No School Left Ahead?
"No Child Left Behind" Program May Be Leaving Schools in the Lurch
by Alan D. McNarie
"Most of us celebrated
the turn of the century on January 1, 2000. But for America's children, the
turn of the century came on January 8, 2002," began the letter from U.S.
Education Secretary Rod Paige to the American public.
Paige, whose letter appears on the Department of Education website (http://www.ed.gov/nclb/overview/welcome/index.html)
was referring to No Child Left Behind (NCLB), the controversial federal education
initiative that President George W. Bush signed into law on January 8, 2002.
NCLB, Paige claims, "will invest in successful public education instead
of continuing to fund a failing system. The new law will give states more flexibility
on how they spend their education dollars. In return, it requires them to set
standards for student achievement, and hold students, teachers and other educators
accountable for results."
The bill's supporters hope that it will finally force improvement in the nation's
- and the state's - school systems. But the new law's detractors fear that it
is actually adding a nightmarish new bureaucratic burden for the schools to
shoulder, without providing adequate funding to pay for it.
Eight Out of 50 Schools
Pass
Under NCLB, every public school that accepts federal money for any program would
be measured annually against a stringent national checklist. Those schools that
failed to meet the checklist's 37 different Annual Yearly Progress (AYP) criteria
would be classified as "In Good Standing, Conditional." Failure to
meet the criteria for two years in a row would reduce the school's status to
"School Improvement Year 1," forcing the school to adopt a two-year
improvement plan and giving parents at least the theoretical right to pull their
children from the school and send them to another with "Good Standing"
or "Good Standing - Conditional" status. Three bad years in a row
would demote the school to "School Improvement Year 2" and force it
to offer tutoring to economically disadvantaged students. Four years of failure
in a row would lead to "Corrective Action" status, forcing staff and
curriculum changes; five years of inadequate progress would lead to "Planning
for Restructuring," under which drastic measures could be introduced, including
replacing most of the school staff and/or conversion of the public school to
a privately-run or charter school.
Nearly three years later, Hawaii's schools are feeling the weight of the new
program's stringent standards. Many schools in the Federal Government's Title
I Program, which provides extra aid to schools with high percentages of students
from low-income families, have already found themselves assigned to "Planning
for Restructuring" status based on their past records of testing. Of the
Big Island's 50 schools, 32 failed to meet NCLB's Annual Yearly Progress (AYP)
requirements last year; 12 schools are already in Planning for Restructuring.
Only eight have earned unconditional Good Standing - and half of those schools
are small charter or laboratory schools. None of the island's high schools met
this year's AYP standards. Over a vast swath of the island's southern coast,
from Honaunau in South Kona through all of Pahala in Ka'u, none of the schools
have made even Conditional Good Standing.
Doomed to Failure?
According to the Federal DOE website, the program's annual "report cards"
on each school are based on a number of factors, including " student academic
achievement disaggregated by subgroups," "comparison of students at
basic, proficient, and advanced levels of academic achievement," "graduation
rates," "professional qualifications of teachers," "percentages
of students not tested," and "whether the school has been identified
as 'in need of improvement.'" The 37 benchmarks include Language Arts/Reading
and Math proficiency scores of each grade in Grades 3-8, as well as the percentage
of proficient scores among students classified as "learning disabled,"
students who speak English as a second language, and lower income students in
the Free and Reduced Lunch program. The students in the last three groups are
expected to reach the same percentage of efficiency as their peers in the general
population.
"Testing tells parents, communities, educators and school boards which
schools are doing well. If a school takes a challenging population and achieves
great results, testing will show that. If a school is allowing certain groups
to fall behind year after year, testing will expose that, too," contends
the website's description of the program.
But some of those charged with creating and administering those tests believe
that they're based on a flawed concept that may lead to more harm than good.
One of the program's critics is Mike Heim of the Hawai'i Department of Education's
Planning and Evaluation Branch.
