Back in 2011, states chafing under the badly outdated No Child Left Behind Act leapt at the Obama administration鈥檚 offer of relief from the mandates at the center of the law鈥攁nd the chance to forge a new and innovative partnership with the federal government to bolster standards, pinpoint good teachers, and fix low-performing schools.
Three years later, much of the political sheen has come off the resulting NCLB waivers.
The waiver initiative has been marked by policy backtracks, political pushback, and wildly divergent, complicated approaches to school accountability. The system also has generated its own set of bewildering buzzwords: 鈥渆xtension鈥 vs. 鈥渞enewal,鈥 for instance, and even a subcategory of 鈥渨aiver-waivers.鈥
Waivers 鈥済ave states room to breathe,鈥 said Andy Smarick, who served as the deputy education commissioner in New Jersey in 2011 when that state applied for the flexibility, and who later urged Congress to let the new waivers take hold before tackling an NCLB renewal.
鈥淏ut what鈥檚 left feels extremely messy,鈥 he said. 鈥淎t this point, I couldn鈥檛 even begin to define what federal K-12 policy is in the age of waivers. It seems incoherent.鈥
The biggest policy pothole experts identify over and over again: The waivers tied together the controversial Common Core State Standards, new aligned assessments, and teacher performance. The Obama administration initially expected states to roll out new tests at the exact moment new educator-evaluation plans incorporating student outcomes were also coming on line.
The combination has led to political strife in states and course corrections by the U.S. Department of Education.
鈥淭hey made so-called high-stakes testing much higher-stakes,鈥 said Margaret Spellings, an architect of the NCLB law in 2001, who later served as President George W. Bush鈥檚 secretary of education.
鈥淭hat鈥檚 placed all other reforms at risk, including their precious common core,鈥 she said. 鈥淚鈥檓 crying in my bed at night that it also places muscular accountability at risk.鈥
But in the Obama administration鈥檚 view, the waivers have allowed states to better tailor accountability systems to meet their needs, and federal officials say they have adjusted implementation after getting feedback from states.
鈥淲e鈥檙e working with states in a spirit of flexibility,鈥 said Deborah S. Delisle, the department鈥檚 assistant secretary for elementary and secondary education.
鈥淲e know that working with states to implement varying plans is very complicated,鈥 she said, 鈥渂ut we think it鈥檚 better for all involved. ... We are very much interested in the outcomes we will get for kids.鈥
鈥楾ight鈥 or 鈥楲oose鈥?
The flexibility provided by the waivers has allowed states to create more individualized accountability systems and helped school districts gain control over millions of dollars in federal funding for disadvantaged students.
And, by and large, state school chiefs with waivers continue to see them as an improvement over the No Child Left Behind law, and nearly all are seeking one-year extensions offered by the Education Department this summer.
Some states say that by focusing attention and resources on the schools most in need of help, the waivers have led to significant gains in student achievement.
The waivers 鈥済ave us the opportunity to focus on growth,鈥 said Brenda Cassellius, the education commissioner in Minnesota. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a completely different conversation happening in our state around all kids.鈥 Nearly 80 percent of Minnesota鈥檚 lowest-performing schools have seen gains under the new system, she added.
But at least one state鈥擴tah鈥攃ontemplated voluntarily giving up its waiver, citing too much federal interference. (The Beehive State ultimately decided this month to apply for an extension.)
And some states that didn鈥檛 win approval for the flexibility, including California, North Dakota, and Vermont, don鈥檛 feel that they are missing out on much.
鈥淲e鈥檝e spent much less time looking over our shoulder and looking at what the federal government is doing,鈥 said Richard Zeiger, the chief deputy superintendent in California. The absence of a waiver 鈥渆nabled us to strike our own pathway,鈥 he said, particularly in the rollout of the common-core standards, which has been a relatively smooth process in the Golden State.
Even state officials with a generally positive view of the waivers say the Education Department has at times fallen short of its rhetoric on collaboration.
鈥淭he department likes to say, 鈥榃e鈥檙e tight on goals and loose on means,鈥 鈥 said Terry Holliday, the commissioner of education in Kentucky, quoting one of Secretary of Education Arne Duncan鈥檚 favorite lines. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 know that they鈥檙e too loose on means.鈥 He noted, for instance, that states had to fill out a more-than-150-page application for a one-year waiver extension鈥攁 process that was supposed to have been 鈥渟treamlined.鈥
But Mr. Holliday鈥攚ho wrote a memo for skeptical district superintendents in his state extolling the virtues of the NCLB waivers鈥攊s sympathetic to the motivations behind all the bureaucratic back-and-forth.
