1 | Representatives Pickens, Flores, and Vana offered the following: |
2 |
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3 | Substitute Amendment for Amendment (115333) to Senate Bill |
4 | (with title amendment) |
5 | Remove everything after the enacting clause and insert: |
6 | Section 1. Section 1003.41, Florida Statutes, is amended |
7 | to read: |
8 | 1003.41 Sunshine State Standards.-- |
9 | (1) Public K-12 educational instruction in Florida is |
10 | based on the "Sunshine State Standards." The State Board of |
11 | Education shall review the Sunshine State Standards and replace |
12 | them with the Next Generation Sunshine State Standards that |
13 | establish the core content of the curricula to be taught in this |
14 | state and that specify the core content knowledge and skills |
15 | that K-12 public school students are expected to acquire. The |
16 | Next Generation Sunshine State Standards must, at a minimum: |
17 | (a) Establish the core curricular content for language |
18 | arts, science, mathematics, and social studies, as follows: |
19 | 1. Language arts standards must establish specific |
20 | curricular content for, at a minimum, the reading process, |
21 | literary analysis, the writing process, writing applications, |
22 | communication, and information and media literacy. The standards |
23 | must include distinct grade-level expectations for the core |
24 | content knowledge and skills that a student is expected to have |
25 | acquired by each individual grade level from kindergarten |
26 | through grade 8. The language arts standards for grades 9 |
27 | through 12 may be organized by grade clusters of more than one |
28 | grade level. The language arts standards must also identify |
29 | significant literary genres and authors that encompass a |
30 | comprehensive range of historical periods. The State Board of |
31 | Education shall, in accordance with the expedited schedule |
32 | established under subsection (2), review and replace the |
33 | language arts standards adopted by the state board in 2007 with |
34 | Next Generation Sunshine State Standards that comply with this |
35 | subparagraph. |
36 | 2. Science standards must establish specific curricular |
37 | content for, at a minimum, the nature of science, earth and |
38 | space science, physical science, and life science. The standards |
39 | must include distinct grade-level expectations for the core |
40 | content knowledge and skills that a student is expected to have |
41 | acquired by each individual grade level from kindergarten |
42 | through grade 8. The science standards for grades 9 through 12 |
43 | may be organized by grade clusters of more than one grade level. |
44 | 3. Mathematics standards must establish specific |
45 | curricular content for, at a minimum, algebra, geometry, |
46 | probability, statistics, calculus, discrete mathematics, |
47 | financial literacy, and trigonometry. The standards must include |
48 | distinct grade-level expectations for the core content knowledge |
49 | and skills that a student is expected to have acquired by each |
50 | individual grade level from kindergarten through grade 8. The |
51 | mathematics standards for grades 9 through 12 may be organized |
52 | by grade clusters of more than one grade level. |
53 | 4. Social studies standards must establish specific |
54 | curricular content for, at a minimum, geography, United States |
55 | and world history, government, civics, economics, and |
56 | humanities. The standards must include distinct grade-level |
57 | expectations for the core content knowledge and skills that a |
58 | student is expected to have acquired by each individual grade |
59 | level from kindergarten through grade 8. The social studies |
60 | standards for grades 9 through 12 may be organized by grade |
61 | clusters of more than one grade level. |
62 | (b) Establish the core curricular content for visual and |
63 | performing arts, physical education, health, and foreign |
64 | languages. Standards for these subjects must establish specific |
65 | curricular content and include distinct grade-level expectations |
66 | for the core content knowledge and skills that a student is |
67 | expected to have acquired by each individual grade level from |
68 | kindergarten through grade 5. The standards for grades 6 through |
69 | 12 may be organized by grade clusters of more than one grade |
70 | level. |
71 | (c) Identify the core curricular content that a student is |
72 | expected to learn for each subject at each individual grade |
73 | level in order to acquire the broad background knowledge needed |
74 | for reading comprehension. |
75 | (d) Be rigorous and relevant and provide for the logical, |
76 | sequential progression of core curricular content that |
77 | incrementally increases a student's core content knowledge and |
78 | skills over time. |
79 | (e) Integrate critical-thinking and problem-solving |
80 | skills; communication, reading, and writing skills; mathematics |
81 | skills; collaboration skills; contextual and applied-learning |
82 | skills; technology-literacy skills; information and media- |
83 | literacy skills; and civic-engagement skills. |
84 | (f) Be organized according to a uniform structure and |
85 | format that is consistent for each subject. The Next Generation |
86 | Sunshine State Standards shall, for each subject and grade |
87 | level, use the same alphanumeric coding system. |
88 | (g) Be aligned to expectations for success in |
89 | postsecondary education and high-skill, high-wage employment. |
90 | (2) By December 31, 2008, the State Board of Education |
91 | shall establish an expedited schedule for adoption of the Next |
92 | Generation Sunshine State Standards and shall establish by rule |
93 | a schedule for the periodic review and revision of the |
94 | standards. The state board shall adopt the Next Generation |
95 | Sunshine State Standards for each subject by December 31, 2011. |
96 | (3)(a) The Commissioner of Education shall develop and |
97 | submit to the State Board of Education proposed Next Generation |
98 | Sunshine State Standards, and periodically submit proposed |
99 | revisions to the standards, for adoption by the state board |
100 | according to the schedules established under subsection (2). The |
101 | commissioner, in developing the proposed standards, shall |
102 | consult with renowned experts on K-12 curricular standards and |
103 | content in each subject listed in paragraphs (1)(a) and (b) and |
104 | shall consider standards that are implemented by other states or |
105 | nations and regarded as exceptionally rigorous by the curricular |
106 | and content experts. The commissioner may also consult with |
107 | curricular and content experts in other subjects. |
108 | (b) The commissioner shall submit the proposed standards |
109 | for review and comment by Florida educators, school |
110 | administrators, representatives of community colleges and state |
111 | universities who have expertise in the content knowledge and |
112 | skills necessary to prepare a student for postsecondary |
113 | education, and leaders in business and industry. The |
114 | commissioner, after considering any comments and making any |
115 | revisions to the proposed standards, shall submit the standards |
116 | for written evaluation by renowned experts on K-12 curricular |
117 | standards and content. |
118 | (c) The commissioner, upon finalizing the proposed |
119 | standards, shall submit the standards and evaluations by the |
120 | curricular and content experts to the Governor, the President of |
121 | the Senate, and the Speaker of the House of Representatives at |
122 | least 21 days before the State Board of Education considers |
123 | adoption of the proposed standards. |
124 | (4) The State Board of Education may adopt rules under ss. |
125 | 120.536(1) and 120.54 to administer this section. These |
126 | standards have been adopted by the State Board of Education and |
127 | delineate the academic achievement of students, for which the |
128 | state will hold schools accountable, in grades K-2, 3-5, 6-8, |
129 | and 9-12 in the subjects of language arts, mathematics, science, |
130 | social studies, the arts, health and physical education, and |
131 | foreign languages. They include standards in reading, writing, |
132 | history, government, geography, economics, and computer |
133 | literacy. |
134 | Section 2. Paragraph (i) of subsection (9) of section |
135 | 220.187, Florida Statutes, is amended to read: |
136 | 220.187 Credits for contributions to nonprofit |
137 | scholarship-funding organizations.-- |
138 | (9) DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION OBLIGATIONS.--The Department |
139 | of Education shall: |
140 | (i) Maintain a list of In accordance with State Board of |
141 | Education rule, identify and select the nationally norm- |
142 | referenced tests identified for purposes of satisfying the |
143 | testing requirement in subparagraph (8)(c)2. The tests must meet |
144 | that are comparable to the norm-referenced provisions of the |
145 | Florida Comprehensive Assessment Test (FCAT) provided that the |
146 | FCAT may be one of the tests selected. However, the Department |
147 | of Education may approve the use of an additional assessment by |
148 | the school if the assessment meets industry standards of quality |
149 | in accordance with State Board of Education rule and |
150 | comparability. |
151 | Section 3. Subsection (7) of section 1000.21, Florida |
152 | Statutes, is amended to read: |
153 | 1000.21 Systemwide definitions.--As used in the Florida K- |
154 | 20 Education Code: |
155 | (7) "Sunshine State Standards" or the "Next Generation |
156 | Sunshine State Standards" means the state's public K-12 |
157 | curricular are standards adopted under s. 1003.41. The term |
158 | includes the Sunshine State Standards that are in place for a |
159 | subject until the standards for that subject are replaced under |
160 | s. 1003.41 by the Next Generation Sunshine State Standards. that |
161 | identify what public school students should know and be able to |
162 | do. These standards delineate the academic achievement of |
163 | students for which the state will hold its public schools |
164 | accountable in grades K-2, 3-5, 6-8, and 9-12, in the subjects |
165 | of language arts, mathematics, science, social studies, the |
166 | arts, health and physical education, foreign languages, reading, |
167 | writing, history, government, geography, economics, and computer |
168 | literacy. |
169 | Section 4. Subsection (1) of section 1001.03, Florida |
170 | Statutes, is amended to read: |
171 | 1001.03 Specific powers of State Board of Education.-- |
172 | (1) PUBLIC K-12 CURRICULAR STUDENT PERFORMANCE |
173 | STANDARDS.--The State Board of Education shall adopt and |
174 | periodically review and revise approve the student performance |
175 | standards known as the Sunshine State Standards in accordance |
176 | with s. 1003.41 key academic subject areas and grade levels. The |
177 | state board shall establish a schedule to facilitate the |
178 | periodic review of the standards to ensure adequate rigor, |
179 | relevance, logical student progression, and integration of |
180 | reading, writing, and mathematics across all subject areas. The |
181 | standards review by subject area must include participation of |
182 | curriculum leaders in other content areas, including the arts, |
183 | to ensure valid content area integration and to address the |
184 | instructional requirements of different learning styles. The |
185 | process for review and proposed revisions must include |
186 | leadership and input from the state's classroom teachers, school |
187 | administrators, and community colleges and universities, and |
188 | from representatives from business and industry who are |
189 | identified by local education foundations. A report including |
190 | proposed revisions must be submitted to the Governor, the |
191 | President of the Senate, and the Speaker of the House of |
192 | Representatives annually to coincide with the established review |
193 | schedule. The review schedule and an annual status report must |
194 | be submitted to the Governor, the President of the Senate, and |
195 | the Speaker of the House of Representatives annually not later |
196 | than January 1. |
197 | Section 5. Paragraph (a) of subsection (1) of section |
198 | 1001.452, Florida Statutes, is amended to read: |
199 | 1001.452 District and school advisory councils.-- |
200 | (1) ESTABLISHMENT.-- |
201 | (a) The district school board shall establish an advisory |
202 | council for each school in the district and shall develop |
203 | procedures for the election and appointment of advisory council |
204 | members. Each school advisory council shall include in its name |
205 | the words "school advisory council." The school advisory council |
206 | shall be the sole body responsible for final decisionmaking at |
207 | the school relating to implementation of the provisions of ss. |
