Abstracts
Foreword (full text)
Senator Edward M. Kennedy
Introduction to Assessing NCLB (full text)
The Editors
No Child Left Behind:
The Ongoing Movement for Public Education Reform
Rod Paige
From New Deal to No Deal:
No Child Left Behind and the Devolution of Responsibility for Equal Opportunity
Harvey Kantor and Robert Lowe
Will NCLB Improve or Harm Public Education?
John W. Borkowski and Maree Sneed
Domesticating a Revolution:
No Child Left Behind Reforms and State Administrative Response
Gail L. Sunderman and Gary Orfield
Real Improvement for Real Students:
Test Smarter, Serve Better
Betty J. Sternberg
Why Connecticut Sued the Federal Government over No Child Left Behind
Richard Blumenthal
Accountability without Angst?:
Public Opinion and No Child Left Behind
Frederick M. Hess
Forces of Accountability?:
The Power of Poor Parents in NCLB
John Rogers
No Child Left Behind and High School Reform
Linda Darling-Hammond
Troubling Images of Teaching in No Child Left Behind
Marilyn Cochran-Smith and Susan Lytle
High School Students’ Perspectives on the 2001 No Child Left Behind Act’s Definition of a Highly Qualified Teacher
Veronica Garcia, with Wilhemina Agbemakplido, Hanan Abdella, Oscar Lopez Jr., and Rashida T. Registe
No Child Left Behind:
The Ongoing Movement for Public Education Reform
Click here to access this article.
Rod Paige is currently chairman of Chartwell Education Group LLC, a global education consulting firm based in New York City and Washington, D.C. He served as the seventh U.S. secretary of education, from 2001 through 2005, and was the first former school superintendent to hold this position. As secretary of education, Paige oversaw the creation, authorization, and implementation of the No Child Left Behind Act. A former teacher and coach, Paige has also served as dean of the College of Education at Texas Southern University and as a board of education member and superintendent of the Houston Independent School District. In 2001, the American Association of School Administrators named him National Superintendent of the Year. Paige has also been a public policy fellow at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars.