Linda Darling-Hammond
After 10 years of
missed opportunity under No Child Left Behind, we must learn from our
experience to accelerate academic progress and improve the quality of learning
in American schools.
Lesson #1: Don’t
overreach. The federal role should not be to micromanage
educational decisions, but to enable strategic investments that will increase
opportunity. The quest for 100 percent proficiency has focused attention on
boosting scores, but it has also narrowed the curriculum, encouraged exclusions
of struggling students, and undermined confidence in federal initiatives.
Meanwhile, federal
efforts to prescribe top-down reforms have often wreaked havoc in the field.
From the dismantling of many successful local reading programs under Reading First
to more recent requirements for turnaround models that research has found
ineffective, federal overreach can leave students further behind.
Lesson #2: Focus on
genuine equity. NCLB helped us understand the severity
of achievement gaps between different student groups, but it has not provided
sufficient resources in strategic ways to address the sources of those gaps.
The small federal allocation makes hardly a dent in our huge state and local
funding disparities, and is not being spent in high-leverage ways. National
education policy must expect states to be transparent about the availability of
resources to students and to pursue funding equity.
Lesson #3: Invest
strategically. The Title I formula should better target
low-income states and communities and support investments known to improve
student achievement: quality preschool, high-quality preparation and
professional development for teachers and school leaders, wraparound services
and community schools, and summer learning opportunities.
Finally, the federal
government should learn from high-achieving nations and encourage the use of
more thoughtful performance-based assessments. Used to inform curriculum
improvements and teacher development, rather than to punish students, teachers,
or schools, such assessments would support higher-quality instruction and more
engaged learning.
Linda Darling-Hammond
is the Charles E. Ducommun professor of education at Stanford University. She
is the author of The Flat World and Education: How
America’s Commitment to Equity Will Determine Our Future (Teachers College
Press, 2010).
Note: Linda Darling-Hammond is the Vice Chair of the
California Commission on Teacher Credentialing. For an important video on corruption within this state agency
see the video below.
For more on her work with the CTC see
For additional views
on the NCLB see these essays.
http://www.edweek.org/ew/articles/2012/01/05/15nclb_perspectives.h31.html?tkn=XLTFjLB9deqCd53KQJhZBIJaXX2wAJ2bZ816&cmp=clp-edweek#hammond
No comments:
Post a Comment