Will
Rogers once said, "If you ever injected truth into politics, you
would have no politics." This is especially true when it comes to
education and the federal law known as the No Child Left Behind Act
(NCLB). But truth--always a rare commodity--is growing rarer still
as the nation approaches November, and discussion about this
complex and bipartisan law is deteriorating into a partisan mud
fight.
The
misleading rhetoric does a disservice to the public and does
nothing to address the fundamental problem: Too many students lack
the knowledge and skills to succeed in school, and those left
behind in school will likely remain behind as adults.
Two
years ago, by a large majority, Congress enacted the NCLB to raise
achievement for all students. Whether the law is improving student
achievement is an important question. An honest discussion of the
law's merits and shortcomings may be hard to come by, but it is
nonetheless essential to answer the most important question: "Where
do we go from here?"
Where We Have Been
The
NCLB is the new name for an older body of law, the Elementary and
Secondary education Act of 1965 (ESEA). Signed by President Lyndon
Johnson, the ESEA provided funds to local education agencies
(school districts) to meet "the special educational needs of
educationally deprived children." It also provided funds for
libraries, education research, and state education departments and
programs. Signing the 34-page law, President Johnson proudly
stated, "No law I have signed or will ever sign means more to the
future of America."
Like
other Great Society programs, the ESEA sought to alleviate the
effects of poverty. Then, as now, children from low-income and
minority families did not do as well in school as their peers did.
On national tests such the National Assessment of Educational
Progress (NAEP), administered by the U.S. Department of Education,
there are significant achievement gaps between black and white
students and between low-income and higher-income students.
NAEP
long-term trend tests have tracked achievement by race for three
decades. In the early 1970s, there was a 53- and 54-point
achievement gap between black and white 17-year-old students on
reading and science tests and a 40-point gap in math. Despite a
reduction in the gap in the late seventies and eighties, the gap
grew during the nineties. On the most recent test, black and white
scores were 31 points apart in reading and math and 52 points apart
in science.
Similar NAEP tests that track achievement
by income levels conducted in the past decade show an average
26-point gap in reading and math between low-income and
higher-income eighth graders. This means that in 2003, 16 percent
of low-income eighth graders were proficient in reading and 12
percent in math, while about three times as many higher-income
students were at grade level.
Graduation rates for minorities and
lower-income students are also lower. Anecdotal evidence suggests
that black senior high school students are graduating with
eighth-grade skills.
By
the 1994 reauthorization, the law had grown to over 600 pages and
more than sixty programs. The Improving America's Schools Act of
1994 required significantly more testing and accountability than
the 1988 reauthorization had. It required states to have academic
standards, testing, and disaggregated reports to determine whether
disadvantaged students were making adequate yearly progress (AYP)
toward meeting state content and performance standards. Schools
accepting Title I funds that were not making AYP were subject to
corrective actions as determined by state and local law. Among
these corrective actions were the loss of funds, staff replacement,
or allowing students to transfer to other public schools within the
district. High-performing schools were eligible for rewards.
The
growth of standards and accountability provisions from 1988 to 1994
to 2002 tracks the growth of the standards and achievement movement
that began in the 1970s with minimum competency tests. In the past
two decades, most states have adopted state-level standards in
math, reading, history, science, and other subjects and tests to
ensure that students are meeting these standards. Some have adopted
"high-stakes" tests used to determine whether students may ascend
to the next grade or graduate. Some give monetary rewards to
high-performing schools. In Florida, high-performing schools
receive awards while low-performing schools receive additional
monetary aid and technical assistance. Students in the
lowest-performing schools are permitted to transfer to other
schools, public or private.
Research has bolstered the case for
accountability by demonstrating how systems in Florida, Texas,
Massachusetts, and other states have increased achievement.
Expectations, rewards, and sanctions focus the energies of students
and educators on agreed-upon outcomes. Testing information enables
teachers to know whether students are mastering the material. The
data are useful for school leaders in making management decisions
and for parents in choosing schools and monitoring their children's
progress.
Despite all the talk about accountability,
the accountability provisions in the 1994 act were not strongly
enforced. While most states had some level of standards and
testing, school sanctions were rare. State sanctions were
nonexistent. By the end of the Clinton Administration, only
seventeen states were in full compliance--even though all were
receiving funds.
