Professor Helen Ladd is one of the nation’s most distinguished economists of education; she holds a chair at Duke University.
In this article, she reviews the federal program No Child Left Behind.
The first conclusion one could draw was that the Congress and President committed a fatal flaw by putting the federal government in charge of all educational policy, a function normally left to the states. Whether the Secretary was Rod Paige, Margaret Spellings, Arne Duncan, or John King, their assumption was that they were in charge of education across the nation.
She begins:
No Child Left Behind (NCLB), the 2001 reauthorization of the Federal Elementary and Secondary Education Act, represented a sea change for the federal government’s role in k-12 education, a function reserved by the U.S. Constitution for the states. Prior to that year, the federal government had relied primarily on the equal protection clause of the Constitution to promote educational opportunity for protected groups and disadvantaged students and had done so in part with Title 1 grants to schools serving low-income students. Although it accounted for only 1.5 percent of school budgets in 2000, Title I funding served as the mechanism for the federal government to use NCLB to put pressure on all individual schools throughout the country to raise student achievement. While a state could have avoided the pressure of NCLB by foregoing its share of Title 1 funds, none chose to do so.
Under NCLB, the federal government required all states to test every student annually in Grades 3 through 8 and once in high school in math and reading and to set annual achievement goals so that 100 percent of the students would be on track to achieve proficiency by 2013/2014. Each school was required to make adequate yearly progress (AYP) toward the proficiency goal and was subject to consequences if it failed to do so. This AYP requirement applied not only to the average for all students in the school, but also to subgroups defined by economic, racial, and disability characteristics. Consistent with our federal system, states were to use their own tests and to set their own proficiency standards. The act also required that all teachers of core academic subjects be highly qualified, defined as having a Bachelor’s degree and subject-specific knowledge.
No state met the goal of 100% proficiency.
Her data suggests that NCLB did not improve student test scores and that gains registered after its passage continued pre-existing trends. After reviewing other studies, she concludes:
The overall test score effects of NCLB are clearly disappointing. Moreover, its positive effects on certain subgroups in some grades and subjects were far from sufficient to move the needle much on test score gaps. Such gaps in NAEP scores remained high in 2015.
She notes that NCLB had some positive components, like generating mountains of data and disaggregating scores for different groups.
However:
Despite these positive elements, the law’s use of top-down accountability pressure that was more punitive than constructive represents a flawed approach to school improvement. Three specific flaws deserve attention.
Its Narrow Focus
An initial problem with the test-based accountability of NCLB is that it is based on too narrow a view of schooling. Most people would agree that aspirations for education and schooling should be far broader than teaching children how to do well on multiple-choice tests. A broader view would recognize the role that schools play in developing in children the knowledge and skills that will enable them not merely to succeed in the labor market but to be good citizens, to live rich and fulfilling lives, and to contribute to the flourishing of others (Brighouse et al., 2016).
Research both on NCLB, as well as some of the state-specific accountability programs that preceded it, has shown it has narrowed the curriculum by shifting instruction time toward tested subjects and away from others. A nationally representative survey of 349 school districts between 2001 and 2007 shows that schools raised instructional time (measured in minutes per week) in English and math quite significantly while reducing time for social studies, science, art and music, physical education, and recess (McMurrer, 2007; also see National Surveys by the Center on Education Policy; Byrd-Blake et al., 2010; Dee & Jacob, 2010; Griffith & Scharmann, 2008). This narrowing of the curriculum undermines the potential for schools to promote other valued capacities, such as those for democratic competence or personal fulfillment.
Further, NCLB has led to a narrowing of what happens within the math and reading instructional programs themselves. That occurs in part because of the heavy reliance on multiple-choice tests that are cheaper and quicker to grade than open-ended questions that would better test conceptual understanding and writing skills. In addition, test-based accountability gives teachers incentives to “teach to the test” rather than to the broader domains that the test questions are designed to represent. Evidence of teaching to the test emerges from the differences in student test scores on the specific high stakes tests used by states as part of their accountability systems, and test scores on the NAEP, which is not subject to this problem (see Klein et al., 2000, for a comparison of Texas test scores on NAEP and the Texas high stakes tests).
