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No Child Left Behind: Most States To Seek Exception To Education Law

No Child Left Behind

KIMBERLY HEFLING   10/13/11 05:00 PM ET   AP

WASHINGTON — A majority of states intend to take President Barack Obama up on his offer to let them get around unpopular requirements in the "No Child Left Behind" education law, the Education Department said Thursday.

Obama said last month he was frustrated that Congress didn't act to change the law that he has said is flawed, so he was moving forward with an effort to let qualifying states circumvent it.

His plan allows states to scrap a key requirement that all children show they are proficient in reading and math by 2014. To qualify, the states must submit a plan showing how they will meet certain requirements such as enacting standards to prepare students for college and testing for those standards, and by making teachers and principals more accountable by setting guidelines on evaluations.

The Education Department says 37 states, plus the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico, have notified the agency that they intend to submit a plan to get a waiver around the law. Seventeen states have said they will submit a plan by Nov. 14, which means it will be reviewed in December and could be enacted as soon as early next year.

While the opportunity to apply for a waiver was warmly received in many states, some officials see the requirements to get a waiver as intrusive or expensive to implement.

California, New York, Pennsylvania and Texas and were among the states that didn't file a notice of intention by a deadline Wednesday – although they still could apply for a waiver later.

In Texas, Debbie Ratcliffe, the spokeswoman for the Texas Education Agency, said the state was still weighing its options. Texas has not adopted what is known as the Common Core standards, a uniform national standard of what high school students should know when they graduate from high school. Because of that, Texas Education Commissioner Robert Scott has expressed concern that it could be a more arduous task for the state to prove it has adopted "college- and career-ready standards" that is a requirement for a state to get a waiver, Ratcliffe said.

Ratcliffe said Scott has also expressed concern that the state would find itself in the position of having the federal government controlling what teachers teach in their classrooms.

"Our concern is that it's exchanging one set of strings for another set of strings," Ratcliffe said.

California officials also remain undecided, although Tom Torlakson, the state superintendent of public instruction, has said in a statement that California already has a strong accountability system in place and that meeting the requirements to get a waiver would appear to cost billions of dollars. He urged Congress to rework the law.

The law, passed in 2002 under President George W. Bush, has been due for a rewrite since 2007. There's been widespread agreement that the law has problems, but a growing ideological divide in Congress has made it more difficult to get the law rewritten.

This week, Sen. Tom Harkin, D-Iowa, chairman of the Senate committee with jurisdiction over education, released an outline of a bill that he and Sen. Mike Enzi, R-Wyo., have worked on for almost a year that would overhaul the law.

Similar to Obama's plan for states, it would apply to every state in the country and not just those that sought a waiver around the law. The committee is scheduled on Tuesday to begin hammering out the bill's language.

The GOP-led House Education and the Workforce Committee has forwarded three bills that would revamp aspects of the law but has yet to fully tackle some of the more contentious issues such as teacher effectiveness and accountability.

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Associated Press writer April Castro contributed to this report from Austin, Texas.

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Kimberly Hefling can be followed at http://twitter.com/khefling

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WASHINGTON — A majority of states intend to take President Barack Obama up on his offer to let them get around unpopular requirements in the "No Child Left Behind" education law, the Education D...
WASHINGTON — A majority of states intend to take President Barack Obama up on his offer to let them get around unpopular requirements in the "No Child Left Behind" education law, the Education D...
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wstrvlr
Trust nothing you hear & only part of what you see
03:11 PM on 11/12/2011
More than a waiver is needed for this fiasco called NCLB. The whole thing needs scraped & teachers need to be given the tools required to get kids to learn. Tried & true methods that worked BEFORE NCLB was forced down the teaching institute's collective throats.

To require a teacher to be "graded" to keep their job is a joke! PARENTS are the problem in 95% of these cases. A teacher can teach till they are blue in the face, but if a child will not do their homework & the parents will not or are educationally unable to help with their children's homework each day it is brought home then it's a lost cause.

Parents, YES, PARENTS & the problems in the home is the #1 problem we have in every school in the USA. The vast majority or teachers are wonderful people & really DO care about kids & their future.

Another major problem is the government at ALL levels sticking their noses into homes & schools & telling parents & schools to let kids do what they want & never have any consequences for their actions. The results? Rude, disrespectful, ill-mannered, immoral, out of control hellions.

