No Child Left Behind

Greed

Star
Registered
States Help Schools Hide Minority Scores
By FRANK BASS, NICOLE ZIEGLER DIZON and BEN FELLER, Associated Press Writers
27 minutes ago

States are helping public schools escape potential penalties by skirting the No Child Left Behind law's requirement that students of all races must show annual academic progress.

With the federal government's permission, schools aren't counting the test scores of nearly 2 million students when they report progress by racial groups, an Associated Press computer analysis found.

Minorities — who historically haven't fared as well as whites in testing — make up the vast majority of students whose scores are being excluded, AP found. And the numbers have been rising.

"I can't believe that my child is going through testing just like the person sitting next to him or her and she's not being counted," said Angela Smith, a single mother. Her daughter, Shunta' Winston, was among two dozen black students whose test scores weren't broken out by race at her suburban Kansas City, Mo., high school.

Under the law championed by President Bush, all public school students must be proficient in reading and math by 2014, although only children above second grade are required to be tested.

Schools receiving federal aid also must demonstrate annually that students in all racial categories are progressing or risk penalties that include extending the school year, changing curriculum or firing administrators and teachers.

The U.S. Education Department said it didn't know the breadth of schools' deliberate undercounting until seeing AP's findings.

"Is it too many? You bet," Education Secretary Margaret Spellings said in an interview. "Are there things we need to do to look at that, batten down the hatches, make sure those kids are part of the system? You bet."

Students whose tests aren't being counted in required categories include Hispanics in California who don't speak English well, blacks in the Chicago suburbs, American Indians in the Northwest and special education students in Virginia, AP found.

Bush's home state of Texas — once cited as a model for the federal law — excludes scores for two entire groups. No test scores from Texas' 65,000 Asian students or from several thousand American Indian students are broken out by race. The same is true in Arkansas.

One consequence is that educators are creating a false picture of academic progress.

"The states aren't hiding the fact that they're gaming the system," said Dianne Piche, executive director of the Citizens' Commission on Civil Rights, a group that supports No Child Left Behind. "When you do the math ... you see that far from this law being too burdensome and too onerous, there are all sorts of loopholes."

The law signed by Bush in 2002 requires public schools to test more than 25 million students periodically in reading and math. No scores can be excluded from the overall measure.

But the schools also must report scores by categories, such as race, poverty, migrant status, English proficiency and special education. Failure in any category means the whole school fails.

States are helping schools get around that second requirement by using a loophole in the law that allows them to ignore scores of racial groups that are too small to be statistically significant.

Suppose, for example, that a school has 2,000 white students and nine Hispanics. In nearly every state, the Hispanic scores wouldn't be reported because there aren't enough to provide meaningful information.

State educators decide when a group is too small to count. And they've been asking the government for exemptions to exclude larger numbers of students in racial categories. Nearly two dozen states have successfully petitioned the government for such exemptions in the past two years. As a result, schools can now ignore racial breakdowns even when they have 30, 40 or even 50 students of a given race in the testing population.

Students must be tested annually in grades 3 through 8 and at least once in high school, usually in 10th grade. This is the first school year that students in all those grades must be tested, though schools have been reporting scores by race for the tests they have been administering since the law was approved.

To calculate a nationwide estimate, AP analyzed the 2003-04 enrollment figures the government collected — the latest on record — and applied the current racial category exemptions the states use.

Overall, AP found that about 1.9 million students — or about 1 in every 14 test scores — aren't being counted under the law's racial categories. Minorities are seven times as likely to have their scores excluded as whites, the analysis showed.

Less than 2 percent of white children's scores aren't being counted as a separate category. In contrast, Hispanics and blacks have roughly 10 percent of their scores excluded. More than one-third of Asian scores and nearly half of American Indian scores aren't broken out, AP found.

Ms. Smith's family in Missouri demonstrates how the exemptions work. Shunta' and other black children in tested grades at Oak Park High School, which is in a mostly white suburban Kansas City neighborhood, weren't counted as a group because Missouri schools have federal permission not to break out scores for any ethnic group with fewer than 30 students in the required testing population.

"Why don't they feel like she's important enough to rearrange things to make it count?" her mother asked.

In all, the tests of more than 24,000 mostly minority children in Missouri aren't being counted as groups, AP's review found. Other states have much higher numbers. California, for instance, isn't counting the scores of more than 400,000 children. In Texas, the total is about 257,000.

State educators defend the exemptions, saying minority students' performance is still being included in their schools' overall statistics even when they aren't being counted in racial categories.

Scott Palmer, a consultant for the Council of Chief State School Officers in Washington, said he hoped critics will focus on the 23 million children whose scores are being counted by schools rather than those whose scores aren't reported separately.

"There's a huge positive feeling for the notion" of making schools accountable, Palmer said. "It's a huge plus."

Spellings said she believes educators are acting in good faith. "Are there people out there who find ways to game the system? Of course," she said. "But on the whole ... I fully believe in my heart, mind and soul that educators are people of good will."

Bush has hailed the separate accounting of minority students as a vital feature of the law. "It's really essential we do that. It's really important," Bush said in a May 2004 speech. "If you don't do that, you're likely to leave people behind. And that's not right."

Nonetheless, Bush's Education Department continues to give widely varying exemptions to states:

_Oklahoma lets schools exclude the test scores from any racial category with 52 or fewer members in the testing population, one of the largest across-the-board exemptions. That means 1 in 5 children in the state don't have scores broken out by race.

_Maryland, which tests about 150,000 students more than Oklahoma, has an exempt group size of just five. That means fewer than 1 in 100 don't have scores counted.

_With one of the most diverse school populations in the nation, Florida has been allowed to create a special "provisional," or probationary, category for schools that are failing to meet the law's requirements. The deal helped reduce the number of failing Florida schools from 73 percent in 2003 to 37 percent in 2004.

_Washington state has made 18 changes to its testing plan, according to a February report by the Harvard Civil Rights Project. Vermont has made none. On average, states have made eight changes at either the state or federal level to their plans in the past five years, usually changing the size or accountability of subgroups whose scores were supposed to be counted.

Toia Jones, a black teacher whose daughters attend school in a mostly white Chicago suburb, said the loophole is enabling states and schools to avoid taking concrete measures to eliminate an "achievement gap" between white and minority students.