In
1999, reformers conceived of a new idea that would give states
complete freedom in administering their ESEA funds in exchange for
accountability for performance. The intention was to reduce the red
tape associated with federal aid provided to states. The federal
government supplies less than 10 percent of the over $454 billion
the nation spends on its schools. For this, it demands a
disproportionate amount of paperwork and bureaucracy. Reformers
proposed to bring the federal bureaucratic burden into balance with
the level of federal funding supplied by Washington for local
education. In return, states would have provided baseline data on
their students' educational achievement levels and would have
tracked these levels for the term of the federal grant. States that
showed improved educational attainment for their students would
have qualified to continue under the agreement. The bill would have
brought an end to the myriad of rules, regulations, and paperwork
and the beginning of accountability based on performance. A pilot
version of this plan, called the Academic Achievement for All Act
(or "Straight A's"), was passed by the House of Representatives in
1999. As the 2000 election season progressed, however, the ESEA
reauthorization stalled.
The
idea gained new life in then-candidate George W. Bush's education
platform. He advocated greater accountability, flexibility,
parental choice, and consolidation of the act's numerous
special-interest programs. He said, "I don't want to tinker with
the machinery of the federal role in education. I want to redefine
that role entirely." After the election, these proposals would
become the framework for the administration's ESEA
reauthorization.
The Making of the NCLB Act
The
new administration sought to toughen the ESEA's accountability
provisions. The proposal required states to test all students
annually in grades 3-8 in reading and mathematics; to disaggregate
the scores by race, gender, English-language proficiency,
disability, and socioeconomic status; and then to publish the data.
The disaggregation was meant to ensure that minority populations
were improving. Aggregate school performance can conceal
disparities in achievement among students.
President Bush spoke eloquently about the
"soft bigotry of low expectations" that allowed so many young men
and women to fall behind and never reach their potential. In the
beginning of his proposal, he made the case: "Too many children in
America are segregated by low expectations, illiteracy, and
self-doubt. In a constantly changing world that is demanding
increasingly complex skills from its workforce, children are
literally being left behind. It doesn't have to be this way."
Under his plan, schools that did not make
adequate yearly progress toward meeting the state standards would
receive additional assistance, but continued failure would bring
sanctions. After two years of making inadequate progress, students
would be allowed to transfer to another public school. After three
years, the students who remained at the school would be eligible to
receive free tutoring or transfer to another public or private
school. States that failed to make progress could lose a portion of
their administrative funds. The President called upon Congress to
eliminate special-interest programs and focus the act on a few
national priorities. His proposal included the House's Straight A's
plan to give states and districts the option of entering a
five-year performance "charter agreement" that would allow them
complete freedom over their ESEA funds.
Congress received the President's plan and
began to work on the reauthorization. The original bill, as
introduced in the House of Representatives, strongly resembled the
President's plan. It even bore the inspiring title "No Child Left
Behind." By the time the legislative process was through, however,
private school choice, consolidation, and program flexibility lay
on the cutting room floor.
Before it got to the House floor, the
private school choice provision was eliminated. Individual
legislators added back nearly all of the small, special-interest
programs such as Ready-to-Learn Television, Star Schools, the
National Writing Project, Arts in education, education for Native
Hawaiians, and others.
On
the House floor, members reattached the Women's Educational Equity
Act, which had been eliminated in the committee's initial draft.
This seventies-era program, enacted to promote "equity" in
educational policies and programs, is based on the premise that
"teaching and learning practices in the United States are
frequently inequitable as such practices relate to women and
girls." The problem is that the inequity that the act was designed
to rectify no longer exists. According to statistics, boys, not
girls, are falling behind. Girls equal or outperform boys on almost
every indicator of academic success, and their success continues
into adulthood. Onlookers in the House gallery witnessed how the
influence of special interests can trump the facts. The program
spends $3 million a year to help those who do not need it.
The
Senate version of the bill gained a host of new programs during
debate, leading one observer to dub it the "No Lobbyist Left Behind
Act." Nobody seemed willing to question how "educational, cultural,
apprenticeship, and exchange programs for Alaska natives, Native
Hawaiians, and their historical whaling and trading partners in
Massachusetts" were central to federal efforts to raise
achievement. Reformers had hoped that the Republicans' first
opportunity to oversee the reauthorization would result in a
departure from the old model, but it was still just business as
usual. The final 1,100-page bill that emerged was much like the old
ESEA: the same old programs, only with significantly higher
authorization levels. Congress basically grafted additional
accountability measures onto the old law.