208 | 1001.42(16) and 1008.345. A majority of the members of each |
209 | school advisory council must be persons who are not employed by |
210 | the school district. Each advisory council shall be composed of |
211 | the principal and an appropriately balanced number of teachers, |
212 | education support employees, students, parents, and other |
213 | business and community citizens who are representative of the |
214 | ethnic, racial, and economic community served by the school. |
215 | Career center and high school advisory councils shall include |
216 | students, and middle and junior high school advisory councils |
217 | may include students. School advisory councils of career centers |
218 | and adult education centers are not required to include parents |
219 | as members. Council members representing teachers, education |
220 | support employees, students, and parents shall be elected by |
221 | their respective peer groups at the school in a fair and |
222 | equitable manner as follows: |
223 | 1. Teachers shall be elected by teachers. |
224 | 2. Education support employees shall be elected by |
225 | education support employees. |
226 | 3. Students shall be elected by students. |
227 | 4. Parents shall be elected by parents. |
228 |
|
229 | The district school board shall establish procedures for use by |
230 | schools in selecting business and community members that include |
231 | means of ensuring wide notice of vacancies and of taking input |
232 | on possible members from local business, chambers of commerce, |
233 | community and civic organizations and groups, and the public at |
234 | large. The district school board shall review the membership |
235 | composition of each advisory council. If the district school |
236 | board determines that the membership elected by the school is |
237 | not representative of the ethnic, racial, and economic community |
238 | served by the school, the district school board shall appoint |
239 | additional members to achieve proper representation. The |
240 | commissioner shall determine if schools have maximized their |
241 | efforts to include on their advisory councils minority persons |
242 | and persons of lower socioeconomic status. Although schools are |
243 | strongly encouraged to establish school advisory councils, the |
244 | district school board of any school district that has a student |
245 | population of 10,000 or fewer may establish a district advisory |
246 | council which shall include at least one duly elected teacher |
247 | from each school in the district. For the purposes of school |
248 | advisory councils and district advisory councils, the term |
249 | "teacher" shall include classroom teachers, certified student |
250 | services personnel, and media specialists. For purposes of this |
251 | paragraph, "education support employee" means any person |
252 | employed by a school who is not defined as instructional or |
253 | administrative personnel pursuant to s. 1012.01 and whose duties |
254 | require 20 or more hours in each normal working week. |
255 | Section 6. Paragraph (i) of subsection (3) of section |
256 | 1003.413, Florida Statutes, is amended to read: |
257 | 1003.413 Florida Secondary School Redesign Act.-- |
258 | (3) Based on these guiding principles, district school |
259 | boards shall establish policies to implement the requirements of |
260 | ss. 1003.4156, 1003.428, and 1003.493. The policies must |
261 | address: |
262 | (i) An annual review of each high school student's |
263 | electronic personal education plan created pursuant to s. |
264 | 1003.4156 and procedures for high school students who have not |
265 | prepared an electronic personal education plan pursuant to s. |
266 | 1003.4156 to prepare such plan. |
267 | Section 7. Paragraph (a) of subsection (2), paragraph (b) |
268 | of subsection (4), and paragraph (a) of subsection (8) of |
269 | section 1003.428, Florida Statutes, are amended to read: |
270 | 1003.428 General requirements for high school graduation; |
271 | revised.-- |
272 | (2) The 24 credits may be earned through applied, |
273 | integrated, and combined courses approved by the Department of |
274 | Education and shall be distributed as follows: |
275 | (a) Sixteen core curriculum credits: |
276 | 1. Four credits in English, with major concentration in |
277 | composition, reading for information, and literature. |
278 | 2. Four credits in mathematics, one of which must be |
279 | Algebra I, a series of courses equivalent to Algebra I, or a |
280 | higher-level mathematics course. School districts are encouraged |
281 | to set specific goals to increase enrollments in, and successful |
282 | completion of, geometry and Algebra II. |
283 | 3. Three credits in science, two of which must have a |
284 | laboratory component. |
285 | 4. Three credits in social studies as follows: one credit |
286 | in American history; one credit in world history; one-half |
287 | credit in economics; and one-half credit in American government. |
288 | 5. One credit in fine or performing arts, which may |
289 | include speech and debate, or a practical arts course that |
290 | incorporates artistic content and techniques of creativity, |
291 | interpretation, and imagination. Eligible practical arts courses |
292 | shall be identified through the Course Code Directory. |
293 | 6. One credit in physical education to include integration |
294 | of health. Participation in an interscholastic sport at the |
295 | junior varsity or varsity level for two full seasons shall |
296 | satisfy the one-credit requirement in physical education if the |
297 | student passes a competency test on personal fitness with a |
298 | score of "C" or better. The competency test on personal fitness |
299 | must be developed by the Department of Education. A district |
300 | school board may not require that the one credit in physical |
301 | education be taken during the 9th grade year. Completion of one |
302 | semester with a grade of "C" or better in a marching band class, |
303 | in a physical activity class that requires participation in |
304 | marching band activities as an extracurricular activity, or in a |
305 | dance class shall satisfy one-half credit in physical education |
306 | or one-half credit in performing arts. This credit may not be |
307 | used to satisfy the personal fitness requirement or the |
308 | requirement for adaptive physical education under an individual |
309 | education plan (IEP) or 504 plan. Completion of 2 years in a |
310 | Reserve Officer Training Corps (R.O.T.C.) class, a significant |
311 | component of which is drills, shall satisfy the one-credit |
312 | requirement in physical education and the one-credit requirement |
313 | in performing arts. This credit may not be used to satisfy the |
314 | personal fitness requirement or the requirement for adaptive |
315 | physical education under an individual education plan (IEP) or |
316 | 504 plan. |
317 | (4) Each district school board shall establish standards |
318 | for graduation from its schools, which must include: |
319 | (b) Earning passing scores on the FCAT, as defined in s. |
320 | 1008.22(3)(c), or scores on a standardized test that are |
321 | concordant with passing scores on the FCAT as defined in s. |
322 | 1008.22(10) s. 1008.22(9). |
323 |
|
324 | Each district school board shall adopt policies designed to |
325 | assist students in meeting the requirements of this subsection. |
326 | These policies may include, but are not limited to: forgiveness |
327 | policies, summer school or before or after school attendance, |
328 | special counseling, volunteers or peer tutors, school-sponsored |
329 | help sessions, homework hotlines, and study skills classes. |
330 | Forgiveness policies for required courses shall be limited to |
331 | replacing a grade of "D" or "F," or the equivalent of a grade of |
332 | "D" or "F," with a grade of "C" or higher, or the equivalent of |
333 | a grade of "C" or higher, earned subsequently in the same or |
334 | comparable course. Forgiveness policies for elective courses |
335 | shall be limited to replacing a grade of "D" or "F," or the |
336 | equivalent of a grade of "D" or "F," with a grade of "C" or |
337 | higher, or the equivalent of a grade of "C" or higher, earned |
338 | subsequently in another course. The only exception to these |
339 | forgiveness policies shall be made for a student in the middle |
340 | grades who takes any high school course for high school credit |
341 | and earns a grade of "C," "D," or "F" or the equivalent of a |
342 | grade of "C," "D," or "F." In such case, the district |
343 | forgiveness policy must allow the replacement of the grade with |
344 | a grade of "C" or higher, or the equivalent of a grade of "C" or |
345 | higher, earned subsequently in the same or comparable course. In |
346 | all cases of grade forgiveness, only the new grade shall be used |
347 | in the calculation of the student's grade point average. Any |
348 | course grade not replaced according to a district school board |
349 | forgiveness policy shall be included in the calculation of the |
350 | cumulative grade point average required for graduation. |
351 | (8)(a) Each district school board must provide instruction |
352 | to prepare students with disabilities to demonstrate proficiency |
353 | in the core content knowledge and skills and competencies |
354 | necessary for successful grade-to-grade progression and high |
355 | school graduation. |
356 | Section 8. Section 1003.4285, Florida Statutes, is created |
357 | to read: |
358 | 1003.4285 Standard high school diploma designations.--By |
359 | the 2008-2009 school year, each standard high school diploma |
360 | shall include, as applicable: |
361 | (1) A designation of the student's major area of interest |
362 | pursuant to the student's completion of credits as provided in |
363 | s. 1003.428. |
364 | (2) A designation reflecting completion of four or more |
365 | accelerated college credit courses if the student is eligible |
366 | for college credit pursuant to s. 1007.27 or s. 1007.271 in |
367 | Advanced Placement, International Baccalaureate, Advanced |
368 | International Certificate of Education, or dual enrollment |
369 | courses. The Commissioner of Education shall establish |
370 | guidelines for successful passage of examinations or coursework |
371 | in each of the accelerated college credit options for purposes |
372 | of this subsection. |
373 | (3) A designation reflecting career education |
374 | certification in accordance with s. 1003.431. |
375 | (4) A designation reflecting a Florida Ready to Work |
376 | Credential in accordance with s. 1004.99. |
377 | Section 9. Paragraph (a) of subsection (6) of section |
378 | 1003.429, Florida Statutes, is amended to read: |
379 | 1003.429 Accelerated high school graduation options.-- |
380 | (6) Students pursuing accelerated 3-year high school |
381 | graduation options pursuant to paragraph (1)(b) or paragraph |
382 | (1)(c) are required to: |
383 | (a) Earn passing scores on the FCAT as defined in s. |
384 | 1008.22(3)(c) or scores on a standardized test that are |
385 | concordant with passing scores on the FCAT as defined in s. |
386 | 1008.22(10) s. 1008.22(9). |
387 |
|
388 | Weighted grades referred to in paragraphs (b), (c), and (d) |
389 | shall be applied to those courses specifically listed or |
390 | identified by the department as rigorous pursuant to s. |
391 | 1009.531(3) or weighted by the district school board for class |
392 | ranking purposes. |
393 | Section 10. Paragraph (a) of subsection (5) and paragraph |
394 | (a) of subsection (11) of section 1003.43, Florida Statutes, are |
395 | amended to read: |
396 | 1003.43 General requirements for high school graduation.-- |
397 | (5) Each district school board shall establish standards |
398 | for graduation from its schools, and these standards must |
399 | include: |
400 | (a) Earning passing scores on the FCAT, as defined in s. |
401 | 1008.22(3)(c), or scores on a standardized test that are |
402 | concordant with passing scores on the FCAT as defined in s. |
403 | 1008.22(10) s. 1008.22(9). |
404 |
|
405 | The standards required in this subsection, and any subsequent |
406 | modifications, shall be reprinted in the Florida Administrative |
407 | Code even though not defined as "rules." |
408 | (11)(a) Each district school board must provide |
409 | instruction to prepare students with disabilities to demonstrate |
410 | proficiency in the core content knowledge and skills and |
411 | competencies necessary for successful grade-to-grade progression |
412 | and high school graduation. |
413 | Section 11. Subsection (1) of section 1003.433, Florida |
414 | Statutes, is amended to read: |
415 | 1003.433 Learning opportunities for out-of-state and out- |
416 | of-country transfer students and students needing additional |
417 | instruction to meet high school graduation requirements.-- |
418 | (1) Students who enter a Florida public school at the |
419 | eleventh or twelfth grade from out of state or from a foreign |
