House Bill 0131

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    Florida House of Representatives - 2000                 HB 131

        By Representative Wasserman Schultz






  1                      A bill to be entitled

  2         An act relating to school safety; creating s.

  3         229.5925, F.S.; creating the Safe and Secure

  4         Schools Commission; providing membership

  5         requirements; establishing responsibilities of

  6         the commission; creating s. 230.23003, F.S.;

  7         providing requirements relating to safety

  8         incident data collection and reporting;

  9         defining terms; amending s. 230.2316, F.S.;

10         revising criteria for the identification of

11         potential dropouts; amending s. 230.23175,

12         F.S.; providing for the coordination of the

13         duties of school safety officers; amending s.

14         230.2318, F.S.; revising provisions relating to

15         the duties and responsibilities of school

16         resource officers; creating s. 230.23183, F.S.;

17         requiring each school district to commission a

18         district coordinator of school security;

19         providing an exception; establishing duties and

20         responsibilities; amending s. 230.23185, F.S.,

21         relating to the statewide crime watch program;

22         revising provisions relating to the toll-free

23         school safety hotline; revising provisions

24         relating to the quarterly report of incidents

25         reported to the hotline; amending s. 231.087,

26         F.S.; revising the duties of the Florida

27         Council on Educational Management to include

28         the identification of required training

29         relating to discipline and crisis situations;

30         amending s. 231.17, F.S.; revising minimum

31         competencies for professional certification to

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  1         include the ability to recognize and intervene

  2         in potential disciplinary, disruptive, and

  3         crisis situations; amending s. 231.24, F.S.;

  4         revising requirements for the renewal of

  5         professional certificates to encourage

  6         inservice training in the area of crisis

  7         management; providing an effective date.

  8

  9  Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida:

10

11         Section 1.  Section 229.5925, Florida Statutes, is

12  created to read:

13         229.5925  Safe and Secure Schools Commission.--There is

14  created the Safe and Secure Schools Commission. The purpose of

15  the commission is to ensure that the state is progressing

16  towards providing the safest, most secure school environments

17  for its public school children, teachers, and staff.

18         (1)  MEMBERSHIP.--The membership of the commission

19  shall be as follows:

20         (a)  Three members who are educators and are not school

21  board members; one from a district of more than 100,000

22  students appointed by the Governor; one from a district of

23  35,001 to 99,999 students appointed by the President of the

24  Senate; and one from a district of up to 35,000 students

25  appointed by the Speaker of the House of Representatives;

26         (b)  Three members with a background in law

27  enforcement, security, or juvenile justice; one appointed each

28  by the President of the Senate, the Speaker of the House of

29  Representatives, and the Attorney General;

30

31

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  1         (c)  The current president of the Florida PTA or his or

  2  her designee, provided that such designee is also a member of

  3  the Florida PTA;

  4         (d)  A representative of the Department of Education,

  5  designated by the Commissioner of Education, who is

  6  responsible for safe school programs; and

  7         (e)  The Director of Security of the Florida Department

  8  of Law Enforcement or the commissioner's designee.

  9         (2)  DUTIES.--

10         (a)  The commission shall have the responsibility and

11  authority to oversee programs relating to school safety,

12  security, and discipline as used throughout the school

13  districts in the state to ensure that districts are

14  implementing programs and policies that lessen the incidences

15  of criminal activity and disruption on school campuses. The

16  commission is, therefore, authorized and instructed to:

17         1.  Conduct site visit audits of individual school

18  districts and schools in order to determine the effectiveness

19  of school safety measures employed by such schools and

20  districts.

21         2.  Conduct financial audits as necessary to determine

22  if moneys designated for school safety programs are being

23  spent effectively and as intended.

24

25  Should the commission choose to do so, it is authorized to

26  contract with the Office of Program Policy Analysis and

27  Government Accountability or any public or private agency with

28  appropriate background and training in performing these types

29  of audits.

