SB 2510                                          First Engrossed
       
       
       
       
       
       
       
       
       20252510e1
       
    1                        A bill to be entitled                      
    2         An act relating to prekindergarten through grade 12
    3         education; amending s. 402.22, F.S.; conforming a
    4         cross-reference; amending s. 1001.292, F.S.; requiring
    5         a third-party administrator to transfer a specified
    6         amount of money from a loan fund to the Schools of
    7         Hope program under certain conditions, beginning on a
    8         specified date; amending s. 1002.32, F.S.; conforming
    9         a cross-reference; amending s. 1002.33, F.S.;
   10         conforming cross-references and provisions to changes
   11         made by the act; amending s. 1002.333, F.S.; revising
   12         definitions; revising requirements for the
   13         establishment of a school of hope; requiring that
   14         certain students receive an enrollment preference;
   15         providing that certain requirements apply to a state
   16         university or a Florida College System institution;
   17         authorizing a school of hope to colocate with another
   18         school in a public school facility; requiring a school
   19         district to permit a school of hope to use certain
   20         facilities and receive certain services; providing
   21         that a hope operator must be able to use certain
   22         facilities at no cost; authorizing a school of hope to
   23         receive funds after a specified period of operation if
   24         certain requirements are met; requiring a school of
   25         hope to report specified information to its sponsor;
   26         requiring the Department of Education to annually
   27         provide specified entities with a report; amending s.
   28         1002.37, F.S.; conforming cross-references; amending
   29         s. 1002.411, F.S.; deleting eligibility requirements
   30         for New Worlds Scholarship Accounts; revising parent
   31         and student responsibilities for participation;
   32         deleting school district and private prekindergarten
   33         provider obligations; revising account funding and
   34         payment requirements; amending s. 1002.45, F.S.;
   35         conforming a cross-reference; amending s. 1003.4201,
   36         F.S.; revising components that may be included in a
   37         reading instruction plan; amending s. 1003.4203, F.S.;
   38         requiring that CAPE digital tool certificates be made
   39         available to all public elementary grades students,
   40         but not middle grades students; requiring that
   41         approved industry certifications be identified in the
   42         CAPE Industry Certification Funding List; providing
   43         that certain industry certifications are eligible for
   44         additional funding; conforming provisions to changes
   45         made by the act; amending s. 1003.4935, F.S.; making
   46         conforming changes; amending s. 1003.498, F.S.;
   47         conforming a cross-reference; amending s. 1007.271,
   48         F.S.; conforming a cross-reference; amending s.
   49         1008.44, F.S.; revising requirements for the CAPE
   50         Industry Certification Funding List; amending s.
   51         1010.20, F.S.; conforming cross-references; amending
   52         s. 1011.61, F.S.; deleting the definition of “full
   53         time equivalent student”; providing that certain
   54         calculation methodologies apply to the Florida
   55         Education Finance Program rather than the “current
   56         operation program”; amending s. 1011.62, F.S.;
   57         revising the methodology to determine full-time
   58         equivalent student membership; requiring full-time
   59         equivalent survey data to include unduplicated counts
   60         of school district full-time equivalent students and
   61         full-time equivalent Family Empowerment Scholarship
   62         students; revising methodology for the calculation of
   63         full-time equivalent membership with respect to dual
   64         enrollment instruction; deleting requirements for the
   65         calculation of certain additional full-time equivalent
   66         student memberships; revising requirements for certain
   67         funding determinations; requiring that the
   68         discretionary millage compression supplement be
   69         recalculated based on actual full-time equivalent
   70         student membership; requiring that the state-funded
   71         discretionary contribution be recalculated based on
   72         actual full-time equivalent student membership;
   73         revising requirements for the recalculation of the
   74         educational enrichment allocation; deleting a
   75         requirement for the recalculation of the exceptional
   76         student allocation; requiring that the supplemental
   77         allocation for juvenile justice education programs be
   78         recalculated based on actual full-time equivalent
   79         student membership; requiring that the safe schools
   80         allocation be recalculated based on actual full-time
   81         equivalent student membership; requiring that the
   82         mental health assistance allocation be recalculated
   83         based on actual full-time equivalent student
   84         membership; requiring that the total allocation of
   85         state funds to each district be based on the results
   86         of full-time equivalent membership surveys; providing
   87         that if gross state Florida Education Finance Program
   88         funds are not sufficient, state funds must be prorated
   89         pursuant to a specified methodology; requiring that
   90         the state-funded discretionary supplement be based on
   91         actual full-time equivalent student membership;
   92         creating the Academic Acceleration Options Supplement;
   93         providing the purpose of the supplement; providing for
   94         the determination of the allocation of the supplement;
   95         requiring a school district to award a bonus from the
   96         supplement to certain teachers if specified
   97         requirements are met; providing requirements for the
   98         use of funds from the supplement; amending s. 1011.65,
   99         F.S.; revising requirements for the recalculation of
  100         the Florida Education Finance Program allocations;
  101         authorizing a school district to receive funding for
  102         students who graduate early; requiring the Department
  103         of Education to provide the Legislature and the
  104         Governor with certain data prior to the recalculation;
  105         requiring the Department of Education to recommend to
  106         the Legislature a Florida Title I performance
  107         incentive program by a specified date; requiring that
  108         the recommendations include a methodology to determine
  109         student eligibility; requiring the department to
  110         consider specified factors in its recommendations;
  111         providing an effective date.
  112          
  113  Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida:
  114  
  115         Section 1. Subsection (6) of section 402.22, Florida
  116  Statutes, is amended to read:
  117         402.22 Education program for students who reside in
  118  residential care facilities operated by the Department of
  119  Children and Families or the Agency for Persons with
  120  Disabilities.—
  121         (6) Notwithstanding the provisions of s. 1001.42(4)(m), the
  122  educational program at the Marianna Sunland Center in Jackson
  123  County shall be operated by the Department of Education, either
  124  directly or through grants or contractual agreements with other
  125  public educational agencies. The annual state allocation to any
  126  such agency shall be computed pursuant to s. 1011.62(1), (2),
  127  and (18) s. 1011.62(1), (2), and (17) and allocated in the
  128  amount that would have been provided the local school district
  129  in which the residential facility is located.
