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Sunday, December 09, 2007
George Will :: Townhall.com Columnist
Stop Mandating a Bureaucratic Mess
by George Will
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Will the Dems' health care Christmas Present to America be an improvement or detriment to our health care system?


So says "The Proficiency Illusion," a report from the Thomas B.

Fordham Institute, which studies education reform. Its findings include:

The rationale for standards-based reform was that expectations would become more rigorous and uniform, but states' proficiency tests vary "wildly" in difficulty, "with 'passing scores' ranging from the 6th percentile to the 77th." Indeed, "half of the reported improvement in reading, and 70 percent of the reported improvement in mathematics, appear idiosyncratic to the state test." In some states, tests have become more demanding; but in twice as many states, the tests in at least two grades have become easier. NCLB encourages schools to concentrate their efforts on the relatively small number of students near the state test's proficiency minimum -- the students that can most help the state meet its "adequate yearly progress" requirements.

Rep. Peter Hoekstra, a Republican who represents western Michigan's culturally cohesive Dutch Calvinist communities, opposed NCLB from the start because he thought it would "tear apart the bond between the schools and the local communities." He believes the reauthorized version of NCLB will "gut" accountability. He is gloomily sanguine about that because he thinks accountability belongs at the local level anyway, and because removing meaningful accountability removes NCLB's raison d'etre. He proposes giving states the option of submitting to Washington a "Declaration of Intent" to reclaim full responsibility for K-12 education.

Such states would receive their portion of K-12 funds as block grants.

But Rep. Scott Garrett, a New Jersey Republican, warns that Washington, with its unsleeping hunger for control, steadily attaches multiple strings to block grants. He proposes to allow states to opt out from under NCLB's mandates and regulations and to give residents of those states tax credits equal to the portion of their taxes their state would have received back in federal funds for K-12 education. Garrett thinks that this could be a template for states to escape many entanglements with Washington.

NCLB intensified what Paul Posner of George Mason University calls "coercive federalism." Kenneth Wong and Gail Sunderman of Brown University and the Harvard Civil Rights Project, respectively, say NCLB "signaled the end of 'layer cake' federalism and strengthened the notion of 'marble cake'

federalism, where the national and subnational governments share responsibilities in the domestic arena." Hoekstra's and Garrett's proposals would enable states to push Washington toward where it once was and where it belongs regarding K through 12 education: Out.

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About The Author
George F. Will is a 1976 Pulitzer Prize winner whose columns are syndicated in more than 400 magazines and newspapers worldwide.
 
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It's worse than you think!!!
Sadly, I teach in a public school. 75% of the kids in the school are in the US illegally. Whose paying that tab??

As for NCLB, it is a colossal waste of money, and I have very serious concerns about it.

a) We DO focus a ton of time and a ton of money on the low kid. The average kid, who in a public school is really a low level kid, is NOT pushed forward. Of course, we pay no attention to the smart kid either. He already makes good scores so I guess there is no need to challenge him.

b) When do NOT plot the growth of EACH child. If I am in charge of education, I encourage teachers to make gains for ALL students. For each class, I give a pre and post test. I judge teachers on the improvement of EACH child.

c) NCLB requires absolutely NOTHING from the parents or the students. All responsibility for a child's education is placed on the school. This is a typical LIBERAL attitude. (Poor parents are too stupid to help their kids...so we will won't make them responsible...of course, poor parents are poor because they never have to take responsibility!!)

d) In my school system anyway (DeKalb Co/Atlanta), I have many people from the county and the state enter my room. These people make more money than I do...and all they do is LOOK AT MY WALLS to make sure I have the correct standard listed and that I have the correct amount of student work on the walls. I don't mind putting those things up, but we don't need to spend hundreds of thousands of dollars to check on this little detail.

e) My school also evaluates my lesson plans...not my lessons...my lesson plans!! They don't have time to evaluate my lessons. Even more maddening is the fact that results don't matter. (You would think that with NCLB they would, but they don't.) I coud have unbelievable test scores, but if my lesson plans look skimpy, I am considered a poor teacher.

No Child Left Behind Act-
Another Ted Kennedy legacy for taxpayers. George Will was totally correct when he said government will double down on a recognized failed policy. Look at Los Angeles Unified. Built the most expensive campus in America, (currently not usable),on an oil field in downtown LA so shallow you could pull fossil fuel out of the dirt with your bare hands. Gave amnesty this week for thousands of employees to keep two hundred fifty dollars of wrongfully paid payroll if they return the rest by December 17, 2007. Purchased a payroll system so deficient workers were sometimes not paid on time for over two to three weeks. The LAUSD has now embarked on their latest money spending spree at taxpayer expense for the benefit of our children's education. Spending our tax dollars to improve the boards poor image. Why don't we voters approve another tax bond to make sure our elected school board members don't look bad. That is after all, more important than our childrens education, according to the voters who approve these bonds at every opportunity.
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