DeVos approves revised Washington education plan

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U.S. Department of Education Secretary Betsy DeVos has approved Washington state’s plan for how it will meet the requirements of the Every Student Succeeds Act, the new federal K-12 education law that takes effect this fall.

The approval comes after more than a year of work by state education officials, months of waiting, and a few revisions of the original plan, submitted last September.

Washington’s ESSA plan outlines how the state will measure student progress and hold schools and districts accountable for that progress, or lack of progress.

The change in accountability from the previous law – No Child Left Behind – is significant, and allows each state to come up with its own method to measure schools.

Washington will use a 1-to-10 scale to identify schools that need support.  Elementary and middle schools will be measured on math- and reading-test scores, academic growth, English-language-learner progress, and rates of chronic absenteeism.  High schools will be measured on those indicators, and graduation rates, ninth-grade academic achievement, and dual-credit opportunities.

DeVos praised Washington for how it plans to assess its schools and its emphasis on continued training for new and veteran teachers. (Seattle Times)

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