S-1177-114
Became Public Law
What it does
The Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA) reauthorizes the Elementary and Secondary Education Act through FY2020, continuing federal funding for K-12 public education. It shifts significant authority over school accountability, academic standards, and teacher quality from the federal Department of Education to states and local school districts. The law replaces the previous "Adequate Yearly Progress" system under No Child Left Behind with state-designed accountability frameworks, eliminates the federal mandate for specific school turnaround models, and explicitly prohibits the Department of Education from requiring states to adopt the Common Core State Standards or any other nationally common standards.
Who benefits
Students in low-income schools, who receive targeted funding increases and expanded access to courses, credit recovery, and dual enrollment programs. English language learners, who gain new protections and dedicated funding. Homeless, neglected, delinquent, and at-risk youth, who receive expanded services and reentry support. State education agencies and governors, who gain broad new authority to design accountability systems. Local school districts (LEAs), which gain flexibility in how they use federal funds. Private school students, who gain clearer protections for equitable service access. Rural districts, which benefit from geographically diverse grant distribution requirements. Indian children and children in U.S. territories, who receive a modest funding increase. Parents and families, who gain expanded engagement rights and notification requirements. Teachers and school leaders in high-need schools, who gain access to new competitive grant programs.
Who is hurt
Civil rights and advocacy organizations concerned that returning accountability to states may reduce oversight of achievement gaps for minority, low-income, and disabled students. Students in persistently low-performing schools, who may receive less consistent federal intervention if states design weak accountability systems. Teachers' unions and educators subject to new performance-based compensation systems under the Teacher and School Leader Incentive Program. Federal education bureaucracy and the Department of Education, which loses significant regulatory authority. Taxpayers in states that previously relied on federal mandates to drive local accountability reforms. Competitors to religious private schools, who may face pressure under the equitable services provisions. Districts that previously benefited from standalone School Improvement Grants, which are folded into the broader Title I-A formula, potentially diluting targeted turnaround funding.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that No Child Left Behind's rigid, federally imposed accountability system — including its "Adequate Yearly Progress" mandates — labeled the vast majority of American schools as failing and forced states into one-size-fits-all turnaround models that evidence showed were ineffective. They contend that ESSA restores the constitutional principle that education is a state function while preserving federal funding commitments, and that state-designed accountability systems are better positioned to reflect local needs, demographics, and priorities. Supporters also point to the explicit prohibition on federal coercion of Common Core adoption as a meaningful protection of state sovereignty in curriculum decisions.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that returning accountability to states risks repeating the pre-NCLB era, when states routinely set low standards and masked achievement gaps for minority and low-income students behind aggregated data. They contend that without federal minimum floors for intervention in failing schools, states face political pressure to avoid identifying schools as low-performing, and that the bill's prohibition on federal oversight of state standards removes the only mechanism that ensured rigor. Critics also argue that consolidating School Improvement Grant funding into the broader Title I-A formula reduces the concentration of resources available for the most severely underperforming schools.