White House announces new reforms for No Child Left Behind
States currently use all kinds of methods to determine their graduation rates, many of which are based on unreliable information about school dropouts, leading to overestimates.
States will be told to count graduates, in most cases, as students who leave on time and with a regular degree. Research indicates students who take extra time or get alternatives to diplomas, such as a GED, generally don’t do as well in college or in the work force.
While states will no longer be able to use their own methods for calculating grad rates, they still will be able to set their own goals for getting more students to graduate. Critics say that may allow some states to continue setting weak improvement goals.
The administration’s proposed regulations would require schools to be judged not only on how the overall student body does but also on the percentage of minority students who graduate.
Nationally, an estimated 70 percent of students graduate on time with a regular diploma. For Hispanic and black students, the proportion drops to about half.
Critics of the six-year-old education law have complained that judging schools on test scores but not, to the same degree, on graduation rates has created an incentive for schools to push weak students out or into non-diploma tracks.
No Child Left Behind requires testing in reading and math in grades three through eight and once in high school. The stated goal is to get all kids doing math and reading at their proper grade level by 2013-14.
Spellings has been taking steps in recent months to make changes to the law from her perch, after efforts to rewrite the bill in Congress stalled. The proposed regulations amount to the most comprehensive set of administrative changes she has sought so far.
"The Congress, I guess because of the political and legislative climate, has not been able to get a reauthorization under way this year," Spellings said in an interview. "I know that schools and students need help now, and we are prepared to act administratively."
The regulations call for a federal review of state policies regarding the exclusion of test scores of students in racial groups deemed too small to be statistically significant or so small that student privacy could be jeopardized. Critics say too many kids’ scores are being left aside under these policies.
The regulations also call for school districts to demonstrate that they are doing all they can to notify parents of low-income students in struggling schools that free tutoring is available. If the districts fail to do that, their ability to spend federal funds could be limited. The department estimates only 14 percent of eligible students receive tutoring available to them.
An even smaller percentage of kids who are allowed to transfer to higher-performing schools make that switch, in part because they aren’t always informed of vacancies on time. The regulations require schools to publicize open spots at least 14 days before school starts.
The administration’s proposal also would tighten the rules around the corrective steps schools must take once they’ve failed to hit progress goals for many consecutive years.
Spellings and others have said schools often take quick steps when reforming troubled schools, such as replacing principals, rather than taking more comprehensive action. "Real school restructuring is not a new coat of paint," Spellings said Tuesday.
President Bush said in a statement Tuesday that the regulations would "address the dropout crisis in America, strengthen accountability, improve our lowest-performing schools, and ensure that more students get access to high-quality tutoring."
The administration is seeking public comments before finalizing the regulations in the fall.
Regulations can be overturned by a new administration. Spellings said that’s unlikely in this case, because the rules she is proposing have widespread support. She said she hoped the ideas would help shape any future debate on Capitol Hill.
"I think these things will help the law work better in the field ... and I think they are ways for the Congress to have a good jumping-off place when they start on their work," she said.
Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass., who chairs the Senate education committee, said the regulations "include important improvements for implementing No Child Left Behind."
Rep. George Miller, D-Calif., who chairs the House education committee, said the new rules fall short of what’s needed. He said the Bush administration didn’t try hard enough to get a revised law through Congress.
"The changes amount to tinkering with a law that needs significant improvements, as most parents, educators, and students know," Miller said.
Miller had sought changes that included a merit-pay program to reward teachers who boost student performance, which teachers’ unions opposed. He also wanted to expand the criteria under which schools are judged, which drew criticism from the administration.
