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EDUCATION: No Child Left Behind: The Bad and the Good
By Chester E. Finn Jr.
The report card on the No Child Left Behind Act is in, and the grades are passing—barely. By Chester E. Finn Jr. and Michael J. Petrilli.
If there’s one memorable lesson from the release
in October of the 2005 National Assessment of
Educational Progress (NAEP) results in reading and math, it’s a timeless one: Incentives work. They alter
behavior in education and government, just as they do in capitalism.
Unfortunately, they don’t always alter behavior for the better.
On the positive side, the 2005 NAEP scores for African
American, Hispanic, and poor children were slightly higher than in
2003, thereby narrowing a bit the nation’s long-standing
“achievement gaps.” Among fourth-grade students the average
scores of black youngsters bumped up two points in reading and four in math
(on a 500-point scale). Hispanic students gained three points in reading
and four in math, while low-income children rose two points in reading and
three in math. All those gains are “statistically significant”
and are good news for our democracy and society.
The president’s much-discussed No Child Left
Behind Act can take some credit for the modest gains of the past two years.
By holding schools to account for the learning of all their students,
especially minority and needy children, the law has captured the attention
of educators nationwide. One hopes (and the data imply) that schools are
raising expectations, redistributing resources (such as quality teachers),
and putting their noses to the grindstone in
order to help disadvantaged youngsters achieve basic standards in reading and in math (and to avoid the harsh sunlight,
embarrassing comparisons, and unwelcome
sanctions of the federal law).
But there are perverse incentives at play here, too.
No Child Left Behind seeks to help all students reach
“proficiency” by 2014 and requires states to develop tough accountability systems to ensure that their schools
are making progress toward that end. (If
schools are not progressing, they face a cascade of interventions, exiting students, and other consequences.)
But here’s the catch: The states define “proficiency”
however they like. So if you’re a governor or education commissioner,
and you want your state’s schools to look good, you have a strong
incentive to relax your definition of “proficiency” in reading
and math and make your own state tests easier. Last week’s good news
is shadowed by early evidence that some states may be doing just that.
We analyzed data from state tests as well as the
national assessment and looked at states’ progress on both over the
past two years. The result? Nineteen states (of the 29 with available and
comparable data) reported their eighth-grade students made progress on
state reading exams. But only three of these states show any gains on NAEP
and, even then, only at the “basic” level. (Eighth-grade NAEP
reading results were disappointing almost everywhere, and the national
average fell by a point.)
Consider Arizona. Its own test results show the number
of eighth graders proficient in reading rose 8 points (from 55 percent to
63 percent) between 2003 and 2005. Yet the percentage of Arizona eighth
graders scoring at NAEP’s “proficient” level actually
fell two points during the same biennium. (The percentage of
Arizona’s students reaching NAEP’s lower “basic”
level also dropped by a point.)
States may say that such discrepancies merely reflect
the different subject matter they test versus the content assessed by the
feds. California, for example, has laudably
rejected “whole language” reading instruction and other faddish
ideas that have partially infected the national test. Perhaps this is why
the Golden State posted gains of nine points in its proportion of eighth
graders reaching proficiency on reading, whereas its percentage of students
reaching “basic” and
“proficient” on NAEP dropped a point each. But surely that’s not the case for all states. The larger trend
line is clear: The news is much rosier if you believe state reports than if
you believe the national assessment.
What about the concern that the federal law, by
focusing on students at the lower end of the achievement range, will give
educators incentives to ignore top-performing pupils? Here the news is
mixed. In reading, there’s disturbing evidence that our top students
are stalling; those at the 90th percentile have lost ground in both
fourth and eighth grades since 2003. In math, however, students at all
levels showed progress. This is something to
watch in future years. Although closing the achievement gap is a priority, so is closing the “economic competitiveness” gap
with other nations. We can’t afford to zap the talent of our most
gifted kids.
Behaviorism is at least as risky in public policy as
it is in psychology. When Washington knowingly holds out carrots and
sticks, sunshine and sanctions, to alter the established practices of
states, districts, schools, and teachers, unintended and undesirable
changes are at least as likely to result as the kind that lawmakers expect.
This essay was posted on National Review Online on October 28, 2005.
Available from the Hoover Press is School Accountability: An Assessment by the Koret Task Force on K–12 Education, edited by Williamson M. Evers and Herbert J. Walberg. To order, call 800.935.2882 or visit www.hooverpress.org.
Chester E. Finn Jr. is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution and chairman of the Koret Task Force on K–12 Education. He is also president and trustee of the Thomas B. Fordham Foundation.
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