1 | A bill to be entitled |
2 | An act relating to public school attendance; amending ss. |
3 | 1002.01, 1002.20, 1002.42, and 1002.43, F.S.; conforming |
4 | cross-references; amending s. 1003.01, F.S.; redefining |
5 | the term "habitual truancy" to apply to students who are |
6 | subject to pilot program requirements; defining the term |
7 | "regular program attendance" to conform to changes made by |
8 | the act; amending s. 1003.21, F.S.; requiring that a |
9 | student in a pilot program school district be informed of |
10 | attendance and completion requirements; creating s. |
11 | 1003.215, F.S.; creating the Student Preparedness Pilot |
12 | Program; requiring that the Duval County School District |
13 | and each selected school district review and identify |
14 | curricula options for certain students; requiring that |
15 | students in pilot program districts who attain the age of |
16 | 16 years but have not reached the age of 18 years and who |
17 | do not regularly attend school be subject to specific |
18 | attendance and completion requirements; providing for an |
19 | application and selection process for school district |
20 | participation; specifying procedures for termination of |
21 | school enrollment and requirements for pilot program |
22 | attendance and completion; providing that students who |
23 | select a nontraditional academic option are not eligible |
24 | students for purposes of school grading; requiring that |
25 | the Office of Program Policy Analysis and Government |
26 | Accountability conduct and submit an annual study and |
27 | report; amending s. 1003.26, F.S.; conforming a cross- |
28 | reference; providing an effective date. |
29 |
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30 | Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida: |
31 |
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32 | Section 1. Section 1002.01, Florida Statutes, is amended |
33 | to read: |
34 | 1002.01 Definitions.- |
35 | (1) A "home education program" means the sequentially |
36 | progressive instruction of a student directed by his or her |
37 | parent in order to satisfy the attendance requirements in of ss. |
38 | 1002.41, 1003.01(13)(a) 1003.01(13), and 1003.21(1). |
39 | (2) A "private school" is a nonpublic school defined as an |
40 | individual, association, copartnership, or corporation, or |
41 | department, division, or section of such organizations, that |
42 | designates itself as an educational center that includes |
43 | kindergarten or a higher grade or as an elementary, secondary, |
44 | business, technical, or trade school below college level or any |
45 | organization that provides instructional services that meet the |
46 | requirements in s. 1003.01(13)(a) intent of s. 1003.01(13) or |
47 | that gives preemployment or supplementary training in technology |
48 | or in fields of trade or industry or that offers academic, |
49 | literary, or career training below college level, or any |
50 | combination of the above, including an institution that performs |
51 | the functions of the above schools through correspondence or |
52 | extension, except those licensed under the provisions of chapter |
53 | 1005. A private school may be a parochial, religious, |
54 | denominational, for-profit, or nonprofit school. This definition |
55 | does not include home education programs conducted in accordance |
56 | with s. 1002.41. |
57 | Section 2. Paragraph (b) of subsection (2) of section |
58 | 1002.20, Florida Statutes, is amended to read: |
59 | 1002.20 K-12 student and parent rights.-Parents of public |
60 | school students must receive accurate and timely information |
61 | regarding their child's academic progress and must be informed |
62 | of ways they can help their child to succeed in school. K-12 |
63 | students and their parents are afforded numerous statutory |
64 | rights including, but not limited to, the following: |
65 | (2) ATTENDANCE.- |
66 | (b) Regular school attendance.-Parents of students who |
67 | have attained the age of 6 years by February 1 of any school |
68 | year but who have not attained the age of 16 years must comply |
69 | with the compulsory school attendance laws. Parents have the |
70 | option to comply with the school attendance laws by attendance |
71 | of the student in a public school; a parochial, religious, or |
72 | denominational school; a private school; a home education |
73 | program; or a private tutoring program, pursuant to s. |
74 | 1003.01(13)(a) in accordance with the provisions of s. |
75 | 1003.01(13). |
76 | Section 3. Subsection (7) of section 1002.42, Florida |
77 | Statutes, is amended to read: |
78 | 1002.42 Private schools.- |
79 | (7) ATTENDANCE REQUIREMENTS.-Attendance of a student at a |
80 | private, parochial, religious, or denominational school |
81 | satisfies the attendance requirements in of ss. 1003.01(13)(a) |
82 | 1003.01(13) and 1003.21(1). |
83 | Section 4. Subsection (1) of section 1002.43, Florida |
84 | Statutes, is amended to read: |
85 | 1002.43 Private tutoring programs.- |
