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    What happened to no child left behind?
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  2. Sep 21, 2022 · Back in early 2002, after close to a year of tendentious stop-and-start negotiations and just months after 9/11, sweeping bipartisan Congressional majorities approved the No Child Left...

    • Frederick Hess
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  4. The No Child Left Behind Act of 2001 (NCLB) [1][2] was a U.S. Act of Congress promoted by the presidency of George W. Bush. It reauthorized the Elementary and Secondary Education Act and included Title I provisions applying to disadvantaged students. [3]

  5. No Child Left Behind (NCLB) was the main law for K–12 general education in the United States from 2002–2015. The law held schools accountable for how kids learned and achieved. The law was controversial in part because it penalized schools that didn’t show improvement.

  6. Aug 9, 2024 · No Child Left Behind (NCLB), U.S. federal law aimed at improving public primary and secondary schools, and thus student performance, via increased accountability for schools, school districts, and states. The act was passed by Congress with bipartisan support in December 2001 and signed into law by.

  7. Oct 27, 2015 · The ESEA is supposed to be updated every few years but hasn't been rewritten since 2001, when another Texan, President George W. Bush, famously renamed it No Child Left Behind. Bush took...

  8. Dec 10, 2015 · More importantly, the bipartisan bill being signed was the Every Student Succeeds Act — a long-overdue replacement of the unpopular federal education law known as No Child Left Behind. The...

  9. The Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA) replaced No Child Left Behind (NCLB). This chart shows key differences between the two laws.

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