1 | A bill to be entitled |
2 | An act relating to career education; amending s. |
3 | 1003.4156, F.S.; revising the general requirements for |
4 | middle grades promotion to require that a course in |
5 | career and education planning explore Florida's Career |
6 | Clusters; creating s. 1003.4287, F.S.; providing |
7 | requirements for a career high school diploma; |
8 | requiring a student and the student's parent to agree |
9 | in writing to the requirements of the career diploma |
10 | track; specifying the credits that must be |
11 | successfully completed to receive a career diploma; |
12 | requiring an intensive reading course or remediation |
13 | in mathematics for a student who does not meet certain |
14 | academic standards; requiring at least one course |
15 | required for high school graduation to be completed |
16 | through online learning; providing strategies to |
17 | enable an exceptional student to meet graduation |
18 | requirements for a career diploma; requiring district |
19 | school board standards for graduation and policies to |
20 | assist students in meeting the requirements; requiring |
21 | rules for test accommodations and modifications of |
22 | procedures for students with disabilities; providing |
23 | for the award of a certificate of completion to a |
24 | student who is unable to meet certain standards; |
25 | providing conditions for the waiver of assessment |
26 | requirements for a career diploma for a student with a |
27 | disability; authorizing the State Board of Education |
28 | to adopt rules; amending ss. 1002.321, 1002.33, |
29 | 1002.45, 1003.03, 1003.413, 1003.428, 1003.438, |
30 | 1003.493, 1003.4935, and 1008.22, F.S.; conforming |
31 | provisions to changes made by the act; providing an |
32 | effective date. |
33 |
|
34 | Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida: |
35 |
|
36 | Section 1. Paragraph (a) of subsection (1) of section |
37 | 1003.4156, Florida Statutes, is amended to read: |
38 | 1003.4156 General requirements for middle grades |
39 | promotion.- |
40 | (1) Promotion from a school composed of middle grades 6, |
41 | 7, and 8 requires that: |
42 | (a) The student must successfully complete academic |
43 | courses as follows: |
44 | 1. Three middle school or higher courses in English. These |
45 | courses shall emphasize literature, composition, and technical |
46 | text. |
47 | 2. Three middle school or higher courses in mathematics. |
48 | Each middle school must offer at least one high school level |
49 | mathematics course for which students may earn high school |
50 | credit. Successful completion of a high school level Algebra I |
51 | or geometry course is not contingent upon the student's |
52 | performance on the end-of-course assessment required under s. |
53 | 1008.22(3)(c)2.a.(I). However, beginning with the 2011-2012 |
54 | school year, to earn high school credit for an Algebra I course, |
55 | a middle school student must pass the Algebra I end-of-course |
56 | assessment, and beginning with the 2012-2013 school year, to |
57 | earn high school credit for a geometry course, a middle school |
58 | student must pass the geometry end-of-course assessment. |
59 | 3. Three middle school or higher courses in social |
60 | studies, one semester of which must include the study of state |
61 | and federal government and civics education. Beginning with |
62 | students entering grade 6 in the 2012-2013 school year, one of |
63 | these courses must be at least a one-semester civics education |
64 | course that a student successfully completes in accordance with |
65 | s. 1008.22(3)(c) and that includes the roles and |
66 | responsibilities of federal, state, and local governments; the |
67 | structures and functions of the legislative, executive, and |
68 | judicial branches of government; and the meaning and |
69 | significance of historic documents, such as the Articles of |
70 | Confederation, the Declaration of Independence, and the |
71 | Constitution of the United States. |
72 | 4. Three middle school or higher courses in science. |
73 | Successful completion of a high school level Biology I course is |
74 | not contingent upon the student's performance on the end-of- |
75 | course assessment required under s. 1008.22(3)(c)2.a.(II). |
76 | However, beginning with the 2012-2013 school year, to earn high |
77 | school credit for a Biology I course, a middle school student |
78 | must pass the Biology I end-of-course assessment. |
79 | 5. One course in career and education planning to be |
80 | completed in 7th or 8th grade. The course may be taught by any |
81 | member of the instructional staff; must include career |
82 | exploration aligned to Florida's Career Clusters; must include |
83 | career exploration using Florida CHOICES or a comparable cost- |
84 | effective program; must include educational planning using the |
85 | online student advising system known as Florida Academic |
86 | Counseling and Tracking for Students at the Internet website |
87 | FACTS.org; and shall result in the completion of a personalized |
88 | academic and career plan. The required personalized academic and |
89 | career plan must inform students of high school graduation |
90 | requirements, high school assessment and college entrance test |
91 | requirements, Florida Bright Futures Scholarship Program |
92 | requirements, state university and Florida College System |
93 | institution admission requirements, and programs through which a |
94 | high school student can earn college credit, including Advanced |
95 | Placement, International Baccalaureate, Advanced International |
96 | Certificate of Education, dual enrollment, career academy |
97 | opportunities, and courses that lead to national industry |
98 | certification. |
99 |
|
100 | A student with a disability, as defined in s. 1007.02(2), for |
101 | whom the individual education plan team determines that an end- |
102 | of-course assessment cannot accurately measure the student's |
103 | abilities, taking into consideration all allowable |
104 | accommodations, shall have the end-of-course assessment results |
105 | waived for purposes of determining the student's course grade |
106 | and completing the requirements for middle grades promotion. |
107 | Each school must hold a parent meeting either in the evening or |
108 | on a weekend to inform parents about the course curriculum and |
109 | activities. Each student shall complete an electronic personal |
110 | education plan that must be signed by the student; the student's |
111 | instructor, guidance counselor, or academic advisor; and the |
112 | student's parent. The Department of Education shall develop |
113 | course frameworks and professional development materials for the |
114 | career exploration and education planning course. The course may |
115 | be implemented as a stand-alone course or integrated into |
116 | another course or courses. The Commissioner of Education shall |
117 | collect longitudinal high school course enrollment data by |
118 | student ethnicity in order to analyze course-taking patterns. |
119 | Section 2. Section 1003.4287, Florida Statutes, is created |
120 | to read: |
121 | 1003.4287 Requirements for the career high school |
122 | diploma.- |
123 | (1) Beginning with students entering grade 9 in the 2012- |
124 | 2013 school year, a career high school diploma shall be awarded |
125 | to a student who successfully completes a minimum of 24 credits |
126 | as required under this section. In order to pursue the career |
127 | diploma, the student and the student's parent must sign a form |
128 | confirming that they are aware of the requirements for the |
129 | career track and agree to the minimum standards for successful |
130 | completion. The school personnel designated to advise the |
