Congress is set to evaluate
the five-year-old landmark education reform law this year. California currently
uses an incremental system to
measure student performance through the Academic Performance Index. This
index allows a school to compare themselves with like schools but also allows
for rewards to be given to schools that are still far below acceptable academic
standards but are able to demonstrate through the state’s STAR testing program
that their school is improving over previous testing cycles. This comparison
method allows schools to
improve based on their previous year’s scores in an incremental method – even
if their students are still underscoring acceptable norms on the standardized
testing. This, according to officials in Sacramento, is vital in our
state where roughly half of all public school students are non-English language
learners. Officials state that this is best for the state and they want to keep
it. Federal officials want
California to switch to another performance indicator- one that follows the
law. Pat McCabe, director
of policy and evaluation for the California Department of Education told the AP
that “What we want is the federal government to give credence to states that
have well-established accountability systems in place that existed before
NCLB,"
The California system of
accountability rewards schools for making progress toward achievement over
time, even when they don't meet the overall yearly targets and even when some
groups of students remain far below others says McCabe- and this system, say
educators, fits the demographics of California best because it is a model more
fair to schools than the stricter federal measurement, the annual yearly
progress, or AYP achievement goals,
McCabe said. The California model rewards schools that start out as very low achievers rather than
holding all schools to the same standard. Department of Education officials
also believe the 2014 deadline is too ambitious. McCabe states, “Of
course we're trying to (meet it), that's our goal," he continued "Do
I think it will happen? No." U.S. Education Secretary Margaret Spellings has been flexible on some of
the law's deadlines, such as its requirement to have all teachers fully
qualified by 2006. And while she has said she is open to new ways of measuring
achievement, she has identified a few principles the administration will not
alter. Among them is the 2014 goal. That goal is written into the
original law and now California Education Officials are also lobbying for
flexibility in the hard and fast deadline as well. "It's written into the
law," department spokesman Chad Colby said. No Child Left Behind had
bipartisan support when signed by President Bush in 2002