30         (b)  The commission shall research and prepare a

31  comprehensive report on successful school crime prevention,

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  1  intervention, and management practices. To the extent

  2  possible, this report shall detail:

  3         1.  Successful programs employed by schools within the

  4  nation and the state;

  5         2.  The reasons for the success or failure of certain

  6  programs;

  7         3.  The general profiles of schools employing

  8  successful programs; and

  9         4.  Cost factors associated with the implementation of

10  individual programs.

11         (c)  The commission shall research and prepare a report

12  on training needs for school principals and instructional

13  staff related to incident reporting, crisis prevention and

14  management, intervention, and other areas as the commission

15  deems necessary. The commission shall use information gathered

16  for the report as the basis for recommendations necessary for

17  school districts and schools to improve their school safety

18  and security. Schools and school districts are encouraged to

19  request site visits and program recommendations from the

20  commission or its representatives at any mutually agreed upon

21  time.

22         (d)  The commission shall, by January 1, 2002, make

23  recommendations to the President of the Senate and the Speaker

24  of the House of Representatives as to implementation of a

25  system of performance-based funding measures and incentives to

26  be used in determining funding for school safety, discipline,

27  and security programs in public schools.

28         (e)  In consultation with the Department of Education

29  and the Department of Juvenile Justice, the commission shall

30  create a uniform incident reporting system for the state. It

31  is the intention of the Legislature that this system of

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  1  reporting be such that information is attainable as

  2  immediately as is possible by all school districts and the

  3  Department of Education. Further, it is the intention of the

  4  Legislature that this system of reporting take into account

  5  all acts of criminality, disorder, or disciplinary actions on

  6  school campuses, including those that involve nonstudents.

  7         Section 2.  Section 230.23003, Florida Statutes, is

  8  created to read:

  9         230.23003  Safety incident reporting.--

10         (1)  Each district school board shall require all

11  kindergarten through grade 12 principals within its

12  jurisdiction to document all public school grounds, public

13  school student, and public school staff related incidents of

14  crime, delinquency, disorder, and disruption. Documentable

15  incidents shall include:

16         (a)  Incidents requiring student referrals for

17  disciplinary action;

18         (b)  Noncriminal incidents instigated by nonstudent,

19  nonstaff persons on school property; and

20         (c)  Reportable incidents as defined pursuant to s.

21  230.235.

22         (2)  Subject to mutual agreement between school

23  districts and their local sheriff's offices and local police,

24  arrests made of public school students or staff which occur

25  off of school property shall be reported to the principal of

26  the school in which the student is enrolled or the staff

27  person employed, by the law enforcement agency making the

28  arrest. These incidents shall also be documented by the

29  principal of that school.

30         (3)  Each school in every district shall be required to

31  report all documented incidents to the appropriate school

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  1  district personnel responsible for collecting and

  2  disseminating school safety data.

  3         (4)  For the purposes of this section, the following

  4  public school grounds, public school student, and public

  5  school staff related incidents of crime, delinquency,

  6  disorder, and disruption shall be documented and are defined

  7  as follows:

  8         (a)  "Alcohol violation" means the violation of laws or

  9  ordinances prohibiting the manufacture, sale, purchase,

10  transportation, possession, or use of intoxicating alcoholic

11  beverages. This includes use or possession of alcoholic

12  beverages or substances represented as alcohol at school,

13  school-sponsored events, or on school transportation. An

14  incident should be reported only if a student is caught in the

15  act of using an intoxicating alcoholic beverage, is tested by

16  an officer during or after arrest and is found to have used

17  such an alcoholic beverage, or is discovered in the course of

18  investigating the incident to have used such an alcoholic

19  beverage. Suspicion of the use of alcohol will not be

20  reported. Nothing in this act shall be interpreted as

21  authorizing schools to test for alcohol use.

22         (b)  "Arson" means to willfully and unlawfully, by fire

23  or explosion, damage or cause to be damaged: any dwelling, or

24  its contents, whether occupied or not; any structure, or

25  contents thereof, where persons are normally present; or any

26  other structure that the person knew, or had reasonable

27  grounds to believe, was occupied by a human being.

