From the Associated Press:
At least three states are vowing to ignore the latest requirements under the No Child Left Behind law in an act of defiance against the federal government that demonstrates their growing frustration over an education program they say sets unrealistic benchmarks for schools.
The law sets a goal of having 100 percent of students proficient in math and reading by 2014, but states were allowed to establish how much schools must improve each year. Many states saved the biggest leaps for the final years, anticipating the law would be changed.
But it hasn’t, and states like Idaho, Montana and South Dakota are fed up. They are preparing to reject the latest requirements for determining school progress under the 9-year-old law – even if the move toward noncompliance may put them at risk of losing some federal funding.
Idaho will no longer raise the benchmarks that public schools have to meet under No Child Left Behind, nor will it punish the schools that do not meet these higher testing goals, said Tom Luna, the state’s superintendent of public schools.
The federal requirements are unrealistic for schools to meet while they wait for the government to enact new education standards, he said.
“We’ve waited as long as we can,” Luna said.
- Alaska Committee Passes Bill to Make Gold and Silver Legal Tender - May 19, 2025
- Gold and Silver Sound Money Act Clears First Hurdle in North Carolina - April 29, 2025
- Defend the Guard Act Passes Arizona House Committee - March 27, 2025