  130         Section 2. Subsection (6) of section 1001.292, Florida
  131  Statutes, is amended to read:
  132         1001.292 Schools of Hope Revolving Loan Program.—
  133         (6) All repayments of principal and interest shall be
  134  returned to the loan fund and made available for loans to other
  135  applicants. Beginning July 1, 2027, when the funds of the
  136  Schools of Hope program established in s. 1002.333 fall below
  137  $25 million, the third-party administrator shall transfer from
  138  the loan fund to the program an amount that provides for
  139  maintaining a balance of $25 million in the program.
  140         Section 3. Paragraph (a) of subsection (9) of section
  141  1002.32, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
  142         1002.32 Developmental research (laboratory) schools.—
  143         (9) FUNDING.—Funding for a lab school, including a charter
  144  lab school, shall be provided as follows:
  145         (a) Each lab school shall receive state funds for operating
  146  purposes as provided in the Florida Education Finance Program as
  147  defined in s. 1011.61(4) s. 1011.61(5) based on the county in
  148  which the lab school is located and as specified in the General
  149  Appropriations Act.
  150         1. The nonvoted required local effort millage established
  151  pursuant to s. 1011.71(1) that would otherwise be required for
  152  lab schools shall be allocated from state funds.
  153         2. An equivalent amount of funds for the operating
  154  discretionary millage authorized pursuant to s. 1011.71(1) shall
  155  be allocated to each lab school through a state-funded
  156  discretionary contribution established pursuant to s.
  157  1011.62(6).
  158         Section 4. Paragraph (b) of subsection (17) of section
  159  1002.33, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
  160         1002.33 Charter schools.—
  161         (17) FUNDING.—Students enrolled in a charter school,
  162  regardless of the sponsorship, shall be funded based upon the
  163  applicable program pursuant to s. 1011.62(1)(c), the same as
  164  students enrolled in other public schools in a school district.
  165  Funding for a charter lab school shall be as provided in s.
  166  1002.32.
  167         (b)1. Funding for students enrolled in a charter school
  168  sponsored by a school district shall be the sum of the school
  169  district’s operating funds from the Florida Education Finance
  170  Program as defined in s. 1011.61(4) s. 1011.61(5) and the
  171  General Appropriations Act, including gross state and local
  172  funds, and funds from the school district’s current operating
  173  discretionary millage levy; divided by total funded weighted
  174  full-time equivalent students in the school district; and
  175  multiplied by the weighted full-time equivalent students for the
  176  charter school. Charter schools whose students or programs meet
  177  the eligibility criteria in law are entitled to their
  178  proportionate share of categorical program funds included in the
  179  total funds available in the Florida Education Finance Program
  180  by the Legislature, including the student transportation
  181  allocation and the educational enrichment allocation. Total
  182  funding for each charter school shall be recalculated during the
  183  year to reflect the revised calculations under the Florida
  184  Education Finance Program by the state and the actual weighted
  185  full-time equivalent students reported by the charter school
  186  during the full-time equivalent student survey periods
  187  designated by the Commissioner of Education. For charter schools
  188  operated by a not-for-profit or municipal entity, any
  189  unrestricted current and capital assets identified in the
  190  charter school’s annual financial audit may be used for other
  191  charter schools operated by the not-for-profit or municipal
  192  entity within the school district. For charter schools operated
  193  by a not-for-profit entity, any unrestricted current or capital
  194  assets identified in the charter school’s annual audit may be
  195  used for other charter schools operated by the not-for-profit
  196  entity which are located outside of the originating charter
  197  school’s school district, but within the state, through an
  198  unforgivable loan that must be repaid within 5 years to the
  199  originating charter school by the receiving charter school.
  200  Unrestricted current assets shall be used in accordance with s.
  201  1011.62, and any unrestricted capital assets shall be used in
  202  accordance with s. 1013.62(2).
  203         2.a. Funding for students enrolled in a charter school
  204  sponsored by a state university or Florida College System
  205  institution pursuant to paragraph (5)(a) shall be provided in
  206  the Florida Education Finance Program as defined in s.
  207  1011.61(4) s. 1011.61(5) and as specified in the General
  208  Appropriations Act. The calculation to determine the amount of
  209  state funds includes the sum of the base Florida Education
  210  Finance Program basic amount for current operations established
  211  in s. 1011.62(1)(n) s. 1011.62(1)(s), the discretionary millage
  212  compression supplement established in s. 1011.62(5), and the
  213  state-funded discretionary contribution established in s.
  214  1011.62(6). Charter schools whose students or programs meet the
  215  eligibility criteria in law are entitled to their proportionate
  216  share of categorical program funds included in the total funds
  217  available in the Florida Education Finance Program. The Florida
  218  College System institution or state university sponsoring the
  219  charter school shall be the fiscal agent for these funds, and
  220  all rules of the institution governing the budgeting and
  221  expenditure of state funds shall apply to these funds unless
  222  otherwise provided by law or rule of the State Board of
  223  Education.
  224         (I) The nonvoted required local millage established
  225  pursuant to s. 1011.71(1) that would otherwise be required for
  226  the charter schools shall be allocated from state funds.
  227         (II) An equivalent amount of funds for the operating
  228  discretionary millage authorized pursuant to s. 1011.71(1) shall
  229  be allocated to each charter school through a state-funded
  230  discretionary contribution established pursuant to s.
  231  1011.62(6).
  232         (III) The comparable wage factor as provided in s.
  233  1011.62(2) shall be established as 1.000.
  234         b. Total funding for each charter school shall be
  235  recalculated during the year to reflect the revised calculations
  236  under the Florida Education Finance Program by the state and the
  237  actual weighted full-time equivalent students reported by the
  238  charter school during the full-time equivalent student survey
  239  periods designated by the Commissioner of Education.
  240         c. The Department of Education shall develop a tool that
  241  each state university or Florida College System institution
  242  sponsoring a charter school shall use for purposes of
  243  calculating the funding amount for each eligible charter school
  244  student. The total amount obtained from the calculation must be
  245  appropriated from state funds in the General Appropriations Act
  246  to the charter school.
