Obama Unveils No Child Left Behind Changes
President Obama today officially announced new changes to the national No Child Left Behind education law that will allow states to bypass a critical requirement that threatened to deny them federal funding down the road.
In a roughly 15-minute speech at the White House, Obama explained that due to congressional inaction, he decided to act unilaterally.
“I’ve urged Congress for awhile now — let’s get a bipartisan effort and let’s fix this. Congress hasn’t been able to do it. So, I will.”
The most significant of the NCLB reforms unveiled by the president involves granting waivers to lieberate states from a requirement that all students be proficient in reading and math by 2014. That mandate was tied heavily to federal funding, and allowing it to take effect would have put nearly every state in financial jeopardy.
However, in exchange for providing states with “flexibility” to dodge that requirement, states must show that they are implementing high educational standards of their own.
“This does not mean that states will be able to lower their standards or escape accountability,” Obama said. “If states want more flexibility, they’re gonna have to set higher standards, more honest standards.”
Already, 44 states and the District of Columbia “have adopted a common set of State- developed college- and career-ready standards,” according to the White House.
(Click here to read the White House’s summary of the reforms to NCLB).
In addition to transforming classroom standards for students, states must also remodel their methods of evaluating teachers and principals in order to qualify for relief from the law.
“We can’t afford to wait for an education system that is not doing everything it needs to do for our kids,” Obama said. “We can’t let another generation of young people fall behind.”
NAACP Incarceration Report Receives Strong Bipartisan Support
By Anna Cameron
Flanked by a bipartisan coalition of law enforcement experts, the NAACP unveiled a new report on the escalating levels of prison spending at the National Press Club Thursday.
Entitled “Misplaced Priorities: Over Incarcerate, Under Educate,” the report focuses on the increased flow of state dollars away from education and toward prison funding. The study reveals a strong correlation between high incarceration rates and poor education systems in states across the nation.
“We have arrived at a point where we have, all across our nation, rising prison budgets and falling education budgets. This is inconsistent with a great nation and something that we have to deal with right away,” noted former Education Secretary Rod Paige.
On this issue, the NAACP has garnered the support of an array of lawmakers and experts, among them notable conservatives Grover Nordquist, Pat Nolan, and former Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich.
“Center-right activists and political leaders [are] focusing on ‘How much do we spend on incarceration? Are we getting our money’s worth?’ What is the cost-benefit analysis when someone gets sentenced to prison?’” said Nordquist, President of Americans for Tax Reform. “I think It’s been helpful because conservatives have not focused on these issues over the last ten or twenty years.”
Presently, the United States accounts for five percent of the world’s population, but twenty-five percent of its prisoners.