NCLB also encouraged teachers to narrow the groups of students they attend to. Various studies document, for example, that the incentive for teachers to focus attention on students near the proficiency cut point has led to reductions in the achievement of students in the tails of the ability distribution (Krieg, 2008; Ladd & Lauen, 2010; Neal & Schanzenbach, 2010).
Unrealistic and Counter-Productive Expectations
A second flaw is that NCLB was highly unrealistic and misguided in its expectations. Even if we set aside its 100 percent proficiency goal as aspirational rhetoric, the program imposed counter-productive expectations in a variety of ways.
Recall that one of the goals of NCLB was to raise academic standards throughout the country. Given that the U.S. lodges responsibility for education at the state level, federal policymakers had to permit individual states to set their own proficiency standards. The accountability provisions of the law meant, however, that if a state chose to raise its standards without providing the additional resources and support needed to meet those standards, the result would be greater numbers of failing schools. Hence, it is not surprising that instead of states raising their proficiency standards, some states reduced them. Among the 12 states for which they had data starting in 2002/2003, Cronin et al. (2007) found that seven had lowered their proficiency standards by 2006 and declines were largest in states that had the highest initial proficiency standards. The authors also found a huge amount of variance between states in the difficulty of their proficiency standards.
The program was unrealistic as well in that many schools simply could not meet the requirements of AYP and hence were named and shamed as failures and made subject to sanctions. This requirement differed across schools and states depending on the state’s proficiency standards and the timetable it set out for the schools to meet the goal by 2013/2014. In many cases, states defined the time path so that it would be more feasible to meet in the early years than in the later years. The net effect was a rising failure rate over time. By 2011, close to half of all schools in the country were failing, with the rates well over 50 percent in some (Usher, 2015). Something is clearly amiss when half of the objects of accountability, in this case individual schools, are not in a position to succeed.4
With Congress not able to reach consensus on how to modify or update ESEA between 2007 and 2015, the requirements of NCLB remained in force, leading to the untenable situation in which most schools would eventually be failing. To avoid this situation, the Obama administration intervened in 2011 by offering waivers from certain requirements of NCLB to states that requested them. A key element of the waiver agreements was a shift of focus of accountability away from test score levels to a greater focus on the growth in student test scores or progress in reducing achievement gaps. While this shift represents a sensible change, it did little to counter the narrow focus and top-down nature of NCLB. By 2015, 43 states had received waivers from the most stringent provisions of NCLB (Polikoff et al., 2015). Although the waivers were necessary to stop the rise of school failures, the fact that the Obama administration had to work outside the Congress is another undesirable outcome in that it sets a bad precedent for future policymaking.
A final counterproductive effect of NCLB has been its adverse effect on teacher morale and the harm it could be doing to the teaching profession. Although researchers and policymakers frequently point to teachers as the most important school factor for student achievement, evidence shows that NCLB has reduced the morale of teachers, especially those in high poverty schools (Byde-Blake et al., 2010). Further, clear evidence of cheating by teachers in some large cities, including Atlanta; Chicago; and Washington, DC, even if limited to small numbers of teachers, indicates the magnitude of the pressures facing some teachers under high stakes accountability of the type imposed by NCLB. Low teacher morale matters in part because it may well increase teacher attrition. Although we do not have much direct evidence on how NCLB affects attrition, we do know that the approximately 8 percent attrition rate of teachers in the United States is far higher than that in many other countries (Sutcher, Darling-Hammond, & Carver-Thomas, 2016) and that reducing the rate would substantially mitigate concerns about projected teacher shortages and the costs of teacher turnover.
Perhaps its worst flaw was that it implied pressure but not support. Punishment but not encouragement or help.
