WASHINGTON — A revised No Child Left Behind law should include merit pay for teachers and new ways of judging schools, the chairman of the House education committee said Monday.
"We didn't get it all right," said Rep. George Miller, D-Calif.
The law, which is now up for renewal, requires annual math and reading tests in grades three through eight and once in high school. Schools that miss progress goals face consequences, such as having to offer tutoring or fire their principals.
Miller said the law places too much emphasis on the math and reading tests, although those are still important indicators. Other tests or graduation rates could also be used to judge how schools are doing, he said.
The teachers unions have called for that kind of change, but the Bush administration and some Republicans in Congress say it could weaken the law.
Miller also said the law should pay teachers extra for boosting student achievement, an idea generally opposed by the national teachers unions.
Miller said he hopes the full House will vote on the legislation this September.
Massachusetts Democrat Sen. Edward Kennedy, who chairs the Senate education committee, said he hopes the bill gets through his committee in September.
The legislation is a priority for President Bush, who pushed for its initial passage in 2001.
A majority of Americans want the law to be renewed as it is or with minor changes, according to a poll out Monday by Harvard University's Kennedy School of Government and Education Next, a publication of the Hoover Institution at Stanford University.
This from the Associated Press @ Newsvine.
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