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I may be wrong here but it's pretty much common knowledge today that this act proved to be a total disaster for obvious reasons this video chose to be vague on. While it had some good points, it also had many unrealistic and questionable goals. For starters, it placed yearly proficiency levels (which on the surface sounds good), on many different "subgroups" and even combined groups to make "super sub-groups" (English-learners, students in special education, racial minorities, social-economically challenged) and any else they could think of. AND, if any ONE group failed to meet that proficiency level, the WHOLE school was held accountable and labeled a failure. Anybody with half a brain knows this is unrealistic and perhaps done by design. This eventually led to school closings, (even if they improved), good teachers leaving the system, and good students (instead of the failing ones) transferring to other schools. This in turn led to schools lowering standards to make them look like they were reaching their goals but in reality they weren't. Another standard incorporated in the NCLB was that 100% of the students in all states were to reach proficiency level by 2013-14. Seriously, no joke, look it up. Anyway, that ship sailed, but seriously who thought this up?! The standards they placed were unrealistic and were doomed to failure from the start, which should make one wonder if that was the intent all along, and for what purpose? What happened to the money? Even waivers which were added later to try and fix the sinking ship failed. Ultimately this was replaced in 2015 by the ESSA Act (Every Students Succeeds Act) of which I still have to research but I believe is a departure from NCLB. As a final note for now, I would like to mention that it is argued that the NCLB Act forced teachers to teach "to the test" and how to "choose the right box" at the expense of creative critical thinking which requires one to think outside the box. Ultimately, I'm sure the complete reality is more complex, but since I have been assigned this topic I'm sure to find out more.
You are spot on! Even Ivy League colleges and universities do not have a 100% success rate, about 95% of students graduate on time. So, to have a 100% proficiency rate is ludicrous, 80% is considered very successful in any public school.
So much for graduating with almost a 4.0 GPA in HS. Each time I would ask a teacher to teach me something different, higher than what the class was learning, they would be fired. 8th grade teacher was fired for teaching me logarithms and he even blamed it on NCLB. I absorb information fast and learn fast. So when teacher's started teacher basic Trigonometry, I absorbed that too. Why couldn't I be a transfer student 😪? I'd probably have a better education...
I graduated with a 3.97 GPA and had the 4th highest GPA among all seniors in my class. High school is an absolute joke. Even AP classes were going at a snail's speed. I too wish I learned at a much higher level. But you know what, high school isn't JUST about academics. It helped me a lot socially and mentally. I also got to connect with some fantastic people that I still talk to today. College is definitely another beast. It's muuuuch faster and more in-depth, and STEM classes are so difficult. But I like this! I like being challenged. Only negative is I absolutely cannot slack off because it's America. It costs way too much money for something I personally think should be a human right.
Wow, thanks NCLB! My health teacher gives me a D- on a paper and dosen't like my definition of a role model, but another guy named Yusuf writes the same paper, but its shorter, and he gave less of a definition of a "role model" He was Given a C- She also gave me a D- on a "flyer" I was supposed to make about anti-bullying. I followed all 2 directions and she gave me a D- because it looked "Half-assed"
Joe R. When I took chemistry my teacher told me I was a c student and gave every paper a c without any markings and I had no idea what answer was suppose to be wrong. I told him it was unfair so he started giving me Ds so I started kissing up and he gave me back my C's. A boy he liked copied my essay like homework word for word and he got an A on it, while I got a C. My final exams marked by state officials or other teachers I received As,and my final grade was a low B. That teacher died a few years ago and I believe the world is a better place without him.
I hate the way my school works. I don't know if this applies to all school or if it's only the one I go to but in my school they allow students who don't show up to class more than 2 times a month, don't do any work, fail the quizzes and tests, and fail the class to pass to the next grade while someone like me who's probably smarter than 90% of the class is stuck with them because I wasn't in that school for 6th grade so I can't be in the advanced classes. And I was on a college grade reading level in 8th grade but I'm still stuck in the 9th grade class with a bunch of morons who can't even pronounce thou correctly. We're reading Romeo and Juliet so the word comes up a lot. Not sure if this law affects that but I just felt like ranting
no public schools throughout the United States should deal with bad teachers. Instead, they need qualified instructors to properly teach students in the classrooms for a change.
@@erickrobson4293 they could probably find that money up the gym coaches ass if they tried. Sports gets all the money, even if the team sucks monumentally.
This sounds to me like they had the right idea, it was most likely just not enforced. Schools aren't going to get rid of bad teachers, I know my sons school didn't. I literally had to remove him from at least one class per year due to poor teaching abilities.
