[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 158 (Tuesday, October 27, 2015)]
[Senate]
[Pages S7536-S7537]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
NO CHILD LEFT BEHIND REFORM
Mr. ALEXANDER. Mr. President, over the weekend President Obama
announced that all 100,000 public schools across the Nation should
limit testing to 2 percent of a student's time in the classroom. It is
a recommendation, not a requirement, and it comes in response to a
nationwide backlash from teachers, students, and parents who are sick
of overtesting.
I was glad to see the President's comments. He is right about
students taking too many tests. But I hope the President will stop and
think before trying to cure overtesting by telling teachers exactly how
much time to spend on testing or what the tests should be. Classroom
teachers know better than Washington how to assess their students'
progress. They also know that the real reason we have too many tests is
that there are too many Federal mandates that put high stakes on
student test results and that one more Washington decree--even if it is
only a recommendation for now--is not the way to solve the problem of
too many Federal mandates.
Instead, the best way to fix overtesting is to get rid of the Federal
mandates that are causing the problem. That is precisely what the
Senate did when it passed by an overwhelming bipartisan majority, 81 to
17, legislation to fix No Child Left Behind and give more flexibility
to States and to classroom teachers to decide which tests will decide
what progress students are making in the classroom.
No Child Left Behind, a Federal law enacted in 2001, requires
students to take 17 standardized tests over the course of their
education, kindergarten through the 12th grade. It then uses those
tests to decide whether schools and teachers are succeeding or failing.
In the Senate's work to fix No Child Left Behind, no issue stirred as
much controversy as these high-stakes tests. At first, I was among
those who thought the best way to fix overtesting might be to get rid
of the 17 Federal tests. But the more we studied the problem, the more
the issues seemed not to be the 17 Federal tests but the federally
designed system of rewarding and punishing schools and teachers that
was attached to the tests.
A third grader, for example, is required to take only one test in
math and one in reading. Each of those tests probably takes 1 or 2
hours, according to testimony before our committee. But here is the
problem: The results of these tests count so much in the federally
mandated accountability system that States and school districts are
giving students dozens of additional tests to prepare for the Federal
tests.
A new survey says students in big-city schools will take, on average,
112 mandatory standardized tests between prekindergarten and high
school graduation. That is eight tests a year. One Florida study showed
that a Fort Myers school district gave more than 160 tests to its
students. Only 17 of those are federally required.
So after hearing this, the Senate decided to keep the federally
required 17 tests. That is two annual tests in reading and math in
grades 3 through 8 and once in high school, as well as science tests
given three times between grades 3 and 12. We also kept the practice of
reporting results publicly so parents and teachers know how their
children are performing. These results are disaggregated, so we know
how students are doing based upon their gender, their ethnicity or
their disability.
[[Page S7537]]
Then, to discourage overtesting, we restored to States and classroom
teachers the responsibility for deciding how to use these Federal test
scores to measure achievement.
The Senate bill ends the high-stakes, Washington-designed, test-based
accountability system that has caused the explosion of tests in our
local schools. The Senate bill reverses the trend toward a national
school board.
I am glad to see President Obama's focus on overtesting, but let's
not make the same mistake twice by decreeing from Washington exactly
how much time to spend on tests or what the tests should be. States and
3 million teachers in 100,000 public schools are in the best position
to know what to do about overtesting our children.
Both the Senate and the House of Representatives have now passed
similar bills to fix No Child Left Behind and to reduce the Federal
mandates that are the real cause of overtesting. The best way to have
fewer and better tests in America's classrooms is for Congress to
finish its work and the President to sign our legislation before the
end of the year.
I yield the floor.
I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The bill clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. McCONNELL. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order
for the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
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