No Child Left Behind Act: Analytical Essay

In this essay, a brief description of educational policy is discussed, showing how interested parties collaborate to form a new public policy within education. The various actors within the network are discussed, along with competing interests surrounding these policies. Next, an explanation is given of how policy networks influence democratic governance. This information will be used to draw a conclusion regarding the relationship between democratic governance and policy networks.

Educational policy is continually changing. In 2001, a federal law called the No Child Left Behind Act (NCLB), provided money to improve educational assistance for children from a poor background and held schools accountable for how students achieved on annual state assessments. The goal of the No Child Left Behind Act was to improve the test scores of students with economic disadvantages and students with disabilities. With the controversy surrounding NCLB, in 2015 this law was replaced with the Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA).

McCarthy and Soodak (2007) clarify that schools must balance democratic values within a community of equals that protects the rights of all students. Educational policy involves several components such as the State Department of Education, local departments of education, teachers, and parents, while a competing interest is local companies and businesses. The No Child Left Behind Act required schools to report the results of subgroups that highlighted students that were struggling, including graduation rates of subcategories such as students with disabilities. This policy did not protect the rights of all students, therefore, needed to be changed.

Policy networks are composed of organizations that are connected by subsystems that have a mutual dependency requiring them to work together. Networks look at how to proceed to fulfill the needs of the collective which influences democratic governance by deploying these models as assets to society. Through these networks, collaboration allows for some constructive discourse to occur that promotes healthy competitive ideas that can stimulate policy change when used appropriately.

In conclusion, policy networks are used to influence democratic governance by ensuring the needs of the collective are met. These networks can achieve this by ensuring policies are protecting the rights of all. The No Child Left Behind Act did not achieve its goal, but instead put undue attention on specific groups and pressure on schools to perform pressuring teachers to teach to the test only. Networks were then used to create a new law that allowed policymakers the ability to create a law to advocate for children.

Review of Dana Goldstein’s ‘The Teacher Wars’

How schooling has changed! Moving forward to present day and everything is done by computer. Notebook paper is barely used, presentations are ‘slides’ on ‘google classroom’, and if you do not know ‘Excel’ or ‘PowerPoint’, you will be left behind. Everyone has at least one computer at home, if not more. We can submit and/or complete homework and classroom assignments any day of the week. The computer is a way of everyday communication and it is a very useful tool in part of America’s school learning. For the older person, we have had to learn to adjust, connect, and develop a tolerance for the computer age.

Even the ‘classroom’ has changed in the past thirty or so years! It was not heard of having a class ‘online’ years ago but today, here I am taking a class online for the very first time but it is very common for many! In fact, one could graduate with a degree and never set foot out of his or her house to actually go to the college which they graduated from! Going back even further, let’s say sixty or seventy years, there were white versus black schools. Segregation. “Separate but equal”. Even though black schools were “lower quality than white- less well funded, with older textbooks and fewer athletic facilities”. “For black teachers, a transfer to an integrated school was considered a vote of confidence; for white teachers, it was considered a demotion”. Today, however, we do not think twice if we have a black or white teacher for ourselves and/or for our children. We can go one step further: today we are taught with both black, white, male, or female teachers from kindergarten on up to graduate school and beyond.

During the Segregation Era, we had the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 which was the “most lasting Great Society change for the nation’s schools” .This was “the precursor to the Bush-era No Child Left Behind”. The Act of 1965 was created during the presidency of Lyndon B. Johnson to help fund low-income families and close the gap in reading, writing, and mathematics. It also helped fund preschool programs. Then came “No Child Left Behind Act” that was introduced in 2001 by President Bush. This required states to test students in reading and math in grades third through eighth and once in high school. If the majority of the school did not pass for three consecutive years, they had to offer after-school programs and tutoring. If the majority of the school did not pass for five consecutive years, the firing of staff took place!

Then in 1998, the first year of SOL (Standards of Learning) testing only two percent of Virginia public schools met the standard for full accreditation. By 2004, it increased by eighty-four percent. Did they improve because year after year since the SOL’s began “teachers took the previous tests and would target their lessons over that”? (page 200, Goldstein) Is this a true example of what American students know or is it that they are presented with the material and they just memorize the answer, not really knowing the material? What if one knows the material but are bad test takers? The test is geared to one thinker, what about the rest?

We have adjusted, learned from our mistakes and changed through the years. In the future, let’s say thirty or even sixty years, how will teaching and the classroom change? Presently, we judge our teachers and/or schools by how good our test scores are. “To determine what data can be collected to prove the big goal has been achieved. The data will almost always be test scores, from either a state standardized test, a district test, or a test the teacher finds or creates on her own”. “Standardized testing, numbers-driven evaluation of teachers, and merit pay”. There is so much demand and stress on achieving high scores to look good to get that ‘bonus’ for themselves or school, are some schools cheating by erasing answers that their students answers so their school will have high scores (pay bonuses had been paid to administrators and teachers who cheated by erasing and correcting student’s answers on standardized test). By personal knowledge, I know that is a child fails the standardized test they are tutored and are re-given the test. Is this truly fair? We put a lot of emphasis on these scores. Heaven forbid if our schools fail! Are we even lowering our standards too?

‘No Child Left Behind’ has provoked states to lower standards and the scores that would qualify as proficient. Lowering scores will only hurt them, this is not challenging them. Another issue leading to the No Child Left Behind controversy is the fact that some teachers have felt pressured to focus on subjects rated by the No Child Left Behind testing requirements, rather than focusing on providing children with a well-rounded education. Some schools have been accused of cutting back on studies involving science and the arts to increase the focus on English and math. As a result, some complain education isn’t really improving; it just means sacrificing one subject proficiency for another. “The best things a teacher can do for her students is to set high, individualize expectations for each one of them, regardless of a child’s past performance…”. So what will happen in the future? Time will tell. However, I know things I hope stay the same and that I can be successful in directing the future adults to believing “that doing well in school could help them become more effective advocates for their families and neighbors”. I hope to make them self-directed learners. I hope to be observant of other teachers and see what really works in guiding my little scholars. I also want to be able to relate to them so they can “see themselves reflected in me”. I hope this will create a determination and a strong desire for them to want to achieve. Hopefully, I will be molded into an outstanding teacher by not only being taught in the classroom but having real-world experience in the classroom, that in itself is a ‘powerful education’. I think for me to observe other teachers and being observed myself will help by receiving positive or negative feedback. This will help make me be a more successful teacher by letting us know what is more effective or what is not. Our lessons need to be engaging and challenging enough so our students will not be bored. Teacher evaluation whether observational or based on children test scores, I would like to think, can be a clear determining factor of whether or not my students are receiving a proper education.

What the future holds for the American public school with its complex relationship between publicly funded education and the democratic way of life is somewhat hard to grasp. However, what will be the same as it was from the beginning as Ella Flagg Young wrote, “….I believe that every child should be happy in school” and that “ someday the system will be such that the child and teacher will go to school will ecstatic joy. At home in the evening, the child will talk about the things done during the day and will talk with pride. I want to make the schools the great instrument of democracy” in some regards, this holds true and we must hold onto some of the past dreams (the example of Ella Flagg Young) and continue that hope into the future.

Overall, the book was about the rich history of our public-school teaching and the teachers. It was interesting, well written, and went into detail from the beginning to present day education system. I think it should be on the list to read for this class. A lot of the details that were uncovered I was unaware, for example, was the size of the classrooms and the gender of the teacher of two hundred years ago. I was unaware that the classes were so large and that the teachers were mainly male! I also learned about ‘consulting teachers’. I love this idea of having a teacher (sort of like a mentor) assign to new teachers. These consulting teachers act as coaches and it is really encouraging me to know that I will or could have extra guidance once I graduate.

Achieving the Goals of the No Child Left Behind Act: Analytical Essay

1. Problem Identification & Analysis

1.1 Organisational Culture

During her tenure as superintendent of the Atlanta Public School System (APS), Beverly Hall instilled a problematic results-driven culture, placing premiums on student performance with no tolerance for any results bar unattainable performance. This poisonous achievement culture was exemplified by the view that her management enforced a “low score out the door” (Simons & Kindred, 2017) policy with employees. This organizational culture spread like a plague throughout the APS infecting all levels with corrupt and fraudulent practices.

Organizational culture comprises the cornerstones of core values, beliefs, and attitudes shared by the organizational members (Williams, McWilliams, & Lawrence, 2017). In the APS, Hall implemented an achievement culture. This type of organizational culture has an external strategic focus with a view to sustainability, as the organization concerns itself with serving customers in the external environment and fosters a results-oriented culture (Williams et al., 2017). This altered the invisible values of the organizational culture as it encouraged principals and teachers to covet results and performance over all else. Acts such as a principal saying he “needs those numbers” (Simons & Kindred, 2017, p. 9) and threats of job termination should goals not be met (Simons & Kindred, 2017, p. 11) exhibit how the focus on results caused employees to shift their focus to achieving these goals at any cost, leading to resorting to widespread fraud.

The consequence of a results-oriented culture and external pressure to achieve, such as under the No Child Left Behind policy, have been shown to burden schools. Schools feel obligated to satisfy performance requirements instead of delivering their mission (Male & Palaiologou, 2015). Male & Palaiologou (2015) further suggest that the use of models ignores the needs of the community of the educational organization. This evidence shows that a results-obsessed achievement culture was destined to fail in the APS at every level, as the focus shifted from the needs of students in the Atlanta community to achieving the goals of the No Child Left Behind Act.

2. Generation and Evaluation of a Range of Alternative Solutions

2.1 Organisational Culture

2.1.1 New Superintendent

Male & Palaiologou (2015) suggest that installing a culture in a school as a priority over the interests of any agenda create a strong core values that build a positive culture of success. One potential solution is to appoint a new superintendent, with the aim of installing a leader who aims to instill a relation-oriented culture focused on what is best for the children in the APS.

  1. Advantages:
  • Shift the focus of the APS from achieving performance goals to focussing on improving schooling for students
  • Strengthening the group sense of belonging and increasing the level of interdependence discouraging acts or corruption and fraud through cheating, based on social bonding theory (Gentina, Tang, & Gu, 2017)ach
  • Establish a culture in which goals are expressed in terms of achieving the “greatest good for the greatest number of people rather than individual achievement” (Male & Palaiologou, 2015)
  1. Disadvantages:
  • Does not relieve the external political pressures of performance requirements of No Child Left Behind
  • Does not replace other corrupt leaders in the APS, who may continue cheating practices
  • New culture most effective without performance requirements, particularly concerning requirements for tertiary entry (Male & Palaiologou, 2015)

2.1.2 Reform No Child Left Behind Act

According to Loyalka, Sylvia, Liu, Chu, & Shi (2019), level and gains incentives encourage teachers to focus only on select students and do not elicit any meaningful change in achievement in any segment of students. Therefore, the incentivization based on level or gain increase from class averages such as what is used in No Child Left Behind is ineffective. Reforming it to offer pay-for-percentile incentives offers an opportunity to positively revitalize the program.

  1. Advantages:
  • Pay for percentile incentives have been shown to meaningfully improve student achievement (Loyalka et al. 2019)
  • Pay for percentile outperforms class average achievement-based incentivization and class achievement gains from when examining achievement of every individual student (Loyalka et al., 2019)
  • Places a greater focus on the welfare and learning of individual students, catering to everyone
  1. Disadvantages:
  • Requires a nationwide rollout or special conditions under the No Child Left Behind Act
  • Implementation would not be instantaneous

2.1.3 De-Centralisation of APS

Segmenting the APS, to give control of smaller segments of schools to more administrators allowing for fiscal de-centralization and serving smaller communities has been shown to increase efficiency in resource allocation for public services (Zhu, 2017)

  1. Advantages:
  • Increases efficiency of resource allocation for schools (Zhu, 2017)
  • Allows for administrators to more closely tailor the schools to the needs of the community
  1. Disadvantages:
  • Possible the best practices are not well enforced (Zhu, 2017)
  • Possible that best practices are not well enforced (Zhu, 2017)
  • Does not relieve performance pressures from No Child Left Behind

3. Recommendations

3.1 Organisational Culture

The recommendation being put forth is the installation of a new superintendent. Revitalizing and altering the culture of the APS would allow the organization to refocus on a new set of goals and values going forward. The effect of this change is to implement an involvement culture in the APS which shifts focus internally and places a high value on meeting the needs of internal members (Williams et al., 2017). This form of behavioral substitution is an effective form of transitioning from an established culture to a new organizational culture (Williams et al., 2017) and allows the APS to transition from their achievement culture to an involvement culture.

While an attempt to reform the performance program may have proven benefits, the amount of time required to uproot an established system and install a pay-for-percentile incentive program that contradicts the No Child Left Behind Act renders it infeasible. Furthermore, de-centralization is not guaranteed to have the desired effect without problematic unintended consequences where best practice is not upheld. Hence, the advantage of a new appointee to introduce an improved culture focused on students has been suggested by Male & Palaiologou (2015) to be more effective than reliance upon models of leadership. Furthermore, the ease and speed that a new superintendent could be installed far outperform the delayed implementation the alternative solutions would require.

Therefore, the recommendation of this report is that the APS appoint a new superintendent, who aims to implement an involvement culture to best serve the internal members (Williams et al., 2017), therefore placing a premium on positive student outcomes.

References

  1. Gentina, E., Tang, T., & Gu, Q. (2017, December). Does Bad Company Corrupt Good Morals? Social Bonding and Academic Cheating among French and Chinese Teens. Journal of Business Ethics, 146(3), 639-667. doi:10.1007/s10551-015-2939-z
  2. Loyalka, P., Sylvia, S., Liu, C., Chu, J., & Shi, Y. (2019). Pay by Design: Teacher Performance Pay Design and the Distribution of Student Achievement. Journal of Labor Economics, 37(3), 621-662. doi:https://doi-org.ezproxy.lib.monash.edu.au/10.1086/702625
  3. Male, T., & Palaiologou, I. (2015). Pedagogical leadership in the 21st century: Evidence from the field. Educational Management Administration & Leadership, 43(2), 214-231. doi:https://doi-org.ezproxy.lib.monash.edu.au/10.1177/1741143213494889
  4. Simons, R., & Kindred, N. (2017). Atlanta Schools: Measures to Improve Performance. Harvard Business School, 1-25.
  5. Williams, C., McWilliams, A., & Lawrence, R. (2017). MGMT3. Melbourne: Cengage Learning.
  6. Zhu, M. (2017). The quality and efficiency of public service delivery in the UK and China. Regional Studies, 51(2), 285-296. doi:10.1080/00343404.2015.1080992

Standardized Testing and No Child Left Behind: Analytical Essay

All students have the memory of sitting in class with a number 2 pencil being quite as the proctor reads a script about the test you are about to take. Standardized testing has become a right of passage for students starting in kindergarten all the way to seniors in high school. Standardized testing has been a part of schooling since the nineteen hundreds. In those days it was used to measure if students were developmentally behind their peers. Since then standardized tests have been used for the college admission SAT and ACT tests. These standardized tests can determine your future When most people think of standardized testing they think of those dreaded SAT and ACT that can determine your future in college (no pressure). However, many argue that these test does not measure student’s intelligence effectively, creates inequality in economic status and test accuracy, and takes away time from teachers to teach new information.

These tests have been around dating back to the 1800s. Ever since the begining debates have arised wheter standardized tests are an effective way to track students’ intellectual abilities. In the current school system standardized test are maditory by laws passed by congress. They feel this is an effective way to hold schools and students accountable for learning materials mandated by the state. However many agree these tests do not have the best intreset of teachers and students at heart and instead just another way for states to control the classroom enviorment.

Have you ever wondered what students really achive from a standardized test? achieve from standardized testing? Achievement means something that somebody has succeeded in doing. “Achievement is more than just test scores but also includes class participation, students’ course-taking patterns, and teachers’ professional development patterns”(Harris, Harris, Smith). This quote explains that in reality a test score can not truly capture the essenice of the different areas students can achive in. Standardized tests are just an edless cycle they start in kindergarden, develope into college admission test like SAT, and could even carry on into carrer test like the MCAT. Testing patterns have also been at hot topic. Most standardized test are only multiple choice. In result students could just be good “guessers” and not truly know the information the test in asking. It does not test the students’ full potential to what they have learned, it just simply tests the students’ ability to guess quickly under pressure (Walberg). These tests are also usually timed in a strick limit. How the student paces his or her time results in how well they can perform without feeling rushed, and not be able to think through the questions full. In addition, this could cause major anziety for students with fear of not completeing the test in time. With all these circumstances student rush to finish the test and creates the end result of lower test schores than students actual intelectual ability (Popham).

Colleges now put great emphasis on SAT scores rather than grades in the classroom. The common core commity think some teachers might teach easier than others which don’t give all students equal opprutinities to have strong grades on your transcrip that you submit to college.

Standardized tests have been a part of American education since the mid-1800s (“Standardized Tests”). Since that time teachers began to teach for the test instead of lessons students might be intrested in. Standardized tests are an unreliable measure of student performance. A 2001 study published by the Brookings Institution found that 50-80% of year-over-year tests-core improvements were temporary and “caused by fluctuations that had nothing to do with long-term changes in learning…”(“Standardized Tests”). Teachers become stressed that they are teaching “the right way” in hope of their students scoring high on standardized tests. A psychologist, Daniel Koretz says, “standardized tests usually do not provide a direct and complete measure of educational achievement.”

Standardized testing has many positive effects such as getting used to standardized tests. Some say that they are more reliable at measuring student achievement. Without standardized tests the policymakers would have to rely on tests scored by individual schools and teachers who have a vested interest in producing favorable results. The multiple-choice tests are graded by a machine which is less time consuming and generally more accurate than a hand-graded test by a person which rids of the human subjective thinking or bias(“Standardized Tests”). According to a Nov. 2010 report by Mckinsey & Company, a global management firm, “Twenty countries’ studies have achieved significant and widespread gains on national and international assessments had used “proficiency targets for school” and “frequent, standardized testing to monitor system progress,”(Popham). The US Department of Education stated that “if teachers cover subject matter required by the standards and teach it well, then students will master the material on which they will be tested-and probably much more”. “teaching to the Test” can be a good thing because it focuses on essential content and skills, eliminates time-wasting activities that don’t produce learning gains, and motivates the students to excel(Bily).

There are boundless reasons to determine that standardized testing can in fact be a positive thing to students and educators across the globe. One of the most important things is that it is not stressful on students. According to the United Stated Department of Education, “although testing may be stressful for some students, testing is a normal and expected way of assessing what students have learned.” A Nov. 2001 University of Arkansas study found that “the vast majority of students do not exhibit stress and have a positive attitude towards standardized testing programs.”(“Standardized Tests”). This

“Teaching to the Test” idea can be a positive thing for students across the globe because it better prepares them for colleges and other higher learning facilities beyond secondary school. In January of 1998, A Public Agenda found that 66% of college professors said that elementary and high schools expect students to learn too little. By March of 2002, after a surge in the testing and the passing of the No Child Left Behind act,(NCLB), that figure dropped tremendously to 47% “in direct support of higher educations, strengthened standards, and better tests.”(“Standardized Testing No Child Left Behind”).

Many people believe that standardized testing is a burden on society and a total waste of taxpayers’ money. According to the Texas Education Agency, the state of Texas spent over $9 million in 2002-03 to test students. While the cost to Texas taxpayers from 2009-12 is projected to be around $88 million per year(“Standardized Testing”). That is well over $264 million spent on standardized tests just in one state. That is useful money that could be going towards bettering the education of the students through better technology, books, classrooms, and even teachers. Not only is testing expensive it is stressful on the students and equally the teachers. According to education researcher Mr. Cizek, anecdotes produce griping anxiety in even the smartest students and makes children cry, vomit, or both. On March 14, 2002, the Sacramento Bee reported that “test-related jitters, especially among young students are so common that the Stanford-9 exam comes with instructions on what to do with a test booklet if a student vomits on it.”(“Standardized Tests”). The stress is equally distributed to the teachers. Over 17 percent of Houston teachers ranked in the top category of the Texas Essential Knowledge and Skills reading test were ranked in the two lowest categories on the equivalent Stanford Achievement test. The results were based on “the same students, tested in the same subject, at approximately the same time of year, using two different tests.”(Walberg).

Some people say that standardized tests are discriminatory against non-English speaking students and students with special needs. Students in the process of learning the English language a forced to take English tests before they have mastered the language. Special needs students take the same tests as other children, receiving few of the accommodations usually provided to them as part of their Individualized Education Plans(IEP). (“Standardized Tests”). Also, the NCLB tests are drastically narrowing the curriculum. According to a study done by the Center on Education Policy reported that since 2001, 44 percent of school districts had reduced the time spent on science, social studies, and the arts by one hundred and forty-five minutes per week in order to focus on reading and math, and 75 percent of those teaching current events less often cited standardized tests as the reason behind all of this.(Popham). Not only are they discriminatory, but they are also an unreliable measure of student performance.

The multiple choice format used on standardized tests is an inadequate assessment tool. It encourages a simplistic way of thinking in which there are only right and wrong answers, which doesn’t apply in real world scenarios. The format is also biased toward male students, who studies have shown adapt more easily to the “game-like” point-scoring of multiple choice questions.(Harris, Harris, and Smith). The tests are graded by underpaid temporary workers with no educational training. The scorers make $11-$13 per hour and need only a bachelor’s degree, not necessarily related to education. “All it takes to become a test scorers a bachelor’s degree, a lack of a steady job, and a willingness to throw independent thinking out the window.”(“Standardized Tests”).

The No Child Left Behind Act or the NCLB, is a 2001 federal law designed to improve the quality of American education. The Act required all states to design basic tests to be distributed to students statewide. This act is optional; however, states that do not take part in this program will not be given funding from the government. Most states adopted this act and because of this students are forced to take mandatory tests annually or sometimes bi-annually. Students in grades 3-8 take annual standardized tests. In Tennessee, that test is called the TCAP. In most places, it is simply named the Terranova.

Standardized testing can be both a positive and negative thing on students and teachers everywhere. Ultimately, standardized testing has been a tradition in the United States for a long time the debate is whether or not students benefit from this monotonous task. Testing is hard on the students and equally challenging on the educators teaching them. This does not mean that school systems should rid of the idea behind it. A better solution would be smaller, less time-consuming benchmarks throughout the year to track student’s progress, and also to decide if they have learned what they were required to learn based on the curriculum.

