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Thursday, September 06, 2007
Rebecca Hagelin :: Townhall.com Columnist
Education Policy: Putting Congress to the Test
by Rebecca Hagelin
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Visitors to the Department of Education in Washington, D.C., encounter a bit of ticky-tacky architecture when they enter the otherwise grand, white-marble building: They must pass through a façade that resembles the entrance of a little red schoolhouse. It’s probably the most ridiculous, oxymoronic (and moronic) structure in town. And just to make sure that folks feel all “folksy” as they enter, the phrase “No Child Left Behind” is emblazoned across the top. Some DOE genius seems to believe that if you force people to first walk through a little fake door of a fake neighborhood school, maybe they’ll ignore the fact that they have entered the belly of a bureaucratic beast. Heck, maybe they’ll even think they’re at Disneyworld.

This absurd structure symbolizes the problems of the “No Child Left Behind” era that local educators, students and parents are suffering through. The sappy name says one thing, but when you get inside, you see it’s just another failed government effort.

Lawmakers are considering whether to reauthorize NCLB, the Bush administration’s signature education reform. And while some of its intentions deserve praise -- specifically, the focus on reducing achievement gaps and ensuring that all children receive a quality education -- most aspects don’t make the grade. When President Bush agreed to change his NCLB draft to pacify Sen. Ted Kennedy, NCLB became yet another big-government recipe for disaster in an already failing school system.

Eugene Hickok knows. A former U.S. deputy secretary of education, he recently served as a Bradley education fellow at The Heritage Foundation. “Although fashioned with noble intentions, NCLB created a powerful perverse incentive for states to lower their academic standards, and that pressure to lower standards will grow stronger with each passing year unless Congress makes substantial changes,” he writes in a Heritage paper.

Here’s why: NCLB requires states to test students every year and show that they’re making progress toward all students demonstrating “proficiency” on state-level tests by 2014. A laudable goal, to be sure, and no one denies that we should push students to succeed. But because the requirement is an imposed solution -- an edict handed down from on high, rather than one generated by parents and local officials -- many states have reacted predictably: To avoid federal penalties, they’ve lowered their standards to ensure that more students pass the test. As Hickok shows, Texas, Arizona and other states are leading an unfortunate “race to the bottom.”

You could call this outcome an example of the Law of Unintended Consequences at work --except that it really shouldn’t surprise anyone. At least, not anyone who knows that it’s a mistake to put Washington in charge of an area best left to the states. As Sen. Barry Goldwater said back in 1958 when he opposed the National Defense Education Act of 1958, the first federal law that provided funding to schools: “Federal aid to education invariably means federal control of education.”

Those who push for that control may do so with the best of intentions, but it often winds up backfiring on them. Only the worst partisan hack could doubt President Bush’s desire to end “the soft bigotry of low expectations,” and his original proposal for NCLB did include some conservative ideas -- cutting bureaucracy, giving states flexibility, promoting school choice. But as Heritage education experts Dan Lips and Evan Feinberg note, these provisions were dropped during negotiations with Congress. “What emerged,” they write, “was a law that has increased spending by 41 percent, expanded federal authority and bureaucracy, and created 7 million hours per year worth of new regulations and paperwork for state and local authorities.”

Obviously, this isn’t what the president -- not to mention millions of parents -- had in mind.

Congress still has the opportunity to do the right thing and make the law work. One approach that sounds promising comes from Sens. Jim DeMint (R-S.C.) and John Cornyn (R-Texas). Their “A-PLUS Act” would let states opt out of NCLB and enter into performance agreements. “Their plan would give states freedom from federal bureaucracy and red tape if they agree to establish academic goals and maintain a consistent, transparent testing system over time to determine whether students are learning,” Lips and Feinberg write.

The best part of this approach is that it would move decisions about education back to the state and local level, closer to parents. Those of us who champion family issues are sometimes asked what type of education we favor: Public? Private? Homeschool? The fact is, children can excel at all three. What’s important is that their parents, who know them best, are the ones making the choices about what works best for their children -- and when.

Parent-centered education reforms continue to proliferate nationwide. This year, more than 1 million children will be able to attend safe and effective schools chosen by their parents, thanks to reforms implemented at the state and local level.

I urge you to become better acquainted with the many schooling options now available. Heritage’s “Types of School Choice” is a great place to start. It outlines just about everything, from tax credits and education savings accounts to scholarships and charter schools. And it shows why parents should settle for nothing less than excellence when it comes to the supremely important task of educating their children.

We need to remember that parents -- not federal bureaucrats -- are best situated to direct their children’s education. Congress and President Bush should study his words when he was governor of Texas: “The federal government should be a limited partner, not a general partner. If they feel like sending money back to the states, fine. But don’t tell us how to run things.”

It’s time to tear down the NCLB façade and restore true localization and parental control to education.

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About The Author
Rebecca Hagelin is a public speaker on the family and culture and the author of the new best seller, 30 Ways in 30 Days to Save Your Family.
 
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The only way to TRULY fix
the Department of Education is to eliminate it.
Get rid of it completely and give education BACK to parents and local government.
Stop teaching things parents DON'T WANT TAUGHT TO THEIR CHILDREN.
Go back to reading, writing and arithmetic. Along with geography, civics and history. And rid the curriculum of all pc isms.

Ronald Reagan was right
Abolish the Dept of Education.

Attach the money to the child and let parents enroll them in any school they choose, public or private. The private sector would make the public schools obsolete in about two years.

FIX???
What's the government ever fixed?

school choice
ditto Scottie... My grandchildren will never darken the doorway of a "Publik Indoktrination Center"

The DOE
Was an invention of Jimmy “Coward” Carter. That tells you all you need to know about it. Liberals think that they control us. EXCUSE ME, “We The People” pay for The DOE and ALL THE SCHOOLS. Therefore, what is taught should be decided by us on a local level, NOT according to The Drunken Whims of The Massachusetts Murderer.

The way to fix The DOE is with a Wrecking Ball!

Close the Department of Education
An which presidential candidate do you think would actually work to close the DOE? Hint: rhymes with Don Hall.

It's unanimous!
Explain where the Constitution authorizes the federal government to have any say in education and I would write another word. And if you come up with the "general welfare" clause, I will hunt you down and dispatch you to where you belong.

Sorry would should be won't
My bad.

see here for where creation of
DOE might be in Const.

http://www.townhall.com/columnists/FredThompson/2007/04/26/rewriting_history_a_classroom_at_a_time&Comments=true#b73194ef-e62a-4668-ac48-0898e81abdfd

start at post 4/27 @9:20
(FWIW I think many of the posts on that article
were quite interesting - mine most of all, of
course)

Enjoy!

Eliminate the Department of Education
Return education to the States thereby eliminating a vast very expensive bureacracy full of lifetime bureaucrats. States can and should continue the crusade for accountability without the expensive and time consuming multiple reports required of educators by the Federal Government. Testing of students isn't all bad and can be handled by the states. I saw teachers in schools where I was a social worker skillfully using testing to see where their teaching needed a change to accomplish teaching goals (not teaching to the test).

Style over substance
The opening paragraph of this article actually says it all. Since the Ed. Dept. was started by Carter, it is filled with leftists who think they know better than we do,what our children should learn.

It's all about sybolism, the little red school house facade is a perfect example of style over substance. Who cares if our kids are being indoctrinated, and dumbed down to the lowest common denominator? We feel better about ourselve because we're leaving no child behind.

Want to improve education, And save billions of dollars? Shut down the DoE and hand out school vouchers for the average amount the govt. spends on public schools. If the public schools are so great they won't lose students to private schools.
Time for the DoE and the teachers unions to put our money where their mouths are.
Of course that will never happen the NEAhas one goal, and it's not teaching our kids, it's making sure no teacher, no matter how incompetent, gets fired, Ever.

Shut down pub.educa.
Pub. ed. is not in the Const. It comes from state const.'s and most of them have only had mandatory attendance laws since 100 years ago. NJ's go back to the 1880s, but CA didn't pass mand. attendance until 1913.

Ergo, a return to all private school ed. is not that long ago and not chiseled in stone.

Turn brds of ed. into bds. of trustees. Let parents keep rax monies and pay direct tuition. Find a formula for renters to use a portion of the real estate taxes normally paid by landlords for their tuitions.

Immediately, the fed gov't can get out of ed. and save gadzillions in just shuffling tax collection and dispersals among bureacracies.

The associaitons (unions) will lost clout.

Current facilities can be used if sending areas are limited to townships or counties.

New all-voucher schools can throw-out progressive mission statements that bleat about student potential and self esteem and return to their mission of teaching skills and cultural background young people need to become productive adults.

Actually, Mike Piscal in W. LA with his charter schools program is beginning to produce the above model through fundraising and hard-line academics. He says he eventually wants to takeovfer LA schools altogether.

The CAEA hates him, but that's the point.


One Little Problem
There's one little problem with the plan you-all want, which sounds like "no public schools, and the government providing vouchers to parents so they can send their kids to private schools". Right now the way to go to private school is to pay, often a fairly high tuition. Many of the people calling for vouchers (ie free government money, the very thing they claim to despise when it goes to the poor, elderly, sick etc) are not people of means or background. Their kids are not the kind of kids currently attending Country Day Prep for cash tuition.

So when all these folks get to send their children, via vouchers, ie free, to private schools, all the problems carried by public school pupils and parents will then be lodged in the private schools. What do you think is going to happen when the sophisticated CEOs and corporate attorneys who are paying $20,000 a year tuition to have their children in private school find out that the school is now in the hands of plumbers and fork-lift operators who don't want evolution taught but do want prayers to open every class? Who expect to ban a literary classic from the school library because it takes the Lord's name in vain? Who don't want foreign languages taught because they're not American? Who want to crush anything "elite" (get rid of soccer, bring on the dirt bikes).

In other words, what makes you think you will be welcomed at private schools?

And the philosophy of this confuses me. You want a government handout so you will have a freebie for using private property. Is that conservative?
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