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What the No Child Left Behind Law Means for Your Child
The No Child Left Behind law has brought sweeping changes to education across the nation. Here's what it means to your child.
Since the No Child Left Behind (NCLB) law took effect in 2002, it has had a sweeping impact on U.S. public school classrooms. It affects what students are taught, the tests they take, the training of their teachers, and the way money is spent on education.
Debate rages over whether the law is an effective way to improve academic achievement. Congress was scheduled to decide whether to renew it in 2007. But efforts stalled amid criticism of the law from both Democrats and Republicans, and arguments over how to change it.
The Focus of the Debate NCLB's advocates say the landmark law holds schools accountable, empowers parents and is helping to close the achievement gap in America's schools.
Many critics, including those who agree with the law's goals, argue that it is a "one-size-fits-all" approach to education that overemphasizes testing and doesn't provide enough money to schools to achieve success.
As stricter testing requirements and penalties have taken effect, several states have rebelled, challenging the law in legislatures and the courts. In response, the U.S. Department of Education has given greater latitude to some districts and states in satisfying the law's provisions. That, in turn, has drawn criticism that the federal government has gone too far and weakened the law so much that it can't achieve its goals.
For parents trying to figure out how NCLB affects their children, it can be tough to keep up with the fast-moving developments. Here's a primer:
NCLB, Your Child and Your School The law may help your child in two ways:
  • Your child may be eligible to move to a better school or could receive free tutoring.
  • Your school could qualify for grants to use toward attracting top-notch teachers or other school programs.
But your child and your school may not receive the full benefits if you don't ask for them. The U.S. Department of Education has neither the personnel nor the budget to make sure that all of the nation's public schools comply with NCLB's complicated regulations. Education officials in the Bush administration have said from the start that the key to enforcement would be parents who pressure schools to give their children the options provided by the federal law.
The Law's Goals and What It Says Philosophy: The law, which was passed with bipartisan support, was designed to introduce national standards to a system in which students in some demographic groups were more likely to succeed and others likely to be left behind. But it allows states to determine how success is measured.
Targets: States are required to set targets for overall achievement and for specific categories of students, such as English language learners or economically disadvantaged students. These targets determine whether the school makes "adequate yearly progress," or AYP, as measured by state standardized tests. A school can fail — even if it is making substantial progress for most of its students — if one category of students cannot meet the standards. The goal is for every student in public school to be proficient in reading and math by 2014.
Testing: Students must be tested annually in reading and math in grades 3 through 8 and at least once in grades 10 through 12. Beginning in 2007, students were required to be tested in science in at least one grade in elementary, middle and high school. Schools that don't meet goals for their overall student bodies or specific categories of students are sanctioned.
Affected schools: The law applies to schools that receive Title I money from the federal government. Schools that get Title I funds are generally those in which at least 35% of students are from low-income families. More than half of all public schools are Title I schools.
How the Law Affects Teachers Teachers must be "highly qualified" to teach core academic subjects in every classroom. Specifically, an elementary school teacher must have a bachelor's degree and pass a rigorous test in core curriculum areas. Middle and high school teachers must show they're competent in the subjects they teach by passing a test or by completing an academic major, graduate degree or comparable coursework.
Research, including a 2006 study of three states by the think tank Education Trust, shows that students in schools with a large percentage of minority and low-income students are more likely to be taught by teachers who are inexperienced and lack a major or minor in the subjects they teach. The teacher qualification provisions of NCLB are aimed at insuring that schools where students tend to need the most help employ teachers who are qualified to provide it. States have struggled to meet this goal.
The law covers other teaching staff, too. Most teachers' aides and other "paraprofessionals" are now required to complete two years of college or an equivalent type of training.
Reading Instruction NCLB also requires teachers in kindergarten through third grade to teach reading based on "scientifically based" research. Schools may be eligible for "Reading First" grants to assist with improving reading instruction. Although this program has shown initial signs of effectiveness in helping to boost reading instruction, it came under scrutiny in September 2006 when a scathing report (PDF) by the Office of Inspector General of the U.S. Department of Education revealed that several members of the panel who award Reading First grants may have had conflicts of interest because they had ties to publishing companies which promoted specific reading materials with a specifc philosophy.
Unsafe Schools States must have an "Unsafe School Choice Option"—that is, a plan that allows students to transfer to a safe school if they attend a school designated as a persistently dangerous school or if they become victims of violent crime.