131 | student or the school principal must also sign the form to |
132 | confirm that the school and the school district are aware of the |
133 | student's intent to pursue the career diploma. The form shall be |
134 | a standard form prescribed by the Department of Education and |
135 | used in each school district. Students must be advised of |
136 | eligibility requirements for state scholarship programs and |
137 | postsecondary admissions. |
138 | (2) The 24 credits may be earned through applied, |
139 | integrated, and combined courses approved by the Department of |
140 | Education and shall be distributed as follows: |
141 | (a) Core curriculum credits: |
142 | 1. Four credits in English, with major concentration in |
143 | composition, reading for information, and literature. |
144 | 2. Four credits in mathematics, one of which must be |
145 | Algebra I, a series of courses equivalent to Algebra I, or a |
146 | higher-level mathematics course. In addition to the Algebra I |
147 | credit requirement, one of the four credits in mathematics must |
148 | be geometry or a series of courses equivalent to geometry as |
149 | approved by the State Board of Education. The end-of-course |
150 | assessment requirements under s. 1008.22(3)(c)2.a.(I) must be |
151 | met in order for a student to earn the required credits in |
152 | Algebra I and geometry. |
153 | 3. Three credits in science, two of which must have a |
154 | laboratory component. One of the three credits in science must |
155 | be Biology I or a series of courses equivalent to Biology I as |
156 | approved by the State Board of Education. The end-of-course |
157 | assessment requirements under s. 1008.22(3)(c)2.a.(II) must be |
158 | met in order for a student to earn the required credit in |
159 | Biology I. |
160 | 4. Three credits in social studies as follows: one credit |
161 | in United States history; one credit in world history; one-half |
162 | credit in economics; and one-half credit in United States |
163 | government. |
164 | 5. One-half credit in fine or performing arts, speech and |
165 | debate, or a practical arts course that incorporates artistic |
166 | content and techniques of creativity, interpretation, and |
167 | imagination. Eligible practical arts courses shall be identified |
168 | through the Course Code Directory. |
169 | 6. One credit in physical education to include integration |
170 | of health. Participation in an interscholastic sport at the |
171 | junior varsity or varsity level for two full seasons shall |
172 | satisfy the one-credit requirement in physical education if the |
173 | student passes a competency test on personal fitness with a |
174 | score of "C" or better. The competency test on personal fitness |
175 | must be developed by the Department of Education. A district |
176 | school board may not require that the one credit in physical |
177 | education be taken during the 9th grade year. Completion of one |
178 | semester with a grade of "C" or better in a marching band class, |
179 | in a physical activity class that requires participation in |
180 | marching band activities as an extracurricular activity, or in a |
181 | dance class shall satisfy one-half credit in physical education |
182 | or one-half credit in performing arts. This credit may not be |
183 | used to satisfy the personal fitness requirement or the |
184 | requirement for adaptive physical education under an individual |
185 | education plan (IEP) or 504 plan. Completion of 2 years in a |
186 | Reserve Officer Training Corps (R.O.T.C.) class, a significant |
187 | component of which is drills, shall satisfy the one-credit |
188 | requirement in physical education and the one-credit requirement |
189 | in performing arts. This credit may not be used to satisfy the |
190 | personal fitness requirement or the requirement for adaptive |
191 | physical education under an individual education plan (IEP) or |
192 | 504 plan. |
193 | (b) Seven credits in career or technical training. A |
194 | student must receive at least a "C" average in each course to |
195 | earn the required credit. |
196 | (c) One-half credit in a career preparation or planning |
197 | course. A student must receive at least a "C" average to earn |
198 | the required credit. |
199 | (d) One credit in an elective. |
200 | 1. For each year in which a student scores at Level 1 on |
201 | FCAT Reading, the student must be enrolled in and complete an |
202 | intensive reading course the following year. Placement of Level |
203 | 2 readers in either an intensive reading course or a content |
204 | area course in which reading strategies are delivered shall be |
205 | determined by diagnosis of reading needs. The department shall |
206 | provide guidance on appropriate strategies for diagnosing and |
207 | meeting the varying instructional needs of students reading |
208 | below grade level. Reading courses shall be designed and offered |
209 | pursuant to the comprehensive reading plan required by s. |
210 | 1011.62(9). A high school student who scores at Level 1 or Level |
211 | 2 on FCAT Reading but who did not score below Level 3 in the |
212 | previous 3 years may be granted a 1-year exemption from the |
213 | reading remediation requirement; however, the student must have |
214 | an approved academic improvement plan already in place, signed |
215 | by the appropriate school staff and the student's parent, for |
216 | the year for which the exemption is granted. |
217 | 2. For each year in which a student scores at Level 1 or |
218 | Level 2 on FCAT Mathematics, the student must receive |
219 | remediation the following year. These courses may be taught |
220 | through applied, integrated, or combined courses and are subject |
221 | to approval by the department for inclusion in the Course Code |
222 | Directory. |
223 | (e) Beginning with students entering grade 9 in the 2012- |
224 | 2013 school year, at least one course within the 24 credits |
225 | required in this subsection must be completed through online |
226 | learning. However, an online course taken during grades 6 |
227 | through 8 fulfills this requirement. This requirement shall be |
228 | met through an online course offered by the Florida Virtual |
229 | School, an online course offered by the high school, or an |
230 | online dual enrollment course offered pursuant to a district |
231 | interinstitutional articulation agreement pursuant to s. |
232 | 1007.235. A student who is enrolled in a full-time or part-time |
233 | virtual instruction program under s. 1002.45 meets this |
234 | requirement. |
235 | (3)(a) A district school board may require specific |
236 | courses and programs of study within the minimum credit |
237 | requirements for high school graduation and shall modify basic |
238 | courses, as necessary, to assure exceptional students the |
239 | opportunity to meet the graduation requirements for a career |
240 | diploma, using one of the following strategies: |
241 | 1. Assignment of the exceptional student to an exceptional |
242 | education class for instruction in a basic course with the same |
243 | student performance standards as those required of |
244 | nonexceptional students in the district school board student |
245 | progression plan; or |
246 | 2. Assignment of the exceptional student to a basic |
247 | education class for instruction that is modified to accommodate |
248 | the student's exceptionality. |
249 | (b) The district school board shall determine which of |
250 | these strategies to employ based upon an assessment of the |
251 | student's needs and shall reflect this decision in the student's |
252 | individual education plan. |
253 | (4) Each district school board shall establish standards |
