Two States Defying No Child Left Behind

from Andrew J. Coulson, Cato-at-Liberty:

South Dakota joined Idaho this week in declaring that it will not raise its student proficiency targets next year as required by the NCLB. Under the law, states have been required to bring increasing percentages of their students up to the “proficient” level on their own tests. By 2014, NCLB demands that all students be deemed proficient by their respective state departments of education.

The belief driving NCLB was that, if we we raise government standards for what students are supposed to know and be able to do, they will learn more. They haven’t, according to the best, nationally representative indicator of academic outcomes: the NAEP Long Term Trends tests. By the end of high school, overall student achievement is no better today than it was 40 years ago. In science, it’s slightly worse.

The reason NCLB failed is that its core belief was and is wrong: external, government-mandated standards are not the driving force of progress. It is the freedom and incentives of competitive marketplaces that drive up performance and productivity. I’ve already made this case in the context of the national education standards movement, and the same arguments and evidence apply to NCLB.

The testing component of NCLB was never more than a thermometer—and a broken, unreliable thermometer at that; allowing states to play games with test difficulty and the definition of “proficiency” in order to massage their results.

Thermometers don’t cure people. They are at best a diagnostic tool.

If we want to see the same kind of progress, productivity growth, and innovation in education that we’ve come to expect in every other field, we have one choice and one choice only: adopt the same freedoms and incentives in education that have driven progress in other fields. Either we allow education to benefit from the free enterprise system or we should get used to disappointment.

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3 comments
Pepper
Pepper

Remember Jimmy Carter?? He created the Department of Education as a reward to the various teacher's unions for their money and support. Public Education has gone down since. Just another government entitlement gone awary.

Kelly
Kelly

I agree government madates are useless and harmful, but I don't really buy this 'competitive marketplace' mantra. It has no substance - it's an empty echo, all promise and no meat. I love learning and have studied many topics and disciplines. That love of learning is why I study - not gov't, not free market. Just love of learning.

Philip Young pine grove ca
Philip Young pine grove ca

I wish to mention the Tenth Amendment center on a radio spot I have scheduled on the 13th of july. My intention is to discuss how continued government inaction is continuing to bring strife and suffering to the public; many of whom cannot vote due to losing their residence and are living in third world conditions.

I wish to hold our elected official accountable for these people. As a staunch conservative I am a strong advocate of states rights and am appalled by the filing by the federal government to countermand Arizona's right to defend its own borders.
As a former Conservative Party County Chairman and editor for the California news letter I am nevertheless still involved in trying to change our nation in a positive way.
Building from a small foundation of one I am planning on continuing writing and reaching out to the community here for support.
If you have material that you can provide me that I can briefly discuss on the air, please contact me. I would like to also become more active in your organization.
A question; is anyone heading legislation that would mandate a states right to take over a problem when it can be demonstrated that federal policy has failed. Education is a perfect example.
Is it true that only 70% of the money sent to the federal government is returned to the state?
thanks