First Lady defends criticized ‘No Child’ tests

Greg Toppo:

No Child Left Behind can’t catch a break lately on the campaign trail. Barack Obama last week slammed its “broken promises” and John McCain called it “a good beginning” that “has to be fixed.”
Ask first lady Laura Bush and she’ll tell you that, come what may, the 2002 education law, championed by President Bush, will be a lasting part of her husband’s legacy.
Its requirement for annual testing in reading and math for virtually all children in grades three through eight has led critics to charge that it focuses too much on testing, but Mrs. Bush says she doesn’t buy it.
“We would never go to a doctor and say, ‘I’m sick, you can’t try to diagnose me … you can’t use any kind of test,” she says.