Here is a good capsule summary of a valuable analysis:
NCLB relied instead almost exclusively on tough test-based incentives. This approach would only have made sense if the problem of low-performing schools could be attributed primarily to teacher shirking, as some people believed, or to the problem of the “soft bigotry of low expectations” as suggested by President George W. Bush. But in fact low achievement in such schools is far more likely to reflect the limited capacity of such schools to meet the challenges that children from disadvantaged backgrounds bring to the classroom. Because of these challenges, schools serving concentrations of low-income students face greater tasks than those serving middle class students. The NCLB approach of holding schools alone responsible for student test score levels while paying little if any attention to the conditions in which learning takes place is simply not fair either to the schools or the children and was bound to be unsuccessful.
Inform yourself. Read this very readable and important study.
Let’s hope that legislators read it.

“The first conclusion one could draw was that the Congress and President committed a fatal flaw by putting the federal government in charge of all educational policy, a function normally left to the states. ”
I don’t find the federalism argument persuasive because it doesn’t address the ed reform civil rights argument for standardized tests.
The argument is that there needs to be federal accountability or disfavored minority groups will not be “counted” at the state level. This is the civil rights justification for federal laws. We HAD “states rights” in the United States. It was the confederacy. That’s oversimplifying but I don’t think public school supporters can just dismiss the civil rights argument for federal accountability by saying “states rights”.
Voting laws are primarily state laws. If everyone was being treated equally and states were doing such a bang-up job then why did we need the Voting Rights Act?
One of the reasons I don’t opt my son out of testing is because I find the civil rights argument persuasive. I buy that minority students need the protections of federal laws. I think their argument to be addressed by anti-testing people.
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NCLB never had realistic goals for students, but at least the Title 1 funding did supplement state funds to help needy students. There is no connection between civil rights and testing as many poor black and brown children do poorly on standardized tests. Under Obama the results of testing were used to close schools, turn public schools over to charters, and unfairly fire teachers. Actually, firing teachers based on scores is a bigger civil rights issue than the rights of students to be tested. All it did was provide a vehicle for privatization.
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Here, here!
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Okay, but they aren’t claiming there is a direct civil rights connection. It isn’t “black students do better with adding standardized testing”
They are saying that if there isn’t a common national measure attention won’t be paid to groups that have been under-served. That states WON”T because states had the chance and did nothing to address this.
I understand criticizing the measure. But I think one has to address the civil rights protection part of the argument. Collecting information based on a common measure (no matter how crude the measure) is what is used to force states to intervene.
There’s an individual benefit to standardized tests too. If you went to a high school that was underfunded and didn’t offer a lot of advanced courses and you want to apply to competitive colleges, you are at a disadvantage. One of the things that can even that up is a high ACT score because it’s an objective national measure. I’ve seen this happen.
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Nothing about standardized tests benefits poor children of color
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While we would perhaps rather not, we must remember that while NCLB was unsettling, the arrival of Obama and his repeated vilification of teachers was the true nail in the coffin.
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Ciedie, agreed. We expected Bush would attack teachers, unions, and public schools. We did not expect it from Obama. Worse, he persuaded Dems in congress and some governors that corporate reform and privatization were cool.
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May be a good reason for cutting the DOE down in size and at same time make a review of programs and policy necessary to continue – send the money and responsibilities back to the states…
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The frustrating thing is that anyone informed already knew how this would turn out, and these results have emerged despite tremendous pressures and sweeping actions to distort and hide them.
If you’re going to have federal policy dictate everything, one you have to change the Constitution, two the policy has to be benevolent and workable, not malicious and intrinsically disastrous, three you don’t slap together a nation curriculum without a curriculum or materials in some kind of extended PL session with a narrow and dubious collection of framers.
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thank you Chiara
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Au contraire. NCLB worked perfectly to do what it was designed to do, which was pave the way for RttT, which, in turn, paved the way for complete privatization of public education. Mission accomplished!
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Dienne,
Agreed. I usually refer to Race to Top as NCLB 2.0
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Here, here!
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This report questions the value of a master’s degree in teaching. As an undergrad., I was trained as a foreign language teacher. At the time the only way to become an ESL teachers was to complete a master’s degree, and the training was essential. I taught in suburban districts in both Pennsylvania and New York. What I noticed about the teachers in New York, where a master’s degree is mandatory for permanent certification,. is that the New York teachers were better prepared and more professional. This may be due to the fact that the staff in New York was better trained, but it is only my personal observation.
