Lawmakers, educators debate how to rate school performance

Dec. 17, 2007
Proposed changes to No Child Left Behind Act stall amid questions of what government should be measuring

A debate over the formula for rating the nation's public schools has stalled efforts in Congress to revise the No Child Left Behind law. At issue: What's the best way to measure whether schools are doing their job? For nearly six years, the federal government has defined school success mainly by how many students pass state reading and math tests. But a growing number of educators and lawmakers are pushing to give more weight to graduation rates, achievement in science and history and even physical education.

Click here to read The Washington Post article.

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