  247         d. Capital outlay funding for a charter school sponsored by
  248  a state university or Florida College System institution
  249  pursuant to paragraph (5)(a) is determined as follows: multiply
  250  the maximum allowable nonvoted discretionary millage under s.
  251  1011.71(2) by 96 percent of the current year’s taxable value for
  252  school purposes for the district in which the charter school is
  253  located; divide the result by the total full-time equivalent
  254  student membership; and multiply the result by the full-time
  255  equivalent student membership of the charter school. The amount
  256  obtained shall be the discretionary capital improvement funds
  257  and shall be appropriated from state funds in the General
  258  Appropriations Act.
  259         Section 5. Present paragraph (b) of subsection (10) of
  260  section 1002.333, Florida Statutes, is redesignated as paragraph
  261  (c) of that subsection, present subsection (12) of that section
  262  is redesignated as subsection (13), a new paragraph (b) is added
  263  to subsection (10) of that section, a new subsection (12) is
  264  added to that section, and paragraphs (c) and (d) of subsection
  265  (1), subsection (4), paragraphs (d), (k), (l), and (m) of
  266  subsection (5), paragraphs (a) and (h) of subsection (6),
  267  paragraphs (a) and (d) of subsection (7), and paragraph (c) of
  268  subsection (11) of that section are amended, to read:
  269         1002.333 Persistently low-performing schools.—
  270         (1) DEFINITIONS.—As used in this section, the term:
  271         (c) “Persistently low-performing school” means a school
  272  that meets at least one of the following criteria:
  273         1. A school that has earned three grades lower than a “C,”
  274  pursuant to s. 1008.34, in at least 3 of the previous 5 years
  275  that the school received a grade and has not earned a grade of
  276  “B” or higher in the most recent 2 school years;, and
  277         2. A school that was closed pursuant to s. 1008.33(4)
  278  within 2 years after the submission of a notice of intent; or
  279         3.A school in the bottom 10 percent in at least 2 of the
  280  previous 3 years for student performance on the end-of-year
  281  administration of the coordinated screening and progress
  282  monitoring system for grade 3 English Language Arts or grade 4
  283  mathematics as prescribed in s. 1008.22(3)(a)2.
  284         (d) “School of hope” means:
  285         1. A charter school operated by a hope operator which:
  286         a. Serves students from one or more persistently low
  287  performing schools or and students who reside in a Florida
  288  Opportunity Zone;
  289         b. Is located in a Florida Opportunity Zone or in the
  290  attendance zone of a persistently low-performing school or
  291  within a 5-mile radius of such school, whichever is greater. A
  292  school of hope may be located outside of a Florida Opportunity
  293  Zone or persistently low-performing school attendance zone if
  294  the school district does not have underused, vacant, or surplus
  295  property available for the hope operator to use within a Florida
  296  Opportunity Zone or persistently low-performing school
  297  attendance zone; and
  298         c. Is a Title I eligible school; or
  299         2. A school operated by a hope operator pursuant to s.
  300  1008.33(4)(b)3.
  301         (4) ESTABLISHMENT OF SCHOOLS OF HOPE.—A hope operator
  302  seeking to open a school of hope must submit an application to a
  303  state university or a Florida College System institution or a
  304  notice of intent to a school district to establish a school of
  305  hope. If a hope operator seeks to open a school of hope through
  306  an agreement with a state university or a Florida College System
  307  institution, a notice of intent must be provided to the school
  308  district in which a persistently low-performing school has been
  309  identified by the State Board of Education pursuant to
  310  subsection (10) or in which a Florida Opportunity Zone is
  311  located.
  312         (a) The notice of intent must include:
  313         1. An academic focus and plan.
  314         2. A financial plan.
  315         3. Goals and objectives for increasing student achievement
  316  for the students from low-income families.
  317         4. A completed or planned community outreach plan.
  318         5. The organizational history of success in working with
  319  students with similar demographics.
  320         6. The grade levels to be served and enrollment
  321  projections.
  322         7. The proposed location or geographic area proposed for
  323  the school consistent with the requirements of sub-subparagraphs
  324  (1)(d)1.a. and b.
  325         8. A staffing plan.
  326         (b) Notwithstanding the requirements of s. 1002.33, a
  327  school district, state university, or Florida College System
  328  institution, as applicable, shall enter into a performance-based
  329  agreement with a hope operator to open schools to serve students
  330  from persistently low-performing schools and students residing
  331  in a Florida Opportunity Zone.
  332         (5) PERFORMANCE-BASED AGREEMENT.—The following shall
  333  comprise the entirety of the performance-based agreement:
  334         (d) A plan of action and specific milestones for student
  335  recruitment and the enrollment of students from persistently
  336  low-performing schools and students residing in a Florida
  337  Opportunity Zone, including enrollment preferences and
  338  procedures for conducting transparent admissions lotteries that
  339  are open to the public. For the entire validity period of the
  340  performance agreement, students from persistently low-performing
  341  schools and students residing in a Florida Opportunity Zone must
  342  receive an enrollment preference and shall be exempt from any
  343  enrollment lottery to the extent permitted by federal grant
  344  requirements.
  345         (k) A requirement that any arrangement entered into to
  346  borrow or otherwise secure funds for the school of hope from a
  347  source other than the state, a state university, a Florida
  348  College System institution, or a school district shall indemnify
  349  the state, state university, Florida College System institution,
  350  and the school district from any and all liability, including,
  351  but not limited to, financial responsibility for the payment of
  352  the principal or interest.
  353         (l) A provision that any loans, bonds, or other financial
  354  agreements are not obligations of the state, state university,
  355  Florida College System institution, or the school district but
  356  are obligations of the school of hope and are payable solely
  357  from the sources of funds pledged by such agreement.
  358         (m) A prohibition on the pledge of credit or taxing power
  359  of the state, state university, Florida College System
  360  institution, or the school district.