254 | for graduation from its schools, which must include: |
255 | (a) Successful completion of the academic credit or |
256 | curriculum requirements of subsections (1) and (2). For courses |
257 | that require statewide, standardized end-of-course assessments |
258 | under s. 1008.22(3)(c)2.d., a minimum of 30 percent of a |
259 | student's course grade shall be comprised of performance on the |
260 | statewide, standardized end-of-course assessment. |
261 | (b) Earning passing scores on the FCAT, as defined in s. |
262 | 1008.22(3)(c), or scores on a standardized test that are |
263 | concordant with passing scores on the FCAT, as defined in s. |
264 | 1008.22(10). |
265 | (c) Completion of all other applicable requirements |
266 | prescribed by the district school board pursuant to s. 1008.25. |
267 | (d) Achievement of a cumulative grade point average of 2.0 |
268 | on a 4.0 scale, or its equivalent, in the courses required by |
269 | this section. |
270 |
|
271 | Each district school board shall adopt policies designed to |
272 | assist students in meeting the requirements of this subsection. |
273 | These policies may include, but are not limited to: forgiveness |
274 | policies, summer school or before or after school attendance, |
275 | special counseling, volunteers or peer tutors, school-sponsored |
276 | help sessions, homework hotlines, and study skills classes. |
277 | Forgiveness policies for required courses shall be limited to |
278 | replacing a grade of "D" or "F," or the equivalent of a grade of |
279 | "D" or "F," with a grade of "C" or higher, or the equivalent of |
280 | a grade of "C" or higher, earned subsequently in the same or |
281 | comparable course. Forgiveness policies for elective courses |
282 | shall be limited to replacing a grade of "D" or "F," or the |
283 | equivalent of a grade of "D" or "F," with a grade of "C" or |
284 | higher, or the equivalent of a grade of "C" or higher, earned |
285 | subsequently in another course. The only exception to these |
286 | forgiveness policies shall be made for a student in the middle |
287 | grades who takes any high school course for high school credit |
288 | and earns a grade of "C," "D," or "F" or the equivalent of a |
289 | grade of "C," "D," or "F." In such case, the district |
290 | forgiveness policy must allow the replacement of the grade with |
291 | a grade of "C" or higher, or the equivalent of a grade of "C" or |
292 | higher, earned subsequently in the same or comparable course. In |
293 | all cases of grade forgiveness, only the new grade shall be used |
294 | in the calculation of the student's grade point average. Any |
295 | course grade not replaced according to a district school board |
296 | forgiveness policy shall be included in the calculation of the |
297 | cumulative grade point average required for graduation. |
298 | (5) The State Board of Education, after a public hearing |
299 | and consideration, shall adopt rules based upon the |
300 | recommendations of the Commissioner of Education for the |
301 | provision of test accommodations and modifications of procedures |
302 | as necessary for students with disabilities which will |
303 | demonstrate the student's abilities rather than reflect the |
304 | student's impaired sensory, manual, speaking, or psychological |
305 | process skills. |
306 | (6) The public hearing and consideration required in |
307 | subsection (5) shall not be construed to amend or nullify the |
308 | requirements of security relating to the contents of |
309 | examinations or assessment instruments and related materials or |
310 | data as prescribed in s. 1008.23. |
311 | (7)(a) A student who meets all requirements prescribed in |
312 | subsections (1), (2), (3), and (4) shall be awarded a career |
313 | diploma in a form prescribed by the State Board of Education. |
314 | (b) A student who completes the minimum number of credits |
315 | and other requirements prescribed by subsections (1), (2), and |
316 | (3), but who is unable to meet the standards of paragraph |
317 | (4)(b), paragraph (4)(c), or paragraph (4)(d), shall be awarded |
318 | a certificate of completion in a form prescribed by the State |
319 | Board of Education. However, any student who is otherwise |
320 | entitled to a certificate of completion may elect to remain in |
321 | the secondary school either as a full-time student or a part- |
322 | time student for up to 1 additional year and receive special |
323 | instruction designed to remedy his or her identified |
324 | deficiencies. |
325 | (8)(a) Each district school board must provide instruction |
326 | to prepare students with disabilities to demonstrate proficiency |
327 | in the core content knowledge and skills necessary for |
328 | successful grade-to-grade progression and high school |
329 | graduation. |
330 | (b)1. A student with a disability, as defined in s. |
331 | 1007.02(2), for whom the individual education plan (IEP) |
332 | committee determines that the FCAT cannot accurately measure the |
333 | student's abilities, taking into consideration all allowable |
334 | accommodations, shall have the FCAT requirement of paragraph |
335 | (4)(b) waived for the purpose of receiving a career diploma, if |
336 | the student: |
337 | a. Completes the minimum number of credits and other |
338 | requirements prescribed by subsections (1), (2), and (3). |
339 | b. Does not meet the requirements of paragraph (4)(b) |
340 | after one opportunity in 10th grade and one opportunity in 11th |
341 | grade. |
342 | 2. A student with a disability, as defined in s. |
343 | 1007.02(2), for whom the IEP committee determines that an end- |
344 | of-course assessment cannot accurately measure the student's |
345 | abilities, taking into consideration all allowable |
346 | accommodations, shall have the end-of-course assessment results |
347 | waived for the purpose of determining the student's course grade |
348 | and credit as required in paragraph (4)(a). |
349 | (9) The State Board of Education may adopt rules pursuant |
350 | to ss. 120.536(1) and 120.54 to implement the provisions of this |
351 | section and may enforce the provisions of this section pursuant |
352 | to s. 1008.32. |
353 | Section 3. Subsection (3) of section 1002.321, Florida |
354 | Statutes, is amended to read: |
355 | 1002.321 Digital learning.- |
356 | (3) DIGITAL PREPARATION.-Each student must graduate from |
357 | high school having taken at least one online course, as provided |
358 | in s. 1003.428 or s. 1003.4287. |
359 | Section 4. Paragraph (a) of subsection (7) of section |
360 | 1002.33, Florida Statutes, is amended to read: |
361 | 1002.33 Charter schools.- |
362 | (7) CHARTER.-The major issues involving the operation of a |
363 | charter school shall be considered in advance and written into |
364 | the charter. The charter shall be signed by the governing board |
365 | of the charter school and the sponsor, following a public |
366 | hearing to ensure community input. |
367 | (a) The charter shall address and criteria for approval of |
368 | the charter shall be based on: |
369 | 1. The school's mission, the students to be served, and |
370 | the ages and grades to be included. |
371 | 2. The focus of the curriculum, the instructional methods |
372 | to be used, any distinctive instructional techniques to be |
373 | employed, and identification and acquisition of appropriate |
374 | technologies needed to improve educational and administrative |
375 | performance which include a means for promoting safe, ethical, |
376 | and appropriate uses of technology which comply with legal and |
377 | professional standards. |
378 | a. The charter shall ensure that reading is a primary |
379 | focus of the curriculum and that resources are provided to |