Works Cited

  1. Bily, Cynthia A. Standardized Testing. Farmington Hills: Greenhaven Press, 2011. Print.
  2. ‘Do Standardized Tests Show an Accurate View of Students’ Abilities?.’ Concordia University-Portland Online. N.p., n.d. Web. 8 Nov 2013.< education.cu-portland.edu/blog/news/do-standardized-test-show-an-accurate-view-of-students-abilities/>
  3. Harris, Phillip, Joan Harris, and Bruce M. Smith. ‘Standardized Tests Do Not Effectively Measure Student Achievement.’ Standardized Testing. Ed. Dedria Bryfonski.
  4. Detroit: Greenhaven Press, 2012. At Issue. Rpt. from ‘Chapter 3: The Tests Don’t Measure Achievement Adequately.’ The Myths of Standardized Tests: Why They Don’t Tell You What You Think They Do. 2011. 33-45. Opposing Viewpoints In Context. Web. 8 Nov. 2013.
  5. Popham, W.James. ‘Why Standardized Tests Don’t Measure Educational Quality.’ Educational Leadership. N.p., n.d. Web. 8 Nov 2013.
  6. www.ascd.org/publications/educational-leadership/mar99/vol56/num06/Why-standardized-tests-don’t-measure-educational-quality/
  7. ‘Standardized Tests.’ procon.org. N.p., 01 Nov. 2013. Web. 11 Nov 2013.
  8. ‘Standardized Testing: No Child Left Behind.’ Lawserver. N.p. Web. 13 Nov 2013.
  9. Walberg, Herbert J. ‘Standardized Tests Effectively Measure Student Achievement.’
  10. Standardized Testing. Ed. Dedria Bryfonski. Detroit: Greenhaven Press, 2012. At Issue. Rpt. from ‘Stop the War Against Standardized Tests.’ Defining Ideas: A Hoover Institution Journal (20 May 2011). Opposing Viewpoints In Context.

Educate America Act and No Child Left Behind Act: Analytical Essay

Unit 1 Individual Project

Abstract

Similarly, as in budgetary and economic policies, the two political parties have altogether different approaches to reforming education for the up and coming age of American learners. The main education policy difference among the parties is the role that the federal government plays in educating the children. Both political parties outline the policy stances of each party that clearly show two different visions of what directions that each party would like to take the country. It is clear that both parties require and support high academic standards for learners; they advocate altogether different philosophies on how that ought to be accomplished. The Republican Party trusts in both the state and local control over the schools in order to develop standards. The Democratic Party on the other hand urged states to raise their standards so that learners can graduate in order to go to college or get a profession in order to prevail in a dynamic worldwide economy. Forty-six states have notable implemented reform that will convey better education to over a million of American learners. This is an unobtrusive reference to the Common Core Standards in math and reading that were made by the National Governors Association and the Chief State School Officers, which the Administration emphatically underpins. Many accept that these Common Core Standards will prompt national education standards expanding the federal government’s job in our state-funded schools.

Forces for Curriculum Change

The origin of the national standards movement in education development in American education was largely driven for economic purposes. For a significant part of the twentieth century, individuals with only an eighth-grade level of literacy could do most employment in the United States. Just a minority of individuals required more than that, less still required the sorts of learning and expertise related with the work by experts and managers. At that point, in the late 1970s and mid-1980s, everything changed. American business was attacked by firms, primarily from Asia, that were making gigantic advances into American markets for products and services at home and abroad. State governors turned out to be very worried about the employment that were being lost to low-wage nations, and business pioneers started to understand that gifted and educated individuals were indispensable to their future. The plan of action of guidelines-driven change has affected the standards movement in education.

Goals 2000: Educate America Act

The Clinton Administration signed the education reform initiative called Goals 2000: Educate America Act in March 1994. Goals 2000 was implemented to push the country toward a framework that depends on high expectations that all learners would be able can meet. It was a framework that will give both value and excellence to the majority of the learners in this nation. When learners are not held to high standards, the outcomes are low accomplishment and the grievous experience of children leaving school while never having been challenged to satisfy their potential. High standards permit each learner, each parent, and each instructor to partake in common expectations for what learners should know and have the option to achieve. Learners will adapt more when more is anticipated from them, in school and at home. Furthermore, adjusting instructor training, instructional materials, assessment practices, and parental involvement, will make soundness in instructive practice.

The Goals 2000: Educate America Act created higher standards and making course content all the more challenging. At the point when more is anticipated from students, they work more earnestly and accomplish more. For example, when employees are aware of the skills needed to prevail at work, they will work to accomplish them. Expectations of teachers also needed to change. They should not teach new standards utilizing a similar old ways. Teacher training must be offered and make continuous professional development an indispensable aspect of their responsibilities. Schools must be given the apparatuses and the adaptability they have to take care of business and after that be considered responsible for the outcomes they accomplish. There must be genuine rewards for good performance and critical ramifications for disappointment.

Schools cannot possibly carry out the responsibility alone. Parents, organizations, families, network associations, and open and private offices that give medical services, counseling, family support, and other social administrations must be a piece of network-wide endeavors to help learners. The targets for this goal are for all children to be able to access a high-quality education from preschool programs that help get ready learners ready for school. Each parent in the United States should be their child’s first educator and dedicate time every day to helping such parent’s preschool children learn and parents will have access to training as well as supporting parent’s needs. Children will get the proper nutrition, physical activities, and healthcare needed to attend school with the proper mindset.

The high school graduation rate will increment to in any event 90 percent. This objective is to significantly lessen its school dropout rate, and 75 percent of the learners who do drop out will effectively finish a high school degree or its equivalent. Initially closing the gap between American learners from minority cultures and non-minority cultures will be dispensed with.

All understudies will leave grades 4, 8, and 12 having exhibited competency over testing topics including English, arithmetic, science, civics and government, foreign language, art, history, and geography. Every school in America will guarantee that all learners figure out how to utilize their psyches well, so they might be set up for capable citizenship, further learning, and becoming good employees in a cutting-edge economy.

No Child Left Behind Act of 2001

The No Child Left Behind Act of 2001 was passed and changed into enactment under George Bush’s administration in 2002. It reauthorized the Elementary and Secondary Education act. The act for all intents and purposes influenced each public school in America and expanded the job of the federal government in the education system. The purpose of the act was to improve the education system of America. The principle thought behind the act was to take measures to build learner accomplishments and consider states and schools responsible for the advancement of the student body. The act carried a few changes to the education system of the public school system.

The act required states to start testing learners from grades three to eight every year on reading, math, and science by 2008. These tests needed to pursue state academic standards. Moreover, so as to analyze and compare the states, each state was required to introduce an example of fourth and eighth graders to take an interest in the National Assessment of Educational Progress testing program. So as to monitor the advancement of an educational institution, states were required to bring all learners up to the proficient level on state tests by the 2013-2014 academic school year. Individual schools needed to meet state satisfactory yearly advancement targets. From the beginning of the 2002-2003 academic school year, states were required to give yearly report cards of school districts that would demonstrate a wide scope of data on the performance of schools and accomplishments of learners.

The qualification of educators for schools was determined to a standard premise and by 2005-2006 school year, all the instructing personnel procured needed to have finished in any event two years of college, received an associate’s degree or higher, or passed an assessment to exhibit knowledge and educating capacity.

U.S. National Standards Movement

The U.S. National Standards Movement was reinforced with education standards and assessments from the Obama Administration in the American education reform. Defenders of national standards contend that setting up less, higher, and clear benchmarks and assessments will engage parents with data about what their children should know and which aptitudes they ought to have, and that they will consider schools responsible for delivering those outcomes. National standards and assessments guarantee that all learners are prepared for college or the workforce and will propel the instructive standing of the United States.

Parental involvement is critical and presently deficient. More accountability must be placed on the public school system to both the parents and taxpayers. An excessive number of learners leave secondary school without fundamental knowledge or abilities. American education ought to be increasingly competitive, especially given the measure of funds that citizens contribute.

Then again, national standards and assessments are probably not going to conquer these insufficiencies. These issues are excessively profoundly instilled in the power and motivator structure of the public education framework. A centralized standardized setting would cause parents and taxpayers to give up their empowerment to be involved in school improvement. They will give up the ability to be involved in the academic content, standards as well as assessments through their state and local policymakers.

