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No Child Left Behind - Who’s Getting Rich

The “No Child Left Behind” law (NCLB), signed by President George W. Bush on January 8, 2002 has shifted the way schools must deal with their student population. While the verdict is still out on whether or not the NCLB is beneficial for schools around the country, one must still ask the question, does that even matter? After all, are schools developed to benefit the schools themselves or the students that occupy them? Several states are now taking issue with the NCLB, stating that they are losing money as a result of this law. Before we get exasperated with our current President however, remember that the initial intention of NCLB was pure. With schools failing to reach federal standards across the country, something had to be done, subsequently, for the first time in the history of education a level of accountability was being implemented nationwide. Tying results to the bottom line seemed to be a good idea.

NCLB has had 4 years to produce results and even now many states are not in agreement with the current administration on the effectiveness of this new law. “Utah’s legislature passed a bill giving state education law priority over NCLB, even though the decision could cost the state more than $76 million in federal funding. Colorado also allows local districts to opt out of NCLB without incurring penalties from the state” according to Ellen R. Delisio (Education-World.com, 2005).

More states are following suit in fighting NCLB and the Federal Government. The focus seems to be on the fact that the Federal government has given states a mandate but has not funded the states with enough money to implement this mandate. A perfect example of this shortfall is in Connecticut where officials recently ascertained that full execution of NCLB will cost the state $41.6 million more than the state receives from the federal government through fiscal year 2008. (Education-World.com, 2005)

Connecticut has filed a law suit to fight against NCLB; that suit is pending. The fact is that schools in Connecticut repeatedly perform higher on annual standardized tests. However, there are significant pockets of failure among minority children, which is why NCLB was instituted, to make sure quality education was provided for ALL students in all areas. Civil rights leaders have taken a strong stance in the fight, stating that the Connecticut law suit is “ill-advised” and will only hurt the children.

The list of schools that have been labeled as failing was released on September 1st In Arizona 13 east valley schools have failed under the NCLB guidelines. Reportedly 21% of Arizona schools failed to meet “adequate yearly progress,” this number increased 3 percentage points from ‘04. All the information seems to point towards our school system moving backwards. Yet despite reports that showed 21% of Arizona schools had not made “adequate progress”, SAT scores for students in Arizona hit an all-time high.

Since the inception of NCLB a new industry has exploded. Within the last 4 years a multitude of educational companies, close to 1800, have found their way onto a multitude of our states Supplemental Education Services (SES) providers lists (ASU news release, 8/29). The most prominent of these companies produce millions of dollars in revenue and have created a niche market, operating on the failure of schools to reach their disengaged students. While the 1800+ companies have developed SES programs, Newton Learning (reported between 80,000 - 90,000 SES students in ‘04) and Sylvan Learning (reported approx. 70,000 SES students in ‘04) have consistently been fighting for the top spot. These programs are free to the students and yet are generating millions of dollars, tax payer dollars, for the companies operating them. The fight for student numbers in these programs is fierce. These companies are aggressively pursuing student populations for enrollment into their programs for pure profit.

The fact is that one student attending an SES provider program generates approximately $1500 per semester of attendance. This fee yields these companies millions of dollars and takes those dollars directly from the schools. Millions of taxpayer dollars are leaving the schools and going into the pockets of private sector companies, all under the guise of helping students improve their academic position. Some companies have produced statistical data to prove their programs are better than others. Numbers don’t lie. Or do they? Statistics are easy to use and manipulate to prove whatever your objective is. Are the students really benefiting?

Some SES providers are profiting so much that they can afford to offer incentives to the students for attendance. There are students across the country receiving incentives equaling $100 for perfect attendance. The profit is so significant that SES providers can pay their staff, develop and purchase materials, create marketing materials and offer student’s incentives to participate in their program.

Is it no wonder why tax payers refuse to vote in favor of school bonds across the country? With millions of dollars leaving the schools and going into the private sector, why do we think that taxpayers, already feeling taxed to death, would offer more cash to the seemingly bottomless pit of education? The new push is for parents to obtain outside education assistance for students. This year parents are expected to spend $2.5 billion dollars nationwide on additional academic tutoring. This can’t be the answer. Why can’t the students learn the necessary information within the same school day as their parents and grandparents before them?

So what is the solution? No one has come up with a solution that works. One has to question whether taking millions of dollars from the current school system is the answer. The fact that students are not being given the basic level of education necessary across the board is not acceptable. The question is how do we redesign an entire educational system to produce success?

Let me give you something to ponder over the next few months as the whole NCLB situation plays itself out across the country. The problem is not the teachers, or the principles within the schools, it is simply an issue of systems. The system is not working and yet we hold onto it like in time it will get better. Our current educational system is antiquated and it is not reaching the current clientele. What about taking some of the millions of dollars that are finding their way into privately held multi-million dollar companies and disperse that to the instructors that are creating an atmosphere conducive to learning? Why not look to reward instructors for finding ways to reach their population? The fact is that teaching is one of the lowest paid professions in the world. It’s time we took notice of that and kept the money in the schools and rewarded those instructors that are gaining ground and reaching their student populations, while providing specified trainings for those that are failing to reach their students.

