Submitted by R. Neal on Tue, 2006/04/18 - 8:41am

According to this report, test scores for 28,000 minority students in Tennessee weren't included in No Child Left Behind evaluations. Experts say that if they were included, some Tennessee schools would not have scored as well, and may have in fact ended up on "watch lists".

According to the article, West View Elementary in Knoxville reported scores for "all 57 white third-graders tested, but no scores for their 24 black and five Hispanic classmates." The article notes that this would be the very same West View Elementary where Bush staged a NCLB promotional photo-op back in January 2004 and said:

"I'll drop a fancy word on you called 'disaggregate,' Bush said. "We're disaggregating results. We're focusing not just on the whole, we're trying to understand whether or not a black child is learning or a Hispanic child is learning.

Apparently not really. Which doesn't make much sense if you think about it. NCLB is the first step towards a long-term goal of eliminating public education through teacher intimidation and meaningless metrics so conservatives can install a voucher system. Lower test scores and more failing schools would theoretically advance that agenda. State and local school systems are apparently skewing the data, though, because they don't want to suffer the consequences. And who can blame them?

Anyway, the underlying question of why minority students aren't scoring as well (or why this is always an automatic presumption) is not discussed. One might wonder if it has something to do with fostering or at best tolerating school environments such as this or this.

9
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SemiPundit's picture

Testing and vouchers

I have always felt that much of the disparity in international test score comparisons between the U.S. and other countries is explained by our testing of practically all of our students versus their testing of privileged and selected groups. In some countries, the event of one's birth determines whether he or she will go to school or raise pigs. It certainly provides good ammunition for the criticism of our public schools.

On vouchers, I have yet to hear anyone give a clear explanation on how they are supposed to work. It seems that if a school is failing, then it is failing for every one of its children, not the select few who get selected by lottery to spend tax money at a parochial or secular private school, leaving their friends behind.

Additionally, are the lucky parents entitled to the money spent per pupil by everyone in the community or just that part of the school-support taxes that they pay personally?

Brian A.'s picture

This begs the question

Is our children learning under NCLB?

Brian A.
I'd rather be cycling.

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