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What the No Child Left Behind Law Means for Your Child
The No Child Left Behind law has brought sweeping changes to education across the nation. Here's what it means to your child.
Since the No Child Left Behind (NCLB) law took effect in 2002, it has had a sweeping impact on U.S. public school classrooms. It affects what students are taught, the tests they take, the training of their teachers and the way money is spent on education.
Debate rages over whether the law is an effective way to improve academic achievement. Congress was scheduled to decide whether to renew it in 2007. But efforts stalled amid criticism of the law from both Democrats and Republicans, and arguments over how to change it.
The latest estimates, according to U.S. Deputy Secretary of Education Ray Simon, are that NCLB will not be reauthorized until well after the November 2008 election, and probably not until 2010. In the meantime, in October 2008, the U.S. Department of Education added new regulations to the law which include requiring schools to provide a uniform calculation for high school graduation rates, and enhancing a parent's ability to access school choice and tutoring options for their children by requiring schools (and providing them with funds) to communicate to parents about their options in a timely and clear way.
The Focus of the Debate NCLB's advocates say the landmark law holds schools accountable, empowers parents and is helping to close the achievement gap in America's schools.
Many critics, including those who agree with the law's goals, argue that it is a "one-size-fits-all" approach to education that overemphasizes testing and doesn't provide enough money to schools to achieve success.
As stricter testing requirements and penalties have taken effect, several states have rebelled, challenging the law in legislatures and the courts. In response, the U.S. Department of Education has given greater latitude to some districts and states in satisfying the law's provisions. That, in turn, has drawn criticism that the federal government has gone too far and weakened the law so much that it can't achieve its goals.
For parents trying to figure out how NCLB affects their children, it can be tough to keep up with the fast-moving developments. Here's a primer:
NCLB, Your Child and Your School The law may help your child in two ways:
  • Your child may be eligible to move to a better school or could receive free tutoring.
  • Your school could qualify for grants to use toward attracting top-notch teachers or other school programs.
But your child and your school may not receive the full benefits if you don't ask for them. The U.S. Department of Education has neither the personnel nor the budget to make sure that all of the nation's public schools comply with NCLB's complicated regulations. Education officials have said from the start that the key to enforcement would be parents who pressure schools to give their children the options provided by the federal law.
The Law's Goals and What It Says Philosophy: The law, which was passed with bipartisan support, was designed to introduce national standards to a system in which students in some demographic groups were more likely to succeed and others likely to be left behind. But it allows states to determine how success is measured.
Targets: States are required to set targets for overall achievement and for specific categories of students, such as English language learners or economically disadvantaged students. These targets determine whether the school makes "adequate yearly progress," or AYP, as measured by state standardized tests. A school can fail — even if it is making substantial progress for most of its students — if one category of students cannot meet the standards. The goal is for every student in public school to be proficient in reading and math by 2014.
Testing: Students must be tested annually in reading and math in grades 3 through 8 and at least once in grades 10 through 12. Students must be tested in science in at least one grade in elementary, middle and high school. Schools that don't meet goals for their overall student bodies or specific categories of students are sanctioned.
Affected schools: The law applies to schools that receive Title I money from the federal government. Schools that get Title I funds are generally those in which at least 35% of students are from low-income families. More than half of all public schools are Title I schools.
How the Law Affects Teachers Teachers must be "highly qualified" to teach core academic subjects in every classroom. Specifically, an elementary school teacher must have a bachelor's degree and pass a rigorous test in core curriculum areas. Middle and high school teachers must show they're competent in the subjects they teach by passing a test or by completing an academic major, graduate degree or comparable coursework.
Research, including a 2006 study of three states by the think tank Education Trust, shows that students in schools with a large percentage of minority and low-income students are more likely to be taught by teachers who are inexperienced and lack a major or minor in the subjects they teach. The teacher qualification provisions of NCLB are aimed at insuring that schools where students tend to need the most help employ teachers who are qualified to provide it. States have struggled to meet this goal.
