| Friday, March 26, 2010 Dear Chairman Miller and Ranking Member Kline: The Aspen Institute’s Commission on No Child Left Behind has called for Congress and the Administration to build on the education reform momentum that has energized the country by working together to enact bipartisan legislation this year to reauthorize and improve the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA), currently known as the No Child Left Behind Act (NCLB). We are therefore pleased that the Committee on Education and Labor has launched a bipartisan effort to revamp the law, and that the Administration followed President Obama’s State of the Union call for ESEA reauthorization with a blueprint that could help advance that critical process. NCLB initiated a national commitment—and sustained national dialogue—to hold schools accountable for the achievement of all students. Students who often had been overlooked are no longer invisible, and many are now receiving the attention, resources, and interventions they need to succeed. Indeed, students have made gains under the law’s disaggregated accountability policy—but they have not been large enough or fast enough to meet the significant challenges we face, and troubling achievement gaps remain pervasive. Achievement gaps matter to all of us, with tragic consequences not only for individual students, but also for our collective standard of living. A sense of urgency must compel us to act.
Once groundbreaking, NCLB must now be updated and improved to help drive the dramatic progress our students and schools need. Don’t Leave Accountability Behind (available at www.nclbcommission.org), a report the Commission co-released this month with the Alliance for Excellent Education, outlines additional reasons that a timely ESEA reauthorization is necessary to support sustained reform and ensure strong accountability for student outcomes and improvement. Among them:
The Commission is pleased that the Administration’s ESEA “Blueprint for Reform” contains top-line priorities aligned with those that have been advanced by the Commission, including teacher and principal effectiveness measures primarily focused on student achievement, more aggressive interventions in chronically low-performing schools, and higher expectations for students. However, congressional leadership will be critical in developing important details of these priorities—and in updating the law’s accountability provisions to maintain a strong framework for driving improved performance.
If the pressure to continuously improve performance for all students fades, if most schools can avoid taking real action to remedy their shortcomings, and if options for students in struggling schools disappear, then we will return to a time when disadvantaged students were essentially invisible and low performance was excused or swept under the rug. While we hope that is not what the Administration intended, we must all work together to guard against this potential outcome. Simply put, strengthening efforts to help the lowest-performing schools must not result in lowered accountability for all other students. Instead, the next ESEA must update current accountability provisions, take into account student growth, and give states and districts the flexibility to better target assistance and interventions to each school’s most compelling needs while driving improved performance for all students in all schools.
Continuous Improvement for All: Ensure that states and districts have the flexibility to better target assistance and interventions on each school’s most compelling needs—as identified by reliable data—to drive continuous improvement and increase the academic achievement of all students in all schools. Effective Interventions: Require that states and districts address persistent low performance through a variety of intensive interventions, including school closure, and provide disadvantaged students with additional educational options such as effective tutoring as their schools undergo improvement or transformation. Actionable Data and Research: Streamline and improve data systems to ensure that data collected is both necessary and actionable for educators, parents, policymakers, and the public; and reliable data is consistently used to drive effective decision making and reform and appropriately identify schools that need assistance, while maintaining strong privacy and security safeguards. Ensure that the federal research infrastructure generates timely, high-quality research that yields reliable, actionable, relevant information, and expand awareness and use of research-based practices among educators. Remove Obstacles: Incent states and districts to increase flexibility and remove any regulations or barriers that limit the ability and autonomy of school leaders to pursue innovative ways of achieving the bottom line—college and career readiness for all students—and allow states to propose waiving certain federal requirements in exchange for strong accountability for results. Diversified Delivery Options: Challenge states and districts to reorient the delivery of education in a way that ensures all parents’ ability to choose the educational environments and supports best suited for their children through a broad range of high-quality options, including:
Principles to Guide Teacher and Principal Effectiveness Policy
Measure Teacher and Principal Effectiveness Well
Use Data to Drive Improvement and Support Success
Drive Reform by Better Targeting Resources for Effective Teacher and School Leadership Strategies
Gary Huggins | |
© 2012 Aspen Institute