420 | country shall not be required to spend additional time in a |
421 | Florida public school in order to meet the high school course |
422 | requirements if the student has met all requirements of the |
423 | school district, state, or country from which he or she is |
424 | transferring. Such students who are not proficient in English |
425 | should receive immediate and intensive instruction in English |
426 | language acquisition. However, to receive a standard high school |
427 | diploma, a transfer student must earn a 2.0 grade point average |
428 | and pass the grade 10 FCAT required in s. 1008.22(3) or an |
429 | alternate assessment as described in s. 1008.22(10) s. |
430 | 1008.22(9). |
431 | Section 12. Paragraph (d) of subsection (6) of section |
432 | 1003.63, Florida Statutes, is amended to read: |
433 | 1003.63 Deregulated public schools pilot program.-- |
434 | (6) ELEMENTS OF THE PROPOSAL.--The major issues involving |
435 | the operation of a deregulated public school shall be considered |
436 | in advance and written into the proposal. |
437 | (d) Upon receipt of the annual report required by |
438 | paragraph (b), the Department of Education shall provide the |
439 | State Board of Education, the Commissioner of Education, the |
440 | President of the Senate, and the Speaker of the House of |
441 | Representatives with a copy of each report and an analysis and |
442 | comparison of the overall performance of students, to include |
443 | all students in deregulated public schools whose scores are |
444 | counted as part of the statewide assessment tests, versus |
445 | comparable public school students in the district as determined |
446 | by statewide assessments administered under s. 1008.22(3) FCAT |
447 | and district assessment tests and, as appropriate, the Florida |
448 | Writes Assessment Test, and other assessments administered |
449 | pursuant to s. 1008.22(3). |
450 | Section 13. Paragraphs (c) and (d) of subsection (3) of |
451 | section 1004.85, Florida Statutes, are amended to read: |
452 | 1004.85 Postsecondary educator preparation institutes.-- |
453 | (3) Educator preparation institutes approved pursuant to |
454 | this section may offer alternative certification programs |
455 | specifically designed for noneducation major baccalaureate |
456 | degree holders to enable program participants to meet the |
457 | educator certification requirements of s. 1012.56. Such programs |
458 | shall be competency-based educator certification preparation |
459 | programs that prepare educators through an alternative route. An |
460 | educator preparation institute choosing to offer an alternative |
461 | certification program pursuant to the provisions of this section |
462 | must implement a program previously approved by the Department |
463 | of Education for this purpose or a program developed by the |
464 | institute and approved by the department for this purpose. |
465 | Approved programs shall be available for use by other approved |
466 | educator preparation institutes. |
467 | (c) Upon completion of an alternative certification |
468 | program approved pursuant to this subsection, a participant |
469 | shall receive a credential from the sponsoring institution |
470 | signifying satisfaction of the requirements of s. 1012.56(6) s. |
471 | 1012.56(5) relating to mastery of professional preparation and |
472 | education competence. A participant shall be eligible for |
473 | educator certification through the Department of Education upon |
474 | satisfaction of all requirements for certification set forth in |
475 | s. 1012.56(2), including demonstration of mastery of general |
476 | knowledge, subject area knowledge, and professional preparation |
477 | and education competence, through testing or other statutorily |
478 | authorized means. |
479 | (d) If an institution offers an alternative certification |
480 | program approved pursuant to this subsection, such program may |
481 | be used by the school district or districts served by that |
482 | institution in addition to the alternative certification program |
483 | as required in s. 1012.56(8) s. 1012.56(7). |
484 | Section 14. Subsection (3) of section 1004.91, Florida |
485 | Statutes, is amended to read: |
486 | 1004.91 Career-preparatory instruction.-- |
487 | (3) An adult student with a disability may be exempted |
488 | from the provisions of this section. A student who possesses a |
489 | college degree at the associate in applied science level or |
490 | higher is exempt from this section. A student who has completed |
491 | or who is exempt from the college-level communication and |
492 | computation skills examination pursuant to s. 1008.29, or who is |
493 | exempt from the college entry-level examination pursuant to s. |
494 | 1008.29, is exempt from the provisions of this section. Students |
495 | who have passed a state, national, or industry licensure exam |
496 | are exempt from this section. An adult student who is enrolled |
497 | in an apprenticeship program that is registered with the |
498 | Department of Education in accordance with the provisions of |
499 | chapter 446 is exempt from the provisions of this section. |
500 | Section 15. Paragraph (d) of subsection (3) of section |
501 | 1004.99, Florida Statutes, is amended, present subsection (4) of |
502 | that section is renumbered as subsection (5), and a new |
503 | subsection (4) is added to that section, to read: |
504 | 1004.99 Florida Ready to Work Certification Program.-- |
505 | (3) The Florida Ready to Work Certification Program shall |
506 | be composed of: |
507 | (d) A Florida Ready to Work Credential certificate and |
508 | portfolio awarded to students upon successful completion of the |
509 | instruction. Each portfolio must delineate the skills |
510 | demonstrated by the student as evidence of the student's |
511 | preparation for employment. |
512 | (4) A Florida Ready to Work Credential shall be awarded to |
513 | a student who successfully passes assessments in Reading for |
514 | Information, Applied Mathematics, and Locating Information or |
515 | any other assessments of comparable rigor. Each assessment shall |
516 | be scored on a scale of 3 to 7. The level of the credential each |
517 | student receives is based on the following: |
518 | (a) A bronze-level credential requires a minimum score of |
519 | 3 or above on each of the assessments. |
520 | (b) A silver-level credential requires a minimum score of |
521 | 4 or above on each of the assessments. |
522 | (c) A gold-level credential requires a minimum score of 5 |
523 | or above on each of the assessments. |
524 | Section 16. Paragraph (c) of subsection (2) of section |
525 | 1007.21, Florida Statutes, is amended to read: |
526 | 1007.21 Readiness for postsecondary education and the |
527 | workplace.-- |
528 | (2) |
529 | (c) The common placement test authorized in ss. |
530 | 1001.03(10) and 1008.30 or a similar test may be administered to |
531 | all high school students second semester sophomores who have |
532 | chosen one of the four destinations. The results of the |
533 | placement test shall be used to target additional instructional |
534 | needs in reading, writing, and mathematics prior to graduation. |
535 | Section 17. Paragraph (b) of subsection (2) of section |
536 | 1007.235, Florida Statutes, is amended to read: |
537 | 1007.235 District interinstitutional articulation |
538 | agreements.-- |
539 | (2) The district interinstitutional articulation agreement |
540 | for each school year must be completed before high school |
541 | registration for the fall term of the following school year. The |
542 | agreement must include, but is not limited to, the following |
543 | components: |
544 | (b)1. A delineation of courses and programs available to |
545 | students eligible to participate in dual enrollment. This |
546 | delineation must include a plan for the community college to |
547 | provide guidance services to participating students on the |
548 | selection of courses in the dual enrollment program. The process |
549 | of community college guidance should make maximum use of the |
550 | automated advisement system for community colleges. The plan |
551 | must assure that each dual enrollment student is encouraged to |
552 | identify a postsecondary education objective with which to guide |
553 | the course selection. At a minimum, each student's plan should |
554 | include a list of courses that will result in an Applied |
555 | Technology Diploma, an Associate in Science degree, or an |
556 | Associate in Arts degree. If the student identifies a |
557 | baccalaureate degree as the objective, the plan must include |
558 | courses that will meet the general education requirements and |
559 | any prerequisite requirements for entrance into a selected |
560 | baccalaureate degree program. |
561 | 2. A delineation of the process by which students and |
562 | their parents are informed about opportunities to participate in |
563 | articulated acceleration programs. |
564 | 3. A delineation of the process by which students and |
565 | their parents exercise their option to participate in an |
566 | articulated acceleration program. |
567 | 4. A delineation of high school credits earned for |
568 | completion of each dual enrollment course. |
569 | 5. Provision for postsecondary courses that meet the |
570 | criteria for inclusion in a district articulated acceleration |
571 | program to be counted toward meeting the graduation requirements |
572 | of s. 1003.43. |
573 | 6. An identification of eligibility criteria for student |
574 | participation in dual enrollment courses and programs. |
575 | 7. A delineation of institutional responsibilities |
576 | regarding student screening prior to enrollment and monitoring |
577 | student performance subsequent to enrollment in dual enrollment |
578 | courses and programs. |
579 | 8. An identification of the criteria by which the quality |
580 | of dual enrollment courses and programs are to be judged and a |
581 | delineation of institutional responsibilities for the |
582 | maintenance of instructional quality. |
583 | 9. A delineation of institutional responsibilities for |
584 | assuming the cost of dual enrollment courses and programs that |
585 | includes such responsibilities for student instructional |
586 | materials. |
587 | 10. An identification of responsibility for providing |
588 | student transportation if the dual enrollment instruction is |
589 | conducted at a facility other than the high school campus. |
590 | 11. A delineation of the process for converting college |
591 | credit hours earned through dual enrollment and early admission |
592 | programs to high school credit based on mastery of course |
593 | outcomes as determined by the Department of Education in |
594 | accordance with s. 1007.271(6). |
595 | 12. An identification of the responsibility of the |
596 | postsecondary educational institution for assigning letter |
597 | grades for dual enrollment courses and the responsibility of |
598 | school districts for posting dual enrollment course grades to |
599 | the high school transcript as assigned by the postsecondary |
600 | institution awarding the credit. |
601 | Section 18. Section 1008.22, Florida Statutes, is amended |
602 | to read: |
603 | 1008.22 Student assessment program for public schools.-- |
604 | (1) PURPOSE.--The primary purposes of the student |
605 | assessment program are to provide information needed to improve |
606 | the public schools by enhancing the learning gains of all |
607 | students and to inform parents of the educational progress of |
608 | their public school children. The program must be designed to: |
609 | (a) Assess the annual learning gains of each student |
610 | toward achieving the Sunshine State Standards appropriate for |
611 | the student's grade level. |
612 | (b) Provide data for making decisions regarding school |
613 | accountability and recognition. |
614 | (c) Identify the educational strengths and needs of |
615 | students and the readiness of students to be promoted to the |
616 | next grade level or to graduate from high school with a standard |
617 | or special high school diploma. |
618 | (d) Assess how well educational goals and curricular |
619 | performance standards are met at the school, district, and state |
620 | levels. |
621 | (e) Provide information to aid in the evaluation and |
622 | development of educational programs and policies. |
623 | (f) Provide information on the performance of Florida |
624 | students compared with that of other students across the United |
625 | States. |
626 | (2) NATIONAL EDUCATION COMPARISONS.--It is Florida's |
627 | intent to participate in the measurement of national educational |
628 | goals. The Commissioner of Education shall direct Florida school |
629 | districts to participate in the administration of the National |
630 | Assessment of Educational Progress, or a similar national |
631 | assessment program, both for the national sample and for any |
632 | state-by-state comparison programs which may be initiated. The |