86 | (1) Regular school attendance as defined in s. |
87 | 1003.01(13)(a) s. 1003.01(13) may be achieved by attendance in a |
88 | private tutoring program if the person tutoring the student |
89 | meets the following requirements: |
90 | (a) Holds a valid Florida certificate to teach the |
91 | subjects or grades in which instruction is given. |
92 | (b) Keeps all records and makes all reports required by |
93 | the state and district school board and makes regular reports on |
94 | the attendance of students in accordance with the provisions of |
95 | s. 1003.23(2). |
96 | (c) Requires students to be in actual attendance for the |
97 | minimum length of time prescribed by s. 1011.60(2). |
98 | Section 5. Subsections (8) and (13) of section 1003.01, |
99 | Florida Statutes, are amended to read: |
100 | 1003.01 Definitions.-As used in this chapter, the term: |
101 | (8) "Habitual truant" means a student who has 15 unexcused |
102 | absences within 90 calendar days with or without the knowledge |
103 | or consent of the student's parent;, is subject to compulsory |
104 | school attendance under s. 1003.21(1) and (2)(a) or is subject |
105 | to the Student Preparedness Pilot Program under s. 1003.215;, |
106 | and is not exempt under s. 1003.21(3), or s. 1003.24, or by |
107 | meeting the criteria for any other exemption specified by law or |
108 | rules of the State Board of Education. Such a student must have |
109 | been the subject of the activities specified in ss. 1003.26 and |
110 | 1003.27(3), without resultant successful remediation of the |
111 | truancy problem before being dealt with as a child in need of |
112 | services according to the provisions of chapter 984. |
113 | (13)(a) "Regular school attendance" means the actual |
114 | attendance of a student during the school day as defined by law |
115 | and rules of the State Board of Education. Regular attendance |
116 | within the intent of s. 1003.21 may be achieved by attendance |
117 | in: |
118 | 1.(a) A public school supported by public funds; |
119 | 2.(b) A parochial, religious, or denominational school; |
120 | 3.(c) A private school supported in whole or in part by |
121 | tuition charges or by endowments or gifts; |
122 | 4.(d) A home education program that meets the requirements |
123 | of chapter 1002; or |
124 | 5.(e) A private tutoring program that meets the |
125 | requirements of chapter 1002. |
126 | (b) "Regular program attendance" means actual attendance |
127 | by a student who is participating in the Student Preparedness |
128 | Pilot Program under s. 1003.215 and who has selected a |
129 | traditional or nontraditional academic option as defined by law |
130 | and rules of the State Board of Education. The district school |
131 | superintendent shall enforce the attendance of the student. |
132 | Section 6. Paragraph (c) of subsection (1) of section |
133 | 1003.21, Florida Statutes, is amended to read: |
134 | 1003.21 School attendance.- |
135 | (1) |
136 | (c) A student who attains the age of 16 years during the |
137 | school year is not subject to compulsory school attendance |
138 | beyond the date upon which he or she attains that age if the |
139 | student files a formal declaration of intent to terminate school |
140 | enrollment with the district school board. Public school |
141 | students who have attained the age of 16 years and who have not |
142 | graduated are subject to compulsory school attendance until the |
143 | formal declaration of intent is filed with the district school |
144 | board. The declaration must acknowledge that terminating school |
145 | enrollment is likely to reduce the student's earning potential |
146 | and must be signed by the student and the student's parent. The |
147 | school district must notify the student's parent of receipt of |
148 | the student's declaration of intent to terminate school |
149 | enrollment. The student's guidance counselor or other school |
150 | personnel must conduct an exit interview with the student to |
151 | determine the reasons for the student's decision to terminate |
152 | school enrollment and actions that could be taken to keep the |
153 | student in school. The student must be informed of opportunities |
154 | to continue his or her education in a different environment, |
155 | including, but not limited to, adult education and GED test |
156 | preparation. Additionally, the student must complete a survey in |
157 | a format prescribed by the Department of Education to provide |
158 | data on student reasons for terminating enrollment and actions |
159 | taken by schools to keep students enrolled. A student enrolled |
160 | in a Student Preparedness Pilot Program school district must |
161 | receive information regarding the program's attendance and |
162 | completion requirements under s. 1003.215. |
163 | Section 7. Section 1003.215, Florida Statutes, is created |
164 | to read: |
165 | 1003.215 Student Preparedness Pilot Program.- |
166 | (1) The Legislature finds that it is in the public |
167 | interest that all students exit from public schools having |