"With this loophole, it's almost like giving someone a trick bag to get out of a hole," she said. "Now people, instead of figuring out how do we really solve it, some districts, in order to save face or in order to not be faced with the sanctions, they're doing what they can to manipulate the data."

Some students feel left behind, too.

"It's terrible," said Michael Oshinaya, a senior at Eleanor Roosevelt High School in New York City who was among a group of black students whose scores weren't broken out as a racial category. "We're part of America. We make up America, too. We should be counted as part of America."

Spelling's Education Department is caught between two forces. Schools and states are eager to avoid the stigma of failure under the law, especially as the 2014 deadline draws closer. But Congress has shown little political will to modify the law to address their concerns. That leaves the racial category exemptions as a stopgap solution.

"She's inherited a disaster," said David Shreve, an education policy analyst for the National Conference of State Legislatures. "The 'Let's Make a Deal' policy is to save the law from fundamental changes, with Margaret Spellings as Monte Hall."

The solution may be to set a single federal standard for when minority students' scores don't have to be counted separately, said Ross Wiener, policy director for the Washington-based Education Trust.

The law originally created the exemptions to make sure schools didn't unfairly fail schools or compromise student privacy when they had just a small number of students in one racial category, Wiener said.

But there's little doubt now that group sizes have become political, said Wiener, whose group supports the law.

"They're asking the question, not how do we generate statistically reliable results, but how do we generate politically palatable results," he said.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20060417....1I2ocA;_ylu=X3oDMTA5aHJvMDdwBHNlYwN5bmNhdA--
 
Spellings to Examine 'No Child' Loophole

Spellings to Examine 'No Child' Loophole
By FRANK BASS and BEN FELLER, Associated Press Writers
1 hour, 1 minute ago

Education Secretary Margaret Spellings is pledging to scrutinize a loophole that allows states to exclude nearly 2 million student test scores under the No Child Left Behind Act.

"When children are not part of the accountability system, then that's a problem," Spellings said in an interview Thursday at the conclusion of four-day Associated Press series that highlighted the excluded scores.

Spellings said the AP report amounted to a "truth-in-advertising" exercise for state policymakers, parents and federal officials. She declined to specify exactly how she will address the excluded scores, noting the issue will come up with the law's renewal next year and with pending federal reviews of state education plans.

At least 10 states are seeking permission to change the numbers of students whose scores do not have to be counted in required racial categories.

"Do we need to move forward to include more and more children all the time? Yes, we do. I think you'll see we're going to continue to look at that issue," she said.

Under the law, schools are required to test students in math and reading and report their scores by group, such as race, disability, English language ability or economic situation. If one group of students fails to meet standards, an entire school can face penalties.

States, however, are allowed to set minimum numbers of students to ensure statistical reliability and privacy. AP found that states have set wildly different minimum standards for how many children must be counted, allowing schools to exclude 1.9 million scores in required racial categories.

One idea to be considered is "whether a one-size-fits-all solution makes sense or not, and I don't think we know that yet," Spellings said. She emphasized her agency will look at a state's entire education plan, not just the way it sets its group sizes.

Spelling also emphasized the law's accomplishments.

Before Congress passed it in 2001, she said, federal officials had no way to track state progress of roughly 50 million children who attend public school.

Now, she said — even with nearly 2 million uncounted — parents, teachers and educators have a better idea of how 23 million are doing because of the law's requirement that children be tested annually in third grade through eighth grade and once in high school.

Spellings also said the law marks a watershed for closing the racial achievement gap. In previous tests, she said, schools could always produce better results by reporting test scores for an entire grade or building. Now, schools are required to report test scores and show progress for different groups.

The schools, she said, "are working on those student groups as they never have before, and that is because of No Child Left Behind. Yes, we need to continue to press them to serve each and every child, but we have made huge progress."

The AP investigation also found:

_Many education officials are concerned that the law's reporting requirements will discourage schools from integration efforts.

_A huge gap between teacher expectations and parental expectations regarding the law. An AP-AOL Learning Services Poll found teachers are more pessimistic than parents about getting every student to succeed.

_The law has been a boon for educational consultants, teachers and service companies. One estimate puts the burgeoning industry's revenues as high as $22 billion annually.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20060421...5FI2ocA;_ylu=X3oDMTA5aHJvMDdwBHNlYwN5bmNhdA--
 
Re: Spellings to Examine 'No Child' Loophole

<font size="4"><center>
Every Single State Failed Teacher Test
</font size></center>



[frame]http://www.cnn.com/2006/EDUCATION/05/12/teacher.quality.ap/index.html[/frame]
 
Judge Rejects California Exit Exams

not specifically NCLB, but these people can't pass an exam that test 8th grade math and 10th grade english.

Judge Rejects California Exit Exams

Weekend Edition - Saturday, May 13, 2006 · A judge in California has thrown out the state's high school exit exam, a centerpiece of the state's efforts to increase the value of a high school education. But critics filed a lawsuit saying it's unfair to poor and minority students, who fail the test at higher rates. Elaine Korry reports. 3 min 36 sec

http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=5402881
 
Re: Judge Rejects California Exit Exams

<font size="5"><center>Judge suspends exit exam for '06 seniors</font size>
<font size="4">Students claim a lack of quality teachers robbed
them of a chance to pass the test ... suit claimed that
the test was unfair, particularly to English learners and poor
students who were more likely to have unqualified teachers and
supplies necessary to learn the material on the test</font size></center>


By Shirley Dang and Eric Louie
CONTRA COSTA TIMES
Posted on Fri, May. 12, 2006

An Alameda County judge granted the wish of 47,000 high school seniors Friday by abolishing the exit exam as a graduation requirement this year.

In his written decision, Superior Court Judge Robert Freedman sided with five students from Richmond High School suing the state over exit exam. They claim that substandard schools and a lack of quality teachers robbed them of a chance to pass the test.

Freedman also wrote that denying them diplomas would cause significant damage.

"Prospective harm to a student who is otherwise fully qualified to graduate is sufficiently clear," Freedman wrote. "Remaining for a fifth or subsequent year in an already stressed district or attending community college when the student might otherwise be accepted to a four-year institution all demonstrate significant risk of harm."

Lawyers from Morrison & Foerster filed for a preliminary injunction to prevent the state from denying diplomas to students this year. Freedman granted the injunction, but has not decided the case.