28         (c)  "Battery" means an actual and intentional touching

29  or striking of another person against his or her will or

30  intentionally causing bodily harm to an individual, including

31  when one individual physically attacks another individual with

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  1  a weapon that causes serious bodily harm to the victim. This

  2  category also includes the actual placement of a bomb or one

  3  sent through the mail, regardless of whether or not the bomb

  4  blows up.

  5         (d)  "Breaking and entering" or "burglary" means the

  6  unlawful entry into a building or other structure with the

  7  intent to commit a crime. This applies to school buildings or

  8  activities related to a school function.

  9         (e)  "Disorderly conduct" means any act or behavior

10  which substantially disrupts the orderly conduct of a school

11  function, disrupts the orderly learning environment, or poses

12  a threat to the health, safety, or welfare of students, staff,

13  or others. If the action results in a more serious incident,

14  the incident shall be reported in the more serious incident

15  category.

16         (f)  "Drug violation" means the unlawful use,

17  cultivation, manufacture, distribution, sale, purchase,

18  possession, transportation, or importation of any controlled

19  drug or narcotic substance, or equipment and devices used for

20  preparing or taking drugs or narcotics, at school-sponsored

21  events or on school transportation. The use or possession of

22  substances represented as drugs or over-the-counter

23  medications, if abused by the student, shall be included in

24  this category; however, this category does include the use or

25  possession of tobacco or alcohol. An incident should be

26  reported only if a student is caught in the act of using, is

27  tested by an officer during or after arrest and is found to

28  have used such drugs, or is discovered in the course of

29  investigating the incident to have used. Suspicion of use of

30  drugs will not be reported.

31

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  1         (g)  "Fighting" means mutual participation in a fight

  2  involving physical violence, when there is not one main

  3  offender and there is no major injury. Fighting does not

  4  include verbal confrontation, tussles, or other minor

  5  confrontations.

  6         (h)  "Homicide" means murder, the unlawful killing of a

  7  human being; manslaughter, the killing of a human being by the

  8  act of procurement; or culpable negligence of another, without

  9  lawful justification.

10         (i)  "Kidnapping" means forcibly, secretly, or by

11  threat confining, abducting, or imprisoning another person

12  against his or her will and without lawful authority, with

13  intent to: hold for ransom or reward or as a shield or

14  hostage; commit or facilitate commission of any felony;

15  inflict bodily harm upon or to terrorize the victim or another

16  person; or interfere with the performance of any governmental

17  or political function.

18         (j)  "Motor vehicle theft" means theft or attempted

19  theft of a motor vehicle.

20         (k)  "Robbery" means the taking or attempting to take

21  anything of value that is owned by another person or

22  organization under confrontational circumstances, by force or

23  threat of force or violence, or by putting the victim in fear;

24  the key difference between robbery and larceny being that a

25  threat or battery is involved in a robbery.

26         (l)  "Larceny" or "theft" means the unlawful taking,

27  carrying, leading, or riding away of property of another

28  person without threat, violence, or bodily harm. Included are

29  pocket picking, purse or backpack snatching if left unattended

30  or no force used to take it from the owner, theft of

31  accessories, theft of bicycles, theft from a machine or device

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  1  which is operated or activated by the use of a coin or token,

  2  and all other types of larcenies.

  3         (m)  "Sexual battery" means oral, anal, or vaginal

  4  penetration by, or union with, the sexual organ of another, or

  5  anal or vaginal penetration of another by any other object.

  6         (n)  "Sexual harassment" means:

  7         1.  To discriminate against a student in any course or

  8  program of study in any educational institution in the

  9  evaluation of academic achievement, or in providing benefits,

10  privileges, and placement services, on the basis of that

11  student's submission to, or rejection of, sexual advances or

12  requests for sexual favors by administrators, staff, teachers,

13  students, or other school board employees; or

14         2.  To create or allow to exist an atmosphere of sexual

15  harassment, which is defined as deliberate, repeated, and

16  unsolicited physical actions, gestures, or verbal or written

17  comments of a sexual nature, when such conduct has the purpose

18  or effect of interfering with a student's academic performance

19  or creating an intimidating, hostile, or offensive learning

20  environment.