168 | attained academic skills that provide the students the |
169 | opportunity to pursue postsecondary education or having attained |
170 | skills that lead to ready-to-work certification, industry |
171 | certification, or skill licensure. |
172 | (2)(a) Beginning with the 2011-2012 school year, and |
173 | continuing through the 2017-2018 school year, there is created |
174 | the Student Preparedness Pilot Program, which shall be |
175 | implemented as a pilot program by school districts. Students in |
176 | a school district selected to implement the pilot program |
177 | pursuant to subsection (3) who attain the age of 16 years, but |
178 | have not reached the age of 18 years, and who choose to exercise |
179 | their option not to regularly attend school pursuant to s. |
180 | 1003.21(1)(c) shall be subject to the attendance and completion |
181 | requirements in this section. |
182 | (b) In the 2011-2012 school year, each school district |
183 | selected pursuant to subsection (3) shall review, identify, and |
184 | develop curricula options for the implementation of the pilot |
185 | program requirements pursuant to paragraph (5)(a) for students |
186 | who attain the age of 16 years, but have not reached the age of |
187 | 18 years, and whose academic goals may not include a traditional |
188 | high school diploma. These options shall include, but are not |
189 | limited to, nontraditional academic options and flexible |
190 | attendance options, and may include a phasing in of students by |
191 | age or grade. Each selected school district must develop a plan |
192 | to meet the student's needs and the attendance and completion |
193 | requirements in this section before the pilot program is |
194 | implemented in the 2012-2013 school year. |
195 | (3) The Department of Education shall develop an |
196 | application process for all school districts to apply to |
197 | participate in the pilot program. The State Board of Education |
198 | shall select the pilot program districts, one of which shall be |
199 | the Duval County School District. |
200 | (4) Parents of public school students enrolled in a |
201 | participating pilot program district must receive accurate and |
202 | timely information regarding their child's academic progress and |
203 | must be informed of ways they can help their child succeed in |
204 | school. |
205 | (5)(a) A student in a participating pilot program district |
206 | who attains the age of 16 years, but has not reached the age of |
207 | 18 years, has the right to file a formal declaration of intent |
208 | to terminate school enrollment if the declaration is signed by |
209 | the parent. The parent has the right to be notified by the |
210 | school district of the district's receipt of the student's |
211 | declaration of intent to terminate school enrollment. The |
212 | student's guidance counselor or other school personnel must |
213 | conduct an exit interview pursuant to s. 1003.21(1)(c). Any |
214 | student in a participating pilot program district who files a |
215 | declaration seeking to terminate school enrollment but has not |
216 | reached the age of 18 years shall be required, until completion |
217 | or attainment of the age of 18 years, to continue pursuing |
218 | credits toward a high school diploma, pursue a high school |
219 | equivalency diploma along with participation in the Florida |
220 | Ready to Work Certification Program under s. 1004.99, |
221 | participate in a career or job training program leading to |
222 | industry certification or skill licensure that is developed by |
223 | or in cooperation with the district school board, or participate |
224 | in the Florida Ready to Work Certification Program under s. |
225 | 1004.99. |
226 | (b) A Student Preparedness Pilot Program student subject |
227 | to the attendance and completion requirements in this section is |
228 | not an eligible student for purposes of school grading under s. |
229 | 1008.34(3)(c) if the student has selected a nontraditional |
230 | academic option as part of the pilot program. |
231 | (6) Students who are or become married or who are pregnant |
232 | and parenting have the right to attend school and receive the |
233 | same or equivalent educational instruction as other students. |
234 | (7) The Office of Program Policy Analysis and Government |
235 | Accountability (OPPAGA), in cooperation with the participating |
236 | pilot program districts, the applicable state attorneys' offices |
237 | and regional workforce boards, the Agency for Workforce |
238 | Innovation, the Department of Education, and the Department of |
239 | Juvenile Justice, shall conduct a study annually of the impact |
240 | of the pilot program on dropout and graduation rates, on the |
241 | employability of students, and on juvenile crime, using 2010- |
242 | 2011 data as the baseline for the research. OPPAGA shall develop |
243 | criteria for the collection and reporting of data using input |
244 | from the cooperating entities. The results of each annual report |