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That soft bigotry thing became no excuses: ignore reality and commit compounded child abuse.
And now we have real, hard bigotry in the White House.
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Agree. here is a keys sentence for me
“This narrowing of the curriculum undermines the potential for schools to promote other valued capacities, such as those for democratic competence or personal fulfillment.”
NCLB had nothing to do with these values. I question the efficacy of test scores as guarantor of the civil rights of students, not only in NCLB but also NCLB version 2, known as ESSA.
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New slogan: Bigotry: No Excuses: It is what it is
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The day NCLB came into effect, it was the day all the children were screwed.
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Thanks to all for a discussion in which there was some heat, much light and no rheephorm smoke.
😄
I will repeat, albeit in my own terms, a few points mentioned above.
First, NCLB relied on a variant of a worst management practice: “fire your way to success.” Rather than engage, support and provide resources, it was a clear example of “test to punish,” “starve to feed” and “pummel them senselessly into success.” [The last a riff off the old saw: the beatings will continue until morale improves.]
Second, such dog whistles as “the soft bigotry of low expectations” was and is part of a playbook that is also used by Trump & Co. That is, find an insidious way to scapegoat a part of the population by turning them into not just willing but consciously evil, lazy and immoral villains that deserve humiliation and unending thrashing. In this case, most especially teachers bore the brunt of this. A predictable consequence of such slogans was the language used to justify rheephorm and vilify critics. As for rheephorm miracles that over and over and over again turned out to be failures or mediocrities: almost always a free pass and throw more $tudent $ucce$$ at whatever EMO (or whatever they would call themselves) that popped up.
Third, under NCLB rheephormsters of all shades and hues very rarely felt they had to take responsibility for patently unrealistic promises aka “truthful hyperbole.” 2014—100% proficiency?!?!?!? These were NOT just mere words—it was written into law and failure to achieve the impossible had very real and painful consequences for many many people.
Fourth, to defend NCLB, supporters and enforcers had to (not the first to do so nor the last) furiously engage in the constant manufacture of something that [oh boy, will you be surprised at this!] we have KellyAnne Conway to thank for: “alternative facts.” Data, logic, consistency, willingness to engage in a genuine back-and-forth? Well, if you are going to provide perverse incentives to undermine genuine teaching and learning, then what’s the point of critical thinking based in reality that leads to self-examination and self-correction?
Fifth and last, I am reminded of what someone far wittier than I dubbed NCLB: NoChild’sBehindLeft.
Again, thanks to everyone for a lively discussion.
😎
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And we are assuming the assessments were a valid measure of achievement when many of the questions were confusing or designed to be tricky, sometimes with either no clear answer or more than one logical correct choice, not to mention math problems or reading passages which were not at the appropriate grade level for the test takers.
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Then there is the issue that ALL students were expected to “pass” these exams including refugees who did not have a command of the English language and students with learning dchallenges such as Down’s Syndrome. Even hospitalized students were hounded to take the test so schools could be in compliance.
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Ultimately these unrealistic expectations was used as an excuse to foster the privatization of education via charters and now pushing more students into unregulated religious schools via vouchers (or financially assisting parents who already opt for a parochial education).
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From a Looking in and Learning Lens:
As a young adult preparing to teach herself, I find it tasteless to force a child to take a test that they are unprepared for. Being that I am a product of the public education system I can not stress to how unrealistic the expectations were of taking the standardized tests. For many schools outside my own many faced lack of resources. You can’t tell me that a student in a lower income is going to have the same advantages as a student in a wealthier school. Which increases more anxiety, no involvement from both parents or students, and lastly no ideal future. I can remember how idolized NCLB was and how changes were going to happen. In fact what really happened was a case of poor management skills. It was also a shame that many teachers received the boot instead of encouragement or help. What was needed was an aid and NCLB was not what the education world needed.
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