Friday,  June 29, 2012 • Vol. 12--No. 351 • 11 of 29 •  Other Editions

South Dakota forest fire now 60 percent contained

• RAPID CITY, S.D. (AP) -- A forest fire in South Dakota's Black Hills southwest of Rapid City is now 60 percent contained.
• The Dakota Fire has burned about 330 acres near Sheridan Lake. Officials say the more than 200 firefighters battling the blaze made significant gains on Thursday.
• The lake remains closed to boats.


5 more states granted NCLB waivers
CHRISTINE ARMARIO,AP Education Writer

• Five more states have been granted relief from key requirements of the Bush-era No Child Left Behind law, bringing the total to 24 states given waivers, an Obama administration official said Friday.
• Arkansas, Missouri, South Dakota, Utah and Virginia will be freed from the No Child Left Behind requirement that all students test proficient in math and science by 2014, a goal the nation remains far from achieving.
• In exchange, the states and all others granted waivers must develop accountability plans that set new targets for raising achievement, advancing teacher effectiveness, preparing all students for careers and college, and improving the performance of low-performing schools.
• "We all understand that the best ideas don't come from Washington, and moving forward, these states will have increased flexibility with federal funds and relief from NCLB's mandates, allowing them to develop locally-tailored solutions to meet their unique educational challenges," Education Secretary Arne Duncan said in draft remarks released to The Associated Press.
• Democrats and Republicans agree the No Child Left Behind law is broken, but have been unable to agree on how to fix it. The law has been praised for shining a light on the performance of subgroups like minorities, low-income, English language learner and special education students, but also has led to an increasing number of schools being labeled as "failing" and subject to a prescribed set of interventions -- even if just one of these groups didn't meet learning targets.
• Critics of the law also say it has had the unintended effect of encouraging instructors to teach to the test and has led schools to narrow their curriculums.
• Duncan and the White House have pushed for a comprehensive reauthorization

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