Saturday, July 21, 2007

Moving Beyond Identification: Assisting Schools in Improvement

Reading First suffered bad press recently due to some sweetheart deals that locked out certain programs and favored select assessment tools that are...questionable.

Despite that, Reading First is a major effort to bring resources to the classroom level in terms of curriculum and - most importantly - improved quality of instruction.

Lose the corruption. Keep the program.

Last week Education Secretary Margaret Spellings released a statement in response to a Center on Education Policy study that said:
  • state and local education officials report the Reading First program, which may be facing funding cuts, has been effective in schools identified as needing improvement;
  • professional development and curriculum alignment were cited as effective;
  • Reading First is much more popular than school choice and supplemental assistance programs.
The report advocates significant increases to Title I funds; a triage approach to school assistance; and funding for external monitoring of school improvements.
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Statement by Secretary Spellings on Center for (sic) Education Policy Report

Washington, D.C. — In response to the Center for Education Policy's release of Moving Beyond Identification: Assisting Schools in Improvement, U.S. Secretary of Education Margaret Spellings said the following:

The Center on Education Policy's report adds to overwhelming evidence that Reading First is working. These encouraging findings show that the vast majority of school districts find Reading First effective in lifting achievement at struggling schools.

Reading First is the most effective and successful reading initiative in the nation's history, and I have seen the positive results firsthand in classrooms throughout our country. Literacy is the foundation of learning, and we know that student improvements in fluency and comprehension help them succeed in other subjects as well.

Reading First is one of many meaningful No Child Left Behind reforms that are helping close the achievement gap and boost student performance. Now we must work together to reauthorize the law and restore funding this year. We can't afford to take tools like Reading First away from the students who need them most.

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