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V

irginia

C

apitol

C

onnections

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inter

2016

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giving educators, parents, policy-makers,

and members of allied professions the

opportunity to decide—at the community

level—what experiences and practices are

best and that make sense for students in our

communities.

While the task before us is not easy,

it is essential. It includes assessment of what students most need

based on a suite of measures, rather than a single test score. It also

includes embedding into our most challenged schools a cross-

disciplinary, multi-faceted approach to student development and

learning whereby teachers are much more closely supported by

school counselors, nurses, social workers, bi-lingual interpreters,

nurses, specialists in the varying domains of learning needs, etc.—

whatever supports that any given school needs most urgently. In

our poorest schools warm breakfast and lunch programs should be

available, along with engaging after-school enrichment and learning-

support programs. No, it’s not easy, and it’s not cheap. However, it

does little good (and could do much harm) to continue hammering

low-performing schools if we are not willing or able to provide the

support (resources, professional development, incentives, etc.) and

the technical capacity these schools need.

With ESSA we have a chance to institute measures that enable

us to determine many of the important ways that individual students,

their teachers and administers are improving. Again, analyzing what

the evidence from multiple and varied assessment tools reveals

about students’ and teachers’ accomplishments, consideration

regarding changing things in the classroom or staying the course can

be undertaken. In what areas is progress being made? In what areas

are more support, effort, and resources indicated? In what ways

might we be better able to customize learning experiences that are

effective for individual learners?

Lastly, with ESSA we also have a chance to acknowledge the

importance of development and accomplishment of the

whole

child

(e.g. students’ capacity for ethical decision-making; their artistic

and self-expressive impulses; their passion for exploration and

creativity; their interest in civic engagement and social justice, their

pursuit of wondrous things), not just performance on a narrow band

of academic skills. Our schools can do better, and hopefully ESSA

provides us with a realistic chance this time around of rising more

successfully to the challenge.

Phil Wishon is the Dean of the College of Education at James

Madison University and President Emeritus of the Virginia

Association of Colleges of Teacher Education in partnership with

the Association of Teacher Education in Virginia.

After it landed on President Obama’s desk in the wake of broad

bipartisan support from the House and Senate, the Every Student

Succeeds Act (ESSA) was signed into law on December 10, 2015.

Intended to be an update to the widely criticized No Child Left

Behind Act (NCLB) which GeorgeW. Bush signed into law in 2002,

ESSA significantly scales back the federal government’s authority

to intervene in schools that were underperforming, falling short

of meeting student achievement targets, and failing. Under ESSA,

moreover, states will now have a lot more leeway to identify and fix

struggling schools.

Many critics of NCLB lamented what they saw as a denaturing

of educational practice as a humane, uplifting, and (historically

anyway) a noble endeavor and— citing its emphasis on teaching/

testing a very narrow band of academic skills implemented with

a high stakes “blame and punish” mentality—a diminishment of

the art of teaching. Under pressure from NCLB mandates to reach

specific achievement benchmarks, the educational enterprise in

countless public school districts nationwide was reduced to little

more than a scramble each year to make a certain quota of students

who attained or exceeded a certain score on a standardized test set

by decision-makers who were often far removed from classroom and

neighborhood realities. Under the threat of punishment and censure,

teaching and learning in thousands of our nation’s schools became a

game of “chase the cut score”, or else. The “or else” included such

possibilities as firing staff members, replacing the principal, and

closing the school down.

The Progressive Network for Public Education and others say

that the new bill still puts too much emphasis on testing—ESSA

retains mandatory testing from third through eighth grade, for

example—and concern remains that tests will continue to be misused

and misapplied. Under ESSA however, automatic mandatory

punishments would be detached from test results, and teachers

would no longer be compelled to bow to the constant pressure and

stress under which they operated and the wrath that might befall

them during their teacher evaluation reviews as a result of students

performing poorly on narrowly-focused, standardized tests.

To its credit, NCLB did expose for the first time the staggering

achievement gap between America’s poorest schools and schools

located in more affluent communities, and between students from

low-income families, English Language learning students or students

with disabilities, and students from stable homes and families with

adequate incomes. While ESSA is a much-welcomed step in the

right direction, no law—whether administered at the federal or

state (or local) level—will be effective in narrowing the shameful

achievement gap—American Education’s

scarlet letter

—that now

exists in our public schools, unless we are successful in our attempts

to address underlying issues of broader

concern (e.g. families living in poverty;

ravages of crime and neighborhood violence;

inequitable access to quality early childhood

education; under-resourced schools; lack of

access to quality health care; high incidence

of under employment.

Unfortunately, not all students arrive at

school every day well-rested, well-nourished,

fit, emotionally secure, in good health, and

ready to learn. To the critical needs of these

students the foundational academic narrative

of contemporary educational reform has

been insufficiently responsive. Passage of

the Every Student Succeeds Act provides

us an opportunity to improve things by

The Every Student Succeeds Act

and American Education’s “Scarlet Letter”

By Phil Wishon

Legislative Counsel

John G. “Chip” Dicks

FutureLaw, LLC

1802 Bayberry Court, Suite 403

Richmond, Virginia 23226

(804) 225-5507 (Direct Dial)

chipdicks@futurelaw.net

(804) 225-5508 (Fax)

www.futurelaw.net

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