As
for flexibility, the Straight A's "charter state" provision was
reduced to a pilot program that allows states limited flexibility
with their administration and state-level activities--a far cry
from being able to control the entire pool of state and local
funds. States' earlier eagerness to participate waned. Local
districts have more flexibility to transfer funds between
categorical grants. They can also participate in a demonstration
program to combine federal funding for specific programs. These
limited flexibility options were not what reformers had
envisioned.
In
the end, the final bill contained a close variant of the Bush
accountability plan but with a twist: The law expected all students
to reach proficiency in twelve years. Proponents believed that
anything less than 100 percent proficiency signaled a retreat from
high expectations for every student. After all, who doesn't deserve
to read and do math at grade level?
Specifically, the law requires states to
test students and report on their progress, with results
disaggregated by student subgroups. States must submit a plan that
shows how student performance will improve each year, with the goal
of full proficiency in math and reading in twelve years. Districts
must allow students in Title I-eligible schools that are in "school
improvement" status (meaning they did not make adequate yearly
progress for two years) to enroll in a better public school in the
district. Students in schools deemed "unsafe" may also exercise
choice. If the school does not meet AYP standards in the third
year, the district must provide low-income students in the school
access to free tutoring. In the fourth year, the district must
implement a corrective action plan that could include new curricula
or bringing new teachers on board. In the fifth year, the district
is required to significantly restructure the school. Tutoring and
public school choice must continue while the school is in
"corrective action" and restructuring.
It
is important to note that states, not the federal government,
determine the standards, design the tests, and set the bar for
proficiency. States and schools do not lose funds for poor
performance.
The
bill was passed by a vote of 381 to 41 in the House and 87 to 10 in
the Senate. The chairmen and ranking members of each chamber's
education committee, Representatives John Boehner (R-OH) and George
Miller (D-CA) and Senators Judd Gregg (R-NH) and Edward Kennedy
(D-MA), joined the President for the signing of the bill. The
President concluded his speech by saying: "Signing this bill is the
end of a long, long time of people sitting in rooms trying to
hammer out differences. It's a great symbol of what is possible in
Washington when good people come together to do what's right. But
it's just the beginning of change. And now it's up to you, the
local citizens of our great land, the compassionate, decent
citizens of America, to stand up and demand high standards, and to
demand that no child--not one single child in America--is left
behind."
Indeed, it was just the beginning.
The Hard Part: Implementation
Two
years have passed, and it is too early to tell whether the law is
working. State plan negotiations were not finished before June
2003. States and districts are still working out the kinks
regarding accountability programs, teacher quality, public school
choice, supplemental services, and other aspects of the law by
trial and error. There are both positive signs and complications,
but it is still too early to declare victory or defeat.
Although the federal law gives states the
freedom to set standards and create tests, it is highly
prescriptive about how AYP is determined, and these requirements
are not always compatible with preexisting state systems. As a
result, schools rated highly on the state system can fail to make
AYP according to the NCLB. Differences in how each system treats
subgroups or standards governing the percentage of students that
must be tested cause discrepancies in the ratings. In 2003 an
"excellent" rated school in Colorado did not make AYP while others
with unsatisfactory ratings cleared the AYP bar. Florida saw three
out of four of its "A" rated schools underperforming, according to
the NCLB.
The
problem is that inconsistency between state and federal systems
threatens to undermine people's confidence in both. Who should the
public believe? One of the strengths of the NCLB is that it puts
information in the hands of teachers, parents, and the public,
energizing them for change and improvement. If, however,
information is confusing or inconsistent, cynicism and apathy could
result.
Another problem exists: Some states have
set lower standards or created easier tests. Others have used
creative statistical strategies to increase their proficiency
scores. Still others have backloaded their accountability plans, so
that little is expected in the short term while large increases are
"planned" for the final years. For reasons that are quite
arbitrary, some states look rosy while others appear to be dropping
the ball.
The
subject of quality teachers raises still other questions. Under the
NCLB, "qualified" teachers must have a bachelor's degree, be state
certified, and demonstrate subject-area mastery by having their
college degree in the subject they teach or passing a state test on
the subject. These provisions may end up labeling some good
teachers as unqualified, while those who meet the letter of the law
but do not teach well get the stamp of approval. The problem could
be particularly acute in rural areas, where teachers teach multiple
subjects.
