NEA on ESSA
Thursday evening NEA Government Relations Director Mary Kulser andDirector of Education Policy and Practice Donna Harris-Aikensspoke on a brief conference call about NEA and the New ESSA. This will be as disjointed as my notes, and there aren't many surprises here, though a few pieces of clarifying information.
Richard Allen Smith opened by observing that "we can see the finish line" for ending NCLB. Then he handed the conference off to Kulser.
Kulser used the word "historic" roughly six billion times, noting among other things that this was the first education conference committee meeting since about 2008, with a full conference committee meeting further still in the past.
Who was naughty
She also noted that it was bipartisan and bicameral about a thousand times (my notes are sloppy). She did note that the bill came out of committee with just one nay vote, and that nay-voter was Rand Paul.
The language NEA keeps using to praise the bill which Kulser echoed is that every child will have access to quality education regardless of their zip code. She thinks ESSA will do that. She's apparently kind of an optomist.
Kulser noted that NEA had "three buckets" that marked their goals:
1) reduce testing and divorce it from high stakes
2) maximize multiple measures, noting that everyone loved the disagregated data of NCLB, but we should also be noting if all subgroups are getting art class and guidance counselors, and not just test scores.
3) when educators have a voice, students do better. Looking out for the profession. That kind of thing.
What next?
Senate vote next week. It will pass overwhelmingly. Rumors are that the Pres could be signing this CURMUDGUCATION: NEA on ESSA: