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  1. ESSA reauthorized the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA) of 1965 while replacing the previous federal education law of "No Child Left Behind." Passed with strong bipartisan support, ESSA represents a shift from broad federal oversight of primary and secondary education by extending greater flexibility and decision-making at the state ...

  2. Dec 20, 2022 · Local school boards, districts and schools are encouraged to adopt this model policy and its recommendations, which will help them meet and exceed the requirements of: Ohio Parent Involvement Law, as outlined in Ohio Revised Code (ORC) Sections 3313.472 (A), 3324.04 and 3324.06; No Child Left Behind, Title I, Section 1118; and the

  3. Apr 10, 2015 · The No Child Left Behind lawthe 2002 update of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act—effectively scaled up the federal role in holding schools accountable for student outcomes. In...

    • aklein@educationweek.org
    • Assistant Editor
  4. Sep 21, 2022 · Less than a decade after the adoption of NCLB, most of the nation’s schools were judged “in need of improvement” under the law—and subjected to a series of mandated federal remedies.

    • Frederick Hess
  5. Jul 30, 2016 · The new law passed by Congress last fall replaces the often-villified No Child Left Behind laws - a package passed in 2001 that made education "accountability" a constant focus and that...

  6. In the wake of a highly polarized battle over health care reform, Congress and the Obama Administration began to take up another major piece of domestic legislation: reauthorization of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA, originally enacted in 1965), now more commonly known as No Child Left Behind (NCLB).

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  8. Mar 20, 2015 · March 20, 2015. CLEVELAND — Ginn Academy, the first and only public high school in Ohio just for boys, was conceived to help at-risk students make it through school — experimenting with small...

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