Politics K12

Politics K-12

Your education road map to state and federal politics

Michele McNeil covered education and state government in Indiana for a decade before joining Education Week as a state policy reporter in June 2006. Alyson Klein, who reports on federal education policy, joined the staff in February 2006 after nearly two years at Congress Daily.

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October 27, 2009

Off Year Elections and ESEA Renewal

If you haven't already, you should check out my colleague Erik Robelen's story about education in this off-year election. He points out that the very tight races for governor in New Jersey and Virginia will help shed some light on how well the Democratic brand is faring, now that the party is in charge of practically everything and the economy is still slumping. The New Jersey race is close, according to these recent polls. And the GOP has an edge, according to this one from Virginia.

Although it might not seem so on the surface, those gubernatorial races may matter quite a bit in terms of the Obama administration's education priorities. If Democrats Gov. Jon Corzine, of New Jersey, and state Sen. Creigh Deeds, of Virginia, lose badly, the election will be read by some as a rebuke of President Barack Obama.

And that may mean Democrats in Congress, who are worried about their own electoral futures, will be less likely to go along with some of Obama's priorities (like, say, merit pay) that might anger folks who members of Congress will need to get re-elected (like teachers' unions).

Bottom line: If Dems win in both states, it will likely be a lot easier for the Obama folks to sell their ideas on health care, student loans, and the reauthorization of the Elementary and Secondary Act to Congress. If not...maybe not.

October 13, 2009

Rep. Mike Castle to Run for Senate

So I'm sure all you politics geeks out there have heard by now that Rep. Mike Castle, a Republican, is going to run for the Senate seat in Delaware that became vacant when Sen. Joseph R. Biden, Jr. became Vice President Joe Biden. Sen. Edward E. Kaufman, a Democrat, is keeping the seat warm for now, but no one expects him to stick around.

Although the initial statements from the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee play up some of Castle's more conservative stances, he is generally considered a moderate's moderate. In fact, after the Dems took over Congress in 2006, Democratic strategist James Carville called Castle a "caucus of one," since he was one of the few centrist Republicans left standing.

A former governor, Castle has an excellent grasp of K-12 issues. (Not every congressman can think on their feet about in-the-weeds-type issues like national standards.) He also seems to have a good working relationship with Rep. George Miller, D-Calif., the chairman of the House Education and Labor Committee. If he leaves the House, and the committee, before reauthorization of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act is complete, that might lessen the chances that the new version of the ESEA would be bipartisan.

Will education be an issue in next year's Senate race? Hard to say. Castle's likely opponent is Biden's son, Beau Biden, who is Delaware's attorney general. When it comes to education, Castle's views aren't really all that different from the Obama administration's, at least on sticky issues like merit pay. And it's hard to see Beau Biden dissing the policies his father (and his father's boss) support. There just might not be enough of a contrast to generate debate.

If Castle wins, the Obama administration may have one more Republican who would cooperate with it on education issues in the Senate. Castle would probably team up with fellow Republican Sens. Richard Burr of North Carolina and Lamar Alexander of Tennessee ... so at least on school issues, he'd no longer be a caucus of one.

September 24, 2009

Department Kicks Off NCLB Discussion at Packed Forum

More than 200 advocates from a wide range of groups packed the U.S. Department of Education today to hear Secretary of Education Arne Duncan outline his priorities for the reauthorization of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act -- better known over the last eight years as the No Child Left Behind Act.

Duncan didn't say anything he hasn't said before, but he used the high-profile forum to stress some priorities, including extended learning time, using data to track student and teacher effectiveness, and systems to better measure individual student progress. (That's code for growth models, which are expected to be a given in this reauthorization.)

Two assistant secretaries - Carmel Martin and Thelma Melendez - also outlined the department's extensive process for getting feedback from stakeholders, including education associations, the business community, practitioners and parents, to help inform the development of the department's legislative draft. Apparently, there will be five more meetings this fall in Washington, including two next month, two in November and one in December. And the department is seeking written comments at esea.comments@ed.gov.

After the kick-off, the department got right to the feedback, hearing from about two dozen different advocates, including school superintendents, representatives of community organizations, the business community, and unions, as well as proponents of arts education and public school facilities.

No major surprises from those comments, though they were a good sampling of the broad range of opinions the department is likely to hear as it gets going on what is sure to be a pretty tricky reauthorization.

Charles Weis, a superintendent from California said he was worried that the assessments used in the current NCLB law don't do a good enough job of measuring skills like critical thinking - a perennial, but important, criticism of NCLB. And lots of folks brought up the importance of making sure that schools don't focus too heavily on math and reading - the subjects students are tested in annually - to the exclusion of social studies, arts, and other subjects. Others voiced support for making prekindergarten a key part of reauthorization. And community-based organizations made it clear that they want their voices to be heard along with national groups.

Reginald Felton, the director of federal relations at the National School Boards Association, asked the $64 question: When does the department actually expect to get its draft together? He said a new law is urgent because school districts around the country are currently subject to the sanctions in the original law, which Felton described as "costly and severe."

Martin, who worked on the 2002 authorization of NCLB as a top staffer on the Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee, said that the department doesn't have a specific time line yet for releasing a draft, but is hoping to move quickly. Melendez suggested that districts look into some of the waivers the department has proposed.

Much more on the speech and the comments to come, so keep checking back at edweek.org.

September 23, 2009

Duncan to Get Advice on ESEA Renewal

It sounds as if the Department of Education is ready to get rolling on reauthorization of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act.

On Thursday, Secretary Arne Duncan will do the "inside the Beltway" version of his listening and learning tour. Around 200 education advocates, representing nearly all the major education organizations, will be on hand. The meeting is just the first in a series seeking input from Washington-based advocates, think tanks, and other interested parties.

And, according to an e-mail circulated by the department Wednesday afternoon, the groups have been told to start working on their suggestions for reauthorization:

Two of our assistant secretaries, Carmel Martin of the policy office, and Thelma Melendez of the elementary and secondary office, will give an overview of next steps in the ESEA reauthorization process and outline a series of opportunities this fall at which your organizations will be able to offer input to the department. A transcript and video of Thursday's forum should be on ED.gov early next week. We at the department hope that your organizations and members agree that we cannot wait to take up the essential task of reauthorizing ESEA -- together. We look forward to continued collaboration with you.

Duncan will address many of the oft-repeated concerns about the federal law in its No Child Left Behind incarnation, including its heavy reliance on standardized testing to determine student progress. He notes that the department will provide resources through the Race to the Top program to help states develop better assessments, since the current tests don't always provide the best picture of student achievement.

And, according to his prepared remarks, he'll repeat his assertion that "we should be tight on the goals -- with clear standards set by states that truly prepare young people for college and careers -- but loose on the means for meeting those goals."

Duncan won't give any of his own specific proposals for reauthorization, but he will stress that the new version of the ESEA should treat teachers as the professionals they are, reward excellence, and tie accountability to student growth.

That seems to be the direction in which implementation of NCLB was headed anyway, given the Race to the Top program, the Obama administration's emphasis on merit pay, and even some of the actions of the Bush administration, such as opening the growth-model pilot project to all states.

As a reporter, I have to give the department a tip of the hat for making this meeting public and open to the press. Of course, I have no idea what is going on behind closed doors; this could just be the show-and-tell version. But still, it seems to be a step toward the department's promised transparency.

You can check out Duncan's full prepared remarks here. UPDATE: Read the final, edited version of his prepared remarks here.

September 16, 2009

Duncan Holds a (Somewhat) National Town Hall on NCLB

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So, remember that listening-and-learning tour that U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan embarked on to get a sense of what Americans think of the No Child Left Behind Act? Well, he took the tour to the airwaves (sort of) earlier this week, holding a national town hall meeting that was televised in many places. Check it out online here.

There wasn't much said at Tuesday's event that was new to me. The criticisms he heard of NCLB were important, but relatively predictable (too much testing, too much focus on the core subjects at the expense of physical education, art, and other interests).

And Duncan's answers were similar to what he's said on those topics before. He wants tighter control from the federal government on what states' goals should be, but would like to consider how there can be more flexibility in how they get students there. (Is that attitude evident in the guidance the department has put out so far, dealing with Race to the Top Fund and other programs? Discuss.)