The Obama administration, he said, is up against intense pressure from civil rights groups to hold states to their promises of raising the achievement of all students, including members of minority groups and those with disabilities.
鈥淚nnovation is probably the last thing they鈥檙e thinking about right now,鈥 Mr. Holliday said of federal officials. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e probably just thinking about how to get through and let states keep their waivers.鈥
Patchwork of Systems
The waivers have been panned by the administration鈥檚 own congressional allies鈥攊ncluding U.S. Rep. George Miller of California, the top Democrat on the House education committee, and lawmakers who represent majority-minority districts鈥攁s a retreat from accountability, particularly for the poor and minority students that the NCLB law was designed to protect.
鈥淭he performance of individual groups of kids is not a strong signal鈥 in accountability systems developed under the waivers, said Daria Hall, the director of K-12 policy development at the Education Trust, a Washington group that advocates on behalf of low-income and minority students. 鈥淚f you鈥檙e going to have one commonality across these systems, that鈥檚 a horrible one to have.鈥
At this point, it鈥檚 hard to know just how subgroups of students鈥攊ncluding racial minorities and students in special education鈥攈ave fared under the waivers, in part because the systems are so complex and variant.
For instance, many state accountability systems consider whether schools are able to close achievement gaps, but they all define that accomplishment differently, said Morgan Polikoff, an assistant professor of education at the University of Southern California鈥檚 Rossier School of Education.
Some states, for example, are using in-school gaps, while others are looking at the gap between school and state averages, he said. And while all states are looking at growth in student performance, some are looking at growth measured against a standard, while others are looking at actual growth versus where students are projected to be.
The differences are highly technical, but they are important in gauging the impact of the waivers on student outcomes, particularly for members of subgroups.
At the same time, tests and standards in nearly every state are changing, which makes effects of the new systems harder to study and comprehend.
鈥淭he unfortunate truth is that it will be a few years before we can really get a sense of what鈥檚 working and what鈥檚 not,鈥 Mr. Polikoff said.
Adding to the complexity: The Education Department has constantly revised waiver policies and expectations. And it鈥檚 been rigid in some respects, while doing a significant about-face in others.
Arguably, the administration took the hardest line on teacher evaluation. It yanked Washington state鈥檚 waiver because of a state law allowing districts to use their own local test scores, rather than results of state exams, in teacher evaluations. It also placed Arizona, Kansas, and Oregon in 鈥渉igh risk鈥 status鈥攎eaning in danger of losing their waivers鈥攂ecause of teacher-evaluation issues.
And federal approval of Illinois鈥 waiver took more than two years, primarily because the state鈥檚 timeline for fully implementing its teacher-evaluation system was one year later than the administration wanted.
In some instances, however, the Education Department has reversed course, offering states serious wiggle room on teacher evaluation, and eventually allowing some states to hang on to their waivers for an extra year, even if their performance-review systems weren鈥檛 ready to go.
Such changes give the impression that the department 鈥渄idn鈥檛 really have a clear long-term vision of how this was going to play out,鈥 said Mr. Smarick, who is now a partner at the consulting firm Bellwether Education Partners.
But Mr. Holliday, the Kentucky schools chief, said the department is only responding to states鈥 concerns. 鈥淲e鈥檙e the ones asking for the twists and turns,鈥 he said.
What鈥檚 Next?
In the background is a ticking clock: The Obama administration will be out of power in January 2017. That鈥檚 right in the middle of the school year in which many states have to use their new, student-outcome-based systems of teacher evaluation to make critical personnel decisions, such as which teachers are promoted or fired.
Many observers expect that reauthorization of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act, the law currently known as No Child Left Behind, will still be stalled at that point. It鈥檚 far too early to predict whether President Barack Obama鈥檚 successor will continue with the waiver system or scrap it for a new approach to accountability.
鈥淎t this point, we would really like the reauthorization to take place. All of this is stopgap, and that鈥檚 unfortunate,鈥 said Kathleen Smith, the outgoing director of Virginia鈥檚 office of school improvement.
She said some district officials are reluctant to invest resources in new strategies鈥攊ncluding new teacher-evaluation systems鈥攌nowing the landscape could suddenly change.
鈥淭hey don鈥檛 know what will pay off in the long run,鈥 Ms. Smith said.