The ruling brought tears of happiness to Mayra Ibanez, a Richmond High senior named in the suit.

"When I heard the news, I began to cry," Ibanez said during a press conference Friday afternoon.

The state is expected to appeal the injunction immediately.

"I'm greatly disappointed in today's decision," said State Superintendent of Schools Jack O'Connell. "This is not only a great personal disappointment to me, having worked on it for seven years, it's a setback for students and hard-fought school accountability in the state of California."

Morrison & Foerster filed a suit in February on behalf of 10 students, half from Richmond High. The suit claimed that the test was unfair, particularly to English learners and poor students who were more likely to have unqualified teachers and supplies necessary to learn the material on the test.

The suit also asserts $20 million in state money aimed at tutoring for students who failed the test was unfairly distributed. According to the complaint, 166 districts with failing students received none of the money.

Judge Freedman called this argument the most significant.

"Plaintiffs are likely to prevail on their claim that the State's arbitrary distribution of the $20 million allocated for remediation purposes constitutes an additional violation of the equal protection clause."

In addition to ruling against the state, Freedman denied a stay requested Friday morning, according to Hilary McLean, Department of Education spokeswoman. Marsha Bedwell, lead counsel for the state Department of Education, said the state will seek an appeal and a stay from an appellate or high court.

"Our hope is that we'll be at the Supreme Court," Bedwell said.

Legal experts say unless the appeal is expedited, a reversal may not come soon enough to prevent the Class of 2006 from grasping their diplomas in June.

"The wheels of justice don't turn that quickly," said Bill Koski, a professor of law and education at Stanford University and director of the school's Youth and Law Clinic. "For this year's class ... they're going to get a diploma."

The Legislature approved the test as a graduation requirement in 1999. O'Connell, who wrote the law when he served as a state senator, introduced the exam to level out differences in graduation standards among high schools and thereby give meaning to the high school diploma.

The test measures sophomore English and eighth-grade math skills.

At last count, 89 percent of the state's seniors, or 390,000 out of 437,000, had passed the test. A remaining 47,000 seniors, excluding special education students, have not.

No statewide estimate exists for how many seniors failed the test but have enough credits to graduate. But in the 32,000-student West Contra Costa school district, 160 students graduate rather than be denied after failing the test.

For Richmond High School, the decision means that more than 60 students may now pick up their diplomas.

Upon hearing the news, Richmond High senior Iris Padilla laughed and shrieked with joy.

"I'm pleased," she said in Spanish, shouting to her friends. "I'm happy."

Padilla had planned to continue school until she passed the test, but will now go to college next year with hopes of transferring to a four-year university to study psychology.

Liliana Valenzuela, another Richmond High senior and the namesake of the suit, said she hopes the appeals fail.

"We have won a fair fight," she said. "Please let us graduate."

If Freedman's decision stands, it could deal a significant blow to the future of the exit exam. Granting a reprieve to this year's seniors sets the stage for similar decisions on any injunctions filed in successive years.

Arturo Gonzalez, lead counsel for Morrison and Foerster, said 120,000 students in the class of 2007 have not passed.

"They're going to have the same issue," Gonzalez said.

The suit is one of three filed against the state over the test. Disability advocates sued in 2001 and won an exemption for nearly 25,000 special education students this year.

Californians for Justice and Public Advocates sued in April claiming that the state failed to investigate alternatives soon enough to benefit the class of 2006. A hearing is scheduled for Monday.

Of the 10 students in the Morrison & Foerster suit, only six of the students remain plaintiffs, said Chris Young, lawyer with the firm. One of the students, Alex Sellman, passed the test and dropped out of the suit. Three others also withdrew.

"It's very ironic that even the kids represented in the lawsuit are succeeding," said Jim Lanich, President of the California Business for Education Excellence, a nonprofit that supports school accountability.

Lanich said the judgment flew in the face of keeping schools -- and students -- accountable to the same high standards.

"All students rise to the level of their expectations," Lanich said. "We cannot have alternative expectations for brown faces, black faces, English learners. It's unfair to them."

Pleasanton school board member Juanita Haugen said though the ruling benefited some students, she questioned the effect on those who worked hard to pass the test and graduate.

"Does that devalue their diplomas?" Haugen asked.


----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Nathaniel Hoffman contributed to this report. Shirley Dang and Eric Louie cover education. Reach Shirley Dang at 510-262-2798 or sdang@cctimes.com. Reach Eric Louie at 925-847-2123 or elouie@cctimes.com.

http://www.mercurynews.com/mld/mercurynews/news/breaking_news/14568202.htm
 
Re: Judge Rejects California Exit Exams

<font size="5"><center>Big-city schools struggle with graduation rates</font size></center>

Updated 6/20/2006 11:26 PM ET
By Greg Toppo, USA TODAY

WASHINGTON — Students in a handful of big-city school districts have a less than 50-50 chance of graduating from high school with their peers, and a few cities graduate far fewer than half each spring, according to research released on Tuesday.

Fourteen urban school districts have on-time graduation rates lower than 50%; they include Detroit, Baltimore, New York, Milwaukee, Cleveland, Los Angeles, Miami, Dallas, Denver and Houston.

The findings present a bleak picture and are sure to generate controversy as lawmakers and others push to keep U.S. students competitive globally.

While the basic finding that the nation's overall graduation rate is about 70% is not new, the study suggests that graduation rates are much lower than previously reported in many states. It also could bring the dropout debate to the local level, because it allows anyone with Internet access to view with unprecedented detail data on the nation's 12,000 school districts.

Among the nation's 50 largest districts, the study finds, three graduate fewer than 40%: Detroit (21.7%), Baltimore (38.5%) and New York City (38.9%).

The advantage of the new study is that "you could apply it to any and all school districts in the country with the same validity — and the same problems," says Michael Casserly of The Council of the Great City Schools, an advocacy group for large urban districts.

He says it's still unclear whether researcher Christopher Swanson overstates the problem. Swanson's analysis, strictly speaking, is not a calculation of dropout rates but of graduation rates; it estimates the probability that a student in ninth grade will complete high school on time and with a regular diploma.

Adding to the debate: The study is sponsored by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, which promotes its own brand of high school reform. Last year, Bill Gates called U.S. high schools "obsolete."