21         (o)  "Sex offense" means sexual intercourse, sexual

22  conduct, or other unlawful behavior or conduct intended to

23  result in sexual gratification without force or threat of

24  force and where the victim is capable of giving consent,

25  including indecent exposure and obscenity.

26         (p)  "Threat" or "intimidation" means to unlawfully

27  place another person in fear of bodily harm through verbal

28  threats, without displaying a weapon or subjecting the person

29  to actual physical attack.

30         (q)  "Tobacco violation" means the possession, use,

31  distribution, or sale of tobacco products on school grounds,

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  1  at school-sponsored events, or on transportation to or from

  2  school or school-sponsored events.

  3         (r)  "Trespassing" means to enter or remain on a public

  4  school campus or school board facility without authorization

  5  or invitation and with no lawful purpose for entry. Students

  6  under suspension or expulsion and other unauthorized persons

  7  who enter or remain on a campus or school board facility after

  8  being directed to leave by the chief administrator of the

  9  facility or his or her designee, campus or function, are

10  trespassing.

11         (s)  "Vandalism" means the willful and/or malicious

12  destruction, damage, or defacement of public or private

13  property, real or personal, without the consent of the owner

14  or the person having custody or control of such property. This

15  category includes graffiti.

16         (t)  "Weapons possession" means possession of the

17  following:

18         1.  Firearms defined in section 921 of Title 18 of the

19  United States Code to be any weapon which will, is designed

20  to, or may readily be converted to, expel a projectile by the

21  action of an explosive.

22         2.  Any combination of parts either designed for, or

23  intended for use in, converting any device into a destructive

24  device that expels a projectile, or any explosive, incendiary,

25  or poison gas and from which a destructive device may be

26  readily assembled; including the frame or receiver of any

27  weapon designed to be converted to expel a projectile and any

28  firearm muffler or silencer.

29         3.  Any chemical compound or mixture that has the

30  property of yielding readily to combustion or oxidation upon

31  application of heat, flame, or shock including, but not

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  1  limited to, dynamite, nitroglycerin, trinitrotoluene, or

  2  ammonium nitrate when combined with other ingredients to form

  3  an explosive mixture, blasting caps, and detonators.

  4         4.  Possession, use of, or intent to use any instrument

  5  or object to inflict harm on another person, or to intimidate

  6  any person.

  7         Section 3.  Paragraph (c) of subsection (3) of section

  8  230.2316, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:

  9         230.2316  Dropout prevention.--

10         (3)  STUDENT ELIGIBILITY AND PROGRAM CRITERIA.--

11         (c)  A student shall be identified as being eligible to

12  receive services funded through the dropout prevention and

13  academic intervention program based upon one of the following

14  criteria:

15         1.  The student is academically unsuccessful as

16  evidenced by low test scores, retention, failing grades, low

17  grade point average, falling behind in earning credits, or not

18  meeting the state or district proficiency levels in reading,

19  mathematics, or writing.

20         2.  The student has a pattern of excessive absenteeism

21  or has been identified as a habitual truant.

22         3.  The student has a history of disruptive behavior in

23  school or has committed an offense that warrants out-of-school

24  suspension or expulsion from school according to the district

25  code of student conduct. For the purposes of this program,

26  "disruptive behavior" is behavior that:

27         a.  Interferes with the student's own learning or the

28  educational process of others and requires attention and

29  assistance beyond that which the traditional program can

30  provide or results in frequent conflicts of a disruptive

31

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  1  nature while the student is under the jurisdiction of the

  2  school either in or out of the classroom; or

  3         b.  Severely threatens the general welfare of students

  4  or others with whom the student comes into contact.

  5         4.  The student's custodial or noncustodial parent or

  6  legal guardian is currently incarcerated or has been

  7  determined to be a habitual offender or career criminal as

  8  defined in s. 775.084.

