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No Child Left Behind: 10 States Receive Waivers From Education Law's Sweeping Requirements

No Child Left Behind

First Posted: 02/09/12 06:24 AM ET Updated: 02/09/12 10:54 AM ET

By KIMBERLY HEFLING and BEN FELLER, Associated Press

WASHINGTON -- President Barack Obama on Thursday will free 10 states from the strict and sweeping requirements of the No Child Left Behind law, giving leeway to states that promise to improve how they prepare and evaluate students, The Associated Press has learned.

The first 10 states to receive the waivers are Colorado, Florida, Georgia, Indiana, Kentucky, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New Jersey, Oklahoma and Tennessee. The only state that applied for the flexibility and did not get it, New Mexico, is working with the administration to get approval, a White House official told the AP.

The official spoke on condition of anonymity because the states had not yet been announced. A total of 28 other states, the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico have signaled that they, too, plan to seek waivers - a sign of just how vast the law's burdens have become as a big deadline nears.

Obama planned to speak about the waivers Thursday afternoon at the White House.

No Child Left Behind requires all students to be proficient in reading and math by 2014. Obama's action strips away that fundamental requirement for those approved for flexibility, provided they offer a viable plan instead. Under the deal, the states must show they will prepare children for college and careers, set new targets for improving achievement among all students, develop meaningful teacher and principal evaluation systems, reward the best performing schools and focus help on the ones doing the worst.

In September, Obama called President George W. Bush's most hyped domestic accomplishment an admirable but flawed effort that hurt students instead of helping them. He said action was necessary because Congress failed to update the law despite widespread bipartisan agreement that it needs fixing. Republicans have charged that by granting waivers, Obama was overreaching his authority.

The executive action by Obama is one of his most prominent in an ongoing campaign to act on his own where Congress is rebuffing him. No Child Left Behind was primarily designed to help the nation's poor and minority children and was passed a decade ago with widespread bipartisan support. It has been up for renewal since 2007. But lawmakers have been stymied for years by competing priorities, disagreements over how much of a federal role there should be in schools and, in the recent Congress, partisan gridlock.

For all the cheers that states may have about the changes, the move also reflects the sobering reality that the United States is not close to the law's original goal: getting children to grade level in reading and math.

Critics today say the 2014 deadline was unrealistic, the law is too rigid and led to teaching to the test, and too many schools feel they are labeled as "failures." Under No Child Left Behind, schools that don't meet requirements for two years or longer face increasingly tough consequences, including busing children to higher-performing schools, offering tutoring and replacing staff.

As the deadline approaches, more schools are failing to meet requirements under the law, with nearly half not doing so last year, according to the Center on Education Policy. Center officials said that's because some states today have harder tests or have high numbers of immigrant and low-income children, but it's also because the law requires states to raise the bar each year for how many children must pass the test.

In states granted a waiver, students will still be tested annually. But starting this fall, schools in those states will no longer face the same prescriptive actions spelled out under No Child Left Behind. A school's performance will also probably be labeled differently.

The pressure will probably still be on the lowest-performing schools in states granted a waiver, but mediocre schools that aren't failing will probably see the most changes because they will feel less pressure and have more flexibility in how they spend federal dollars, said Michael Petrilli, vice president of the Thomas B. Fordham Institute, an education think tank.

While the president's action marks a change in education policy in America, the reach is limited. The populous states of Pennsylvania, Texas and California are among those that have not said they will seek a waiver, although they could still do so later.

On Tuesday, Education Secretary Arne Duncan said states without a waiver will be held to the standards of No Child Left Behind because "it's the law of the land."

Some conservatives viewed Obama's plan not as giving more flexibility to states, but as imposing his vision on them. Rep. John Kline, R-Minn., who chairs the House Education and Workforce Committee, said Thursday that, "This notion that Congress is sort of an impediment to be bypassed, I find very, very troubling in many, many ways."

Duncan maintained this week that the administration "desperately" wants Congress to fix the law.

In an election year in a divided Congress, that appears unlikely to happen.

Kline, who was speaking at an event at the conservative American Enterprise Institute, said that in the House there was some bipartisan agreement on how to fix No Child Left Behind, but in many areas there was disagreement. He said later in the day he would release Republican-written legislation that seeks to restore states' authority in education.

California Rep. George Miller, the committee's ranking Democrat, has said such partisanship "means the end" to No Child Left Behind reform in this Congress. Sen. Tom Harkin, D-Iowa, who chairs the Senate committee with jurisdiction over education, has said he believes it "would be difficult to find a path forward" without a bipartisan bill in the House.