National standards and assessments do not have the ability to deliver on supporters’ promises. As opposed to tending to the misalignment of influence and incentives from which numerous public education issues emerge, national standards and assessments would further confuse these equivalent issues.

Conclusion

The exhaustive exchanges drive us to the conclusion that the necessity of the comprehensive education on a thorough premise was required at the time period before the usage of the Acts and the social elements drove the ethnic contrasts just as poor instructive accomplishment rates experienced by empirical. The States was forced to keep up with the rising educational achievements and minimization of the accomplishment gaps. In addition, the necessity of raising academic standards due to the economic status was among the numerous reasons homelessness, domestic violence, and unemployment prompted the chalking out of the Acts.

References

  1. Butler, F. A., & Stevens, R. (2001). Standardized assessment of the content knowledge of English language learners K-12: Current trends and old dilemmas. Language Testing, 18(4), 409-427.
  2. Hakuta, K., Goto Butler, Y., & Witt, D. (2000). How long does it take English learners to attain proficiency? Stanford University, CA: University of California Linguistic Minority Research Institute.
  3. Linn, R. L., Baker, E. L., & Betebenner, D. W. (2002). Accountability systems: Implications of requirements of the No Child Left Behind Act of 2001 ( CSE Technical Report 567). University of California, Los Angeles: Center for the Study of Evaluation, National Center for Research on Evaluation, Standards, and Student Testing.
  4. No child left behind. (2004, August 04). edweek. Retrieved from http://www.edweek.org/ew/issues/no-child-left-behind/
  5. Rivera, C., Stansfield, C. W., Scialdone, L., & Sharkey, M. (2000). An analysis of state policies for the inclusion and accommodation of English language learners in state assessment programs during 1998-1999. Arlington, VA: U.S. Department of Education, Office of Bilingual Education and Minority Languages Affairs, The George Washington University Center for Equity and Excellence in Education.
  6. Toppo, G. (2007, August 01). How bush education law has changed our schools. Retrieved from http://www.usatoday.com/news/education/2007-01-07-no-child_x.htm
  7. What the no child left behind law means for your child. (n.d.). Retrieved from http://www.greatschools.org/improvement/quality-teaching/61-no-child-left-behind.gs?page=5

The Every Student Succeeds Act and No Child Left Behind Act: Analytical Essay

Education is an important building block for any society to thrive and dominate. Education reform has long remained a vital component of governmental agendas since the beginning of the 17th century. Because the United States has a capitalist economic system, the progression of innovation, competitiveness, and industrialization are heavily embedded into the economy. With education being such a crucial and complex entity to tackle, it remains a high priority to governments all over the world. For many years government officials have attempted to restructure and improve the education systems around the United States. They have focused on bridging the educational gap between the rich and poor, minorities and their white counterparts, and children with special needs and disabilities. In a nutshell, these are all the problems that the Every Student Succeeds Act aims to confront.

The Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA) is the K-12 federal education law. It reauthorizes the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA) and replaces the No Child Left Behind act. The ESSA was signed into law on December 10, 2015. The law was designed to increase opportunities for local input and flexible decision-making. Like the No Child Left Behind Act, ESSA is a reauthorization of the 1965 Elementary and Secondary Education Act, which instituted the increase in the federal government’s role in public education. ESSA preserves the general structure and funding methods of the ESEA, while giving states significantly greater local authority and flexibility over standards, goals, measures of students’ success and outcomes, and supports for school districts. ESSA tasks each state with developing its plan for support and accountability. ESSA passed the U.S. House of Representatives on December 2, 2015, by a vote of 359 to 64 and passed the U.S. Senate on December 9, 2015, by a vote of 85 to 12 (Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA)). This legislation was not some new-found idea, policymakers attempted to reform an already present, failing education system.

The Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA), which was reauthorized in December 2015, denoted its 50th commemoration, and the new form predicts significant future moves in responsibility and appraisal. The ESEA was made during Lyndon B. Johnson’s organization in 1965. The first ESEA enactment was a social liberties law made as a reaction to neediness and disparity in instruction the nation over – destitution that President Johnson saw direct while educating in Texas. ESEA offered government awards to locale serving low-pay students and awards for books, instruction focuses, and grants for low-salary undergrads. President Johnson accepted that the full instructive open door ought to be our first national objective.

In spite of the fact that the general crucial ESEA has continued as before throughout the years, it had advanced after some time to incorporate the requirements of increasingly particular in danger gatherings, including English-language students (the Bilingual Act; Title VII), female students (the Women’s Educational Equity Act; Title IX), and Native American students (the Improvement of Educational Opportunities for Indian Students Act; Title X).

A ton has been expounded with the new law, yet it may be useful to consider it in the setting. Keeping that in mind, here’s a short course of events of a portion of the significant achievements and changes identified with ESEA. Not the slightest bit is this expected to cover the entirety of the subtleties of its history.

In 1965, ESEA was instituted by Congress and marked into law. In 1968, Congress extended ESEA to incorporate new projects (and titles) that serve in-danger kids (transients and disregarded youngsters). The Bilingual Education Act was likewise passed.

Through, 1969 and 1970, analyses demonstrated the abuse of Title 1 guide (counting the compelling Martin-McClure report) making Congress alter and fix the language in ESEA a few times (between 1965-1980). The objective of the revisions was to build confinements to such an extent that more Title 1 cash would be utilized to help instructively burdened students from low-salary families. During the mid-1980 government backing of instruction, programs were forcefully decreased. Altogether less instructively distraught students were served under ESEA in the 1980s than in the 1970s.

In 1988, ‘Accountability and student testing become a major part of the law in 1988’ (Wardlow, 2016). The new form expected areas to utilize evaluations to quantify and report their viability every year. Schools that neglected to gain satisfactory ground were committed to creating plans for development.

In 1994, the recharging of the ESEA called for states to create measures and norms-adjusted evaluations for all students. States and locale were committed to distinguishing schools that were not making satisfactory yearly progress under Improving America’s Schools Act (IASA) and singled them out for development. The IASA was put into effect with ‘the expectation that all children will meet challenging state standards, flexibility with accountability, targeting funds, family and community partnerships, and support system roles and infrastructure’ (Billig, 2009).

In 2002, ESEA became NCLB (No Child Left Behind Act). NCLB moved a significant part of the basic leadership and asset designation away from states and in this way expanded the national government’s job in instruction. NCLB additionally fundamentally extended testing prerequisites. States were required to evaluate students every year in perusing and math in grades 3-8 and once in secondary school. Satisfactory yearly progress was required/expected for all students, including students of constrained English capability, racial/ethnic minority students, and students with impairments. NCLB necessitated that all students become capable in math and perusing/language expressions by 2014.

In 2009, ESEA was at that point two years past due for reauthorization. Despite the fact that ESEA was slowed down in Congress, new projects were made, and funds were designated towards instruction in 2009 as a feature of the national monetary improvement plan (the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act). Around $100 billion was designated towards instruction help by means of the ARRA. The ARRA was ‘aimed at stimulating and stabilizing the American economy during the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression, reflecting significant new dimensions of federal action in the area of educational reform’ (Superfine, 2011). Notwithstanding sparing employments in the teacher workforce, the ARRA was intended to start the execution of explicit change methodologies in states and schools and establish a framework for the Obama organization’s ensuing instructive change endeavors, including the looming reauthorization of the No Child Left Behind Act of 2001. While the objectives of the instructive change arrangements of the ARRA are excellent, the ARRA exceeds the breaking points of viable government activity. The instructive change arrangements of the ARRA face numerous potential entanglements given the chronicled attributes of government instructive change from the statehouse to the school rooms, the logical proof hidden in the changes supported by the ARRA, and the current political atmosphere. Albeit a considerable lot of these traps are presently unavoidable, change endeavors that expand on the ARRA yet center around dealing with the educator workforce, balance issues of nearby and government experts in a more nuanced way, and draw all the more emphatically on instructive research offer many guarantees for progressively compelling government activity in schooling. New aggressive award programs were built up for the structure of appraisals adjusted to the Common Core State Standards and for imaginative endeavors to improve state information frameworks, guidelines, and educator assessment frameworks.