When it comes to teachers, he thinks student achievement data should be part of the equation in measuring effectiveness, but he also said that it doesn't tell the whole story. Principal observations and peer feedback counts too, he said.

"We need a menu of options," he said.

Duncan took questions from folks in Hillsborough County, Fla., school system, which includes Tampa. The superintendent there, MaryEllen Elia, recommended national standards, to allow for better comparisons across state lines.

"Amen," said Duncan.

Interesting factoid: Duncan did not have a TV in his house growing up. Instead, his parents read to him and his sibilings from classic literature, including the Lord of the Rings trilogy, Huckleberry Finn, and Moby Dick. Makes me wonder if his own children have a television.

Speaking of TV, despite lots of help from the U.S. Department of Education, I had a tough time finding a place to watch live on television. It's not clear that the event was broadcast in Washington, D.C., or in parts of suburban Maryland, for instance, just a few miles from where it was being taped in Shirlington, Va. Although Duncan said the program was being broadcast on 800 stations nationwide, I guess mine wasn't one of them. I suspect that's at the discretion of local providers...there probably wasn't much the department could have done about it.


August 24, 2009

Aspen Take Two: The Commission on No Child Left Behind is Back in Business

If you're enough of an education policy geek to read this blog regularly, you probably remember the Aspen Commission on the Future of No Child Left Behind, which ramped up in 2006 and was charged with devising a bipartisan set of recommendations for improving the law.

At the helm were two former governors, Tommy Thompson, a Republican from Wisconsin, and Roy Barnes, a Democrat from Georgia. And leading the staff was Alex Nock, who is now a top aide for Rep. George Miller, D-Calif., the chairman of the House Education and Labor Committee.

Recommendations included providing states with incentives for tracking teacher effectiveness and a move towards more common standards. (Sound familiar, stimulus watchers?)

Many of the recommendations were incorporated into a bill introduced by Sen. Joseph Lieberman, I-Conn., Sen. Mary Landrieu, D-La., and Sen. Norm Coleman, R-Minn., who was defeated in the 2008 election.

Well, now Congress is supposedly going to get going on NCLB reauthorization early next year. So the commission is back in business and plans to hold a series of hearings over the next four months on issues including turning around low-performing schools and high school improvement. Early next year, it will release an addendum to its original report.

The first hearing will be held next Wednesday, Sept. 2, at Howard University in D.C. It will focus on turnarounds. Witnesses include:

*Steve Barr, founder and chairman, Green Dot Public Schools in Los Angeles
*Natalie Elder, principal, Hardy Elementary School in Chattanooga, Tenn.
*Phyllis Lockett, president and CEO, the Renaissance Schools Fund in Chicago
*Ronald Peiffer, deputy state superintendent for Maryland

Thompson and Barnes are still on board, but the commission also has some new members. The new ones include:

*Danika Lacroix, principal, Young Scholars’ Academy for Discovery and Exploration, Brooklyn, N.Y.
*Michael Lomax, president and CEO, United Negro College Fund
*Paul Pastorek, state superintendent of education for Louisiana
*Greg Richmond, president and CEO, National Association of Charter School Authorizers
*Andres Alonso, superintendent, Baltimore City Public Schools
*F. Philip Handy, CEO of Strategic Industries, and former chairman of the Florida State Board of Education
*Delia Pompa, vice president for education, National Council of La Raza
*Jane Hannaway, director, Education Policy Center at the Urban Institute
*Mike Johnston, state senator and former principal in Colorado
*Tasia Providence, master educator, District of Columbia Public Schools
*Eduardo Cancino, superintendent, Hidalgo Independent School District in Texas
*Dan Schab, mathematics teacher and former Michigan teacher of the year, Williamston High School in Michigan
*Laysha Ward, president of community relations, Target Corp., and president, Target Foundation

Returning members include:

*Dr. Edward Sontag, chief management official, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
*Judith Heumann, director, Department of Disability Services, District of Columbia
*J. Michael Ortiz, president, California State Polytechnic University, Pomona, Calif.
*Andrea Messina, member, Charlotte County School Board, Florida

July 30, 2009

Four Words Not Heard Much Lately: No Child Left Behind

Education has been on the national stage plenty lately. (In fact, Politics K-12's own Michele McNeil talked about the $4.35 billion Race to the Top fund on National Public Radio's "To the Point" just yesterday.)

But, we haven't heard much about the law that has dominated education policy for going on nine years now: No Child Left Behind.

For those who need a quick review: The bill was scheduled to be reauthorized back in 2007, but Rep. George Miller, D-Calif., the chairman of the House Education and Labor Committee, ran into a brick wall when he took a crack at it, because of lack of consensus on teacher pay and issues around how to measuring student progress.

After that, everyone expected work on the new bill to get going once a new president took office. And, as we've pointed out before, it should, at least on the surface, be a little easier this time. Miller and the Obama administration share very similar views on education.

Still, the debate hasn't moved forward very much, at least publicly, in part because of the stimulus, which made some major changes on education policy. That may have alleviated some of the pressure for renewal.

And, in case you haven't heard, Congress (including the committees that oversee education) is very busy working on student loans, and especially, health care. In fact, over at Eduwonk, Andrew Rotherham, a former Clinton administration official, sketches out how the health-care bill and NCLB renewal may be linked.

The upshot? Anything can happen, but don't hold your breath for a reauthorization, or even any major action on renewing the law, this year. In fact, many folks say that lawmakers are waiting for the administration to unveil its plan for reauthorization before they get going on a bill. Right now, observers say that seems likely to happen in January. My money's on a mention in Obama's State of the Union Address.

But, if you want to brush up on the law in the meantime, check out Education Week's Spotlight on No Child Left Behind, which includes five articles and three commentaries in a downloadable PDF. More information is available here.

June 23, 2009

Education Department Leaves the Little Red Schoolhouse Behind

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It's the end of an era at 400 Maryland Ave. The little red No Child Left Behind schoolhouse out in front of the U.S. Department of Education's headquarters in the nation's capital is no more.

It's no secret that folks in the administration and Congress are very likely to change the name of the federal school improvement law. A key author of the legislation, U.S. Rep. George Miller, D-Calif., the chairman of the House Education and Labor Committee, has called it "the most tainted brand in America." And U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan told Michele awhile back that he might seek suggestions for a new name for the law from America's schoolchildren.

I guess the schoolhouse was necessary collateral damage. The Education Department had it dismantled over the weekend.

Awhile back, the Eduwonk blog held a contest to rename NCLB. So, in that spirit, Politics K-12 is taking any and all suggestions of what the Education Department could put on its front terrace to symbolize that it's a new era in education policy under President Barack Obama and Duncan. The comments section is ready and waiting.

UPDATE: The U.S. Department of Education just announced today that it will decorate its halls with "larger than life" photos of kids from all around the country participating in the arts and athletics, as well as reading and in classrooms. Sounds to me like the department might be trying to send a message that the federal government cares about more than just the reading and math tests that are central to NCLB. Or maybe I'm just reading too much into it.

May 13, 2009

Administration's NCLB Goal: A Framework by Early Fall

After health care, it seems one of the next big things on the Obama agenda is the No Child Left Behind Act.

In an interview about Education Secretary Arne Duncan's cross-country listening tour yesterday, lead spokesman Peter Cunningham told me that the goal is for Duncan and the president to be able to outline their plans in early fall for overhauling federal education policy.

That's if all of the political air doesn't get sucked out of Washington during what's sure to be a contentious and fast-moving debate about health care.

April 1, 2009

Title I Changes: Duncan Says What He Wants

From guest blogger Catherine Gewertz:

In a letter sent today to all chief state school officers, Ed Secretary Arne Duncan outlines several changes he intends to make to the rules covering Title I programs, either by issuing waivers or new proposed regulations.

He is proposing to change a 2002 regulation that bars school districts that have failed to make adequate yearly progress under the No Child Left Behind Act from serving as tutoring providers under that law. You might remember that when Duncan was Chicago schools CEO, the district fought tooth and nail for the right to serve as a tutoring entity for its students, even though it had failed to make AYP. It won that right, and the feds, in a pilot program, eventually extended the same right to a few other districts "in need of improvement."

