Describe the five main requirements of the No Child Left Behind Act
What will be an ideal response?
(1) Standards. States must establish "challenging" content and performance standards in math, reading/language arts, and science for all students from 3rd through 8th grade. What constitutes challenging standards is left to the discretion of the states. (2) Testing. All states must test students in grades three through eight each year on that state's standards. Decisions about the types of tests to use, the lengths of the tests, and the difficulty of the tests, are left to each state. (3) Adequate Yearly Progress, or AYP. All schools must have a certain percentage of students scoring at the proficient or higher level each year so that by 2014 all students, including low-SES students, English language learners, and students with disabilities, have reached proficiency in math and reading. 4) Reporting. All school districts must issue an annual report card to the public that describes how all groups performed that year. (5) Accountability. NCLB specifies increasingly severe penalties for schools that fail to achieve AYP for two or more consecutive years. These may include labeling a school as "needs improvement," allowing students to transfer to other schools in the district, providing students with supplemental instructional services, and replacing the entire staff of a school.
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Networks and media that use broadband technologies transmit signals at much slower speeds than traditional network configurations
a. True b. False
Using a database can help students ask questions that seek to test relationships among ideas
Indicate whether the statement is true or false.
Of the following, which is the best description of English Learners (ELs)?
a. Students who are skilled in speaking, reading, and writing English b. Children who are bilingual c. Students who understand basic grammar, punctuation, and spelling in English d. Students whose first or home language is not English
According to David Labaree's book How to Succeed in School without Really Learning (1997), since the late 1800s Americans have increasingly viewed schooling as
a. a way to get ahead of other people by acquiring a credential b. a social equalizer c. an irrelevant intellectual exercise d. unfair to the middle class