Thursday, October 4, 2007

NCLB Letter

Rush Holt
50 Washington Rd.
West Windsor, NJ 08550

Dear Congressman Holt,

I am writing this letter in hopes that you will take my concerns into consideration when lobbying for the upcoming renewal of NCLB. While President George W. Bush improved the last educational act, it comes with many naysayers’. Those whom have not fully examined the benefits of ensuring all children are educated. It is a bill that addresses all learners regardless of seriocomic status or disability. All districts are held accountable to meet the same benchmarks. Regardless of where a student is being educated the level of instruction is designed to be comparable to the neighboring towns. NCLB enables local districts to review and analyze data from standardized tests to determine where the student’s strengths and weaknesses lie. Based on those results, school districts are able to design instruction to address the areas of concern.

School choice can be determined as both a positive and a negative aspect of NCLB. School choice enables a parent to move their students based on that schools academic performance or lack thereof. If lack of success is noted, the parent can opt to have their child removed and placed in a performing school. While this can be of great benefit, the quandary becomes what happens to the student in a district where all the schools are deemed a failing school? Although communities were mandated to form relationships with neighboring communities, the reality is many districts are not honoring the initial agreement.

While NCLB is not fullprooof, it has caused low performing districts to raise their standards to create lifelong learners. NCLB has the ability to reach educators in all communities. If all areas are addressed then NCLB has begun to bridge the gap between special and general education. Special education students are no long permitted to be educated in segregated environments, thus forcing districts to create programs that will address all learners.

Thank you in advance for your attention to this matter.

Keshia Golding

1 comment:

Prof. Bachenheimer said...

I like that you made the distinction about special education; we have accomodations for them in their IEP, but they are still all help to NCLB accountability standards.