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Why Have the Children Been Left Behind?

By Sean Gonsalves, AlterNet. Posted October 22, 2007.


Bush's ironically-named No Child Left Behind program cheatsschools out of money and time.
Gonsalves

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Also by Sean Gonsalves

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A child's education should begin at least one hundred years before he is born. -- Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr.

The debate in Congress over whether to reauthorize No Child Left Behind (NCLB) is underway.

What's with these politically-calculated, brand-name, PR-speak, Orwellian euphemisms? Clear Skies Act. Operation Enduring Freedom. USAPatriot Act. No Child Left Behind. Who, other than Hal Lindsey fans, would want a child to be left behind?! What unenlightened creature, harboring "the soft bigotry of low expectations," in the words of the President, would be opposed to legislation that promotes "academic excellence?"

Loaded terms aside, the Repubs are ready to march in line behind Bush while the Dems say they have issues with the law's mandate that state's rely on standardized tests to measure "adequate yearly progress" in reading and math.

The most obvious problem with NCLB is the gap between the lofty sounding rhetoric coming out of the President's mouth, and the money. Since the law came into effect in 2002, it's been underfunded by an estimated $56 billion.

Last month, Bush held up New York City as an example of how to improve "underperforming" schools. "If New York City can do it, you can do it," he said.

Two weeks later, the New York press is reporting how "the feds are cheating the city out of $3.3 billion in education funds -- money promised to help kids pass a slew of new standardized tests."

In 2007, for example, Bush promised $1.8 billion to Big Apple schools, but only delivered $834 million -- a 54 percent shortfall, according to U.S. Rep. Anthony Weiner, D-Brooklyn and Queens.

Despite the under-funding of NCLB, student test scores have generally increased and the so-called achievement gap between ethnic groups has narrowed somewhat since the law was enacted. But, no one can say whether those gains are because of NCLB or other factors.

And there doesn't seem to be any discernible relationship between standardized test results and good grades, class rank or other measures used to predict success in college or the job market.

Ben Sears of Political Affairs magazine captures the situation succinctly. "This is resulting in narrowing the curriculum as schools focus on preparing for the tests and are forced to reduce instructional time for 'non-tested' subjects."

"All this forces one to wonder. Could NCLB as presently written be part of the long range plan of the Administration to undermine public education? If the law's harsh provisions result in more schools being branded 'failures,' could that lead to an exodus from the public schools in to the proliferating charter schools or religious or other private academies?"

"And could the law generate such frustration with the federal government's clumsy attempt to influence education policy, that it causes a 'backlash' movement opposing any federal role?"

Of course, high standards and accountability are worthy ideals but the public appears to be growing weary of this over-reliance on testing. A Phi Delta Kappa/Gallup poll in June found that 52 percent of public school parents felt there's too much testing -- up from 32 percent in 2002. And, 75 percent of public school parents said the focus on testing was forcing teachers to teach to the test, not the subject matter.

This growing skepticism is based on more than just gut instinct or warmed-over Dr. Spock feel goodism. A survey conducted by the Center on Education Policy shows that 71 percent of America's 15,000 schools had cut instruction time at the expense of other subjects like history, art and music.

But, even more basic than these concerns are those coming from the scientific community. "Contrary to traditional notions ... emotions, not cognitive stimulation, serve as the mind's primary architect," Dr. Stanley Greenspan details in his book The Growth of the Mind.

So while we're obsessing over high-stakes testing and focusing on the minds of teenagers, there's not much attention being paid to what's in the babies' heart -- the foundation of theirs (and ours) educational future.

And not just the babies but their mothers too. I think Abigail Adams was onto something when she wrote to her husband and Founding Father, John: "If we mean to have heroes, statesmen and philosophers, we should have learned women."

"If much depends ... on the early education of youth and the first principles which are instilled take the deepest root, great benefit must arise from literary accomplishments in women."

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See more stories tagged with: no child left behind, education, bush, testing

Sean Gonsalves is a Cape Cod Times staff reporter and a syndicated columnist.

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Those who do NOT know History
Posted by: JSquercia on Oct 22, 2007 5:03 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Those who do NOT know History are DOOMED to Repeat it .
Just as those who now are unthinkingly abandoning our Constitution are those who were NOT taught Civics

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» RE: Whose history? Posted by: peacelf
Great article
Posted by: SavageDissension on Oct 22, 2007 8:48 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
As a 2006 high school graduate, I'm intimately familiar with all the time that teachers obsessed over making sure we knew the test material. It stifled discussion and actual learning; this article makes great points and continues some excellent dialogue. I just have one question: From where out of left field did the pro-mother gig at the end come? I'll probably get crucified for questioning a good word about mothers, but it just seemed out of place and jarred me out of the run of the rest of the piece. Maybe moms will help develop kids, but so will dads, and teachers, and friends, and less societal pressure to be super-kids.