The law covers other teaching staff, too. Most teachers' aides and other "paraprofessionals" are now required to complete two years of college or an equivalent type of training.
Reading Instruction NCLB also requires teachers in kindergarten through third grade to teach reading based on "scientifically based" research. Schools may be eligible for "Reading First" grants to assist with improving reading instruction. Although this program has shown initial signs of effectiveness in helping to boost reading instruction, it came under scrutiny in September 2006 when a scathing report (PDF) by the Office of Inspector General of the U.S. Department of Education revealed that several members of the panel who award Reading First grants may have had conflicts of interest because they had ties to publishing companies which promoted specific reading materials with a specifc philosophy.
Unsafe Schools States must have an "Unsafe School Choice Option"—that is, a plan that allows students to transfer to a safe school if they attend a school designated as a persistently dangerous school or if they become victims of violent crime.
Sanctions Those that haven't met "adequate yearly progress" (AYP) for two consecutive school years are identified as "in need of improvement." Every student in the school will be given the option to transfer to a better-performing school in the district, with free transportation included. However, NLCB requires that priority in providing school choice be given to low-achieving children from low-income families.
School districts may not use lack of space as a reason to deny a transfer, but they have some flexibility in meeting this requirement. School districts may restrict which schools are available for transfer and when transfers may occur. They may sign contracts with neighboring districts to accept students from failing schools, contract with online schools, create schools within schools, offer supplemental services a year early, hire more teachers, add portables or build new classrooms at more successful schools. If a school continues to fail to meet AYP, these sanctions take effect:
After three consecutive years, the school must also provide "supplemental education services," or SES, to children who remain at the school. Those services can include tutoring, remedial classes, after-school services and summer school programs.
The federal government has allowed some districts to switch the order of sanctions. Students would be eligible for free tutoring if these schools fail to meet their goals for two years in a row and would then get the option to transfer if the school misses its goals a third time.
After four consecutive years of failing to meet annual goals, the district must take action to improve the school, such as replacing certain staff or implementing a new curriculum.
After five years, the school is identified for restructuring and arrangements must be made to run it differently. These can include a state takeover, the hiring of a private management contractor, conversion to a charter school or significant staff restructuring.
How Schools Can Benefit There are rewards for schools that close achievement gaps between groups of students or exceed academic achievement goals. States can use federal funds to pay teachers bonuses, and they can designate schools that have made the greatest achievement gains as "Distinguished Schools."
Other benefits of No Child Left Behind include:
  • Grants for teacher training. Parents should be aware that districts have flexibility in how they can spend federal funds designed to find and retain quality teachers, including alternative certification, merit pay and bonuses for teachers of high-need subjects such as math and science.
  • Grants for reading instruction. The goal of the Reading First program is to help every child learn to read using "scientifically based" research. States may apply for these grants for their reading programs.
  • Flexibility in spending federal funds. School districts have considerable leeway in spending up to 50% of their non-Title I funds in categories such as teacher quality, technology, after-school learning, and Safe and Drug-Free schools. For example, a district may decide to spend 50% of its federal technology funds on recruiting quality teachers instead of technology.New regulations issued in October 2008 make it easier for schools to use Title I funds for outreach to parents to make them aware of their school choice and free tutoring options.
What Schools Must Tell Parents All schools and districts are required to make annual report cards available to the public. The report cards must include details on:
  • Student academic achievement for all student groups
  • A comparison of students at the basic, proficient and advanced levels of academic achievement within the school district and compared to other students statewide
  • High school graduation rates and dropout rates
  • The professional qualifications of teachers
  • The percentage of students not tested
  • The names of schools identified as "in need of improvement"
The U.S. Department of Education also requires states to participate in National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) reading and math assessments of fourth- and eighth-grade students every two years. These tests allow parents to compare how students are performing in different states. The NAEP results must also be included on school and district report cards.