Sanctions Those that haven't met "adequate yearly progress" (AYP) for two consecutive school years are identified as "in need of improvement." Every student in the school will be given the option to transfer to a better-performing school in the district, with free transportation included. However, NLCB requires that priority in providing school choice be given to low-achieving children from low-income families.
School districts may not use lack of space as a reason to deny a transfer, but they have some flexibility in meeting this requirement. School districts may restrict which schools are available for transfer and when transfers may occur. They may sign contracts with neighboring districts to accept students from failing schools, contract with online schools, create schools within schools, offer supplemental services a year early, hire more teachers, add portables or build new classrooms at more successful schools. If a school continues to fail to meet AYP, these sanctions take effect:
After three consecutive years, the school must also provide "supplemental education services," or SES, to children who remain at the school. Those services can include tutoring, remedial classes, after-school services and summer school programs.
The federal government has allowed some districts to switch the order of sanctions. Students would be eligible for free tutoring if these schools fail to meet their goals for two years in a row and would then get the option to transfer if the school misses its goals a third time.
After four consecutive years of failing to meet annual goals, the district must take action to improve the school, such as replacing certain staff or implementing a new curriculum.
After five years, the school is identified for restructuring and arrangements must be made to run it differently. These can include a state takeover, the hiring of a private management contractor, conversion to a charter school or significant staff restructuring.
How Schools Can Benefit There are rewards for schools that close achievement gaps between groups of students or exceed academic achievement goals. States can use federal funds to pay teachers bonuses, and they can designate schools that have made the greatest achievement gains as "Distinguished Schools."
Other benefits of No Child Left Behind include:
  • Grants for teacher training. Parents should be aware that districts have flexibility in how they can spend federal funds designed to find and retain quality teachers, including alternative certification, merit pay and bonuses for teachers of high-need subjects such as math and science.
  • Grants for reading instruction. The goal of the Reading First program is to help every child learn to read using "scientifically based" research. However, this program may be cut substantially in 2008 because of controversy about its effectiveness and federal investigations into how it has been operated.
  • Flexibility in spending federal funds. School districts have considerable leeway in spending up to 50% of their non-Title I funds in categories such as teacher quality, technology, after-school learning, and Safe and Drug-Free schools. For example, a district may decide to spend 50% of its federal technology funds on recruiting quality teachers instead of technology.
What Schools Must Tell Parents All schools and districts are required to make annual report cards available to the public. The report cards must include details on:
  • Student academic achievement for all student groups
  • A comparison of students at the basic, proficient and advanced levels of academic achievement within the school district and compared to other students statewide
  • High school graduation rates and dropout rates
  • The professional qualifications of teachers
  • The percentage of students not tested
  • The names of schools identified as "in need of improvement"
The U.S. Department of Education also requires states to participate in National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) reading and math assessments of fourth- and eighth-grade students every two years. These tests allow parents to compare how students are performing in different states.
How the Law is Working The nonprofit, independent Center on Education Policy releases annual report cards on NCLB. The organization, which advocates for public schools, surveyed education officials in 50 states and gave the law a mixed report card in 2006. The center concluded that as a result of the law:
  • Districts are better aligning classroom teaching with state academic standards.
  • Principals and teachers are making better use of test results to improve teaching.
  • Scores on states tests are higher in a large majority of states and school districts.
  • Teachers report high stress levels and poor staff morale because of the pressure to improve scores.
  • Most school districts are cutting back on social studies, science, art or other subjects to make more time for reading and math, the subjects that are tested.
  • The effect on achievement gaps between groups of students of different races or ethnicities is unclear. While most states and districts reported that the achievement gap in test results had narrowed or stayed the same, the center's own case studies did not find the same results. As a result, the study concluded, it is "impossible to reach an overall conclusion about achievement gaps."
In a harsher report, the The Civil Rights Project, formerly known as the Harvard Civil Rights Project, concluded in 2006 that NCLB is failing to close the achievement gap, won't make its 2014 goals and has not significantly improved reading and math achievement.
Federal education officials dispute these conclusions.
Few Students Take Advantage of School Choice, Tutoring Only about 1.6% of students eligible to transfer from low-performing schools did so in 2005-2006, a percentage that hasn't changed much since 2002-2003 when the option was first offered. The Center for Education Policy survey suggested that families didn't choose to change because they were satisfied with their current schools, wanted to go to schools in their neighborhoods or were discouraged by long commutes.
But others have accused school districts of failing to notify parents of their option to transfer. School choice advocates took legal action on these complaints and sued the Los Angeles and Compton, California, school districts in 2006.