633 | Such assessments must be conducted using the data collection |
634 | procedures, the student surveys, the educator surveys, and other |
635 | instruments included in the National Assessment of Educational |
636 | Progress or similar program being administered in Florida. The |
637 | results of these assessments shall be included in the annual |
638 | report of the Commissioner of Education specified in this |
639 | section. The administration of the National Assessment of |
640 | Educational Progress or similar program shall be in addition to |
641 | and separate from the administration of the statewide assessment |
642 | program. |
643 | (3) STATEWIDE ASSESSMENT PROGRAM.--The commissioner shall |
644 | design and implement a statewide program of educational |
645 | assessment that provides information for the improvement of the |
646 | operation and management of the public schools, including |
647 | schools operating for the purpose of providing educational |
648 | services to youth in Department of Juvenile Justice programs. |
649 | The commissioner may enter into contracts for the continued |
650 | administration of the assessment, testing, and evaluation |
651 | programs authorized and funded by the Legislature. Contracts may |
652 | be initiated in 1 fiscal year and continue into the next and may |
653 | be paid from the appropriations of either or both fiscal years. |
654 | The commissioner is authorized to negotiate for the sale or |
655 | lease of tests, scoring protocols, test scoring services, and |
656 | related materials developed pursuant to law. Pursuant to the |
657 | statewide assessment program, the commissioner shall: |
658 | (a) Submit proposed Next Generation Sunshine State |
659 | Standards to the State Board of Education for adoption and |
660 | periodic review and revision under s. 1003.41 a list that |
661 | specifies student skills and competencies to which the goals for |
662 | education specified in the state plan apply, including, but not |
663 | limited to, reading, writing, science, and mathematics. The |
664 | skills and competencies must include problem-solving and higher- |
665 | order skills as appropriate and shall be known as the Sunshine |
666 | State Standards as defined in s. 1000.21. The commissioner shall |
667 | select such skills and competencies after receiving |
668 | recommendations from educators, citizens, and members of the |
669 | business community. The commissioner shall submit to the State |
670 | Board of Education revisions to the list of student skills and |
671 | competencies in order to maintain continuous progress toward |
672 | improvements in student proficiency. |
673 | (b) Develop and implement a uniform system of indicators |
674 | to describe the performance of public school students and the |
675 | characteristics of the public school districts and the public |
676 | schools. These indicators must include, without limitation, |
677 | information gathered by the comprehensive management information |
678 | system created pursuant to s. 1008.385 and student achievement |
679 | information obtained pursuant to this section. |
680 | (c) Develop and implement a student achievement testing |
681 | program known as the Florida Comprehensive Assessment Test |
682 | (FCAT) as part of the statewide assessment program to measure a |
683 | student's content knowledge and skills in reading, writing, |
684 | science, and mathematics. Other content areas may be included as |
685 | directed by the commissioner. Comprehensive assessments The |
686 | assessment of reading and mathematics shall be administered |
687 | annually in grades 3 through 10. Comprehensive assessments The |
688 | assessment of writing and science shall be administered at least |
689 | once at the elementary, middle, and high school levels. End-of- |
690 | course assessments for a subject may be administered in addition |
691 | to the comprehensive assessments required for that subject under |
692 | this paragraph. An end-of-course assessment must be rigorous, |
693 | statewide, standardized, and developed or approved by the |
694 | department. The content knowledge and skills assessed by |
695 | comprehensive and end-of-course assessments must be aligned to |
696 | the core curricular content established in the Sunshine State |
697 | Standards. The commissioner may select one or more nationally |
698 | developed comprehensive examinations, which may include, but |
699 | need not be limited to, examinations for a College Board |
700 | Advanced Placement course, International Baccalaureate course, |
701 | or Advanced International Certificate of Education course or |
702 | industry-approved examinations to earn national industry |
703 | certifications as defined in s. 1003.492, for use as end-of- |
704 | course assessments under this paragraph, if the commissioner |
705 | determines that the content knowledge and skills assessed by the |
706 | examinations meet or exceed the grade-level expectations for the |
707 | core curricular content established for the course in the Next |
708 | Generation Sunshine State Standards. The commissioner may |
709 | collaborate with the American Diploma Project in the adoption or |
710 | development of rigorous end-of-course assessments that are |
711 | aligned to the Next Generation Sunshine State Standards The |
712 | commissioner must document the procedures used to ensure that |
713 | the versions of the FCAT which are taken by students retaking |
714 | the grade 10 FCAT are equally as challenging and difficult as |
715 | the tests taken by students in grade 10 which contain |
716 | performance tasks. The testing program must be designed as |
717 | follows so that: |
718 | 1. The tests shall measure student skills and competencies |
719 | adopted by the State Board of Education as specified in |
720 | paragraph (a). The tests must measure and report student |
721 | proficiency levels of all students assessed in reading, writing, |
722 | mathematics, and science. The commissioner shall provide for the |
723 | tests to be developed or obtained, as appropriate, through |
724 | contracts and project agreements with private vendors, public |
725 | vendors, public agencies, postsecondary educational |
726 | institutions, or school districts. The commissioner shall obtain |
727 | input with respect to the design and implementation of the |
728 | testing program from state educators, assistive technology |
729 | experts, and the public. |
730 | 2. The testing program shall be composed will include a |
731 | combination of norm-referenced and criterion-referenced tests |
732 | that shall and include, to the extent determined by the |
733 | commissioner, include test items questions that require the |
734 | student to produce information or perform tasks in such a way |
735 | that the core content knowledge and skills and competencies he |
736 | or she uses can be measured. |
737 | 3. Beginning with the 2008-2009 school year, the |
738 | commissioner shall discontinue administration of the selected- |
739 | response test items on the comprehensive assessments of writing. |
740 | Beginning with the 2012-2013 school year, the comprehensive |
741 | assessments of writing shall be composed of a combination of |
742 | selected-response test items, short-response performance tasks, |
743 | and extended-response performance tasks, which shall measure a |
744 | student's content knowledge of writing, including, but not |
745 | limited to, paragraph and sentence structure, sentence |
746 | construction, grammar and usage, punctuation, capitalization, |
747 | spelling, parts of speech, verb tense, irregular verbs, subject- |
748 | verb agreement, and noun-pronoun agreement. Each testing |
749 | program, whether at the elementary, middle, or high school |
750 | level, includes a test of writing in which students are required |
751 | to produce writings that are then scored by appropriate and |
752 | timely methods. |
753 | 4. A score shall be is designated for each subject area |
754 | tested, below which score a student's performance is deemed |
755 | inadequate. The school districts shall provide appropriate |
756 | remedial instruction to students who score below these levels. |
757 | 5. Except as provided in s. 1003.428(8)(b) or s. |
758 | 1003.43(11)(b), students must earn a passing score on the grade |
759 | 10 assessment test described in this paragraph or attain |
760 | concordant scores as described in subsection (9) in reading, |
761 | writing, and mathematics to qualify for a standard high school |
762 | diploma. The State Board of Education shall designate a passing |
763 | score for each part of the grade 10 assessment test. In |
764 | establishing passing scores, the state board shall consider any |
765 | possible negative impact of the test on minority students. The |
766 | State Board of Education shall adopt rules which specify the |
767 | passing scores for the grade 10 FCAT. Any such rules, which have |
768 | the effect of raising the required passing scores, shall only |
769 | apply only to students taking the grade 10 FCAT for the first |
770 | time after such rules are adopted by the State Board of |
771 | Education. |
772 | 6. Participation in the testing program is mandatory for |
773 | all students attending public school, including students served |
774 | in Department of Juvenile Justice programs, except as otherwise |
775 | prescribed by the commissioner. If a student does not |
776 | participate in the statewide assessment, the district must |
777 | notify the student's parent and provide the parent with |
778 | information regarding the implications of such nonparticipation. |
779 | A parent must provide signed consent for a student to receive |
780 | classroom instructional accommodations that would not be |
781 | available or permitted on the statewide assessments and must |
782 | acknowledge in writing that he or she understands the |
783 | implications of such instructional accommodations. The State |
784 | Board of Education shall adopt rules, based upon recommendations |
785 | of the commissioner, for the provision of test accommodations |
786 | for students in exceptional education programs and for students |
787 | who have limited English proficiency. Accommodations that negate |
788 | the validity of a statewide assessment are not allowable in the |
789 | administration of the FCAT. However, instructional |
790 | accommodations are allowable in the classroom if included in a |
791 | student's individual education plan. Students using |
792 | instructional accommodations in the classroom that are not |
793 | allowable as accommodations on the FCAT may have the FCAT |
794 | requirement waived pursuant to the requirements of s. |
795 | 1003.428(8)(b) or s. 1003.43(11)(b). |
796 | 7. A student seeking an adult high school diploma must |
797 | meet the same testing requirements that a regular high school |
798 | student must meet. |
799 | 8. District school boards must provide instruction to |
800 | prepare students to demonstrate proficiency in the core |
801 | curricular content established in the Next Generation Sunshine |
802 | State Standards adopted under s. 1003.41, including the core |
803 | content knowledge and skills and competencies necessary for |
804 | successful grade-to-grade progression and high school |
805 | graduation. If a student is provided with instructional |
806 | accommodations in the classroom that are not allowable as |
807 | accommodations in the statewide assessment program, as described |
808 | in the test manuals, the district must inform the parent in |
809 | writing and must provide the parent with information regarding |
810 | the impact on the student's ability to meet expected proficiency |
811 | levels in reading, writing, and mathematics math. The |
812 | commissioner shall conduct studies as necessary to verify that |
813 | the required core curricular content is skills and competencies |
814 | are part of the district instructional programs. |
815 | 9. District school boards must provide opportunities for |
816 | students to demonstrate an acceptable level of performance on an |
817 | alternative standardized assessment approved by the State Board |
818 | of Education following enrollment in summer academies. |
819 | 10. The Department of Education must develop, or select, |
820 | and implement a common battery of assessment tools that will be |
821 | used in all juvenile justice programs in the state. These tools |
822 | must accurately measure the core curricular content skills and |
823 | competencies established in the Sunshine State Standards. |
824 | 11. For students seeking a special diploma pursuant to s. |
825 | 1003.438, the Department of Education must develop or select and |
826 | implement an alternate assessment tool that accurately measures |
827 | the core curricular content skills and competencies established |
828 | in the Sunshine State Standards for students with disabilities |
829 | under s. 1003.438. |
830 | 12. The Commissioner of Education shall establish |