The study, which uses 2002 and 2003 data, the most current available, finds that public schools graduate 69.6% of an estimated 4 million eligible students each spring, meaning about 1.2 million students likely won't graduate this year. That means about 7,000 students drop out per school day, Swanson says.

Researcher Lawrence Mishel of the Economic Policy Institute says Swanson's figures "seriously understate graduation rates, especially for minorities." They say that just 52% of blacks graduate, and 57% of Hispanics.

Mishel says by comparing the number of graduates with the number of ninth-graders, Swanson exaggerates the effects of the "ninth-grade bulge," in which many ninth-graders are held back a year before tackling more advanced work and, often, state-mandated exit exams. Mishel's most recent research puts the overall U.S. graduation rate at 82%.

________________________________________________
TABLE:Graduation rates for 50 largest districts in U.S.

Rate - District - Size rank

21.7 Detroit 11
53.7 New Orleans 48
68.4 Gwinnett County, Ga. 20

38.5 Baltimore City, Md. 30
53.8 Duval County, Fla. 19
68.6 Brevard County, Fla. 42

38.9 New York City 1
54.6 Clark County, Nev. 6
69.3 Fulton County, Ga. 45

43.1 Milwaukee 28
54.8 DeKalb County, Ga. 27
70.0 Hillsborough County, Fla. 10

43.8 Cleveland 44
55.1 Austin 37
70.2 Anne Arundel County, Md. 40

44.2 Los Angeles 2
55.2 Palm Beach County, Fla. 12
70.4 Cobb County, Ga. 26

45.3 Miami-Dade County, Fla. 4
55.5 Philadelphia 8
72.2 Granite, Utah 46

46.3 Dallas 13
56.0 Charlotte 23
75.3 Mesa, Ariz. 39

46.5 Pinellas County, Fla. 22
56.2 Orange County, Fla. 15
75.8 Northside, Tex. 49

46.8 Denver 43
60.1 Polk County, Fla. 34
77.0 Jefferson County, Colo. 33

48.5 Memphis 21
62.2 Jefferson County, Ky.
31 80.2 Jordan, Utah 41

48.7 Broward County, Fla. 5
63.0 San Diego 16
81.3 Cypress-Fairbanks, Tex. 47

48.9 Fort Worth 36
63.1 Fresno 35
81.5 Montgomery County, Md. 17

48.9 Houston 7
63.7 Hawaii (statewide) 9
81.9 Baltimore County, Md. 24

50.4 Nashville 50
66.5 Virginia Beach 38
82.2 Wake County, N.C. 25

52.0 Albuquerque 32
67.3 Prince George's County, Md. 18
82.5 Fairfax County, Va. 14

52.2 Chicago 3 68.1 Long Beach 29




http://www.usatoday.com/news/education/2006-06-20-dropout-rates_x.htm
 
Re: Judge Rejects California Exit Exams

Costs of Not Graduating Tallied by Researchers
[
The cumulative costs to the public
from the nation's dropouts are in the billions,
for both lost taxes and spending on social programs


Published: June 22, 2006
Education Week


Young people who fail to earn a high school diploma do so at enormous cost to themselves and to society, according to data presented at a 2005 conference at Teachers College, Columbia University, on the social costs of an inadequate education:

• Over a lifetime, an 18-year-old who does not complete high school earns about $260,000 less than an individual with a high school diploma, and contributes about $60,000 less in federal and state income taxes. The combined income and tax losses aggregated over one cohort of 18-year-olds who do not complete high school is about $192 billion, or 1.6 percent of the gross domestic product. (Cecilia Elena Rouse, economist, Princeton University)

• Individuals with a high school diploma live longer, have better indicators of general health, and are less likely to use publicly financed health-insurance programs than high school dropouts. If the 600,000 18-year-olds who failed to graduate in 2004 had advanced one grade, it would save about $2.3 billion in publicly financed medical care, aggregated over a lifetime. (Peter Muennig, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University)

• Adults who lack a high school diploma are at greater risk of being on public assistance. If all those receiving assistance who are high school dropouts instead had a high school diploma, the result would be a total cost savings for federal welfare spending, food stamps, and public housing of $7.9 billion to $10.8 billion a year. (Jane Waldfogel et al., Columbia University School of Social Work)

• In the 2004 election, college graduates were nearly three times as likely to vote as Americans without a high school diploma. (Jane Junn, Eagleton Institute of Politics, Rutgers University)

• High school dropouts are far more likely to commit crimes and be incarcerated than those with more education. A 1 percent increase in the high school completion rate of men ages 20 to 60 would save the United States as much as $1.4 billion a year in reduced costs from crime incurred by victims and society at large.(Enrico Moretti, economist, University of California, Berkeley)​

http://www.edweek.org/ew/articles/2006/06/22/41s_costs.h25.html
 
Last edited:
Study: H.S. dropouts face steeper costs

Study: H.S. dropouts face steeper costs
By BEN FELLER, AP Education Writer
Tue Sep 12, 5:03 AM ET

Dropping out of high school has its costs around the globe, but nowhere steeper than in the United States.

Adults who don't finish high school in the U.S. earn 65 percent of what people who have high school degrees make, according to a new report comparing industrialized nations. No other country had such a severe income gap.

Adults without a high school diploma typically make about 80 percent of the salaries earned by high school graduates in nations across Asia, Europe and elsewhere. Countries such as Finland, Belgium, Germany and Sweden have the smallest gaps in earnings between dropouts and graduates.

The figures come from "Education at a Glance," an annual study by the Paris-based Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development. The report, released Tuesday, aims to help leaders see how their nations stack up.

The findings underscore the cost of a persistent dropout problem in the United States. It is rising as a national concern as politicians see the risks for the economy and for millions of kids.

The new report says 44 percent of adults without high school degrees in the United States have low incomes — that is, they make half of the country's median income or less.

Only Denmark had a higher proportion of dropouts with low incomes.

Also, the United States is below the international average when it comes to its employment rate among adults age 25 to 64 who have no high school degree.

Even U.S. adult education and job training do little to close gaps, because too few dropouts take part, said Barbara Ischinger, director of education for the OECD.

"Those with poor initial qualifications remain disadvantaged throughout their life, because they have fewer opportunities to catch up later on," she said.

About one-third of students in the United States don't finish high school on time — or at all. Estimates on that dropout rate vary, though, and state data are often shaky.