How the Law is Working The nonprofit, independent Center on Education Policy releases annual report cards on NCLB. The organization, which advocates for public schools, surveyed education officials in 50 states and gave the law a mixed report card in 2006. The center concluded that as a result of the law:
  • Districts are better aligning classroom teaching with state academic standards.
  • Principals and teachers are making better use of test results to improve teaching.
  • Scores on states tests are higher in a large majority of states and school districts.
  • Teachers report high stress levels and poor staff morale because of the pressure to improve scores.
  • Most school districts are cutting back on social studies, science, art or other subjects to make more time for reading and math, the subjects that are tested.
  • The effect on achievement gaps between groups of students of different races or ethnicities is unclear. While most states and districts reported that the achievement gap in test results had narrowed or stayed the same, the center's own case studies did not find the same results. As a result, the study concluded, it is "impossible to reach an overall conclusion about achievement gaps."
In a harsher report, the The Civil Rights Project, formerly known as the Harvard Civil Rights Project, concluded in 2006 that NCLB is failing to close the achievement gap, won't make its 2014 goals and has not significantly improved reading and math achievement.
Federal education officials dispute these conclusions.
Few Students Take Advantage of School Choice, Tutoring Only about 1.6% of students eligible to transfer from low-performing schools did so in 2005-2006, a percentage that hasn't changed much since 2002-2003 when the option was first offered. The Center for Education Policy survey suggested that families didn't choose to change because they were satisfied with their current schools, wanted to go to schools in their neighborhoods or were discouraged by long commutes.
But others have accused school districts of failing to notify parents of their option to transfer. School choice advocates took legal action on these complaints and sued the Los Angeles and Compton, California, school districts in 2006.
Only 20% of students eligible for free tutoring are getting it. School districts and for-profit tutoring companies are sparring over the reasons why. Some tutoring companies say districts have failed to inform families in a clear and timely way that students are eligible for tutoring. Some school officials have pointed to the lack of oversight of tutoring companies and say the quality of services has been wildly uneven.
In an attempt to increase the number of students getting tutoring, the federal government changed the rules in 2006 for 23 school districts in Alaska, Delaware, Indiana, North Carolina and Virginia. In these districts, students in schools that have failed to meet goals for two years are eligible for free services and don't have to wait for their schools to fail a third time.
NCLB Prompts Protests, Revolts As the increasingly strict provisions and penalties of the law have taken effect, protests over the law have grown in scores of states, where officials complain that the law requires them to spend dollars they don't have.
The single biggest criticism is that the federal government has not fully funded the law, a charge the Bush administration counters by saying that the law is a partnership between the U.S. government and the states.
The New York Times reported in 2006 that the Bush administration has increased education spending since the Clinton era, but the money for No Child Left Behind stayed at $24.5 billion in 2004 and 2005. The administration cut funding for 2006 to $23.5 billion, the Times reported.
Others argue that the law imposes a rigid solution to problems historically better solved at the state and local levels. Utah decided in 2005 to forfeit federal money rather than follow the law. Other districts and states have filed legal challenges or are contemplating them.
While praising the law's goals, the bipartisan National Conference of State Legislatures has called for more flexibility and more money.
In response to the criticisms, the federal government has loosened some of the rules for some states. But critics, on the left and right, say the law creates a number of other problems:
  • Officials can "game" the system because each state sets its own criteria for meeting many of the law's requirements. States can make tests easier so that more students can meet proficiency standards. Critics argue that this is exactly what has happened in some cases. And despite a requirement in the law that parents be allowed to transfer children out of unsafe schools, not a single one of California's more than 9,000 schools has ever been classified as "persistently dangerous," a conclusion questioned by federal auditors.
  • The law jeopardizes privacy rights. The U.S. military has the right to obtain lists from high schools of students' names, addresses and phone numbers for recruiting purposes, and must be granted the same access to schools that is given to college and business recruiters. Parents who oppose this practice may "opt out," but schools have not always made this provision clear.
