In every legislative struggle, ideological boundaries inevitably
emerge. Factions of conservative and liberal lawmakers and their
allies define the right and left walls of the debate. The
forthcoming battle over the reauthorization of the No Child Left
Behind law (NCLB)-President Bush's signature education reform-is no
exception.
Five years after its passage, the frustration with NCLB has grown
and spans the ideological spectrum. In 2006, according to the White
House Office of Management and Budget, state and local education
bureaucrats spent 6.7 million hours and more than $140 million
complying with NCLB paperwork. This has angered just about
everyone-state lawmakers, state and local education officials,
teachers' unions, parents and education policy experts on both the
left and the right.
Criticism From the States
Legislatures in states such as Connecticut, Hawaii, Maine, New
Mexico and Virginia passed resolutions criticizing NCLB's rigid
testing and proficiency requirements. Colorado and Utah clarified
that their education laws take precedence over those enacted in
Washington. School districts even forfeited federal funds rather
than comply with NCLB.
Last year, the National Education Association reported that 69% of
its members found fault with NCLB. At the other end of the
ideological spectrum, conservative education reformers believe it
is time to reestablish the natural pre-eminent role for parents,
states and localities in the education of our children.
With committee hearings underway and the legislative process set
to begin, let's examine the contours of the debate.
The Left Wall: Rep. George Miller (D.-Calif.) and Sen. Ted Kennedy
(D.-Mass.), who chair the House and Senate education committees,
personify the liberal view. They seek to exponentially increase the
level of federal education funding, as well as its reach. Kennedy
wants to increase the salaries of principals and teachers, extend
the school day, and saturate schools with AmeriCorps volunteers,
parent-family outreach coordinators, and "community programs that
address children's social, emotional and other non-academic
needs."
On NCLB, Kennedy believes that "President Bush ... short-changed
the promise made in the law by nearly $56 billion" and wants
Congress to make up this alleged shortfall through increased
spending. (Reality check: Between 2001 and 2006 federal spending on
No Child Left Behind programs jumped by 33%, from $17.4 billion in
2001 to $23.3 billion in 2007. There was no commensurate increase
in student test scores.)
The Bush Administration: NCLB gets high marks from the
administration. "There's not much needed in the way of change,"
Education Secretary Margaret Spellings said. Comparing NCLB to
Ivory soap, she added: "It's 99.9% pure."
To its credit, the Bush Administration has continued to push for
the principle of expanding parental choice but has done so within
the existing framework of No Child Left Behind. The administration
has proposed $4,000 "promise scholarships" for children trapped in
schools that have missed state benchmarks consecutively for five or
more years. Sadly, hundreds of thousands of children would qualify.
Rep. Buck McKeon (Calif.), the senior Republican on the House
Education Committee, is championing the administration's
proposal.
The Right Wall: To Capitol Hill conservatives, the alternative to
No Child Left Behind requires reviving the principles of federalism
and limited government. Senators Jim DeMint (R.-S.C.) and John
Cornyn (R.-Tex.) and Rep. Pete Hoekstra (R.-Mich.) introduced
far-reaching legislation last week that could eventually garner
bipartisan support and fundamentally alter the NCLB debate.
Known as the "Academic Partnerships Lead Us to Success" or A-PLUS
Act, it would let states opt out of the current regulatory morass
of federal education programs and into a simplified contractual
arrangement with Uncle Sam. States would be allowed to consolidate
most of their federal K-12 funds and focus them on state-directed
initiatives. States would use their own well-developed testing
systems to evaluate student progress and make the results fully
transparent to parents and taxpayers.
"Our idea would allow states to enter voluntarily into a charter
agreement or contract with the U.S. Department of Education, to let
state and local authorities identify their education needs and
priorities," Cornyn said. "A state will have the flexibility to
consolidate federal education programs and funding, and redirect
resources to reform initiatives developed at the state
level."
The House plan received an unexpectedly robust level of support-52
original sponsors, including Republican Whip Roy Blunt (R.-Mo.).
Senators Sam Brownback (R.-Kan.), Mel Martinez (R.-Fla.) and Jon
Kyl (R.-Ariz.) also sponsored it.
That could spell bad news for Sen. Kennedy and Rep. Miller-and
others hoping to continue down the path of greater federal
involvement in education.
Michael Franc who has held a number of positions on Capitol Hill, is vice president of Government Relations.
First appeared in Human Events