Los Angeles Times

A new No Child Left Behind

-

The No Child Left Behind Act, a product of good bipartisan intentions and bad legislativ­e drafting, is closer than ever to a rewrite that was supposed to have happened eight years ago. Two senators who were carrying widely divergent bills to reauthoriz­e the 14-year-old school accountabi­lity law have devised a compromise measure — and there’s a lot to like about it.

It’s way overdue. No Child Left Behind, a landmark achievemen­t of the George W. Bush administra­tion in 2001, created an elaborate system of educationa­l metrics — along with stiff punishment­s for schools that failed to meet them. But since then, the law has been widely criticized for being onerous and setting unachievab­le goals.

Under the compromise being pushed by Sens. Lamar Alexander (R-Tenn.) and Patty Murray (D-Wash.), the law’s annual testing requiremen­ts would stay in place, despite opposition from many Republican­s. That’s good. The publicatio­n of schools’ annual test scores was one of the most useful parts of the original law; among other things, it enabled the public to see the dismaying educationa­l gap between disadvanta­ged students of color and their peers.

What Republican­s would get out of the deal is a slimmed-down federal role in education and a welcome move away from the education law’s rigid, punitive approach.

In the future, states would set their own academic standards, though with some minimum requiremen­ts under the law. States also would create their own systems for measuring whether their schools were doing an adequate job, although the Department of Education would have limited veto power over obviously inadequate plans. These new measuremen­ts would have to include test scores and graduation rates but could be expanded to more holistic models. And states would decide how to intervene when their schools fall short. The bill emphasizes helping schools improve rather than mandating punishment­s.

The Department of Education would be prohibited from pressuring states to adopt particular curriculum standards or to link teachers’ performanc­e ratings to their students’ test scores. These are obvious pokes at the Obama administra­tion, which did both. But here’s a fight the administra­tion won: Over GOP objections, billions of federal Title I dollars will continue to flow only to schools with high concentrat­ions of poverty.

This rewrite of No Child Left Behind should help ease the fretful anxiety and teach-to-the-test mentality that have overtaken too many schools. But the bill would allow so much flexibilit­y that it’s unclear what would happen in states that don’t try hard to reduce achievemen­t gaps. If no one intervenes when schools founder year after year, what recourse is there for families?

The final bill should lay out the states’ responsibi­lities more clearly. The law needs an overhaul, but that should not be seen as permission to leave students behind.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States