American Federation of Teachers - A Union of Professionals

Skip directly to:

AFT - A Union of ProfessionalsTeachersHigher EducationPSRPPublic EmployeesHealthcareRetireesEarly Childhood Educators

Home > News > 2008 >

NCLB: Still Failing the Test of Time

    Print 


HomeContact UsSite Map

 

 Advanced Search

The No Child Left Behind Act remains a "fundamentally flawed" piece of legislation and much of the blame rests at the Oval Office door, AFT president Edward J. McElroy charged on Jan. 8, the six-year anniversary of the law.

"Tests, tests and more tests. Ask teachers what the No Child Left Behind Act has accomplished, and that is what you will hear," McElroy said in a statement. Enacting a better law will require strong leadership from the White House, but President Bush refuses to acknowledge the law's flaws and was AWOL last year while Congress was attempting to rewrite NCLB."

McElroy's comments came a day after a federal appeals court revived a suit charging that NCLB places unfunded mandates on schools. The case, Pontiac v. Spellings, should be a "reality check" for President Bush and others who refuse to acknowledge NCLB shortcomings, said McElroy, stressing that the problems with NCLB extend well beyond funding levels.

"By focusing exclusively on test scores and setting aside teacher judgment, the law has created a 'teach to the test' mania that is overwhelming American schools and narrowing the curriculum. Teachers and students need a law that supports good teaching, gives credit to schools when students are making progress, and offers real help-not unproven mandates-for struggling schools."

January 8, 2008

people pictureAbout AFTNewsHot TopicsAFT Plus Member BenefitsSalary SurveysLegislative Action CenterPublications/ReportsPress CenterAFT PartnersAFT Storepeople picture
American Federation of Teachers | 555 New Jersey Ave. N.W., Washington, DC 20001

© American Federation of Teachers, AFL-CIO. All rights reserved. | Disclaimer
Photographs and illustrations, as well as text, cannot be used without permission from the AFT.