Professor_Adam Wrote:Is this program the miserable failure the media makes it seem like, or is there more to the story? What is it about this program that has people so upset?
ok, I'll bite. Understand that I'm looking at this from a parent standpoint, and a special education aide who is hoping to be a teacher next year.
On paper, no child behind looks great. Children will be expected to perform on grade level in english, math, science, social studies and will be able to communicate well in writing. Schools will be held accountable for student's scores, and children will have to take standardized tests (subjects will be alternated from year to year). Different states have implemented the standardized testing. In Texas, the kids are given 3 opportunities to pass the testing. If they can't pass, then typically they are not promoted to the next year.
In reality what this causes is that the teachers are so worried about the test scores that they only teach to the test. In math, this works pretty well. The basics are the basics. In social studies and science, it doesn't work as well. The teacher's are focusing on what's on the test, and it may not necessarily match up to everything that the teachers want to cover. I recently saw a science class get really excited about volcanoes, and the kids were asking great questions. When I was a student (subject to standardized tests but not NCLB), many of my teachers probably would have taken several additional days to explore the subject more in depth. This teacher couldn't do this because he was concerned that he wouldn't be able to cover all the material that the students would need for the test. The best that he could do was promise the kids that he would block off a day or two after the testing to revisit the subject. Being able to spend a couple of extra days in a subject might have ignited a curiousity and passion in a student to learn more about the volcanoes.
One of the reasons that teachers & administrators scream about NCLB is that the federal government mandated changes in education without funding them. I can understand that being unfair. Parents scream about NCLB because teachers teach to the test, and kids are under extreme pressure to perform on tests. Some children are poor test takers, and nothing is going to change that. Should they be penalized by failing when they're doing fantastic work in the classroom?
If NCLB had been implemented better, it probably would work. Let me give you an example of what I mean. As it is now, schools give benchmark practice tests several times throughout the year, with a "real" test around March/April that the kids must pass. Wouldn't it be better instead to administer the test at the beginning of the year to give a snapshot of where individual kids are performing, and then again at the end of the year and measure rather the student improved over the course of the year?
Each state is allowed to implement how they want the tests to be considered. In Texas, we've done it in the worst way possible. We have children who are great performers that are so stressed by the tests that they literally are close to nervous breakdowns.
IMHO, NCLB gets an F in Texas.
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