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Entries in States (3)

Monday
Nov142011

States Apply For Relief From No Child Left Behind

By Lisa Kellman

Education officials from across the country met in DC Monday to preview state efforts to seek waivers from the national No Child Left Behind law.

President Obama announced in September that states that put high educational standards in place would qualify to opt-out of soon-to-take-effect NCLB requirements that put federal funding at risk for several states.

School officials from Florida, Georgia, Colorado and Massachusetts spoke during a briefing with the Council of Chief State School Officers (CCSSO), a nonprofit organization comprised of various heads of state and local educational systems.

“Because No Child Left Behind has not been reauthorized, states are left with no choice but to move forward and to seek relief through an alternative route,” said CCSSO Executive Director Gene Wilhoit.

While each state representative acknowledged NCLB’s contribution in holding states accountable, they also felt that states should be more active in implementing education goals.

One common complaint of NCLB was the Adequate Yearly Progress (AYP) metric which has been used to evaluate schools and teachers. Opponents have argued that it has encouraged teachers to “teach to the test” rather focus on the needs of their students.  

“We have a generation of students that we taught how to pass a test but were they ready for college and careers?” asked John Barge with the Georgia Department of Education.

Congress hasn’t reauthorized NCLB since 2007, nor has it passed a reform plan. Obama challenged lawmakers back in September to get to work, and decided at that point to move forward with waivers.

“Our kids only get one shot at a decent education,” he said during a speech at the White House. “They cannot afford to wait any longer. So, given that Congress cannot act, I am acting,”

According to the White House, the waivers represent an effort to enhance accountability and transparency and create programs that strengthen career and college preparedness for students. States will be allowed to implement such standards with their own individual building blocks.

For example, among other initiatives, Massachusetts would cut in half the number of students who are not college ready, Colorado would require all school districts to engage in improvement plants, Georgia would give equal weight to all school subjects, not just those tested in NCLB, and Florida would provide full access to college level courses.

Eleven states are expected to apply for waivers today, with more to follow.

Tuesday
Mar172009

President Obama celebrates St. Patrick's Day with the Irish Prime Minister

Irish Prime Minister (Taoiseach) Brian Cowen brought some St. Patrick's Day cheer today, as he met with President Barack Obama and Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) on his visit to Washington D.C. The trio were greeted with the sound of bagpipes from the United States Air Force Reserve Pipe Band as they walked down the House of Representative steps. The Irish Prime Minister later discussed his visit with press outside the Cannon House Building.

President walks down House steps to the sound of bagpipes

Irish Prime Minister Celebrates St. Patrick's Day with President Obama

St. Patrick's Day Band

St. Patrick's Pipers

Pipers Line the House of Representatives

Representative Richard Neal, President Barack Obama and Irish Prime Minister Brian Cowen

Irish Prime Minister (Taoiseach) Brian Cowen

Irish Prime Minister Is All Smiles on St. Patrick's Day

Irish Prime Minister Celebrates St. Patrick's Day in Washington D.C.


Thursday
Feb122009

Celebrating the legend of Lincoln

By Kayleigh Harvey - Talk Radio News Service

All around the country Americans are celebrating the birthday of one of the most historical American political figures, Abraham Lincoln.

The Capitol held its own Lincoln Bicentennial Celebration, today, with President Barack Obama making an appearance to pay his respects to a man he said “made America’s story possible.”

President Obama said: “What Lincoln never forgot, not even in the midst of civil war, was that despite all that divides us - north and south, black and white - we were, at the heart, one nation and one people, sharing a bond as Americans that could bend but would not break...I feel great gratitude to this singular figure who in so many ways made my own story possible, and in so many ways made America’s story possible.”

Other politicians who spoke at the ceremony were Speaker of the House, Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif), Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev), House Minority Leader John Boehner (R-Ohio), Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky), Senate Assistant Majority Leader Richard Durbin (D-Ill), Senator Jim Bunning (R-Ky), Representative Jesse Jackson Jnr. (D-Ill) and Representative Donald Manzullo (R-Ill).

The large audience, that filled the Rotunda in the U.S. Captiol, also heard tributes to the former President from Harold Holzer Co-chair of the Lincoln Bicentennial Commission, Richard Norton Smith, Former Executive Director of the Lincoln Presidential Library and Presidential historian and author Doris Kearns Goodwin.

In the closing statement, Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi said: “Let us take our lead from Lincoln. Abraham Lincoln knew that the preservation of the union was a fight for the ideals of the Declaration of Independence. As he said ‘At stake was not just the future of our nation, but the future of people throughout the world’.”