The
difficulties with AYP and teacher quality call into question the
efficacy of establishing a federal standard to govern 93,000 public
schools.
At
the local level, implementation of the public school choice and
supplemental services provisions has been uneven. Although
participation in choice and tutoring is growing, only a small
percentage of eligible students are participating. Nationwide, over
one thousand supplemental service (tutoring) providers have been
state approved. While some rural areas have only online providers
to offer, some urban and suburban areas have a diverse mix of
providers, including faith- and community-based organizations.
Districts also provide supplemental services. In some cases,
districts advantage their own programs by denying competitors space
to tutor and opportunities to notify parents of their services.
Public school choice implementation also
has not gone well, partly because of inadequate capacity and a
pattern of bureaucratic resistance. Rural districts and urban
districts with a majority of underachieving schools have few or no
high-quality alternatives for students who want to transfer. Most
states effectively eliminated the option to transfer from a
dangerous school by declaring that there are no unsafe schools in
the state. While some districts are going to great lengths to give
students several options, others subtly or not-so-subtly discourage
parents from seeking transfer options.
Researchers have discovered districts that
did not inform parents, gave parents a small window of time to
decide between their options, or only offered them schools that
were performing as poorly as or worse than the school their child
was trying to escape. They also found examples of subtle dissuasion
or obfuscation in letters to parents that are unclear about the
school's status and the options available. In her paper "No Child
Left Behind Mandates School Choice: Colorado's First Year," Colorado Independence
Institute researcher Pam Benigno includes the following from such a
letter sent by an unnamed district: "I believe that the high marks
made during the 2001-2002 school year prove that [name omitted in
report] is a successful school and moving to another school to get
a quality education just isn't necessary. But the federal
government did not ask my opinion. ... I hope that you as parents
will keep your children in [name omitted]. ..."
Another district letter said: "All schools
in District [name omitted] are committed to excellence through
continuous improvement. [Name omitted] Elementary is no exception.
Our school has been identified for `School Improvement' by the
Federal Title I guidelines. We are excited by this opportunity to
focus on increasing student achievement on the CSAP
assessments."
As
long as those who have the least to gain from granting transfers
and tutoring--the districts--control information and options, it is
likely that this education shell game will continue. Some districts
will do what they can to undermine the law, frustrate the will of
parents, and ultimately prevent students from gaining access to
safe and effective schools. The only market-driven engine in the
act will stall.
While much of the NCLB emphasizes
accountability to the state or federal government, the choice
provision is all that makes schools accountable to parents. The
NCLB requires states, districts, and schools to issue annual report
cards on academic achievement, teacher qualifications, and school
AYP status. This information is useless unless parents can act on
it. If there is insufficient capacity or will to provide families
with quality options, then Congress should broaden the pool of
providers. The federal government routinely uses private providers
to deliver services under Medicare, the food stamp program, welfare>
and social services, higher education, and other education programs
such as the Individuals with Disabilities education Act. There is
no reason why it should not use them to boost student
achievement.
Second Thoughts
As
any reader of a daily newspaper can attest, No Child Left Behind
has not been without opposition. States have complained of
inadequate flexibility and guidance from the department, some even
going so far as to pass resolutions criticizing the act or asking
for waivers. The term unfunded mandate has been tossed around
despite the fact that the act is both funded and voluntary. So far,
no state has refused to participate, although a few isolated
districts have pulled out; apparently the money is too good to pass
up. The Utah House of Representatives amended its strongly worded
resolution against NCLB to allow the state to continue to receive
federal funding.
Despite substantial yearly increases,
Democrats and their union allies criticize the level of funding.
They claim that the NCLB is underfunded because Congress has not
met the funding limits established in the bill. In response, the
administration revealed that states have $5.75 billion in unspent
federal ESEA funds in the bank. Some of the funds have languished
there for more than three and a half years. Representative John
Boehner, chairman of the House Committee on education and the
Workforce, questioned whether the large yearly increases in
spending were more than states and districts could spend, likening
the situation to "pumping gas into a flooded engine."
The
situation has made for strange bedfellows, with Kennedy and Utah's
Republican legislature lambasting the law and President Bush and
the education Trust, a left-leaning pro-accountability group,
defending it. Dueling studies by think tanks, member organizations,
and state agencies support one side or the other. Based on
different and sometimes methodologically creative assumptions, each
study "proves" that the NCLB is adequately or inadequately funded.
