Grabowska

Friday, January 25, 2008

NCLB and the Negative Impact it has on Students with Disabilities

 This past week, many discussions have begun to crop up at my workplace concerning NCLB.  This stands for The No Child Left Behind Act.  Many people know that the law exists and the basic requirements it makes for our schools.  However, most don't know that NCLB has a hugely negative effect on students, specifically, students with disabilities.  

Under the law, schools are required to make what's called Adequate Yearly Progress (AYP).  This means that in order for a school to continue the way it is, a certain percentage of students need to be at the required learning levels or above.  In order to show progress, students are required to take standardized tests in areas like reading and math.  This is where things get difficult for students with special needs.  There is only a limited number of "alternative tests" that these students can take and many students are forced to take a test that is way above their learning abilities.  It just isn't fair.

I work as a Special Education para at an elementary school.  In our school people have started talking about the changes that will need to be made if we do not meet AYP again.  Unfortunately, most people are pointing the finger of blame at students who are receiving special education.  They say that it is our students who are holding the school back and creating stress for the other educators.  I have to ask myself, "Are these accusations justified and do the people making these accusations really understand the struggle that our students go through in order to complete these tests?"

With the accusations flying, the whole issue is bound to have a negative impact on our community.  The most important thing is to get the correct information out to the public and for them to understand just how challenging this law is.  Our State and Federal Governments need to realize that expecting schools to achieve perfect passing scores is impossible and something needs to be changed.

8 Comments:

At January 28, 2008 at 11:24 AM , Blogger The Aecy said...

I agree. My sister has a tbi, yet she's held to the same tests as everyone else.
She's lucky enough to be high-functioning (she even managed a 23 on her act) but she has to work twice as hard to get the same scores as everyone else.

 
At January 28, 2008 at 6:06 PM , Blogger Crystal Holzer said...

Wow, that’s good. I’ve always thought that people lived in communities so they could pool their resources and help out people who needed it. Too bad there are a lot of people who don’t think of it in that way.

 
At January 29, 2008 at 7:44 AM , Blogger Katherine said...

The testing is just wrong. I remember when I was younger and had to do those testing. My dyslexia was so bad back then that I didn’t do well on those tests. Teachers (especially my reading teachers) would get upset at me, and at the time I didn’t understand why. It was because I couldn’t pass these tests, and because of students like me, we’d be risk factors to the school losing dire funding.
You seem to have a very strong opinion about this. Any ideas on how we could fix this?

 
At January 30, 2008 at 7:57 PM , Blogger Chris Szyplinski said...

Awesome Blog! I agree with what crystal said, i think most people dont look to pool resources to help those in need anymore. The attitude is more of whats best for me these days.

 
At January 31, 2008 at 6:35 AM , Blogger Alisa said...

I really liked you post!! I have worked with children for many years and almost decided to be a teacher. I totally understand what you are coming from it is definatly not fair to put special needs children in the same catagory as regular children and expect them to do the same!! I appluad you in your efforts to try and get these unfair rules changed. It is people like you who make a difference!! Thank You!!

 
At January 31, 2008 at 10:54 AM , Blogger Tuska said...

Very good thoughts on community! I agree with you in most aspects.

 
At January 31, 2008 at 2:17 PM , Blogger Unknown said...

I think the whole 'standarized testing' system is flawed. It's just a bogus way of handling the education system.

Do I know what to do better? Not really, but I'm not an administrator. The testing needs to be fixed.

 
At January 31, 2008 at 9:01 PM , Blogger Dewey said...

I agree with you. I wasn't aware on how bad it is. Good job on pointing out issues and how the community responded. I guess you can learn a lot about a community by how they treat their own in need.

 

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