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» RE: Great article Posted by: spiralwriter
The way it was for my Children
Posted by: worldwide65 on Oct 23, 2007 1:14 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I had my children in Public School a few years ago. It was a school with great ratings on standardized testing. And they were claiming an "amazingly low $10,000 a year cost per student" compared to other schools in the area.
As I travelled about 50% of the year away from home, it was great to know my children were in a school that did so well, that dad did not have to put all of his home time into helping with education.
Returning from one trip, I read one of the children's 99% score essay test on our Government.
In it I found a statement that Federal Gov was responsible for education under the Constitution -- I read the Constitution -- didn't see that line.
When I got down to the 4th essay of the test I learned that the Emancipation Proclamation started the Civil War.
I questioned the teacher on the score, and she told me "don't worry the standardized test are multiple choice.
My children were in a private school by the end of that week.
The cost was $3,000 a year. They did extremely well on their standardized test at the end of the year and competed for Government Essay contest with exceptional results.
While living in Mississippi (known for there poor education system) my children still did well, despite the school district reputation. As a freshman one of them had 3 Universities discussing mathmatics scholarships in his future.
I recently saw a spreadsheet that shows more money spent on education in the last 3 years then ever before. I read another document showing our education system was dropping either further down.
Money is not the answer, standardized test definately are not the answer under the current way they are administered.
Good teachers, with reasonable pay and benefits; parental invovement and demands of the school system; and financially responsible adminstrators are what we need. That's what I got from the private school my chidlren attended, and that is what I got from the public school system in a small rural Mississippi community. My children are excelling in their current education. Both of them credit the good teachers they had. In areas of study that they had poor teachers, they credit me for helping them learn what they needed.

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» RE: The way it was for my Children Posted by: goeswithness
» RE: The way it was for my Children Posted by: worldwide65
Education castrates curiosity
Posted by: peacelf on Oct 23, 2007 7:47 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The problems of public, indeed, "traditional," education in general go far beyond the proscriptions of No Child Left Behind Act or it's lack of funding.

In his book Education for Critical Consciousnees, Paulo Freire writes that traditional education "castrates curiosity." We all know that children are full of questions about everything they newly experience in life. In kindergarten they are full of wonder and curiosity, as exhibited by the number and frequency of their questions. However, by third grade, the frequency and number of those questions diminish, until, by fifth grade, the questioning all but disappears. What happened?

What happened is the "hidden curriculum" of education. In traditional education, a child is taught to sit down, shut up and pay attention. In other words, children are taught to be remain still and quiet, that their ideas and knowledge doesn't matter in school and that only the information the teacher and textbooks impart is important.

This type of education teaches children to be docile, apathetic learners who bend to the will of authority. After 12 years of this domestication process, the young adult is thoroughly indoctrinated into the world of work where his unquestionable respect for authority will be rewarded with a paycheck once a week.

Unfortunately, economics is of paramont importnace and democracy is reduced to free market fundamentalism dogma od "what do you want to be when you gorw up?" Children never learn to participate in their own governance, critical citizenship is never taught and complacency and powerlessness prevail. Maybe that's exactly what the people in power want!

As schools now become more and more focused on standardized testing, teachers are required to teach a narrowed curriculum that promotes test taking skills and answering the question correctly. The danger of this is further reducing the amount of information taught in the classroom, literally "dumbing down" education, more so than ever before. Schools and teachers are rewarded for how well they dumb down the curriculum and teach to the tests.

And, any teacher who moves outside the standardized curriculum is punished or fired, and those teachers who become "commissars for the state," as Noam Chomsky calls them, will be rewarded with accolades (but rarely money).

Fortunately, some kids come through the system with their curiosity still in tact, but remnants of comformity and the lack of critical thinking skills usually bolsters cynicism, resignation or even worse, nihilism, because they don't know how to fix what's obviously wrong with the world.

Either way, the lack of critical thinking skills perpetautes the current power structure, which makes the rich and powerful very happy and ensures no child will be left behind in terms of indoctrination into this system.

peace

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I learned my lessons a long time ago about memorization vs learning.
Posted by: maxpayne on Oct 23, 2007 8:35 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I remember back in private school when my English teacher would cut people's scores for not memorizing the vocabulary definitions. Those who actually learned their vocabulary where harshly penalized ending up with 70-85 whereas those who memorized word for word punctuation by punctuation received scores of 95-100. However, here's where the tables turned. On the PSATs and SATs, those who had lower vocabulary scores in class actually ended up scoring higher on the verbal sections because they actually LEARNED their vocabulary whereas those who blindly memorized scored LOW on the verbal section. The dumbing down of education would make even Stalin and Hitler blush. Also, I'm glad that the SAT verbal section is being changed to provide more emphasis on CRITICAL READING and THINKING.

