Connecticut Challenges No Child Left Behind Act
Connecticut Challenges No Child Left Behind Act
HARTFORD (AP) â The State of Connecticut filed a federal lawsuit on Monday, August 22, challenging President Bushâs No Child Left Behind school reform law, arguing it is illegal because it requires expensive testing and programs it does not pay for.
The lawsuit, which officials said was the first of its kind to be brought by a state government, asks a federal judge to declare that the federal government cannot require state and local money be used to meet federal testing goals.
âThe goals of the No Child Left Behind Act are laudable,â Attorney General Richard Blumenthal said. âIndeed, Connecticut has pursued these goals for decades, but the federal government has failed in implementing them.â
Mr Blumenthal announced plans for the lawsuit this spring, after the state was repeatedly denied waivers to avoid some of the requirements of No Child Left Behind, which aims to have every student in public schools proficient in reading and math by 2014.
Connecticutâs chief complaint with the law has been testing. The state, which has been administering its own mastery test for 20 years, wants to continue testing every other year. The federal law requires annual testing, and federal education officials have repeatedly denied the stateâs requests for leniency.
âThis mindless rigidity harms our taxpayers, but most of all our children,â Mr Blumenthal said.
Standardized testing in grades three, five, and seven is scheduled to begin this school year.
A recent report projects that the state will be $41.6 million short in paying for the lawâs requirements through 2008, but federal officials question that estimate. A state law prohibits state money from being used to pay for the lawâs requirement.
In Utah, the state legislature passed a measure defying the federal law, and it was signed by Governor Jon Huntsman on May 2. The law gives state educational standards priority over the requirements of No Child Left Behind.
The nationâs largest teachers union, the National Education Association, joined with school districts and union chapters across the country to file a lawsuit this year challenging the law. Connecticutâs union chapter is part of that lawsuit.