245 | shall be made available to participating pilot program |
246 | districts, the applicable state attorneys' offices and regional |
247 | workforce boards, the Agency for Workforce Education, the |
248 | Department of Education, the Department of Juvenile Justice, the |
249 | Governor, the President of the Senate, and the Speaker of the |
250 | House of Representatives by January 1 following each school |
251 | year, beginning January 1, 2015. |
252 | Section 8. Paragraph (f) of subsection (1) of section |
253 | 1003.26, Florida Statutes, is amended to read: |
254 | 1003.26 Enforcement of school attendance.-The Legislature |
255 | finds that poor academic performance is associated with |
256 | nonattendance and that school districts must take an active role |
257 | in promoting and enforcing attendance as a means of improving |
258 | student performance. It is the policy of the state that each |
259 | district school superintendent be responsible for enforcing |
260 | school attendance of all students subject to the compulsory |
261 | school age in the school district and supporting enforcement of |
262 | school attendance by local law enforcement agencies. The |
263 | responsibility includes recommending policies and procedures to |
264 | the district school board that require public schools to respond |
265 | in a timely manner to every unexcused absence, and every absence |
266 | for which the reason is unknown, of students enrolled in the |
267 | schools. District school board policies shall require the parent |
268 | of a student to justify each absence of the student, and that |
269 | justification will be evaluated based on adopted district school |
270 | board policies that define excused and unexcused absences. The |
271 | policies must provide that public schools track excused and |
272 | unexcused absences and contact the home in the case of an |
273 | unexcused absence from school, or an absence from school for |
274 | which the reason is unknown, to prevent the development of |
275 | patterns of nonattendance. The Legislature finds that early |
276 | intervention in school attendance is the most effective way of |
277 | producing good attendance habits that will lead to improved |
278 | student learning and achievement. Each public school shall |
279 | implement the following steps to promote and enforce regular |
280 | school attendance: |
281 | (1) CONTACT, REFER, AND ENFORCE.- |
282 | (f)1. If the parent of a child who has been identified as |
283 | exhibiting a pattern of nonattendance enrolls the child in a |
284 | home education program pursuant to chapter 1002, the district |
285 | school superintendent shall provide the parent a copy of s. |
286 | 1002.41 and the accountability requirements in of this |
287 | paragraph. The district school superintendent shall also refer |
288 | the parent to a home education review committee composed of the |
289 | district contact for home education programs and at least two |
290 | home educators selected by the parent from a district list of |
291 | all home educators who have conducted a home education program |
292 | for at least 3 years and who have indicated a willingness to |
293 | serve on the committee. The home education review committee |
294 | shall review the portfolio of the student, as defined by s. |
295 | 1002.41, every 30 days during the district's regular school |
296 | terms until the committee is satisfied that the home education |
297 | program is in compliance with s. 1002.41(1)(b). The first |
298 | portfolio review must occur within the first 30 calendar days of |
299 | the establishment of the program. The provisions of subparagraph |
300 | 2. do not apply once the committee determines the home education |
301 | program is in compliance with s. 1002.41(1)(b). |
302 | 2. If the parent fails to provide a portfolio to the |
303 | committee, the committee shall notify the district school |
304 | superintendent. The district school superintendent shall then |
305 | terminate the home education program and require the parent to |
306 | enroll the child in an attendance option that meets the |
307 | definition of "regular school attendance" under s. |
308 | 1003.01(13)(a)1., 2., 3., or 5., (b), (c), or (e), within 3 |
309 | days. Upon termination of a home education program pursuant to |
310 | this subparagraph, the parent shall not be eligible to reenroll |
311 | the child in a home education program for 180 calendar days. |
312 | Failure of a parent to enroll the child in an attendance option |
313 | as required by this subparagraph after termination of the home |
314 | education program pursuant to this subparagraph shall constitute |
315 | noncompliance with the compulsory attendance requirements of s. |
316 | 1003.21 and may result in criminal prosecution under s. |
317 | 1003.27(2). Nothing contained herein shall restrict the ability |
318 | of the district school superintendent, or the ability of his or |
319 | her designee, to review the portfolio pursuant to s. |
320 | 1002.41(1)(b). |
321 | Section 9. This act shall take effect July 1, 2011. |