Laura Bornfreund
Senior Fellow, Early & Elementary Education
Answering the Senate education committee’s fall proposal for the reauthorization of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act, last Friday, Rep. John Kline (R-MN), chairman of the House Education and Workforce Committee, introduced two final ESEA bills, completing a package of five bills that would rewrite the current law, No Child Left Behind.
Our colleague Jennifer Cohen wrote yesterday about three glaring omissions in the proposals that could lead to more inequities in public education and a lack of focus on ensuring that students graduate. We see yet another: Early education does not get the same boost it did in theSenate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions committee’s ESEA bill (and we’d argue that even there, early ed still isn’t given enough due). In fact, early education (birth – pre-K) is barely mentioned at all in the House bills and when it is, it’s to simply maintain what was in place. As far as we can tell neither bill adds any new references to early education. There are several proposed changes, though, that will surely affect kindergarten through third grade.
Let’s take a look at the two bills. The first, “Student Success Act,” would revise portions of Title I, the section of ESEA that focuses on providing equitable opportunities for disadvantaged students. The second, “Encouraging Innovation and Effective Teachers Act,” would amend Title II, which focuses on improving teacher and principal quality.
Student Success Act
The bill would do away with Adequate Yearly Progress (AYP) instituted under No Child Left Behind. Instead states would need to develop and implement their own accountability systems that would measure student achievement, evaluate the academic performance of the state’s public schools and create a system for school improvement, including interventions in low-performing Title I schools.
Encouraging Innovation and Effective Teachers Act
o Include student achievement data as part of the evaluation;
o Use multiple measures in assessing teacher performance;
o Include more than two rating categories on evaluations of teacher performance;
o Make personnel decision based on the evaluations; and
o Seek input from stakeholders (parents, teachers, school leaders) in the development of the evaluation system.
o Increase access to alternative certification;
o Recruit, hire and retain effective teachers;
o Implement performance-based pay systems and differential incentive pay for teachers who take on additional responsibilities or teach in hard-to-staff subject areas or schools;
o Create teacher advancement paths;
o Establish new teacher or school leader induction programs and teacher residency programs; and
o Provide additional professional development activities or other evidence-based initiatives to increase teacher effectiveness.
It is highly unlikely that either of these bills will lead to ESEA reauthorization. First, they lack bipartisan support in the House. Rep. George Miller (D-CA), ranking member on the House Education and Workforce committee said in a press release, “By abandoning efforts to reach a consensus, this partisanship shuts the door on NCLB reform in this Congress.” Second, it’s doubtful that Senator Harkin, chairman of the Senate HELP committee would consider a partisan package from the House, even if the bills received enough votes to pass. And, the HELP committee has its own comprehensive ESEA bill, which differs significantly from Kline’s proposals. Third, with the presidential election season well underway, it will soon become quite challenging for members of 112th Congress to advance any contentious legislation. The reauthorization of ESEA is quickly becoming just that.