More schools face federal penalties

State errs in its No Child Left Behind tally
Saturday, October 16, 2004 • BY JOHN MOONEY • Star-Ledger Staff

More than 150 schools in New Jersey were mislabeled by the state last month under the federal No Child Left Behind act, with some now facing greater sanctions than they thought, others fewer.

More than two dozen schools moved closer to getting off the law's unflattering lists of those failing to meet the required student performance levels, according to a state announcement yesterday.

Hackettstown, Hawthorne and Somerset County Vocational high schools came off the lists altogether.

But most moved the other way, now heading toward greater penalties than they first were told, such as requirements that students be offered a chance to transfer to another school or receive free extra tutoring.

"We apologize for any inconvenience or confusion this may have caused, and we are issuing this correction so that the districts and the department are working off of the same page," said Isaac Bryant, the assistant state education commissioner whose office oversees implementation of the federal law.

"We know now what went wrong, and we have taken the right steps to make sure this does not happen in the future," he said.

A full list of the schools affected is available through the state Department of Education's Web site: www.state.nj.us/njded/news/ 1015ayp.htm.

The overall number of schools making the lists did not change much, falling from 621 schools to 597, still about a quarter of the schools statewide. Yet the department's errors only added to many administrators' frustrations with federal mandates they haven't much liked in the first place.

North Brunswick saw its John Adams Elementary School get a reprieve after it was found to have met all the test score targets in 2004, moving it from the "early warning" list to a transitional category.

But its Parsons Elementary School went the other way, now required to provide families a chance to go elsewhere. The letters will go out soon, said the district's superintendent, but he's not sure where students would find the extra room.

"We're right at capacity in every one of our schools, and then there would be transportation costs, too," said Superintendent Robert Rimmer. "This can cause a lot more problems than any of us anticipated.

"Everybody agrees the intention of the law is admirable," he said. "But the implementation, like in any bureaucratic program, creates nightmares for districts."

Even the principal of one school benefiting from the correction said it speaks more to what he called the "folly" of the law than any program changes he made.

Hawthorne High School came off the list altogether because it was found to have fewer than 35 special-education students, the state's new cutoff for these scores to be counted.

"I like to think we improve all the time, but really all that happened is the state changed the number," said Principal David Browne. "If this doesn't illustrate the ridiculous nature of No Child Left Behind, nothing will."


John Mooney covers education. He can be reached at jmooney@star ledger.com, or (973) 392-1548.
© 2004 The Star-Ledger. Used by NJ.com with permission.

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