20 Reasons to Eliminate NCLB
- An education policy built on impossible performance demands that assure the failure of the majority of American public schools should be eliminated, not reformed.
- An education policy that has the same impossible demands for most English-language learners and special education students should be eliminated, not reformed.
- An education policy that traumatizes children, destroys the desire to learn, and corrupts the purposes for learning should be eliminated, not reformed.
- An education policy that uses fear, intimidation, and retribution as motivation should be eliminated, not reformed.
- An education policy that uses a single assessment once a year to make life-altering decisions should be eliminated, not reformed.
- An education policy that ignores poverty as a chief determinant in academic performance should be eliminated, not reformed.
- An education policy that creates two different school curriculums, one for the children of the poor and one for well-funded successes, should be eliminated, not reformed.
- An education policy that uses skewed and manipulated research from the National Reading Panel to devise a national reading strategy should be eliminated, not reformed.
- An education policy that uses the strain of test score competition to undercut public cohesion and civic commitment to democratic goals should be eliminated, not reformed.
- An education policy that shrinks the American school curriculum to two or three subjects that are tested should be eliminated, not reformed.
- An education policy that discourages diversity and encourages homogeneity in schools should be eliminated, not reformed.
- An education policy that supports the use of tax dollars to fund private schools rather than public school improvement should be eliminated, not reformed.
- An education policy that advocates the use of public money to pay private contractors to run public schools should be eliminated, not reformed.
- An education policy that is built on unfunded and under-funded mandates should be eliminated, not reformed.
- An education policy that reduces or eliminates local and state decision making by citizens should be eliminated, not reformed.
- An education policy that mandates that military recruiters have access to student information should be eliminated, not reformed.
- An education policy that inflames a teacher shortage in order to replace professional teachers with individuals who have passed a teaching test should be eliminated, not reformed.
- An education policy that is used to reward tax dollars to insiders and cronies for their political support should be eliminated, not reformed.
- An education policy that uses paid propaganda to advance its agenda should be eliminated, not reformed.
- An education policy that puts test scores in the place of the intellectual, social, and emotional growth of America’s children should eliminated, not reformed.
- Hold a public forum in your community to explore and explain these points.
- Organize community and neighborhood potluck dinners with teachers and parents to talk together about how NCLB is affecting children and school.
- Persuade your organizations to pass resolutions calling for the repeal of NCLB based on these points.
- Collect signatures on a Petition to Eliminate NCLB based on these 20 points. Publicize your results in the local media and send copies of resolutions and petitions to your local and federal elected officials.
- Write letters-to-the-editor and op-ed pieces for your local and regional newspapers, making these points.
- Get your local school board to pass a resolution or hold a community forum about eliminating NCLB.
- Contact your U.S. senators and representatives about eliminating NCLB: Call them, write or email them (send these points and other information), and set up meetings with them in your district (bring a group of children).
- Contact your state legislators to enlist them in the effort to eliminate NCLB; get state legislatures to pass resolutions.
- Parents: Join the NCLB-mandated Parents Advisory Board at your child’s school. Bring the 20 Reasons to Eliminate NCLB to begin a dialogue.
- Organize a public protest or march on test days or days given over to test preparation. (anti nclb)
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