380 | identify and provide specialized instruction for students who |
381 | are reading below grade level. The curriculum and instructional |
382 | strategies for reading must be consistent with the Sunshine |
383 | State Standards and grounded in scientifically based reading |
384 | research. |
385 | b. In order to provide students with access to diverse |
386 | instructional delivery models, to facilitate the integration of |
387 | technology within traditional classroom instruction, and to |
388 | provide students with the skills they need to compete in the |
389 | 21st century economy, the Legislature encourages instructional |
390 | methods for blended learning courses consisting of both |
391 | traditional classroom and online instructional techniques. |
392 | Charter schools may implement blended learning courses which |
393 | combine traditional classroom instruction and virtual |
394 | instruction. Students in a blended learning course must be full- |
395 | time students of the charter school and receive the online |
396 | instruction in a classroom setting at the charter school. |
397 | Instructional personnel certified pursuant to s. 1012.55 who |
398 | provide virtual instruction for blended learning courses may be |
399 | employees of the charter school or may be under contract to |
400 | provide instructional services to charter school students. At a |
401 | minimum, such instructional personnel must hold an active state |
402 | or school district adjunct certification under s. 1012.57 for |
403 | the subject area of the blended learning course. The funding and |
404 | performance accountability requirements for blended learning |
405 | courses are the same as those for traditional courses. |
406 | 3. The current incoming baseline standard of student |
407 | academic achievement, the outcomes to be achieved, and the |
408 | method of measurement that will be used. The criteria listed in |
409 | this subparagraph shall include a detailed description of: |
410 | a. How the baseline student academic achievement levels |
411 | and prior rates of academic progress will be established. |
412 | b. How these baseline rates will be compared to rates of |
413 | academic progress achieved by these same students while |
414 | attending the charter school. |
415 | c. To the extent possible, how these rates of progress |
416 | will be evaluated and compared with rates of progress of other |
417 | closely comparable student populations. |
418 |
|
419 | The district school board is required to provide academic |
420 | student performance data to charter schools for each of their |
421 | students coming from the district school system, as well as |
422 | rates of academic progress of comparable student populations in |
423 | the district school system. |
424 | 4. The methods used to identify the educational strengths |
425 | and needs of students and how well educational goals and |
426 | performance standards are met by students attending the charter |
427 | school. The methods shall provide a means for the charter school |
428 | to ensure accountability to its constituents by analyzing |
429 | student performance data and by evaluating the effectiveness and |
430 | efficiency of its major educational programs. Students in |
431 | charter schools shall, at a minimum, participate in the |
432 | statewide assessment program created under s. 1008.22. |
433 | 5. In secondary charter schools, a method for determining |
434 | that a student has satisfied the requirements for graduation in |
435 | s. 1003.428, s. 1003.4287, s. 1003.429, or s. 1003.43. |
436 | 6. A method for resolving conflicts between the governing |
437 | board of the charter school and the sponsor. |
438 | 7. The admissions procedures and dismissal procedures, |
439 | including the school's code of student conduct. |
440 | 8. The ways by which the school will achieve a |
441 | racial/ethnic balance reflective of the community it serves or |
442 | within the racial/ethnic range of other public schools in the |
443 | same school district. |
444 | 9. The financial and administrative management of the |
445 | school, including a reasonable demonstration of the professional |
446 | experience or competence of those individuals or organizations |
447 | applying to operate the charter school or those hired or |
448 | retained to perform such professional services and the |
449 | description of clearly delineated responsibilities and the |
450 | policies and practices needed to effectively manage the charter |
451 | school. A description of internal audit procedures and |
452 | establishment of controls to ensure that financial resources are |
453 | properly managed must be included. Both public sector and |
454 | private sector professional experience shall be equally valid in |
455 | such a consideration. |
456 | 10. The asset and liability projections required in the |
457 | application which are incorporated into the charter and shall be |
458 | compared with information provided in the annual report of the |
459 | charter school. |
460 | 11. A description of procedures that identify various |
461 | risks and provide for a comprehensive approach to reduce the |
462 | impact of losses; plans to ensure the safety and security of |
463 | students and staff; plans to identify, minimize, and protect |
464 | others from violent or disruptive student behavior; and the |
465 | manner in which the school will be insured, including whether or |
466 | not the school will be required to have liability insurance, |
467 | and, if so, the terms and conditions thereof and the amounts of |
468 | coverage. |
469 | 12. The term of the charter which shall provide for |
470 | cancellation of the charter if insufficient progress has been |
471 | made in attaining the student achievement objectives of the |
472 | charter and if it is not likely that such objectives can be |
473 | achieved before expiration of the charter. The initial term of a |
474 | charter shall be for 4 or 5 years. In order to facilitate access |
475 | to long-term financial resources for charter school |
476 | construction, charter schools that are operated by a |
477 | municipality or other public entity as provided by law are |
478 | eligible for up to a 15-year charter, subject to approval by the |
479 | district school board. A charter lab school is eligible for a |
480 | charter for a term of up to 15 years. In addition, to facilitate |
481 | access to long-term financial resources for charter school |
482 | construction, charter schools that are operated by a private, |
483 | not-for-profit, s. 501(c)(3) status corporation are eligible for |
484 | up to a 15-year charter, subject to approval by the district |
485 | school board. Such long-term charters remain subject to annual |
486 | review and may be terminated during the term of the charter, but |
487 | only according to the provisions set forth in subsection (8). |
488 | 13. The facilities to be used and their location. |
489 | 14. The qualifications to be required of the teachers and |
490 | the potential strategies used to recruit, hire, train, and |
491 | retain qualified staff to achieve best value. |
492 | 15. The governance structure of the school, including the |
493 | status of the charter school as a public or private employer as |
494 | required in paragraph (12)(i). |
495 | 16. A timetable for implementing the charter which |
496 | addresses the implementation of each element thereof and the |
497 | date by which the charter shall be awarded in order to meet this |
498 | timetable. |
499 | 17. In the case of an existing public school that is being |
500 | converted to charter status, alternative arrangements for |
501 | current students who choose not to attend the charter school and |
