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_Cross-posted from the Politics K-12 blog_ Texas will get to hang onto its No Child Left Behind Act waiver for one more year, but it’s in danger of losing the flexibility if it doesn’t shape
up when it comes to teacher evaluation. Texas is now the second state to have its waiver put on “high risk” status. The other is South Dakota, also over teacher evaluation. The news here
isn’t that Texas is on high risk. It’s that the state got its waiver renewed at all. Earlier this year, the Lone Star State essentially seemed to be daring U.S. Secretary of Education Arne
Duncan to pull its flexibility. The department was initially really strict when it came to teacher evaluation, but it has become much more flexible recently. Texas’ renewal is essentially
proof that the Education Department is most decidedly not in a waiver-pulling mood these days. To be sure, the renewal comes with a long to-do list for Texas. The state has until January 15
to explain how its teacher evaluation system will meet the department’s parameters by the 2016-17 school year. And it will have to explain how it plans to measure student growth on state
test scores in reading and math and use that data in evaluations. Plus, the state will have to check in with the department on a monthly basis to let them know how all this is progressing.
More in this letter. But Texas still doesn’t have to go back to NCLB Classic. (Gotta wonder how that makes Washington state feel, since it’s the only state to get its NCLB flexibility yanked
and never restored, also because it wasn’t clear how the state was incorporating state test scores into evaluations.) This news means that nearly every state that wanted a waiver renewal
has one. Still waiting: Louisiana and Colorado.