As someone who had unrecognized autism in elementary school I am so glad this existed. Otherwise I would have been the biggest embarrassment to myself being the oldest person in 6th grade through Highschool, and I already had major problems with bullying.
You were held back in KINDERGARTEN? Sorry, maybe I don't understand it because I'm not America (I'm European), but how can a child be held back in kindergarten?
The good: the kids pass grades The bad: unnecessary pressure/violence on teachers, parents literally don't teach anything to children, children don't know what are the rewards for good effort is, lowers all standards of education, corrupts all participants (teachers are forced to give passing scores so they don't lose their job), future of the students is bleak and doomed,
I am sorry for everyone who gone through this excuse of a program I had to fortunate luck to be born in 2010 when I was still a baby, so I never had to do any math or homework that much Have a nice day.
to bad they did not have this back in the 90s my 3rd and 4th grade teacher did pretty much no teaching at all pretty much treated everyone in their class i mean all the kids as if their in kindergarten 6 7 barely learn anything learn times tables instead of going forward they would go lazy way and teach me time tables all the way to 12 grade it would be 2nd half of the school year where they finally teach division list go on two of those school those no longer existed so im guessing n child left behind close those schools
Your Absolutely right about the 90s being very different. My brother was left back twice in the 90s, and I know that would not have been the case if he was protected by the laws of today.
I didn't enjoy growing up with this. Test after test... all the teachers just crammed us with info right before and we didn't get a chance to do many fun things.
@@twaynewade2544 multiple choice test after multiple choice test, yeah I agree. More often than not it took classes forever to move because you had that one kid screwing off the whole time, when the school had a detention center it wasn't as bad, the one's without were a nightmare. I found out my senior year I could have skimmed by doing bare minimum by just passing those stupid standardized tests. Best part were the teachers that knew the system was a sham and let you know beforehand, then have you memorize the test questions and answers. The shit was a joke considering there were still garbage teachers who I'm surprised were qualified for a job let alone a teaching position.
I still see kids getting left be hind most teachers just don’t care at all ! They just want a big paycheck school district should check the teacher making sure that their kid are testing good
This should be changed to No Student With Epilepsy Left Behind! Why? Because whenever I had a seizure at school, I was suspended from school and had to go to the office every time the next day to get readmitted back in! I consider myself lucky that I even got enough credits to graduate! No student with epilepsy should have to get suspended from school nor be unable to make up for the credits they had to miss on that particular day.
WTF!? That's illegal. If these were actual suspensions, that's absurd. Students with documented health conditions should not be suspended if their health condition is the reason. There are laws that say you are entitled to free appropriate public education (FAPE) and that would include a school that is sensitive to your needs.
They couldn't suspend you for medical illness unless you went to a private school that wanted to put you in special education classes that your obvious intelligence would have suffered in and they therefore punished you for disrupting the other students school time....which is cruel and unusual when you were just trying to be normal and learn with the other kids.
"During this time, the percentage with high school completion or higher increased from 88 to 94 percent"-Gov Website. Anyway, with no child gets left behind being a thing one may really question if like not anyone really graduated.
Wow, thanks NCLB! My health teacher gives me a D- on a paper and dosen't like my definition of a role model, but another guy named Yusuf writes the same paper, but its shorter, and he gave less of a definition of a "role model" He was Given a C- She also gave me a D- on a "flyer" I was supposed to make about anti-bullying. I followed all 2 directions and she gave me a D- because it looked "Half-assed"
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I like your honesty
Your*
I win
Sorry..my bad.. wrong room...came here looking for donda
you know..... on paper it sounds great! but as soon as you step into a high school you can spot all the errors
Exactly. It’s such a sweet name though. No Child Left Behind
@@heroray87 But it did the complete opposite of the name.
Ace of Spades oh it did and I’m against it for sure but i just yk love the name
No child can be left behind if all of them never make any progress.