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Pull you kids out of school-
Posted by: WitchyNy on Oct 23, 2007 10:24 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It is becoming common in my state to have schools locked down. After every one-a few parents say ENOUGH-my kids are not going back. The public schools get paid for attendance. The more kids they lose, the less money they get from the feds.

This is something we can all do. We all bitch about Bush-now here is a way you can protest and help your kids at the same time.
Teach your kids at home. Focus on reading and writing. Make up a book list of YOUR favorite books and have the kids do book reports which you then discuss. Focus on Art. Let them paint their bedrooms with endangered animals and environmental heroes. Discuss politics. Make sure they watch all the Michael Moore movies. Forget sports-teach the kids how to swim, walk the dog and garden.

Progressives talk the talk-now walk the walk.

My home schooled -now- university student sons are astounded at the low level of education of their classmates. Mainly these kids just want to sleep through class and party some more.
I will never forget overhearing a teacher telling a bunch of cheerleaders-"Now remember-to get your scholarship-you girls must each write an ORIGINAL cheer!"
Enough already.
If we cannot control our government-we can at least control the education of our own children.

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» RE: Pull you kids out of school- Posted by: worldwide65
Tests can measure what you want them to measure.
Posted by: susanh on Oct 23, 2007 10:54 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Standardizing a test is not inherently bad; that's what you do if you want to measure something, compare results, and infer something meaningful from the comparison. This is part of critical thinking, too: logic, inference, deduction, comparison, definition, etc. These things can definitely be tested. Creative writing can't be tested with a multiple choice test, but math can and so can a lot of other things, like reading comprehension, vocabulary, content knowledge for various fields, logic, analysis, decoding significance, categorization, inference, deduction, etc. These things are the basis for broader critical thinking, so our kids should learn them and we should be able to get a reading as to whether or not our public schools and teachers who can talk the talk can actually deliver.

The test itself is not intended to BE the education. It is the accountability portion, and if we want to foster democracy in this country by making a quality education accessible to all students, then we need accountability, because it does not naturally exist without concerted effort.

Public schools before NCLB were not uniformly wonderful places brimming with achievement. Many were (and are) staffed with arrogant, intractable bureaucrats who do things for the convenience of the adults who work there and for whom students’ interests rank dead last. Public schools as an institution have always had to be dragged to the table, kicking and screaming – forced via the courts, legislation, and people in the streets – to deal with segregation, religious discrimination, racism, sexism, inequality of funding, homophobia, neglect and abuse of the learning disabled and the physically disabled, et cetera, et cetera. They did not step forward themselves to address the achievement gaps that keep generations of Americans in poverty; but with the light of public scrutiny on their shameful disaggregated test scores and the threat of the loss of funds, they have to do something.

When some schools and teachers see bad test scores for their schools they analyze the results and start putting into place the infrastructure and best practices that will address the problems, including training teachers with effective methodologies and supporting a collaborative organization that continuously gathers data, learns, and moves forward.

Unfortunately, many other schools just blame the messenger that’s telling them that their methods and processes are inadequate; they blame the test. They don’t have any idea how to improve and blame the test for their inadequate responses such as narrowing the curriculum, drill and kill, taking away recess, art, and music.

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BINGO!
Posted by: Afban on Oct 23, 2007 6:29 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"All this forces one to wonder. Could NCLB as presently written be part of the long range plan of the Administration to undermine public education?"

Sean, methinks you hit the nail squarely on the head! Citizens who are incapable of critical analysis make better sheeple. They take at face value what the pretty people on the tv tell them.

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NCLB has but two purposes
Posted by: soulrebeljc on Oct 23, 2007 6:35 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
1) To facilitate the destruction of public education and the advent of fully privatized education.
2) To make sure the military has the contact information of all high school students (Section 9528)

Public Education is our most valuable commons-owned commodity. It is the non "affluent white-male" child's best opportunity at leveling the playing field.

NCLB is racist and classist legislation. Repeal now.

BTW I am a white male HS math teacher.
And Michael Moore rocks - who is the fool who claims he doesn't tell the truth? Challenge his assertions - if you prove him wrong he'll give you $1000.

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» RE: NCLB has but two purposes Posted by: WitchyNy
» Privatization Posted by: susanh
uh, duh
Posted by: karyse on Oct 24, 2007 7:01 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Wow, someone finally said it -- the point of NCLB is to destroy public education.

Oh, and what's left unsaid is that NO CHILD LEFT BEHIND is code to the right wing evangelicals that christianity will be taught in the schools so that when the big guy in the sky calls up the righteous no child will be LEFT BEHIND.

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Testing
Posted by: Urgelt on Oct 24, 2007 8:48 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Sean, if you want to force-feed a State-approved mode of thinking into children's heads, there is no better way to do it than to institute mandatory testing.

NCLB is right out of Orwell's nightmare, so it's Orwellian naming is quite appropriate. Teachers no longer teach what they know, they teach what the Government knows.

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» Why is it Orwellian? Posted by: susanh