

Background on the law: http://www2.ed.gov/nclb/landing.jhtml

National Center for Education Statistics: http://nces.ed.gov

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WASHINGTON — The No Child Left Behind education law was cast as a symbol of possibility, offering the promise of improved schools for the nation's poor and minority children and better prepared ...
WASHINGTON — The No Child Left Behind education law was cast as a symbol of possibility, offering the promise of improved schools for the nation's poor and minority children and better prepared ...
WASHINGTON — The No Child Left Behind education law was cast as a symbol of possibility, offering the promise of improved schools for the nation's poor and minority children and better prepared ...
WASHINGTON — The No Child Left Behind education law was cast as a symbol of possibility, offering the promise of improved schools for the nation's poor and minority children and better prepared ...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Michaelxx
12:20 PM on 01/10/2012
think Ive been censored again
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Michaelxx
12:18 PM on 01/10/2012
how can we believe a warmonger criminal....
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Greg Oropeza
09:11 PM on 01/08/2012
I'm trying to think of at least ONE thing GW did right, but I honestly can't think of anything.
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bellsblu2
Unrepentant Liberal living on the edge
11:42 AM on 01/10/2012
He left without having to be dragged out.
01:51 PM on 01/10/2012
he was great in harold and kumar
06:55 PM on 02/18/2012
He made a lot of money.
07:43 PM on 01/08/2012
I find it I there sting to see the political slant bent left in the negative headline and then have a former education official acknowledge the law's success. Like it or not NCLB was better than what we had before, and is a step in the right direction... Though now we at least have data to help correct the way forward. Many of the comments from educators are clear: not all children learn the same way or at the same rate, so any standardized testing and instructing may fit many, but not all kids. I found Stephen Dubner's take on "School of One" very illuminating. http://www.freakonomics.com/2010/05/12/freakonomics-radio-how-is-a-bad-radio-station-like-the-public-school-system/
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Kojak007
12:48 PM on 01/08/2012
NCLB is a complete failure. There is no reason not to scrap it and try something completely different. These are our children we're talking about, this is something our politicians should be able to act on without deferring to corporate interests.

www.currentlychicago.com
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Dahveed1
I have Flying Monkeys...
02:08 PM on 01/08/2012
The only thing worse that NCLB was the dysfunctional education system we had before. At least now we can track our failures instead of letting educators hid them with a bunch of smoke and mirrors.

Before NCLB, the measures of success often quoted was how many computers per student a district has or how much money per student was spent. Neither of these are measures or results, only inputs. NCLB, while not perfect, at least tries to measures the results.
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Kojak007
04:57 PM on 01/08/2012
While I agree that we should have ways to measure our success and be able to set higher standards I do not believe that the NCLB program delivers this. In fact I see it as a set back. As someone who has worked with the NCLB program and this form of testing I find them to be generic and impersonal. They set one bar that all students should be measured by and completely fail to measure any progress of any kind towards reaching these standards. Also they fail to measure any special aptitudes in children. Without measuring progress we actually have a worse system than before and have no way of knowing if a child is improving or if a different curriculum is required as we have narrowed all of education into a pass/fail system. If the child is making significant progress but still misses the testing standard then the NCLB model throws out the progress. I worked with this system for 2 years and personally find it lacking and harmful to our future. Thanks for the comment.

www.currentlychicago.com
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Osusuki
All your base are belong to us...
11:25 AM on 01/08/2012
NCLB was an abysmal failure because it focused on pseudo-accountability in the form of standardized tests, and never even paid lip service to improving the failing methodology so common to ALL U.S. K-12 education in the past quarter century. NCLB required schools to show they were meeting educational standards, or risk losing critical funding. If students failed to meet annual performance goals in reading and math tests, schools were required to supplement their educational offerings with tutoring and other special programs. Sounds good, but the fact is the schools could meet their goals by teaching the tests, and if they still failed to meet them, they could meet these failover requirements by purchasing garbage like Neil Bush's COW program for a mere $3,800 a copy to show effort.

The current gang of ne'er do wells in government--from the local school boards to the oval office--have never attempted to make the fundamental changes our educational system needs. Neither NCLB nor any other legislation which fails to bring about a change in teaching methods will produce any real improvement in our schools.
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Shuey37
Federalism is the answer
12:02 PM on 01/08/2012
Good post.

I would add that we could dream up a new "ne'er do well" program every day for the next 100 years and it will not fix what is wrong with public education. These programs do not (and likely cannot) deal with the big missing piece of the puzzle: Parent and student accountability.

The finest piano teacher in the world who employs the best methods of teaching will end up with failed students if all the kid does is grudingly show up for the piano lesson, put forth the least possible effort (and attention span) and then go home to parents who take no active role in encouraging or demanding that the student practice at home.

