The Debate Over the No Child Left Behind Act

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The current debates surrounding the No Child Left Behind Act of 2001 are both positive and negative. Many politicians and people that previously supported the Act are now standing against it. In the beginning many supported the new Act because everyone was aware that a change needed to happen in the education system and the proposal of No Child Left Behind seemed like the answer we were looking for. As the No Child Left Behind requirements began to be felt in the school systems across America and the assessments results started coming in, everyone took a step back and really began to look at the new law. The results were not what everyone expected, what was once considered an answer was now becoming the problem.
The National Education Association in the beginning supported the No Child Left Behind Act but knew that it needed some revisions before it would be the effective in the school system. The NEA felt that the Act met the requirements of ensuring equality among the school population but they disagreed with the Act’s accountability and testing requirements. Democrats and Republicans both showed great support when the Act was initially proposed by President Bush, but as time went on they to began to question the outcomes. Democrats and Republicans began to debate on the provisions in the Act of state accountability. “The National Conference of State Legislatures called the bill’s testing provisions “seriously and perhaps irreparably flawed.” (Rudalevige, 2003). This was due to the law not having any set way to account for the testing that was supposed to be part of the Act; it left that process up to the individual states.
“NCLB's measurement of proficiency, or "Adequate Yearly Progress" (AYP), has largely been discr...

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.... Retrieved from Education Week: http://www.edweek.org/ew/articles/2006/08/22/01gallup_web.h26.html
Huffington Post. (2011, August 16). No Child Left Behind Debate Centers On Federalism . Retrieved from Huffington Post: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/08/16/no-child-left-behind-reauthorization-federalism_n_927718.html
NEA. (2013). No Child Left Behind Act (NCLB)/ESEA. Retrieved from National Education Association: https://www.nea.org/home/NoChildLeftBehindAct.html
Rich, M. (2013, July). Education Proposal in House Could Replace ‘No Child’ Act. Retrieved from Washington Post: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/07/19/us/politics/education-proposal-in-house-could-replace-no-child-act.html?_r=0
Rudalevige, A. (2003). The politics of No Child Left Behind. EducationNext, 3(4), 63-69. Retrieved from EducationNext: http://educationnext.org/the-politics-of-no-child-left-behind/

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