  9         Section 4.  Subsection (3) of section 230.23175,

10  Florida Statutes, is amended to read:

11         230.23175  School safety officers.--

12         (3)  A school safety officer has and shall exercise the

13  power to make arrests for violations of law on district school

14  board property and to arrest persons, whether on or off such

15  property, who violate any law on such property under the same

16  conditions that deputy sheriffs are authorized to make

17  arrests. A school safety officer has the authority to carry

18  weapons when performing his or her official duties. School

19  safety officer duties shall be coordinated between the school

20  principal and the district coordinator of school security

21  pursuant to s. 230.23183.

22         Section 5.  Paragraph (b) of subsection (2) of section

23  230.2318, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:

24         230.2318  School resource officer program.--

25         (2)  SCHOOL RESOURCE OFFICER CERTIFICATION; DUTIES AND

26  RESPONSIBILITIES.--

27         (b)  School resource officers shall abide by school

28  board policies and shall consult with and coordinate

29  activities through the school principal and the district

30  coordinator of school security pursuant to s. 230.23183, but

31  shall be responsible to the law enforcement agency in all

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  1  matters relating to employment, subject to agreements between

  2  a school board and a law enforcement agency. Activities

  3  conducted by the school resource officer which are part of the

  4  regular instructional program of the school shall be under the

  5  direction of the principal.

  6         Section 6.  Section 230.23183, Florida Statutes, is

  7  created to read:

  8         230.23183  District coordinators of school security.--

  9         (1)  Each district school board shall commission a

10  district coordinator of school security. To the extent

11  possible, such coordinators shall possess prior experience as

12  a law enforcement officer as defined in s. 943.10(1).

13         (2)  District coordinators of school security shall

14  have the following duties and responsibilities:

15         (a)  Overseeing and maintaining all district programs

16  related to student and staff safety at all times that students

17  or staff are on school district property for school purposes

18  or activities. To that end, coordinators may make

19  recommendation to district superintendents on school safety

20  programs to be approved by its district school boards.

21         (b)  Coordinating programs with United States

22  Department of Education officials, Florida Department of

23  Education officials, local law enforcement agencies, and other

24  entities as he or she deems necessary for the safety and

25  security of district students and personnel, and as approved

26  by the district school board.

27         (c)  Maintaining district records relating to

28  incidences of crime, violence, and other reportable actions on

29  district property or campuses as deemed necessary, and

30  off-campus offenses involving students enrolled in the

31  district's public schools.

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  1         (d)  Conducting site visits to schools within the

  2  district to ensure that district safety and security measures

  3  approved by the school board are being implemented.

  4         (e)  Coordinating the efforts of school safety officers

  5  and school resource officers according to the will of the

  6  district school board, and in consultation with school

  7  principals in order to aid in providing a uniform system of

  8  district security.

  9         (f)  Making recommendations to the superintendent

10  regarding the training of school principals in incident

11  reporting, and other training as deemed necessary for the

12  successful implementation of school safety programs.

13         (3)  School districts with fewer than 35,000 students

14  may employ regional coordinators of school security upon the

15  establishment of an agreement of mutual aid between the

16  district school board and the school boards of contiguous

17  counties, provided that the regional coordinator has

18  responsibility for no more than 150,000 students from all

19  districts involved.

20         (4)  This section shall be implemented to the extent

21  specifically funded by the Legislature in the General

22  Appropriations Act.

23         Section 7.  Subsection (2), and paragraphs (b) and (e)

24  of subsection (4) of section 230.23185, Florida Statutes, are

25  amended to read:

26         230.23185  Statewide crime watch program.--

27         (2)  A toll-free school safety hotline may be created

28  and maintained to provide an avenue for students to report

29  criminal activity, such as violations of the code of student

30  conduct, and to enhance the safety and welfare of students,

31  faculty, and staff. Persons receiving calls made to the school

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  1  safety hotline shall be anonymous and no mention of the

  2  organization or agency by which the call receiver is employed

  3  or for which the call receiver is volunteering shall be made.

  4  If the entity receiving calls to the toll-free school safety

  5  hotline is a non-law enforcement entity, it may state only

  6  that it is not a law enforcement agency.

  7         (4)

  8         (b)  The toll-free school safety hotline is to be a

  9  conduit for any person to anonymously report activity that

10  affects the safety and well-being of the school's population.