The importance of a high school degree on income varies across nations. It depends on the demands for skills, the supply of workers, minimum wage laws and the strength of unions.

The disparity is more pronounced in the United States, Ischinger said, partly because the U.S. labor market is more flexible. Other nations protect people with weak education qualifications through regulations or tax systems that favor the low skilled, she said.

On the other end of the spectrum, however, the United States more richly rewards those who go to college.

An adult with a university degree in the U.S. earns, on average, 72 percent more than someone with a high school degree. That's a much bigger difference than in most countries.

The study compares the United States to 29 other nations that belong to the economic organization, although not every country reported data on every indicator.

In perspective, the U.S. economy remains strong and competitive, the report says. The country has a high proportion of educated adults and greater gender equality than other nations.

But a troubling theme of the last couple years continues: The United States is losing ground internationally because other countries are making faster and bigger gains.

The high school and college graduation rates of recent U.S. students are now below the international average.

For example, among adults age 25 to 34, the U.S. ranks 11th among nations in the share of its population that has finished high school. It used to be first.

The United States remains, by far, the most popular place for international students to study. But there, too, the U.S. is losing its market share of students studying abroad.

When it comes to money, the nation remains a big spender.

From elementary school through college, the United States spends an average of $12,023 per student. That's higher than in all countries in the comparison except for Switzerland.
___
On the Net:
Education at a Glance report: http://www.oecd.org/edu/eag2006

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20060912/ap_on_go_ot/education_compared
 
Re: Study: H.S. dropouts face steeper costs


No Child Left Behind
faces contentious reauthorization​


906-20071003-NOCHILD.large.prod_affiliate.91.jpg



By Halimah Abdullah | McClatchy Newspapers
Posted on Thursday, October 4, 2007

WASHINGTON — In the five years since No Child Left Behind was enacted, resistance to the law has created some strange political adversaries and bedfellows in the halls of Congress and among education advocates.

Take, for example, the strained relationship between Jonathan Kozol, an award-winning author and education activist, and Sen. Ted Kennedy, D-Mass, an NCLB co-author and the chairman of the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee. Though he's enjoyed a more than 40-year friendship with the senator, Kozol has grown frustrated by what he sees as Kennedy's reluctance to commit to a major overhaul of the law, which demands that every child be "proficient" — working at grade level in reading and math — by 2014.

"I pray Democratic leadership will not cave in and genuflect in front of a Republican agenda," Kozol recently told a gathering of journalists. "I'm here to make a plea to Kennedy to rethink his views about the law." Kozol has been on a modified hunger strike to protest the act for roughly three months.

Then there's the pairing of conservative Republicans such as Sen. John Cornyn of Texas, who want to return such matters to local authority, and teachers unions such as the National Education Association, which is vowing to oppose reauthorization over proposals to include a performance pay provision.

"Education is a function that is best left mainly to parents, teachers and local school boards," Cornyn said in a statement. "As we reauthorize NCLB, we should pursue ideas to reinforce local control of innovation, even while ensuring accountability in the results."

Some states have threatened to opt out of NCLB, charging that the extra cost of testing causes an undue burden and that some of the law's accountability provisions unfairly penalize them.

The erosion in support for the mandate comes in the twilight of Bush's presidency and as his popularity wanes.

Where the president enjoyed bipartisan support in 2002 when NCLB was signed into law, two of the law's authors, Kennedy and Rep. George Miller, D-Calif., chairman of the House Education and Labor Committee, have since expressed concerns that the mandate has been underfunded.

Over the past year, Kennedy and Miller have met with educators, civil rights groups, business leaders, teachers unions and educational advocacy groups to determine the best way to retool the law. But even those groups widely disagree on what, if any, new shape NCLB should take.

Staffers on both the House and Senate education committees said they hope to put forth reauthorization bills in the next few weeks.

Meanwhile, more than 60 House Republicans have co-sponsored a measure by Rep. Pete Hoekstra, R-Mich., that would give states the right to opt out of NCLB. Dozens of other lawmakers in both chambers have introduced other bills that would affect the mandate.

As groups and lawmakers spar, the law faces a contentious reauthorization.

"Even as early as late 2000, when President-elect Bush was trying to get folks together, he had a fair amount of political capital on this issue. It was clearly one of his domestic priorities and there was some sense in Congress that something needed to be done. He was willing to come to the middle on that issue," said Andrew Rudalevige, an assistant professor of political science at Dickinson College in Pennsylvania who's written essays on the politics of NCLB and a book on Bush's political legacy. "That middle coalition has fragmented quite a bit, partly because there isn't a lot of political capital to be gained by supporting the president on this."

Influential groups with an interest in NCLB have picked up on Bush's weakened state and lobbied hard to make their voices and concerns heard.

"The last thing we want to see is bad NCLB legislation," NEA President Reg Weaver told a group of reporters recently. "I would want us to continue to try to slow the process down."

This stance frustrates organizations such as the National Council of La Raza, which has traditionally worked with NEA on education matters.

"The unions are pulling out all the stops; they are bullying people," said Raul Gonzalez, a legislative director with La Raza. "If they don't get what they want they will kill this bill. If this bill doesn't get past this Congress it is because of staunch opposition by the unions."

Business interests, on the other hand, are allied with civil rights organizations in wanting the law reauthorized.

"It's enlightened self-interest for the business community," said Susan Traiman, the director of education and workforce policy at the Business Roundtable, an association of CEOs of large companies. "The graduates of our schools are our future workforce. When people graduate schools without the skills they need in high school or college, it costs taxpayers' dollars to remediate them."

http://www.mcclatchydc.com/227/story/20201.html
 
Test: Most students not proficient in writing

Test: Most students not proficient in writing
By CHRISTINE ARMARIO | Associated Press – 1 hr 9 mins ago

Just a quarter of eighth and 12th grade students in the United States have solid writing skills, even when allowed to use spell-check and other computer word-processing tools, according to results of a national exam released Friday.

Twenty-seven percent of students at each grade level were able to write essays that were well developed, organized and had proper language and grammar — 3 percent were advanced and 24 percent were proficient. The remainder showed just partial mastery of these skills.

"It is important to remember this is first draft writing," said Cornelia Orr, executive director of the National Assessment Governing Board, which administers the Nation's Report Card tests. "They did have some time to edit, but it wasn't extensive editing."