Many states failed to meet the NCLB standards, and the Obama administration granted waivers to many states for schools that showed success but failed under the NCLB standards. However, these waivers usually required schools to adopt higher academic standards in testing. The NCLB was generally praised for forcing schools and states to become more accountable for ensuring the education of poor and minority children. However, the increase in standardized testing that occurred during the presidencies of Bush and Obama combined with resistance from many parents, called for a lesser role from the federal government in education (Rich and Lewin, 2015). There needed to be a higher focus on the underperforming populations of students, such as minorities, children with learning disabilities/ special education, students in poverty, and English language learning students.

The education agenda was set from the top-down process. This piece of legislation was able to get on the agenda was because in 2015 there was new leadership in three of the four major Congressional leadership positions. Senators Lamar Alexander and Patty Murray sat on the Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee. Representative Bobby Scott served as the House Education Committee ranking Democrat, and Representative John Kline remained the Chair. This new arrangement in leadership positions permitted the start of new negotiations and agenda-setting. They decided to pursue a major rewrite of the No Child Left Behind act. They were the ones who deemed this revision necessary. Alexander and Murray collaborated to write a bipartisan bill that could pass the Republican-controlled Congress and earn the signature of President Barack Obama (Saultz, 2016).

There are many revisions to the No Child Left behind Act that make up the Every Student Succeed Act. The first is that the ESSA requires that all students in America be taught to high academic standards that will prepare them to succeed in college and careers. Secondly, states have more flexibility to define their standards, assessments, and accountability systems rather than having a federally mandated program. Thirdly, it ensures the communication of information to educators, families, students, and communities through annual statewide assessments that measure students’ progress toward those high standards. Next, the ESSA requires that all schools provide evidence that their English Language Learning students are increasing their English proficiency. It includes an increase in funding for support and provisions pertaining to School Climate and Discipline, Educational Technology, Family Engagement, Charter Schools, and Accelerated and Blending Learning. The ESSA sustains and expands investments for increasing access to high-quality preschool. It maintains an expectation that there will be accountability and action to effect positive change in our lowest-performing schools, where groups of students are not making progress, and where graduation rates are low over extended periods of time (Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA).

Since the ESSA shifts the decision-making power to the states and local school districts, it up to each individual state to implement a plan that fits the needs of the students. For this portion, I will look at how the state of Illinois is implementing the ESSA act. The Illinois State Board of Education (ISBE) submitted the ESSA State Plan for Illinois to the U.S. Department of Education (ED) on April 1, 2017. The following changes were outlined: Title I: Improving Basic Programs Operated by State and Local Educational Agencies, Illinois has adopted a program called IL-EMPOWER in which school improvement services are delivered. Title I focused on the Education of Migratory Children. Title I focus on prevention and intervention programs for children and youth who are neglected, delinquent, or at-risk. Title II aims to support effective instruction in classrooms. Title III concentrates on language instruction for English learners and immigrant students. Title IV examines student support and academic enrichment grants. Title establishes 21st-century community learning centers (21st CCLC). Title V focuses on the rural and low-income school programs. Title VII explores Vento homeless assistance act (McKinney-Vento act), education for homeless children, and youth program (Illinois State Template Board of Education State for the Consolidated State Plan Under the Every Student Succeeds Act, 2017).

In order to construct the outline of this plan, the ISBE conducted a tour around the state providing information about the proposed plan and taking suggestions from the public and stakeholders. Although these changes have been outlined tension stilled managed to arise amongst stakeholders just ending the second year of the ESSA enactment in 2019. The 2019-2020 Chicago Public School year began with a great start until the ESSA’s main stakeholders, teachers, and students went on a strike. Members of the Chicago Teacher Union say that they have lost two weeks of pay, CPS is threatening to take away teacher insurance, misuse of funding for minority children, low paying teacher salaries, and overcrowded classrooms (Friedberg 2019). All issues of which the ESSA is supposed to address. The strike lasted for 11 days putting over 300,000 students out of school (Smith, Davey, 2019).

Ineffective Reading Teachers Impact the Abilities of Student’s Reading Achievement: Analysis of No Child Left Behind Act

Ineffective Reading Teachers Impact the Abilities of Student’s Reading Achievement

Abstract

The No Child Left Behind Act was signed into Congress on January 8, 2002, by George Bush. It is an act that gives the state the authority to authorize federal education programs. There are challenges within this act but has sought to advance student achievement in schools across the nation. However, students tend to have proficiencies with fundamental reading skills and is not able to comprehend at a simple reading level. The information of this research will be examined as well as the assessment of the qualitative study with a quantitative emphasis on it. In this study, the Florida Twin Project, researchers selected eight hundred-six first and second-grade Florida twin sets to perform the study on. The main purpose of this theory is to show the importance of teachers that teach English effects the achievement of students. In order to establish if the inconsistency in reading is because of genetic reasons, researchers has to use the grades of the twins’ Oral Reading Fluency (ORF) assessment, which is a reading evaluation. The comparison of the test scores of the twins’ peers and the twins’ will be used to create a measurement of teacher quality. Improving students reading achievement is a national goal our former president, Barack Obama. Furthermore, the study will show the effects of teacher quality and how it suggests a need for ongoing research of this complex issue.

Statement of the Problem

Introduction

People can agree in order to achieve academic success in education today, the quality of teachers is substantially important. Since the enactment of No Child Left Behind, society puts an emphasis on scores and numbers then connects them with the extremely qualified teachers who taught them. The pressure that falls on the shoulders of these teachers is high. The importance of making sure all students are on level with their grade is a concern for everyone. Unfortunately, achievement disparities in math and reading remain a problem across the board for many.

Purpose

In life, one must know how to read to be successful. Teaching children at an early age to read will initially determine how their accomplishment in school transcends over into life and the world we live in today. Reading is such an integral part of life that ensuring qualified teachers are in place is what matters most (Darling-Hammond & Pall, 1996). Recently there has been an extreme amount of research done on the different approaches on learning how to read, how your heredity aspects can affect learning, and the benefits and drawbacks of those programs. Without researching, these are factors that would be non-existent. Nonetheless, the most crucial component is the teacher when it comes to training a child to read. Student achievement should account for at least half of the teacher’s score to show if they are being effective or ineffective. This can eliminate depending on teacher credentials and students passing state-mandated tests to determine how effective the teacher really is, but more so if the teacher is using great teaching techniques and best practices to achieve success in student learning (Dexter & Hughes). This is one of the reasons behind this proposal so that it can explore the research of how ineffective teachers can impact the achievement of a child’s reading aptitude.

There is still much deliberation between scholars and researchers about the extent of guidance that teachers have on a student’s reading success. There are different components to a child’s success. If all the tools are not readily available it makes it that much harder for teachers, effective or ineffective, do their job. Research has been limited on the information about non-effective teachers deterring a student’s success. Taylor, J., Roehrig, A. D., Hensler, B. S., Conner, C . M. & Schatschneider, C. (2010). To gain more knowledge on the issue the following questions will be asked. (1) Even though the “No Child Left Behind’ and numerous judicial acts has been enacted, are teachers highly capable to teach? (2) How is the ineffectiveness of a teacher really decided? (3) How does the planning of the teacher affect student success? So, the answers to these questions can bring a good point on how to measure a teacher’s effectiveness. Using fellow teachers, administrators and student achievement can also help measure the effectiveness of teachers.

