Sunday, April 29, 2007

House Committee Investigates Mismanagement of Reading First

On Friday, April 20, the House Education and Labor Committee raised questions about mismanagement by the Department of Education in running the Reading First program. The reading initiative was established during the 2001 reauthorization of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA-NCLB), aimed at improving literacy among at-risk children. Despite the possible ethical violations in the administration of the program, it has helped participating students improve their reading skills by over 15 percent.
Though the program has been a success, Congress is scrutinizing possible conflicts of interest by experts involved in both the assessment and the reading initiative's implementation. Additional allegations have been made that those in charge of selecting the materials required for the program are also selling the materials themselves, creating a certain profit with material that may not be the most beneficial to students.
The Education and Labor Committee will continue to scrutinize these practices as they prepare legislation for the reauthorization of ESEA-NCLB. As noted by Chairman George Miller of California during the hearing "There is no question that this mismanagement and these conflicts of interest undermined the program and the public's confidence in it. In reauthorization, this committee will act on legislation to explicitly prohibit these types of conflicts."