502 | for current teachers who choose not to teach in the charter |
503 | school after conversion in accordance with the existing |
504 | collective bargaining agreement or district school board rule in |
505 | the absence of a collective bargaining agreement. However, |
506 | alternative arrangements shall not be required for current |
507 | teachers who choose not to teach in a charter lab school, except |
508 | as authorized by the employment policies of the state university |
509 | which grants the charter to the lab school. |
510 | 18. Full disclosure of the identity of all relatives |
511 | employed by the charter school who are related to the charter |
512 | school owner, president, chairperson of the governing board of |
513 | directors, superintendent, governing board member, principal, |
514 | assistant principal, or any other person employed by the charter |
515 | school who has equivalent decisionmaking authority. For the |
516 | purpose of this subparagraph, the term "relative" means father, |
517 | mother, son, daughter, brother, sister, uncle, aunt, first |
518 | cousin, nephew, niece, husband, wife, father-in-law, mother-in- |
519 | law, son-in-law, daughter-in-law, brother-in-law, sister-in-law, |
520 | stepfather, stepmother, stepson, stepdaughter, stepbrother, |
521 | stepsister, half brother, or half sister. |
522 | 19. Implementation of the activities authorized under s. |
523 | 1002.331 by the charter school when it satisfies the eligibility |
524 | requirements for a high-performing charter school. A high- |
525 | performing charter school shall notify its sponsor in writing by |
526 | March 1 if it intends to increase enrollment or expand grade |
527 | levels the following school year. The written notice shall |
528 | specify the amount of the enrollment increase and the grade |
529 | levels that will be added, as applicable. |
530 | Section 5. Paragraph (b) of subsection (4) of section |
531 | 1002.45, Florida Statutes, is amended to read: |
532 | 1002.45 Virtual instruction programs.- |
533 | (4) CONTRACT REQUIREMENTS.-Each contract with an approved |
534 | provider must at minimum: |
535 | (b) Provide a method for determining that a student has |
536 | satisfied the requirements for graduation in s. 1003.428, s. |
537 | 1003.4287, s. 1003.429, or s. 1003.43 if the contract is for the |
538 | provision of a full-time virtual instruction program to students |
539 | in grades 9 through 12. |
540 | Section 6. Subsection (6) of section 1003.03, Florida |
541 | Statutes, is amended to read: |
542 | 1003.03 Maximum class size.- |
543 | (6) COURSES FOR COMPLIANCE.-Consistent with the provisions |
544 | in ss. 1003.01(14), and 1003.428, and 1003.4287, the Department |
545 | of Education shall identify from the Course Code Directory the |
546 | core-curricula courses for the purpose of satisfying the maximum |
547 | class size requirement in this section. The department may adopt |
548 | rules to implement this subsection, if necessary. |
549 | Section 7. Subsection (3) of section 1003.413, Florida |
550 | Statutes, is amended to read: |
551 | 1003.413 Florida Secondary School Redesign Act.- |
552 | (3) Based on these guiding principles, district school |
553 | boards shall establish policies to implement the requirements of |
554 | ss. 1003.4156, 1003.428, 1003.4287, and 1003.493. The policies |
555 | must address: |
556 | (a) Procedures for placing and promoting students who |
557 | enter a Florida public school at grade 6 through grade 12 from |
558 | out of state or from a foreign country, including a review of |
559 | the student's prior academic performance. |
560 | (b) Alternative methods for students to demonstrate |
561 | competency in required courses and credits, with special support |
562 | for students who have been retained. |
563 | (c) Applied, integrated, and combined courses that provide |
564 | flexibility for students to enroll in courses that are creative |
565 | and meet individual learning styles and student needs. |
566 | (d) Credit recovery courses and intensive reading and |
567 | mathematics intervention courses based on student performance on |
568 | FCAT Reading and Mathematics. These courses should be competency |
569 | based and offered through innovative delivery systems, including |
570 | computer-assisted instruction. School districts should use |
571 | learning gains as well as other appropriate data and provide |
572 | incentives to identify and reward high-performing teachers who |
573 | teach credit recovery and intensive intervention courses. |
574 | (e) Grade forgiveness policies that replace a grade of "D" |
575 | or "F" with a grade of "C" or higher earned subsequently in the |
576 | same or a comparable course. |
577 | (f) Summer academies for students to receive intensive |
578 | reading and mathematics intervention courses or competency-based |
579 | credit recovery courses. A student's participation in an |
580 | instructional or remediation program prior to or immediately |
581 | following entering grade 9 for the first time shall not affect |
582 | that student's classification as a first-time 9th grader for |
583 | reporting purposes. |
584 | (g) Strategies to support teachers' pursuit of the reading |
585 | endorsement and emphasize reading instruction professional |
586 | development for content area teachers. |
587 | (h) Creative and flexible scheduling designed to meet |
588 | student needs. |
589 | (i) An annual review of each high school student's |
590 | electronic personal education plan created pursuant to s. |
591 | 1003.4156 and procedures for high school students who have not |
592 | prepared an electronic personal education plan pursuant to s. |
593 | 1003.4156 to prepare such plan. |
594 | (j) Tools for parents to regularly monitor student |
595 | progress and communicate with teachers. |
596 | (k) Additional course requirements for promotion and |
597 | graduation which may be determined by each school district in |
598 | the student progression plan and may include additional |
599 | academic, fine and performing arts, physical education, or |
600 | career and technical education courses in order to provide a |
601 | complete education program pursuant to s. 1001.41(3). |
602 | Section 8. Subsection (1) of section 1003.428, Florida |
603 | Statutes, is amended to read: |
604 | 1003.428 General requirements for high school graduation; |
605 | revised.- |
606 | (1) Except as otherwise authorized pursuant to s. |
607 | 1003.4287 or s. 1003.429, beginning with students entering grade |
608 | 9 in the 2007-2008 school year, graduation requires the |
609 | successful completion of a minimum of 24 credits, an |
610 | International Baccalaureate curriculum, or an Advanced |
611 | International Certificate of Education curriculum. Students must |
612 | be advised of eligibility requirements for state scholarship |
613 | programs and postsecondary admissions. |
614 | Section 9. Section 1003.438, Florida Statutes, is amended |
615 | to read: |
616 | 1003.438 Special high school graduation requirements for |
617 | certain exceptional students.-A student who has been identified, |
618 | in accordance with rules established by the State Board of |
619 | Education, as a student with disabilities who has an |
620 | intellectual disability; an autism spectrum disorder; a language |
621 | impairment; an orthopedic impairment; an other health |
622 | impairment; a traumatic brain injury; an emotional or behavioral |
623 | disability; a specific learning disability, including, but not |
624 | limited to, dyslexia, dyscalculia, or developmental aphasia; or |
625 | students who are deaf or hard of hearing or dual sensory |
626 | impaired shall not be required to meet all requirements of s. |
627 | 1003.43, or s. 1003.428, or s. 1003.4287 and shall, upon meeting |