Only 20% of students eligible for free tutoring are getting it. School districts and for-profit tutoring companies are sparring over the reasons why. Some tutoring companies say districts have failed to inform families in a clear and timely way that students are eligible for tutoring. Some school officials have pointed to the lack of oversight of tutoring companies and say the quality of services has been wildly uneven.
In an attempt to increase the number of students getting tutoring, the federal government changed the rules in 2006 for 23 school districts in Alaska, Delaware, Indiana, North Carolina and Virginia. In these districts, students in schools that have failed to meet goals for two years are eligible for free services and don't have to wait for their schools to fail a third time.
NCLB Prompts Protests, Revolts As the increasingly strict provisions and penalties of the law have taken effect, protests over the law have grown in scores of states, where officials complain that the law requires them to spend dollars they don't have.
The single biggest criticism is that the federal government has not fully funded the law, a charge the Bush administration counters by saying that the law is a partnership between the U.S. government and the states.
The New York Times reported in 2006 that the Bush administration has increased education spending since the Clinton era, but the money for No Child Left Behind stayed at $24.5 billion in 2004 and 2005. The administration cut funding for 2006 to $23.5 billion, the Times reported.
Others argue that the law imposes a rigid solution to problems historically better solved at the state and local levels. Utah decided in 2005 to forfeit federal money rather than follow the law. Other districts and states have filed legal challenges or are contemplating them.
While praising the law's goals, the bipartisan National Conference of State Legislatures has called for more flexibility and more money.
In response to the criticisms, the federal government has loosened some of the rules for some states.
In a pilot program, federal officials are letting two states use individual test scores to measure improvement. Students who show significant improvement will be considered successful even if they don't score proficient on the test. The move came in response to arguments by state and school officials that schools with a high percentage of struggling students are unfairly penalized even if they raise achievement levels significantly. The two states — North Carolina and Tennessee — will track individual scores from year to year, instead of using the current system that takes a "snapshot" of one group of students, for example, this year's third-graders, and compares it to a snapshot of a different group of students: last year's third-graders.
But critics, on the left and right, say the law creates a number of other problems:
  • Officials can "game" the system because each state sets its own criteria for meeting many of the law's requirements. States can make tests easier so that more students can meet proficiency standards. Critics argue that this is exactly what has happened in some cases. And despite a requirement in the law that parents be allowed to transfer children out of unsafe schools, not a single one of California's more than 9,000 schools has ever been classified as "persistently dangerous," a conclusion questioned by federal auditors.
  • The law jeopardizes privacy rights. The U.S. military has the right to obtain lists from high schools of students' names, addresses and phone numbers for recruiting purposes, and must be granted the same access to schools that is given to college and business recruiters. Parents who oppose this practice may "opt out," but schools have not always made this provision clear.
  • NCLB conflicts with another federal law, the Individuals with Disabilities Education Improvement Act. This law entitles students with learning disabilities to an education that meets their needs. The federal government has given states more leeway in measuring student progress in response to protests from parents of children with special needs. But critics say the government hasn't gone far enough. The law's advocates respond that it is this very accountability requirement that will ultimately improve instruction for learning-disabled students.
Updated January 2008

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Comments From GreatSchools.net Users
04/24/2008:
"In our school there were many changes made all of sudden! This made it difficult for many kids who had to change everything about the way they think. The one thing I am seeing a lot in math is there are a lot of kids that can't carry or barrow. What does this do for them in the future if they can't do simple math? How does this help them going into high school? There are just too many problems that nclb is leaving behind or creating! "
04/24/2008:
"It can be hard to have to follow the nclb. There are too many reasons why. As one person put it, this was probably put into place by some one who had it easy. There are many children with disabilities that can't work or closely keep up with school or the class. How does this help them? I see this helping only certain people or kids. there is no way that all goals can be met by 2014! NO WAY!"
04/21/2008:
"My childs Teacher has said it would be in her best interest to repeat the 2nd grade. I feel that they should allow herr to attend Summer school. Does the NCLB say that she should be given that option instead of repeating the 2nd grade. How do I find out if she would be eligible to to attend a better school or recieve free tutoring. Thank you for you time."
