No Child Left Behind ?

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
<font size="5"><center>Allegations of wrongdoing
plague Bush reading program</font size></center>


By Rob Hotakainen
McClatchy Newspapers
Sun, Apr. 29, 2007

WASHINGTON - When the Kansas City public schools lost federal money for their new reading program, Robert Slavin was plenty distressed.


Slavin, who'd designed the program used in Kansas City, had seen the pattern all too often: Local officials try to get government grants to help pay for his scripted Success for All reading program, only to realize that it's fallen out of bureaucratic favor in Washington.


"There have been many of these decisions - this is only the latest," said Slavin, a researcher at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore.


Fueled by a growing list of such complaints, the House Education and Labor Committee is looking into whether the Bush administration steered contracts to its favorite vendors, shutting out Slavin and other competitors.


And the Education Department's inspector general has asked the Justice Department to examine allegations of mismanagement and conflicts of interest that are swirling around the $6 billion federal grant program known as Reading First, a centerpiece of the five-year-old No Child Left Behind law.


Inspector General John Higgins said his office began investigating Reading First in May 2005 after receiving complaints of favoritism. He told the Education and Labor Committee that the law calls for a balanced panel of experts to review grant applications but the department had created a panel that had professional ties to a specific reading program.


Democratic Rep. George Miller of California, the committee's chairman, said three people involved in the reviewing process benefited financially - either directly or indirectly - when the panel distributed grants.


At a committee hearing April 20, three review panel members acknowledged benefiting from the sale of an assessment product called the Dynamic Indicators of Basic Early Learning Skills. One of the panel members was a co-author of the product, and the company in which he owned a 50 percent share had received more than $1.3 million in royalty and other payments from the sale of DIBELS. Two other review panel members were co-authors of a reading intervention product that was packaged with DIBELS, and they each had received about $150,000 in royalty payments from sales of their product.


All three denied any conflict of interest, saying they didn't review grant proposals that involved their own products. They said their products were selling because of their popularity, not because of any pressure from Washington.


At the hearing, Miller charged that investigators had found examples "where states were essentially bullied" to use favored reading programs in order to get federal aid.


Starr Lewis, an associate commissioner with the Kentucky Department of Education, testified that Christopher Doherty - who managed the program for five years before leaving the position last year - had pressured the state to drop one of its reading assessments and that it had received federal funding soon after doing so.


The Bush administration is defending the Reading First program, part of President Bush's effort to get all schoolchildren reading by third grade. The administration points to rising test scores since the program was launched in 2002.


Doherty said the Education Department never maintained a list of favored reading programs. "No one was ever told they must use a certain program or programs instead of others."


One of the program's biggest defenders is the president himself. Speaking at a school in Harlem on Tuesday, Bush said: "I appreciate the fact that nationwide, 9-year-olds have made more progress in five years than in the previous 28 years combined on these tests in reading. ... The pipeline is beginning to be full of little readers that are competent readers."




In a report earlier this month, Education Secretary Margaret Spellings said the percentage of first-graders who were meeting or exceeding reading proficiency had increased by 14 percentage points - from 43 percent to 57 percent - from 2004 to 2006, while the percentage of third-graders meeting or exceeding proficiency rose by 7 percentage points - from 36 percent to 43 percent, during the same period.


Spellings is sure to be in the hot seat on May 10 when she testifies to the House Education and Labor Committee on the department's oversight of the program. Congress approved it as a way to help public schools improve reading instruction by giving them federal money to pay for teacher training and reading materials.




Miller said congressional investigators had been investigating the program for months, reviewing thousands of documents and interviewing dozens of people.


Democratic Sen. Edward Kennedy of Massachusetts, the head of the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, charged that the Bush administration had a record "of political manipulation and cronyism that have tainted" the reading program. He said "schools across the country were pressured into using specific reading curricula that were backed by the programs' administrators' political agendas."


Miller and Kennedy were strong supporters of Bush's original No Child Left Behind law but have been critical of how it's administered.




As the investigations continue, Democratic leaders are promising to tighten controls over the program.


Kennedy has introduced a bill that would require federal employees and contractors involved in Reading First to file yearly financial disclosures showing any ties to publishers or organizations that benefit from the program. His bill also would increase monitoring in an attempt to make sure that no federal employee was trying to influence or control decisions on local curricula.

http://www.realcities.com/mld/krwashington/17151352.htm
 
I'm so tired of these stories that push parental responsibility of raising children on others then berate those made responsible for implementation when they fail. If parents were involved in raising their own children, these type programs wouldn't need to exist in the first place.

-VG
 
VegasGuy said:
I'm so tired of these stories that push parental responsibility of raising children on others then berate those made responsible for implementation when they fail. If parents were involved in raising their own children, these type programs wouldn't need to exist in the first place.

-VG
Than why am I paying so much in taxes for a system that is flawed?
 
JUju2005 said:
Than why am I paying so much in taxes for a system that is flawed?
No child is left behind because everyone is being held back.
Its a typical George W policy, teach kids how to better pass tests rather than teach them better.
Welcome to the future, I present to you Idiocracy, the true life reenactment.
 
<font size="5"><center>Scores Rise Since 'No Child' Signed</font size>
<font size="4">Study's Authors Unsure Whether to Credit Law for Gains</font size></center>

By Amit R. Paley
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, June 6, 2007; Page A01

The nation's students have performed significantly better on state reading and math tests since President Bush signed his landmark education initiative into law five years ago, according to a major independent study released yesterday.