The solution? Let teachers teach using the tried & true methods of teaching that DO get results come test time. Teaching kids to actually THINK & REASON. Let parents & teachers discipline when, where & however often is neccessary. If that child needs a good old fashioned spanking let them have
11:10 PM on 10/16/2011
Um, does anyone realize that the waivers come with a price? both financial and educational? among those is a requirement that states implement a teacher evaluation system based primarily on student test scores. You know, those same things that are currently indicating that most schools are failing? Now, we wont fail schools, instead we'll fail teachers.. thus opening up the possibility that we can simply fire them all and hire new, younger, less experienced, and CHEAPER ones...
I have no idea what gobama is thinking, but it sure as heck isnt about fixing any schools. boo! and not just because halloween is coming!
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jvonkorff
Lawyer and School Board member, St. Cloud, MN
10:45 PM on 10/14/2011
NCLB fails a school if any subgroup within the school, including students with disabilities, and non-English speaking students, fail to reach the same proficiency levels as all other students. Certain subgroups of students come to school at kindergarten with median reading readiness skills a full standard deviation below the median. If a school cannot overcome this one standard deviation gap, then it has failed to make adequate yearly progress and is subject to sanctions with severe financial consequences. If a neighboring school has no subgroup that starts out behind, then that school is adjudged successful. Schools with high percentages of minorities, students with disabilities, or immigrants fail. And if they don't fail, the standard increases the next year, and then they fail. Schools with low percentages of minorities, etc, have not failed traditionally, but as 2014 approaches, the standard has kept increasing and all of a sudden the school districts serving majority parents are starting to fail, which is of course intolerable, hence the waivers have finally gained political support. NCLB standards were pulled out of politicians ears, totally without any research basis to suggest that all students could meet politically set arbitrary standards by 2014.
11:11 AM on 10/16/2011
We have students coming to Kindergarten with no idea how to hold a pencil, much less knowing the letters in their names. There are students so lacking in basic vocabulary that I got asked last year what a 'board' was in 4th grade. A piece of lumber, they didn't know. A first grade teacher friend spent 20 minutes trying to get her class to come up with 'ceiling'.
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jvonkorff
Lawyer and School Board member, St. Cloud, MN
11:04 PM on 10/16/2011
The only way to overcome this growing failure to prepare children for school is massively to implement programs that provide more learning time. We have squandered our Head Start resources by elevating local governance above quality programming and best practices. We have refused to implement quality day care initiatives. We have refused to lengthen the school day and the school year, even though it is clear that these initiatives are imperative. To cover up these failures, we blame teachers. While America increases the salaries of sports heroes, hedge fund managers, MBA's and stockbrokers, we attack teachers as overpaid. More and more children are coming to school unprepared, but our national leadership lacks the courage to do what needs to be done.
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nix28
Embracing honesty and its ugly step-sister, truth.
04:24 PM on 10/14/2011
"Texas has not adopted what is known as the Common Core standards, a uniform national standard of what high school students should know when they graduate from high school. Because of that, Texas Education Commissioner Robert Scott has expressed concern that it could be a more arduous task for the state to prove it has adopted "college- and career-ready standards" that is a requirement for a state to get a waiver, Ratcliffe said."

So, Texas is going to have trouble proving that it meets college and career ready standards? Why does that not surprise me? How hard could it be to look at the standards and compare them to school curriculums? I don't think the issue is with providing that the state meets these standards. I think the issue is that the state obviously doesn't meet these standards and Scott doesn't want to be faced with correctly the substandard education.
10:52 AM on 10/14/2011
"No Child Left Behind: Most States To Seek Exception To Education Law".