Too bad it was toilet paper
man, i love being 3 years into high school with a 3rd grade knowledge level because i wasn’t held back to actually learn anything
I may be wrong here but it's pretty much common knowledge today that this act proved to be a total disaster for obvious reasons this video chose to be vague on. While it had some good points, it also had many unrealistic and questionable goals. For starters, it placed yearly proficiency levels (which on the surface sounds good), on many different "subgroups" and even combined groups to make "super sub-groups" (English-learners, students in special education, racial minorities, social-economically challenged) and any else they could think of. AND, if any ONE group failed to meet that proficiency level, the WHOLE school was held accountable and labeled a failure. Anybody with half a brain knows this is unrealistic and perhaps done by design. This eventually led to school closings, (even if they improved), good teachers leaving the system, and good students (instead of the failing ones) transferring to other schools. This in turn led to schools lowering standards to make them look like they were reaching their goals but in reality they weren't. Another standard incorporated in the NCLB was that 100% of the students in all states were to reach proficiency level by 2013-14. Seriously, no joke, look it up. Anyway, that ship sailed, but seriously who thought this up?! The standards they placed were unrealistic and were doomed to failure from the start, which should make one wonder if that was the intent all along, and for what purpose? What happened to the money? Even waivers which were added later to try and fix the sinking ship failed. Ultimately this was replaced in 2015 by the ESSA Act (Every Students Succeeds Act) of which I still have to research but I believe is a departure from NCLB. As a final note for now, I would like to mention that it is argued that the NCLB Act forced teachers to teach "to the test" and how to "choose the right box" at the expense of creative critical thinking which requires one to think outside the box. Ultimately, I'm sure the complete reality is more complex, but since I have been assigned this topic I'm sure to find out more.
You are spot on! Even Ivy League colleges and universities do not have a 100% success rate, about 95% of students graduate on time. So, to have a 100% proficiency rate is ludicrous, 80% is considered very successful in any public school.
Did they put whites in social-minority groups?
The hero the world needs but doesn't deserve preach🐧
We call that socialism in schools.
@@CiA-zm2me Ironic, because the NCLB Act was approved in a Republican government.
So much for graduating with almost a 4.0 GPA in HS. Each time I would ask a teacher to teach me something different, higher than what the class was learning, they would be fired. 8th grade teacher was fired for teaching me logarithms and he even blamed it on NCLB. I absorb information fast and learn fast. So when teacher's started teacher basic Trigonometry, I absorbed that too. Why couldn't I be a transfer student 😪? I'd probably have a better education...
I graduated with a 3.97 GPA and had the 4th highest GPA among all seniors in my class. High school is an absolute joke. Even AP classes were going at a snail's speed. I too wish I learned at a much higher level. But you know what, high school isn't JUST about academics. It helped me a lot socially and mentally. I also got to connect with some fantastic people that I still talk to today.
College is definitely another beast. It's muuuuch faster and more in-depth, and STEM classes are so difficult. But I like this! I like being challenged. Only negative is I absolutely cannot slack off because it's America. It costs way too much money for something I personally think should be a human right.
This was the worst. So much testing.
your profile goes perfectly with your comment
Nah, Common Core was and is the worst.
Wow, thanks NCLB! My health teacher gives me a D- on a paper and dosen't like my definition of a role model, but another guy named
Yusuf writes the same paper, but its shorter, and he gave less of a definition of a "role model"
He was Given a C-
She also gave me a D- on a "flyer" I was supposed to make about anti-bullying. I followed all 2 directions and she gave me a D- because it looked "Half-assed"
Joe R. When I took chemistry my teacher told me I was a c student and gave every paper a c without any markings and I had no idea what answer was suppose to be wrong. I told him it was unfair so he started giving me Ds so I started kissing up and he gave me back my C's. A boy he liked copied my essay like homework word for word and he got an A on it, while I got a C. My final exams marked by state officials or other teachers I received As,and my final grade was a low B. That teacher died a few years ago and I believe the world is a better place without him.
I hate the way my school works. I don't know if this applies to all school or if it's only the one I go to but in my school they allow students who don't show up to class more than 2 times a month, don't do any work, fail the quizzes and tests, and fail the class to pass to the next grade while someone like me who's probably smarter than 90% of the class is stuck with them because I wasn't in that school for 6th grade so I can't be in the advanced classes. And I was on a college grade reading level in 8th grade but I'm still stuck in the 9th grade class with a bunch of morons who can't even pronounce thou correctly. We're reading Romeo and Juliet so the word comes up a lot. Not sure if this law affects that but I just felt like ranting
BACK AGAIN I HAD MY BACK AGAINST THE WALL, NEVER COUNT ON YALL ALWAYS COUNT ON GOD
he’s done miracles on me
no public schools throughout the United States should deal with bad teachers. Instead, they need qualified instructors to properly teach students in the classrooms for a change.
There’s a shortage of teachers so of course quality is down (supply vs demand). Which is whey we need more teachers and less “support” staff
Yah if only they didn’t get paid dog crap for a huge responsibility of human society
@@erickrobson4293 they could probably find that money up the gym coaches ass if they tried. Sports gets all the money, even if the team sucks monumentally.
DONDA
This sounds to me like they had the right idea, it was most likely just not enforced. Schools aren't going to get rid of bad teachers, I know my sons school didn't. I literally had to remove him from at least one class per year due to poor teaching abilities.
Like the girl in the Olympics who can't get a full score because she's too good
It means "Yes adult right in front of", teachers.
