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NCLB Let's Get It Right

The AFT has been a longtime leader in its commitment to:

  • high standards for all children, with appropriate tests to measure whether the standards are being met;
  • disaggregation of student achievement data;
  • well-qualified teachers and well-trained paraprofessionals in every classroom; and
  • extra support for students and schools performing below proficient levels.

 These are the stated goals of the No Child Left Behind Act.

 

However, flaws in the law are undercutting its potential, and improvements are needed to really increase student achievement. NCLB is due to be reauthorized this year. Now is the time to send a letter to your representatives and senators explaining the law’s shortfalls and offering constructive ideas for improvement.

Sample Letter for Campaign

Subject: NCLB - Let's Get It Right!

Dear [ Decision Maker ] ,

I am writing to express my concerns about the No Child Left Behind Act (NCLB). I believe in high standards for students, but believe that flaws in the law are undercutting its worthy goals.

For example, the adequate yearly progress (AYP) formula does not fully recognize gains in student achievement that schools starting furthest behind are really making, and labels them as failures for not reaching arbitrary proficiency levels.

Many of these schools are labeled as in need of improvement but often are making progress, although not at the arbitrary level set by states. When reauthorizing NCLB, Congress should implement an accountability system that gives credit for progress and/or proficiency. These goals should be set at ambitious but attainable levels. Congress also should require states and districts to audit their testing programs to prohibit them from layering unnecessary and duplicative tests on schools. Too much instructional time in classrooms is taken up by testing that is redundant or fails to yield timely or useful information.

Additional flexibility should be provided so that students with disabilities and English language learners can be appropriately included in assessment and accountability systems. The law should allow individualized education programs to determine how students with disabilities participate in state assessments, and allow English language learners to receive English instruction for a period of time before their test scores are included in AYP. Funding should be provided to develop appropriate assessments and accommodations for these groups of students.

Although NCLB prescribes interventions for struggling schools as the solution to raise student achievement, we have no evidence that current sanctions are effective. Instead of punitive sanctions, schools and districts need resources and the flexibility to implement research-based interventions. NCLB's current remedies--school choice, supplemental educational services and other "school improvement" provisions--are punitive, and are neither research- nor evidence-based. The first response to a struggling school should be systemic supportive interventions tailored to the needs of the school and its community. Struggling schools need a broad range of researched-based interventions--such as summer school, extended school day, reduced class size, and access to early childhood programs--in order to turn around and raise their achievement.

Every student deserves to be taught by teachers who know their subject matter and how to teach it, and supported by well-trained paraprofessionals. NCLB requires teachers to demonstrate that they are "highly qualified." In reauthorizing the bill, Congress should not impose additional requirements on teachers but should instead focus on providing them with the supports and professional development they need to succeed in the classroom. Paraprofessionals should also receive appropriate training and professional development.

Finally, NCLB should be funded at the level promised in the 2001 reauthorization. Since the law's passage, the gap between the amount that Congress promised for NCLB programs and what it has actually provided has grown to $55.7 billion. Current funding is not enough to serve all eligible students, and many of the students who are being served are not being served sufficiently--particularly in districts with the greatest concentrations of poverty.

I urge you to address these issues during the upcoming reauthorization so that we can make the constructive changes needed to help spur student achievement for all children.

Sincerely,

Campaign Launched:
July 19, 2006



Background Information

NCLB represents the federal government's commitment to educating disadvantaged children and seeks to close the achievement gap that currently exists.  Since the bill's passage in 2002, the AFT and its state and local affiliates have worked with the Department of Education, state and local education authorities, and others in the civil rights and education communities to help achieve the positive goals of NCLB. However, the AFT recognizes that the goals of the legislation cannot be met without changes in the law, proper implementation and the necessary funding.  For example:

 

·         The AYP formula is a highly inaccurate and arbitrary yardstick for measuring progress.  The law sets predetermined benchmarks for students' proficiency without taking into account schools' starting points. Further, its testing of students with disabilities and English language learners is neither valid nor reliable.

·         The "highly qualified" teacher requirements, as currently implemented, are unworkable for some teachers and do not apply to all individuals, such as supplemental service providers and charter school teachers, who teach public school students. Paraprofessionals are not being provided with the range of options necessary to demonstrate that they are qualified nor with the financial support necessary to meet the requirements.

·         The AFT supports targeting resources to disadvantaged students who are struggling to reach state standards, but the narrow set of school improvement interventions are not research-based and may be punitive rather than helpful to the schools and children they serve. Further, requiring schools to funnel scarce Title I resources to support public school choice and supplemental services diverts already limited classroom resources to these unproven interventions.

·         These problems with the structure and implementation of the law have been exacerbated by a lack of adequate federal funding. It is clear that the increases in funding recommended by the administration for the upcoming fiscal year fall far short of (1) what is necessary to get the job done and (2) what the Congress anticipated would be required to meet the mandates of the law.

Problems with NCLB and its implementation must be corrected to continue progress toward improving school performance and closing the academic achievement gap.


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