Michael A. Rebell and Jessica R. Wolff have released a summary of a far-reaching set of recommendations for changing the federal No Child Left Behind Act, which is up for Congressional reauthorization this year.
Rebell and Wolff address eight broad areas for change; ideas circulated to Congress
New York, NY - Michael A. Rebell, Director of The Campaign for Educational Equity at Teachers College Columbia University,
and his associate, Jessica R. Wolff, have released a summary of a
far-reaching set of recommendations for changing the federal No Child
Left Behind Act, which is up for Congressional reauthorization this
year.
The summary can be viewed at:
http://www.tc.columbia.edu/i/a/document/5562_SummaryNCLBRecommendations.pdf
Drawn from a forthcoming book by Rebell and Wolff titled Moving Every Child Ahead: From NCLB Hype to Meaningful Educational Opportunity,
the summary paper has been sent to all members of Congress who serve on
education- related committees, which are currently circulating new
drafts of the NCLB law, and to the campaign staffs of several declared
candidates in the 2008 presidential election.
The Moving Every Child Ahead summary credits NCLB with reinvigorating America's
egalitarian heritage and the vision of equal educational opportunity
set forth in the U.S. Supreme Court's landmark 1954 decision in Brown
versus Board of Education. However, it calls the law in its current
form "riddled with political hype" and takes it to task for failing to
ensure the presence of highly qualified teachers in classrooms; setting
performance targets for schools and students that are not only
untenable but penalize those most in need of help; and failure to
provide the resources necessary for schools to improve.
The recommendations by Rebell and Wolff are drawn
from a major symposium held in November 2006 by The Campaign which
marshaled a range of new data about the effectiveness of NCLB in
meeting its stated goals. Those findings can be viewed at http://www.tc.edu/centers/EquitySymposium/symposium06/resource.asp.
The recommendations – which are solely the opinions of Rebell and Wolff – cover eight broad areas:
• Meaningful educational opportunity, which
focuses on ensuring the supports necessary to boost academic
performance rather than on outcomes targets; • Effective teachers •
Adequate funding • Challenging standards • Valid assessments • Solid
progress requirements • Local capacity and school improvement • A new
federal-state partnership
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Michael A. Rebell is Executive Director of the
Campaign for Educational Equity and Professor of Law and Educational
Practice at Teachers College. Previously, Mr. Rebell co-founded and
served as Executive Director of The Campaign for Fiscal Equity (CFE),
which won a major constitutional ruling on behalf of New York City public schools. Mr. Rebell is one of the nation's foremost authorities on the education adequacy movement in the United States
and has pioneered the legal theory and strategy of educational
adequacy. In the last 15 years, this legal strategy has proven
successful in almost 75% of the cases challenging a state's failure to
provide students with a sound, basic education. Mr. Rebell has also
litigated numerous class-action lawsuits especially on behalf of
students with disabilities, including the landmark New York State
case, Jose P. v. Mills. He has written two books (Equity and Education
and Education Policymaking and the Courts) and several dozen articles
on a wide range of education issues, including educational equity,
education finance, testing, rights of disabled students and dropout
prevention. Mr. Rebell is a graduate of Harvard College and Yale Law School.
Jessica Wolff is the Policy Director of the Campaign for Educational Equity at Teachers College, Columbia University.
Part of the leadership team that develops the goals, strategies,
platforms, and programs of the Equity Campaign, she has primary
responsibility for developing and directing the implementation of key
research, policy, advocacy, public engagement, and demonstration
projects and programs. A longtime advocate for improving educational
opportunities for New York City students, Ms. Wolff continues to work
closely with the school-funding advocacy group, the Campaign for Fiscal
Equity (CFE), where she was director of policy development from
2000-2005. Prior to CFE, she wrote widely on public school issues for
the Public Education Association, as director of program outreach. In
addition, from 1996 until 2004, Ms. Wolff wrote a monthly column on
public education policy and practice for the award-winning online news
journal Gotham Gazette. She has two children in the New York City public schools.
Published Thursday, Oct. 4, 2007