628 | all applicable requirements prescribed by the district school |
629 | board pursuant to s. 1008.25, be awarded a special diploma in a |
630 | form prescribed by the commissioner; however, such special |
631 | graduation requirements prescribed by the district school board |
632 | must include minimum graduation requirements as prescribed by |
633 | the commissioner. Any such student who meets all special |
634 | requirements of the district school board, but is unable to meet |
635 | the appropriate special state minimum requirements, shall be |
636 | awarded a special certificate of completion in a form prescribed |
637 | by the commissioner. However, this section does not limit or |
638 | restrict the right of an exceptional student solely to a special |
639 | diploma or special certificate of completion. Any such student |
640 | shall, upon proper request, be afforded the opportunity to fully |
641 | meet all requirements of s. 1003.43, or s. 1003.428, or s. |
642 | 1003.4287 through the standard procedures established therein |
643 | and thereby to qualify for a standard diploma or a career |
644 | diploma upon graduation. |
645 | Section 10. Paragraph (g) of subsection (4) of section |
646 | 1003.493, Florida Statutes, is amended to read: |
647 | 1003.493 Career and professional academies.- |
648 | (4) Each career and professional academy must: |
649 | (g) Deliver academic content through instruction relevant |
650 | to the career, including intensive reading and mathematics |
651 | intervention required by s. 1003.428 or s. 1003.4287, with an |
652 | emphasis on strengthening reading for information skills. |
653 | Section 11. Paragraph (c) of subsection (2) of section |
654 | 1003.4935, Florida Statutes, is amended to read: |
655 | 1003.4935 Middle school career and professional academy |
656 | courses.- |
657 | (2) Each middle school career and professional academy |
658 | must be aligned with at least one high school career and |
659 | professional academy offered in the district and maintain |
660 | partnerships with local business and industry and economic |
661 | development boards. Middle school career and professional |
662 | academies must: |
663 | (c) Offer courses that integrate career and professional |
664 | academy content with intensive reading and mathematics pursuant |
665 | to s. 1003.428 or s. 1003.4287; |
666 | Section 12. Paragraph (c) of subsection (3) and paragraphs |
667 | (b) and (c) of subsection (9) of section 1008.22, Florida |
668 | Statutes, are amended to read: |
669 | 1008.22 Student assessment program for public schools.- |
670 | (3) STATEWIDE ASSESSMENT PROGRAM.-The commissioner shall |
671 | design and implement a statewide program of educational |
672 | assessment that provides information for the improvement of the |
673 | operation and management of the public schools, including |
674 | schools operating for the purpose of providing educational |
675 | services to youth in Department of Juvenile Justice programs. |
676 | The commissioner may enter into contracts for the continued |
677 | administration of the assessment, testing, and evaluation |
678 | programs authorized and funded by the Legislature. Contracts may |
679 | be initiated in 1 fiscal year and continue into the next and may |
680 | be paid from the appropriations of either or both fiscal years. |
681 | The commissioner is authorized to negotiate for the sale or |
682 | lease of tests, scoring protocols, test scoring services, and |
683 | related materials developed pursuant to law. Pursuant to the |
684 | statewide assessment program, the commissioner shall: |
685 | (c) Develop and implement a student achievement testing |
686 | program as follows: |
687 | 1. The Florida Comprehensive Assessment Test (FCAT) |
688 | measures a student's content knowledge and skills in reading, |
689 | writing, science, and mathematics. The content knowledge and |
690 | skills assessed by the FCAT must be aligned to the core |
691 | curricular content established in the Next Generation Sunshine |
692 | State Standards. Other content areas may be included as directed |
693 | by the commissioner. Comprehensive assessments of reading and |
694 | mathematics shall be administered annually in grades 3 through |
695 | 10 except, beginning with the 2010-2011 school year, the |
696 | administration of grade 9 FCAT Mathematics shall be |
697 | discontinued, and beginning with the 2011-2012 school year, the |
698 | administration of grade 10 FCAT Mathematics shall be |
699 | discontinued, except as required for students who have not |
700 | attained minimum performance expectations for graduation as |
701 | provided in paragraph (9)(c). FCAT Writing and FCAT Science |
702 | shall be administered at least once at the elementary, middle, |
703 | and high school levels except, beginning with the 2011-2012 |
704 | school year, the administration of FCAT Science at the high |
705 | school level shall be discontinued. |
706 | 2.a. End-of-course assessments for a subject shall be |
707 | administered in addition to the comprehensive assessments |
708 | required under subparagraph 1. End-of-course assessments must be |
709 | rigorous, statewide, standardized, and developed or approved by |
710 | the department. The content knowledge and skills assessed by |
711 | end-of-course assessments must be aligned to the core curricular |
712 | content established in the Next Generation Sunshine State |
713 | Standards. |
714 | (I) Statewide, standardized end-of-course assessments in |
715 | mathematics shall be administered according to this sub-sub- |
716 | subparagraph. Beginning with the 2010-2011 school year, all |
717 | students enrolled in Algebra I or an equivalent course must take |
718 | the Algebra I end-of-course assessment. For students entering |
719 | grade 9 during the 2010-2011 school year and who are enrolled in |
720 | Algebra I or an equivalent, each student's performance on the |
721 | end-of-course assessment in Algebra I shall constitute 30 |
722 | percent of the student's final course grade. Beginning with |
723 | students entering grade 9 in the 2011-2012 school year, a |
724 | student who is enrolled in Algebra I or an equivalent must earn |
725 | a passing score on the end-of-course assessment in Algebra I or |
726 | attain an equivalent score as described in subsection (11) in |
727 | order to earn course credit. Beginning with the 2011-2012 school |
728 | year, all students enrolled in geometry or an equivalent course |
729 | must take the geometry end-of-course assessment. For students |
730 | entering grade 9 during the 2011-2012 school year, each |
731 | student's performance on the end-of-course assessment in |
732 | geometry shall constitute 30 percent of the student's final |
733 | course grade. Beginning with students entering grade 9 during |
734 | the 2012-2013 school year, a student must earn a passing score |
735 | on the end-of-course assessment in geometry or attain an |
736 | equivalent score as described in subsection (11) in order to |
737 | earn course credit. |
738 | (II) Statewide, standardized end-of-course assessments in |
739 | science shall be administered according to this sub-sub- |
740 | subparagraph. Beginning with the 2011-2012 school year, all |
741 | students enrolled in Biology I or an equivalent course must take |
742 | the Biology I end-of-course assessment. For the 2011-2012 school |
743 | year, each student's performance on the end-of-course assessment |
744 | in Biology I shall constitute 30 percent of the student's final |
745 | course grade. Beginning with students entering grade 9 during |
746 | the 2012-2013 school year, a student must earn a passing score |
747 | on the end-of-course assessment in Biology I in order to earn |