  • NCLB conflicts with another federal law, the Individuals with Disabilities Education Improvement Act. This law entitles students with learning disabilities to an education that meets their needs. The federal government has given states more leeway in measuring student progress in response to protests from parents of children with special needs. But critics say the government hasn't gone far enough. The law's advocates respond that it is this very accountability requirement that will ultimately improve instruction for learning-disabled students.
Updated October 2008

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Comments From GreatSchools.net Users
12/17/2008:
"i am a serior in hidh school in florida and i am trying to write a research paper so i can graduate. but the problem is that i have never been taught how to write one. yes in my past 12 years of school (thats counting kindergarden-grade 11) i have not written a research paper. in florida there is a standard test that you start taking in grade 3 and have to take every year untill grade 10. if you pass it in grade 10 you are done with it, but if you dont you have to take it every time they give it untill you pass because you have to pass it to graduate high school. now i understand that it is necessary to test a students knowledge before sending them out to the real world, but the stress that they put on a student about this one test is so stupid. i fourtunatnly have passed this test in grade 10, but i still strugle with school. i have never really been able to learn the curiculm other than what i have to know for this test. and that scares me. i am now faced with having to take my GED test to graduate. thankfully if i remain in school the rest of this year i can walk with my class and recieve my daplomia. but some kids dont get this option. something needs to be done to keep students involved in school and wanting to come back to learn. classes need to be more interesting and less about just teaching to the test standards. ~a student from florida~"
12/10/2008:
"I was very amazed by finding out about free tutoring, I have been looking for cheap tutoring forever,but there all so expensive. I was never told about any such progrom."
12/10/2008:
"this stuff doesn't work i had to drop out my sophomore year because i had ADHD a learning disability and i got a IEP but they wouldn't follow it and now my girlfriends parents have to support me my parents kicked me out they just couldn't stand having a child who is a drop out they wouldn't even give me toutering so its not like i wouldn't try to get help when i asked my teacher for help she said 'No i don't have time for you' as soon as school let out i remember her running out the doors and we graded our own paper"
12/3/2008:
"---As far as I know, teaching is one of the only jobs that requires people to do work off the clock-- grading papers, creating lessons, contacting parents for conferences, dealing with the paperwork they have to keep so people don't accuse them for not doing their jobs. Most people only have to deal with their boss, teachers have to deal with the administration, parents, students, and society at large. For acquiring a strenuous four year degree, it's probably one of the lowest paid positions. You may want to avoid making rash generalizations. I think that No Child Left Behind gives us a good system of accountability, but it requires teachers to teach to the PSSA. Some schools don't teach anything but PSSA material until after April. A response to: 'NCLB is an idea well over due. For far too long, teachers have garnered undeserved pay raises through union extortion while not improving their own education. The only solution offered in the past has been to throw more money at the problem, money to build bigger administrative buildings and pad the pockets of bureaucrats. Until now, there was no incentive for teachers go beyond punching the time clock. I'm sure if President Bush had thrown in millions of dollars for teacher unions, there would be nothing but accolades for this progressive plan. ' "
11/20/2008:
"Does the NCLB really make a difference? My son has been failing his math standardized test since he was in fifth grade. He is now 17 and is beyond frustrated with school because of the standardized tests. He has passed his other tests but knows he won't be able to graduate without passing this test. He feels like why does he bother to go to school when the school doesn't care. The school hasn't provided any type of help to help him pass these test. I'm afraid he will drop out and become another statistic. I asked the school if they had any programs I could enroll him in and I was told that there is nothing available. What do you mean there is no help for these children? Who is to be held accountable? I can't let him drop out and be another statistic. The school suggested he drop out and get his GED. Wow, what kind of support is that? Aren't they suppose to talk kids out of dropping out? Is there any help out there? How can they get away with dismissing children like this? Ca! n't they be held accountable?"
