Per the L.A. Times
The Obama administration has given
10 states a waiver from the federal law known as No Child Left Behind -- once a
bipartisan hope to raise education standards, but now generally regarded as too
cumbersome and draconian.
The White House announced the first
round of waivers for 10 states Thursday morning. The administration had said
that it would grant the waivers because efforts to revise the 10-year-old law
have become bogged down in Congress even though members of both political
parties agree that the law has problems and is in need of major changes.
“After waiting far too long for
Congress to reform No Child Left Behind, my administration is giving states the
opportunity to set higher, more honest standards in exchange for more
flexibility,” President Obama said in a statement released with the
announcement.
“Today, we’re giving 10 states the
green light to continue making reforms that are best for them. Because if we’re
serious about helping our children reach their potential, the best ideas aren’t
going to come from Washington alone. Our job is to harness those ideas, and to
hold states and schools accountable for making them work.”
First, let’s look at the No Child
Left Behind act requirements. Basically,
the law required states to show that they had reached 100% proficiency by
2014. This requirement was for ALL
students, including the “Gap” children (minority and poor). Because the law’s framers wanted to be able
to take corrective action along the way they called for annual achievement
testing to show that at least a linear projection of the progress to get to the
goal in 2014 was met or exceeded. This
annual requirement was termed AYP (Annual Yearly Progress). The consequences for not meeting the AYP
consistently could be many but at the top they meant that the state would take
over the school, fire all the staff and start over. The law did have one gigantic flaw. It allowed each state to define proficiency
for its students, irregardless of how that matched up with the National
Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) or the standards of our best foreign competitors. As you would expect that has led many of the
states to adopt “weak” definitions of proficiency. And in fact you can safely say that all
states fall far short of the international competition and short of the NAEP
requirements.
Now it is true that educators
consider the requirements of No Child Left Behind to be draconian and
cumbersome as the LA Times article mentions.
Educators are consistent in stubbornly refusing to embrace the changes
needed to really solve our education problems.
Of course, they are very comfortable with the status quo in an education
system that is run for the benefit of the adults who work there, not the
students. They are expert at “playing”
the system to get a continuing, ever-increasing flow of money to support new
initiatives which preserve the status quo.
These always fit the “trying to do the wrong thing better”
category. That is, the weakness of our
system is not that it isn’t being worked correctly, it is that the system
itself can’t work which is why improvements of the scale needed are never
achieved on a broad scale. You have to
hand it to our educators for their ability to ignore the facts that all of the
countries who beat us in achievement use a different system.
Sadly it is the one we used to use
in the Nineteenth and early Twentieth Centuries before John Dewey and the
Progressives began to take control of our education establishment. Their
approach was dumbed down and much less rigorous in teacher training. The takeover was complete by the late 1960s
when all high school graduates had essentially been exposed to the new system
for their entire school career.
Consistent with that time frame SAT scores plummeted. To fix the problem requires going back to the
rigor of curriculum and teacher preparation that existed before. You will hear from educators that the current
teacher training is more than what was required in the nineteenth and early
twentieth centuries. It is true that
teachers back then were typically trained in Normal schools which gave two to
three years of training after high school to prepare teachers. Today all teachers require at least a
bachelors (4 year) degree from an education school to be certified. There are alternative certification routes
but they amount to very small portion of all teachers.
The problem with the new teacher
training is that it takes the majority of students from the bottom third of
their high school graduating class and transforms them into all A
students. The ed school diploma (with a
few exceptions like U of Virginia and Hillsdale College) is only indicative of “tuition
paid and seat time” in the ed school diploma mill. The main reason our ed system does not change
to what works is that their human resource; teachers and administrators are all
untrained to do it right. That is they
have virtually no subject knowledge and the administrators tasked to lead do
not know how as they have weak ed school training and no role models once at
work to learn how to do it well. Thus,
to employ the techniques that work so well for our foreign competitors and
their students would require a complete retreading of the current
workforce. Also, the need to set high
standards for certification would mean that not all teachers or administrators
could or would be able to pass muster. A
daunting task to be sure. However, the
current “reduce standards if they bind” approach does nothing to fix our broken
education system.
At times like this, I always hear
examples of kids who are brilliant and are products of our education
system. That is true. They tend to fit into those who have parents,
tutors or other support systems to fill the void between what they need and
what the schools provide. It is
fortunate that some students learn in spite of the schools. It does nothing however to provide the
training that the majority of kids need in today’s knowledge society to allow
them to find decent paying jobs. Thus,
actions like today’s taken by the administration only continue pushing the day
the kids are finally served well into the distant future.