Duncan's letter also says he will also consider waiving, for the 2009-10 year, a regulatory requirement that school districts tell parents at least 14 days before the school year starts if their children are eligible to transfer to another school. He said some states' testing schedules make compliance with that requirement impossible this year.

And Duncan is proposing to change an October 2008 regulation requiring states to update the accountability workbooks required under NCLB. In his letter, Duncan said it doesn't "make sense" to make states undertake that task now, as they are struggling to implement economic stimulus funding, and because the upcoming reauthorization of NCLB could mean that workbooks have to be updated all over again.

The Secretary proposed no changes to the high school graduation-rate regulations issued last October by his predecessor, Margaret Spellings. He praised them as "an important first step," but gave no hint about what next steps might be.

March 31, 2009

Title I Changes: A Preview

The Education Department is at the center of a flurry of activity expected tomorrow.

Education Secretary Arne Duncan is scheduled to visit Doswell E. Brooks Elementary School in Capitol Heights, Md., to announce more detailed guidance on the economic stimulus package. Reportedly, the money is supposed to start flowing to states tomorrow as well. The guidance is expected to focus on the data points that states and districts will have to collect to show they're making progress on four assurances that are spelled out in the stimulus as a condition of receiving the nearly $40 billion state stabilization fund money.

And, the department is expected to announce changes to the Title I program, specifically to accountability provisions under the No Child Left Behind Act. We're hearing from education advocates that these Title I changes will hit on four main topics:

* The department wants to change the regulations to allow districts that are in need of improvement under NCLB to be able to provide their own tutoring services. (Even if they’re allowed to tutor, districts still have to permit outside providers to solicit students – they can’t just bar them.) That's now just a pilot program that several districts, including Chicago Public Schools (Arne Duncan's old district), are participating in.

* School districts will be able to get a waiver from the requirement that they notify parents 15 days ahead of time that their children are eligible for tutoring services under NCLB if states are late in getting test scores to districts.

* States will not have to update their accountability workbooks this year to justify their "n-size" or "confidence intervals" per the time frame outlined in the regulations that ex-Secretary Margaret Spellings ushered in last year. These are very wonky, but important pieces of information that states use to determine if districts and schools are making adequate yearly progress under the law.

* The department wants to continue to work with individual states to re-examine how districts' graduation rates are determined.

March 3, 2009

Union Leaders on NCLB and the Stim

Schools and the Stimulus
Right after the stimulus bill, which contained a whopping $115 billion in new education money, passed the House, I asked Rep. George Miller, D-Calif., the chairman of the House Education and Labor Committee, how the super-sized spending plan would impact reauthorization of the No Child Left Behind Act. You can check out his answer, and some pretty interesting reader comments, here.

Well, last week, I asked the same question of two other folks who are going to play a very important role in the reauthorization debate: Randi Weingarten, the new president of the American Federation of Teachers and Dennis Van Roekel, the new president of the National Education Association.

Neither of them were in their positions back in August 2007 when Miller introduced his ill-fated discussion draft.

Both started off by saying they were grateful to Congress and the administration for stemming what could have been a massive tidal wave of teacher layoffs.

Weingarten, who recently penned a Washington Post editorial calling for national standards, said she sees the stimulus funding, first and foremost, as a "life-line" to schools that have been battered by the economic storm.

"If you are in the trenches like our members are in the trenches, you see what these kinds of cuts could have meant," she said.

It doesn't sound like she would necessarily equate the money in the stimulus with the No Child Left Behind Act.

"Funding issues between [the stimulus] and NCLB [is] really an apples and oranges comparison," she said "This is replacing money that was lost, it's not a net increase" for most school districts. (Check out Michele's take on winners-and-losers in the funding formula here).

Van Roekel had a similar message.

"The 60 billion [in the state stabilization fund] just filled a hole," he said. "It's not new money." He said the increases for Title I and special education "definitely have an impact" but that "we also have to do things inside that system to change" the kinds of supports kids get, including expanding pre-kindergarten programs, which President Barack Obama called for in his budget. And he said, Congress should still rework the accountability system at the center of the law, putting less emphasis on high stakes tests.

"We need to spend the money on research to find a good solid system that measures student learning," he said.

Still, Weingarten said, the money could have a major impact on future funding debates.

"If the money is well spent and if we're able to maintain and improve educational outcomes for kids" which she defines as getting students prepared for the college and the workforce, "We will make a powerful case that money matters. ... If the money is wisely spent then there's a real shot at making the case" for some of the funding to become part of a new baseline.

Weingarten did agree that the NCLB landscape has shifted, but it sounded to me like, in her view, that had as much to do with the change in administration as it does with the stimulus.

"The debate about reauthorizing the ESEA will be different now than it was under the Bush administration," Weingarten said. "Rep. Miller was in an untenable position. He was trying to come up with a compromise that would" pass muster with the Bush administration, rather than trying to find "the best education policy solutions."

When I spoke to Miller, he told me he thought that the nation was more open to incentive pay, one of the issues that drew the loudest criticism back when the discussion draft was released.

Van Roekel reiterated NEA's general position on alternative pay, which is basically that it's okay for teachers to get more money than their colleagues for talking on certain extra tasks, like earning National Board Certification.

Weingarten reminded me that she had been open to "differential pay" for teachers as head of New York's United Federation of Teachers and helped craft a plan that drew praise from Miller.

She didn't say that she was ready to embrace merit pay tied to test scores (if she had, that would have been game-changing breaking news and you wouldn't be reading about it in the very bottom of a blog item).

Instead she said, "I always am very leery of anyone who thinks that any of these things is a silver bullet," She said that she's a supporter of reducing class size but doesn't think that alone will completely change the direction for troubled school systems. "I would put performance pay in that same category it’s not a panacea just like class size is not a panacea."

February 13, 2009

Miller: Stimulus Changes the Conversation on NCLB

Schools and the Stimulus

The $100 billion for education programs in the federal economic-stimulus bill gives the new administration and the secretary of education "credibility" with the public and with educators, just as Congress is gearing up to reauthorize the No Child Left Behind Act, Rep. George Miller, D-Calif., the chairman of the House Education and Labor Committee, told me today.

"I really think this changes the conversation dramatically," Miller said. "I think it makes things a lot easier." Miller said he'd like to reauthorize the law, which many educators have criticized as underfunded, this calendar year.

The unprecedented boost for education in the stimulus "tells the country and the education world where the administration would like to go" on K-12 policy, he said. "They would really like to make a substantial change."

During last year's presidential election, education was largely drowned out on the campaign trail by such issues as the economy, the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, and health care.

But Miller said the stimulus shows that President Barack Obama sees schools as a top priority.

"From the first time I met Barack Obama he made it clear that education was a very, very important part of his growing up and that [he appreciated] the opportunity it provided for him," the committee chairman said.

Miller ran into a brick wall the last time he took a stab at renewing the No Child Left Behind Act. Back in August 2007, he introduced a discussion draft that drew criticism from all parts of the education spectrum, for being too complicated, too tough on schools, or not tough enough, and for including teacher incentive pay.

The draft never even became an official bill and progress on overhauling the law has been stalled ever since.

But Miller thinks that the education world may have become more accepting of policies that helped doom his past effort.

He acknowledged that the controversy's not over on issues like incentive pay. "There are still plenty of people who are skeptical of these things," he said, but added, "It's pretty clear there's a national conversation in support of changing the workplace" for teachers that includes performance pay and new strategies for recruitment and retention.

And Miller said that, during often tense negotiations over the stimulus, Arne Duncan, the incoming Secretary of Education, had plenty of chances to jettison the "reform" oriented pieces from the bill, but stuck by his guns.

"People knew what it would mean if these were accounts were funded" and appropriated money for them anyway, he said.

That sounded to me like Miller fully expects Congress to continue increased support for programs like the Teacher Incentive Fund, state data systems, and probably even Secretary Duncan's new "race to the top fund," which is aimed at rewarding states and districts who are boosting student achievement.

