Tag Archives: Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA)

The Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA)


ESSA Highlights

President Obama signs the Every Student Succeeds Act into law on December 10, 2015.

ESSA includes provisions that will help to ensure success for students and schools. Below are just a few. The law:

  • Advances equity by upholding critical protections for America’s disadvantaged and high-need students.
  • Requires—for the first time—that all students in America be taught to high academic standards that will prepare them to succeed in college and careers.
  • Ensures that vital information is provided to educators, families, students, and communities through annual statewide assessments that measure students’ progress toward those high standards.
  • Helps to support and grow local innovations—including evidence-based and place-based interventions developed by local leaders and educators—consistent with our Investing in Innovation and Promise Neighborhoods
  • Sustains and expands this administration’s historic investments in increasing access to high-quality preschool.
  • Maintains an expectation that there will be accountability and action to effect positive change in our lowest-performing schools, where groups of students are not making progress, and where graduation rates are low over extended periods of time.

History of ESEA

  • The Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA) was signed into law in 1965 by President Lyndon Baines Johnson, who believed that “full educational opportunity” should be “our first national goal.” From its inception, ESEA was a civil rights law.

    ESEA offered new grants to districts serving low-income students, federal grants for textbooks and library books, funding for special education centers, and scholarships for low-income college students. Additionally, the law provided federal grants to state educational agencies to improve the quality of elementary and secondary education.


NCLB and Accountability

NCLB put in place measures that exposed achievement gaps among traditionally underserved students and their peers and spurred an important national dialogue on education improvement. This focus on accountability has been critical in ensuring a quality education for all children, yet also revealed challenges in the effective implementation of this goal.

Parents, educators, and elected officials across the country recognized that a strong, updated law was necessary to expand opportunity to all students; support schools, teachers, and principals; and to strengthen our education system and economy.

In 2012, the Obama administration began granting flexibility to states regarding specific requirements of NCLB in exchange for rigorous and comprehensive state- developed plans designed to close achievement gaps, increase equity, improve the quality of instruction, and increase outcomes for all students.


What’s Next?

Over the next few weeks, the U.S. Department of Education will work with states and districts to begin implementing the new law. Visit this page for updates and sign up for news about ESSA.


Have questions?

ESSA State Plan Notice of Intent to Submission

In the November 29, 2016 Dear Colleague Letter on ESSA State Plans, the Department established two deadlines for the submission of ESSA State Plans:

  • April 3, 2017
  • September 18, 2017

Consistent with the requirements of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 (ESEA), as amended by the Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA), the Department will conduct a peer review process of submitted State plans after each of the two submission dates. The Department will not review plans on a rolling basis and will consider each plan to be submitted only on one of the two dates above. In order to plan for the peer review of State plans, the Department requested that each State provide the date by which it intends to submit a consolidated State plan or individual State plans. The information below is provided for informational purposes. At any time, a State may decide to submit its State plan on the other submission date.

    State Submission Date
    Alabama September 18, 2017
    Alaska September 18, 2017
    Arizona April 3, 2017
    Arkansa September 18, 2017
    BIE September 18, 2017
    California September 18, 2017
    Colorado April 3, 2017
    Connecticut April 3, 2017
    Delaware April 3, 2017
    District of Columbia April 3, 2017
    Florida September 18, 2017
    Georgia September 18, 2017
    Hawaii September 18, 2017
    Idaho September 18, 2017
    Illinois April 3, 2017
    Indiana September 18, 2017
    Kansas September 18, 2017
    Kentucky September 18, 2017
    Louisiana April 3, 2017
    Maine April 3, 2017
    Maryland September 18, 2017
    Massaschusetts April 3, 2017
    Michigan April 3, 2017
    Minnesota September 18, 2017
    Mississippi September 18, 2017
    Missouri April 3, 2017
    Montana April 3, 2017
    Nebraska September 18, 2017
    Nevada April 3, 2017
    New Hampshire September 17, 2017
    New Jersey April 3, 2017
    New Mexico April 3, 2017
    New York September 18, 2017
    North Carolina September 17, 2017
    North Dakota April 3, 2017
    Ohio April 3, 2017
    Oklahoma September 18, 2017
    Oregon April 3, 2017
    Pennsylvania September 18, 2017
    Puerto Rico September 18, 2017
    Rhode Island September 18, 2017
    South Carolina September 18, 2017
    South Dakota September 18, 2017
    Tennessee April 3, 2017
    Texas September 18, 2017
    Utah September 18, 2017
    Vermont April 3, 2017
    Virginia September 18, 2017
    Washington September 18, 2017
    West Virginia September 18, 2017
    Wisconsin September 18, 2017
    Wyoming September 18, 2017