Some of the studies have padded their estimates by including costs
not required by the NCLB in their expense totals. In response,
AccountabilityWorks added up only the costs of goods and services
required by the law and compared the total to the amount
appropriated by Congress. It found that the act has been overfunded
and states have more than enough money to meet the requirements of
the NCLB.
Meanwhile, interest groups have
commissioned polls that seem designed to elicit the responses they
want to hear. Is anyone surprised that proponents found people love
the NCLB or that the union-backed poll discovered that people think
the government should spend more on education?
Near
the end of February 2004, the mounting criticism of the NCLB led
the Bush Administration itself to put forth some remedies. Testing
requirements for students with limited knowledge of English were
relaxed. In addition, education Secretary Rod Paige announced that
he was planning more changes, including a new interpretation of the
teacher quality requirements. He also allowed the most severely
disabled students to be tested separately from other students, thus
changing the way disabled students are treated under the law. These
moves seem to presage even more future changes.
The
rhetoric, perhaps inevitably, is likely to get louder and more
rancorous as the election approaches. Like it or not, when
politicians create education policy, education policy is influenced
by politics. Partisan bickering, one-size-fits-all policies,
special interest influence, facile explanations, and political
expediency are all part and parcel of federal involvement in
education. Even well-meaning politicians are concerned about public
perception and self-preservation. Politics necessarily inflates the
debate even when a thoughtful conversation would be more
beneficial. Ambiguity muddles the message, particularly when
explanations require more time than a sound bite allows. When the
audience has neither the time nor perhaps the desire to truly
understand the issue, it is easier to stick to the script. A
thoughtful discussion about funding or flexibility may not be
possible in an election year.
However, the discussion cannot be put off
indefinitely. In a few years, Congress will face another ESEA
reauthorization. "Where do we go from here" is a question that can
be answered only when other questions are satisfied. All policies
have merits and shortcomings. Even good policies have costs, and
even bad policies benefit some people. The question is, on balance,
whether the benefits outweigh the costs. Nearly four decades and
billions of dollars later, there is little empirical evidence to
show that the ESEA has worked. Will the changes in the NCLB succeed
in increasing student achievement, particularly for minority and
low-income students? Will the results justify the loss of state and
local control or the financial cost to taxpayers?
And
then there are the bigger questions--questions that should have
been asked last time around. To whom should schools be accountable?
The federal government? States? School boards? Parents? What should
the federal role be in raising achievement? If the ESEA model of
the past didn't help and the tough accountability model of today
doesn't work, where do we go from here? Should we revisit parental
choice? Local control? If the primary purpose of schools is to
teach students to read and do math presumably at grade level, why
does the federal government need to compel them with either carrots
or sticks to fulfill their mission? In the words of Secretary
Paige, "Is it too much to ask that a third-grade child read at a
third-grade level?"
Krista Kafer
is Senior education Policy Analyst at The Heritage Foundation.
This article first appeared in the May 2004 edition of The
World & I and is reprinted with permission.
Some Next Steps
As
the article above points out, it will take some time to assess
whether the No Child Left Behind Law is helping to improve student
achievement. It is already apparent, however, that some things need
attention. By taking the following steps, policymakers will be
better able to answer the question, "Where do we go from here?"
Honest Discussion. Elected
officials, special interest groups, grassroots organizations, and
the think tank community should commit to an honest discussion of
the benefits and costs of NCLB. Exaggerated claims and partisan
accusations obscure the issues and detract from the hard work of
improving academic achievement for all students.
Choice and Tutoring Options.
Congress and the federal Department of Education should ensure that
students in underperforming schools receive the public school
choice options and free tutoring to which they are entitled.
Funding. Congress should resist
demand for greater funding. According to several studies, the act
is adequately funded. In fact, states have billions of unspent
funds, some of it left over from the Clinton Administration. It is
important to note that NCLB is also a voluntary program. Since it
is both funded and voluntary, it is not an unfunded mandate, as
some critics charge.
Red Tape. Congress should enact
greater flexibility similar to the Academic Achievement for All
(Straight A's) provision that was not included in the final NCLB.
States that can show results should be given substantial
flexibility in the administration of federal education funds.