Classification of Terms

  • Best practices – existing practices that already possess a high level of widely-agreed effectiveness. (edutopia.org)
  • Highly qualified- requires the teacher to earn a bachelor’s degree in every subject they teach and obtain a full state certification in every subject or has passed the state teacher licensing examination and holds a license to teach in such State. (TEA Title IX 9101)
  • Instruction- the activities of educating or instructing in a particular subject or skill; activities that impart knowledge or skill, a lesson. vocabulary.com (2010)
  • No Child Left Behind (NCLB)- a federal law passed under the George W. Bush administration in 2001. It provides money for extra educational assistance for poor children in return for improvements in their academic progress (Capers, 2010). NCLB`s purpose is to improve the performance of America’s primary and secondary schools by increasing the standards of accountability for states, school districts, and schools, as well as providing parents more flexibility in choosing which schools their children will attend. (Edweek.org)
  • Success – the accomplishment of an aim or purpose. Merriam-webster.com (2010)
  • Teacher- one that teaches; especially: one whose occupation is to instruct. Merriam-webster.com (2010)
  • Teacher Quality – Teachers who can constantly help their students in making substantial academic progress. Teachers must have knowledge of their subject, recognize how students learn, and have comprehensive range of teaching techniques that meets the needs of diverse students. Saphier (2014)

Research methodology

Participants/Students

The researchers in this assessment selected eight hundred-six twins to perform the study. The sample contained two hundred eighty monozygotic or identical (143 female and 137 male) and five hundred twenty-six dizygzotic or fraternal (130 same-sex female; 128 same-sex male; 268 opposite sex) twin sets (Taylor, Roehrig, Hensler, Connor & Schatschneider, 2005). The subjects for the study were chosen from different schools in Florida and were in the first and second grades. Choosing different twin sets in this phase of the assessment will give better results. Having a mixture of different races and cultures helps to expand the outcome. So, based off the study, white subjects were 35%, Hispanic subjects were 33%, African-American subjects were 27% and the rest of the subjects were of mixed or another ethnicity. This information showed the subjects that participated were from diverse socioeconomic backgrounds. Having all students a sense of collegial cohesiveness, hands-on approach to curriculum instruction, overarching teaching philosophy that all children can learn, communication that all students will be successful, high expectations for all children and parents playing a vital role in their child’s success (Brown & Medway, 2005). These are a few reasons the study is significant because of the direct influence of heredity variability amongst the children.

Teachers

Dr. Jeanette Taylor, the lead writer for the Florida Twin Project on Reading talks about the results from the study performed at Florida State University that comprised teachers along with first and second-grade students in Tallahassee, Florida. Although the authors did not disclose the quantity of teachers used (whether they were effective or ineffective) to contribute in the study, neither did it stipulate their qualities, beliefs, or attributes. Dr. Taylor did affirm that the teachers taught first and second grade from different Florida schools demonstrating the diverse environments they came from. (Taylor, Roehrig, Hensler. Connor & Schatschneider, 2005). The information also examines the teacher’s practices that are effective in overcoming educational barriers faced by poor and minority children.

Data analysis

The intent of the study was that the results was gathered through three key possibilities: (1) Oral Reading Fluency test (ORF), (2) scores of the student, and (3) parents’ report. The first and second-grade students who participated in this study, reading skills were measured using the ORF test. The school staff collected the reading achievement test results and stored them in the Progress Monitoring and Reporting Network (PMRN). The PMRN is utilized to evaluate student progress or performance in those areas in which they were identified by universal screening as being at risk for failure (Dexter & Hughes). Results from the start of the year showed the baseline data and the students’ scores at the end of the year showed the post-evaluation data. By utilizing the results of the twins’ Oral Reading Fluency (ORF) exam, which measures reading abilities, they were able to see the inconsistencies in reading was based off genetic factors and expended the results of the twins’ peers, so they could generate a degree of teacher quality.

The results were assessed and compared at the end of the year. The advantages in reading was credited to the efficient teacher however, the less significant improvements were contributed to the inefficient teacher (Outlaw, 2004) (Voehrig, 2006). The twins’ results were not incorporated in the study computations therefore the teachers’ quality results were not established by the twins’ accomplishments.

There have been many studies organized and statistics shown involving teacher quality. The hypothesis was confirmed by the study; ineffective reading teachers’ make a difference when it comes to student success. Nonetheless, the study has difficulties, flaws, and prejudice. Some of those flaws are due to the minority and poor children. Teachers’ qualifications has increased along with the growth of student population and the way society views them (Saylor, 2002). It has been proven that regardless of the student demographics or curriculum change, the most important factor in being an effective teacher is being prepared.

Initially, this particular study validates the important impact of teacher quality and how it has an effect on student achievement however; there are additional issues, such as peers, resources, and the physical school setting, which could help motivate the level of reading success among children. Next, the measure of teacher quality has been a problem (Voehrig, 2006). The value-added model was utilized in this study by the researchers; the progression of how the students’ performed throughout time, but there are additional methods that can determine teacher quality (classroom performance, etc.). Finally, circumstances such as the teachers’ intelligence, approach, values, viewpoint, and knowledge may limit the capacity of the study or may alter the result and cannot be regulated by the researcher. If teachers can address the student’s educational needs by creating an equally supportive educational environment.

Due to the fact, the contributors were from only one state (Florida) and a specific school district limited this study. If this study was performed somewhere else the discoveries would probably be different because of the school district or vicinity.

Particular issues that restricted the capacity of the study was the trial size, age, and classification of the students. The students that were included in the study age and grade were limited because the students were younger children. The study may encounter different outcomes if there were older students involved. In conclusion, the existing matter in the study is that observing unrelated children cannot discuss whether the results relate to heredity or within the environment or schools. This study presumes that assigning high-quality teachers in the classroom may not guarantee proportionately high achievement from students although the role of the teacher is pertinent to the classroom setting which influences students’ reading success. Even though the study demonstrated the hypothesis, more research needs to be done.

References

  1. Brown, K. & Medway, F. (2005). School environment and teacher beliefs in a school effectively serving poor South Carolina (USA). African American students: a case study. Teaching and Teacher Education, 22, 530-541.
  2. Capers, R. (2010). The role of the teacher and classroom atmosphere in reading motivation. Illinois Reading Council Journal, (39), 21-26.
  3. Darling-Hammond, L. & Pall. D. (1996). Teaching for high standards: What policymakers should know and be able to do. CPRE Joint Report Series. Retrieved April 23, 2019, from http://govinfo.library.unt.edu/negp/reports/highstds.htm
  4. Enriques, D., Jones, S., & Clarke, L. (2008). Changing our perceptions and practices, then our readings. The Reading Teacher, (63), 71-75.
  5. Drager. A. M. (2011). Helping preservice reading teachers learn to read and conduct research to update their instruction. Adolescent & Adult Literacy Journal, (42), 200-209.
  6. Mines, Z. (2007). Some highly qualified teachers may not be so qualified. District Administration, 43, 20-20.
  7. Outlaw, T, Clements, M. & Outlaw, N. (2004). Then and now: Evolving highly qualified teachers. Kappa Gamma Bulletin, 75, 22-26.
  8. Saylor, B., Person, D. P., Peterson, D. S. & Rodriguez, M.C. (2002). Reading development in high poverty classrooms; the affect of teacher practices that encourage cognitive engagement in literacy learning. The School Journal, 101, 5-31.
  9. Voehrig, T. J., Hanushek, E. A (2006). Teacher Quality. NCBI. What makes a teacher “effective”? USA Today. (2007). Retrieved on April 22, 2019, from Academic Search Complete.