04/18/2008:
"The NCLB Act is lossy and it needs alot of improvement because the NCLB is leaving kids behind everyday in florida. Whoever came up with this must be some professional someone who had it easy and could afford to send their kids to these fancy schools to get a good education well every child has different learning patterns and their are kids with learning disabilities and they even have to score what a child well educated does or they get left to so who is this helping noone thank you for leaving our children back and not allowing them to be successful as they were. "
04/14/2008:
"My child has severe auditory processing development delay and no one is helping him! How can NCLB help us! "
04/14/2008:
"my child has been left behind for 13 years. he is a senior and has had trouble with math all the way. instead of getting him help they just kept having him retake the class, and said go to tutoring.the boy doesn't like school in the first place and they want him to spend another hour there before or after school,get real.they have no clue what they are doing. this made him miss out on classes he really wanted. now he did not pass his last math class and it has caused a real crisis in his life. he is now angry and depressed and no t graduating. can i hold the school liable "
04/11/2008:
"I feel the NCLB programs are terrible because the children really do not understand the program and it seems if they are just being pushed through without understanding the work. And when it comes to MSA the principals catogize children and give them different labels to to keep their jobs so if the kids need help in certain subjects they still do not understand they still go to the next grade not knowing what they are doing."
04/10/2008:
"Hi! my child was left behind for 5 years what can I do about this? "
04/9/2008:
"This article is very confusing and vague. I was trying to find away to get my son into a better school . The dividing line is within 10 feet of my driveway. The school districts have buses that go past my house everyday. Plus the one I want him to go to is closer than the one we are assigned to and has a far better educational and athletic program. The rental company lied to us about what school district we were in. Is there any recourse short of moving?"
04/7/2008:
"MY DAUGHTER WASNT READY FOR KIDERGARTEN HOWEVER HER TEACHER WAS ABSENT ALMOST THE WHOLE YR.. I TOLD THE SCHOOL I DIDNT WANT HER TO GO TO FIRST BUT THEY INSTEADED SHE WOULD BE FINE..HOWEVER NOW IN SECOND, THEY PUT HER IN SPECIAL ED.. IM TOTALY AGAINST THIS.WHAT SHE IS LEARNING IS SO FAR BEHIND THE ACTUALY SECOND GRADE CLASS.. NOW IM GOING TO FIGHT THE SCHOOL TO KEEP HER BACK AND PUT HER TO A REGULAR CLASS. SHE WAS DIANOSIS WITH ADHD THIS YR,, SHES DOING BETTER WITH THE MEDS,, HOWEVER MY DAUGHTER IS GOING TO SUFFER NOW ,ALL BECAUSE THEY WOULDNT ALLOW ME TO HOLD HER BACK IN THE BEGINING,,,I READ THAT A ADHD STUDENT CAN HAVE A TEACHERS AID IN A REGUALR CLASS TO HELP HER ,IS THAT TRUE??/ "
04/4/2008:
"My daughter needs help and the school bloom high school in chicago heights illinois is saying no to outside help because she is not getting free lunch- claiming this is board rules - not school rules - stating we can pay for outside help on our own or we would be getting free lunch"
03/28/2008:
"3/28/08 My son is attending school in San Antonio Tx, he is currently having problems (according to the teacher) with his assignments in class only. Because he understands his work at home. The teacher says he 'just' seats in class looking around him. I don't know what to do, he was doing so well in a Houston Tx school untill we moved in January 2008. Could he hav ADD? or is it the teacher? He doesn't want to go to school claims the school work is too hard and he never does good anymore. Advise."
03/28/2008:
"My sons' school is a charter school rated top in the district. They do NOT teach to the test. They do have some practice FCAT tests so that the kids know how to fill in the bubbles and learn test-taking strategies for a few weeks before the test. They also go online to practice some sample questions to gear up for what to expect, but it is presented more like a game than a test. The rest of the year, they are taught the way I was when I was in private school. My sons are doing great. I also work at a low-income school where I see a lot of the opposite happening. I think the teachers are so afraid the kids will pull down their 'B' score that they feel they have to push 'teaching the test'. The teachers really need to buck the pressure and just do what they were trained to do...teach the kids. If they are doing a good job, the rest will fall into place. Besides, you have to pretty much guess at those answers to get a 1 and have to repeat. If you get a 1 on the FCAT,! you really should repeat. Even the low-income kids told me that the test was pretty easy. My son told me that he thinks he missed one or two on the whole test. We need to take the pressure off of ourselves and not make such a big deal about one test. The kids will do fine if we just relax."
