
The recent federal push for education reform has reintroduced the discussion over No Child Left Behind, the Elementary and Secondary Education Act, ESEA, as well as putting the focus on the need of a unified and country-wide effort to rebuild our education system from the inside.
Secretary of Education, Arne Duncan, a long-standing proponent of reauthorizing the ESEA, is using President Obama’s increased education budget to reiterate some of the better points of the failed No Child Left behind Act.
Debates have run the gamut over No Child Left Behind, NCLB. Educators and administration feel that they were over scrutinized and underfunded; most of them felt that there was too much focus being put on testing and not teaching their students. Parents saw the plan as ineffective, to say the very least.
In a speech near the end of 2009, Secretary Duncan said of NCLB, “I will always give NCLB credit for exposing achievement gaps, and for requiring that we measure our efforts to improve education by looking at outcomes, rather than inputs. NCLB helped expand the standards and accountability movement.”
The theme is becoming undeniable. What Secretary Duncan referred to as the “accountability movement” is the crux of the Providence Effect Movement to Save American Education. We support both President Obama and Secretary Duncan’s positions that if proponents of the American education system want real change, there needs to be accountability for all involved including students, politicians, educators, administration and the community at large. It has to be a matter of all for one, and one for all, for change.
Posted By: Paul Adams
Monday, February 22nd 2010 at 11:38AM
You can also
click
here to view all posts by this author...