Meeting standards an effort
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Marisa O’Neil
To some, the federal No Child Left Behind Act represents educational
reforms badly needed to help get under-performing schools up to par
by setting high standards. To others, the standards are too high and
the help too little.
The federal act, signed into law two years ago this week, aims to
make every student proficient in math and English by 2014. Schools
that miss performance goals risk sanctions.
“Ideally, in a perfect world, kids would all match the universal
tenets of No Child Left Behind,” Wilson Elementary School Principal
Candy Sperling said. “But kids have individual needs. Standards can’t
always be universally applied.”
Under No Child Left Behind, at least 13.6% of students at each
school must test proficient in English, and 16% must test proficient
in math. If the entire population or any significant subgroup -- such
as English learners -- tests below that level two years in a row,
they are labeled as Program Improvement schools.
Three campuses in the Newport-Mesa Unified School District --
Whittier, Wilson and Pomona elementary schools -- are listed as
Program Improvement schools and so must revise their educational
plan, use funds for staff development and offer parents the choice to
send their children to other schools. Adams, College Park, Kaiser,
Killybrooke, Paularino, Pomona and Rea elementary schools, Ensign and
TeWinkle middle schools and Estancia High School did not make
performance targets last year and will become Program Improvement
schools if they miss target again this year.
In the 2004-05 school year, the goals jump to 24.4% for English
and 26.5% for math. Each year after that, they continue increase,
until 2014 when 100% of students are expected to be proficient.
But even if 100% students are proficient in math and English by
then, new students moving to that district could potentially throw
off the scale.
“The achievement targets set for test scores over the span of
eight to 10 years creates an impossible graph,” said Judi Conroy,
director of the single-subject credential program in UC Irvine’s
education department. “Even elite schools will have to meet
impossible achievement goals.”
Schools such as Whittier, Wilson and Pomona, which all have large
Latino populations, face the added challenge of teaching students to
take a test in a non-native language. On average, Sperling said, it
takes three to five years for students to learn to speak academic
English well enough to understand and take a standardized test.
Pomona and Whittier, which have only a few grades, test just
second- and third-graders. Yet those schools must stick to the same
standards with No Child Left Behind.
“With schools like Pomona and Whittier, that’s difficult,” said
Peggy Anatol, director of curriculum and assessment for the
Newport-Mesa Unified School District. “They don’t have long to
develop students’ language abilities before they’ve gone on to
another school. [No Child Left Behind] is a one size fits all measure
that might not fit all.”
Some people worry that constant testing creates a strain on
students and teachers.
“It’s piling more responsibility on teachers and kids,” said Wendy
Jawor, a first-grade teacher at Harbor View Elementary. “It’s got to
give somewhere. These are little kids. Their brains aren’t ready for
some of the concepts yet.”
This week, President Bush is marking the anniversary of No Child
Left Behind by visiting schools and touting its successes -- higher
test scores for fourth-graders nationwide and more money promised to
help struggling schools. At the same time, democratic presidential
hopeful Howard Dean, a former governor of Vermont, is criticizing the
president, accusing him of spending money on his campaign instead of
on promised educational programs.
Despite any drawback of No Child Left Behind, Newport-Mesa
officials are confident in the long run.
Though the law is 2 years old, it is still a work in progress,
Sperling said. It sets the bar high, but she’s glad that she at least
knows what the expectations are.
“I think Newport-Mesa can meet the mark,” Anatol said. “I think
we’re all working very diligently to teach to the standards. And I
think it’s reasonable to think we can continue our excellent
performance. It just will be a concerted effort every year.”
* MARISA O’NEIL covers education. She may be reached at (949)
574-4268 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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