Alexander’s Assurance of Bipartisanship Does Not Guarantee a Bipartisan NCLB
Last night, Sen. Lamar Alexander (R-TN) released his highly anticipated to reauthorize No Child Left Behind (NCLB). The release shortly followed Secretary Arne Duncan鈥檚 speech outlining the Obama administration鈥檚 key reauthorization along with a speech by Sen. Patty Murray (D-WA), the Senate Education Committee鈥檚 top Democrat (which closely echoed Duncan鈥檚).
What鈥檚 notable is that Alexander鈥檚 proposal is to a failed version he introduced back in 2013, which no Democrats supported (). Even so, before Murray鈥檚 speech, Alexander gave several assurances that he would pursue a bipartisan path in committee discussions. He made it clear that his proposal only differed from Duncan and Murray鈥檚 priorities in four or five areas鈥攎ost dealing with balancing federal mandates to states against state flexibility.
So, setting aside the fact that this proposal previously failed on party lines, what might those areas be? And how reliable is Alexander鈥檚 assurance that he鈥檚 aiming for bipartisanship?
- Testing 鈥 Alexander offered two options for assessment. The first allows states flexibility in how to assess students by eliminating the annual testing requirement. States would need to provide an 鈥渁ssurance鈥 of testing in math, reading, and science but could choose a combination of annual, grade-span, performance-based, or other tests. Alexander鈥檚 second option would basically keep annual testing in place. It seems clear that option one would make comparing student data extremely difficult and be a non-starter for Murray and her fellow Democrats. And though the second option keeps annual testing, states would only need to provide an 鈥渁ssurance鈥 of such testing.
- Standards and accountability 鈥 Like with assessment, states would need to provide an 鈥渁ssurance鈥 of challenging academic standards and could devise their own systems of accountability. And, as an affront to the Common Core, the Secretary would lack authority to exercise any direction over the standards states choose to design or adopt鈥攎imicking the prohibition on a national curriculum. After choosing standards and a system of assessments, states would not be required to set performance targets for schools and intervene in low-performing ones. And while they would still need to disaggregate and compare student data by subgroups for transparency, states could choose their own accountability measures. Though Democrats could consent to leaving standards completely within states鈥 purview, leaving accountability entirely to the states will likely be a non-starter for them.
- Improving teaching 鈥 Alexander鈥檚 proposal does not require states to develop or implement teacher evaluation systems incorporating student outcomes. It also eliminates the Highly Qualified Teacher (HQT) provision, which requires teachers to have a bachelor鈥檚 degree, state certification or licensure, and subject matter expertise. Though eliminating HQT might not be a sticking point for Democrats鈥攕ince it measures inputs rather than student outputs鈥攊t creates problems for accountability systems. Specifically, states would no longer need to report whether teachers were being equitably distributed between high- and low-poverty schools. But eliminating the requirement that teacher evaluation is based partly on student outputs will almost certainly be met with Democratic opposition.
- Programs and funding 鈥 With the exception of the Teacher Incentive Fund grant program, Alexander鈥檚 proposal would not authorize any of President Obama鈥檚 signature programs, including Race to the Top, i3, and Promise Neighborhoods. It would also eliminate the 21st Century Community Schools program and education technology state grants. Moreover, the draft bill collapses several other programs鈥攕uch as teacher quality dollars鈥攁llowing states and districts to have more funding flexibility. And the bill includes a provision for children who are eligible to receive Title I funds to take those dollars to any public school they want. Notably, though unsurprisingly, Alexander鈥檚 proposal makes no mention of the investments in education that Duncan and Murray want included in an ESEA rewrite. What鈥檚 more, the increase in funding and resources called for by both Duncan and Murray didn鈥檛 seem to make their way into this draft either.
While Alexander has assured Congress and the public that he values bipartisanship, there鈥檚 as yet little evidence that he plans to deliver. That is, he鈥檚 introduced a conservative bill that essentially ignores all of both Murray and Duncan鈥檚 key priorities for reauthorization. In order to get to bipartisanship, Alexander will actually need to work with his Democratic colleagues, particularly Senator Murray, on the above issues. Though such is unlikely, as Bellwether鈥檚 Anne Hyslop pointed out, it鈥檚 certainly not impossible.
But it is hard to trust assurances: they aren鈥檛 as reliable as 鈥渞equirements鈥 or 鈥渕andates鈥 or even 鈥渞esponsibilities.鈥 Providing assurances of bipartisanship could lead to a bipartisan bill鈥攐r it could not. Meanwhile, NCLB is long overdue and in need of fixing, as states (like Murray鈥檚) are labeled failing. In kind, asking for assurances from states with regards to systems of testing, standards, and accountability could lead to effective systems鈥攐r it could not. Meanwhile, there are student groups鈥攍ike 鈥攚ho are lagging behind their peers and deserve a guarantee that their states will act in ways that serve their best interests. Assurances simply aren鈥檛 enough.
Finally, even if Senate Republicans and Democrats come together and produce a bipartisan bill, it remains to be seen whether it would pass the House, let alone to the President鈥檚 desk.”