In leaving No Child Left Behind and embracing the Every Student Succeeds Act last year, the federal government gave back more control of schools to states, some of which are trying to figure out how to use that new control to develop their own improvement plans and benchmarks.

ESSA puts a lot of faith in states to recognize problem schools and fix them. But states must submit their plans to the feds on how they are going to fix schools and evaluate teachers.

Georgia is in the midst of holding public hearings around the state on ESSA, and two University of Georgia education doctoral students urge people to get involved.

“While family and community feedback has previously been welcomed when enacting new education laws and policies, it is especially important now considering ESSA gives states more power over significant areas of education reform that can have a positive effect on Georgia’s students, families, and schools. Important topic areas addressed under the law include testing requirements, teacher development and evaluation, school accountability, and funding,” say Kimberly E. West and Christopher D. Holmes.

To read more, go to the AJC Get Schooled blog.

About the Author

Keep Reading

Sunset over the Berry College campus. Photo by Brant Sanderlin/Berry College.

Credit: Brant Sanderlin/Berry College

Featured

Bumper to bumper traffic travels northbound on the I-85 just past the I-285 overpass, also known as Spaghetti Junction, in Doraville. In late May and June of this year, several drivers have pulled out weapons and fired guns at other motorists on metro Atlanta roadways. (Jason Getz/AJC 2023)

Credit: Jason Getz / Jason.Getz@ajc.com