As someone who had unrecognized autism in elementary school I am so glad this existed. Otherwise I would have been the biggest embarrassment to myself being the oldest person in 6th grade through Highschool, and I already had major problems with bullying.
Doing good now?
I don’t know who passed this but HS is hell because of them.
George W. Bush did but you shouldn't worry about it if you're still in high school
b u s h
Me failing those test and being held back in third grade. 😛seriously though I could never past those dang test
Because of my kindergarten teacher held me back, it left me a bad mark in my life. Saw all my friends leave me while I’m stuck behind.
You were held back in KINDERGARTEN? Sorry, maybe I don't understand it because I'm not America (I'm European), but how can a child be held back in kindergarten?
@@NIDELLANEUM you're not supposed to be held back so early, unless you literally didn't attend a single class.
The good: the kids pass grades
The bad: unnecessary pressure/violence on teachers, parents literally don't teach anything to children, children don't know what are the rewards for good effort is, lowers all standards of education, corrupts all participants (teachers are forced to give passing scores so they don't lose their job), future of the students is bleak and doomed,
I am sorry for everyone who gone through this excuse of a program I had to fortunate luck to be born in 2010 when I was still a baby, so I never had to do any math or homework that much Have a nice day.
to bad they did not have this back in the 90s my 3rd and 4th grade teacher did pretty much no teaching at all pretty much treated everyone in their class i mean all the kids as if their in kindergarten
6 7 barely learn anything learn times tables instead of going forward they would go lazy way and teach me time tables all the way to 12 grade it would be 2nd half of the school year where they finally teach division
list go on
two of those school those no longer existed so im guessing n child left behind close those schools
Your Absolutely right about the 90s being very different. My brother was left back twice in the 90s, and I know that would not have been the case if he was protected by the laws of today.
I didn't enjoy growing up with this. Test after test... all the teachers just crammed us with info right before and we didn't get a chance to do many fun things.
@@twaynewade2544 multiple choice test after multiple choice test, yeah I agree. More often than not it took classes forever to move because you had that one kid screwing off the whole time, when the school had a detention center it wasn't as bad, the one's without were a nightmare.
I found out my senior year I could have skimmed by doing bare minimum by just passing those stupid standardized tests.
Best part were the teachers that knew the system was a sham and let you know beforehand, then have you memorize the test questions and answers. The shit was a joke considering there were still garbage teachers who I'm surprised were qualified for a job let alone a teaching position.
I still see kids getting left be hind most teachers just don’t care at all ! They just want a big paycheck school district should check the teacher making sure that their kid are testing good
big pay check? teachers are very underpaid
@@blueciffer1653Important job should be notice.
This should be changed to No Student With Epilepsy Left Behind!
Why?
Because whenever I had a seizure at school, I was suspended from school and had to go to the office every time the next day to get readmitted back in!
I consider myself lucky that I even got enough credits to graduate!
No student with epilepsy should have to get suspended from school nor be unable to make up for the credits they had to miss on that particular day.
WTF!? That's illegal. If these were actual suspensions, that's absurd. Students with documented health conditions should not be suspended if their health condition is the reason. There are laws that say you are entitled to free appropriate public education (FAPE) and that would include a school that is sensitive to your needs.
that's messed up
They couldn't suspend you for medical illness unless you went to a private school that wanted to put you in special education classes that your obvious intelligence would have suffered in and they therefore punished you for disrupting the other students school time....which is cruel and unusual when you were just trying to be normal and learn with the other kids.
So this is the Dutch 'CITO-test', but American
Explained & Summarized or Explained & Standardized? ...Buh dum tsss
You said something about a child's left behind?
For a video based on schooling it is odd kindergarten is spelled wrong.
But what does this have to do with the military... I got a letter from my school and I’m confused
Equality equal I agree
NCLB isn't a policy it's a platitude.
i have been left behind
Ahh so its all a school project bs!
TRAFFICKING
I'd rather go back to this than continue the Common Core National Standard.
Yea sure stalker
it is bad!
SoccerEssential13 I don't like it and its every child left behind.
"During this time, the percentage with high school completion or higher increased from 88 to 94 percent"-Gov Website. Anyway, with no child gets left behind being a thing one may really question if like not anyone really graduated.
#NPR
Wow, thanks NCLB! My health teacher gives me a D- on a paper and dosen't like my definition of a role model, but another guy named
Yusuf writes the same paper, but its shorter, and he gave less of a definition of a "role model"
He was Given a C-
She also gave me a D- on a "flyer" I was supposed to make about anti-bullying. I followed all 2 directions and she gave me a D- because it looked "Half-assed"