  361         (6) STATUTORY AUTHORITY.—
  362         (a) A school of hope or a nonprofit entity that operates
  363  more than one school of hope through a performance-based
  364  agreement with a school district, state university, or Florida
  365  College System institution, as applicable, may be designated as
  366  a local education agency by the department, if requested, for
  367  the purposes of receiving federal funds and, in doing so,
  368  accepts the full responsibility for all local education agency
  369  requirements and the schools for which it will perform local
  370  education agency responsibilities.
  371         1. A nonprofit entity designated as a local education
  372  agency may directly report its students to the department in
  373  accordance with the definitions in s. 1011.61 and pursuant to
  374  the department’s procedures and timelines.
  375         2. Students enrolled in a school established by a hope
  376  operator designated as a local educational agency are not
  377  eligible students for purposes of calculating the district grade
  378  pursuant to s. 1008.34(5).
  379         (h)1. A school of hope shall provide the school district,
  380  state university, or Florida College System institution, as
  381  applicable, with a concise, uniform, quarterly financial
  382  statement summary sheet that contains a balance sheet and a
  383  statement of revenue, expenditures, and changes in fund balance.
  384  The balance sheet and the statement of revenue, expenditures,
  385  and changes in fund balance shall be in the governmental fund
  386  format prescribed by the Governmental Accounting Standards
  387  Board. Additionally, a school of hope shall comply with the
  388  annual audit requirement for charter schools in s. 218.39.
  389         2. A school of hope is in compliance with subparagraph 1.
  390  if it is operated by a nonprofit entity designated as a local
  391  education agency and if the nonprofit submits to each school
  392  district, state university, or Florida College System
  393  institution, as applicable, in which it operates a school of
  394  hope:
  395         a. A concise, uniform, quarterly financial statement
  396  summary sheet that contains a balance sheet summarizing the
  397  revenue, expenditures, and changes in fund balance for the
  398  entity and for its schools of hope within the school district.
  399         b. An annual financial audit of the nonprofit which
  400  includes all schools of hope it operates within this state and
  401  which complies with s. 218.39 regarding audits of a school
  402  board.
  403         (7) FACILITIES.—
  404         (a) A school of hope shall use facilities that comply with
  405  the Florida Building Code, except for the State Requirements for
  406  Educational Facilities. A school of hope that uses school
  407  district facilities must comply with the State Requirements for
  408  Educational Facilities only if the school district and the hope
  409  operator have entered into a mutual management plan for the
  410  reasonable maintenance of such facilities. The mutual management
  411  plan shall contain a provision by which the district school
  412  board agrees to maintain the school facilities in the same
  413  manner as its other public schools within the district. A school
  414  of hope may colocate with another school in a public school
  415  facility. The school district must permit any school of hope to
  416  use all or part of underused, vacant, or surplus school district
  417  facilities, and receive facility-related services, pursuant to
  418  State Board of Education rule. Students enrolled in the school
  419  of hope shall be included in the district’s total capital outlay
  420  full-time equivalent membership for the purpose of s. 1013.62
  421  and for calculating the Public Education Capital Outlay
  422  maintenance funds or any other maintenance funds for the
  423  facility. The local governing authority shall not adopt or
  424  impose any local building requirements or site-development
  425  restrictions, such as parking and site-size criteria, student
  426  enrollment, and occupant load, that are addressed by and more
  427  stringent than those found in the State Requirements for
  428  Educational Facilities of the Florida Building Code. A local
  429  governing authority must treat schools of hope equitably in
  430  comparison to similar requirements, restrictions, and site
  431  planning processes imposed upon public schools. The agency
  432  having jurisdiction for inspection of a facility and issuance of
  433  a certificate of occupancy or use shall be the local
  434  municipality or, if in an unincorporated area, the county
  435  governing authority. If an official or employee of the local
  436  governing authority refuses to comply with this paragraph, the
  437  aggrieved school or entity has an immediate right to bring an
  438  action in circuit court to enforce its rights by injunction. An
  439  aggrieved party that receives injunctive relief may be awarded
  440  reasonable attorney fees and court costs.
  441         (d) No later than January 1, the department shall annually
  442  provide to school districts a list of all underused, vacant, or
  443  surplus facilities owned or operated by the school district as
  444  reported in the Florida Inventory of School Houses. A school
  445  district may provide evidence to the department that a facility
  446  includes prekindergarten students who are not reported for
  447  funding in the Florida Education Finance Program or that the
  448  list contains errors or omissions within 30 days after receipt
  449  of the list. By each April 1, the department shall update and
  450  publish a final list of all underused, vacant, or surplus
  451  facilities owned or operated by each school district, based upon
  452  updated information provided by each school district. A hope
  453  operator establishing a school of hope may use an educational
  454  facility identified in this paragraph at no cost or at a
  455  mutually agreeable cost not to exceed $600 per student. A hope
  456  operator using a facility pursuant to this paragraph may not
  457  sell or dispose of such facility without the written permission
  458  of the school district. For purposes of this paragraph, the term
  459  “underused, vacant, or surplus facility” means an entire
  460  facility or portion thereof which is not fully used or is used
  461  irregularly or intermittently by the school district for
  462  instructional or program use.
  463         (10) SCHOOLS OF HOPE PROGRAM.—The Schools of Hope Program
  464  is created within the Department of Education.
  465         (b)A school of hope may continue to receive funds after
  466  its first 5 years of operation if the school of hope meets
  467  performance metrics established pursuant to state board rule.
  468  Funds received based upon performance may be used for any
  469  operational expenditures.
  470         (11) STATE BOARD OF EDUCATION AUTHORITY AND OBLIGATIONS.
