Expectations of SES: Steve Pines v. NCLB
by
deanmillot@mac.com
on Sun 03 Jun 2007 01:00 AM EDT |
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Cosmos
Assignment:
Read SES
provider spokesperson and Education Industry Association President
Steve Pines’ letter to the Chicago Sun Times discussing the poor
showing of most local SES providers on state tests. Then read the
letter of the law.
Identify the
gaps and overlaps. Discuss the implications for SES providers and the
broader school improvement industry in NCLB reauthorization.
Compare your answer with the "Letter From The Editor" in the Tuesday, June 5th issue of New Education Economy®, as we return to the series "Our Industry's Interests in NCLB II" with "Part VII: SES Program Matters to the Entire Industry."
A complete copy of NCLB can be downloaded below. Pines' letter and the Chicago study of SES providers can be found here.
Steve Pines, May 18:
[T]he
tutoring equivalent of about one week of regular classroom instruction
was never intended to be a panacea for low standardized test scores….
SES, by itself, is likely to have small influences on state
standardized test scores, the tutoring program’s impact should also be
measured in terms of parent satisfaction, principal and teacher
opinions, and compliance issues related to program implementation…. [A]
single standardized exam score… is too blunt of an instrument to
truly detect student progress from tutoring.
NCLB Section 1116 (e) Supplemental Educational Services:
‘(12)
DEFINITIONS... (C) ‘supplemental educational services’.... are of high
quality, research-based, and specifically designed to increase the
academic achievement of eligible children on the academic assessments
required under section 1111 and attain proficiency in meeting the
State’s academic achievement standards.‘‘
‘(4) STATE EDUCATIONAL AGENCY RESPONSIBILITIES.—A State educational agency shall—
‘‘(B)
develop and apply objective criteria... to potential providers that are
based on a demonstrated record of effectiveness in increasing the
academic proficiency of students in subjects relevant to meeting the
State academic content and student achievement standards...
‘‘(D)
develop... standards... for monitoring the quality and effectiveness...
and for withdrawing approval from providers that fail, for 2
consecutive years, to contribute to increasing the academic proficiency
of students....
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