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Murnane, Richard J. – Future of Children, 2007
Richard Murnane observes that the American ideal of equality of educational opportunity has for years been more the rhetoric than the reality of the nation's political life. Children living in poverty, he notes, tend to be concentrated in low-performing schools staffed by ill-equipped teachers. They are likely to leave school without the skills…
Descriptors: Poverty, Graduation Rate, Federal Legislation, School Choice
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Ediger, Marlow – Journal of Instructional Psychology, 2007
Whatever has happened to using teacher observation as an approach to assess student achievement? Presently, the emphasis is upon state mandated testing to ascertain student progress. Much is written in educational journals about having students achieve No Child Left Behind (NCLB) federal and state standards, signed into law in 2002. Much drill is…
Descriptors: Federal Legislation, State Standards, Educational Improvement, Academic Achievement
Lips, Dan; Feinberg, Evan; Marshall, Jennifer A. – Heritage Foundation, 2006
Across the United States, nearly 50 million students are served by 96,000 public schools. Federal policymakers cannot be expected to diagnose the diverse learning needs of these students and to craft solutions adequate to meet all of them. Four decades, eight reauthorizations of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act, and expenditure of…
Descriptors: Federalism, Elementary Secondary Education, Federal Legislation, Change Strategies
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Howell, William G.; West, Martin R.; Peterson, Paul E. – Education Next, 2007
Americans both care about their schools and want them to improve. Though adults give the nation's public schools only mediocre grades, they are willing to invest more money in public education and they are reasonably confident that doing so will improve student learning. They are also open to a host of school reforms ranging from high-stakes…
Descriptors: School Policy, Federal Legislation, Ethnic Groups, Educational Change
Wavering, Michael; Duggan-Haas, Don – 2002
The mandate to teach the theory of evolution and evolution-related concepts in biology and other appropriate science classes in public schools is relatively clear in 31 states and the District of Columbia. In the most recent state legislative sessions, some legislators made attempts to use the legislative processes to restrict the teaching of…
Descriptors: Creationism, Elementary Secondary Education, Evolution, Federal Legislation
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Kretovics, Joseph; Farber, Kathleen S.; Armaline, William D. – Educational Horizons, 2004
With the publication of A Nation at Risk in 1983, a "culture war" against public education in the United States commenced. Education was linked to the nation's economic competitiveness and blamed for declining productivity, and the flag of higher standards and greater accountability was raised. Over the past twenty years both the generals and the…
Descriptors: Public Education, National Standards, Educational Change, High Risk Students
Keller, Bess; Sack, Joetta L. – Education Week, 2005
Widespread sniping at the Bush administration's centerpiece education law escalated into a frontal attack as the nation's largest teachers' union. Several school districts sued federal officials over the measure, just a day after the Utah legislature approved a bill challenging the reach of the law. The National Education Association's suit…
Descriptors: Federal Legislation, Court Litigation, Resistance to Change, Compliance (Legal)
Goldberg, Mark – Education Digest: Essential Readings Condensed for Quick Review, 2005
Compared to 2004 issues concerning the No Child Left Behind Act (NCLB), this year's issues in play are even more complex. First, much more media attention has been paid to testing, in particular to the No Child Left Behind Act and its required Adequate Yearly Progress on state tests. Second, objections to various aspects of testing have increased…
Descriptors: Educational Policy, Federal Legislation, High Stakes Tests, Testing Programs
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Imazeki, Jennifer; Reschovsky, Andrew – Education Finance and Policy, 2006
The No Child Left Behind Act of 2001 (NCLB) requires states to establish goals for all students and for groups of students characterized by race, ethnicity, poverty, disability, and limited English proficiency and requires schools to make annual progress in meeting these goals. In a number of states, officials have argued that increased federal…
Descriptors: Federal Legislation, Educational Finance, Costs, Federal Aid
Kim, Jimmy; Sunderman, Gail L. – Civil Rights Project at Harvard University (The), 2004
This report examines how state policymakers designed their accountability systems to meet the NCLB Title I requirements and the implications of its provisions for schools with large numbers of low-income and minority students. The authors conducted their study in six states--Arizona, California, Illinois, New York, Virginia, and Georgia--which are…
Descriptors: Federal Legislation, State Government, State Programs, Public Schools
Rudalevige, Andrew – 2002
The latest Elementary and Secondary Education Act reauthorization, the No Child Left Behind Act of 2001, includes new standards, testing, and sanctions provisions designed to bring better performance and new accountability for that performance to local schools. The accountability ingredients in the new law were mostly not new to the 2001 debate…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Accountability, Educational Legislation, Elementary Secondary Education
Archer, Jeff – Education Week, 2005
When students put down their pencils at the end of Connecticut's testing each year, another intensive process begins. Hundreds of trained evaluators work day and night for about a month to score the written responses. Although expensive, the use of open-ended questions drives the kind of instruction that state leaders say they want in their…
Descriptors: Federal Legislation, Testing Programs, Federal State Relationship, Cost Effectiveness
Kahle, Jane Butler – Science Educator, 2004
Beginning in 1990 with the National Science Foundation's (NSF) Statewide Systemic Initiative (SSI) program, science leaders at the state, district, and local levels increasingly have faced accountability issues. Today both private and public funding agencies recommend that proposed projects be based upon scientific research; that is, research…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Evaluation, Federal Legislation, National Standards
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Branscome, Eric – Arts Education Policy Review, 2005
In 1994, the National Association for Music Education (MENC) adopted nine content standards that have, since that time, helped to standardize curricula for elementary music education and have given curriculum writers a more well-defined goal for their product. The questions then arise: What elements in the history of music education in America led…
Descriptors: National Standards, Curriculum Development, Music Education, Elementary Education
Bennett, John E. – Journal of Industrial Teacher Education, 2004
The passage of the No Child Left Behind Act and the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 2001 emphasized the growing concern in the United States that a need exists for highly qualified teachers, if children are to have a chance at succeeding in the 21st century. These pieces of legislation and philosophical change to learning have opened the…
Descriptors: Teacher Certification, Teacher Effectiveness, Teacher Evaluation, Federal Legislation
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