831 | schedules for the administration of statewide assessments and |
832 | the reporting of student test results. The commissioner shall, |
833 | by August 1 of each year, notify each school district in writing |
834 | and publish on the department's Internet website the testing and |
835 | reporting schedules for, at a minimum, the school year following |
836 | the upcoming school year. The testing and reporting schedules |
837 | shall require that: |
838 | a. There is the latest possible administration of |
839 | statewide assessments and the earliest possible reporting to the |
840 | school districts of student test results which is feasible |
841 | within available technology and specific appropriations; |
842 | however, test results must be made available no later than the |
843 | final day of the regular school year for students. |
844 | b. Beginning with the 2010-2011 school year, a |
845 | comprehensive statewide assessment of writing is not |
846 | administered earlier than the week of March 1 and a |
847 | comprehensive statewide assessment of any other subject is not |
848 | administered earlier than the week of April 15. |
849 | c. A statewide standardized end-of-course assessment is |
850 | administered within the last 2 weeks of the course. |
851 |
|
852 | The commissioner may, based on collaboration and input from |
853 | school districts, design and implement student testing programs, |
854 | for any grade level and subject area, necessary to effectively |
855 | monitor educational achievement in the state, including the |
856 | measurement of educational achievement of the Sunshine State |
857 | Standards for students with disabilities. Development and |
858 | refinement of assessments shall include universal design |
859 | principles and accessibility standards that will prevent any |
860 | unintended obstacles for students with disabilities while |
861 | ensuring the validity and reliability of the test. These |
862 | principles should be applicable to all technology platforms and |
863 | assistive devices available for the assessments. The field |
864 | testing process and psychometric analyses for the statewide |
865 | assessment program must include an appropriate percentage of |
866 | students with disabilities and an evaluation or determination of |
867 | the effect of test items on such students. |
868 | (d) Conduct ongoing research to develop improved methods |
869 | of assessing student performance, including, without limitation, |
870 | the use of technology to administer tests, score, or report the |
871 | results of, the use of electronic transfer of data, the |
872 | development of work-product assessments, and the development of |
873 | process assessments. |
874 | (e) Conduct ongoing research and analysis of student |
875 | achievement data, including, without limitation, monitoring |
876 | trends in student achievement by grade level and overall student |
877 | achievement, identifying school programs that are successful, |
878 | and analyzing correlates of school achievement. |
879 | (f) Provide technical assistance to school districts in |
880 | the implementation of state and district testing programs and |
881 | the use of the data produced pursuant to such programs. |
882 | (g) Study the cost and student achievement impact of |
883 | secondary end-of-course assessments, including web-based and |
884 | performance formats, and report to the Legislature prior to |
885 | implementation. |
886 | (4) STATEWIDE ASSESSMENT PREPARATION; PROHIBITED |
887 | ACTIVITIES.--Beginning with the 2008-2009 school year, a |
888 | district school board shall prohibit each public school from |
889 | suspending a regular program of curricula for purposes of |
890 | administering practice tests or engaging in other test- |
891 | preparation activities for a statewide assessment. However, a |
892 | district school board may authorize a public school to engage in |
893 | the following test-preparation activities for a statewide |
894 | assessment: |
895 | (a) Distributing to students the sample test books and |
896 | answer keys published by the Department of Education. |
897 | (b) Providing individualized instruction in test-taking |
898 | strategies, without suspending the school's regular program of |
899 | curricula, for a student who scores at Level 1 or Level 2 on a |
900 | prior administration of the statewide assessment. |
901 | (c) Providing individualized instruction in the content |
902 | knowledge and skills assessed, without suspending the school's |
903 | regular program of curricula, for a student who scores at Level |
904 | 1 or Level 2 on a prior administration of the statewide |
905 | assessment or a student who, through a diagnostic assessment |
906 | administered by the school district, is identified as having a |
907 | deficiency in the content knowledge and skills assessed. |
908 | (d) Incorporating test-taking exercises and strategies |
909 | into curricula for intensive reading and mathematics |
910 | intervention courses. |
911 | (e) Administering a practice test or engaging in other |
912 | test-preparation activities for the statewide assessment which |
913 | are determined necessary to familiarize students with the |
914 | organization of the assessment, the format of the test items, |
915 | and the test directions, or which are otherwise necessary for |
916 | the valid and reliable administration of the assessment, as set |
917 | forth in rules adopted by the State Board of Education with |
918 | specific reference to this paragraph. |
919 | (5)(4) DISTRICT TESTING PROGRAMS.--Each district school |
920 | board shall periodically assess student performance and |
921 | achievement within each school of the district. The assessment |
922 | programs must be based on the core curricular content |
923 | established in the Next Generation Sunshine State Standards and |
924 | any upon local goals and objectives that are compatible with the |
925 | state plan for education and that supplement the core content |
926 | knowledge and skills necessary for successful grade-to-grade |
927 | progression and high school graduation and competencies adopted |
928 | by the State Board of Education. All school districts must |
929 | participate in the statewide assessment program designed to |
930 | measure annual student learning and school performance. All |
931 | district school boards shall report assessment results as |
932 | required by the state management information system. |
933 | (6)(5) SCHOOL TESTING PROGRAMS.--Each public school shall |
934 | participate in the statewide assessment program in accordance |
935 | with the testing and reporting schedules published by the |
936 | Commissioner of Education under subparagraph (3)(c)12., unless |
937 | specifically exempted by state board rule based on serving a |
938 | specialized population for which standardized testing is not |
939 | appropriate. Student performance data shall be analyzed and |
940 | reported to parents, the community, and the state. Student |
941 | performance data shall be used in developing objectives of the |
942 | school improvement plan, evaluation of instructional personnel, |
943 | evaluation of administrative personnel, assignment of staff, |
944 | allocation of resources, acquisition of instructional materials |
945 | and technology, performance-based budgeting, and promotion and |
946 | assignment of students into educational programs. The analysis |
947 | of student performance data also must identify strengths and |
948 | needs in the educational program and trends over time. The |
949 | analysis must be used in conjunction with the budgetary planning |
950 | processes developed pursuant to s. 1008.385 and the development |
951 | of the programs of remediation. |
952 | (7)(6) REQUIRED ANALYSES.--The commissioner shall provide, |
953 | at a minimum, for the following analyses of data produced by the |
954 | student achievement testing program: |
955 | (a) The statistical system for the annual assessments |
956 | shall use measures of student learning, such as the FCAT, to |
957 | determine teacher, school, and school district statistical |
958 | distributions, which shall be determined using available data |
959 | from the FCAT, and other data collection as deemed appropriate |
960 | by the Department of Education, to measure the differences in |
961 | student prior year achievement compared to the current year |
962 | achievement for the purposes of accountability and recognition. |
963 | (b) The statistical system shall provide the best |
964 | estimates of teacher, school, and school district effects on |
965 | student progress. The approach used by the department shall be |
966 | approved by the commissioner before implementation. |
967 | (c) The annual testing program shall be administered to |
968 | provide for valid statewide comparisons of learning gains to be |
969 | made for purposes of accountability and recognition. The |
970 | commissioner shall establish a schedule for the administration |
971 | of the statewide assessments. In establishing such schedule, the |
972 | commissioner is charged with the duty to accomplish the latest |
973 | possible administration of the statewide assessments and the |
974 | earliest possible provision of the results to the school |
975 | districts feasible within available technology and specific |
976 | appropriation. District school boards shall not establish school |
977 | calendars that jeopardize or limit the valid testing and |
978 | comparison of student learning gains. |
979 | (8)(7) LOCAL ASSESSMENTS.--Measurement of the learning |
980 | gains of students in all subjects and grade levels other than |
981 | subjects and grade levels required for the state student |
982 | achievement testing program is the responsibility of the school |
983 | districts. |
984 | (9)(8) APPLICABILITY OF TESTING STANDARDS.-- |
985 | (a) If the Commissioner of Education revises a statewide |
986 | assessment and the revisions require the State Board of |
987 | Education to modify the assessment's proficiency levels or |
988 | modify the passing scores required for a standard high school |
989 | diploma, until the state board adopts the modifications by rule, |
990 | the commissioner shall use calculations for scoring the |
991 | assessment which adjust student scores on the revised assessment |
992 | for statistical equivalence to student scores on the former |
993 | assessment. |
994 | (b) A student must attain meet the passing scores on the |
995 | statewide assessment required testing requirements for a |
996 | standard high school diploma which are graduation that were in |
997 | effect at the time the student enters entered 9th grade 9 if, |
998 | provided the student's enrollment is was continuous. |
999 | (c) If the commissioner revises a statewide assessment and |
1000 | the revisions require the State Board of Education to modify the |
1001 | passing scores required for a standard high school diploma, the |
1002 | commissioner may, with approval of the state board, discontinue |
1003 | administration of the former assessment upon the graduation, |
1004 | based on normal student progression, of students participating |
1005 | in the final regular administration of the former assessment. |
1006 | The state board shall adopt by rule passing scores for the |
1007 | revised assessment which are statistically equivalent to passing |
1008 | scores on the discontinued assessment for a student required |
1009 | under paragraph (b) to attain passing scores on the discontinued |
1010 | assessment. |
1011 | (10)(9) CONCORDANT SCORES FOR THE FCAT.-- |
1012 | (a) The State Board of Education shall analyze the content |
1013 | and concordant data sets for widely used high school achievement |
1014 | tests, including, but not limited to, the PSAT, PLAN, SAT, ACT, |
1015 | and College Placement Test, to assess if concordant scores for |
1016 | FCAT scores can be determined for high school graduation, |
1017 | college placement, and scholarship awards. In cases where |
1018 | content alignment and concordant scores can be determined, the |
1019 | Commissioner of Education shall adopt those scores as meeting |
1020 | the graduation requirement in lieu of achieving the FCAT passing |
1021 | score and may adopt those scores as being sufficient to achieve |
1022 | additional purposes as determined by rule. Each time that test |
1023 | content or scoring procedures change are changed for the FCAT or |
1024 | for a high school achievement test for which a concordant score |
1025 | is determined one of the identified tests, new concordant scores |
1026 | must be determined. |
1027 | (b) In order to use a concordant subject area score |
1028 | pursuant to this subsection to satisfy the assessment |
1029 | requirement for a standard high school diploma as provided in s. |
1030 | 1003.429(6)(a), s. 1003.43(5)(a), or s. 1003.428, a student must |
1031 | take each subject area of the grade 10 FCAT a total of three |
1032 | times without earning a passing score. The requirements of this |
1033 | paragraph shall not apply to a new student who enters the |