And, in our brief conversation, Miller really stressed the importance of state data systems, and emphasized that they're also a big priority for Duncan. Some educators, including in Miller's home state of California, are wary that state data systems could be used to tie teacher pay to student progress, but it sounds like the education chairman views them as a good way to measure student learning and wants to press full steam ahead.

January 8, 2009

Bush's NCLB Swan Song

President Bush gave his very last policy speech as chief executive ever today—and he picked education as the topic.

Here in Philadelphia, Mr. Bush extolled the virtues of the No Child Left Behind Act, his signature domestic achievement, in a speech at the racially and socio-economically diverse Gen. Philip Kearny Elementary School, a school that has made adequate yearly progress under NCLB every year since 2003.

He didn't say anything new or surprising. He talked about how NCLB has helped expand access to choice, raised student achievement, provided parents with more information, and helped shine a light on groups of students and schools that were long ignored. You can read the transcript of his speech here. And he called on the incoming Congress and the new administration to keep the law's core principles in place during reauthorization.

It's obvious that President Bush sees NCLB as an important part of his legacy, and whether you like or hate the law, or like or hate the President, he's certainly right in claiming the law has reshaped American education, and its effects will continue to be felt in schools long after he's left office.

But, given Bush's rampant unpopularity, this may not have been the smartest move. If he truly wants the law to stay more-or-less intact, making such a high profile speech about it may not have been the best way to accomplish this. It's true that NCLB will, inevitably, always be associated with Bush. This big speech might give Democrats even more motivation to scrap the law.

And I'm not sure whether Obama's pick for Secretary of Education, Arne Duncan, bristled or smiled or both when he heard this from Mr. Bush:

I have seen the resolve for reform and the belief in high standards in Chicago, where reading and math scores are soaring, and where every child still has time to study a foreign language and the fine arts. The school in Chicago we went to, like other schools across the city, have benefited from the vision and leadership of a person named Arne Duncan. And he is going to be the next Secretary of Education. And we are fortunate he has agreed to take on this position. And we wish him all the very best.

The students and staff seemed thrilled with the presidential visit. But I overheard that some kids were disappointed that the visit wasn't from President-elect Barack Obama, who won Pennsylvania and trounced his Republican opponent, Sen. John McCain of Arizona, in heavily-Democratic Philadelphia.

Also...I overheard that Secretary Spellings lost her wallet at the school. After I file this, I'll have to take a look around here. I bet if I'm the one to return it, she'd owe me an exclusive for sure...

October 1, 2008

Alternative Candidates Offer Chance to Vote Against NCLB

From guest blogger David Hoff:

If you're determined to vote for a presidential candidate who opposes the No Child Left Behind Act, you have options.

Sen. Barack Obama and Sen. John McCain are saying that they would keep much of the law's architecture of standards, testing, and accountability. (For more on that, see my story in this week's issue of Education Week and FairTest's overview of where the candidates stand on NCLB.)

But there are three candidates for president who oppose the law: Bob Barr, Cynthia McKinney, and Ralph Nader. All three want to repeal it.

Here's a sampling of their views:

Ralph Nader, who is running as an independent, says "federal policy needs to be transformed from one that uses punishments to control schools, to one that supports teachers and students; from one that relies primarily on standardized tests, to one that encourages high-quality assessments. Broader measures of student learning are needed that include reliance of classroom-based assessments along with testing."

Bob Barr, the Libertarian Party candidate, writes: "Turning education over to the federal government, as through such legislation as the No Child Left Behind Act has not worked. Trying to fix failing schools with more money and regulations also has failed to do anything other than waste taxpayer money without results." He proposes ending the federal government's role in education and turning decisions back to state and local governments.

The Green Party, which has nominated Cynthia McKinney to be its candidate, writes in its draft platform that "the federal Act titled No Child Left Behind punishes where it should assist and hinders its own declared purpose. It should be repealed or greatly redesigned." The federal government's roles should be limited to ensuring students across states have a "level playing field," the platform says.

McKinney, a former Democrat, and Barr, a former Republican, don't mention relevant details from their experiences representing different Georgia districts in the U.S. House of Representatives. Back in 2001, both voted for NCLB twice, once when the House passed its bill and again when the House approved the House-Senate compromise sent to President Bush.

August 11, 2008

The Democrats' Platform

The party platform that Democrats adopted over the weekend in Pittsburgh borrows straight from the Barack Obama playbook, especially when it comes to education.

The platform, which is meant to detail the party's policy positions (but is often forgotten soon after the convention), will be formally approved by delegates to the Democratic National Convention in Denver later this month.

In writing this blog item, I'm working off the draft that was being considered by the platform committee. A spokeswoman for the Democratic National Committee told me in an e-mail today that they don't have the final, electronic version of the platform ready for distribution. When I get it, I'll post it here.

The education part of the "Renewing America's Promise" platform, according to the draft, calls for:

High-quality early childhood education available to every child, which includes big investments in Head Start and pre-K.

New plans to increase teacher pay developed with teachers, and not "imposed on them."

And one of Obama's signature lines, an urging that parents "turn off the TV ... "

The platform is pretty vague, including when it addresses the No Child Left Behind Act:

We will end the practice of labeling a school and its students as failures and then throwing our hands up and walking away from them without having provided the resources and supports these students need. But this alone is not an education policy. It's just a starting point.

Perhaps more interesting is comparing this year's platform with the one from 2004. Joe Williams at Democrats for Education Reform points out a subtle, yet not to be overlooked, difference: a bit more support this year for public charter schools.

Other differences I noticed in this year's platform: a nod to the important role of effective principals (and not just teachers), more attention to revamping teacher pay, and little to no mention of teaching good citizenship and character education (which got its own small section in the 2004 platform.) And No Child Left Behind got less mention in 2004, when the focus then was on low funding levels, and a criticism that President Bush spent $27 billion less on education than what he promised. This year, the platform (though still vague) hints at the need to retool how the law approaches accountability and assessment.

August 7, 2008

Did the Teachers' Unions Endorse the Wrong Guy?

USA Today editorial writer Richard Whitmire makes that case in an EdWeek commentary you can read here.

The gist of Whitmire's piece? John McCain will do more to gut NCLB then will Barack Obama.

What do you think?

Flypaper thinks his idea isn't so far-fetched. This Week in Education thinks it's true.

I'll weigh in on one minor point. Whitmire says that teachers' unions don't need to worry about McCain's support of school choice because vouchers are dead. "Period," he writes. While the idea of federally funded vouchers may be dead, for now, I do think it's too early to write off this movement at the state level.

In Georgia, for example, a school-voucher group called All Children Matter spent more on legislative races this year than any other independent committee, according to this story. In Florida, the same voucher group has raised $2.1 million to help elect like-minded candidates to the legislature. That state is also considering a constitutional amendment that would help restore a hallmark voucher program created under then-Gov. Jeb Bush but later struck down by the Florida Supreme court.

And as another sign this movement isn't dead, the wealthy Overstock.com CEO Patrick Byrne, who was one of the chief supporters of a failed voucher initiative in Utah, has joined the Friedman Foundation, a school-choice advocacy group, as one of its co-chairs.

July 23, 2008

McCain and Obama Advisers on Spec Ed, NCLB, and Funding

Sen. John McCain will be filling in the blanks in his education plan in a "little bit" with proposals on prekindergarten, college access and affordability, and special education, top education adviser Lisa Graham Keegan told the National Conference of State Legislators today in New Orleans.

While my colleague was covering an Obama event, I'm was here in the Big Easy listening to a forum on the education ideas of the presidential candidates, starring Keegan and Linda Darling-Hammond (on behalf of Obama).

There was very little that hasn't been said before, either by the candidates themselves, or their advisers. But I'll hit on the highlights:

* Keegan wouldn't address questions about early education or college, saying McCain was getting ready to talk in more details about his plans for such programs.

* I heard more than I have ever heard before about special education from the two advisers. Keegan, who noted that McCain's wife, Cindy, was a special education teacher, said the Arizona senator was going to address the issues of the federal special education law (IDEA) and its funding in upcoming remarks. She said he's very supportive of it, but also realizes that if schools did a better job of teaching reading, then fewer students would be referred to special education, thus saving those dollars for those students who really need it. She reiterated McCain's support for research into autism-spectrum disorders. Darling-Hammond said Obama wants to quadruple the number of Head Start slots to help address this issue, and fully fund IDEA.