748 | course credit. |
749 | b. During the 2012-2013 school year, an end-of-course |
750 | assessment in civics education shall be administered as a field |
751 | test at the middle school level. During the 2013-2014 school |
752 | year, each student's performance on the statewide, standardized |
753 | end-of-course assessment in civics education shall constitute 30 |
754 | percent of the student's final course grade. Beginning with the |
755 | 2014-2015 school year, a student must earn a passing score on |
756 | the end-of-course assessment in civics education in order to |
757 | pass the course and be promoted from the middle grades. The |
758 | school principal of a middle school shall determine, in |
759 | accordance with State Board of Education rule, whether a student |
760 | who transfers to the middle school and who has successfully |
761 | completed a civics education course at the student's previous |
762 | school must take an end-of-course assessment in civics |
763 | education. |
764 | c. The commissioner may select one or more nationally |
765 | developed comprehensive examinations, which may include, but |
766 | need not be limited to, examinations for a College Board |
767 | Advanced Placement course, International Baccalaureate course, |
768 | or Advanced International Certificate of Education course, or |
769 | industry-approved examinations to earn national industry |
770 | certifications identified in the Industry Certification Funding |
771 | List, pursuant to rules adopted by the State Board of Education, |
772 | for use as end-of-course assessments under this paragraph, if |
773 | the commissioner determines that the content knowledge and |
774 | skills assessed by the examinations meet or exceed the grade |
775 | level expectations for the core curricular content established |
776 | for the course in the Next Generation Sunshine State Standards. |
777 | The commissioner may collaborate with the American Diploma |
778 | Project in the adoption or development of rigorous end-of-course |
779 | assessments that are aligned to the Next Generation Sunshine |
780 | State Standards. |
781 | d. Contingent upon funding provided in the General |
782 | Appropriations Act, including the appropriation of funds |
783 | received through federal grants, the Commissioner of Education |
784 | shall establish an implementation schedule for the development |
785 | and administration of additional statewide, standardized end-of- |
786 | course assessments in English/Language Arts II, Algebra II, |
787 | chemistry, physics, earth/space science, United States history, |
788 | and world history. Priority shall be given to the development of |
789 | end-of-course assessments in English/Language Arts II. The |
790 | Commissioner of Education shall evaluate the feasibility and |
791 | effect of transitioning from the grade 9 and grade 10 FCAT |
792 | Reading and high school level FCAT Writing to an end-of-course |
793 | assessment in English/Language Arts II. The commissioner shall |
794 | report the results of the evaluation to the President of the |
795 | Senate and the Speaker of the House of Representatives no later |
796 | than July 1, 2011. |
797 | 3. The testing program shall measure student content |
798 | knowledge and skills adopted by the State Board of Education as |
799 | specified in paragraph (a) and measure and report student |
800 | performance levels of all students assessed in reading, writing, |
801 | mathematics, and science. The commissioner shall provide for the |
802 | tests to be developed or obtained, as appropriate, through |
803 | contracts and project agreements with private vendors, public |
804 | vendors, public agencies, postsecondary educational |
805 | institutions, or school districts. The commissioner shall obtain |
806 | input with respect to the design and implementation of the |
807 | testing program from state educators, assistive technology |
808 | experts, and the public. |
809 | 4. The testing program shall be composed of criterion- |
810 | referenced tests that shall, to the extent determined by the |
811 | commissioner, include test items that require the student to |
812 | produce information or perform tasks in such a way that the core |
813 | content knowledge and skills he or she uses can be measured. |
814 | 5. FCAT Reading, Mathematics, and Science and all |
815 | statewide, standardized end-of-course assessments shall measure |
816 | the content knowledge and skills a student has attained on the |
817 | assessment by the use of scaled scores and achievement levels. |
818 | Achievement levels shall range from 1 through 5, with level 1 |
819 | being the lowest achievement level, level 5 being the highest |
820 | achievement level, and level 3 indicating satisfactory |
821 | performance on an assessment. For purposes of FCAT Writing, |
822 | student achievement shall be scored using a scale of 1 through 6 |
823 | and the score earned shall be used in calculating school grades. |
824 | A score shall be designated for each subject area tested, below |
825 | which score a student's performance is deemed inadequate. The |
826 | school districts shall provide appropriate remedial instruction |
827 | to students who score below these levels. |
828 | 6. The State Board of Education shall, by rule, designate |
829 | a passing score for each part of the grade 10 assessment test |
830 | and end-of-course assessments. Any rule that has the effect of |
831 | raising the required passing scores may apply only to students |
832 | taking the assessment for the first time after the rule is |
833 | adopted by the State Board of Education. Except as otherwise |
834 | provided in this subparagraph and as provided in s. |
835 | 1003.428(8)(b), s. 1003.4287(8)(b), or s. 1003.43(11)(b), |
836 | students must earn a passing score on grade 10 FCAT Reading and |
837 | grade 10 FCAT Mathematics or attain concordant scores as |
838 | described in subsection (10) in order to qualify for a standard |
839 | or career high school diploma. |
840 | 7. In addition to designating a passing score under |
841 | subparagraph 6., the State Board of Education shall also |
842 | designate, by rule, a score for each statewide, standardized |
843 | end-of-course assessment which indicates that a student is high |
844 | achieving and has the potential to meet college-readiness |
845 | standards by the time the student graduates from high school. |
846 | 8. Participation in the testing program is mandatory for |
847 | all students attending public school, including students served |
848 | in Department of Juvenile Justice programs, except as otherwise |
849 | prescribed by the commissioner. A student who has not earned |
850 | passing scores on the grade 10 FCAT as provided in subparagraph |
851 | 6. must participate in each retake of the assessment until the |
852 | student earns passing scores or achieves scores on a |
853 | standardized assessment which are concordant with passing scores |
854 | pursuant to subsection (10). If a student does not participate |
855 | in the statewide assessment, the district must notify the |
856 | student's parent and provide the parent with information |
857 | regarding the implications of such nonparticipation. A parent |
858 | must provide signed consent for a student to receive classroom |
859 | instructional accommodations that would not be available or |
860 | permitted on the statewide assessments and must acknowledge in |
861 | writing that he or she understands the implications of such |
862 | instructional accommodations. The State Board of Education shall |
863 | adopt rules, based upon recommendations of the commissioner, for |
864 | the provision of test accommodations for students in exceptional |
