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First page of Exiting School Improvement Sanctions<subtitle>Accountability, Morale, and the Successful School Turnaround Principal</subtitle>

For the past decade, parents, educators, taxpayers, and policymakers have debated the merits of No Child Left Behind (NCLB) and the effect its mandated standards-based assessments have had on schools and school districts (Sunderman, Orfield, & Kim, 2006; Valli, Croninger, Chambliss, Graeber, & Buese, 2008). NCLB required a fundamental philosophical shift in the general public’s judgment about what constitutes a good school, moving from appearances (neat classrooms or the amount of books in the library) to academic results (classroom engagement, teacher accountability, and student proficiency). In the NCLB high-stakes testing context, school success has come to be defined as students demonstrating improved proficiency on state-designed end-of-year examinations (Peck & Reitzug, 2013).

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