*To the question of what, exactly, Obama means when he dabbles in supporting merit-pay programs—a touchy subject for Democrats—Darling-Hammond was evasive about whether he would use test scores. She was evasive until Keegan stepped in and asked her point-blank if he opposes using any test score whatsoever. Darling-Hammond hemmed and hawed, but ended up saying he would support using test scores as part of multiple measures to gauge teacher performance.

*Legislators got a chance to ask several questions, and were most curious about their stances on additional funding for NCLB and for special education. Obama is all for spending more money on NCLB and special education (Darling-Hammond noted that his $18 billion education price tag is less than the cost of one month in Iraq). But Keegan said money is not the answer—that the federal government has increased its spending nearly 50 percent over pre-NCLB levels, yet students, especially poor and minority, are still failing in alarming numbers.

July 17, 2008

The Four Words Not to be Uttered on the Campaign Trail

No Child Left Behind.

Apparently, the McCain camp has decided talking about NCLB is not good.

During his speech to the NAACP, the Arizona senator made no mention of the law that will have to be re-authorized during his presidency if he's elected.

And during a conference call yesterday following his speech, four of his advisers were asked why the presumptive GOP nominee didn't mention NCLB.

Those advisers spent 3 1/2 minutes answering this question about NCLB by—again—not uttering those four words.

Instead, education adviser Lisa Graham Keegan talked about how teacher quality and data are McCain's big focus and senior policy adviser Doug Holtz-Eakin said his speech was about the "future" (doesn't McCain know he'll have to deal with NCLB in the future?). And adviser Nancy Pfotenhauer answered the question by talking about the value of diagnostic data.

Separately, the advisers addressed the law briefly, when asked by a reporter what the senator means when he or his advisors say the law should be "fully" funded, especially when he wants to freeze discretionary spending. Holtz-Eakin said the senator wants to "continue the funding for NCLB." Given that he said the funding, that, to me, means McCain does not want to devote additional money (up to the levels authorized by Congress) for NCLB.

June 25, 2008

Which Demographic Hates NCLB the Most?

A new poll out today reaffirms the obvious: Voters are really worried about their pocketbooks. Education ranks third as the most important issue this year, behind gas prices, and jobs and the economy, according to a poll taken last month by Lake Research Partners and sponsored by the Public Education Network.

If you read the poll more closely, you can find some interesting nuggets about adults' attitudes toward the No Child Left Behind Act. (The most detailed polling information is in the PowerPoint presentation found here). First, adults don't seem to be nearly as opposed to the law as some presidential candidates may make you think (although both John McCain and Barack Obama seem to agree with the goal of NCLB, but want some big changes). About one-third of those polled think the law is hurting schools, one-third think it's helping, and the rest think it's making no difference.

The folks who are the most positive about the law are Republicans (no surprise there), Latinos, and blacks.

So who seems to hate NCLB the most? White independents.

They even beat out Democrats. And if you remember, the Democratic candidates during the primary used NCLB as their favorite punching bag.

Forty percent of adults who classified themselves as political "independents" (the highest rate of disapproval) thought the law is hurting schools, compared to 32 percent of Democrats and 28 percent of Republicans.

June 6, 2008

A General Election Education Debate. Sort Of.

From contributing blogger Alyson Klein:

So this morning I attended the Association of Educational Publishers election forum in Washington. Lisa Graham Keegan, former Arizona schools chief turned adviser to the presidential campaign of Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., squared off with Jeanne Century, director of science education and the director of research and evaluation at the University of Chicago's Center for Elementary Mathematics and Science Education, who represented the campaign of Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill.

They managed to cover a lot of ground without getting into a lot of specificity, in very campaign-like fashion.

They both seem to agree that there needs to be some form of federal accountability for education, although I left the forum not really feeling like I had a clear idea of what they would keep in the No Child Left Behind Act and what they would ditch. They're both for growth models (big surprise) and like the idea of "rich, rigorous standards" but didn't seem inclined towards supporting national standards. Keegan did say she'd like to see states voluntarily "benchmark" standards against each other, though. And McCain is apparently going to put forth a more comprehensive education policy in a few weeks ... so ... be as specific as you can, senator.

Here are some of the areas where I saw the most defined positions, and the starkest contrasts:

Reading First: There was definitely a major difference in the way the two campaign representatives viewed "scientifically based reading research," an important, but little talked about, part of NCLB and a cornerstone of the reading program. Keegan, for the most part, embraced the concept. And she made it clear where she stands in the reading wars, saying that whole-language programs have left some children "illiterate." Century appears to think that the principles behind scientifically based reading research are too limiting, in terms of the types of studies that can be considered.

Merit Pay: Obama got into hot water with some folks when he talked about this at the National Education Association's convention last year. But Century basically clarified his stance, saying that Obama favors merit-pay programs that support "classroom excellence" as defined by, I believe, districts, schools, and teachers. So it sounded like that means individual districts could do merit pay tied to achievement, if they worked that out with educators. McCain on the other hand, supports pay increases tied to student achievement, Keegan said. And he doesn't seem to think teachers' unions need to be at the negotiating table for merit-pay plans.

Funding: Keegan gave a standard GOP-line on funding for NCLB, noting that appropriations for Title I and other federal programs has increased dramatically since its enactment in 2002. She said the federal government needs to make sure it targets its resources towards practices that work. (I couldn't help thinking that she was borrowing a page from Secretary of Education Margaret Spellings' standard budget-day speech, in which she refers to some of the programs in the Education Department as "a thousand flowers blooming.") Century didn't explicitly call for more money. But she did say that schools need more qualified teachers, a richer curriculum, and better assessments, and that an Obama administration would decide whether schools were getting enough money to do that. I'm going to go out on a limb and guess that probably means spending increases ... if the federal government can afford them.

Thanks to all of you who submitted questions for us. Keep them coming. I have a feeling that this forum may have been the first of many on education.

June 4, 2008

The Shape of Things to Come

From contributing blogger Alyson Klein:

Last night kicked off the general election in earnest. And, although neither Sen. Barack Obama of Illinois nor Sen. John McCain of Arizona focused in detail on education in their speeches (big surprise), their general election arguments on education began to take shape. And both speeches were just as notable for what they didn't say as what they did.

Sen. Barack Obama , now the presumptive Democratic nominee, said he wants to provide more resources to schools, particularly for teacher training:

"If John McCain spent some time in the schools of South Carolina or St. Paul, Minnesota, or where he spoke tonight in New Orleans, Louisiana, he’d understand that we can’t afford to leave the money behind for No Child Left Behind; that we owe it to our children to invest in early-childhood education; and recruit an army of new teachers and give them better pay and more support; and finally decide that, in this global economy, the chance to get a college education should not be a privilege for the few, but a birthright of every American."

While Obama mentioned that there needs to be more money put into programs authorized under the No Child Left Behind Act, he didn't say that the law itself needs to be scrapped or even significantly rewritten. He has mentioned "fixing" the law in other stump speeches, and I wonder if that line just didn't make it in ... or if he is going to be more pro-NCLB now that the general election has effectively begun. Stay tuned, I guess.

McCain repeated his calls to make government in Washington more efficient and to "freeze discretionary spending until we have completed top-to-bottom reviews of all federal programs to weed out failing ones."

Presumably, the plan to freeze spending would include Title I grants for disadvantaged students and other major NCLB programs. That would be huge for school districts that say they haven't seen a major increase in Title I aid in years - and it might make it difficult to gain the support of Rep. George Miller, D-Calif., the chairman of the House Education and Labor Committee, who has said President Bush's refusal to increase education spending has essentially deadlocked NCLB negotiations this year.

But, despite his criticism of the expansion of the federal government during the Bush years, McCain also did not attack No Child Left Behind, a program that many conservatives consider the embodiment of federal overreach. The law is so closely identified with President Bush that criticizing it may give McCain a chance to show he's Not Bush, a point he made over and over in his speech last night. And even some conservatives have taken him to task for seeming to stay so close to the law's core principles, despite opposition in his own party. We'll see if McCain's essentially pro-NCLB strategy continues to hold throughout the general election campaign.