11  Persons receiving calls made to the school safety hotline

12  shall be anonymous and no mention of the organization or

13  agency for which the call receiver is employed or for which

14  the call receiver is volunteering shall be made. If the entity

15  receiving calls to the toll-free school safety hotline is a

16  non-law enforcement entity, it may state only that it is not a

17  law enforcement agency.

18         (e)  If a toll-free school safety hotline is

19  established by contract with the Florida Sheriffs Association,

20  the Florida Sheriffs Association shall produce a quarterly

21  report that evaluates the incidents that have been reported to

22  the hotline. This report shall be forwarded to the district's

23  director of school security and This information may be used

24  to evaluate future school safety educational needs and the

25  need for prevention programs as the school board considers

26  necessary.

27         Section 8.  Paragraph (m) is added to subsection (3) of

28  section 231.087, Florida Statutes, to read:

29         231.087  Management Training Act; Florida Council on

30  Educational Management; Florida Academy for School Leaders;

31  Center for Interdisciplinary Advanced Graduate Study.--

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  1         (3)  DUTIES OF COUNCIL.--The council shall have the

  2  following duties:

  3         (m)  To identify, in consultation with the Commission

  4  on School Safety and Security, the training processes required

  5  for school managers to effectively anticipate and manage

  6  disciplinary and crisis situations, and any other situation

  7  that may effect the safety and security of students, staff, or

  8  campuses.

  9         Section 9.  Paragraph (a) of subsection (5) of section

10  231.17, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:

11         231.17  Official statements of eligibility and

12  certificates granted on application to those meeting

13  prescribed requirements.--

14         (5)  MINIMUM COMPETENCIES FOR PROFESSIONAL

15  CERTIFICATE.--

16         (a)  The state board must specify, by rule, the minimum

17  essential competencies that educators must possess and

18  demonstrate in order to qualify to teach students the

19  standards of student performance adopted by the state board.

20  The minimum competencies must include but are not limited to

21  the ability to:

22         1.  Write in a logical and understandable style with

23  appropriate grammar and sentence structure.

24         2.  Read, comprehend, and interpret professional and

25  other written material.

26         3.  Comprehend and work with mathematical concepts,

27  including algebra.

28         4.  Recognize signs of students' difficulty with the

29  reading process and apply appropriate measures to improve

30  students' reading performance.

31

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  1         5.  Recognize signs of severe emotional distress in

  2  students and apply techniques of crisis intervention with an

  3  emphasis on suicide prevention and positive emotional

  4  development.

  5         6.  Recognize signs of alcohol and drug abuse in

  6  students and know how to appropriately work with such students

  7  and seek assistance designed to prevent future abuse.

  8         7.  Recognize the physical and behavioral indicators of

  9  child abuse and neglect, know rights and responsibilities

10  regarding reporting, know how to care for a child's needs

11  after a report is made, and know recognition, intervention,

12  and prevention strategies pertaining to child abuse and

13  neglect which can be related to children in a classroom

14  setting in a nonthreatening, positive manner.

15         8.  Comprehend patterns of physical, social, and

16  academic development in students, including exceptional

17  students in the regular classroom, and counsel these students

18  concerning their needs in these areas.

19         9.  Recognize and be aware of the instructional needs

20  of exceptional students.

21         10.  Comprehend patterns of normal development in

22  students and employ appropriate intervention strategies for

23  disorders of development.

24         11.  Identify and comprehend the codes and standards of

25  professional ethics, performance, and practices adopted

26  pursuant to s. 231.546(2)(b), the grounds for disciplinary

27  action provided by s. 231.28, and the procedures for resolving

28  complaints filed pursuant to this chapter, including appeal

29  processes.

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  1         12.  Recognize and demonstrate awareness of the

  2  educational needs of students who have limited proficiency in

  3  English and employ appropriate teaching strategies.

  4         13.  Use and integrate appropriate technology in

  5  teaching and learning processes and in managing, evaluating,

  6  and improving instruction.

