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Every Student Succeeds Act

Rebranding No Child Left Behind Act a Tough Marketing Call

By Ross Brenneman 鈥 March 17, 2015 6 min read
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If put in front of a focus group today, the title of the nation鈥檚 top K-12 education law would be met with the kind of enthusiasm reserved for day-old cafeteria pizza.

Congress may still be arguing about what provisions of the current law should be extended and which should be axed. But educators and politicians appear to agree on at least one thing: The outdated No Child Left Behind Act needs a fresh brand.

What, though, should replace 鈥淣CLB,鈥 which has been around since 2001, as a catchy tag for the next version of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act? And how much does it matter?

鈥淎 name is one piece of a puzzle, and it鈥檚 an important piece of a puzzle, because it鈥檚 a hook,鈥 said Sasha Stack, a partner in the Boston-based strategy group at Lippincott, a branding firm that counts companies like Southwest Airlines and Samsung among its clients.

Legislation Generator: Name the Country鈥檚 Top Education Law

鈥淭here is obviously a lot more that goes into building a brand,鈥 said Ms. Stack, who leads Lippincott鈥檚 naming team. "[There鈥檚] messaging that supports it and the tone of voice that you鈥檙e acknowledging something with, and obviously the facts you have to support it. But a name becomes that memorable thing that people latch on to.鈥

Not convinced? Think about it this way: Try searching the Federal Register for the 鈥淥bamacare Act.鈥

For better or worse, people did latch on to the No Child Left Behind brand, invoking its message in often-heated rhetorical terms.

To its critics, the law鈥檚 name offered a promise the nation hasn鈥檛 kept.

鈥淐hildren across America are sitting for eight to 10 hours of tests every spring and spending weeks to prepare for them. Testing companies are raking in billions. Schools have been closed because of their scores,鈥 wrote Diane Ravitch, the prominent education historian, in February, citing examples of what she sees as the law鈥檚 shortcomings.

And supporters of the law, who look at its successes in doing things like , recognize that there鈥檚 too much baggage to see the brand continue.

鈥淔or voters, it became synonymous with bad standardized tests,鈥 said Lanae Erickson Hatalsky, the director of social policy and politics at Third Way, a centrist think tank based in Washington. 鈥淔or people in the education community, it became synonymous with unreasonably high standards and not enough flexibility.鈥

Others see the name as a reflection of an outdated philosophy.

鈥淣ow, it鈥檚 not just about making sure children aren鈥檛 left behind; it鈥檚 more about making sure every child has the opportunity to succeed in the classroom,鈥 said Alexandra Sollberger, a vice president for the Podesta Group, who previously served as communications director for U.S. Rep. John Kline, R-Minn., the chairman of the House education committee.

Congress was supposed to renew the NCLB act in 2007, but amid political shifts . None of which helps solve the marketing conundrum.

As a GOP Senate aide working on renewing the law said: 鈥淎s long as we pass a bill and fix the flaws of No Child Left Behind, we can call it the Ham Sandwich Act.鈥

The Current Brand

Congress first passed the Elementary and Secondary Education Act 50 years ago as part of President Lyndon B. Johnson鈥檚 War on Poverty. Like many bills in that era鈥檚 far-reaching wave of federal legislation鈥攖he Civil Rights Act of 1964, the Voting Rights Act of 1965, and others鈥攖he Elementary and Secondary Education Act had a straightforward name containing all the dazzle of store-brand Cheerios.

New Packaging

As Congress works to reauthorize the nation鈥檚 main K-12 statute, it also needs to come up with a name for the revised statute. Whatever version eventually passes would likely include provisions on accountability, data, equity, and school funding, making the branding puzzle even tougher.

BRIC ARCHIVE

Though modified in bits during the course of several reauthorizations, the ESEA largely remained the ESEA until 1994, when Congress gave it a hip new attitude: the Improving America鈥檚 Schools Act.

In 2001, as Congress worked through the next ESEA reauthorization, President George W. Bush threw his support behind the phrase 鈥渘o child left behind,鈥 having adopted it while governor of Texas from the Children鈥檚 Defense Fund鈥檚 鈥淟eave No Child Behind鈥 campaign. The U.S. House of Representatives used the moniker on its version of the reauthorization, eventually winning out over the Senate鈥檚 blander Better Education for Students and Teachers Act (or, the BEST Act).

New and Improved?

A current top contender to replace the NCLB moniker is the Student Success Act, in the House.

In the Senate, Lamar Alexander, R-Tenn., has draft legislation called the Every Child Ready for College or Career Act of 2015. But as of late last week, by Mr. Alexander and Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., the chairman and ranking minority member, respectively, of the chamber鈥檚 education committee.

鈥淔rom a functional standpoint, one of the first things you want to think about is that a name be concise,鈥 Ms. Stack, of Lippincott, said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 much easier for people to remember things that are clear and intuitive and can鈥檛 be easily truncated.鈥

She also recommends that a brand have some dynamism鈥攖he ability to stay relevant should policies shift鈥攁nd that it stand out.

A name should show some optimism, too.

鈥淵ou want the name to feel forward-looking and aspirational and positive,鈥 Ms. Stack said. 鈥淚 think the current name was emphasizing the negative.鈥

As for acronyms: No.

鈥淲e actually think acronyms are not great things,鈥 Ms. Stack said, 鈥渂ecause then people know it by the acronym, but they don鈥檛 know what the acronym means.鈥

Here鈥檚 a test: What does PARCC stand for? Even if you live in a PARCC state, you might not remember the full name of the Partnership for Assessment of Readiness for College and Careers, one of two major federally funded consortia designing tests aligned with the Common Core State Standards. Smarter Balanced, the other big assessment consortium, , too. That clearly did not work out.

And do you know what ACT stands for? SAT? AASA? ASCD? All of them used to go by full names. Think about corporate and other shorthand encountered on a more frequent basis: IBM, CBS, CVS, ZIP codes. Here鈥檚 another fun one: laser. (It used to be LASER. .)

According to cognitive psychologist George A. Miller鈥檚 , the human brain is capable of remembering, on average, seven objects, give or take a couple.

The Every Child Ready for College and Career Act of 2015 is an 10-item mouthful that might reduce to something along the lines of ECRCCA. It鈥檚 memorable, in the way someone would remember watching grass grow.

Ms. Hatalsky, of Third Way, said acronyms can be an asset, though: Maybe it would be better for people just to remember that a lengthy bill name boils down to 鈥淪UCCESS.鈥

What about going retro? Everyone likes a good throwback reference.

鈥淚 think everyone can agree that 鈥楨lementary and Secondary Education Act鈥 doesn鈥檛 tug at the heartstrings or have a lot of meaning to the average family,鈥 Ms. Sollberger said. 鈥淏ut the idea of putting together a law that鈥檚 going to be designed, at its core, to promote success among every student at every school is certainly something I think would resonate with parents and teachers and school leaders.鈥

Among the names now in contention, the Student Success Act may have the optimism and alliteration that people can get behind.

鈥淚t鈥檚 not necessarily saying what the success is, but that might not be a bad thing if you don鈥檛 want to feel overly narrow in your scope,鈥 Ms. Stack, the branding expert, said.

The branding discussion might be premature, of course. First, at least one house of Congress has to hold a successful vote. Then, eight years after deadline, it needs to get something on the president鈥檚 desk.

Afterward, Congress can get around to rebranding Congress.

Library intern Maya Riser-Kositsky provided research assistance.
A version of this article appeared in the March 18, 2015 edition of 澳门跑狗论坛 as Rebranding NCLB Law a Tough Marketing Task

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