
For more information, contact:
Denise L. Berkhalter
dberkhalter@alabamaschoolboards.org
AASB Applauds Congressman Mike Rogers
For Co-sponsoring NCLB Improvements Act of 2007
WASHINGTON, D.C. – (February 6, 2007) – Congressman Mike Rogers of Saks from Congressional District 3 has signed a Pledge to America’s Schoolchildren and will cosponsor legislation to improve the No Child Left Behind Act and help local schools better implement the law.
AASB’s leadership team met with U.S. Rep. Rogers and other members of Congress to urge them to increase federal funding for public schools, make improvements in the No Child Left Behind law, support voluntary preschool programs and help districts attract and retain excellent teachers. The school board members were in Washington, D.C., to take part in the National School Boards Association’s (NSBA) annual Federal Relations Network Conference, Jan. 28-30.
AASB’s leadership team consisted of AASB Executive Director Dr. Sandra Sims-deGraffenried, President Jim Methvin (Alabama School of Fine Arts/Homewood), President-Elect Sue Helms (Madison City), Vice President Florence Bellamy (Phenix City), Immediate Past President Tommy McDaniel of Cherokee County (Alabama School of Math and Science), Executive Committee Member Dr. Charles Elliott (Decatur), NSBA board member Robert A. Lane (Lowndes County), and Lissa Tucker, AASB director of governmental relations.
“We are delighted that Congressman Rogers once again has shown his commitment to Alabama’s schoolchildren and public schools by taking the lead to find a legislative solution to the obstacles local school boards face in implementing No Child Left Behind,” said Methvin. Congressmen Jo Bonner has also agreed to cosponsor bill H.R. 648.
Local school board leaders called on their Congressional members to sign the Pledge to America’s Schoolchildren, a nationwide, grassroots campaign designed to encourage every member of Congress to publicly show their support for America’s schoolchildren. So far, the pledge has also been signed by Alabama Congressmen Artur Davis and Robert Aderholt.
The changes to the NCLB law would more accurately reflect how schools are doing by using growth models to measure student achievement and give states more flexibility in assessing students with disabilities and students not proficient in English. A bipartisan bill, H.R. 648, calls for more than 40 specific improvements to the law.
“Local school board members must serve our public schoolchildren each day, with or without the funding promised by Congress,” said Sims-deGraffenried. “They can best demonstrate to Congress students’ needs and what flaws must be fixed in the law.”
The Alabama Association of School Boards represents all the state’s local school boards. Founded in 1949 and headquartered in Montgomery, AASB provides members with a wide array of services, including boardmanship training seminars, risk management programs, legal assistance and policy research.
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