The No Child Left Behind Act, the centerpiece of Bush's education policy, calls for states to lose federal education money if a certain percentage of their students do not pass standardized tests. However, Republicans insisted that states be free to establish their own standards. Local control, after all, is a Republican mantra?
The harsh penalties for non-compliance with the law, however, has prompted some states to develop a curious strategy- to ensure that the necessary number of kids pass the tests, states are making the tests easier to pass. (can use globalaffairs1 as username and affairs as password)
Fearing that thousands of students would fail the new test and be held back a grade, and that hundreds of schools could face penalties under the federal No Child Left Behind law, the [Texas State Board of Education] voted to reduce the number of questions that students must answer correctly to pass it, to 20 out of 36, from 24, for third-grade reading.
In this case, however, Texas isn't leading the charge to the bottom. Michigan, which used to require a score of 75% to pass the high school English test, lowered the necessary score to 42%!!!! Colorado now counts students who pass only part of the test the same as students who pass the whole thing. Minnesota, New Hampshire, and Hawai'i are now considering waiving federal money altogether rather than attempt to comply with the law.
Moreover, it's entirely possible that the situation could get worse- the law requires that 100% of students pass the tests by the year 2014. In order to make sure that everybody passes the test, will the test become so easy that anybody could pass it?
If anyone wants to know what's wrong with our kids? Why they can't write? Why they don't enjoy reading, among many other problems? This is definitely one of the problems, at least in my opinion.


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