  471  Pursuant to Art. IX of the State Constitution, which prescribes
  472  the duty of the State Board of Education to supervise the public
  473  school system, the State Board of Education shall:
  474         (c) Resolve disputes between a hope operator and a school
  475  district, state university, or Florida College System
  476  institution, as applicable, arising from a performance-based
  477  agreement, mutual management plan, or a contract between a
  478  charter operator and a school district under the requirements of
  479  s. 1008.33. The Commissioner of Education shall appoint a
  480  special magistrate who is a member of The Florida Bar in good
  481  standing and who has at least 5 years’ experience in
  482  administrative law. The special magistrate shall hold hearings
  483  to determine facts relating to the dispute and to render a
  484  recommended decision for resolution to the State Board of
  485  Education. The recommendation may not alter in any way the
  486  provisions of the performance-based agreement under subsection
  487  (5). The special magistrate may administer oaths and issue
  488  subpoenas on behalf of the parties to the dispute or on his or
  489  her own behalf. Within 15 calendar days after the close of the
  490  final hearing, the special magistrate shall transmit a
  491  recommended decision to the State Board of Education and to the
  492  representatives of both parties by registered mail, return
  493  receipt requested. The State Board of Education must approve or
  494  reject the recommended decision at its next regularly scheduled
  495  meeting that is more than 7 calendar days and no more than 30
  496  days after the date the recommended decision is transmitted. The
  497  decision by the State Board of Education is a final agency
  498  action that may be appealed to the District Court of Appeal,
  499  First District in accordance with s. 120.68. A charter school
  500  may recover attorney fees and costs if the State Board of
  501  Education determines that the school district unlawfully
  502  implemented or otherwise impeded implementation of the
  503  performance-based agreement pursuant to this paragraph.
  504         (12) SCHOOLS OF HOPE REPORTING.—
  505         (a) In addition to the information reported in s.
  506  1002.33(9)(k), each school of hope must report to its sponsor:
  507         1.The number of students served, and the percentage of
  508  overall school enrollment, who reside in the attendance zone of
  509  the persistently low-performing school or in a Florida
  510  Opportunity Zone.
  511         2. Student year-to-year re-enrollment within kindergarten
  512  through grade 5, grades 6-8, and grades 9-12.
  513         (b) The department shall annually provide to the State
  514  Board of Education, the Commissioner of Education, the Governor,
  515  the President of the Senate, and the Speaker of the House of
  516  Representatives a report on schools of hope which includes the
  517  information from paragraph (a) and the performance of school of
  518  hope students on statewide assessments under s. 1008.22(3)
  519  compared to assessment results of other Title I-eligible schools
  520  in the district.
  521         Section 6. Paragraphs (a) and (f) of subsection (3) and
  522  paragraph (b) of subsection (9) of section 1002.37, Florida
  523  Statutes, are amended to read:
  524         1002.37 The Florida Virtual School.—
  525         (3) Funding for the Florida Virtual School shall be
  526  provided as follows:
  527         (a)1. The calculation of “full-time equivalent student”
  528  shall be as prescribed in s. 1011.61(1)(c)1.b.(V) and is subject
  529  to s. 1011.61(3) s. 1011.61(4).
  530         2. For a student in a home education program, funding shall
  531  be provided in accordance with this subsection upon course
  532  completion if the parent verifies, upon enrollment for each
  533  course, that the student is registered with the school district
  534  as a home education student pursuant to s. 1002.41(1)(a).
  535         (f) The Florida Virtual School shall receive state funds
  536  for operating purposes as provided in the General Appropriations
  537  Act. The calculation to determine the amount of state funds
  538  includes: the sum of the basic amount for current operations
  539  established in s. 1011.62(1)(n) s. 1011.62(1)(s), the
  540  discretionary millage compression supplement established in s.
  541  1011.62(5), the state-funded discretionary contribution
  542  established in s. 1011.62(6), a per-full-time equivalent share
  543  of the exceptional student education guaranteed allocation
  544  established in s. 1011.62(8), and the mental health assistance
  545  allocation established in s. 1011.62(13).
  546         (9)
  547         (b) For students receiving part-time instruction in
  548  kindergarten through grade 5 and students receiving full-time
  549  instruction in kindergarten through grade 12 from the Florida
  550  Virtual School, the full-time equivalent student enrollment
  551  calculated under this subsection is subject to the requirements
  552  in s. 1011.61(3) s. 1011.61(4).
  553         Section 7. Section 1002.411, Florida Statutes, is amended
  554  to read:
  555         1002.411 New Worlds Scholarship Accounts.—
  556         (1) NEW WORLDS SCHOLARSHIP ACCOUNTS.—New Worlds Scholarship
  557  Accounts are established to provide educational options for
  558  students.
  559         (2) ELIGIBILITY.—Contingent upon available funds, and on a
  560  first-come, first-served basis, each student who is enrolled in
  561  the Voluntary Prekindergarten Education Program pursuant to s.
  562  1002.53 or a Florida public school in kindergarten through grade
  563  5 is eligible for a scholarship account if the student:
  564         (a) Exhibits a substantial deficiency in early literacy
  565  skills based upon the results of the most recent progress
  566  monitoring administered pursuant to s. 1008.25(9), has a
  567  substantial reading deficiency or exhibits characteristics of
  568  dyslexia as identified under s. 1008.25(5)(a), or scored below a
  569  Level 3 on the most recent statewide, standardized English
  570  Language Arts (ELA) assessment. An eligible student who is
  571  classified as an English Language Learner and is enrolled in a
  572  program or receiving services that are specifically designed to
  573  meet the instructional needs of English Language Learner
  574  students shall receive priority.
  575         (b) Exhibits a substantial deficiency in early mathematics
  576  skills based upon the results of the most recent progress
  577  monitoring administered pursuant to s. 1008.25(9), has a
  578  substantial deficiency in mathematics or the characteristics of
  579  dyscalculia as identified under s. 1008.25(6)(a), or scored
  580  below a Level 3 on the most recent statewide, standardized
  581  Mathematics assessment.
  582         (3) PARENT AND STUDENT RESPONSIBILITIES FOR PARTICIPATION.—
  583         (a) For a an eligible student with to receive a scholarship
  584  account, the student’s parent must:
  585         1. Submit an application to an eligible nonprofit
  586  scholarship-funding organization by the deadline established by
  587  such organization; and
  588         2. If available, utilize the administrator’s system to make
  589  direct purchases of qualifying expenditures, which may include:
  590         1.a. Instructional materials.
  591         2.b. Curriculum. As used in this sub-subparagraph, the term
  592  “curriculum” means a complete course of study for a particular
  593  content area or grade level, including any required supplemental
  594  materials and associated online instruction.