1034 | Florida public school system in grade 12, who may either achieve |
1035 | a passing score on the FCAT or use an approved subject area |
1036 | concordant score to fulfill the graduation requirement. |
1037 | (c) The State Board of Education may define by rule the |
1038 | allowable uses, other than to satisfy the high school graduation |
1039 | requirement, for concordant scores as described in this |
1040 | subsection. Such uses may include, but need not be limited to, |
1041 | achieving appropriate standardized test scores required for the |
1042 | awarding of Florida Bright Futures Scholarships and college |
1043 | placement. |
1044 | (11)(10) REPORTS.--The Department of Education shall |
1045 | annually provide a report to the Governor, the President of the |
1046 | Senate, and the Speaker of the House of Representatives on the |
1047 | following: |
1048 | (a) Longitudinal performance of students in mathematics |
1049 | and reading. |
1050 | (b) Longitudinal performance of students by grade level in |
1051 | mathematics and reading. |
1052 | (c) Longitudinal performance regarding efforts to close |
1053 | the achievement gap. |
1054 | (d) Longitudinal performance of students on the norm- |
1055 | referenced component of the FCAT. |
1056 | (d)(e) Other student performance data based on national |
1057 | norm-referenced and criterion-referenced tests, when available, |
1058 | and numbers of students who after 8th grade enroll in adult |
1059 | education rather than other secondary education. |
1060 | (12)(11) RULES.--The State Board of Education shall adopt |
1061 | rules pursuant to ss. 120.536(1) and 120.54 to implement the |
1062 | provisions of this section. |
1063 | Section 19. Subsection (3) of section 1008.30, Florida |
1064 | Statutes, is amended to read: |
1065 | 1008.30 Common placement testing for public postsecondary |
1066 | education.-- |
1067 | (3) The State Board of Education shall adopt rules that |
1068 | would require high schools to evaluate before the beginning of |
1069 | grade 12 the college readiness of each student who indicates an |
1070 | interest in postsecondary education and scores at Level 2 or |
1071 | Level 3 on the reading portion of the grade 10 FCAT or Level 2, |
1072 | Level 3, or Level 4 on the mathematics portion of the grade 10 |
1073 | FCAT. High schools shall perform this evaluation using results |
1074 | from give the corresponding component of the common placement |
1075 | test prescribed in this section, or an equivalent test |
1076 | identified by the State Board of Education. The Department of |
1077 | Education shall purchase or develop the assessments necessary to |
1078 | perform the evaluations required by this subsection and shall |
1079 | work with the school districts to administer the assessments. |
1080 | The State Board of Education shall establish by rule the minimum |
1081 | test scores a student must achieve to demonstrate readiness. |
1082 | Students who demonstrate readiness by achieving the minimum test |
1083 | scores established by the state board and enroll in a community |
1084 | college within 2 years of achieving such scores shall not be |
1085 | required to enroll in remediation courses as a condition of |
1086 | acceptance to any community college. The high school shall use |
1087 | the results of the test to advise the students of any identified |
1088 | deficiencies and to the maximum extent practicable provide 12th |
1089 | grade students access to appropriate remedial instruction prior |
1090 | to high school graduation. The remedial instruction provided |
1091 | under this subsection shall be a collaborative effort between |
1092 | secondary and postsecondary educational institutions. To the |
1093 | extent courses are available, the Florida Virtual School may be |
1094 | used to provided the remedial instruction required by this |
1095 | subsection, at the beginning of the tenth grade year before |
1096 | enrollment in the eleventh grade year in public high school for |
1097 | the purpose of obtaining remedial instruction prior to entering |
1098 | public postsecondary education. |
1099 | Section 20. Paragraph (c) of subsection (1) of section |
1100 | 1008.31, Florida Statutes, is amended to read: |
1101 | 1008.31 Florida's K-20 education performance |
1102 | accountability system; legislative intent; mission, goals, and |
1103 | systemwide measures; data quality improvements.-- |
1104 | (1) LEGISLATIVE INTENT.--It is the intent of the |
1105 | Legislature that: |
1106 | (c) The K-20 education performance accountability system |
1107 | comply with the accountability requirements of the "No Child |
1108 | Left Behind Act of 2001," Pub. L. No. 107-110, and the |
1109 | Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA). |
1110 | Section 21. Subsection (3) of section 1008.34, Florida |
1111 | Statutes, is amended, and subsection (8) is added to that |
1112 | section, to read: |
1113 | 1008.34 School grading system; school report cards; |
1114 | district grade.-- |
1115 | (3) DESIGNATION OF SCHOOL GRADES.-- |
1116 | (a) Each school that has students who are tested and |
1117 | included in the school grading system, except an alternative |
1118 | school that receives a school improvement rating pursuant to s. |
1119 | 1008.341, shall receive a school grade, except as follows: |
1120 | 1. A school shall not receive a school grade if the number |
1121 | of its students tested and included in the school grading system |
1122 | are fewer than the minimum sample size necessary, based on |
1123 | accepted professional practice, for statistical reliability and |
1124 | prevention of the unlawful release of personally identifiable |
1125 | student data under s. 1002.22 or 20 U.S.C. s. 1232g.; however, |
1126 | 2. An alternative school may choose to receive a school |
1127 | grade under this section or in lieu of a school improvement |
1128 | rating under s. 1008.341. |
1129 | 3. Additionally, A school that serves any combination of |
1130 | students in kindergarten through grade 3 which does not receive |
1131 | a school grade because its students are not tested and included |
1132 | in the school grading system shall receive the school grade |
1133 | designation of a K-3 feeder pattern school identified by the |
1134 | Department of Education and verified by the school district. A |
1135 | school feeder pattern exists if at least 60 percent of the |
1136 | students in the school serving a combination of students in |
1137 | kindergarten through grade 3 are scheduled to be assigned to the |
1138 | graded school. School grades itemized in subsection (2) shall be |
1139 | based on the following: |
1140 | (b)1.(a) Criteria.--A school's grade shall be based on a |
1141 | combination of: |
1142 | a.1. Student achievement scores, including achievement |
1143 | scores for students seeking a special diploma. |
1144 | b.2. Student learning gains as measured by annual FCAT |
1145 | assessments in grades 3 through 10; learning gains for students |
1146 | seeking a special diploma, as measured by an alternate |
1147 | assessment tool, shall be included not later than the 2009-2010 |
1148 | school year. |
1149 | c.3. Improvement of the lowest 25th percentile of students |
1150 | in the school in reading, mathematics math, or writing on the |
1151 | FCAT, unless these students are exhibiting satisfactory |
1152 | performance. |
1153 | 2. Beginning with the 2009-2010 school year for schools |
1154 | comprised of high school grades 9, 10, 11, and 12, or grades 10, |
1155 | 11, and 12, 50 percent of the school grade shall be based on a |
1156 | combination of the factors listed in sub-subparagraphs 1.a.-c. |
1157 | and the remaining 50 percent on the following factors: |
1158 | a. The high school graduation rate of the school; |
1159 | b. As valid data becomes available, the performance and |
1160 | participation of the school's students in College Board Advanced |
1161 | Placement courses, International Baccalaureate courses, dual |
1162 | enrollment courses, and Advanced International Certificate of |
1163 | Education courses; and the students' achievement of industry |
1164 | certification, as determined by the Agency for Workforce |
1165 | Innovation under s. 1003.492(2) in a career and professional |
1166 | academy, as described in s. 1003.493; |
1167 | c. Postsecondary readiness of the school's students as |
1168 | measured by the SAT, ACT, or the common placement test; |
1169 | d. The high school graduation rate of at-risk students who |
1170 | scored at Level 2 or lower on the grade 8 FCAT Reading and |
1171 | Mathematics examinations; |
1172 | e. As valid data becomes available, the performance of the |
1173 | school's students on statewide standardized end-of-course |
1174 | assessments administered under s. 1008.22; and |
1175 | f. The growth or decline in the components listed in sub- |
1176 | subparagraphs a.-e. from year to year. |
1177 | (c)(b) Student assessment data.--Student assessment data |
1178 | used in determining school grades shall include: |
1179 | 1. The aggregate scores of all eligible students enrolled |
1180 | in the school who have been assessed on the FCAT. |
1181 | 2. The aggregate scores of all eligible students enrolled |
1182 | in the school who have been assessed on the FCAT, including |
1183 | Florida Writes, and who have scored at or in the lowest 25th |
1184 | percentile of students in the school in reading, mathematics |
1185 | math, or writing, unless these students are exhibiting |
1186 | satisfactory performance. |
1187 | 3. Effective with the 2005-2006 school year, the |
1188 | achievement scores and learning gains of eligible students |
1189 | attending alternative schools that provide dropout prevention |
1190 | and academic intervention services pursuant to s. 1003.53. The |
1191 | term "eligible students" in this subparagraph does not include |
1192 | students attending an alternative school who are subject to |
1193 | district school board policies for expulsion for repeated or |
1194 | serious offenses, who are in dropout retrieval programs serving |
1195 | students who have officially been designated as dropouts, or who |
1196 | are in programs operated or contracted by the Department of |
1197 | Juvenile Justice. The student performance data for eligible |
1198 | students identified in this subparagraph shall be included in |
1199 | the calculation of the home school's grade. As used in For |
1200 | purposes of this section and s. 1008.341, the term "home school" |
1201 | means the school to which the student would be assigned if the |
1202 | student were not was attending when assigned to an alternative |
1203 | school. If an alternative school chooses to be graded under |
1204 | pursuant to this section, student performance data for eligible |
1205 | students identified in this subparagraph shall not be included |
1206 | in the home school's grade but shall be included only in the |
1207 | calculation of the alternative school's grade. A school district |
1208 | that fails to assign the FCAT scores of each of its students to |
1209 | his or her home school or to the alternative school that |
1210 | receives a grade shall forfeit Florida School Recognition |
1211 | Program funds for 1 fiscal year. School districts must require |
1212 | collaboration between the home school and the alternative school |
1213 | in order to promote student success. This collaboration must |
1214 | include an annual discussion between the principal of the |
1215 | alternative school and the principal of each student's home |
1216 | school concerning the most appropriate school assignment of the |
1217 | student. |
1218 | 4. Beginning with the 2009-2010 school year for schools |
1219 | comprised of high school grades 9, 10, 11, and 12, or grades 10, |
1220 | 11, and 12, the data listed in subparagraphs 1.-3. and the |
1221 | following data as the Department of Education determines such |
1222 | data are valid and available: |
1223 | a. The high school graduation rate of the school as |
1224 | calculated by the Department of Education; |
1225 | b. The participation rate of all eligible students |
1226 | enrolled in the school and enrolled in College Board Advanced |
1227 | Placement courses; International Baccalaureate courses; dual |
1228 | enrollment courses; Advanced International Certificate of |
1229 | Education courses; and courses or sequence of courses leading to |
1230 | industry certification, as determined by the Agency for |
1231 | Workforce Innovation under s. 1003.492(2) in a career and |
1232 | professional academy, as described in s. 1003.493; |
1233 | c. The aggregate scores of all eligible students enrolled |
1234 | in the school in College Board Advanced Placement courses, |
1235 | International Baccalaureate courses, and Advanced International |
1236 | Certificate of Education courses; |
1237 | d. Earning of college credit by all eligible students |
1238 | enrolled in the school in dual enrollment programs under s. |
1239 | 1007.271; |
1240 | e. Earning of an industry certification, as determined by |