Scott Lovely is the founder of Generation X Consulting

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A Student’s Perspective on the Effects of No Child Left Behind on American Education

Introduction
I’ve talked up this article for a while, but made no real moves to write it. I have had a pre-write done for weeks, but still, no real effort had been put into its production. Well, I have finally hopped to it. I’ve spent a large portion of a day (in addition to the weeks of prewriting both on paper and in my head) writing this article, a practice inspired in part by Glen.

This article will explore the frustrations of students and teachers alike with “No Child Left Behind” and its effect on the classroom. It will discuss the growing irrelevance of American curriculum to the average high school student. It will give my opinion on what a high school diploma should symbolize.

Every day, in at least one of my classes, someone complains about school. It’s pretty typical. I complain about school all the time. No matter what the specific complaint may be, anywhere from “I hate this assignment!” to “When am I ever going to use math?” All the complaints boil down to the same basic thing: A majority of high schoolers feel that the education they are receiving is not relevant to them and what they want to do with their lives at that point.

In a lot of ways, their concerns and protests are not unfounded.

The Problem
With the advent of “No Child Left Behind” schools across the nation are being forced to teach their classes towards a test. It is in this that our schools are failing its students. When the only reason you go to school is so that you can pass one test one year and another the next and on and on until you graduate, the material becomes irrelevant, pointless and discouraging.

Take, for example, my district and school experience. “No Child Left Behind” passed when I was in middle school and was fully implemented for my sister’s grade. In my case, I only had to take the WASL (Washington Assessment of Student Learning) in 4th, 7th and 10th grades. My sister will take the WASL every year until she graduates.

That being said, in high school now, while the only WASL experience is in 10th grade, if you are in an underclassman non-honors class, your entire curriculum will be centered on the WASL. Luckily, I have been in the honors English class and dodged that bullet there. But my friends who were not in that track often complained about the chronic practice tests, the obnoxious exercises they had to complete that had little to do with English class except that it was on the WASL. Math class was much the same up until Geometry. You learned things that would be on the WASL. Science classes will have to change around their curriculum now that there is a science assessment to deal with.

This year, post-WASL, my classmates are noticing a difference in classroom behavior. A great example is the Physics class and my Honors US History class. There is not a set-in-stone-need-to-get-this-done-by-this-date curriculum. There is an outline of subjects and areas that need to be covered, but there isn’t a timeline. If the class gets distracted about another topic during the class period that encourages the students to think for themselves, it is allowed to continue. The experiences in these classes that do not teach towards a test are much more positive for the students and quickly become their favorite classes, the ones they get excited to go to every day. And when these students are excited about their classes, they do better and they learn more.

I can empathize with this a little more now that I am in a Pre-AP English class that is preparing me for an AP test next year. It sucks. We do these ridiculous things that I will probably never really do again all for the sake of a test. When I compare this year with sophomore year English I haven’t gotten anything out of this year that will last and be memorable.

Making Education Relevant
“No Child Left Behind” has screwed with American education in more ways than one. But to me, sucking the vitality out of the American classroom has been one of the most grievous wrongs it has committed. Tests are not a valid way to keep up with students and make sure they are doing okay. You want to have no child left behind? Then the solution is simple: A bigger education budget so that schools can afford to hire more teachers so class sizes can be smaller.

In order to have no child be left behind, the student cannot be able to fall through the cracks. Unfortunately, in American schools today where class-sizes are literally bursting at the seams with upwards of forty students, it is all too easy to disappear from school and have not one teacher notice. Tests won’t hold American teenagers in the classrooms, personalized attention will. With smaller class sizes and more involvement by each student in a classroom, each student has a larger stake in their education. It becomes a personal choice encouraged by the teacher.

The focus on education has been shifted to content, content, content. Suddenly, knowing what years the Spanish American War took place in and the main players makes you educated. I disagree with the concept that the details of education are the important parts. We have taken the complete wrong perspective.

When I look back on the classes I’ve taken thus far, the ones that stand out the most are not the classes where I learned a lot of facts, but the classes where I learned how to think. I think that it is too easy to say that the point in English class is to read these authors, write this much and learn these words, that the point in Social Studies/History is to learn about these wars, these cultural movements, these dates and these people, that the point in Science is to learn about the periodic table, these biological mechanisms and these laws of physics and that the point in Math is to learn these theories, how to write proofs and how to solve for x. That’s ridiculous. Those are not the things I will remember years down the road and I guarantee they are not the things adults remember about school now.