  595         3.c. Tuition and fees for part-time tutoring services
  596  provided by a person who holds a valid Florida educator’s
  597  certificate pursuant to s. 1012.56, a person who holds a
  598  baccalaureate or graduate degree in the subject area, a person
  599  who holds an adjunct teaching certificate pursuant to s.
  600  1012.57, a person who has demonstrated a mastery of subject area
  601  knowledge pursuant to s. 1012.56(5), a person who holds a micro
  602  credential under s. 1003.485, or, for a prekindergarten student,
  603  a person who holds a credential under s. 1002.55(3)(c)1. or an
  604  educational credential under s. 1002.55(4)(a) or (b).
  605         4.d. Fees for summer education programs designed to improve
  606  reading, literacy, or mathematics skills.
  607         5.e. Fees for after-school education programs designed to
  608  improve reading, literacy, or mathematics skills.
  609  
  610  A provider of any services receiving payments pursuant to this
  611  subparagraph may not share any moneys from the scholarship with,
  612  or provide a refund or rebate of any moneys from such
  613  scholarship to, the parent or participating student in any
  614  manner. A parent, student, or provider of any services may not
  615  bill an insurance company, Medicaid, or any other agency for the
  616  same services that are paid for using scholarship funds.
  617         (b) The parent is responsible for the payment of all
  618  eligible expenses in excess of the amount in the account in
  619  accordance with the terms agreed to between the parent and any
  620  providers and may not receive any refund or rebate of any
  621  expenditures made in accordance with paragraph (a).
  622         (3)(4) ADMINISTRATOR.—An eligible nonprofit scholarship
  623  funding organization as defined in s. 1002.395(2) shall be the
  624  administrator and may establish scholarship accounts for
  625  eligible students in accordance with the requirements of
  626  eligible nonprofit scholarship-funding organizations under this
  627  chapter.
  628         (4)(5) DEPARTMENT OBLIGATIONS.—The department shall have
  629  the same duties imposed by this chapter upon the department
  630  regarding oversight of scholarship programs administered by an
  631  eligible nonprofit scholarship-funding organization.
  632         (6) SCHOOL DISTRICT AND PRIVATE PREKINDERGARTEN PROVIDER
  633  OBLIGATIONS; PARENTAL OPTIONS.—
  634         (a) Each school district and private prekindergarten
  635  provider shall notify the parent of each eligible student of the
  636  process to request and receive a scholarship, subject to
  637  available funds, when providing results from the standardized
  638  coordinated screening and progress monitoring pursuant to s.
  639  1008.25(9)(c).
  640         (b) A school district may not prohibit instructional
  641  personnel from providing services pursuant to this section on
  642  the instructional personnel’s school campus outside regular work
  643  hours, subject to school district policies for safety and
  644  security operations to protect students, instructional
  645  personnel, and educational facilities.
  646         (5)(7) ACCOUNT FUNDING AND PAYMENT.—
  647         (a) The amount of the scholarship for an eligible student
  648  shall be as provided in the General Appropriations Act.
  649         (b) One hundred percent of the funds appropriated for the
  650  scholarship accounts shall be released to the department at the
  651  beginning of the first quarter of each fiscal year.
  652         (c) Upon a student being determined eligible for a
  653  scholarship, the department shall, within 45 days, release the
  654  student’s scholarship funds to such organization to be deposited
  655  into the student’s account.
  656         (d) Accrued interest in the student’s account is in
  657  addition to, and not part of, the awarded funds. Account funds
  658  include both the awarded funds and accrued interest.
  659         (d)(e) The eligible nonprofit scholarship-funding
  660  organization may develop a system that permits eligible students
  661  to use program funds to make direct purchases of qualifying
  662  expenditures. Commodities or services related to the development
  663  of such a system shall be procured by competitive solicitation
  664  unless they are purchased from a state term contract pursuant to
  665  s. 287.056.
  666         (e)(f) Moneys received pursuant to this section do not
  667  constitute taxable income to the qualified student or his or her
  668  parent.
  669         (f)(g) A student’s scholarship account must be closed and
  670  any remaining funds shall revert to the state after:
  671         1. Denial or revocation of scholarship eligibility by the
  672  commissioner for fraud or abuse, including, but not limited to,
  673  the student or student’s parent accepting any payment, refund,
  674  or rebate, in any manner, from a provider of any services
  675  received pursuant to subsection (2) (3); or
  676         2. One Three consecutive fiscal year years in which an
  677  account has been inactive.
  678         (6)(8) LIABILITY.—No liability shall arise on the part of
  679  the state based on the award or use of a scholarship account.
  680         Section 8. Paragraphs (a) and (b) of subsection (6) of
  681  section 1002.45, Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
  682         1002.45 Virtual instruction programs.—
  683         (6) VIRTUAL INSTRUCTION PROGRAM AND VIRTUAL CHARTER SCHOOL
  684  FUNDING.—
  685         (a) All virtual instruction programs established pursuant
  686  to paragraph (1)(b) are subject to the requirements of s.
  687  1011.61(1)(c)1.b.(III), (IV), (VI), and (3) (4), and the school
  688  district providing the virtual instruction program shall report
  689  the full-time equivalent students in a manner prescribed by the
  690  department. A school district may report a full-time equivalent
  691  student for credit earned by a student who is enrolled in a
  692  virtual instruction course provided by the district which was
  693  completed after the end of the regular school year if the full
  694  time equivalent student is reported no later than the deadline
  695  for amending the final full-time equivalent student membership
  696  report for that year.
  697         (b) Students enrolled in a virtual instruction program
  698  shall be funded in the Florida Education Finance Program as
  699  provided in the General Appropriations Act. The calculation to
  700  determine the amount of funds for each student through the
  701  Florida Education Finance Program shall include the sum of the
  702  basic amount for current operations established in s.
  703  1011.62(1)(n) s. 1011.62(1)(s) and all categorical programs
  704  except for the categorical programs established in ss.
  705  1011.62(7), (12), and (16), 1011.68, and 1011.685. Students
  706  residing outside of the school district reporting the full-time
  707  equivalent virtual student shall be funded from state funds
  708  only.
