Change looms for schools

Eric Florip:

First, it was the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965. Later it became No Child Left Behind in 2002.
But with the Obama administration now in the White House, talk of a new rewrite of the law has already begun. Education Secretary Arne Duncan addressed the issue publicly in September, calling for changes to the landmark law during a speech to education leaders.
Just don’t expect to call the next version No Child Left Behind.
“We’re going to change the name of the bill,” said Justin Hamilton, a spokesman of the U.S. Department of Education in Washington, D.C. “That was the previous administration’s name for it. That was their bill, not ours.”
Though nothing definitive has been announced, the department is already in discussions about re-authorizing the law in a different form, Hamilton said. Duncan has spent much of his tenure so far traveling the country to gather input, he added.