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I awakened this morning
to a Washington Post report that
certain states are starting to rebel
against the implementation of the No
Child Left Behind Act, George Bush
III's 1000-plus-page attempt to bully
students and teachers into higher
academic performance.
Now how could anyone not want to line
up single file behind our 43rd
president and his “deep belief in our
public schools and their mission to
build the mind and character of every
child, from every background, in every
part of America,” as he is quoted in
the introduction to the NCLB
legislation? How could anyone be
opposed to the idea of paying
attention to the educational needs of
all students, regardless of race or
social class?
Perhaps it is the transparency of Mr.
Bush’s rhetoric. The only way he plans
to assess whether or not children are
being left behind is by administering
them once a year high stakes
achievement tests. This means that his
noble sentiments will be instantly
doomed by the extensive and
well-documented research indicating
that the only things standardized
tests actually measure are income and
socio-economic status.
Savor the Orwellian irony here. The
same president whose economic policy
has radically widened the already
gaping canyon between rich and poor
pledges to punish, and even shut down
schools containing too many
low-scoring students. Thus, with the
very first stroke of his legislative
pen, Mr. Bush has taken the great
American myth of equal opportunity to
a whole new, and I repeat Orwellian
level.
Meanwhile, while out on my morning
walk I pondered what a society that
really wants to leave no child behind
might look like. Here is what I came
up with:
It would first of all base its economy
on a more equitable distribution of
financial resources. It would not be a
country like ours where the top
one-half percent of the population
possess as much wealth as the bottom
ninety percent, and where over
thirty-five million citizens continue
to live in poverty.
Even more importantly, it would make
the support of vulnerable families
with young children one of its highest
priorities. Initiatives like Healthy
Families Florida, directed by my
cousin Carol McNally, would be
universal. Carol’s mission is to
prevent child abuse and neglect by
eliminating their root causes. Her
program serves primarily young single
mothers and begins working
collaboratively with them—before their
children are born or as near birth as
possible—to address the full range of
each new family’s emerging needs. If
necessary, services continue for up to
five years. The program currently has
more than 10,000 enrolled families and
its success rate is phenomenal.
Ninety-eight percent of children in
participating families reveal no signs
of abuse or neglect a year and a half
after leaving the program. Moreover,
the parents are demonstrating
increased rates of high school
graduation, home ownership, and
ongoing father involvement.
Ironically, Healthy Families Florida
enjoys the staunch support of Governor
Jeb Bush, President Bush’s younger
brother. Here’s hoping that one day
soon Jeb will sit George down and show
him what it looks like when government
truly intends that no child be left
behind.
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