03/27/2008:
"It has been my observation that the strict regulations and 'tunnel vision' on testing has turned schools into factories rather than a place where CHILDREN can learn, grow and enjoy the experience. There is no reward for their effort, only strict punishment for their less than perfect test scores. These are human beings, not machines, and they need and deserve to be treated as such. When an elementary student gets regular migraine headaches caused by stress; when a 6th grade child refuses to attend school because he is overcome by fear - fear of failure (which can not and will not be tolerated by the school system.. and yet the teachers do nothing to reach out to this child as an individual to help because they're overwhelmed themselves, and focusing strictly on test scores and standards), and fear of the terrorism within the school itself. It is my observation that many children are lashing out at other children because of their own frustration. What are we really trying to ! accomplish by all these strict rules and regulations? Children deserve to be nurtured, taught in a way that they personally can learn and grow (even if their parent(s) don't have funds for private schooling), in an environment where they can feel safe and encouraged - NOT pressured, stressed, condemned, fearful, or invisible! "
03/26/2008:
"Why is it that if a child actually makes a 40%(special Education) they can not be given that score, If I understand correctly, they must receive a 70%. Isn't that child being left behing?"
03/24/2008:
"my grandson attends a elementary school in union grove, north carolina his teacher is giving him 90's for work that does not deserve this grade just to push him through, when my daughter confronted them on this , they brought in an arbitrator, come to find out was a friend of the teacher so it was in favor of her, now where can we go to rectify this? he needs to learn and is capable but to pat his head and push him on through is not teaching but stupidity as this will not help him in the future"
03/18/2008:
"Abolish the NCLB. Back to the BASICS. We're far left behind compare to Asian countries(Japan, Korea and even the Philippines).Most Asian students excell in mathematics. "
03/17/2008:
"My child is an advanced student in an advanced school. he is being left behind now because the standards are being dropped and i want to know who is concerned about the smart kids who are no longer being challenged to be their best because a lot of parents cant seem to make education a priority. why should my son suffer a lack of decent education because half of this country wont spend neccesary time with their child? parents make the difference and i think that the parents should suffer for lack of attention not the kids. Parents should have to attend some kind of tutoring class WITH their kids. Make the parents participate. then maybe the rest of us who are doing what we should with our kids can see some real results and OUR kids can be proud that the time they spend PAYING ATTENTION pay off"
03/14/2008:
"As a research assignment for a college course, I was assigned this policy to look into. I have a few questions and after looking over this page, it could be the place to recieve answers. Here are a few questions: What are the proposed funding streams? Which groups benefit financially? What part of the problem are the policies trying to change, correct or eliminate? Are the people for whom the policies originally intended, the ones recieving the benefits? Thanks so much for your time. I would love to get your feedback on these issues to add to much previous research!"
03/14/2008:
"How do I go about finding out how I can move my son out of the current school system and into another based on the ' No child left behind law'? I need to get him into a better school system."
03/13/2008:
"My kid is in first grade, and she is the top student in her class. I don't think she gets much from her teacher since the teacher spends all the time trying to let her class meet the test. Kids like my daughter don't get attention but individual study. Their daily 30 minute social or science study often gets pushed away because it is not in tests. Where is creativity? Where is the enthusiasm about knowledge? Where is the curiosity? Those important things about learning at young age are lost in school. As matter of fact, some of my friends are thinking about home school their kid(s) because they get left behind at school. "
03/11/2008:
"my child is also in fifth grade and is in second grade level of reading, I have been wanting to hold her back because she is not ready to move on, but the principal and the teachers tell me I cant, what do I do? someone help me please"
03/10/2008:
"My child has failed classes and does not comprehend the material - yet, she is still advanced into more difficult courses for the sake of being exposed for 'testing'. She doesn't understand basic math - but lets give her algebra so she is familiar with it so that she can be tested on it??? She is being set-up to fail. My guess is that at this point almost 30 percent her class is not in line for graduation due to this act. Why does my child have to suffer due to this inane act??? How do I get her out of this situation???"
03/10/2008:
"I am so glad I found this site. I just happened upon it while doing research for my paper. I chose NCLB as my topic, because I think its a load of crap! I fought to have my child left behind because he was two grades below in his reading level.How can professionals pass a child simply because of their age, and if they attend summer school?"