Students who took the writing test in 2011 had an advantage that previous test takers did not: a computer with spell-check and thesaurus. Previously, students taking the National Assessment of Educational Progress writing test had to use pencil and paper, but with changes in technology, and the need to write across electronic formats, the decision was made to switch to computers.

Orr said students use technology and tools like spell-check on a daily basis. "It's as if years ago we had given them a pencil to write the essay and took away the eraser," she said.

She said word processing tools alone wouldn't result in significantly better writing scores if students didn't have the core skills of being able to organize ideas and present them in a clear and grammatical fashion.

Still, students in both grades who used the thesaurus and the backspace key more frequently had higher scores than those who used them less often. Students in the 12th grade who had to write four or five pages a week for English homework also had higher scores.

Because this was the first version of the computerized test, the board cautioned against comparing the results to previous exams. In 2007, 33 percent of eighth grade students scored at the proficient level, which represents solid writing skills, as did 24 percent at grade 12.

The results at both grade levels showed a continued achievement gap between white, black, Hispanic and Asian students. At the eighth grade, Asian students had the highest average score, which was 33 points higher than black students on a 300-point scale. At the 12th grade, white students scored 27 points above black students.

There was also a gender gap, with girls scoring 20 points higher on average than boys in the eighth grade and 14 points higher in 12th grade. Those who qualified for free and reduced price lunch, a key indicator of poverty, also had lower scores than those who did not; there was a 27 point difference between the two at the eighth grade.

For the 2011 exam, laptops were brought into public and private schools across the country and more than 50,000 students were tested to get a nationally representative sample. Students were given prompts that required them to write essays that explained, persuaded or conveyed an experience.

Kathleen Blake Yancey, a professor at Florida State University who served on the advisory panel for the test, said one factor to keep in mind is that research shows most students in the United States don't compose at the keyboard.

"What they do is sort of type already written documents into the machine, much as we used to do with typewriters four decades ago," she said.

Yancey said for this reason there was some concern about having students write on the computer as opposed to by hand. Likewise, having the advantage of spell-check assumes students know how to use it. And in some schools and neighborhoods, computers are still not easily accessible.

"There are not so many students that actually learn to write composing at the keyboard," she said.

Yancey added that many kids who do have access to computers are not necessarily using them to write at school, but to take standardized tests and filling in bubbles.

"Digital technology is a technology," she said. "Paper and pencil is a technology. If technology were the answer, that would be pretty simple."

http://news.yahoo.com/test-most-students-not-proficient-writing-150219766.html
 
Re: Test: Most students not proficient in writing

Test: Most students not proficient in writing

. . . and I am afraid its only going to get worse. People don't read nearly as much as they should. I am a firm believer that reading contributes to good writing skills. But, to make matters worse, technological advancements have presented students nifty a tool that is further destroying their ability to write: "Texting" No need for punctuation; no one gives a real hoot about subject verb agreement; and spelling is that now near extinct animal one might find in Jurassic Park.

I fear that "ours" will suffer the most. Unfortunately, I had to let an intern go over the summer because of one note too many in the nature of: "I B bak B 4 noon" left me :smh: Of course, that came after repeated warning to speak and write the g.d. language. LOL (I can be tough but cold I'm not).
 
Re: Test: Most students not proficient in writing

We'll, (I might have posted in this thread) colleges in Chicago have been complaining for years that high schools are passing and graduating seniors that need to take non-credit remedial math and english courses in freshman year.

As the teachers are currently on strike for more money to work an extra hour a day.
 
Ken Robinson: How to escape education's death valley

Ken Robinson: How to escape education's death valley (19:11)
FILMED APR 2013 • POSTED MAY 2013 • TED Talks Education

Sir Ken Robinson outlines 3 principles crucial for the human mind to flourish -- and how current education culture works against them. In a funny, stirring talk he tells us how to get out of the educational "death valley" we now face, and how to nurture our youngest generations with a climate of possibility.

Creativity expert Sir Ken Robinson challenges the way we're educating our children. He champions a radical rethink of our school systems, to cultivate creativity and acknowledge multiple types of intelligence.

http://www.ted.com/talks/ken_robinson_how_to_escape_education_s_death_valley.html

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No Child Left Behind School Law Opens Partisan Divide

No Child Left Behind School Law Opens Partisan Divide
By John Hechinger
Jun 6, 2013 11:00 PM CT

No Child Left Behind, the 11-year-old law governing U.S. schools, was once hailed as a bipartisan triumph uniting Republican President George W. Bush and Democratic Senator Edward Kennedy on improving education.

Now, once again, bitter party divisions are complicating efforts to change the law, criticized by parents, teachers and many politicians for an excessive focus on the standardized testing of students. Efforts to reauthorize No Child Left Behind have been bogged down since 2007.

This week, Senate Democrats proposed a bill to ease the law’s provisions while preserving testing requirements designed to hold schools accountable for all students’ achievement. House Republicans countered yesterday with a plan to curtail U.S. involvement. It’s unlikely the parties will come to an agreement anytime soon, said Maria Ferguson, executive director of Washington-based Center on Education Policy, a nonpartisan research group.

“It’s taken a heck of a long time, and that speaks to something,” Ferguson said of the six years of attempts to overhaul the law. “It demonstrates the complicated relationship this country has with the federal government role in education.”

Officially called the Elementary and Secondary Education Act, the law requires schools to show that all students are proficient on state standardized reading and math tests by 2014. Schools also must demonstrate yearly progress toward that goal or risk losing federal money. U.S. Education Secretary Arne Duncan has said the law’s rigid approach has led to the narrowing of the U.S. curriculum and dumbing down of schools.

‘Failed Tenets’

Tom Harkin, the Iowa Democrat who chairs the Senate Education Committee, introduced a bill this week that he said would “replace the failed tenets of No Child Left Behind” while building on “state-led reforms.”

In many respects, the Harkin bill resembles the approach that President Barack Obama has taken to changing the law. Frustrated with congressional inaction, Obama has granted waivers to 37 states and the District of Columbia, excusing them from meeting No Child Left Behind’s proficiency deadlines if they agree to the principles of his education agenda, such as pledging to turn around the lowest-performing schools.