Americas
Trump: Preventing Iran from developing nuclear weapons is more important than global crisis
Rubio heads to UAE, Kuwait, Bahrain to discuss Iran deal with Gulf allies
US license issues authorization for Iranian oil transactions
Iran must rein in Hezbollah under new deconfliction process, Vance says
NEWS FEED
France will not support lifting sanctions on Iran
Trump: Preventing Iran from developing nuclear weapons is more important than global crisis
Argentina beats Austria, reaches FIFA World Cup knockout stage as Messi shines again
Qatar to help create mechanism to control use of Iran’s frozen assets — Vance
Messi becomes leading goalscorer in World Cup history
Erdoğan welcomes Iran-US agreement in call with Pezeshkian
2 injured in drone attack on Turkish-owned vessel off Ukraine coast
Azerbaijan’s Top Diplomat discussed current situation between the two countries with his Turkmen counterpart
Human skeletal remains discovered in Aghdam
Rubio heads to UAE, Kuwait, Bahrain to discuss Iran deal with Gulf allies
EU vows deeper integration of Moldova before membership
Kazakh President arrives in Brussels on official visit
State banquet hosted on behalf of President Ilham Aliyev in honor of President of Turkmenistan-PHOTO
Council of Europe Baku Office head Petr Zix summoned to Foreign Ministry
Turkmen minister visits DOST Center
Azerbaijani citizens among top five groups of foreigners permanently residing in Georgia
Northern Ireland First Minister accuses Keir Starmer of discrimination
13 killed, 66 injured in gas processing plant explosion in Qatar-UPDATED-1
Azerbaijan, Turkmenistan discuss expanding customs cooperation
President Ilham Aliyev: Relations with Turkmenistan are built on a solid foundation of historical and cultural ties
Georgia to establish unified register of foreigners
Netanyahu says Israel will remain in southern Lebanon as long as necessary
US license issues authorization for Iranian oil transactions
Qatar PM: We have reached the stage of ending the war between the US and Iran
Presidents of Azerbaijan and Turkmenistan delivered press statements-PHOTO - UPDATED
President: We have always supported and will continue to support Turkmenistan’s policy of neutrality
President Ilham Aliyev: Cooperation between Azerbaijan and Turkmenistan in transport and logistics is long-term in nature
Body of third victim recovered from sea in Mardakan, one person still missing-UPDATED-1
Serdar Berdimuhamedov: Cooperation between Turkmenistan and Azerbaijan serves the long-term interests of our countries
At least 14 killed in fire at coaching centre in India's Lucknow
Prime Minister of the Kurdistan Region of Iraq congratulates President Ilham Aliyev on Independence Day and Eid al-Adha
Vietnam's President congratulates Azerbaijani leader on 108th anniversary of Independence Day
Boy killed, 2 children hurt in Philippine mortar explosion
Iran must rein in Hezbollah under new deconfliction process, Vance says
Iran has agreed to invite IAEA inspectors back into country: Vance
Vance: Iran threatened to suspend talks, but dialogue continued until the end
President Ilham Aliyev held expanded meeting with President of Turkmenistan-UPDATED
Azerbaijan's ambassador to Uzbekistan awarded 1st Degree Order “For Service to the Fatherland”
Iran agrees to invite IAEA inspectors back, Vance says
Iranian president expected to visit Pakistan
Sahiba Gafarova meets with Speaker of Jordan's House of Representatives
Peskov: Putin and Lukashenko to discuss Zelenskyy's threats against Belarus
Russian forces shoot down more than 700 Ukrainian drones
UN-Habitat Executive Director thanks President Ilham Aliyev for successful hosting of WUF13
Ukrainian Defense Forces strike satellite communications center in Moscow region
Three injured in Ukrainian strike on Voronezh, governor says - UPDATED
Aircraft flying from Armenia to Moscow issues distress signal and lands in Makhachkala-UPDATED
Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman confirms start of technical talks with U.S. in Switzerland-UPDATED
Azerbaijan sends another relocation convoy to Jabrayil's Shukurbeyli village, families receive house keys - UPDATED - 1 - PHOTO
Moscow airports temporarily suspend flights amid latest drone attacks-UPDATED