11/13/2008:
"It is impossible to pass 20 students if more than half have come to the U.S. recently and don't speak English. Teachers are trying to get jobs in English speaking areas for fear they may lose their jobs. It isn't fair to the teacher or student. "
11/12/2008:
"I feel that the NCLB has left way too many kids behind."
11/12/2008:
"HOME SCHOOL your children if you want them to learn! "
11/5/2008:
"I have asked and never received any informationo n tutoring for my child that is in danager of failing for several years. When I asked about help for a tutor the school told me that I would have to find one on my own and could not reccommend any help."
10/28/2008:
"NCLB... No child left behind, right? Bull! We have always wondered about the accuracy of standardized testing, now we are basing everything a student learns, all of a schools performance every year, off of ONE test. The goals are unrealistic, the means are insane, and the measurements make NO sense at all! We are measuring this years class with the class before it. What do we learn from this? Nothing that we can really use. This whole act is a sham anyway, let's say we actually pulled it off. We've rallied together to get 100% Proficient rates for all schools, what happens then? Nothing. We showed that all the kids of one year, the class of 2014, can be 100% proficient. What about all the years that came before? They don't matter anymore, all the NCLB activists got what they wanted and the children who really got left behind be damned.Do we really expect the whole of America to grow gradually more intelligent on a measurable basis each year? Tell me what this w! ill really accomplish and I'll reconsider many of my opinions about the act, until then... I'll fight this unconstitutional showcase of human stupidity untill we get it out of our school systems!"
10/1/2008:
"My son has ADD and a learning disability, he has had an IEP for the past 2 years and is still far far behind his peers. He is in 4th grade and at a 1st grade level in both math and Language Arts. The teachers are doing the minimum required with him every day and every year they lower the goals on his IEP, so that 'they' can achieve their goal. The way I am understanding NCLB is that because his school is not a Title 1 school this does nothing to help him. Am I correct?"
09/26/2008:
"no school left behind means to me that all student should have home education so they can learn how to cook and clean. parents are at work and have other activities so children should have that education. Driver education should be put back in all school. a lot of teens are driving without liences ruining the lience. teen should be taught the danger of the road. all shcool should teach student how to swim. alot of kids can not swim and that causes a lot of kids unnessary death and hurting parents. All school should have music class. even if the parent have to buy hand me down insturment. student need to learn how to read music. All school be taught on the same basics. there are some first graders that can read well, add, subtract, and know their time table however there are some first graders that can hardly write. so when i heard that no child will be left behind then i have seen the results. they're are some kids left behind. Our children are our furture. there should not ! be any compromising about giving all children the means to live in this failing U.S.A."
09/17/2008:
"I think the NCLB is TERRIBLE !!! My daughter is in the Third grade and doesn't know here ABC's, She can not recognize any of the ABC's. Let alone any Numbers or add subtract. I had to fight with the school in VA to send home work home with the student, the teacher said, 'We don't send home work home with the students' .... WOW in the second grade she didn't know her ABC's and the same teacher she has had for the past two years tells me this .... Ya see I am residing in another state and I see this LAW as Pushing the children thru ..... My daughter knows NO MORE than she knew in the other state she resided in when she was in Kindergarten; now she knows as much in third grade ... WHAT DOES THAT TELL YOU ? "
09/3/2008:
"I totally disagree with making PSSA's a Proficient requirement when all students don't test well. Then for the School Board to vote and say they can't walk with their class if they aren't! They have to go to summer school for 2 weeks or stay after school for 7 weeks when they passed the class all year long or if they were on the honor roll too. The stress level on the students today is too high. Some students it may be easy but majority are stressed out trying to keep up. I think that the standards need to be lowered and the stress level will come down too."