May 20, 2008

Kentucky Primary: A Missed Opportunity?

From contributing blogger Alyson Klein:

Kentucky and Oregon hold their Democratic primaries today. And I have to say, I'm sorry we didn't get to the Blue Grass State earlier in the election cycle, when it might have actually mattered more. The state has a storied history of education redesign, dating back nearly two decades with the Kentucky Education Reform Act. And there's a great debate going on there right now about whether to revamp the state's assessments or leave in place the current system, which includes student portfolios.

It's the kind of in-the-weeds, local issue that typically doesn't get addressed in a presidential contest, but if Kentucky had as much influence as say, Iowa, New Hampshire or (this time around) Pennsylvania, the candidates might have felt compelled to talk about it, maybe as part of seeking the endorsement of teachers' unions and other education groups in the state.

That would have given us a good idea of where the candidates stand on using multiple measures to assess student progress under the No Child Left Behind Act, which has been a major issues in the debate over the law's reauthorization. The law's renewal will likely be completed under the next president's watch.

March 20, 2008

NCLB on Letterman

It's already starting! Al Franken, who is challenging Sen. Norm Coleman, a Republican, for his Senate seat in the swing state of Minnesota, showed up on David Letterman on Tuesday night ... and bashed No Child Left Behind! On late night TV! Shockingly, Letterman wasn't nearly as excited as I was .... he seemed only slightly more amused than Jon Stewart did when Secretary of Education Margaret Spellings brought up "growth models" during her appearance on the Daily Show last year.

Franken was much wonkier (and not nearly as entertaining) as a senate candidate than as a comedian. I think he's trying to show his serious side. Still, it does look like education is going to be a central part of his campaign - and, hopefully, Coleman's. Franken's even got an ad featuring his fourth-grade teacher, which he played during the show.

We've already written about the differences between Franken and Coleman on the NCLB law. Franken brought up many concerns folks on the left (and some on the right) have already voiced about NCLB, namely that it narrows curriculum and forces to teachers to "teach to the test." Even though such criticisms are nothing new for those of us who closely follow federal education policy, it's good to see these issues talked about outside of a congressional hearing room or National School Boards Association conference - particularly since there's been so little discussion of them in the presidential campaign.

It's probably too much to hope that Coleman will show up Leno next week, talking about voluntary national standards and tests...right?

UPDATE: You can watch most of Franken's appearence on Youtube here, but unfortunately, the clip doesn't include the full segment with his NCLB remarks. We're still searching for a full video clip.


March 19, 2008

Clinton on Differentiated Consequences

Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, D-N.Y., yesterday released a statement that amounted to a back-handed compliment of the U.S. Department of Education's plan to allow up to 10 states to use "differentiated consequences" in implementing the No Child Left Behind Act.

"While a small pilot, this is a long overdue step in the right direction. By allowing states to differentiate between schools that need modest improvements and those that are chronically failing, this pilot will provide some much-needed flexibility," Clinton said in the March 18 statement. "This step, however, should be just the beginning. No Child Left Behind is a failed policy that needs fundamental overhaul - not tinkering around the edges."

There's broad support in Congress for differentiated consequnces, which would permit districts and states to use seperate sets of sanctions for schools that missed the law's achievement targets for most of their students, as opposed to those that failed to make progress with one or two subgroups, such as students in special education. Clinton's support of the proposal isn't a surprise.

What's more intriguing is that Democratic presidential candidate's statement on the pilot takes her recent anti-NCLB rhetoric up a notch. She says:

"As president, I will work with Congress to end the No Child Left Behind Act, and put in its place a more sensible law that stops micromanaging our schools from the federal level and provides real support to struggling schools."

But it's still unclear just how Clinton (or the other presidential candidates) would revamp the law. Would we still have an NCLB-like federally driven accountability system, just with a different name? NCLB is a reauthorization of the decades-old Elementary and Secondary Education Act. I find it difficult to imagine that any president would completely scrap that law.

Still, if nothing else, the statement shows that Clinton (or someone in her campaign) is paying attention to the implementation of NCLB. That's probably a good political move, given that the National Education Association's endorsement is still up for grabs.

March 4, 2008

Education and NCLB in the Presidential Election

This is from guest blogger and EdWeek assistant managing editor Mark Walsh, who took a break from his own blog on education law to provide this Campaign K-12 dispatch:

Education won't be any more prominent of an issue in the in the general election campaign for the White House this fall than it has been in the party primary season.

That was the view of two of the three panelists at a symposium on Monday at the American Enterprise Institute in Washington.

"This is the first time since 1980 or '84 that education has not loomed large, or at least largish, as a presidential campaign issue," said Chester E. "Checker" Finn Jr., the president of the Thomas B. Fordham Foundation and a former U.S. Department of Education official under President Reagan. "If any of today's candidates thought education was a winning issue, or even an important issue, I think we'd know it by now."

William A. Galston, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution and a White House domestic-policy adviser under President Clinton, said, "Not only has education not been a big issue in this presidential year, it's not going to be a big issue in this presidential year."

The two overriding issues relate to peace and prosperity, aka the Iraq war and the economy, and when both of those are "on the table simultaneously, that is the election," Galston said.

Finn, the author of the new memoir Troublemaker: A Personal History of School Reform Since Sputnik , offered several theories on why education has taken a back seat in this election. The most obvious is that issues such as the war, the economy, health care, and global warming have hogged the spotlight. Or, people may have grown exasperated with talk of education reform in the presidential elections.

But the theory he seemed to favor was that people have figured out "that education is no longer a winning issue because when all is said and done, a president doesn't have that much leverage over the schools."

The dissenter on the panel was Marc S. Lampkin, the executive director of Strong American Schools, which is running the ED in '08 campaign to push education as an election issue.

Lampkin said the ED in '08 effort has been successful in establishing "some degree of discourse" with the presidential candidates' advisers. And while polling of the electorate has shown that education was, at best, in the middle of the pack as the top concern of voters, the group's own polling shows that "education is the No. 1 issue for Hispanics," Lampkin said.

Education Week reported on the challenges faced by the ED in '08 effort in this story in December.

While the AEI event was billed partly as a look at how education has played historically in presidential campaigns, there was very little of that. Instead, the panelists were eager to discuss what effect the election could have on the future of the No Child Left Behind Act, regardless of how much attention the issue receives on the stump.

Galston, who was involved in the 1994 reauthorization of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (of which NCLB is the 2001 version), said there has been a "collapse of the congressional center" around the federal school accountability law.

"If there is a Democratic president, I don't think that NCLB will survive in anything like its current form," Galston said. He added that he believes that the next Congress, assuming Democratic control and a Democrat in the White House, would pass a renewal of the ESEA, but it would be "more likely to look like the 1994 version than the 2001 version."

Sen. John McCain of Arizona, who is the likely Republican nominee, is on record in support of NCLB and could be expected to try to maintain it, the panelists said. Almost needless to say, they did not seem to think that Congress would hammer out an agreement on reauthorizing the law before this election year is out.

February 26, 2008

Clinton's Biggest Policy Flip Flops

Yesterday's Washington Post explored the flip-flopping going on with Sens. Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama. The Post id'd its top five flip flops for each candidate.

And what was No. 2 for Clinton?

Her position on No Child Left Behind.

February 7, 2008

NCLB's Biggest Champion on the Trail is Dropping Out

Former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, a Republican who had assembled a who's who list of education advisers and one of the more detailed education agendas of the GOP presidential candidates, is calling it quits.

Now who in the presidential race will say nice things about No Child Left Behind?

February 4, 2008

John McCain on NCLB? It's Anyone's Guess

Unless Mitt Romney can pull off a N.Y. Giants-esque upset on Super Tuesday, Republican John McCain seems destined to claim the Republican presidential nomination.

And so I went searching again for more insight into how Sen. McCain might change the No Child Left Behind Act. On his Web site, you can find a little bit about his education ideas, including a video where he extols the benefits of school choice. But I'm still left wanting to know more about what specific changes he'd like to make to President Bush's signature education law.

Perhaps most telling, in March 2007, the senator's hometown newspaper, the Arizona Republic, did a story on the state Congressional delegation's views on NCLB and McCain did not respond to "repeated requests for comment."

In 2005, McCain told CNN's Larry King the act was a "major milestone."

A campaign spokesman told The Hill last year that McCain generally supports NCLB, but would like more emphasis on math and science. The spokesman then said that McCain could withhold support for renewing the law depending on what's in the bill. Thanks -- that helps a lot.

According to this National Education Association account of a town hall meeting in New Hampshire last year, Sen. McCain advocated for more flexibility in measuring progress in students with disabilities and English-language learners.

What I've found in various news stories and speech transcripts is that Sen. McCain feels NCLB is a great start. Well, then, where does he think the law needs to go from here?

(UPDATE: A colleague reminded me of the EdWeek story we did back in 2000, which might shed some more light on this topic.)

February 1, 2008

Clinton's Retribution? Blame Kennedy for NCLB

That's Bill Clinton, not Hillary.

In this story, the former president is blaming Massachusetts Sen. Ted Kennedy, one of the architects of the No Child Left Behind Act, for the "train wreck" that he says the law has become.

Hmmmm. Could this be President Clinton's payback for Sen. Kennedy's endorsement of Hillary Clinton's chief opponent, Barack Obama?

January 29, 2008

Democratic Response on Education? Silence

During President Bush's State of the Union, he touted a re-packaged $300 million "Pell Grants for Kids" program that would essentially give scholarships or vouchers to help low-income students trapped in failing schools. And he again touted the No Child Left Behind Act, which will become—for better or for worse—his education legacy.

Yet the Democratic candidates' official responses didn't touch the subject of education. In his official response, Sen. Barack Obama didn't address education. Neither did Sen. Hillary Clinton of New York or former North Carolina Sen. John Edwards. And even Kansas Gov. Kathleen Sebelius, who isn't in the presidential race but delivered the Democratic Party's "official response" didn't address the issue (and she's chairwoman of the Education Commission of the States). UPDATE: Sebelius has just announced she's endorsing Obama.

But depending on your perspective, silence can be a good thing.

January 10, 2008

NCLB's Biggest Basher Dropping Out

The only sitting governor in the presidential race—and the campaign's loudest NCLB naysayer—is calling it quits. Though New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson hasn't made it official, every media outlet in town is reporting it. (Update: He just made it official, a little before 3:30 p.m. today).

This means Gov. Richardson, a Democrat, can stop thinking up more verbs he can use to describe what he wants to do with NCLB. "Scrap it", "junk it", "get rid of it", "throw it out", and the list goes on...While that may have resonated with the education community fed up with all of the testing and accountability, Richardson never said what he would replace NCLB with.

The leading Democrats left in the race have slightly more moderate approaches to No Child Left Behind (although former North Carolina Sen. John Edwards, who supports better testing and broader measures of student learning gains, has said that it may be necessary to ditch it.) New York Sen. Hillary Clinton has called it a great promise that's resulted in an unfunded mandate. And Sen. Barack Obama of Illinois wants to improve assessments and provide more resources to low-performing schools.


January 7, 2008

Margaret Spellings' Future: 'Staying Put'

If you read my colleague David Hoff's new piece about Margaret Spellings, you'll see that she seems to put to rest speculation , at least for the near future, that she may return to her home state of Texas to pursue a run for governor in 2010, or possibly the U.S. Senate.

Spellings told EdWeek's Hoff that she expects to keep living in suburban Washington, D.C., until her youngest daughter graduates from high school in 2010. “I’m probably going to stay in Washington for a while,” she said.


January 4, 2008

Iowa Caucuses: Change is Needed, But Even in Education?

The results from yesterday's Iowa caucuses make one thing very clear: these Midwestern voters are demanding change.

So they gave their votes to Republican Mike Huckabee, a likable, though sometimes gaffe-prone, bass-playing former Arkansas governor who has made arts education his big school initiative.

And to Democrat Barack Obama, an African-American candidate who has billed himself as a force for change, who has dared to broach the subject of merit pay for teachers and who hasn't been nearly as fierce in his opposition of No Child Left Behind as some of his opponents. (Democrat Hillary Clinton made a passing mention of the law in her speech last night after finishing a disappointing third.)

But this is what isn't clear: While voters wanted a change in this nation's leadership, will there be the same demand for change in the direction of education, especially when it comes to federal involvement?

The entrance and exit polling in Iowa sponsored by media outlets shed no light on how education may have influenced votes—because the issue probably didn't. The top issues for Democrats were the economy, Iraq, and health care, in that order. Republicans said illegal immigration, followed by Iraq, the economy, and terrorism were their top issues. Education didn't make either list.

Update: The education blogsphere is full of Iowa reactions. Read takes by Alexander Russo, the Education Writers Association Education Election bloggers, Joe Williams, and ED in '08's Roy Romer.

December 27, 2007

Voter Attitudes on School Prayer, Vouchers, and NCLB

If I were writing this as a traditional news story, this would be my lead:

"Forty-two percent of voters surveyed in a recent Associated Press-Yahoo poll said they would be much more likely, or somewhat more likely, to vote for a candidate who supports teacher-led prayer in public schools."

But since this is my blog, here's what I will say:

"For the 42 percent of voters who think teacher-led prayer is such a good idea that they would base their choice for president on it, have you considered regulating such prayer? Imagine what the teachers could pray about: 'Dear God, please don't let my cheerleading routine end up on YouTube.'"

Deep within the AP-Yahoo poll, conducted Dec. 14-20 with 1,821 adults, are a few interesting tidbits about voters' feelings on education. Of those polled, 847 were Democrats and 655 were Republicans, with the rest being independent or unaffiliated with a party.

Interestingly, when voters were asked to name their top issue, education wasn't even on the list of choices they were given. However, voters were later asked more specific questions about three education issues.

Of those polled, voters seem to like teacher-led prayer about as much as they hate No Child Left Behind.

First, on prayer. While 42 percent said they'd be more likely to vote for a candidate who supports teacher-led prayer in public schools, 27 percent said they'd be much less, or somewhat less, likely to support a candidate for that same view. Thirty percent said the issue made no difference to them.

Candidates who support scrapping NCLB get similar support (good news for New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson, the Democratic presidential candidate who has made this his education mantra). Forty-six percent said they'd be more likely to support a candidate who wants to get rid of the law, while 27 percent say that hard-line stance would make them less likely to support the candidate. Twenty-six percent said it made no difference. (For more about candidates' positions on NCLB, the National Center for Fair and Open Testing just compiled a list of what the presidential candidates are saying about the law.)

The poll also gauged voters' feelings toward candidates who support federally funded vouchers to send children to private schools. More voters said they would be less likely to support a candidate who favored vouchers.

December 11, 2007

John Edwards on NCLB: We May Have to Ditch It

Even the presidential candidate with one of the most comprehensive plans to re-tool the No Child Left Behind Act is now saying those fixes might not be enough.

At a campaign stop in Iowa Monday, former North Carolina Sen. John Edwards spoke for about two minutes about NCLB, even going as far to say that the federal education law is really just an attempt by President Bush to privatize public schools. Edwards said that even with his proposals to amend NCLB, "it may be that this just can't be fixed." And if that's the case, then it's time to "ditch it," Edwards said. This is one of the first times we've heard another Democrat besides New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson talk about completely getting rid of NCLB. (Although in a new campaign ad, New York Sen. Hillary Clinton talks about ending the "unfunded mandate" of NCLB). The thing is, testing, accountability, and data-driven decision-making are here to stay—and many states were leading the charge on this before NCLB came along.

Listen to John Edwards:


November 29, 2007

The CNN/YouTube Republican Debate: The Confederate Flag Over Education?

Last night's CNN/YouTube Republican debate in Florida provided an opportunity for regular people to submit questions to the presidential questions via video through YouTube—and thousands did. As I scanned the questions beforehand, I found that hundreds dealt with education, from how the candidates would change No Child Left Behind and help students better afford college to where the candidates stand on evolution in the classroom and national standards.

