12. Bush Profiteers Collect Billions From No Child
Left Behind
Source:
Diatribune and Daily Kos, March, 30, 2007
Title: Bush Profiteers Collect Billions From NCLB
Author: Mandevilla
Researchers: Alan Scher and Sam Burchard
Faculty Evaluator: Karen Grady, PhD
The architect of No Child Left Behind (NCLB), President Bushs
first senior education advisor, Sandy Kress, has turned the program,
which has consistently proven disastrous in the realm of education,
into a huge success in the realm of corporate profiteering. After ushering
NCLB through the US House of Representatives in 2001 with no public
hearings, Kress went from lawmaker turning on spigots of federal
funds to lobbyist, tapping into those billions of dollars in
federal funds for private investors well connected to the Bush administration.
A statute that once promised equal access to public education to millions
of American children now instead promises billions of dollars in profits
to corporate clients through dubious processes of testing and assessment
and supplemental educational services. NCLB the Business
Roundtables revision of Lyndon Johnsons Education and Secondary
Education Act (ESEA) created a high stakes testing
system through which the private sector could siphon federal education
funds. The result has been windfall corporate profit. What was once
a cottage industry has become a corporate giant. Millions of dollars
are being spent, says Jack Jennings, director of the Center on
Education Policy, and nobody knows whats happening.
The wedding of big business and education benefits not only the interests
of the Business Roundtable, a consortium of over 300 CEOs, but countless
Bush family loyalists. Sandy Kress, chief architect of NCLB; Harold
McGraw III, textbook publisher; Bill Bennett, former Reagan education
secretary; and Neil Bush, the presidents youngest brother, have
all cashed in on the Roundtables successful national implementation
of outcome-based education. NCLBs mandated system
of state standards, state tests, and school sanctions has together transformed
our public school system into a for-profit frenzy.
Kress, former president of the Dallas School Board, began A Draft
Position for George W. Bush on K-12 Education as early as 1999.
Working successfully with then-Governor Bush in Texas for years, the
Democrat bolstered bipartisan support behind the compassionate marketing
promise to leave no child behind through the adoption of
high state standards measuring school performance. Signed into law in
early 2002, NCLB dramatically extended the federal role in public education,
mandating annual testing of children in Grades 3 to 8, providing tutoring
for children in persistently failing schools, and setting a twelve-year
timetable for closing chronic gaps in student achievement. Having then
crafted the legislation, Kress transitioned from public servant to corporate
lobbyist, guiding clients to the troth of federal funds. By 2005 he
had made upwards of $4 million from lobbying contracts.
While the Business Roundtable maintains that the high-stakes tests
administered nationwide hold schools accountable to Adequate Yearly
Progress, NCLB has instead benefited the testing industry in the
amount of between $1.9 and $5.3 billion a year. NCLB requires states
to produce interpretive, descriptive, and diagnostic reports,
all of which are provided at a price by members of the industry. Among
these are the top four or five players in the textbook market, including
the Big Three McGraw-Hill, Houghton-Mifflin, and Harcourt General
who have, since the passage of NCLB, come to dominate the testing
market. Identified by Wall Street analysts in the wake of the 2000 election
as Bush stocks, all three represent owners like Harold McGraw
III, who has longstanding ties to the Bush administration and the lobbying
efforts of Sandy Kress.
Other Kress clients, including Ignite! Learning, a company headed by
Neil Bush, and K12 Inc., a for-profit enterprise owned by Bill Bennett,
tailored themselves to vie for NCLB dollars.
Under NCLB, as school districts receive federal funding they are required
by law to hold 20 percent of those funds aside, anticipating that its
schools will fail to meet its Annual Yearly Progress formula. When that
failure is certified by test scores, the district is required
to use those set-aside federal funds to pay supplemental education service
(SES) providers. Ignite! has placed products in forty US school districts,
and K12 offers a menu of services as an option to traditional
brick-and-mortar schools, including computer-based virtual
academies, that have qualified for over $4 million in federal
grants. Under NCLB, supplemental educational services, whose results
are being increasingly challenged, reap $2 billion annually.
Nationally, there are over 1,800 approved providers of supplemental
educational services, but little in the way of regulation. To the contrary,
Michael Petrilli, former member of the Department of Education, purports,
We want as little regulation as possible so the market can be
as vibrant as possible. To that end, Kress is currently lobbying
on behalf of another bipartisan coalition to win reauthorization of
NCLB for another six years.