By Christina Hoag, Associated Press
LOS ANGELES (AP)—Nine California school districts on Thursday filed a joint application for a waiver of stringent federal school standards, instead proposing an alternative method to measure performance.

The superintendents of Los Angeles, Long Beach, Fresno, San Francisco, Oakland, Sacramento City, Santa Ana, Sanger and Clovis unified districts said they are seeking their own waiver from No Child Left Behind standards after the U.S. Department of Education rejected a waiver application by the state of California last year.
Under federal law, districts are allowed to file their own applications although they are generally filed by states. So far, 34 states and the District of Columbia have obtained waivers, some 10 other requests are pending.
If the superintendents’ application is approved, the districts would regain $110 million in federal funding that has been redirected to other uses because they are not meeting federal benchmarks for student progress, which are based on standardized test scores. Combined, the districts educate about 1 million students.