Identifying what needs to be fixed in the field of education is easy: the No Child Left Behind Act, currently up for reauthorization but stalled in Congress pending the next election. The elaborate law requires schools to test the bejeezus out of elementary- and middle-school students in reading and math, to test them again in high school, and to sprinkle in a few science tests along the way. Schools posting consistently poor test scores are supposed to be punished so that theyll clean up their acts and allow NCLBs ultimate goal to be achieved in 2014. The act imagines that essentially all students across the country will be proficient in that year, meaning that theyll all pass the battery of standardized tests required by the NCLB. Hence the acts catchy title.
NCLB was enacted in 2001 with huge bipartisan support, though many Democrats in Congress have since disclaimed if not denounced it, presumably having had some time to read it. The act is at once the Bush administrations signature piece of education legislation, its most significant domestic policy initiative, and the most intrusive federal education law in our nations history. The federal government provides less than 10% of all education funding, yet NCLB drives education policy in every school district in the country. In short, its a big deal. Its also in need of repair. No one—conservative or liberal, Democrat or Republican—doubts that. Read more at Slate.com.
Fixing It is a 10-part series on Slate.com offering detailed policy prescriptions for the next president. This article is by Jim Ryan, the academic associate dean and William L. Matheson and Robert M. Morgenthau distinguished professor at the University of Virginia School of Law, where he teaches law and education.
Posted by Louise Ash on 02 April 2008 in Opinion