09/2/2008:
"What this page neglected to mention is the most frightening thing about this law and what is coming up in 2014. At that time schools will be required to have %100 of students reaching the proficient level. That's right, not one child within the school can fail the test. While this is a noble goal, it's unrealistic. It's like asking a hospital to cure %100 of its patients or a politician to provide %100 employment. I believe that all children can learn, but they vary significantly in how much they can learn and how willing they are to learn. Because of this, there will always be kids that won't pass the test. I think that the pilot program for gauging student improvement is a step in the right direction, but we could run into the same problem if the government expects %100 of the students to improve. There are many students that just don't care and unfortunately, you can't force someone to learn. What we need is an accountability system that takes all the different f! actors that contribute to a students success (parent involvement, socio-economic status, class size etc) into account and then judges a school on how they handle these issues and how their students are performing despite these obstacles. One test score does not give an accurate picture of the effectiveness of a school."
08/19/2008:
"I don't understand how NCLB developing the PSSA standards and how high schools can make this a graduation requirement. Every student does not test well, and to make this a requirement due to the NCLB is not fair to the student, especially when they are on the honor roll. "
08/15/2008:
"my grandson who lives on Daniel Island S.C. was tested to enter the 3rd grade in the gifted program at the school on the Island. He tested 29% for vocabulary and in the 90% for all other test. His parents have asked that he be retested in that one low area. They were informed that they will have to wait 6 months. Where can we go for help in this matter?"
07/21/2008:
"NCLB is a JOKE! I work in a school system and have a child in 7th grade. They have dumbed down the schools instead of allowing students to work at their pace. EVERYONE is NOT the same! My son is gifted and the program is 1 hr a day and takes him out of the things he loves like PE Music and ART. ALL he has learned is how to ride the free ride and do nothing and still earn his A's! The others in his class are so far behind he ends up in trouble cause he is so BORED he has become disruptive. There was a time when our country wanted to help the leaders become LEADERS! Now it's make everyone the same and in my book that is ruining our society. Everyone is NOT the same. Think of all the Gifted kids who are ignored, and left to teach themselves. The worst thing we could have done is what NCLB did to our children. We are creating a country of Followers, NOT LEADERS!"
07/15/2008:
"My son is in the gifted program and with the changes that have taken place in the past 2 years, the truth of the matter is that the 'no child left behind' should be changed to 'dumb down the smart kids.' My son is left bored and that leads to other problems. You can not expect that a highly intelligent child should be learning at the same level as the child who would have been in the lower level reading/math group under the old way. Teachers are teaching to the tests and have had to remove the personal touches that previously made it a joy to mold children's lives. The truth is they are passing students that shouldn't be, and they are losing the smart kids attention and the idea of feeding a brain to grow it is lost with these children. They are left with an enhanced classroom 1 day a week and are told to deal with it. This program dumbs down American children instead of enhancing the majority, it puts it's time and energy on the bottom rung, which let's be honest are ! the immigrant children who do not speak much English, and their parents usually don't speak any English at all. "
07/3/2008:
"What program are used for reading tutoring?"
07/2/2008:
"NCLB caters to the lowest common denominator. My daughter has had hardly any homework since the second grade. I have gone to the teachers asking them to challenge her and give her more work, but they claim she will be too far ahead of the rest of the students. She has become lazy and has poor time management skills. I have to create lessons at home for her. She will enter college underprepared. Something needs to be done for the students at the top of the class who do not test into GATE. This is quite frightening. "
07/2/2008:
