Nclb
The No Child Left Behind Act was signed into law in 2001 by President Bush. The bill was signed into law three days after he took office and was supposed to be "the cornerstone of his administration" (Department of Education, 2004), and ushered in a series of reforms for public education in the United States. The Act came about as the result of a push for greater teacher accountability, on the principle that this would spur improvements in classroom performance. There were several problems with the Act from the outset, including an emphasis on testing, which then caused teachers to teach to the test, rather than actually teaching the students material that they needed to learn. Ultimately, No Child Left Behind was viewed almost universally as a failure, and was replaced by the Every Student Succeeds Act in December, 2015.
This paper will outline the background of NCLB, and what its impacts were on the American education system. A background will be presented, including a description of the law and some of its aspects. Then, the responses to the law will be outlined. There were critiques from teachers and parents, as well as from educational scholars It seemed that the law really only had a few beneficiaries, and these were generally the only people who already had advantages; the disadvantages tended to suffer from the provisions in this law. Ultimately, too many complaints from too many people saw Congress overhaul, gut and eventually replace many of the key elements of No Child Left Behind, to the point where today it has simply moved past the law.
Background
The stated intent of the law was to "close the achievement gap with accountability, flexibility, and choice, so that no child is left behind" (GPO.gov, 2002). The problem that was identified to justify the law was a gap in education quality between schools around the country. The gap existed between different states, and it existed within states in different areas. No Child Left Behind was intended to close that gap.
The main mechanism by which the law worked was a set of standards. Schools were expected to teach to these standards, and students would be examined on them. The concept was that by instilling a common set of standards, it would be easier to hold schools and teachers accountable for underperformance on the part of their students, as common measures would allow for greater comparability of the results.
The law was passed in a sense to create an economic incentive, to use the forces of the market (not really the market, the government, but working with basically a market mechanism). When a school does well, or a state does well, there is rewards. Poor performance brings about a penalty. The challenge for administrators would be to ensure that their school did not receive any sort of penalty, as such a penalty to make it difficult for the school to improve in the future.
Response
Almost immediately, the law drew criticism. Ultimately, it was not written by educators and the results reflected in that. Among the main criticisms are that it changed the way students were tested, what material they were taught. The way that money was spent in the education system changed, too, and there was increasing focus on the tests (GreatSchools, 2016). Schools that did not deliver results would see their funding cut, which only made it harder for them to achieve results. Teachers needed to be retrained, which added considerable expense as well. Ultimately, the law proved to be a major disruption to the education system. The new vision for the classroom was one of teaching to the test, rather than learning, and surveys indicated "over half of teachers considered leaving the profession" (Walker, 2015).
IN particular, the funding formulas that went along with the law were called into question A common critique was that schools were not receiving enough funding. Further, parents could move their children to "better" schools, so the law's influence was that all the money and good students could end up at a few top schools while the other schools had only lesser students, and no funding. There is no mechanism in that structure to actually improve the standards at such schools.
Other provisions were equally untenable. One of the provisions in the law was that teachers needed to be "highly qualified," which meant that they needed to meet certain educational standards and pass a curriculum test (GreatSchools, 2016. The concept of the law was that many students, especially in poor areas, are taught by underqualified teachers. The problem,...
Impact on Equity One major point regarding equity as applied to performance-based assessment is made by Yale Professor Emeritus Edmund Gordon (Dietel, Herman and Knuth, 1991). "We begin with the conviction that it is desirable that attention be given to questions of equity early in the development of an assessment process rather than as an add-on near the end of such work....The task then is to find assessment probes (test items)
No Child Left Behind your purchase.' No Child Left Behind The No Child Left Behind (NCLB) Act was officially passed in 2001 and was introduced into education shortly after. This act worked to introduce standards-based educational reform of elementary and secondary education. One of the main components of the act was a push towards mandated standardized testing as a means for rating achievements and holding educators accountable for their performances. While the
E. ELL students in public schools. Data provided in the literature demonstrates that by 2030, more than half of all students in American public schools will speak a language other than English (Devoe, 35). In some schools the total number of students whose first language is not English is much higher. Specifically, Devoe reports that in Lawrence, Massachusetts more than 90% of all children enrolled in public schools are ELLs.
No Child Left Behind Act (Public Law 107-110, 115), is a Congressional Act signed into law by George W. Bush in January 2002. The Bill was a bi-partisan initiative, supported by Senator Edward Kennedy, and authorized a number of federal programs designed to improve standards for educational accountability across all States, districts, and increase the focus on reading. Much of the NCLB focus is based on the view that American
Superintendents must deal with student populations that change yearly as school choice options alter. These alterations will influence schools that have to present school choice, and schools that do not get Title 1 funds. The child who uses school choice does not have to attend another Title 1 school. They may decide to go to a school that does not get Title 1 funding (Whitney, 2011). Evaluation of the Effect
They computed a variety of measures to determine whether there was in fact a narrowing of a gap between teacher qualifications across wealthier and poorer schools and found that there was. This narrowing -- indicative of changes in hiring practices and policies as a result in NCLB, was positively correlated with improved test scores in those districts with higher poverty populations. The researcher felt there was some possibility, as indicated
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