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Between September 2005 and January 2006, Public Education Network
(PEN) held a series of public hearings to give students, parents, and
community members – audiences very much affected by the law, but
usually left out of the policy debate – an opportunity to tell their side of the NCLB
story.
While education organizations and Congress hold forums and hearings to solicit
feedback from educators and school administrators about the impact of NCLB,
they seldom look beyond schools to see the impact of the law on the public and
on communities. But because schools play such a critical role in community life,
understanding how the law affects students, families, and the broader community
is critically instructive to policymakers and to others who are trying to make sure
the law meets its goals.
The hearings serve four purposes: They provide venues through which a public
record of the local capacity to implement NCLB can be compiled. They serve as a
means to inform and mobilize the public on issues pertaining to public education
and what it takes to improve its quality. They give PEN and its national partners
the information needed to bring public voices and concerns into the debate
about reshaping NCLB. And, finally, they create a public “résumé” for review by
policymakers in the context of the law’s reauthorization.
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