Standardized Tests

Like the Obama waivers, the bill offered by Harkin and other Senate Democrats leaves in place the No Child Left Behind standardized-testing program, including the reporting of the results of subgroups, such as minorities, children with disabilities and those who speak English as a second language. The bill calls on states to establish goals for those students’ achievement. Civil-rights groups had been pushing to preserve that kind of accountability in the law.

The Harkin bill also said schools must use students’ standardized-test scores to improve teaching, while it is silent on whether they should be incorporated into the evaluation of teachers -- a controversial approach, especially among teachers. The Obama administration supports their use in teacher evaluations.

By contrast, House Republicans led by U.S. Representative John Kline of Minnesota, who chairs the Education and Workforce Committee, proposed eliminating federal mandates for turning around troubled schools and letting states determine their own accountability systems. It would still require testing and the posting of annual report cards for parents.

Republican Bill

Their bill eliminates more than 70 elementary and high school programs. It would create new grants to provide money to states and school districts for their own initiatives to improve achievement. It would also expand funding for the expansion of charter schools, privately run public schools. States would be required to make student achievement a significant part of teacher evaluations.

The proposed legislation would also limit the authority of the Education Secretary, specifically prohibiting him from imposing conditions on states and school districts in exchange for waivers to federal law -- as Duncan did for the No Child Left Behind waivers.

“House Republicans are determined to put an end to the Obama administration’s overreach in our nation’s classrooms and empower communities to fix our broken education system,” they said in materials introducing the bill.

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-06-07/no-child-left-behind-school-law-opens-partisan-divide.html
 
John McWhorter: Txtng is killing language. JK!!!

. . . and I am afraid its only going to get worse. People don't read nearly as much as they should. I am a firm believer that reading contributes to good writing skills. But, to make matters worse, technological advancements have presented students nifty a tool that is further destroying their ability to write: "Texting" No need for punctuation; no one gives a real hoot about subject verb agreement; and spelling is that now near extinct animal one might find in Jurassic Park.

I fear that "ours" will suffer the most. Unfortunately, I had to let an intern go over the summer because of one note too many in the nature of: "I B bak B 4 noon" left me :smh: Of course, that came after repeated warning to speak and write the g.d. language. LOL (I can be tough but cold I'm not).
As an aside:

Does texting mean the death of good writing skills? John McWhorter posits that there’s much more to texting -- linguistically, culturally -- than it seems, and it’s all good news.

Linguist John McWhorter thinks about language in relation to race, politics and our shared cultural history.

John McWhorter studies how language has evolved -- and will evolve -- with social, historical and technological developments, in addition to studying and writing about race in America.

In recent work, he’s been urging grammarians to think of email and text messages not as the scourge of the English language but as “fingered speech,” a new form between writing and talking. These digital missives, despite their “shaggy construction,” represent an exciting new form of communication in which “lol” and “hey” are particles, he suggests, and written thoughts can be shared at the speed of talking. Should we worry that knowing how to parse "haha kk" means we'll lose the ability to read Proust? No, he told the TED Blog: "Generally there’s always been casual speech and formal speech, and people can keep the two in their heads."​
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Re: John McWhorter: Txtng is killing language. JK!!!

Goddamn, I was reading the first article like it was current. Shit is scary how badly NCLB failed...

Honestly, American K-12 kids just aren't as "smart" as other countries...it starts in Kindergarten and Pre-K3/4.


Educators are doing something wrong...and it takes 10-20 years to see the results of a public policy...so here we are at the 10 year mark...and clearly this NCLB shit was a damned failure, which anybody with common sense knew from day one!
 
White House threatens veto of GOP education bill

White House threatens veto of GOP education bill
By PHILIP ELLIOTT | Associated Press
Wed, Jul 17, 2013

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Barack Obama threatened Wednesday to veto House Republicans' rewrite of the No Child Left Behind education law that could come to a vote this week.

If it were to become law, the GOP rewrite would scrap large swaths of the previous version in favor of greater local control and severe reductions to the Education Department's oversight role. The White House said the bill "would represent a significant step backwards in the effort to help our nation's children and their families prepare for their futures."

Republican officials said a vote could come as early as Thursday but Majority Leader Eric Cantor had not yet announced a schedule for the rest of the week. Republicans were counting votes to make sure the bill had enough support before announcing its formal addition to the schedule.

Some conservatives have groused that the revisions to the George W. Bush-era law still put too much emphasis on centralized education programs and keep in place required achievement tests. Other lawmakers have complained the rewrite does not do enough to give parents choices, such as public charter schools or private religious schools.

Lawmakers on Wednesday were considering amendments that would address those concerns as House members prepared a final slate of options for consideration, although the timing was uncertain.

"We intend to bring this to the floor as early as this week," Cantor said Tuesday.

"I think we will have success in getting Student Success Act across the floor because of the reform nature of the bill," he added when reporters pressed him for a timeline.

The Republican-backed bill is a more conservative proposal than the one Bush signed into law and eliminates dozens of school improvement programs. It gives state and local officials the power to implement reforms and explicitly bars Education Secretary Arne Duncan and his successors from encouraging states to implement national achievement standards known as the Common Core.

The bill also sends states money in a block grant to teach English-language learners, students from poor families and rural students. States could decide which students would benefit most from those dollars.

But that hasn't proved enough for some, including Cantor. He has introduced an amendment that would let students switch from a public school to a public charter school along with the federal money that supported the child's public schooling.

In near unanimity, Democrats are expected to oppose the amendment and the bill as a whole, which they have called the "Letting Students Down Act."

A Senate panel has already completed its work on a rewrite of No Child Left Behind. It, too, limits the Education Department's role and lets states write their own plans to improve schools. Unlike the GOP proposal, the secretary of education retains his approval role.

A vote of all senators has not been scheduled. Aides expect it would be autumn, if not later, before it makes its way to the full chamber.

http://news.yahoo.com/white-house-threatens-veto-gop-education-bill-193518373.html
 
This Year's SAT Scores Are Out, and They're Grim

We'll, (I might have posted in this thread) colleges in Chicago have been complaining for years that high schools are passing and graduating seniors that need to take non-credit remedial math and english courses in freshman year.

As the teachers are currently on strike for more money to work an extra hour a day.
This Year's SAT Scores Are Out, and They're Grim
Fewer than half of the 2013 graduating seniors who took the test got "college-ready" scores.
JULIA RYAN
SEP 26 2013, 7:15 AM ET

Of the 1.66 million high school students in the class of 2013 who took the SAT, only 43 percent were academically prepared for college-level work, according to this year’s SAT Report on College & Career Readiness. For the fifth year in a row, fewer than half of SAT-takers received scores that qualified them as “college-ready.”

