February 4, 2015

No Child Left Behind Law even made liberals dumber


 From our overstocked archives

Sam Smith, 2008 - If you're serious about teaching, the No Child Left Behind Law is the educational equivalent of creationism: faith parading as facts and blocking changes that recognition of the facts would require.

It's not surprising given that the idea was shoved down the country's throat by George Bush because, like the perp's other policies, it represents a happy mixture of fantasy combined with lucrative payoffs to political buddies - in this case including book and curricula publishers.

If you don't believe me, listen to Business Week which reported a couple of years ago:
Across the country, some teachers complain that President George W. Bush's makeover of public education promotes "teaching to the test." The President's younger brother Neil takes a different tack: He's selling to the test. The No Child Left Behind Act compels schools to prove students' mastery of certain facts by means of standardized exams. Pressure to perform has energized the $1.9 billion-a-year instructional software industry.
Now, after five years of development and backing by investors like Saudi Prince Alwaleed Bin Talal and onetime junk-bond king Michael R. Milken, Neil Bush aims to roll his high-tech teacher's helpers into classrooms nationwide. He calls them "curriculum on wheels," or COWs. The $3,800 purple plug-and-play computer/projectors display lively videos and cartoons: the XYZ Affair of the late 1790s as operetta, the 1828 Tariff of Abominations as horror flick. The device plays songs that are supposed to aid the memorization of the 22 rivers of Texas or other facts that might crop up in state tests of "essential knowledge."
Bush's Ignite! Inc. has sold 1,700 COWs since 2005, mainly in Texas, where Bush lives and his brother was once governor. In August, Houston's school board authorized expenditures of up to $200,000 for COWs. The company expects 2006 revenue of $5 million. Says Bush about the impact of his name: "I'm not saying it hasn't opened any doors. It may have helped with some sales." . . .
The stars haven't always aligned for Bush, but at times financial support has. A foundation linked to the controversial Reverend Sun Myung Moon has donated $1 million for a COWs research project in Washington (D.C.)-area schools. In 2004 a Shanghai chip company agreed to give Bush stock then valued at $2 million for showing up at board meetings. (Bush says he received one-fifth of the shares.) In 1988 a Colorado savings and loan failed while he served on its board, making him a prominent symbol of the S&L scandal. Neil calls himself "the most politically damaged of the [Bush] brothers."
And how has it all worked out in the classroom? Here's a taste from the New York Times earlier this year:
President Bush's $1 billion a year initiative to teach reading to low-income children has not helped improve their reading comprehension, according to a Department of Education report.

The program, known as Reading First, drew on some of Mr. Bush's educational experiences as Texas governor, and at his insistence Congress included it in the federal No Child Left Behind legislation that passed by bipartisan majorities in 2001. . .
"Reading First did not improve students' reading comprehension," concluded the report, which was mandated by Congress and carried out by the Department of Education's research arm, the Institute of Education Sciences. "The program did not increase the percentages of students in grades one, two or three whose reading comprehension scores were at or above grade level.". . .

Senator Edward M. Kennedy, the Massachusetts Democrat who is chairman of the education committee, and who has long criticized the program, said, "The Bush administration has put cronyism first and the reading skills of our children last, and this report shows the disturbing consequences."

In 2006, John Higgins, the department's inspector general, reported that federal officials and private contractors with ties to publishers had advised educators in several states to buy reading materials for the Reading First program from those publishers. The Reading First director, Chris Doherty, resigned in 2006, days before the release of Mr. Higgins's report, which disclosed a number of e-mail messages in which Mr. Doherty referred to contractors or educators who favored alternative curriculums seen as competitors to the Reading First approach as "dirtbags" who he said were "trying to crash our party."
But what is truly amazing about the No Child Left scandal is that hardly anyone in power or the press considers it a scandal. Not even liberals.

Admittedly, the Democrats did cut funding - although didn't eliminate - Reading First after it became so embarrassing, and Barack Obama wants some vague changes in the No Child Law but basically liberals are going along with one of the worst domestic programs passed in recent years.

And it's not getting any better. The Century Foundation - on the board of which sits major Obama advisor John Podesta - has just published a book edited by senior fellow Richard D. Kahlenberg, that examines what the foundation calls "three central defects of the act: the under-funding of NCLB; the flawed implementation of the standards, testing, and accountability provisions; and major difficulties with the provisions that are designed to allow students to transfer out of failing public schools."

Central to the argument, though, is the funding issue. If you want to increase funding for a bad law you're making a bad law more powerful. But, says, the Century Foundation, "To date, most of the debate over the funding of No Child Left Behind has centered on the gap between authorized levels of funding and appropriations. But this discussion avoids the fundamental question: What is the true cost of NCLB's goal of making all students academically proficient by 2014? According to new research in the book. . . federal funding would have to multiply many times over to help districts succeed in meeting even the intermediate goals of the legislation."

What is most disturbing is the gold-plated list of liberal "partners and collaborators" provided by the Century Foundation, including the American Prospect, Campaign for America's Future, Carnegie Corporation, The Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, The Center for American Progress, The Columbia Journalism Review, The Council on Foreign Relations, Drum Major Institute ,The Economic Policy Institute, John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, The Nation, The Open Society Institute, Common Cause, People for the American Way Leadership and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.

In other words, the very people who should be guiding us out of this mess are trying to save No Child for the indefinite future.