I will remember how English class taught me to organize and articulate my thoughts well. I will remember how Social Studies class taught me to evaluate and analyze historical and present day situations honestly to see what really happened and whether it was positive, negative, or both. I will remember how Science class taught me to appreciate and understand the world around me. I will remember how Math class helped me to further understand the world around me and to think logically. Those are the things that matter. Who cares if American students aren’t learning specific details? The question we should be asking is: Are they learning how to think responsibly, creatively and effectively? I’d have to say that the majority of high schoolers are not. And it’s not their fault. It’s the system that’s in place.

Conclusion
It is the unfortunate truth that a high school education is not relevant to a lot of students today. Classrooms in America today teach details, specifics; not skill sets, methods of analysis or presentation of ideas. This is not the teachers’ faults. They are being forced to teach to a test that is incapable of testing these invaluable student assets. So what else can be expected?

Teachers are growing continually more frustrated with this every day. I am priveleged enough to hear several of my educator’s moanings. They wish that the “damn WASL” wasn’t such a huge part of their lives. They are restricted in class now in ways they never were before. These state tests are putting strain on our teachers making it more difficult for them to reach out and be the inspirational teachers we all (will) remember from our high school experience. When “your students have to pass this test or we’re all at risk for our jobs” is continually pounded into your head, you begin to lose the drive, the desire to say “screw the WASL” and emphasize the things that really matter.

It’s a shame.

I’ll tell you what can be expected. Parents, adults, people who can vote and who care about the future of America: Stand up and say something for those of us who cannot. We deserve more.

For teens who are experiencing this in public schools and are growing steadily more frustrated, I encourage you to write intelligently about this issue. How has this act affected your life? In the next few days I’ll be posting something about “No Child Left Behind.” It will explain what the act puts in place, how it was advertised and how it works. If you feel inclined to speak up, do so and tag your article: teens on No Child Left Behind. Let’s see how many we can get on the subject.

Elyse is a 17 year old junior in high school. Her blog, Reaching Maturity, reflects her development of thoughts, opinions and beliefs.

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Education - The Fallacy of Teaching to the Test

With the passage of the No Child Left Behind Law, each state is required to set their own performance benchmarks and through a series of tests assess the academic improvement of all students to ensure accountability for the billions of dollars being invested within the American public education system. One of the most repeated arguments is that this law or any accountability law mandates teachers to teach to the test and that teaching to the test is wrong.

From a performance improvement perspective, teaching to the test is 100% absolutely correct. One of the best examples is the thousands of citizens in every state study who study to pass the state’s driving test to earn a driver’s license. The state driver’s examination is to determine the applicant’s knowledge of the laws pertaining to operating a motorized vehicle. Each question on the test can be found within the appropriate state driver’s manual. High schools to commercial driving schools instruct their students based upon the information within the manual. If these instructors did not teach to the information within their state manuals, their students would not pass the state’s exam. These teachers must teach to the test.

The real problem arises when students who have not mastered previously taught concepts are forced to play “catch up” within a very short time frame. This is where, I believe, this fallacy of teaching to the test originated. This type of testing is really a symptom of a greater problem, lack of mastery.

During the last 5 years, I have surveyed over 500 teachers and 98% agreed that this is how learning works in the classroom:

  • Read It
  • Learn It
  • Test It
  • Forget It
  • Proceed to Next Lesson
  • Repeat Process

This process is all about the acquisition of knowledge and not truly about performance - the application of knowledge.

Performance comes in various stages from limited to mastery. Within the American public education, mastery, in all honesty, is not the desired end result for many teachers and students. If mastery was the desired end result, we would not have teachers who are not highly qualified, social promotion along with the many other programs that sacrifice mastery for issues of self-esteem, etc. nor would we continue to have an agrian school structure. Did you know that today’s students spend less time in the classroom than students of 50 years ago even though information is doubling every year?

If we truly want to improve public education, which is one of the best explanations why America rose to be a super power, then we must revamp the structure of public education to reflect a 21st Century performance driven society. In the meanwhile, public education must begin to develop the desire for young people especially middle school, high school students and even college students to become self-directed learners who demonstrate leadership skills by mastering key concepts necessary for their success. This solution would seem much more logical; align to the desired end results; avoid the blame game; eliminate wasted tax dollars and get to the performance results in real time.

Leanne Hoagland-Smith, President of ADVANCED SYSTEMS, works with large urban to private schools, certified staff, support staff, students and parents to improve performance in 30 to 180 days. Using proven tools, we can quickly and affordably identify the gaps in YOUR organization, provide you with an Action Plan that you can easily implement along with developmental programs from executive leadership to student leadership.

What would the value to you be if everyone within your school all rowed in the same direction with energy and enthusiasm?

ADVANCED SYSTEMS

Connecting Passion to Purpose to DOUBLE Performance in Real Time

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