"How do I find out if my school is a Title 1 school?? There is no one at the school at this time of yr and I don't want to wait until August 13th to find out?? My son has flunked Algebra 1 twice now and his teacher and the principle are doing nothing about it ... my son has even gone to his counselor for help and still nothing. He now wants to go to another school but we cannot transfer out because I cannot afford the gas to take him to another school and we cannot move because the prices of rent have gone up so drastically that we feel cornered. Please help me??? Amy Watson"
07/2/2008:
"I feel that the NCLB has probably saved my daughter from having to repeat 2nd grade, but at the same time, the principal and the teacher wanted my daughter moved to another school. I requested it in writing and of course the refused, knowing clearly well that they would have then had a NCLB complaint on their hands. We fought it and things have now changed in the teacher and in the principal. After completing half of her 2nd grade in Tokyo, Japan (up to July, 2007), we moved to Hawaii (for me a move back) and due to her age registered her for 3rd grade (July 2007). In the beginning she was reading and writing below 1st grade level; and didn't quite know what was going on. By the end of the first quarter, she had gone to mid 2nd grade level in reading and writing. At the end of the year, my daughter was reading and writing at the 3rd grade level and was fully participating in class and also was exited from ELL (English Language Learners). On the math side of things, I was appalled. The text books that my daughter was using in 2nd grade in Japan were far, I mean really far, beyond what her 3rd grade math book was like in the US. I checked into the 4th grade math book and that is where her math level is at. The math taught in the 3rd grade was heavily reliant on reading, writing and drawing (yes drawing), and a bit of math. Since my daughter's reading and writing were below 3rd grade, her favorite and strongest subject was not showing through, until toward the end of the year. One test which was given about 3 weeks from the start, 100 math and only math problems, no words, in which the test is designed so that only 50 percent of the students would finish in 15 minutes, my daughter completed that in 7 minutes with a perfect score. However, it was math she was doing in 1st grade in Japan. Math here is taught at an extremely frustrating way and when I went to complain, I found out that it was a national text (my! mother, my daughter's grandmother is a teacher of 3rd grade or higher - credentialed in Los Angeles). What is going on here? Math drawing was somehow supposed to help students understanding places (ones, tens, hundreds, thousands, etc.) by drawing blocks. This was one of the stupidest things I have ever seen. My daughter was doing multi-digit multiplication and was doing long division and was learning how to get the lowest common denominator and such for fractions. Also, this was completed in her first half of second grade in Japan. When I spoke to her teacher about levels that 3rd grade was at, she said it was comparing apples to oranges. I didn't know what she meant by that, but when I saw the drawing problems that only Kindergartners would use in Japan, i think I got it. Yes, apples and oranges were there if you could draw them correctly. When I was in 3rd grade, we never had to draw math problems, we were doing multi-digit multiplication and long division and working o! n fractions, but that was in L.A. City schools - my school was! Brentwo od Elementary back in the late 1960s. Has math really gone that far down? It is no wonder, Asian students are so much stronger in math when compared to their American counterparts. When the teacher said comparing apples to oranges, I was also skeptical. I am an engineer and math was always the most objective subject there was. It is also the purest international language. No science is as pure as math. In fact a lot of science is 'correct' in only the math. I met a Russian in Japan, who had a PhD in nuclear physics, and we had a hard time communicating, except for the math parts of our jobs."
07/2/2008:
"NCLB was never funded adequately in the first place. It has had the effect of intensifying the reliance placed upon testing, so that kids who 'excel' are good test takers, but not lovers of learning. Another sound bite from the people that brought us 'Mission Accomplished'"
07/1/2008:
