After years of intense pressure on school test scores, the state's education department on Monday submitted a final plan to the federal government that broadens its previous reach — promising to evaluate more schools than before, and in a well-rounded fashion.
With the federal No Child Left Behind education law being replaced by the Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA) nationwide, Minnesota will focus on the lowest-performing schools that get federal money for low-income students.
Test scores will be just one part of the picture. School performance evaluations will also include factors like consistent student attendance.
But the state also will examine the lowest-performing students broken down by race, socioeconomic status and disability.
Some schools that weren't targeted on those criteria before would be pinpointed, said education department spokesman Josh Collins.
Students statewide will continue to take regular tests, and the state still has ambitious goals: Ninety percent of its students will be math and reading proficient by 2025. By 2020, 90 percent of high schoolers will graduate in four years.
"Minnesotans have always placed a high value on our schools and the world of opportunities that come from a great education," state Education Commissioner Brenda Cassellius said in a statement on Monday.
Monday was Minnesota's deadline to submit an ESSA plan. The new system aims to give states more autonomy.