Personal tools

Skip to content. | Skip to navigation

Sections
You are here: Home Newsroom Education News Roundup Archive 2010 November 2010 Student transfers from failing schools via No Child law swamp successful ones

Student transfers from failing schools via No Child law swamp successful ones

  • 11-24-2010
  • Bookmark and Share

By Michael Birnbaum/Washington Post

In some struggling school districts around the country, students transferring from failing schools are overwhelming the few successful schools in their areas, an unintended byproduct of the No Child Left Behind law. The issue arose in Prince George's County this year, when the parents of nearly 3,000 middle-schoolers learned just days before school started that they could switch their children to the only two non-specialized middle schools in the county that met the law's performance goals. About 200 families accepted the offer, taking their new schools by surprise. The flurry of transfers - more than 700 in Prince George's this year across all 12 grades - has packed classrooms while underscoring a tough aspect of the Bush administration's landmark education initiative. It demands steadily rising achievement - all students are supposed to pass benchmark tests by 2014 - and, as a result, more schools fail every year. So students hop to more successful schools, leading to dwindling populations and funding for the weakest schools and crowding for the better ones. (more…)

Document Actions
Connect with IDEA
Subscribe to the news roundup

 

facebook-portlet

 

twitter-portlet

 

rss-portlet