"I am so disgusted with NCLB! Why can't legislators see that the benifits for result is only for ADULTS and ADMINISTRATORS, not children. Now the focus has shifted from educating children wholly with the results being average or better, to kill and drill tacticts that will produce high scores. Wake up parents. When your school eliminates subjects like history, social studies, art, music, and science it is because they don't hold as much weight in testing, and they add more required instructional minutes in math and language arts so that they do better on ONE test. How many assesments is your child getting throughout the year? 10-16 to practice for ONE test. This is not for your child, it is for bureaucracy and money. Administrators have figured out the system and are using your children to give the results that they need to show how well they are doing at the expense of your children's sound education. Compare your district's score progression from the elementary leve! l to high school. Notice the decline. If things were getting done the right way and we truly instilled a thirst for knowledge, they would be going the oposite direction. Those children that are below basic and far below basic are abandoned in favor of focusing extra attention on the basic children that can be moved into the proficient level. Vice-versa, those that are above the proficient level are left alone, maybe given quiet reading or independent work, because they are at the level 'they need to be'. Nevermind letting them continue to improve, let's just stop teaching them because they are where the test results make us look good already. "
06/30/2008:
"MY ASPERGER SON HAS BEEN LEFT BEHIND! NICKS DOCTOR TELLS THAT HE NEEDS HELP IN SCHOOL. 4 YEARS, 4 DOCTOR, STILL NO 504 OR IDEA, NOTHING. NICKS DOCTOR WANTED TO GO INTO THE SCHOOL TO WATCH NICK. SHE WAS NOT ALLOWED INTO THE SCHOOL. THE SCHOOL HAND BOOK TELL THAT NO ONE GOES INTO THE SCHOOL.AT 6'0 AND 190LBS. A NOTE WAS SENT HOME FROM THE SCHOOL THAT NICK WAS CRAWING UNDER DESK AND LAYING OUT IN THE FLOOR. NICK COMES HOME WITH BRUSES. THE COACH MADE NICK CRAW ON THE GROUND UNTIL HIS HANDS BLEED. THIS TIME A MAKE A POLICE REPORT. THE POLICE MAN WENT TO SCHOOL AND ASK THE PRINCPAL WHAT HAPPENED. THE PRINCPAL TOLD THE POLICE MAN THAT IT WAS AN IN HOUSE PUNSHMENT. THIS MEANS THAT NOTHING WILL BE WRITTEN DOWN, THIS IS A WAY OF GETTING OUT OF GIVING NICK SERVICE. THE SCHOOL WOULD NO TAKE NICKS NEW TESTING, I HAD TO C/MAIL IT. MY NICK HAS BEEN LEFT BEHIND BY MISSISSIPPI.NO ONE WILL HELP MY NICK. NO ONE WILL STEP ON THE STATES TOES. MISSISSPPI SPENDS MORE MONEY ON ATTORNEYS FIGHTING ! SPECIAL EDUCATION, THAN ON SPECIAL EDUCATION ITS SELF! PEOPLE DON'T WANT TO SPEAK OUT, THAY SEEN AFRAID. I WANT TO TALK, TO SAVE MY NICK. PLEASE SOMEONE, HELP ME!! I HAVE NO HELP!! ROBIN 601-605-6030"
06/11/2008:
"When my son was in the 9th grade before the firs term was over I was informed that he was not up to the standards and needed to find another program more suitable to his needs. It wasn't until later I realized we were conned into transferring my son so that this public school could keep or get the ratings they needed for state or federal money. I found out they did this to many students in that high school and several others in the area including the middle school. Turns out the other options were not good for my son and he is another statistic drop out at 17. Just in my neighborhood the drop out rate among teenage boys is higher than ever and the schools are unenrolling them so they are not considered dropouts!! I am horrified that this is happening to middle school and high school kids, both boys and girls and they are so young. I can't prove it but children are being left behind and numbers are being deliberately misrepresented by the schools."
06/10/2008:
"My son has been struggling in his school district for the past two years. We have made numerous calls and had meetings to get him back on track but nothing has been done. I'm in the process of trying to get him enrolled in a school in the city only 3 miles from us and just received notification today that they will not accept him. They said they don't have the staff to be able to help him get to the level he needs to be with all the other students. I'm so frustrated because I know he could do better with a little bit of guidance and support for a staff that has been awarded the Blue Ribbon award for teaching. I'm not sure if I can do anything to get the district to accept him as a tuition paying student, any quidance would be appreciated. "
06/4/2008:
"Question do I have the final word if my child has failed am I allowed to say if I want him to continue on or repeat that grade?"
06/2/2008:
"NCLB is an idea well over due. For far too long, teachers have garnered undeserved pay raises through union extortion while not improving their own education. The only solution offered in the past has been to throw more money at the problem, money to build bigger administrative buildings and pad the pockets of bureaucrats. Until now, there was no incentive for teachers go beyond punching the time clock. I'm sure if President Bush had thrown in millions of dollars for teacher unions, there would be nothing but accolades for this progressive plan. "
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