The study's authors warned that it is difficult to say whether or how much the No Child Left Behind law is driving the achievement gains. But Republican and Democratic supporters of the law said the findings indicate that it has been a success. Some said the findings bolster the odds that Congress will renew the controversial law this year.

"This study confirms that No Child Left Behind has struck a chord of success with our nation's schools and students," U.S. Education Secretary Margaret Spellings said in a statement. "We know the law is working, so now is the time to reauthorize."

The report, which experts called the most comprehensive analysis of test data from all 50 states since 2002, concluded that the achievement gap between black and white students is shrinking in many states and that the pace of student gains increased after the law was enacted. The findings were particularly significant because of their source: the nonpartisan Center on Education Policy, which in recent years has issued several reports that have found fault with aspects of the law's implementation.

Jack Jennings, president of the D.C.-based center and a former Democratic congressional aide, said a decade of school improvement efforts at local, state and national levels has contributed to achievement gains.

"No Child Left Behind, though, is clearly part of the mix of reforms whose fruit we are now seeing," he said.

Some skeptics said the study overstated the extent of academic gains. Others said the law should not be credited for the positive results.

"There are a lot of problems with No Child Left Behind that we need to fix because they work against some of the progress that is being noted in this study," said Edward J. McElroy, president of the American Federation of Teachers, a 1.3 million-member union.

The law requires all public school students to be tested in reading and math every year from grades 3 through 8 and once in high school, and it prescribes a series of sanctions on schools that do not make adequate progress. States and the District are allowed to design their own tests and set their own standards.

President Bush and senior Democratic lawmakers are seeking to renew No Child Left Behind this year, despite mounting attacks on the law from the political left and right. Some conservative Republicans call the law an unnecessary expansion of federal government, and some liberal Democrats complain it has placed too much emphasis on high-stakes tests and discouraged creativity.

Key lawmakers worry that if the law is not reauthorized by year's end, it will become next to impossible to do so until a new president takes office in 2009. One crucial sign of progress or stalemate is whether the congressional education committees approve a bill before the August recess.

Rep. Dale E. Kildee (D-Mich.), chairman of the House subcommittee that oversees elementary and secondary education, plans to review the center's study with Jennings in a hearing tomorrow.

"I think the study certainly will be helpful for winning reauthorization of No Child Left Behind," Kildee said. "Passing a major education bill is difficult, but I think the energy is there, and this study will contribute to the will to get something done."

Researchers for the nearly $1 million study -- titled "Answering the Question That Matters Most: Has Student Achievement Increased Since No Child Left Behind?" -- spent 18 months gathering data from the states, much of which was verified and brought together for the first time. They said D.C. public schools did not cooperate.

The study examined the percentage of students whose scores were rated as proficient or higher, a frequently reported measure, and a less-common statistical tool, known as "effect size," to help gauge average student performance. Conclusions were drawn from states that administered comparable tests for at least three years. Gaps in the data meant that not all states were included in evaluations of certain subjects and grade levels.

The study found that gains tended to be larger in math than in reading and larger at the elementary level than in middle and high school.

In elementary school math, 37 out of 41 states with adequate data showed significant gains.

In middle school reading, such increases were found in 20 out of 39 states, and in high school reading, in 16 out of 37.

The study also found that 14 of 38 states with sufficient data showed shrinking gaps in reading scores between black and white students and that there was no evidence of a widening achievement gap in that subject in other states. The researchers cautioned that the gaps remain enormous, with black students scoring as many as 30 percentage points, on average, behind white students in some states.

The analysis also found that test-score gains accelerated after enactment of No Child Left Behind in nine of the 13 states with sufficient data.

In the Washington region, the study confirmed previous reports of increases in reading and math scores in Maryland and Virginia.

Virginia was one of the few states where gains slowed after 2002. Andrew J. Rotherham, a member of the state Board of Education, said Virginia had made major progress before the law took effect.

Some scholars criticized the report's methodology. Bruce Fuller, a professor of education and public policy at the University of California at Berkeley, said it made little sense to draw conclusions when so few states have adequate data. He also said the researchers overstated small gains and did not adequately address states that he said have been dumbing down standards.

"These big-hearted analysts, to amend an adage, look at a glass that's nine-tenths' empty and celebrate that it's one-tenth full," Fuller wrote in an e-mail.

Chester E. Finn Jr., president of the District-based Thomas B. Fordham Foundation and who has criticized the law's implementation, said the study showed that academic performance is moving in the right direction even though much remains to done.

"It's not champagne time," Finn said. "But it's not sackcloth and ashes time, either."


http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/06/05/AR2007060502684.html?hpid=topnews
 
That a Kennedy would accuse Bush of political manipulation and cronyism must be a fucking joke!

Political manipulation is whats going on when Kennedy and his pals on the left call No Child left Behind a failure.

Handing control of our education system to the teachers Unions.is a far better Idea than No Child Left Behind in Mr Kennedy's eyes.

He will point to ever negative in the program. Just to Kill the program.

Testing kids, hold teacher and schools responsible if they fail the children in their care, will now turned into mis-management and conflicts of interest all blamed on Bush.

It does not matter if the program is working.

Democrats will use things like congressional over sight to manipulate public opinion on the program.

Does the program produce better educated kids,.compared to the system it replaced?

Well that does not matter if the funds does not end up where the DNC
benefits the most.

Private schools are become more and more the only choice for properly educating a child. Parents don't have the time or passions to deal with political infighting over education funding.
 
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