  709         Section 9. Paragraph (a) of subsection (2) of section
  710  1003.4201, Florida Statutes, as amended by chapter 2025-110,
  711  Laws of Florida, is amended to read:
  712         1003.4201 Comprehensive system of reading instruction.—Each
  713  school district must implement a system of comprehensive reading
  714  instruction for students enrolled in prekindergarten through
  715  grade 12 and certain students who exhibit a substantial
  716  deficiency in early literacy.
  717         (2)(a) Components of the reading instruction plan may
  718  include the following:
  719         1. Additional time per day of evidence-based intensive
  720  reading instruction for kindergarten through grade 12 students,
  721  which may be delivered during or outside of the regular school
  722  day.
  723         2. Highly qualified reading coaches, who must be endorsed
  724  in reading, to specifically support classroom teachers in making
  725  instructional decisions based on progress monitoring data
  726  collected pursuant to s. 1008.25(9) and improve classroom
  727  teacher delivery of effective reading instruction, reading
  728  intervention, and reading in the content areas based on student
  729  need.
  730         3. Professional learning to help instructional personnel
  731  and certified prekindergarten teachers funded in the Florida
  732  Education Finance Program earn a certification, a credential, an
  733  endorsement, or an advanced degree in scientifically researched
  734  and evidence-based reading instruction.
  735         4. Summer reading camps, using only classroom teachers or
  736  other district personnel who possess a micro-credential as
  737  specified in s. 1003.485 or are certified or endorsed in reading
  738  consistent with s. 1008.25(8)(b)3., for all students in
  739  kindergarten through grade 5 exhibiting a reading deficiency as
  740  determined by district and state assessments.
  741         5. Intensive reading interventions, which must be delivered
  742  by instructional personnel who possess a micro-credential as
  743  defined in s. 1003.485(1) or are certified or endorsed in
  744  reading as provided in s. 1012.586 and must incorporate
  745  evidence-based strategies identified by the Just Read, Florida!
  746  office pursuant to s. 1001.215(7). Instructional personnel who
  747  possess a micro-credential as defined in s. 1003.485(1) and are
  748  delivering intensive reading interventions must be supervised by
  749  an individual certified or endorsed in reading. For the purposes
  750  of this subparagraph, the term “supervised” means that
  751  instructional personnel with a micro-credential are able,
  752  through telecommunication or in person, to communicate and
  753  consult with, and receive direction from, certified or endorsed
  754  personnel. Incentives for instructional personnel and certified
  755  prekindergarten teachers funded in the Florida Education Finance
  756  Program who possess a reading certification or endorsement as
  757  specified in s. 1012.586 or micro-credential as specified in s.
  758  1003.485 and provide educational support to improve student
  759  literacy.
  760         6. Tutoring in reading.
  761         7. A description of how the district prioritizes the
  762  assignment of highly effective teachers, as identified in s.
  763  1012.34(2)(e), from kindergarten to grade 2.
  764         8.Providing resources that support informed parent
  765  involvement in decision-making processes for students who have
  766  difficulty in reading and for parents of students who are
  767  reading below grade level, information about the students
  768  eligibility for the New Worlds Reading Initiative under s.
  769  1003.485.
  770         Section 10. Section 1003.4203, Florida Statutes, is amended
  771  to read:
  772         1003.4203 Digital materials, CAPE Digital Tool
  773  certificates, CAPE industry certifications, and technical
  774  assistance.—
  775         (1) DIGITAL MATERIALS.—Each district school board, in
  776  consultation with the district school superintendent, shall make
  777  available digital materials, CAPE Digital Tool certificates, and
  778  CAPE industry certifications for students in prekindergarten
  779  through grade 12 in order to enable students to attain digital
  780  skills. The digital materials, CAPE Digital Tool certificates,
  781  and CAPE industry certifications may be integrated into subject
  782  area curricula, offered as a separate course, made available
  783  through open-access options, or deployed through online or
  784  digital computer applications.
  785         (2) CAPE DIGITAL TOOL CERTIFICATES.—The department shall
  786  identify, in the CAPE Industry Certification Funding List under
  787  ss. 1003.492 and 1008.44, CAPE Digital Tool certificates that
  788  indicate a student’s digital skills. The department shall notify
  789  each school district when the certificates are available. The
  790  certificates shall be made available to all public elementary
  791  and middle grades students.
  792         (a) Targeted skills to be mastered for the certificate
  793  include digital skills that are necessary to the student’s
  794  academic work and skills the student may need in future
  795  employment. CAPE Digital Tool certificates earned by students
  796  are eligible for additional funding pursuant to s. 1011.62(17)
  797  full-time equivalent membership under s. 1011.62(1)(o)1.a.
  798         (b) The school district shall notify each middle school
  799  advisory council of the methods of delivery of the open-access
  800  content and assessments for the certificates. If there is no
  801  middle school advisory council, notification must be provided to
  802  the district advisory council.
  803         (c) The Legislature intends that, on an annual basis, at
  804  least 75 percent of public middle grades students earn at least
  805  one CAPE Digital Tool certificate.
  806         (3) BASIC CAPE INDUSTRY CERTIFICATIONS.—
  807         (a) CAPE industry certifications, issued to middle school
  808  and high school students, which do not articulate for college
  809  credit, are eligible for additional funding full-time equivalent
  810  membership pursuant to s. 1011.62(17) s. 1011.62(1)(o)1.b. Each
  811  approved industry certification must be specifically identified
  812  in the CAPE Industry Certification Funding List as a CAPE Basic
  813  Non-articulated industry certification.
  814         (b) CAPE industry certifications, issued to high school
  815  students, which articulate for college credit, are eligible for
  816  additional funding full-time equivalent membership pursuant to
  817  s. 1011.62(17) s. 1011.62(1)(o)1.b. Each approved industry
  818  certification must be specifically identified in the CAPE
  819  Industry Certification Funding List as a CAPE Basic Articulated
  820  industry certification.