For decades the school system has been complicit in giving students and parents a pass on accountability. To get around this they have developed all sorts of excuses (for the parents and students) such as suddenly declaring tens of millions of kids having conditions such as ADD, ADHD and the like. It's always a different excuse to avoid confronting a lack of effort on the part of students and parents. Even going so far in some cases as to decide that giving grades is a bad thing. "Tha's why Johnny is failing.... because he is under too much pressure to perform."
12:20 PM on 01/08/2012
"As the Clinton administration came to a close in early 2001, it was discovered that Hugh Rodham received around $400,000 for legal services regarding gaining the Presidential pardon of fraudulent businessman Glenn Braswell and the sentence commutation of drug trafficker Carlos Vignali". Hugh Rodham is Hillary Clinton's brother. Then there was Jimmy Carter's brother Billy who registered as a foreign agent of the Libyan government and received a $220,000 loan. Need I say more?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
willowraven
It must be something in the water!!
01:12 PM on 01/08/2012
Sure you do, because what does you babble have to do with NCLB?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
BarryWeber
11:21 AM on 01/08/2012
Pick any random public school teacher- ANY, RANDOM- and ask them what they think of the rules, regulations, and curriculum that have grown from this 'educational' mandate. Their comments will speak far more eloquently than mine..
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Dahveed1
I have Flying Monkeys...
02:14 PM on 01/08/2012
Same could be said for any business that has regulations rammed down their throats. The main difference is business just does the regulations while school districts whine and whine and whine about it.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Bascoda
Illigitimati non carborundum
09:48 PM on 01/08/2012
You really are clueless.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
BarryWeber
12:23 AM on 01/09/2012
weak, but predictable
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
stopnlisten
Simplify, simplify!
11:16 AM on 01/08/2012
GOP mantra-smaller governement.....unless you have NCLB which was designed to fail so businesses could take government contract money by privatizing education and line their pockets.
So transparent.
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Stephen1349
The law is reason..free from passion.
10:51 AM on 01/08/2012
G.W. should be in a federal pentitentary with Rumsfield, Cheney, and Rove...playing spades with Bernie Madoff.
11:15 AM on 01/08/2012
I believe I read the other day that Bernie is already out and pitching his new book or some such.
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Dahveed1
I have Flying Monkeys...
02:16 PM on 01/08/2012
Oh, put Mark Rich in there too! Oh wait, Rich bought a 'get out of jail' card from Clinton for a couple of million 'donation' to the Dems.
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Brenda Starr
Time is before us. Time is after us.
10:45 AM on 01/08/2012
There's a great new documentary out called "Race to Nowhere" that is well worth a watch, if you can find it. It outlines exactly how NCLB has destroyed our education system and laid waste many, many young creative minds. Now the push to privatize education is on and that will do nothing but dumb our country down even more. We will never be able to compete as a country in a global market if we don't invest in the education of our citizens, whatever race, whatever economic background and whatever age. But make no mistake: NCLB was a terrible manipulation of our system and if you think it's bad now, wait until some consulting firm comes in and turns education into a business.
10:58 AM on 01/08/2012
And endoctrination! That way, they can promote whatever propaganda they desire.
11:23 AM on 01/08/2012
Alas, no child left behind was but a fanciful detour -and now it's time to return to the road to idiocracy "wherein advertising, commercialism, and cultural anti-intellectualism run rampant and dysgenic pressure has resulted in a uniformly stupid human society devoid of intellectual curiosity, social responsibility, and coherent notions of justice and human rights."
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rothomaha
The Truth will out
10:42 AM on 01/08/2012
GW hired the superintendent of schools in Houston as Sec. of Education to craft this piece of crap; eventually, it was discovered that the "phenomenal success" which led to his hiring was the result of playing a shell game with children who were failing in the Houston schools, and that the entire "success" was nothing more than a sham. So, as the ld saying goes, "Gabage in, garbage out". Nobody should be surprised.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
stopnlisten
Simplify, simplify!
11:17 AM on 01/08/2012
McGraw, long time family friend also sells standardized tests. Any surprise that they became mandatory for testing?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rothomaha
The Truth will out
02:00 PM on 01/08/2012
The trouble is that the left and the right hands keep stroking each other. If we could only proactively discover one of those hands and chop it off, perhaps we could "right the ship".
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
johnjohn4321
We all win when we ALL win.
10:33 AM on 01/08/2012
His biggest accomplishment was clearing brush.
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Fattonecat
whoops !!
10:28 AM on 01/08/2012
This program was set up to fail from the get go.
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PerryWhite
My micro-bio is still empty
11:46 AM on 01/08/2012
Let's say that you are right, and abolish the Department of Education.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
willowraven
It must be something in the water!!
01:15 PM on 01/08/2012
Sure that will make it work, just how would we educate the kids then?
10:28 AM on 01/08/2012
"Scores on a national assessment show significant gains in math among the fourth- and eighth-graders, with Hispanic and African-American fourth-graders performing approximately two grade levels higher today than when the law was passed." Instead of building on that, let's lower the standards instead?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
chrisfrenzy
I am that one guy who says those things.
10:27 AM on 01/08/2012
"...Bush took what was an uncommon stance for a conservative in seeking an aggressive federal role in forcing states and districts to tackle abysmal achievement gaps in schools."

It's important to remember that Bush took this uncommon stance for the all-too-common conservative goal of setting up an effortless profit channel of tax-payer money directly to private corporation/donors who (in this case) manufacture standardized tests, dubious text books and learning materials, and so forth. NCLB was not some noble cause for which Bush fought, but like the Iraq war, it was a profiteer's solution to the wrong problem.