The College Board considers a score of 1550 to be the “College and Career Readiness Benchmark.” Students who meet the benchmark are more likely to enroll in a four-year college, more likely to earn a GPA of a B- or higher their freshman year, and more likely to complete their degree.

“While some might see stagnant scores as no news, the College Board considers them a call to action. These scores can and must change — and the College Board feels a sense of responsibility to help make that happen,” the report said.

The report also offered insights into why some students graduated high school prepared for college and others didn’t. Students in the class of 2013 who met or exceeded the benchmark were more likely to have completed a core curriculum, to have taken honors or AP courses, and to have taken higher-level mathematics courses, like precalculus, calculus, and trigonometry.

Although the SAT takers in the class of 2013 were the most diverse group of test takers ever, the report showed that minority students’ scores have only slightly improved in the past year.

While 14.8 percent of African-American SAT takers met or exceeded the SAT benchmark in 2012, 15.6 percent met or exceeded the mark in 2013. Similar gains were made among Hispanic SAT takers: 23.5 percent met the benchmark in 2013, up from 22.8 in 2012. This may be due to differing academic preparation between the groups: Only 66 percent of African American students and 70 percent of Hispanic students completed a Core Curriculum, in comparison to 80 percent of white students.

http://www.theatlantic.com/educatio...rs-sat-scores-are-out-and-theyre-grim/279999/
 
Obama Throws a Gut Punch to the Teachers Unions

Obama Throws a Gut Punch to the Teachers Unions
By Liz Peek | The Fiscal Times
Wed, Jan 15, 2014

A funny thing happened on the way to President Obama’s “Promise Zones.” He stepped off track and delivered quite a smack to the teachers unions. In rolling out his newest anti-poverty program, Obama pledged federal support for five targeted communities, which share high unemployment and poverty and cited as a model the Harlem Children’s Zone.

That neighborhood initiative, led by founder Geoffrey Canada, is best known for bringing charter schools to Harlem. The Promise Academies have become the cornerstone of the community’s renaissance. Why? As Obama pointed out, “Last year, a study found that students who win a spot in one of the charter schools score higher on standardized tests than those who didn’t.” It’s that simple. But don’t expect the teachers’ unions to agree.

No one has been a greater thorn in the side of the teachers unions than Geoffrey Canada has. He was the hero of the stunning film Waiting for Superman that ripped the education status quo. The film provided statistics about the inability to fire teachers and exposed the infamous “rubber rooms” in New York where disgraced teachers are put “on hold” but not dismissed, at an annual cost of $65 million.

Canada, who attended Obama’s presentation on the Promise Zones, has railed against the continuing failures of our public schools. He has dared to say, “If you are a lousy teacher, you should be fired.” He has lambasted the education industry for refusing to innovate, for pursuing the same approaches that haven’t worked for 50 years and that continue to leave millions of children behind.

Talking about the teachers unions to England’s Education Secretary Michael Gove, Canada once said, "Our charter schools were not unionized. My contract with my teachers is fair and is two pages. The union contract is 200 pages. You cannot manage your business when you cannot make any decision without going back to 200 pages worth of stuff.”

Further, Canada said, "So that is inflexible. It kills innovation; it stops anything from changing. The only thing that we can do is what we did last year, and last year was another failure. So that to me makes no sense."

It makes no sense to most people – and especially to those concerned about children whose only ticket out of poverty is a decent education. Liberals, led by President Obama, are decrying a decline in social mobility in this country. We all know that the best shot at upward movement for those born into the lowest income brackets is graduation from high school and a college degree.

To quote a Brookings study, “Without a college degree a child born into a family in the lowest quintile has a 45 percent chance of remaining in that quintile as an adult and only a 5 percent chance of moving into the highest quintile. On the other hand, children born into the lowest quintile who do earn a college degree have only a 16 percent chance of remaining in the lowest quintile and a 19 percent chance of breaking into the top quintile.” That’s powerful.

Why would President Obama deliver such an affront to the teachers unions? First, he is no longer running for office (though sometimes it’s hard to tell). Early on, President Obama challenged our broken education system, bringing on board as Secretary of Education Arne Duncan, who had established himself as a reformer when heading Chicago’s schools. Duncan targeted teacher accountability as a key element in turning around our schools, incurring the wrath of the NEA and UFT. But, seeking reelection, President Obama had to woo the disaffected unions; as a result, he slow-walked his education agenda.

Second, he’s reading the polls, which show a declining number of Americans thinking that the unions are a positive force in our schools. The ongoing and embarrassing plunge in our students’ achievement level (and reality checks such as that delivered by Canada’s film) may finally have come home to roost.

Membership is slipping for the NEA, the country’s largest labor group, which has lost more than 7 percent of its members since 2009, reducing its rolls to fewer than 3 million. The recession and consequent layoffs, the ability of teachers in states like Wisconsin and Michigan to opt out of membership and the growth of the charter school movement have all taken their toll, along with the country’s waning affection for Big Labor.

The teachers’ unions face another looming challenge – declining student enrollment—especially in labor-friendly states in the northeast. According to the Western Interstate Commission for Higher Education, the number of students graduating high school peaked in 2011. Though we may yet see slight gains in some future years, the outlook is dim. “In the next peak year, 2025, the numbers will only be 3 percent higher than the class of 2011 – a difference of only about 100,000 graduates nationally,” the report said. In the Northeast, the prospects are worse. From 644,000 high school grads in 2011, the total will slump to 576,000 in 2028.

Unions want help—allies are lending a hand by proposing to ramp up pre-K education. While this program, championed by liberals such as New York City’s new mayor Bill de Blasio, might boost achievement for at-risk kids – it is part of Canada’s initiative as well -- it is also likely to add union jobs. In de Blasio’s case, we are skeptical about his enthusiasm for pre-K. Bucking popular opinion, and even the president’s views, de Blasio has declared war on charter schools. He is not on the side of the children. Perhaps President Obama and Geoffrey Canada will help him see the light.

http://news.yahoo.com/obama-throws-gut-punch-teachers-104500099.html
 
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