"Among my peers, we call this [the NCLB's testing structure] a fully conjunctive
model, which is a fancy way of saying that each and every condition must be
met at the same time," explains Heim. He notes that a school may meet or
exceed expectations in most of the 37 categories, but still be rated unsatisfactory
if it fails to make the grade in even one category.
"To expect schools to be nearly perfect in 37 different criteria all at
the same time, is, I believe, unrealistic," he contends. "In real
life, people behave in a compensatory fashion. More often than not, in everyday
life, people can make up for a weakness, by compensating for it with strengths
in another area."
The same, he believes, may be true of organizations made up of people: they're
never strong in every area, but compensate for weaknesses in one area with exceptional
strengths in others. Students who experience a weak fourth-grade curriculum
may excel under an exceptional fifth grade teacher; a high school may need improvement
in its geometry classes, but have an exceptional science program.
The school status assigned by NCLB's Annual Progress Reports can stigmatize
the entire school, based on the school's weakest link, Heim contends.
"It's almost as if somebody put this thing together without thinking about
what happens to the people that comprise this organization . . . and perhaps
without thinking through very clearly the effects that these negative labels
will have on people," he suspects. "I wonder if the people that designed
this thought that humiliation would be motivating. I'm not so sure that it is."
He notes that some school principals have told him, "It seems we're doomed
to failure."
Not all school officials are so pessimistic. John Thatcher, who manages Connections
Charter School in Hilo, believes that overall, NCLB will probably be "more
beneficial than detrimental" to his and other charter schools. He notes
that all charter schools are already living under the sword that NCLB places
over the heads of other public schools:
"If a charter school doesn't fulfill those obligations, it loses its charter,"
he notes. "NCLB basically extends that principle to all public schools."
Right now, he believes, the NCLB testing benchmarks are set so low that they
ought to be achievable, even if there are 37 of them. For the program's first
three years, he says, the benchmarks require that only 30 percent of the students
in each category need to be proficient at reading, and only 10 percent must
be proficient at math.
"If a school only has 30 percent of their population reading at grade level,
they're not doing something right," Thatcher maintains.
One point on which Heim and Thatcher agree, however, is that increasing numbers
of schools are likely to receive failing NCLB report cards in the future.
Thatcher points out that for the next three years, the benchmarks for the percentage
of students in each group who are reading up to their grade level will rise
to 44 percent, and the math proficiency benchmark will rise to 38 percent. The
standards will continue to rise for the next decade. According to the Federal
DOE website, every student in the country is expected to be proficient in math
and language skills by the 2012-13 school year.
"Unless there are really, really major changes, we're going to see a lot
more schools that are going to be failing," predicts Thatcher.
Heim has an even gloomier prognosis.
"In 3-5 years, virtually every school in the country is going to be labeled
in need of improvement," he believes.
The Numbers Game
Some critics point out another problem with the NCLB testing regimen: statistical
validity. Back in the heyday of "grading on the curve" - the practice
of assigning grades so that the majority of students received a 'C' and smaller
numbers received 'A's and 'F's, producing a statistical bell-shaped curve on
a graph - dissenters pointed out that to produce a statistically valid "natural"
bell curve, a class would have to contain at least 400 students. A similar problem
haunts the NCLB testing regimen. The NCLB rules only require testing of 30 students
to obtain a benchmark sample. In some smaller Hawai'i schools, especially, there
simply aren't enough in a given class to produce even this limited sample.
In the short run, notes State DOE curriculum specialist Kathy Kawaguchi, this
has worked to the advantage of the smaller schools, which have been measured
only on the benchmarks for which they have the required minimum numbers.
"It was rare that all 37 components applied to every single school,"
she notes. "If you didn't have at least 30 in that particular class that
would be an N.A. [not applicable] for that particular component."
But that will change in the future, she says, whether the schools have adequate
numbers or not.
"By 2005 or 2006, they would take whatever data they have and compute the
AYP for that school," she said. "At some point, you have to hold all
the schools accountable."
