"Law to leave children" (NCLB) is the educational policy originally proposed by President George Bush in 2001. Since then, President Barack Obama has made changes to better education in our country. The purpose of NCLB is to give all children the same educational rights. All children, regardless of race, sex, or place of residence, should be able to receive equal education. This policy requires annual state tests submitted to higher educated teachers and the government.
& Lt; Tab / & gt; 2001 "Do not Leave Children" is an epoch-making event of educational reform aimed at improving the student's academic performance and changing the culture of the American school. President George W. Bush said this law is "the cornerstone of my government." As President Bush said, "Our children are our future," as Congress said, "There are too few of the poorest children left" . Primary Secondary Education Law "This is a major Federal law affecting education from kindergarten to high school. When the ESEA was revised, the new law represented a comprehensive reform of the federal effort to support primary and secondary education in the United States. It is based on the pillars of four common sense: responsible for the results; emphasis on research based on scientific research; expansion of parental choice; and expansion of regional control and flexibility
Do not delay children On 8th January 2002, President George W. Bush signed the law "There is no child left behind in the 2001 bill" (NCLB). The new law represents his educational reform program and includes the most thorough revision of the Primary and Secondary Education Act since the enactment in 1965. It changes the role of the federal government in education by obliging American schools to explain their success based on what each student has accomplished. . The bill contains the basic principles of the president's four educational reforms.