865 | education programs and for students who have limited English |
866 | proficiency. Accommodations that negate the validity of a |
867 | statewide assessment are not allowable in the administration of |
868 | the FCAT or an end-of-course assessment. However, instructional |
869 | accommodations are allowable in the classroom if included in a |
870 | student's individual education plan. Students using |
871 | instructional accommodations in the classroom that are not |
872 | allowable as accommodations on the FCAT or an end-of-course |
873 | assessment may have the FCAT or an end-of-course assessment |
874 | requirement waived pursuant to the requirements of s. |
875 | 1003.428(8)(b), s. 1003.4287(8)(b), or s. 1003.43(11)(b). |
876 | 9. A student seeking an adult high school diploma must |
877 | meet the same testing requirements that a regular high school |
878 | student must meet. |
879 | 10. District school boards must provide instruction to |
880 | prepare students in the core curricular content established in |
881 | the Next Generation Sunshine State Standards adopted under s. |
882 | 1003.41, including the core content knowledge and skills |
883 | necessary for successful grade-to-grade progression and high |
884 | school graduation. If a student is provided with instructional |
885 | accommodations in the classroom that are not allowable as |
886 | accommodations in the statewide assessment program, as described |
887 | in the test manuals, the district must inform the parent in |
888 | writing and must provide the parent with information regarding |
889 | the impact on the student's ability to meet expected performance |
890 | levels in reading, writing, mathematics, and science. The |
891 | commissioner shall conduct studies as necessary to verify that |
892 | the required core curricular content is part of the district |
893 | instructional programs. |
894 | 11. District school boards must provide opportunities for |
895 | students to demonstrate an acceptable performance level on an |
896 | alternative standardized assessment approved by the State Board |
897 | of Education following enrollment in summer academies. |
898 | 12. The Department of Education must develop, or select, |
899 | and implement a common battery of assessment tools that will be |
900 | used in all juvenile justice programs in the state. These tools |
901 | must accurately measure the core curricular content established |
902 | in the Next Generation Sunshine State Standards. |
903 | 13. For students seeking a special diploma pursuant to s. |
904 | 1003.438, the Department of Education must develop or select and |
905 | implement an alternate assessment tool that accurately measures |
906 | the core curricular content established in the Next Generation |
907 | Sunshine State Standards for students with disabilities under s. |
908 | 1003.438. |
909 | 14. The Commissioner of Education shall establish |
910 | schedules for the administration of statewide assessments and |
911 | the reporting of student test results. When establishing the |
912 | schedules for the administration of statewide assessments, the |
913 | commissioner shall consider the observance of religious and |
914 | school holidays. The commissioner shall, by August 1 of each |
915 | year, notify each school district in writing and publish on the |
916 | department's Internet website the testing and reporting |
917 | schedules for, at a minimum, the school year following the |
918 | upcoming school year. The testing and reporting schedules shall |
919 | require that: |
920 | a. There is the latest possible administration of |
921 | statewide assessments and the earliest possible reporting to the |
922 | school districts of student test results which is feasible |
923 | within available technology and specific appropriations; |
924 | however, test results for the FCAT must be made available no |
925 | later than the week of June 8. Student results for end-of-course |
926 | assessments must be provided no later than 1 week after the |
927 | school district completes testing for each course. The |
928 | commissioner may extend the reporting schedule under exigent |
929 | circumstances. |
930 | b. FCAT Writing may not be administered earlier than the |
931 | week of March 1, and a comprehensive statewide assessment of any |
932 | other subject may not be administered earlier than the week of |
933 | April 15. |
934 | c. A statewide, standardized end-of-course assessment is |
935 | administered at the end of the course. The commissioner shall |
936 | select an administration period for assessments that meets the |
937 | intent of end-of-course assessments and provides student results |
938 | prior to the end of the course. School districts shall |
939 | administer tests in accordance with the schedule determined by |
940 | the commissioner. For an end-of-course assessment administered |
941 | at the end of the first semester, the commissioner shall |
942 | determine the most appropriate testing dates based on a review |
943 | of each school district's academic calendar. |
944 |
|
945 | The commissioner may, based on collaboration and input from |
946 | school districts, design and implement student testing programs, |
947 | for any grade level and subject area, necessary to effectively |
948 | monitor educational achievement in the state, including the |
949 | measurement of educational achievement of the Next Generation |
950 | Sunshine State Standards for students with disabilities. |
951 | Development and refinement of assessments shall include |
952 | universal design principles and accessibility standards that |
953 | will prevent any unintended obstacles for students with |
954 | disabilities while ensuring the validity and reliability of the |
955 | test. These principles should be applicable to all technology |
956 | platforms and assistive devices available for the assessments. |
957 | The field testing process and psychometric analyses for the |
958 | statewide assessment program must include an appropriate |
959 | percentage of students with disabilities and an evaluation or |
960 | determination of the effect of test items on such students. |
961 | (9) APPLICABILITY OF TESTING STANDARDS.- |
962 | (b) A student must attain the passing scores on the |
963 | statewide assessment required for a standard or career high |
964 | school diploma or for high school course credits under sub-sub- |
965 | subparagraphs (3)(c)2.a.(I) and (II) which are in effect at the |
966 | time the student enters grade 9. If a student transfers into a |
967 | high school, the school principal shall determine, in accordance |
968 | with State Board of Education rule, whether the student must |
969 | take an end-of-course assessment in a course for which the |
970 | student has credit that was earned from the previous school. |
971 | (c) If the commissioner revises a statewide assessment and |
972 | the revisions require the State Board of Education to modify the |
973 | passing scores required for a standard or career high school |
974 | diploma or for high school course credits under sub-sub- |
975 | subparagraphs (3)(c)2.a.(I) and (II), the commissioner may, with |
976 | approval of the state board, discontinue administration of the |
977 | former assessment upon the graduation, based on normal student |
978 | progression, of students participating in the final regular |
979 | administration of the former assessment. The state board shall |
980 | adopt by rule passing scores for the revised assessment which |
981 | are statistically equivalent to passing scores on the |
982 | discontinued assessment for a student required under paragraph |
983 | (b) to attain passing scores on the discontinued assessment. |
984 | Section 13. This act shall take effect upon becoming a |
985 | law. |