January 23, 2026
ATPE representatives visited the U.S. Department of Education this summer to discuss the state's ESEA waiver request. Texas received an extension of the waiver this week but learned that our state has been placed on "high-risk status."[/caption]
In 2013, Texas asked the U.S. Department of Education to waive certain outdated accountability provisions in the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA), also known as No Child Left Behind (NCLB). The federal government granted us flexibility on a temporary basis, conditioned on Texas's agreeing to change the way it evaluates educators. As TEA has been developing and piloting a new state-recommended system for evaluations of teachers and principals (T-TESS and T-PESS), the state has sought and received short-term extensions of the waiver. Now, the feds are giving Texas a January 2016 deadline to show that it is prepared to meet the Obama administration's demands on requiring all schools to use the state's new evaluation model and base personnel decisions upon it. Commissioner of Education Michael Williams says it's not that simple though. Read more in our blog post earlier this week about the state's commitment to local control. Also, view ATPE's press release about the news.