Report
Finds NCLB Rigid and Confusing NCLB "In Need of Improvement"
According to a recent report released by the Harvard
University Civil Rights Project, the No
Child Left Behind Act, despite its stated goal to
improve educational achievement for all students across
the country, has imposed inconsistent and rigid requirements
on state education systems. Inspiring
Vision, Disappointing Results: Four Studies on Implementing
the No Child Left Behind Act, a four-part report
on the effects of the implementation of NCLB, applauds
its goals, but concludes that states are experiencing
difficulty complying with the many regulations and requirements
of the law. Although states are moving towards compliance,
the federal government has allowed little flexibility
and has not consulted with education experts and officials.
Expanded
Role of the Federal Government Expansion of Federal Power in American
Education: Federal-State Relationships Under the No Child Left Behind Act, Year
One notes the "troubling" effects of this unprecedented expansion of the federal
government's role in education. Researchers discovered that local education officials
were not greatly involved during the writing of the law and financial resources
from the federal government have fallen below the promised level. The federal
government has allowed little flexibility for states when implementing
NCLB, and support for the law has eroded as states are having difficulties
complying with its complexities and deadlines. Accountability The
authors of Large Mandates and Limited Resources: State Response to the No Child
Left Behind Act and Implications for Accountability studied efforts in six
states - Arizona, California,
Illinois, New
York, Virginia, and Georgia
- to meet NCLB's accountability requirements. They found that NCLB's requirements
conflict with already existing accountability systems in individual states. NCLB
creates an "uneven playing field," the report states, by failing to recognize
that schools must improve by different amounts to reach proficiency. Researchers
also found NCLB's "one-size-fits-all approach to test-based accountability" to
place schools containing more subgroups at a disadvantage. Schools educating higher
numbers of minorities, low-income students, and English Language Learners were
less likely to meet Adequate Yearly Progress (AYP) goals. School Choice
and Supplemental Services An analysis of school choice in ten urban
public school districts was completed for Does NCLB Provide Good Choices for
Students in Low-Performing Schools? Results showed that only a small percentage
of students requested transfers under NCLB. In these urban districts, the school
choice provision added an increased administrative and financial burden to school
districts. The report concludes that urban areas are more likely to contain a
higher number of schools granting transfers, and will have a difficult time providing
students with opportunities to attend schools with much higher achievement levels.
The authors recommend that students in schools "in need of improvement"
should have better access to well-performing schools. They also emphasize that
NCLB's school choice program should not interfere with already existing desegregation
efforts. According to Increasing Bureaucracy or Increasing Opportunities?
School District Experience with Supplemental Educational Services, a very
small percentage of students took advantage of the supplemental services provision
of NCLB. The authors recognize that additional academic services can improve achievement
for at-risk students, yet the additional financial and administrative burden has
an even greater detrimental effect on schools in danger of not meeting AYP. As
more schools are classified as failing to meet AYP, the need for accountable and
financially-supported supplemental services will increase, the authors conclude.
NCLB "In Need of Improvement" Although NCLB has
renewed public interest in education across the nation, the report says, many
of the strict federal mandates have placed an increased burden on schools already
facing painful budget cuts. The authors stress that NCLB could positively improve
the nation's public schools if a collaborative effort between federal and local
education experts takes place to revise the law's more contentious and damaging
policies. Prepared February 25, 2004
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