1241 | the Agency for Workforce Innovation under s. 1003.492(2) in a |
1242 | career and professional academy, as described in s. 1003.493; |
1243 | f. The aggregate scores of all eligible students enrolled |
1244 | in the school in reading, mathematics, and other subjects as |
1245 | measured by the SAT, the ACT, and the common placement test for |
1246 | postsecondary readiness; |
1247 | g. The high school graduation rate of all eligible at-risk |
1248 | students enrolled in the school who scored at Level 2 or lower |
1249 | on the grade 8 FCAT Reading and Mathematics examinations; |
1250 | h. The performance of the school's students on statewide |
1251 | standardized end-of-course assessments administered under s. |
1252 | 1008.22; and |
1253 | i. The growth or decline in the data components listed in |
1254 | sub-subparagraphs a.-h. from year to year. |
1255 |
|
1256 | The State Board of Education shall adopt appropriate criteria |
1257 | for each school grade. The criteria must also give added weight |
1258 | to student achievement in reading. Schools designated with a |
1259 | grade of "C," making satisfactory progress, shall be required to |
1260 | demonstrate that adequate progress has been made by students in |
1261 | the school who are in the lowest 25th percentile in reading, |
1262 | mathematics math, or writing on the FCAT, including Florida |
1263 | Writes, unless these students are exhibiting satisfactory |
1264 | performance. Beginning with the 2009-2010 school year for |
1265 | schools comprised of high school grades 9, 10, 11, and 12, or |
1266 | grades 10, 11, and 12, the criteria for school grades must also |
1267 | give added weight to the graduation rate of all eligible at-risk |
1268 | students, as defined in this paragraph. Beginning in the 2009- |
1269 | 2010 school year, in order for a high school to be designated as |
1270 | having a grade of "A," making excellent progress, the school |
1271 | must demonstrate that at-risk students, as defined in this |
1272 | paragraph, in the school are making adequate progress. |
1273 | (8) RULES.--The State Board of Education shall adopt rules |
1274 | under ss. 120.536(1) and 120.54 to administer this section. |
1275 | Section 22. Subsection (2) and paragraph (b) of subsection |
1276 | (3) of section 1008.341, Florida Statutes, are amended, and |
1277 | subsection (6) is added to that section, to read: |
1278 | 1008.341 School improvement rating for alternative |
1279 | schools.-- |
1280 | (2) SCHOOL IMPROVEMENT RATING.--An alternative school |
1281 | schools that provides provide dropout prevention and academic |
1282 | intervention services pursuant to s. 1003.53 shall receive a |
1283 | school improvement rating pursuant to this section. However, an |
1284 | alternative school shall not receive a school improvement rating |
1285 | if the number of its students for whom student performance data |
1286 | is available for the current year and previous year are fewer |
1287 | than the minimum sample size necessary, based on accepted |
1288 | professional practice, for statistical reliability and |
1289 | prevention of the unlawful release of personally identifiable |
1290 | student data under s. 1002.22 or 20 U.S.C. s. 1232g. The school |
1291 | improvement rating shall identify an alternative school schools |
1292 | as having one of the following ratings defined according to |
1293 | rules of the State Board of Education: |
1294 | (a) "Improving" means the schools with students attending |
1295 | the school are making more academic progress than when the |
1296 | students were served in their home schools. |
1297 | (b) "Maintaining" means the schools with students |
1298 | attending the school are making progress equivalent to the |
1299 | progress made when the students were served in their home |
1300 | schools. |
1301 | (c) "Declining" means the schools with students attending |
1302 | the school are making less academic progress than when the |
1303 | students were served in their home schools. |
1304 |
|
1305 | The school improvement rating shall be based on a comparison of |
1306 | student performance data for the current year and previous year. |
1307 | Schools that improve at least one level or maintain an |
1308 | "improving" rating pursuant to this section are eligible for |
1309 | school recognition awards pursuant to s. 1008.36. |
1310 | (3) DESIGNATION OF SCHOOL IMPROVEMENT RATING.--Student |
1311 | data used in determining an alternative school's school |
1312 | improvement rating shall include: |
1313 | (b) The aggregate scores of all eligible students who were |
1314 | assigned to and enrolled in the school during the October or |
1315 | February FTE count, who have been assessed on the FCAT, |
1316 | including Florida Writes, and who have scored in the lowest 25th |
1317 | percentile of students in the state on FCAT Reading. |
1318 |
|
1319 | The assessment scores of students who are subject to district |
1320 | school board policies for expulsion for repeated or serious |
1321 | offenses, who are in dropout retrieval programs serving students |
1322 | who have officially been designated as dropouts, or who are in |
1323 | programs operated or contracted by the Department of Juvenile |
1324 | Justice may not be included in an alternative school's school |
1325 | improvement rating. |
1326 | (6) RULES.--The State Board of Education shall adopt rules |
1327 | under ss. 120.536(1) and 120.54 to administer this section. |
1328 | Section 23. Paragraph (a) of subsection (8) of section |
1329 | 1008.345, Florida Statutes, is amended to read: |
1330 | 1008.345 Implementation of state system of school |
1331 | improvement and education accountability.-- |
1332 | (8) As a part of the system of educational accountability, |
1333 | the Department of Education shall: |
1334 | (a) Develop minimum performance standards for various |
1335 | grades and subject areas, as required in ss. 1001.03, 1008.22, |
1336 | and 1008.34. |
1337 | Section 24. Subsection (2) of section 1008.36, Florida |
1338 | Statutes, is amended to read: |
1339 | 1008.36 Florida School Recognition Program.-- |
1340 | (2) The Florida School Recognition Program is created to |
1341 | provide financial awards to public schools that: |
1342 | (a) Sustain high performance by receiving a school grade |
1343 | of "A," making excellent progress; or |
1344 | (b) Demonstrate exemplary improvement due to innovation |
1345 | and effort by improving at least one a letter grade or by |
1346 | improving more than one letter grade and sustaining the |
1347 | improvement the following school year. |
1348 |
|
1349 | Notwithstanding statutory provisions to the contrary, incentive |
1350 | awards are not subject to collective bargaining. |
1351 | Section 25. Subsections (4) through (16) of section |
1352 | 1012.56, Florida Statutes, are renumbered as subsections (5) |
1353 | through (17), respectively, and a new subsection (4) is added to |
1354 | that section to read: |
1355 | 1012.56 Educator certification requirements.-- |
1356 | (4) ALIGNMENT OF SUBJECT AREAS.--As the Sunshine State |
1357 | Standards are replaced by the Next Generation Sunshine State |
1358 | Standards under s. 1003.41, the State Board of Education shall |
1359 | align the subject area examinations to the Next Generation |
1360 | Sunshine State Standards. |
1361 | Section 26. Subsection (1) of section 1012.57, Florida |
1362 | Statutes, is amended to read: |
1363 | 1012.57 Certification of adjunct educators.-- |
1364 | (1) Notwithstanding the provisions of ss. 1012.32, |
1365 | 1012.55, and 1012.56, or any other provision of law or rule to |
1366 | the contrary, district school boards shall adopt rules to allow |
1367 | for the issuance of an adjunct teaching certificate to any |
1368 | applicant who fulfills the requirements of s. 1012.56(2)(a)-(f) |
1369 | and (10) (9) and who has expertise in the subject area to be |
1370 | taught. An applicant shall be considered to have expertise in |
1371 | the subject area to be taught if the applicant demonstrates |
1372 | sufficient subject area mastery through passage of a subject |
1373 | area test. The adjunct teaching certificate shall be used for |
1374 | part-time teaching positions. The intent of this provision is to |
1375 | allow school districts to tap the wealth of talent and expertise |
1376 | represented in Florida's citizens who may wish to teach part- |
1377 | time in a Florida public school by permitting school districts |
1378 | to issue adjunct certificates to qualified applicants. Adjunct |
1379 | certificateholders should be used as a strategy to reduce the |
1380 | teacher shortage; thus, adjunct certificateholders should |
1381 | supplement a school's instructional staff, not supplant it. Each |
1382 | school principal shall assign an experienced peer mentor to |
1383 | assist the adjunct teaching certificateholder during the |
1384 | certificateholder's first year of teaching, and an adjunct |
1385 | certificateholder may participate in a district's new teacher |
1386 | training program. District school boards shall provide the |
1387 | adjunct teaching certificateholder an orientation in classroom |
1388 | management prior to assigning the certificateholder to a school. |
1389 | Each adjunct teaching certificate is valid for 5 school years |
1390 | and is renewable if the applicant has received satisfactory |
1391 | performance evaluations during each year of teaching under |
1392 | adjunct teaching certification. |
1393 | Section 27. Subsection (1) of section 1012.586, Florida |
1394 | Statutes, is amended to read: |
1395 | 1012.586 Additions or changes to certificates; duplicate |
1396 | certificates.--A school district may process via a Department of |
1397 | Education website certificates for the following applications of |
1398 | public school employees: |
1399 | (1) Addition of a subject coverage or endorsement to a |
1400 | valid Florida certificate on the basis of the completion of the |
1401 | appropriate subject area testing requirements of s. |
1402 | 1012.56(5)(a) s. 1012.56(4)(a) or the completion of the |
1403 | requirements of an approved school district program or the |
1404 | inservice components for an endorsement. |
1405 |
|
1406 | The employing school district shall charge the employee a fee |
1407 | not to exceed the amount charged by the Department of Education |
1408 | for such services. Each district school board shall retain a |
1409 | portion of the fee as defined in the rules of the State Board of |
1410 | Education. The portion sent to the department shall be used for |
1411 | maintenance of the technology system, the web application, and |
1412 | posting and mailing of the certificate. |
1413 | Section 28. Effective upon this act becoming a law, |
1414 | section 1012.71, Florida Statutes, is amended to read: |
1415 | (Substantial rewording of section. See |
1416 | s. 1012.71, F.S., for present text.) |
1417 | 1012.71 The Florida Teachers Lead Program.-- |
1418 | (1) For purposes of the Florida Teachers Lead Program, the |
1419 | term "classroom teacher" means a certified teacher employed by a |
1420 | public school district or a public charter school in that |
1421 | district on or before September 1 of each year whose full-time |
1422 | or job-share responsibility is the classroom instruction of |
1423 | students in prekindergarten through grade 12, including full- |
1424 | time media specialists and guidance counselors serving students |
1425 | in prekindergarten through grade 12, who are funded through the |
1426 | Florida Education Finance Program. A "job-share" classroom |
1427 | teacher is one of two teachers whose combined full-time |
1428 | equivalent employment for the same teaching assignment equals |
1429 | one full-time classroom teacher. |
1430 | (2) The Legislature, in the General Appropriations Act, |
1431 | shall determine funding for the Florida Teachers Lead Program. |
1432 | The funds appropriated are for classroom teachers to purchase, |
1433 | on behalf of the school district or charter school, classroom |
1434 | materials and supplies for the public school students assigned |
1435 | to them and may not be used to purchase equipment. The funds |
1436 | appropriated shall be used to supplement the materials and |
1437 | supplies otherwise available to classroom teachers. From the |
1438 | funds appropriated for the Florida Teachers Lead Program, the |
1439 | Commissioner of Education shall calculate an amount for each |
1440 | school district based upon each school district's proportionate |
1441 | share of the state's total unweighted FTE student enrollment and |
1442 | shall disburse the funds to the school districts by July 15. |
1443 | (3) From the funds allocated to each school district for |
1444 | the Florida Teachers Lead Program, the district school board |
1445 | shall calculate an identical amount for each classroom teacher, |
1446 | which is that teacher's proportionate share of the total amount |
1447 | allocated to the district. A job-share classroom teacher may |
1448 | receive a prorated share of the amount provided to a full-time |