No Child is the first piece of legislation to make the teaching of Asperger's syndrome a national policy. The manifestations of this form of autism has been described as including "poor communication skills, obsessive or repetitive routines, and physical clumsiness," which is also some of the predictable payoff when students are locked behind desks, answering specific questions with little chance to learn judgment, imagination or wisdom; no time to experiment or relate learned facts to real life, and - of course - no time left for the playground. The typical higher functioning autistic is bright but unable to relate factual knowledge to a social environment. It is how No Child is training our kids.

At a session with about a hundred DC high schoolers a few years ago, I was struck by how hard it was for them to ask questions, even ones having to deal with issues that directly concerned them such as violence and drugs. I mentioned this to a teacher friend who responded quickly that according to the system, "they're not meant to ask questions: they're just meant to answer them."

And that pretty well sums up the problem. With the help of No Child we are teaching a generation of kids how to answer questions but not how to ask them, how to collect facts but not how to use them; to add and subtract numbers, but how to measure the impact of conflicting human choices,and how relate to data but not with other people. 

 
A GUIDE TO NCLB FAILURES
Disappointing Results
Failing Schools
Lack of Quality Teachers
Lowering of Standards
Narrowing of Curriculum
Ignoring of Children
Fear, Shame and Threats
Bad Tests
Fake Results
Educational Triage
Factory Style Learning
Loss of Best Teachers
Loss of Future Teachers
Loss of Morale
Drop Outs and Push Outs
Reduction in Time for Learning
Stagnation

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

Its not news that in an economically devastated place like Detroit, which hasn't even had functioning mass transit since the 1950's, loads of liberals and lefties are clamped like refrigerator magnets to the non-profit, foundation funded jobs sector which thrives on the labeling and "servicing" of "at-risk youth" ... "under-privileged children" or whatever else the social service pros are calling their perpetual funding units du jour.

They might privately sniff a bit at NCLB because G.W. Bush is tied to it... but hey, that shit is a gold mine . Dysfunctional programs are better than good ones, ESPECIALLY in "Education".

The real news is that almost nobody really wants the kids to become creative young thinkers. At least not until later... much later.

Right now , as "youngsters" they're sure -fire meal tickets. And not just for bone-headed Republican think- tankers & the brazen NCLB scammers they've helped to spawn. Libs do just fine swilling from the same trough. And everybody depends on libs to zip their lips when not guzzling.

- John A. Joslin ( Detroit NON-professional person )

Unknown said...

What I see in the classroom is a focus on tests, the taking of tests and the results of tests. It used to be called "evaluation" and the tests were supposed to be reliable. Now its stanine scores and at risk schools. I see my own child as having dyslexia but no medication can treat this so the schools misdiagnose it as a "hearing" problem. Every time I mention the fact at age 11 he still reverses numbers i.e. 9x3=
72
They would accept ADHD or ADD but not dyslexia because it is a "psychological" disorder.
Thanks for reminding us how much money the "politically damaged" Neil Busch has stolen from the U$ taxpayers and continues to reap.
NCLB dumbs down our society. The kids do not know how to sort out BS from Bush's s%%%.
Can we blame anyone but the congress who went along?

Anonymous said...

If you are serious about educating your child, send him to private school, or home school him.
My SO works in a public school, well regarded as public schools go around here (NH). I hear the drumbeat of outrage every evening; believe it: NCLB may be bad, but the foundations of our public education system are rotted and corrupt. Removing NCLB will remove the only visible relict of accountability left in the system.
I do not endorse NCLB, but I testify that contemporary US public education is a war crime without the war. --wam

Unknown said...

This is what i struggle with. The fact that the system is broken and do I walk away? How much more dangerous is ignorance than say a population like Cuba? I think the hubris we have that we are right ignores the theft of the future by raping the earth. No answers here either.

Anonymous said...

Spot on 9:25,

For those that don't understand just what public education is all about, and the reasons behind the sort of educational system we have in the US, as opposed to say Finland, here is a link to a very informative book that explores the history and evolution of the problem. The whole book is online.

The Underground History of American Education, by John Taylor Gatto

http://www.johntaylorgatto.com/chapters/index.htm


Bruce,

Have you heard of the Davis Program for helping dyslexics? They teach skills that help dyslexics sort out the confusing information that causes the reversed numbers, reading problems, and strange spellings. Dyslexics usually have great improvement from only a few sessions. They also have some books on the topic.

http://www.dyslexia.com/

The public schools will never address dyslexia, because dyslexics are generally quite intelligent, and dyslexia is a condition that has as a major feature creative thinking, which is something public schools try to educate away. Many dyslexics also do better away from a school environment, and homeschooling communities usually have plenty of dyslexics because families get frustrated with how the Public Schools ignore their kid's "learning disability".

Homeschooling only creates ignorance if the parents make a concerted effort to keep their kids in the dark about the world. Most homeschool kids have a much better grasp of the real world, because they are living in it, instead of cloistered away for 30 hours a week plus homework. Kids want to learn, but the environment of PS crushes that normal urge in the interest of keeping order in the class room.

I've homeschooled my dyslexic child all her life, she didn't read until she was 10, but now at 13 she is an avid reader, because nobody made her feel stupid because she couldn't read at 8. I simply strew her path with the interesting and the educational, and support her interests, because of this no pressure learning environment she has learned how to learn things on her own, for herself, which is the only true learning there is.