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NCLB & PARENT CHOICE. Presented by: John~Erika~Shirrecca~Kathie~Barbara. Parent Choice for NCLB (in theory). - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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NCLB &
PARENT CHOICE
Presented by:John~Erika~Shirrecca~Kathie~Bar
bara
• In the case of a school identified for school improvement, the school district will, not later than the first day of the school year following identification, provide all students enrolled in the school with the option to transfer to another public school served by the school district, which may be a public charter school, that has not been identified for school improvement, unless this option is prohibited by State law. [Section 1116(b)(1)(E), ESEA.]
Parent Choice for NCLB (in theory)
• Priority must be given to the lowest-achieving children from low-income families in providing students the option to transfer to another public school. [Section 1116(b)(1)(E)(ii), ESEA.]
Parent Choice for NCLB (in theory)
• If their children are in failing schools, they have the option to transfer their children to other district schools. If parents choose to transfer their children, the failing district must pay for the attendant transportation costs.
Parent Choice for NCLB (in theory)
In theory• Under No Child Left Behind,
such schools must use their federal funds (Title I), to make needed improvements. In the event of a school’s continued poor performance, parents have options to ensure that their children receive the high-quality education to which they are entitled.
• That might mean that children can transfer to higher-performing schools in the area or receive supplemental educational services in the community, such as tutoring, after-school programs or remedial classes.
What It Should Look Like Vs. What It Does Look Like
In reality
•That
MIGHT
mean that children can transfer to higher-performing schools in the area.
•Supplemental educational services are available as a second option after choice.
Reasons it’s not working
Parents aren’t informed of the choice in the first placeThere aren’t any alternatives in many districtsSuccessful schools state no room and deny entryNo mandate forcing schools to accept
transfer as of nowLack of funding to assist in choiceLow parent involvement to move child
when option is there (finding out too late)The at risk child is harmed most by the
move into an overcrowded room (high teacher/student ratio)
Is this what we really need?
A. RussoA. Russo would say, fix the schools the children are in…instead of sending them elsewhere.
• C. Finn and F. Hess suggest that the order of supplemental services and school choice should be reversed.
• If school misses AYP two years in a year, the children receive supplemental support and choice on the third year of failure.
• This supports what Russo said about fixing the schools first.
Change the batting order!
The Struggles of Choice• ACORN~ Association of Community
Organizations for Reform Now• NEA teamed up with ACORN to fight
against the campaign to protect the integrity of public schools
• All Children Matter and LEAD are trying to influence politicians to keep school choice an option and improve the prospects for parents
• C. Bolick desires to keep choice and diminish the achievement gap
Skimming the top
•J. Garrett terms the “skimming theory”
•Milwaukee defies this notion
•School choice is a market idea aimed at making schools better
•Disadvantaged students need greater access to better performing schools
John’s slide
Explicit Messages• Brofenbrenner model~ Macro belief of no
child being left behind• Government is saying parents have a
choice to send elsewhere, but sometimes it’s the only school in the district or….
• Other schools in the district are also failing• Anyon’s “elite” schools not accepting
transfers based on capacity• Supplemental Support will come next• If you don’t use the funds to improve, they
will be taken away and given to other school
How is this connected to this course?
Implicit Messages• Kendall would suggest there is a social problem• Ogbu would say it perpetuates the caste system • Rotherham’s notion of a system of accounting
but not accountability is clearly demonstrated implicitly.
• Mackey realizes that schools do not provide a real choice, rather an opportunity to transfer to other failing schools.
• Shrag ~“it is a massive confusion, owing to the stapling together of state and federal accountability systems, and pretending we have one system.”
How is this connected to this course?
Administrators need to provide
clearer information to the parents on
what their choices are if the district is
failing.
After all, it is the law of NCLB
Administrative Implications
The alternative to losing students and
funding is reforming the
school. Work on fixing what’s
wrong.
What a concept!
Administrative Implications
Administrators in performing schools are
required to accept transfers. Find creative ways to accommodate
the children.
And this does not mean put them in the closet!
Administrative Implications
Administrative Implications
The best way to preserve and strengthen public education is to make demonstrable, regular
progress in providing all students with at least the
basics in reading, writing and math--and then be able to
communicate that progress to those who actually own your local schools: parents, voters
and taxpayers
Put your money where your mouth is!
Administrators need to be pro-active. Spend as much time as possible playing offense, not just hunkering down into a
defensive posture. That means, above all, developing
in advance a strategic plan for communicating with key
stakeholders in your community about school
performance.
Your best defense is a good offense!
Administrative Implications
Administrative Implications
Help parents and community members understand how their schools are doing--and
how they can help.
Help me, help you (Jerry MacGuire, people)
Action Recommendations based on Pros/Cons
Pros1. Parent involvement is increased2. Public School choice increases equity
and qualityin education.
Recommendation1. Educate the parents on the
importance of getting involved.2. Inform parents early so they can
make the choice.
Cons1. The law makes it difficult for parents to make
the choice to transfer….especially when there aren’t any other schools.
2. Schools are turning away students claiming they are over capacity.
3. Tutoring comes after choice and time is lost in this waiting period.
Recommendation1. Avoid the choice and fix the current school. 2. Mandate consequences for schools that turn
children away. 3. Start with the supplemental services first, and
offer the choice thereafter.
Action Recommendations based on Pros/Cons
NCLB What does it really
stand for?
New Choices
Less Bull##$%