A Senate committee last fall passed a bipartisan bill to update the law, but it was opposed by the administration and did not go before the full Senate for a vote.

 
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05:14 PM on 02/09/2012
In our local school system in Pennsylvania, the "No Child Left Behind" law has shown the weaknesses in how public schools teach our children. Thre are schools who are doing a better job than others for various reasons and if there are no standards of achievement, the bad teachers and school managers will never implement what is needed to get better results. What Obama has done again, which is unconstitutional, is change a law without the approval of Congress. There are many reasons why schools fail, but to give each state the right to set their own standards allows them to keep the status quo. Many High School graduates cannot read. The game is to pass the problem along to the next level. These kids come out unemployable. We need these standards. There can be some flexibility in schools with high minority or foreign born students, but there have to be real goals. The reason Obama has done this is because the Teachers' Union, his supporters, do not like to have their teachers evaluated by this law and would rather have bad teachers stay in charge of our children.
Instead of using his power to promote and push for changes in the law with Congress, he would rather say it is hopeless, blame the Republicans, and change the law to further his self-interest and not the needs of our children.
04:42 PM on 02/09/2012
In an article called “They Say” in the Readers Digest” the moral was, there is no one but it is a spread of rumour, You cannot pinpoint any, it is they, a rumour mongering. Greece has reached a tentative agreement on new austerity cuts demanded by creditors to release a euro130 billion ($173 billion) bailout, hours before a crucial meeting of finance ministers in Brussels, Prime Minister Lucas Papademos' office said Thursday. A spokeswoman said the agreement with the majority Socialists and the conservatives will allow alternative cuts to those rejected early Thursday during a marathon meeting of the three coalition party leaders. No details were available on what alternative measures would be chosen. The spokeswoman spoke on customary condition of anonymity. Well this is. It may be true but I would read this with skepticism. If it true, I am happy. "Even with the growth of comparative privacy, life remained much more communal and exposed than today. Toilets often had multiple seats, for ease of conversation, and paintings regularly showed couples in bed or bath in an attitude of casual friskiness while attendants waited on them and their friends sat amiably nearby, playing cards or conversing but comfortably within sight and earshot." I thank you Firozali A.Mulla DBA
01:27 PM on 02/09/2012
Obama is so obvious when he is pandering for more votes (at the expense of children) in the next election.
Lets see, teachers (teachers Union) are really under assault because of "No child left behind". That law established some minimum standards that students (teachers) had to reach in Reading ,Writing and Arithmatic. How can I help teachers and the UNIONS.?? (screw the kids)
I"ll grant wavers from "No Child Left Behind" to as many states as I can. Since teachers, and their Unions, don't have any self created, accountablity measures, to show if teachers are actually successfully teaching students, they will be free from any REAL ACOUNTABILITY FOR ACTUALLY TEACHING STUDENTS ANYTHING.
"I HOPE ALL THE TEACHERS AND UNIONS VOTE FOR ME IN NOVEMBER."
12:36 PM on 02/09/2012
This is not good for the good teachers, testing children is fine, but to test a teacher based on the child is not good. If that were a factor during my school days, my teacher would have been fired. I don't blame my teachers, I blame myself. I could have done better, but the classrooms were overcrowded and they had no time to pick me out of all the children. I am against this, and President Obama should fire Arne Duncan.
08:48 AM on 02/10/2012
I always thought it was mostly the teachers, until I seen my daughter at work. She's a 3rd grade teacher.They continue to put demands with the no child left behind. They have no help, and up to 29 kids in a classroom, of which she has 4 to 7 special needs. It's impossible to give these kids the time they need to comprehend the work they are given. There's no artwork, music or even gym. The administrators make all the decisions because in the end the principle wants numbers and scores to make himself look good. He could give a crap about the kids. Teaching is not just giving them work and testing them. It is learning the reason why you get the answer or why the stars shine or how come the E is silent. It's not memorizing the word...its figuring out how to spell it. It has become about test scores and not about learning. She's burned out and is going to quit teaching. She has taken a cut in pay and insurance and taken on more work, but she cannot teach her classroom....because it is dictated by the govt. and all its testing. You cannot force a child learn.....you need to show them why and teach them how to find the answers. Thank you to the teachers who try! And to those who just want the scores...THATS NOT TEACHING!