03/5/2008:
"I WAS a teacher in a small, rural town in south-eastern California. I taught at the middle school for 8 years. I have a CLEAR Multiple Subject Credential. For 7 years I taught reading intervention. We used the L! Language curriculum, I have more than 100 hours of training and 7 years experience and data that shows many of the students achieved 1 to 3 years growth. I took one year off for health reasons. When I tried to return to work, I was denied a job, because I was not 'highly qualified' under the NCLB. Some of the teachers who are now teaching the curriculum this year have had only 40 hours of training and their isn't anyone to coach them, some of them didn't have any training. MY QUESTION IS: How are these teachers 'more highly qualified' than I am? This isn't only about me, it is about the students, former students call me or I see them around town and they want to know why I am not teaching, the 'new' teachers don't know how to teach L!or don't even try. The Orton-Gillingham curriculums are more expense for the districts. The training for the teachers and the materials are more costly so the district is pushing to get rid of L! This district consists of 3 elementary, 1 middle, 1 high, and 1 continuation schools. PARENTS: IT IS YOUR RESPONSIBILITY TO ASK FOR, INSIST, AND/OR DEMAND ANY SERVICES YOUR CHILD NEEDS TO HELP HIM/HER S! UCCEED AND YOU HAVE TO DO YOUR PART: WORK WITH THE TEACHER, WORK WITH YOUR CHILD AT HOME, AND ENCOURAGE YOUR CHILD TO RESPECT THE TEACHERS AND THE EDUCATION THAT IS BEING OFFERED "
03/5/2008:
"No child left behind is a joke. My child is being left behind. Because my child goes to a private school and needs summer school, I was told by my school district that she could not attend public summer school because she is attending a private school. My taxes on my home pay for public school so why can't my child attend summer school in the public school system when she needs the assistance. No child left behind is a complete joke and our children are suffering because of this law. Every child is being left behind...the gifted ones and the ones with learning disabilities! Look at the TX school system. That is what this law is based on and my daughter was not even taught the basics of 1st grade when she attended school in TX. Our children will have great difficulties with the rest of their lives because the basics of math,reading, writing are NOT being taught. The teachers are teaching to a 'test' and our children are not getting the foundation they need to build o! n a foundation. Teaching lessons are disjointed and CHILDREN ARE BEING LEFT BEHIND!!! This law is a disservice to the entire country and our country will suffer the consequences. VERY DISATISFIED WITH EDUCATION OF OUR CHILDREN"
03/5/2008:
"Thanks for this informative report. There is not enough said about the negative effects of NCLB on low income schools. I teach in a low income district in CA, and I see teachers becoming increasingly isolated for each other, and students pushing back which manifests itself in very poor and disruptive behaviors. Principals do not want to create any opportunities for teachers to gather together without a very specific structure. There is fear of anarchy and mutiny. The fallout from this is teachers becoming more complacent and numb in the job. Our work, which a labor of the heart just becomes HARD work, not heart work. Kids are losing in low socioeconomic areas. Teachers are leaving the profession earlier. Talented teachers are muted. And this is just at the elementary level."
03/5/2008:
"I have been teaching for 20 years. NCLB has had negative impact on the way I teach (less creativity, less depth, less out side the box thinking) and my ability to accommodate students with special needs. The premise that an entire year of learning can be tested in a week by a test that is not normed or standardized is ridiculous. The money spent by my state(IL) on developing, administering and grading the test could make it possible to lessen class size and buy resources for students who need additional learning materials and hire more special needs resource personnel. I do think that educators need to be accountable for their performance (as I do our political leaders), but the premise of this law is that all educators are bad and that all students were not learning. I too am worried about the literacy and drop out rate in our country, (which seems to reflective of the socio/economic/ethnic disparities in our country). I feel that by having a law in place that tests special! needs students at grade level, rather than the level of ability might also be compounding this problem. NCLB cuts funding to schools who are failing, schools whose students are usually in the most need of additional funding and programs (like after school tutoring, drop-in centers, daycare, early childhood education, etc). We used to lead other countries with a 'broken' education system. With our 'fixed' NCLB system we have dropped in our worldwide standing. If you feel strongly about NCLB, then let your senator and congressperson know. I am disheartened to read about the difficulties that so many children are having, but also feel that there is hope for positive change in the future. Our nation's children deserve it!"
03/4/2008:
"i agree with Butler,PA. Our dyslexic kids are left behind. My son may not get to graduate with a regular diploma because he can not master the english and reading portion of the graduate exam. He is also ineligeable for a exception for any one of these because he does not have a high enough gpa."
03/4/2008:
"My children attend Nevin Elementary School. They have received tutoring and inproved temondously. I'm so happy that Nevin made me aware of this program abailable to my children."
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