  7         14.  Use assessment and other diagnostic strategies to

  8  assist the continuous development of the learner.

  9         15.  Use teaching and learning strategies that include

10  considering each student's culture, learning styles, special

11  needs, and socioeconomic background.

12         16.  Demonstrate knowledge and understanding of the

13  subject matter that is aligned with the subject knowledge and

14  skills specified in the Sunshine State Standards and student

15  performance standards approved by the state board.

16         17.  Recognize the early signs of truancy in students

17  and identify effective interventions to avoid or resolve

18  nonattendance behavior.

19         18.  Demonstrate knowledge and skill in managing

20  student behavior inside and outside the classroom. Such

21  knowledge and skill must include techniques for preventing and

22  effectively responding to incidents of disruptive or violent

23  behavior.

24         19.  Demonstrate knowledge of and skill in developing

25  and administering appropriate classroom assessment instruments

26  designed to measure student learning gains.

27         20.  Demonstrate the ability to maintain a positive

28  collaborative relationship with students' families to increase

29  student achievement.

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  1         21.  Effective for applicants seeking certification

  2  after September 1, 2000, recognize and intervene in potential

  3  disciplinary, disruptive, and crisis situations.

  4         Section 10.  Paragraph (a) of subsection (3) of section

  5  231.24, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:

  6         231.24  Process for renewal of professional

  7  certificates.--

  8         (3)  For the renewal of a professional certificate, the

  9  following requirements must be met:

10         (a)  The applicant must earn a minimum of 6 college

11  credits or 120 inservice points or a combination thereof. For

12  each area of specialization to be retained on a certificate,

13  the applicant must earn at least 3 of the required credit

14  hours or equivalent inservice points in the specialization

15  area. Education in "clinical educator" training pursuant to s.

16  240.529(5)(b) and credits or points that provide training in

17  the area of exceptional student education, normal child

18  development, and the disorders of development may be applied

19  toward any specialization area. Credits or points that provide

20  training in the areas of drug abuse, child abuse and neglect,

21  crisis situation management, strategies in teaching students

22  having limited proficiency in English, or dropout prevention,

23  or training in areas identified in the educational goals and

24  performance standards adopted pursuant to ss. 229.591(3) and

25  229.592 may be applied toward any specialization area. Crisis

26  situation management training is highly encouraged for

27  individuals who hold a professional certificate and one credit

28  hour, or the equivalent points, of such training is required

29  for all school principals and supervisors. Credits or points

30  earned through approved summer institutes may be applied

31  toward the fulfillment of these requirements. Inservice points

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  1  may also be earned by participation in professional growth

  2  components approved by the State Board of Education and

  3  specified pursuant to s. 236.0811 in the district's approved

  4  master plan for inservice educational training, including, but

  5  not limited to, serving as a trainer in an approved teacher

  6  training activity, serving on an instructional materials

  7  committee or a state board or commission that deals with

  8  educational issues, or serving on an advisory council created

  9  pursuant to s. 229.58.

10         Section 11.  This act shall take effect July 1, 2000.

11

12            *****************************************

13                          HOUSE SUMMARY

14
      Creates the Safe and Secure Schools Commission. Provides
15    membership requirements and responsibilities of the
      commission. Provides requirements relating to safety
16    incident data collection and reporting. Defines terms.
      Revises criteria for the identification of potential
17    dropouts. Provides for the coordination of the duties of
      school safety officers. Revises provisions relating to
18    the duties and responsibilities of school resource
      officers. Requires each school district to commission a
19    district coordinator of school security. Provides an
      exception. Establishes duties and responsibilities.
20    Revises provisions relating to the toll-free school
      safety hotline and the quarterly report of incidents
21    reported to the hotline. Revises the duties of the
      Florida Council on Educational Management to include the
22    identification of required training relating to
      discipline and crisis situations. Revises minimum
23    competencies for professional certification to include
      the ability to recognize and intervene in potential
24    disciplinary, disruptive, and crisis situations. Revises
      requirements for the renewal of professional certificates
25    to encourage inservice training in the area of crisis
      management.
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