Another mess cleaned!
02:05 AM on 10/14/2011
Thank you Obama! This step alone will improve the education system tenfold!
11:12 AM on 10/16/2011
Even with the wavers we'll still have to take the tests.
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powerage
Take a chance while you still got a choice!
11:53 PM on 10/13/2011
Heres an idea- Stop paying for our stupid endless wars & put half of that budget into our public schools ( for increasing our teachers wages,buying computers, etc} and set up grants with the other half for those kids who want to go to college but cannot afford it and America would leave the rest of the world in the dust.
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Viper1st
multi quasi faceted
09:42 AM on 10/14/2011
And ~ stop expecting the U.S. Taxpayer to fund FREE K-12 education for over 850,000 illegals ANNUALLY at a cost of over $8 billion ANNUALLY ~ instead, using this money to educate USA-American students
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trinity
09:36 PM on 10/13/2011
Indiana will probably keep it...gives them a reason to lower teacher pay, since they want to base it on test scores only...which is great if you are a special needs or ELL teacher....
07:24 PM on 10/14/2011
My gal teaches special needs kids in Indy, she's always talking about how screwed up the edu system is there and how the teachers there don't like how things are going.
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giono
09:18 PM on 10/13/2011
Well .... wasn't that a successful education initiative...As if Race to the Top will be any better. Fix poverty, let teachers teach -- and education will get fixed.
07:27 PM on 10/14/2011
Agreed. Parents also need to go back to raising their kids again. A whole lot would get straighten up in the system.
09:53 PM on 10/15/2011
get rid of the department of education, let states dictate what is best for them, plus the states will have less regulations that keep teachers from doing their job
11:13 AM on 10/16/2011
Do you realize that the states with less regulations are the ones that drag the rest of us down? They're the ones that defund their education and then wonder why their students do badly.
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giono
08:53 PM on 10/16/2011
And the states will know better ....my you are naive
08:21 PM on 10/13/2011
Whether people like it or not, some of the kids, especially special needs kids are not going to make it in life. They are born low functioning to begin with. What are they going to do, go to law or med school and graduate with top honors????????
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Nick Rossiter
Live in these United States!
06:59 PM on 10/13/2011
When does a President get to decide not to enforce the laws of the land?
Good bad or indifferent it is the law.
Congress is the only authorized authority to write the laws. Now with this obsfucation of waivers, making corrections to the current law is going to be even more diffucult.
Why aren't more citizens standing up for contol.
09:57 PM on 10/13/2011
This law is incredibly damaging to kids' education. Yes, congress should have repealed it long ago. But they didn't.
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jvonkorff
Lawyer and School Board member, St. Cloud, MN
10:31 PM on 10/14/2011
Actually, the law itself contains the authority for the waivers.
03:45 PM on 10/13/2011
I live in south Louisiana and I can completely understand why children can't read or write. If you could hear most of the teachers here....Let me be ax you a question? Oh please, didn't you go to college??? When my oldest son was small, he was sent home with a spelling paper. The first word was RACCOONN................need I say more????? When our teachers LEARN TO TEACH (and I am sure there are a few out there that can) then the children will learn. Oh, and PARENTS, where are your behinds in all of this?
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jillcvin
07:04 PM on 10/13/2011
What you describe above is not a teacher's inability to teach, but rather a case of someone who should never have been certified to begin with.
09:57 PM on 10/15/2011
I hope you took this to your principal, if not, your point is moot. I wish you the best, get that teacher out now.
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vobox3343
Each day is a new day - make the most of it
03:44 PM on 10/13/2011
How much Bush mess does this president have to continually clean up? I just wish Republicans in Congress would do more than just collect a pay check - I believe they're against that sort of thing?
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04:37 PM on 10/13/2011
You do mean how much of a mess will our next president have to clean up after obama. His change = nothing! He can't even get his own party to support his stupid proposals. Take note of his last jobs bill proposal.
09:55 PM on 10/13/2011
You're right that Obama's "change" has often turned out to be nothing. The next president will still be working on cleaning up Bush's mess, because Obama hasn't done as much of that as he should have.
10:00 PM on 10/15/2011
Instead of the blame game, let's solve the problem. Here's a suggestion I have put out since I started teaching in 1973, get rid of the department of education. Let states take control of their educational needs.
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lshaft
This We'll Defend
03:24 PM on 10/13/2011
The Department of Education should be disbanded entirely! All we have done is establish a convoluted process for centralizing educational initiatives, procedures and instructional methods by bureaucrats, with little education experience themselves, at the federal level. The concept of some "crat" providing identical instructions on these processes to officials in Mississippi and New Hampshire, respectively, is unthinkable: Mississippi's educational problems may be much more complex than that of New Hampshire. Every person has the right to accord the best possible education for their offspring and I have no problem with that; however, what irks me is everyone of these government officials, to include the president, send their children to private schools. Yet, they have all of these wonderful ideas for improving public education???

Disband the Department of Education and put the onus of education where it belongs: At the state and local levels!!! I think my education professionals in Maryland can better articulate needs, problems and remedies in this state than some "crat" with an attitude of indifference.
03:22 PM on 10/13/2011
GOOD! Finally someone is doing something to help the future of this country. No Child Left Behind should go down in history as one of the most stupid unproductive asinine laws of our nation.