No child left behind

Post on 23-Dec-2014

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No Child Left Behind

Piper Stone, TJ Turner, Grant Wethington, Veronica Rosales

No Child Left Behind was established

from 2001-2002. Proposed on January 23, 2001 Passed by House of Representatives on

May 23, 2001 Passed by Senate on June 14, 2001

Program Establishment

Signed by George W. Bush (president

when the program was established) on January 8, 2002

The Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 was the law that established this program.

Program Establishment

No Child Left Behind supports

standard-based education reforms (standardized testing) based on premise that setting high standards and establishing measurable goals can improve individual outcomes in education.

Purpose/Mission Statement

Educators and policy makers

questioned feasibility and fairness of goals.

Poll showed in 2003 Half of school principals felt the

federal legislative was aimed at undermining public schools.

Political Controversy

The Department of Education is the

federal government department agency that administers/oversees No Child Left behind.

NCLB is administered at the state and local level.

States must create Adequate Yearly Progress Objectives to comply with No Child Left Behind.

Administration

No Child Left Behind is still

controversial. Teachers do not like to be

evaluated on student test scores. It has been in the news recently

because NCLB has been up for reauthorization since 2007 but has just reauthorized been in July.

Controversial

No Child Left Behind has been

modified many times. Obama has pushed to change

it.

Modifications

Costs are greater than expected because

there was a large push for quality teachers and more professional development.

School districts and state education agencies complained about it because they claimed NCLB funding did not cover those expenses.

Costs

The total federal education funding

increased from $42.2 billion to $55.7 billion from 2001 to 2004.

The federal funding for education increased 59.8% from 2000 to 2003.

Costs

The money is distributed to the states through

grants to pay for No Child Left Behind. There are four types of grants: 1. Basic grant 2. Concentration grant 3. Targeted assistance 4. Education incentive grant formula

Payments

All states participate in No Child

Left Behind. Some states are trying to opt out

because the goals set are not reasonable.

32 states have received waivers to opt out.

Participation

1. Which president signed the No Child Left Behind act?

A.George Bush

B.George W. Bush

C.Bill Clinton

D.Barack Obama

B. George W. Bush

2. No Child Left Behind was proposed in _____ and

signed in _____.

A.2001; 2002B.2000; 2002C.2001; 2003D.2000; 2001

A.2001; 2002

3. What original law established No Child Left Behind?

A. Education ActB. Elementary ActC. Federal Schooling ActD. Elementary and Secondary

Education Act

D. Elementary and Secondary Education Act

4. When was the Elementary and Secondary Education Act established?

A. 1953B. 1960C. 1965D. 1975

C. 1965

5. What government agency oversees No Child Left Behind?

A. Department of EducationB. Federal Bureau of EducationC. Homeland SecurityD. Department of National

Welfare

A.Department of Education