U.S. Department of Education Outlines Guidance for Submitting Amendments to State ESSA Plans
Policy 2 min read

Last week, the U.S. Department of Education released guidance outlining how states can amend their state plans under the Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA). The ESSA State Plan amendment process offers an opportunity for continuous improvement of state education systems, toward greater coherence.

According to the guidelines, a state wishing to make an amendment will need to:

  • Seek approval from the Governor on the amendment;
  • Include stakeholder feedback, such as public comments, regarding the proposed changes;
  • Provide the Department the approved consolidated state plan redlining the proposed changes; and,
  • Provide the Department with a cover letter detailing the proposed changes.

In addition to these requirements, states will need to provide a description to the Department detailing how the public was consulted regarding the proposed changes.

The Department requests that any amendments that could have an impact on school accountability determinations for the 2019-2020 school year be submitted by March 1, 2019.

Next Steps

iNACOL has several resources and recommendations on how states can transform education systems with the opportunities that ESSA provides.

States can use this opportunity for amending state plans to:

Learn More:
For more information, please contact:

Susan Patrick
President & CEO, iNACOL
spatrick@inacol.org

Maria Worthen
Vice President for Federal and State Policy, iNACOL
mworthen@inacol.org

Natalie Truong
Policy Director, iNACOL
ntruong@inacol.org

Related Posts

Teachers at the Forefront: What We’ve ...

Two Sides of the Same Coin: Using Techni...

Fourth and fifth grade students working on posters

Implementation Champions in Action: What...

A classroom scene showing students seated and attentively listening to David Delikat - a fourth year high school math teacher at ASU Prep. David served as an implementation champion (an educator who leads the way in adopting and supporting new practices) this year for ASU Prep’s ELI-supported initiative, “Archie."
Scroll to Top