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Cost Benefit Analysis of the No Child Left Behind Act of 2001 (NCLB)

Cost Benefit Analysis of the No Child Left Behind Act of 2001 (NCLB). Presented by Surendrakumar Bagde Peter Edelman David Lee 4/28/2004. NCLB Background. We explored three aspects NCLB. Background of NCLB Declining test scores Other education acts NCLB features NCLB Costs

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Cost Benefit Analysis of the No Child Left Behind Act of 2001 (NCLB)

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  1. Cost Benefit Analysis of the No Child Left Behind Act of 2001 (NCLB) Presented by Surendrakumar Bagde Peter Edelman David Lee 4/28/2004

  2. NCLB Background

  3. We explored three aspects NCLB • Background of NCLB • Declining test scores • Other education acts • NCLB features • NCLB Costs • NCLB Benefits

  4. Student Intellectual Achievement Declined in the 1970’s General Intellectual Achievement (GIA) declined in the 1970’s Source: Bishop (1989)

  5. NCLB Established Accountability Standards that Are Expected to Enhance Student Achievement • Adequate Yearly Progress (AYP) • Testing • States set the standards • Penalties for failure to meet AYP

  6. Congress Responded to the Decline • Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 (ESEA) • Provided funding and assistance to K-12 schools • No Child Left Behind Act of 2001 (NCLB) • Maintains ESEA principles & act appropriations • Establishes accountability standards

  7. NCLB requirements have caused controversy • Conflicts with state standards • Forces schools to focus on testing • Addresses failure through punishment instead of assistance

  8. NCLB Costs

  9. Costs of the NCLB Program are Hotly Debated • A politically charged debate • Federal vs. State and Local • Supporters vs. Haters • Fundamental disagreement on what the cost scope of the NCLB project should be • Difference in expected States’ level in academic proficiency under IASA vs. actual proficiency

  10. Goals of NCLB (2002~2014) • Meet state-set standards for subject mastery within time-frame • Ensure states assess student knowledge to check #1 • Define and implement teacher quality improvement efforts to achieve #2 • Define ways that can improve schools’ performance • Ensure student performance feedback to parents is effective • Gives freedom in allocation of funds by states to achieve all these goals

  11. Cost Components of NCLB • Accountability (AYP and Student Assessments) • Annual testing of students • Reading (grades 3~8) • Math (grades 3~8) • Science (grades 3~5, 6~9, and 10~12) • English for LEP students • Disability students (IDEA) • Personnel • Attracting hiring high-quality teachers/paraprofessionals • Retention • Information Management • Database systems for analyzing data • Reporting and monitoring • School Improvement • Corrective action on “delinquent” schools • Student support systems to increase performance

  12. Cost Estimates (2002~2006):NCLB incremental costs over IASA, etc. • Costs for 2002~3 and 2003~4 are actual figures • Costs from 2004~2008 are projections by ELC

  13. Cost Estimates (2006~2010):NCLB incremental costs over IASA, etc. • We have estimated cost projections from 2008~2014

  14. Cost Estimates (2010~2014):NCLB incremental costs over IASA, etc.

  15. Total Cost Estimates for NCLB

  16. NCLB Benefits

  17. Pennsylvania System of School Assessment (PSSA) • Determines how well children are learning at certain grade levels. • Subjects are: reading, math and writing • PSSA has a range of 800-1600 • The standard deviation for 5th grade math is 67.1, reading 5th grade is 59.59,8th grade math is 65.8, • The mean is around 1330 Source: Davare (2004 )

  18. Pennsylvania System of School Assessment (PSSA) • By 2014 the minimum score at the proficient level has to be 1300 • The new mean score will be 1450 (range has to b3 1300-1600) • The quality improvement, taken as difference between two means, is 120 • In terms of today’s standard deviation, quality improvement is 1.84*s.d. Source: Davare (2004 )

  19. Economic Benefits of Quality Improvement • Test performance have the effect on earning potential of individuals • One standard deviation difference on test performance is related to 1 % difference in annual growth rates of GDP per capita • An improvement of 1 s.d. would put U.S. student performance in line with that of students in a variety of high performing European countries

  20. Quality Improvements have high pay-offs Source: Hanushek (2004)

  21. Conclusions • Present value of benefits is projected to range from $6T to $17T. • Benefits far exceed costs, thus NPV is insensitive to cost levels & discount rate. • Reverses the trend of U. S. students falling behind students in other countries

  22. Bibliography: Bishop, John H. “Is the Test Score Decline Responsible for the Productivity Growth Decline?”, The American Economic Review, Vol. 79, No. 1, March 1989, p. 178-197 Wermers, Jason, “’No Child’ called impractical”, Richmond Times-Dispatch, http://www.timesdispatch.com/servlet/Satellite?pagename= RTD%2FMGArticle%2FRTD_BasicArticle&c=MGArticle&cid=1031773592674 February 10, 2004 Davare, Dave, director of research, Pennsylvania School Boards Association, personal communication through Robert Strauss, April 27, 2004 Hanushek, Eric A., “Some Simple Analytics of School Quality”, Working Paper 10229, National Bureau of Economic Research, http://www.nber.org/papers/w10229 , January, 2004 Accountability Works, “NCLB Under a Microscope”, Education Leaders Council, January 2004. Mathis, William J., “No Child Left Behind, Costs and Benefits”, Phi Delta Kappan, www.pdkintl.org/kappan/k0305mat.htm. Hanushek, Eric A., “The Importance of School Quality”, Education Next, Spring 2003, http://www.educationnext.org/unabridged/20032/141.pdf , viewed 4/29/04

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