But only one of the 33 questions asked during the debate even touched on the subject of education. Perhaps the producers could have swapped out the question about the Confederate flag for a weighty question about the future of K-12 education in this country.

The question that did prompt a discussion about education sparked an exchange between former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee and former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney over college tuition assistance for children of illegal immigrants. Romney, who is duking it out with Huckabee for a win in the Jan. 3 Iowa caucus, is trying to paint the former Arkansas governor as a liberal for supporting a proposal several years ago in Arkansas that would have given the children of illegal immigrants the same chance at academic scholarships (if they meet other residency requirements) as other students. Romney argued that children of illegal immigrants were getting a "special deal," while Huckabee countered that children shouldn't be "punished" for illegal actions of their parents. Watch their exchange below:


November 28, 2007

'Only Bill Richardson Has a Bold Plan for Our Schools'

That's the opening line of New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson's new television ad that's running in Iowa. I question the "only" and the "bold" part of his claim.

His "bold plan," if elected president: getting rid of the No Child Left Behind Act, expanding prekindergarten, paying teachers more, and expanding math and science academies. Hardly original ideas, since most of those proposals are shared by every other Democratic candidate in the race. Webster's dictionary defines bold as "readiness to take risks, daring, fearless," and although he goes a step further than other candidates by calling for an all-out elimination of NCLB, I'd still be hesitant to call his plan bold since proposing to expand pre-K and boost teacher salaries are safe bets for a Democratic presidential candidate these days.

Still, I kept watching his ad, which further directs viewers to see what he "did" for New Mexico schools by going to www.risingschools.com.

The site details a list of education accomplishments in New Mexico, and mentions that Education Week's Quality Counts gave his state an A for assessments and accountability. I thought this merited some fact-checking.

Richardson is right, we did give New Mexico an A in 2006, and gave the state other high marks for improving teacher quality and allocating resources equitably.

However, Richardson understandably left out an important fact: More recently, in the 2007 Quality Counts, New Mexico ranked dead last among the 50 states and the District of Columbia for providing children with chances for success from cradle to career.

There is a bright side to this dismal ranking for Gov. Richardson. Christopher Swanson, the director of the Editorial Projects in Education Research Center, which produced the report, told me that New Mexico officials didn't shrink away from the story—that they instead used it to bring more attention to the importance of education and funding in their state.

Update: Check out this on-point cartoon, which appeared in the Baton Rouge (La.) Advocate this year shortly after our Quality Counts report debuted. Thanks to the cartoonist, Frank Mulhearn, for his permission to reprint this here.

Fred%20Mulhearn.jpg

November 27, 2007

Presidential Politics and Bilingual Education (Plus NCLB)

Over at Learning the Language, my colleague, Mary Ann Zehr, has a must-read about the presidential candidates' views on bilingual education.

While all of the Democratic frontrunners said they supported bilingual education, only Republican Mitt Romney and the lesser-known Tom Tancredo responded in time to the survey Mary Ann featured in her post. They came out against bilingual education.

While some may disagree with Romney, the former Massachusetts governor who supported a 2002 voter-approved initiative against bilingual education, at least he responded to the survey. And although his campaign's response was a little murky, he has staked out a clear stance against bilingual education on the campaign trail.

Update: The presidential candidates are providing a lot of fodder for EdWeek bloggers. Over at NCLB: Act II, my colleague, David Hoff, writes about how NCLB is still the candidates' favorite punching bag.

November 26, 2007

Mitt Romney on NCLB: He Likes Testing

Check out this blog item at The Washington Post, which details Republican Mitt Romney's brief statement of support on Sunday for student testing as part of the federal No Child Left Behind Act.

The former Massachusetts governor may not be taking the popular stance in defending standardized testing. But, he's clearly distinguishing himself in the pack of presidential candidates in both political parties who are routinely bashing the federal school accountability law.

November 20, 2007

Obama's Education Plan and His Dance Around Hot-Button Teacher Issues

In Sen. Barack Obama's new education plan, his ideas for reforming the teaching profession are substantial, expensive, and have the potential to result in fairly dramatic changes in the teaching profession. I discussed this with one of my colleagues on the teacher beat here at Education Week, Bess Keller, who helped me navigate my way through the Illinois Democrat's detailed plan.

Obama wants to get serious about recruiting by offering $25,000 "teaching service" scholarships to talented, high-performing teacher candidates who agree to teach in a high-need area or subject for at least four years. His $18 billion plan calls for expensive teacher residency programs, like one in Chicago, to train teachers for struggling, urban districts. He wants to keep good teachers in the classroom by giving them mentors, and by offering incentives for schools to offer paid common planning time so teacher can plan their lessons together. And, he wants to offer incentives for districts to develop "career ladder initiatives" that give teachers opportunities for advancement (and more money) by becoming mentors, acquiring more training, and boosting student learning.

While Obama's education plan is detailed and ambitious, he dances around two of the most hot-button teacher issues: merit pay based on test scores, and getting rid of failing teachers.

Obama, who promoted merit pay in a July speech to the National Education Association, alludes to merit pay in his plan by giving a nod to districts like Denver, which use student test scores as one means of evaluating teachers for salary raises. But he doesn't come out and directly say whether test scores should be part of the salary equation. Instead, he says teachers should be rewarded for their deep knowledge of subjects, additional training they receive to help high-needs students, and a "variety of contributions" they make to student learning.

Nor does Obama's plan say much about what districts should do with teachers who, despite everything, fail to help their students achieve. In his prepared remarks from the speech he gave today in Manchester, N.H., he said: "And if they’re still underperforming after that, we should find a quick and fair way to put another teacher in that classroom." Though he offers an example of using peer review and assistance plans to help underperforming teachers, it certainly won't be easy for teachers and school districts to find a "quick and fair" way to get rid of underperforming teachers.

Obama and No Child Left Behind

Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., released a detailed education plan in New Hampshire this morning. It’s long on detail when it comes to teacher pay, early childhood education, and expanding federal college outreach … but somewhat skimpy when it comes to what is arguably the biggest education question in Congress these days: how states should be held accountable for student progress under a reauthorized No Child Left Behind Act. Obama said he wants to “reform” the law and repeats perennial Democratic criticisms about a lack of adequate funding by the Bush administration.

His most interesting proposal calls for helping states expand the use of “real time tests,” aka formative assessments. It’s tough to tell, though, whether Obama would allow states to use these tests for accountability purposes and, if so, to what degree they would “count” towards whether a state makes adequate yearly progress under the law. He also said he would like to consider measures beyond reading and math tests, presumably to demonstrate student progress towards state goals. But he doesn't provide more detail than that.

His only other major idea for adequate yearly progress? It appears to be permitting states to use “growth models,” which track individual student progress, instead of the current “status” models, which compare different cohorts of students. That’s a “me-too” proposal. The Bush administration, which is already permitting nine states to use growth models as part of a pilot project, also endorsed expanding the idea in its reauthorization blueprint, released in January.

Rep. George Miller, D-Calif., the chairman of the House Education and Labor Committee and Rep. Howard P. “Buck” McKeon of California, the panel's ranking Republican, included a proposal to expand growth models in a draft bill reauthorizing the law, released in August. Even lawmakers who don’t want to see major changes to the school improvement measure, such as Sen. Judd Gregg, R-N.H., the former chairman of the Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee, are in favor of growth models. In fact, it’s pretty safe to say that, right now, growth models are a given in reauthorization.

But, as an education reporter, I would have a couple more questions for Obama, who sits on the Senate education committee. Should the renewed version of the law keep the 2013-14 deadline for bringing all students to proficiency? Would he permit states to stagger testing, or continue to test every year from 3rd to 8th grades, and once in high school? Would Obama want more testing at the high school level? Would he favor offering carrots or developing sticks to get states to raise their standards so that they are better aligned with the National Assessment of Educational Progress?

Still, it’s telling that Obama bashed his main rivals for the Democratic nomination--Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton of New York and former Sen. John Edwards of North Carolina--for not supporting an amendment to NCLB that would have made the law unenforceable if it’s not fully funded. I wonder if that particular criticism of the other two frontrunners will continue to come up on the campaign trail.

Michele McNeil

Michele McNeil
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Alyson Klein

Alyson Klein
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