No Child Left Behind Act: Analytical Essay

In this essay, a brief description of educational policy is discussed, showing how interested parties collaborate to form a new public policy within education. The various actors within the network are discussed, along with competing interests surrounding these policies. Next, an explanation is given of how policy networks influence democratic governance. This information will be used to draw a conclusion regarding the relationship between democratic governance and policy networks.

Educational policy is continually changing. In 2001, a federal law called the No Child Left Behind Act (NCLB), provided money to improve educational assistance for children from a poor background and held schools accountable for how students achieved on annual state assessments. The goal of the No Child Left Behind Act was to improve the test scores of students with economic disadvantages and students with disabilities. With the controversy surrounding NCLB, in 2015 this law was replaced with the Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA).

McCarthy and Soodak (2007) clarify that schools must balance democratic values within a community of equals that protects the rights of all students. Educational policy involves several components such as the State Department of Education, local departments of education, teachers, and parents, while a competing interest is local companies and businesses. The No Child Left Behind Act required schools to report the results of subgroups that highlighted students that were struggling, including graduation rates of subcategories such as students with disabilities. This policy did not protect the rights of all students, therefore, needed to be changed.

Policy networks are composed of organizations that are connected by subsystems that have a mutual dependency requiring them to work together. Networks look at how to proceed to fulfill the needs of the collective which influences democratic governance by deploying these models as assets to society. Through these networks, collaboration allows for some constructive discourse to occur that promotes healthy competitive ideas that can stimulate policy change when used appropriately.

In conclusion, policy networks are used to influence democratic governance by ensuring the needs of the collective are met. These networks can achieve this by ensuring policies are protecting the rights of all. The No Child Left Behind Act did not achieve its goal, but instead put undue attention on specific groups and pressure on schools to perform pressuring teachers to teach to the test only. Networks were then used to create a new law that allowed policymakers the ability to create a law to advocate for children.

Review of Dana Goldstein’s ‘The Teacher Wars’

How schooling has changed! Moving forward to present day and everything is done by computer. Notebook paper is barely used, presentations are ‘slides’ on ‘google classroom’, and if you do not know ‘Excel’ or ‘PowerPoint’, you will be left behind. Everyone has at least one computer at home, if not more. We can submit and/or complete homework and classroom assignments any day of the week. The computer is a way of everyday communication and it is a very useful tool in part of America’s school learning. For the older person, we have had to learn to adjust, connect, and develop a tolerance for the computer age.

Even the ‘classroom’ has changed in the past thirty or so years! It was not heard of having a class ‘online’ years ago but today, here I am taking a class online for the very first time but it is very common for many! In fact, one could graduate with a degree and never set foot out of his or her house to actually go to the college which they graduated from! Going back even further, let’s say sixty or seventy years, there were white versus black schools. Segregation. “Separate but equal”. Even though black schools were “lower quality than white- less well funded, with older textbooks and fewer athletic facilities”. “For black teachers, a transfer to an integrated school was considered a vote of confidence; for white teachers, it was considered a demotion”. Today, however, we do not think twice if we have a black or white teacher for ourselves and/or for our children. We can go one step further: today we are taught with both black, white, male, or female teachers from kindergarten on up to graduate school and beyond.

During the Segregation Era, we had the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 which was the “most lasting Great Society change for the nation’s schools” .This was “the precursor to the Bush-era No Child Left Behind”. The Act of 1965 was created during the presidency of Lyndon B. Johnson to help fund low-income families and close the gap in reading, writing, and mathematics. It also helped fund preschool programs. Then came “No Child Left Behind Act” that was introduced in 2001 by President Bush. This required states to test students in reading and math in grades third through eighth and once in high school. If the majority of the school did not pass for three consecutive years, they had to offer after-school programs and tutoring. If the majority of the school did not pass for five consecutive years, the firing of staff took place!

Then in 1998, the first year of SOL (Standards of Learning) testing only two percent of Virginia public schools met the standard for full accreditation. By 2004, it increased by eighty-four percent. Did they improve because year after year since the SOL’s began “teachers took the previous tests and would target their lessons over that”? (page 200, Goldstein) Is this a true example of what American students know or is it that they are presented with the material and they just memorize the answer, not really knowing the material? What if one knows the material but are bad test takers? The test is geared to one thinker, what about the rest?

We have adjusted, learned from our mistakes and changed through the years. In the future, let’s say thirty or even sixty years, how will teaching and the classroom change? Presently, we judge our teachers and/or schools by how good our test scores are. “To determine what data can be collected to prove the big goal has been achieved. The data will almost always be test scores, from either a state standardized test, a district test, or a test the teacher finds or creates on her own”. “Standardized testing, numbers-driven evaluation of teachers, and merit pay”. There is so much demand and stress on achieving high scores to look good to get that ‘bonus’ for themselves or school, are some schools cheating by erasing answers that their students answers so their school will have high scores (pay bonuses had been paid to administrators and teachers who cheated by erasing and correcting student’s answers on standardized test). By personal knowledge, I know that is a child fails the standardized test they are tutored and are re-given the test. Is this truly fair? We put a lot of emphasis on these scores. Heaven forbid if our schools fail! Are we even lowering our standards too?

‘No Child Left Behind’ has provoked states to lower standards and the scores that would qualify as proficient. Lowering scores will only hurt them, this is not challenging them. Another issue leading to the No Child Left Behind controversy is the fact that some teachers have felt pressured to focus on subjects rated by the No Child Left Behind testing requirements, rather than focusing on providing children with a well-rounded education. Some schools have been accused of cutting back on studies involving science and the arts to increase the focus on English and math. As a result, some complain education isn’t really improving; it just means sacrificing one subject proficiency for another. “The best things a teacher can do for her students is to set high, individualize expectations for each one of them, regardless of a child’s past performance…”. So what will happen in the future? Time will tell. However, I know things I hope stay the same and that I can be successful in directing the future adults to believing “that doing well in school could help them become more effective advocates for their families and neighbors”. I hope to make them self-directed learners. I hope to be observant of other teachers and see what really works in guiding my little scholars. I also want to be able to relate to them so they can “see themselves reflected in me”. I hope this will create a determination and a strong desire for them to want to achieve. Hopefully, I will be molded into an outstanding teacher by not only being taught in the classroom but having real-world experience in the classroom, that in itself is a ‘powerful education’. I think for me to observe other teachers and being observed myself will help by receiving positive or negative feedback. This will help make me be a more successful teacher by letting us know what is more effective or what is not. Our lessons need to be engaging and challenging enough so our students will not be bored. Teacher evaluation whether observational or based on children test scores, I would like to think, can be a clear determining factor of whether or not my students are receiving a proper education.

What the future holds for the American public school with its complex relationship between publicly funded education and the democratic way of life is somewhat hard to grasp. However, what will be the same as it was from the beginning as Ella Flagg Young wrote, “….I believe that every child should be happy in school” and that “ someday the system will be such that the child and teacher will go to school will ecstatic joy. At home in the evening, the child will talk about the things done during the day and will talk with pride. I want to make the schools the great instrument of democracy” in some regards, this holds true and we must hold onto some of the past dreams (the example of Ella Flagg Young) and continue that hope into the future.

Overall, the book was about the rich history of our public-school teaching and the teachers. It was interesting, well written, and went into detail from the beginning to present day education system. I think it should be on the list to read for this class. A lot of the details that were uncovered I was unaware, for example, was the size of the classrooms and the gender of the teacher of two hundred years ago. I was unaware that the classes were so large and that the teachers were mainly male! I also learned about ‘consulting teachers’. I love this idea of having a teacher (sort of like a mentor) assign to new teachers. These consulting teachers act as coaches and it is really encouraging me to know that I will or could have extra guidance once I graduate.