The Facts About...Making
Gains Every Year
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The Challenge: Too
many schools are not showing academic progress. Unfortunately, the current
system hides failing schools.
The Solution: Set
clear goals and timeframes; give parents information on academic achievement;
and provide choices if their child's school continues to be identified as in
need of improvement.
WHY SETTING THE BAR AND MEASURING PROGRESS WILL WORK
Democrats and Republicans agree that failure will no
longer be funded.
- Since 1965, more than $321 billion in federal funding
has been spent to help schools provide the best education possible for
disadvantaged students. Under the old law, schools continued to receive this
funding whether or not their students learned to read or perform basic math
skills.
No Child Left Behind
ties funding to academic achievement for the first time in history.
- The bipartisan support and popularity of No Child
Left Behind shows that Americans are united for results and that
schools must use taxpayer funds on programs that work.
Improvement at a snail's pace and chronic
underachievement are inadequate and unacceptable.
- Under No Child Left Behind we must ensure
that every child learns, and that starts with setting measurable goals and
standards for every school.
Academic expectations and improvement
timeframes will be clear.
- States will establish academic
achievement goals by setting academic standards in core subjects and measuring
progress using tests aligned to state standards.
- States will set annual progress goals
for school improvement, so all students can reach proficiency and no child is
left behind.
- Schools will be identified as needing
improvement if they are not meeting these goals.
This law has punch. Parents have options when their
schools don't improve.
- Parents of children in schools in need of improvement
have the choice to direct district funds toward transportation costs to a
better public school or toward supplemental services (tutoring or after-school
programs) for their child.
No Child Left Behind
supports schools and is realistic about progress.
- Schools that are making measurable improvement but
experience a one-year dip in academic achievement are given a fair chance to
demonstrate that the decline is out of the ordinary.
- Schools that don't demonstrate adequate yearly progress
for two consecutive years are identified as needing improvement and subject to
immediate interventions—beginning with technical assistance and then more
serious corrective actions if the school continues to not make Adequate Yearly
Progress.
Failure cannot hide.
- Test data will be reported by economic background, race
and ethnicity, English proficiency and disability.
- Measuring progress by subgroups will demonstrate not
just that overall student performance is improving, but also that achievement
gaps are closing between disadvantaged students and other students.
- Holding schools accountable for the academic achievement
of all subgroups ensures that no child is left behind.