Thatcher knows, from personal experience, the problems of working with assessments
based on small numbers. "If you look at the latest report on us, you'll
see that we missed out by one point with our economically disadvantaged group,"
he notes. "One child who was listed as a fifth grader was actually a fourth
grader. I'm asking them to look at it again."
He says he is "not going to worry too much about it, because I know our
test scores are going to be better this year." But he adds, "When
you have small populations, it's very skewed. When you're basing everything
on percentage points, and you have a very small number of kids, then one kid
can have a big effect on your percentage points."
But for parents trying to find the best school for their children, this statistical
problem has very practical implications. Two of the claims that the Federal
DOE repeatedly makes about the NCLB program is that it will provide scientifically
valid tools to measure a school's progress and that, in Paige's words, it "
will give parents new opportunities to make sure their children receive the
very best education possible." But of the handful of Hawai'i Island schools
that made unconditional "Good Standing" this year, the majority may
be there not because they had met all 37 benchmarks, but because there was not
enough data to measure whether the school had met all the benchmarks. And unless
parents look at all the benchmarks, not just the overall AYP rating, they may
pass over a school that would function very well for their particular children.
Back to Busing?
Another much-trumpeted claim is that NCLB will offer parents of children in
deficient schools the option of moving their children to better schools. Ironically,
a conservative Republican administration is now claiming that some schools are
inherently unequal, and is advocating busing as a solution.
"If a school fails to make adequate yearly progress for two years and continues
to be identified as in need of improvement after receiving special help and
resources, then students are eligible to transfer to another public school with
transportation provided," claims the Federal DOE website.
In reality, though, that claim may be exaggerated. And if it were true, it could
create as many problems as it solved.
Consider the case of Ka'u, for instance. Both of the district's schools, with
a collective total of around 900 students, are currently in "Planning for
Restructuring" status - the poorest possible category. The nearest school
in "Good Standing" is tiny Volcano School of Arts and Sciences, a
charter school with a current capacity of only 105 students.
"We could take some of the kids," says Ted Persig, the school's Business
Manager. But he adds, "We are completely full in some grade levels, and
nearly full in others."
If the Federal DOE gets its way, his school might have to accept more children
than he would like.
"There was a policy letter from Secretary Paige to State Superintendents
last fall. We all just sort of dropped our jaws when we read it," recounts
Mike Heim. "It said that the state could not use capacity as a reason to
refuse public school choice . . . Somehow, we'd have to find the zillions of
dollars to enable that public school choice."
In other words, the state could not refuse to transfer a student from a poorly
rated school to a school in "Good standing," even if all such schools
were full. The results, ironically, could knock the schools in "Good Standing"
out of out of their standing, with an influx of students that the schools don't
have the physical capacity or the personnel to serve.
Fortunately and/or unfortunately, however, the federal DOE in reality has shown
more flexibility than its leader admits - and parents may not have all the freedom
of choice that Bush Administration press releases have claimed. According to
Kawaguchi, for instance, federal officials have already compromised with the
state on the issue of Molokai, where none of the schools have measured up to
par. It will allow Molokai students to receive extra tutoring help, rather than
forcing the state to fly them to Maui.
Kawaguchi also maintains that according to the federal rules, not every student
in a school that is out of NCLB compliance will be allowed to transfer. Instead,
a priority system may be set up, giving the first chance of transferring to
students who are in academic trouble and those who come from lower-income households.
Thatcher contends that the State Department of Education, in fact, has shown
little enthusiasm about even preparing to move students from deficient schools.
"There are NCLB grants that provide for transportation," he says.
"The state could have applied for them. I even offered to write the grant
a couple of years ago. I tried to put together a team to write the grant. But
the State DOE just kind of dragged their feet. . . "
Thatcher also accuses some local schools of concealing their capacity to take
on more students.
"In some schools I've seen, there were four or five classrooms just being
used for storage space for old computers," he recounts, "and the administrators
were saying that those rooms were being used for technology resources. And that
was a lie."
