The Brownsville Independent School District in Texas won what may be the nation's most important prize for excellence in urban education on Tuesday, the same day that Texas authorities announced that the district had failed to meet achievement targets for two years under the federal No Child Left Behind law.
Erica Lepping, a spokeswoman for the foundation that administers the $1 million Broad Prize for Urban Education, said the 10-member prize jury, which included two former secretaries of education, was aware that Brownsville had missed its testing targets under the federal law last year but had considered many other academic quality indicators in making its choice.
A vast majority of the nation's largest urban districts, including three of the four runners-up for this year's Broad prize, also failed to meet the federal law's annual targets, Ms. Lepping said.