1449 | classroom teacher. The district school board and each charter |
1450 | school board shall provide each classroom teacher with his or |
1451 | her total proportionate share by September 30 of each year by |
1452 | any means determined appropriate by the district school board or |
1453 | charter school board, including, but not limited to, direct |
1454 | deposit, check, debit card, or purchasing card, notwithstanding |
1455 | any law to the contrary. Expenditures under the program are not |
1456 | subject to state or local competitive bidding requirements. |
1457 | Funds received by a classroom teacher do not affect wages, |
1458 | hours, or terms and conditions of employment and, therefore, are |
1459 | not subject to collective bargaining. Any classroom teacher may |
1460 | decline receipt of or return the funds without explanation or |
1461 | cause. This subsection shall apply retroactively to July 1, |
1462 | 2007. |
1463 | (4) Each classroom teacher must sign a statement |
1464 | acknowledging receipt of the funds, keep receipts for no less |
1465 | than 4 years to show that funds expended meet the requirements |
1466 | of this section, and return any unused funds to the district |
1467 | school board at the end of the regular school year. Any unused |
1468 | funds that are returned to the district school board shall be |
1469 | deposited into the school advisory council account of the school |
1470 | at which the classroom teacher returning the funds was employed |
1471 | when that teacher received the funds or deposited into the |
1472 | Florida Teachers Lead Program account of the school district in |
1473 | which a charter school is sponsored, as applicable. |
1474 | (5) The statement must be signed and dated by each |
1475 | classroom teacher before receipt of the Florida Teachers Lead |
1476 | Program funds and shall include the wording: "I, (name of |
1477 | teacher) , am employed by the County District School |
1478 | Board or by the Charter School as a full-time classroom |
1479 | teacher. I acknowledge that Florida Teachers Lead Program funds |
1480 | are appropriated by the Legislature for the sole purpose of |
1481 | purchasing classroom materials and supplies to be used in the |
1482 | instruction of students assigned to me. In accepting custody of |
1483 | these funds, I agree to keep the receipts for all expenditures |
1484 | for no less than 4 years. I understand that if I do not keep the |
1485 | receipts, it will be my personal responsibility to pay any |
1486 | federal taxes due on these funds. I also agree to return any |
1487 | unexpended funds to the district school board at the end of the |
1488 | regular school year for deposit into the school advisory council |
1489 | account of the school where I was employed at the time I |
1490 | received the funds or for deposit into the Florida Teachers Lead |
1491 | Program account of the school district in which the charter |
1492 | school is sponsored, as applicable." |
1493 | Section 29. Paragraphs (b) and (c) of subsection (2) of |
1494 | section 1013.12, Florida Statutes, are redesignated as |
1495 | paragraphs (c) and (d), respectively, and a new paragraph (b) is |
1496 | added to that subsection to read: |
1497 | 1013.12 Casualty, safety, sanitation, and firesafety |
1498 | standards and inspection of property.-- |
1499 | (2) PERIODIC INSPECTION OF PROPERTY BY DISTRICT SCHOOL |
1500 | BOARDS.-- |
1501 | (b) Each school cafeteria must post in a visible location |
1502 | and on the school website the school's semiannual sanitation |
1503 | certificate and a copy of its most recent sanitation inspection |
1504 | report. |
1505 | Section 30. Except as otherwise expressly provided in this |
1506 | act, this act shall take effect July 1, 2008. |
1507 |
|
1508 | ----------------------------------------------------- |
1509 | T I T L E A M E N D M E N T |
1510 | Remove the entire title and insert: |
1511 | A bill to be entitled |
1512 | An act relating to education; amending s. 1003.41, F.S.; |
1513 | requiring that the State Board of Education replace the Sunshine |
1514 | State Standards with the Next Generation Sunshine State |
1515 | Standards; providing requirements for the content and |
1516 | organization of the standards; requiring that the standards |
1517 | establish core curricular content in specified areas for certain |
1518 | grades or grade clusters; requiring that the state board |
1519 | establish schedules for the adoption and revision of the Next |
1520 | Generation Sunshine State Standards; requiring that the state |
1521 | board adopt the standards by a specified date; requiring the |
1522 | Commissioner of Education to provide proposed Next Generation |
1523 | Sunshine State Standards or proposed revisions of such standards |
1524 | to the state board; providing requirements for the |
1525 | commissioner's development of the proposed standards or |
1526 | revisions; requiring consultation with certain experts; |
1527 | requiring distribution of a proposal developed by the |
1528 | commissioner for review and comment by certain experts; |
1529 | requiring a written evaluation of the proposal developed by the |
1530 | commissioner by certain experts; requiring provision of the |
1531 | commissioner's proposed standards and the written evaluation and |
1532 | comments to the Governor, the President of the Senate, and the |
1533 | Speaker of the House of Representatives; authorizing rulemaking |
1534 | by the State Board of Education; amending s. 220.187, F.S.; |
1535 | revising requirements for the selection of norm-referenced tests |
1536 | administered by private schools for purposes of the Corporate |
1537 | Income Tax Credit Scholarship Program; amending s. 1000.21, |
1538 | F.S.; providing and revising definitions; providing for |
1539 | application of the Sunshine State Standards pending adoption of |
1540 | the Next Generation Sunshine State Standards; amending s. |
1541 | 1001.03, F.S.; requiring the State Board of Education to |
1542 | periodically review and revise state curriculum standards; |
1543 | eliminating provisions requiring that the state board report |
1544 | proposed revisions to the Governor and the Legislature; amending |
1545 | s. 1001.452, F.S.; revising provisions relating to membership of |
1546 | school advisory councils; amending s. 1003.413, F.S.; requiring |
1547 | policies of each district school board to address an annual |
1548 | review of student education plans; amending s. 1003.428, F.S.; |
1549 | revising courses that are acceptable for high school graduation; |
1550 | conforming provisions and a cross-reference; creating s. |
1551 | 1003.4285, F.S.; providing for high school diploma designations; |
1552 | amending ss. 1003.429, 1003.43, and 1003.433, F.S.; conforming |
1553 | provisions and cross-references; amending s. 1003.63, F.S.; |
1554 | revising the type of assessment tests reported to the Governor |
1555 | and the Legislature relating to the deregulated public schools |
1556 | pilot program; amending s. 1004.85, F.S.; conforming cross- |
1557 | references; amending s. 1004.91, F.S.; providing an exemption |
1558 | relating to career-preparatory instruction; amending s. 1004.99, |
1559 | F.S.; providing designations of Florida Ready to Work |
1560 | credentials; amending s. 1007.21, F.S., relating to |
1561 | postsecondary placement tests for high school students; |
1562 | authorizing the common placement test to be administered to high |
1563 | school students meeting certain criteria; amending s. 1007.235, |
1564 | F.S.; requiring district interinstitutional articulation |
1565 | agreements to include responsibility for assignment of grades |
1566 | for dual enrollment courses; amending s. 1008.22, F.S.; revising |
1567 | provisions governing application of testing requirements for |
1568 | high school graduation; providing criteria concerning the |
1569 | testing and scores required for a continuously enrolled student |
1570 | to earn a standard high school diploma; authorizing the |
1571 | commissioner to administer end-of-course assessments; providing |
1572 | requirements for comprehensive assessments and end-of-course |
1573 | assessments; authorizing the commissioner to select a nationally |
1574 | developed comprehensive examination for use as an end-of-course |
1575 | assessment; revising the design of the testing program; |
1576 | authorizing the commissioner to collaborate with the American |
1577 | Diploma Project to develop end-of-course assessments; deleting |
1578 | requirements for norm-referenced tests; revising assessments of |
1579 | writing; requiring the commissioner to establish schedules for |
1580 | the administration of statewide assessments and the reporting of |
1581 | student test results; providing requirements for the testing and |
1582 | reporting schedules; requiring district school boards to |
1583 | prohibit public schools from suspending a program of curricula |
1584 | for the administration of practice tests or certain test- |
1585 | preparation activities; authorizing a district school board to |
1586 | permit a school to engage in certain test-preparation |
1587 | activities; requiring public schools to comply with statewide |
1588 | assessment and reporting schedules; revising the applicability |
1589 | of testing standards under certain conditions; establishing |
1590 | requirements for calculating student scores on revised statewide |
1591 | assessments; authorizing the commissioner to discontinue |
1592 | administration of an outdated assessment under certain |
1593 | circumstances; requiring the state board to adopt rules |
1594 | establishing passing scores on revised assessments required for |
1595 | a standard high school diploma; clarifying determination of |
1596 | concordant scores for the FCAT; revising the requirements |
1597 | contained in the annual report by the department to the Governor |
1598 | and the Legislature; amending s. 1008.30, F.S.; revising |
1599 | provisions relating to administration and use of the results of |
1600 | the common placement test; requiring the State Board of |
1601 | Education to adopt rules requiring high school evaluation of |
1602 | student college readiness and establishing minimum test scores |
1603 | for such readiness; authorizing the purchase or development of |
1604 | assessments; providing for remedial instruction; amending s. |
1605 | 1008.31, F.S.; declaring the legislative intent that the K-20 |
1606 | education system comply with the Individuals with Disabilities |
1607 | Education Act; amending s. 1008.34, F.S.; revising the |
1608 | exceptions for a school to receive a school grade; providing for |
1609 | a revised high school grading system beginning with the 2009- |
1610 | 2010 school year which includes the statewide standardized |
1611 | assessment, graduation rates, performance and participation in |
1612 | certain courses, postsecondary readiness as measured by certain |
1613 | examinations, and the change in these factors from year to year; |
1614 | specifying the data components to be used in determining the |
1615 | revised high school grading system; requiring that the criteria |
1616 | for school grades give added weight to the graduation rate of |
1617 | all eligible at-risk students; revising the student assessment |
1618 | data used in determining school grades; requiring a school |
1619 | district that fails to assign FCAT scores to students' schools |
1620 | to forfeit Florida School Recognition Program funds for a |
1621 | specified time; requiring the collaboration between a home |
1622 | school and alternative school to be between the principals of |
1623 | each school in order to promote student success; authorizing the |
1624 | state board to adopt rules; amending s. 1008.341, F.S.; revising |
1625 | provisions for a school improvement rating for an alternative |
1626 | school; authorizing the state board to adopt rules; amending s. |
1627 | 1008.345, F.S.; conforming provisions; amending s. 1008.36, |
1628 | F.S.; revising criteria for financial awards under the Florida |
1629 | School Recognition Program; amending s. 1012.56, F.S.; requiring |
1630 | teacher certification examinations to be aligned to the Next |
1631 | Generation Sunshine State Standards; amending ss. 1012.57 and |
1632 | 1012.586, F.S.; conforming cross-reference; amending s. 1012.71, |
1633 | F.S., relating to the Florida Teachers Lead Program; revising |
1634 | requirements for use of program funds by classroom teachers; |
1635 | providing for disbursement of funds to school districts; |
1636 | specifying means for providing a classroom teacher with his or |
1637 | her proportionate share of program funds and providing that |
1638 | funds received are not subject to collective bargaining; |
1639 | providing for retroactive effect; providing requirements for |
1640 | accounting of expenditures; amending s. 1013.12, F.S.; requiring |
1641 | that a school cafeteria post certain information concerning its |
1642 | sanitation certificate and inspection; providing effective |
1643 | dates. |