January 8 marks the fifth anniversary of President Bush's signature
education reform initiative, the No Child Left Behind Act
(NCLB).
Soon, the new Democratic-controlled Congress will embark on the
ninth federal foray into the world of elementary and secondary
education. (The first came in 1965.)
Sadly, after four decades and hundreds of billions of taxpayer
dollars, it is hard to demonstrate how the federal government's
involvement in K-12 education has improved student
achievement.
Increased funding for an ever-expanding menu of federal programs
not only steered education policy to numerous dead-end education
fads but caused state and local education officials to develop a
"compliance mentality," meaning they devoted too much time to
adhering to federal regulatory requirements and not enough to
delivering a quality education.
The No Child Left Behind Act started with the noblest of
intentions. "I do not want to be the national principal," President
Bush said in 2000, "I believe in local control of schools." Indeed,
Bush's first blueprint would have given state and local school
bureaucracies more flexibility and held them accountable for
student performance, as well as injected the ultimate form of
accountability-giving parents the power to remove their children
from failing schools and move them (and some federal funding) to a
better school, be it public, private or religious.
But something happened on the way to the Rose Garden signing
ceremony. At the insistence of senior congressional liberals such
as Sen. Ted Kennedy (D.-Mass.) and George Miller (D.-Calif.), these
key features of Bush's plan were dropped or watered down. Plus,
1,100 pages of substantial new requirements were downloaded on
state and local education agencies while taxpayers were asked to
bear the brunt of a 26% increase (to $22 billion per year) in
federal education funding.
After five years, it's more apparent than ever that the federal
government cannot force local school systems to expand parental
choice. Of the 3.9 million students who were eligible to use the
limited public school option in NCLB, for example, less than 1%
successfully maneuvered through the maze of bureaucratic roadblocks
erected by union-addled big-city school systems.
One thing rose significantly, however: the added regulatory
burden. According to the Office of Management and Budget, in 2006
state and local education bureaucrats had to devote an additional
6.7 million hours to NCLB-inspired record-keeping, reporting and
third-party disclosure.
Congress should return policy-making authority to state and local
levels through the so-called "Charter-State Option." This would
allow every state to choose either the current briar patch of
hundreds of federal programs, each with its own funding stream and
unique set of detailed regulatory requirements, or a simplified
contractual arrangement in which the state would have broad
authority to consolidate its federal funds and refocus them on
state-directed initiatives.
The charter-state option would restore greater federalism in
education, allow state leaders to embrace innovative strategies
according to their local needs, priorities and reform philosophy,
and make them more directly responsible to parents and
taxpayers.
Freedom for the States
Former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush (R.) offered the most succinct
argument on behalf of the charter-state concept: "Though the
federal contribution to education in Florida is small, only about
7% of total spending, it takes more than 40% of the state's
education staff to oversee and administer federal dollars." In
fact, he continued, federal regulatory requirements are so onerous
that "six times as many people are required to administer a federal
education dollar as are required [to administer] a state
dollar."
"Imagine," he asked, "what our states could do if we could spend
more of our time and energy working to improve student achievement,
rather than tediously complying with a dizzying array of federal
rules."
On cue, Republican Senators Jim DeMint (S.C.) and John Cornyn
(Tex.) will introduce legislation that embodies the state-charter
approach.
Despite their conservative credentials, it would be a mistake to
assume that the DeMint/Cornyn effort will languish in some
conservative policy ghetto on Capitol Hill. After all, frustration
with NCLB extends far and wide-from state and local education
agencies frustrated by the law's regulatory constraints to
education reformers of all philosophical stripes who have
essentially given up on Washington's ability to leverage
substantive education reforms.
Some states have passed resolutions protesting NCLB, others have
risked losing federal funds by insisting that state education law
take precedence over federal law. School districts have opted to
forfeit federal funds rather than comply with NCLB, and a
consortium of 14 states have banded together to assess NCLB's
regulatory burden.
If all this frustration galvanizes around a visionary alternative
to NCLB such as the one proposed by DeMint and Cornyn,
conservatives might have a horse in the next big education policy
debate.
Michael Franc who
has held a number of positions on Capitol Hill, is vice president
of Government Relations.