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Student-Centered Funding Pilot Submissions

This list includes all local educational agencies (LEAs) that applied for the Student-centered Funding Pilot as of the March 12, 2018, deadline and does not indicate their eligibility for an agreement.

District Jurisdiction
Wilsona School District California
Indianapolis Public Schools Indiana
Salem-Keizer School District 24J Oregon
Upper Adams School District Pennsylvania
Puerto Rico Department of Education
Local Flexibility Demonstration Agreement
Approval Letter (6/28/2018)

Updated Implementation Timing (1/3/2019)

Update to Authority (4/16/2019)

Puerto Rico

Summer 2018 Submission
This list includes the LEA that applied for the Student-Centered Funding Pilot as of the July 15, 2018, deadline and does not indicate its eligibility for an agreement.

District Jurisdiction
Roosevelt School District Arizona

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Student-Centered Funding Pilot

Well-Rounded Education through Student-Centered Funding Demonstration Grants

The Well-Rounded Education through Student-Centered Funding Demonstration Grants program provides competitive grants to local educational agencies (LEAs) to demonstrate model programs for providing well-rounded education opportunities through the development and implementation of student-centered funding (SCF) systems based on weighted per-pupil allocations under Section 1501 of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965, as amended (ESEA). Grants awarded under this program are intended to help build the capacity of LEAs to provide well-rounded education in order to establish models for expanding and enhancing delivery of such opportunities for educationally disadvantaged students.

For more information, please visit the following page: https://oese.ed.gov/offices/office-of-formula-grants/school-support-and-accountability/well-rounded-education-student-centered-funding-demonstration-grants/.

Student-Centered Funding Pilot

ESEA section 1501 authorizes the U.S. Secretary of Education to enter into local flexibility demonstration agreements with local educational agencies (LEAs) under which such agencies may consolidate eligible Federal education funds with State and local funds in accordance with certain requirements in order to develop a student-centered funding system based on weighted per-pupil allocations for low-income and otherwise disadvantaged students. Under a local flexibility demonstration agreement, an LEA may use the Federal funds allocated through its system flexibly, provided it meets the purposes of each Federal education program supported by the consolidated Federal funds, including serving students from low-income families, English learners, migratory children, and children who are neglected, delinquent, or at risk, as applicable.

For an LEA that enters into a local flexibility demonstration agreement, the Secretary is authorized to waive those provisions of the ESEA that would otherwise prevent the LEA from using eligible Federal funds as part of such an agreement. Relieving an LEA from certain ESEA requirements in this manner would enable the LEA to use the Federal funds allocated through its student-centered funding system flexibly, provided it meets the purposes of each Federal education program supported by the consolidated Federal funds, including serving students from low-income families, English learners, migratory children, and children who are neglected, delinquent, or at risk, as applicable.

For an LEA that enters into a local flexibility demonstration agreement, the Secretary is authorized to waive those provisions of the ESEA that would otherwise prevent the LEA from using eligible Federal funds as part of such an agreement. Relieving an LEA from certain ESEA requirements in this manner would enable the LEA to use the Federal funds allocated through its student-centered funding system flexibly, provided it meets the purposes of each Federal education program supported by the consolidated Federal funds, including serving students from low-income families, English learners, migratory children, and children who are neglected, delinquent, or at risk, as applicable.

ESEA Section 1501 Resources