As my inquiry project is beginning to come together, I am finding that my question is one that teachers are all too familiar with. English teachers have been struggling with the implementation of No Child Left Behind. It’s mandates stifle creative license and narrow the curriculum so that neither the teachers nor the students are benefiting. On the one hand, critics (rightly) argue that NCLB has placed too much emphasis on Language Arts and other “core” subjects at the expense of all other subjects; still, the focus of this emphasis has consistently been on standardized testing. As a result, teachers have found that they are not able to teach what they want to, the way they want to, at the pace they feel is acceptable.
Students are taught to take a test, not to read, write, speak, or listen effectively, stifling their interests and creativity. Sticking to the curriculum is of utmost importance, and, as one teacher related to me, students do not always have the opportunity to expand on what they have learned. It saddens me to think that there are students who are intrigued by something they’ve read in class, but who are forced to move on the next lesson before they have truly fleshed it out. As a teacher, it must be disheartening to have to cut short an interesting discussion because the class is falling behind schedule.
As such, I still have quite a bit of research to do and quite a few interviews to conduct, but I am beginning to see how it all falls together. More importantly, I can see how it all fits into the bigger picture: it seems that No Child Left Behind has left the teachers behind, forgetting to take into consideration the variation in effective instruction methods and allowing for very little wiggle room. This predicament is one that is shared by every teacher in every subject, and I believe that it is negatively impacting students’ learning.
Now that this understanding has come together, I am finding that I only have more and more questions, some of which are harder to answer than others:What can teachers do to ensure that students are getting the most out of their education if NCLB has placed so many restrictions on what they can or want to do? How can teachers restructure their goals to make them compatible with what the NJ Core Curriculum Content Standards ask of them? By doing so, will they be selling their students short of a good education? What needs to be done to take the emphasis off standardized testing? Is this even possible anymore? Why, if so many people are so upset about it, has NCLB not been amended to better suit the needs of the students and teachers? Who are we not holding accountable here, and why?!
I wonder what kinds of answers to these questions I will come up with over time…
Segregated proms in a "post-racial" USA
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