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Thursday
Nov042004
Thursday, November 4, 2004 at 03:48AM
By 2014, nearly all of California's K-12 schools are
likely to be labeled as "failing" under the federal No Child Left
Behind (NCLB) Act. For those receiving Title I funds for low-income
students, chances are they'll be facing serious sanctions - conversion
to charter status, takeover by a for-profit company or complete
closure. "It's absolutely absurd that the federal government has
instituted such a punitive and degrading system of school evaluation,"
says Southwest High School biology teacher Steve Wavra, shown here with
students Lee Elliott and Phillip Pouvave. Even though the Bush
administration has agreed to some changes in the NCLB law, the fact
that they're not retroactive means good schools like Southwest will
remain at a disadvantage. Instead of being a tool to help "fix" public
schools as it was originally touted, it's now obvious that the federal
law sets up schools to fail. NCLB, in fact, includes 37 different ways
in which a school can miss the mark. Schools considered good on every
other standard of measurement are being branded as failing. Already, 36
percent of the state's schools have been put on the list of schools
failing to make Adequate Yearly Progress (AYP) this year. The number is
expected to rise exponentially as the percentage of students required
to score "proficient" ratchets up to 100 percent. As of this summer,
approximately 1,200 Title I schools in California had been enrolled in
Program Improvement (PI) as a precursor to more severe sanctions. [more]