HR-1-107
Became Public Law No: 107-110.
What it does
The No Child Left Behind Act of 2001 (Public Law 107-110) comprehensively rewrites the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965, the primary federal law governing K-12 public education funding. It requires states to implement annual standardized testing in reading and math, establish Adequate Yearly Progress (AYP) benchmarks for all student subgroups, and take escalating corrective actions — including offering public or private school choice and supplemental tutoring services — when schools repeatedly fail to meet those benchmarks. It also restructures federal funding formulas for teacher quality, English language learner education, technology, safe and drug-free schools, and rural education, while consolidating or eliminating dozens of existing categorical grant programs.
Who benefits
Students in low-performing schools, who gain access to school choice options and supplemental tutoring services. Low-income and minority students, whose academic progress must be tracked and reported separately under AYP, making previously hidden achievement gaps visible. Parents, who receive annual school performance reports and teacher quality information. Rural school districts, which gain new funding flexibility under the Rural Education Initiative. English language learners, who receive restructured formula grant funding. Homeless children and youth, whose education protections are strengthened under the McKinney-Vento revisions. Teachers and school staff, who receive liability protection for disciplinary actions. Military veterans transitioning to teaching through the Troops-to-Teachers program. Charter and magnet schools, which receive reauthorized federal support.
Who is hurt
Schools and districts that repeatedly miss AYP targets face escalating federal interventions, potential loss of administrative funds, and reputational harm from public reporting. Teachers and administrators in low-performing schools face increased pressure and potential job changes under corrective action requirements. States and local education agencies (LEAs) bear significant new administrative and compliance costs for testing, data collection, and reporting. Bilingual education advocates lose the dedicated Bilingual Education Act programs, which are replaced with a broader English-language-focused formula grant. Native Hawaiian students lose a dedicated education program (title IX part B). Gifted and talented students lose a dedicated federal program, which is repealed. Arts education, civic education, and school construction programs are also eliminated. Private school choice opponents are affected where states must offer private options when no safe public school is available.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that prior to NCLB, federal education funding flowed to states with little accountability, allowing persistent achievement gaps — particularly for low-income, minority, and English language learner students — to go unaddressed and unmeasured. They contend that mandatory disaggregated reporting of AYP data by student subgroup was the first federal mechanism to make these gaps visible and legally actionable, and that school choice and tutoring provisions gave families in chronically failing schools a meaningful exit option. Supporters also point to early National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) data showing measurable gains in 4th-grade reading and math scores among Black and Hispanic students in the years following NCLB's implementation.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that NCLB's rigid AYP structure — which required 100% proficiency by 2014 — was mathematically unrealistic and caused schools to narrow curricula to tested subjects, reducing time for science, history, arts, and physical education. They contend that high-stakes testing pressure led to documented instances of teaching to the test and, in some cases, data manipulation, undermining the reliability of the very accountability system the law created. Critics also argue that the law's school choice and supplemental services provisions were underfunded and logistically difficult to implement, meaning that students in the most under-resourced districts — those most in need of alternatives — often had the fewest viable options in practice.