But even if space in a better school was available and buses or vouchers were
provided, the realities of geography, money and time would still limit the choices
of some parents. Some Big Island families live more than 50 miles from the nearest
grade school in Good Standing, and nearly 90 miles from the nearest high school
in Good Standing-Conditional. They would have to choose between sending their
children to a low-rated nearby school, or forcing them to endure several hours
a day on a school bus.
More Mandates
than Money
Another common criticism of NCLB is that the Bush Administration has passed
out more rhetoric and rules than money and support.
Heim calls the program an "under-funded mandate." The money his office
has gotten for the new testing program, for instance, might have funded multiple
choice tests, he says, but not the battery of tests required to determine reading
and math skills, which usually require written paragraphs and mathematical proofs.
The same sorts of problems are surfacing not just in the school bureaucracy,
but in the schools themselves.
"You're told to do X, Y and Z, and suddenly you find out that there are
no funds available to do X, Y and Z," complains Persig.
Lack of operating funds, compounded with the state's budget shortfalls, hiring
freezes, and the NCLB's requirements for rapid implementation - Kawaguchi points
out that the state had to have a "consolidation plan" for NCLB in
place by June of 2002, months before the USDOE had even supplied its guidelines
for such a plan - have driven some educators to the edge.
"I, and a number of other people, don't want to go through another year
like we've just been through, or else we won't be here," says Heim. "Either
we're going to die, or we're going to walk away from the job."
The USDOE website points out that the NCLB does give the schools greater flexibility
with the federal funds that they already receive. But it also places new demands
on those funds. The law requires that up to 5 percent of Title I funds - money
earmarked to help schools with high percentages of economically disadvantaged
students - be used by schools with unsatisfactory ratings to ship their students
to better schools.
The law has also hit the schools hard in other ways. Persig notes that one of
the school's most experienced teachers had to return to school herself to take
additional courses, in order to meet newly tightened teacher certification requirements.
He finds it ironic that the law is depriving his school of teachers who are
achieving the results the NCLB demands.
"It eliminates the local control, which is ironic for the charter schools,
because there is accountability built in," he comments. "The idea
of a charter school is that you come up for renewal periodically, and your accountability
for the performance of the students will be reviewed at that time."
Discontent with the new program has started to reach the ears of Hawaii's legislators.
Representative Ed Case recently sent a letter to local school administrators,
seeking suggestions on how to reform the school reform law. The educators that
the Journal talked to had several suggestions, including more small schools
with higher teacher-to-student ratios, more emphasis on student contentment
in rating surveys - "If a student likes being in school, he's going to
learn," maintains Thatcher - and a greater emphasis on children's total
environment, not just the classroom. And of course, a more realistic testing
regimen.
"We have students who come to school hungry. We have students to come to
school unable to study because their parents had such a horrendous fight last
night that they're terribly distraught. We have students who come to school
not knowing where to sleep the next night," notes Heim. "That all
affects their class performance."
Some DOE officials maintain that the school system isn't in quite as bad a shape
as its publicity warrants - Heim notes that overall, the various testing criteria
for school performance are sending out a "mixed signal of what's going
on here." Compared to other states, he says, Hawaii's NCLB results are
about "the middle of the pack."
But even the program's critics tend to admit that its goals of better schools
and universal education are difficult to argue with, and acknowledge a wave
of discontent with public education as it is - especially in Hawai'i. When the
Journal's predecessor, Ka'u Landing, published a three-part series about the
Hawai'i education system in 1995, it provoked a flood of letters and calls from
distraught parents, each with his or her own horror story about trying to deal
with unresponsive teachers and administrators. In the years since then, parents
and educators have tried a host of reforms: charter schools, the Felix vs.Waihe'e
lawsuit, and Community Children's Councils, to name a few. Despite those efforts,
when the Journal held a reader poll earlier this year, island residents voted
the DOE the dubious honor of "Best Example of a Dysfunctional Government
Agency." Whatever the flaws of NCLB, it represents a real wave of public
discontent.
"I think we have to go back to Congress again, and ask them to develop
a broader solution," believes Heim. " . . . We can't do it alone.
If we're expected to do it alone, we are doomed to failure."