  821         (4) CAPE ACCELERATION.—Industry certifications that
  822  articulate for 15 or more college credit hours and, if
  823  successfully completed, are eligible for additional funding
  824  full-time equivalent membership under pursuant to s. 1011.62(17)
  825  s. 1011.62(1)(o)1.d. Each approved industry certification must
  826  be specifically identified in the CAPE Industry Certification
  827  Funding List as a CAPE Acceleration industry certification.
  828         (5)CAPE PATHWAYS.—Industry certifications issued to high
  829  school students who complete at least three courses and an
  830  industry certification in a single career and technical
  831  education program or program of study and who exit with a
  832  standard high school diploma are eligible for additional funding
  833  pursuant to s. 1011.62(17). Each approved industry certification
  834  must be specifically identified in the CAPE Industry
  835  Certification Funding List as a CAPE Pathways industry
  836  certification.
  837         (6)(5) GRADE POINT AVERAGE CALCULATION.—For purposes of
  838  calculating grade point average, a grade in a course that is
  839  level 3 or above and leads to an industry certification must be
  840  weighted the same as a grade in an honors course.
  841         (7)(6) TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE.—
  842         (a) The Department of Education shall collaborate with
  843  Florida educators and school leaders to provide technical
  844  assistance to district school boards in the implementation of
  845  this section. Technical assistance to districts shall include,
  846  but is not limited to, identification of digital resources,
  847  primarily open-access resources, including digital curriculum,
  848  instructional materials, media assets, and other digital tools
  849  and applications; training mechanisms for teachers and others to
  850  facilitate integration of digital resources and technologies
  851  into instructional strategies; and model policies and procedures
  852  that support sustainable implementation practices.
  853         (b) Public schools may provide students with access to
  854  third-party assessment centers and career and professional
  855  academy curricula in a digital format in support of CAPE Digital
  856  Tool certificates and CAPE industry certifications, pursuant to
  857  this section and s. 1008.44, to assist public schools and school
  858  districts to establish Florida Digital Classrooms.
  859         (8)(7) PARTNERSHIPS.—
  860         (a) A district school board may seek partnerships with
  861  other school districts, private businesses, postsecondary
  862  institutions, or consultants to offer classes and instruction to
  863  teachers and students to assist the school district in providing
  864  digital materials, CAPE Digital Tool certificates, and CAPE
  865  industry certifications established pursuant to this section.
  866         (b) Third-party assessment providers and career and
  867  professional academy curricula providers are encouraged to
  868  provide annual training to staff of the Department of Education,
  869  staff of school district offices, instructional staff of public
  870  schools, including charter schools, and other appropriate
  871  administrative staff through face-to-face training models;
  872  through online, videoconferencing training models; and through
  873  state, regional, or conference presentations.
  874         (9)(8) RULES.—The State Board of Education shall adopt
  875  rules to administer this section.
  876         Section 11. Subsection (3) of section 1003.4935, Florida
  877  Statutes, is amended to read:
  878         1003.4935 Middle grades career and professional academy
  879  courses and career-themed courses.—
  880         (3) CAPE Digital Tool certificates and CAPE industry
  881  certifications offered in the middle grades that are included on
  882  the CAPE Industry Certification Funding List, if earned by
  883  students, are eligible for additional funding full-time
  884  equivalent membership pursuant to s. 1011.62(17) s.
  885  1011.62(1)(o)1.a. and b.
  886         Section 12. Subsection (2) of section 1003.498, Florida
  887  Statutes, is amended to read:
  888         1003.498 School district virtual course offerings.—
  889         (2) School districts may offer virtual courses for students
  890  enrolled in the school district. These courses must be
  891  identified in the course code directory. Students may
  892  participate in these virtual course offerings pursuant to s.
  893  1002.455.
  894         (a) Any student who is enrolled in a school district may
  895  register and enroll in an online course offered by his or her
  896  school district.
  897         (b)1. Any student who is enrolled in a school district may
  898  register and enroll in an online course offered by any other
  899  school district in the state. The school district in which the
  900  student completes the course shall report the student’s
  901  completion of that course for funding pursuant to s.
  902  1011.61(1)(c)1.b.(VI), and the home school district may shall
  903  not report the student for funding for that course.
  904         2. The full-time equivalent student membership calculated
  905  under this subsection is subject to the requirements in s.
  906  1011.61(3) s. 1011.61(4). The Department of Education shall
  907  establish procedures to enable interdistrict coordination for
  908  the delivery and funding of this online option.
  909         3. Funding for virtual courses shall be as provided in s.
  910  1002.45(6).
  911         Section 13. Subsection (2) of section 1007.271, Florida
  912  Statutes, is amended to read:
  913         1007.271 Dual enrollment programs.—
  914         (2) For the purpose of this section, an eligible secondary
  915  student is a student who is enrolled in any of grades 6 through
  916  12 in a Florida public school or in a Florida private school
  917  that is in compliance with s. 1002.42(2) and provides a
  918  secondary curriculum pursuant to s. 1003.4282. Students who are
  919  eligible for dual enrollment pursuant to this section may enroll
  920  in dual enrollment courses conducted during school hours, after
  921  school hours, and during the summer term. However, if the
  922  student is projected to graduate from high school before the
  923  scheduled completion date of a postsecondary course, the student
  924  may not register for that course through dual enrollment. The
  925  student may apply to the postsecondary institution and pay the
  926  required registration, tuition, and fees if the student meets
  927  the postsecondary institution’s admissions requirements under s.
  928  1007.263. Instructional time for dual enrollment may vary from
  929  900 hours; however, the full-time equivalent student membership
  930  value shall be subject to the provisions in s. 1011.61(3) s.
  931  1011.61(4). A student enrolled as a dual enrollment student is
  932  exempt from the payment of registration, tuition, and laboratory
  933  fees. Applied academics for adult education instruction,
  934  developmental education, and other forms of precollegiate
  935  instruction, as well as physical education courses that focus on
  936  the physical execution of a skill rather than the intellectual
  937  attributes of the activity, are ineligible for inclusion in the
  938  dual enrollment program. Recreation and leisure studies courses
  939  shall be evaluated individually in the same manner as physical
  940  education courses for potential inclusion in the program.
  941         Section 14. Subsections (1) and (4) of section 1008.44,
  942  Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
  943         1008.44 CAPE Industry Certification Funding List.—
  944         (1) The State Board of Education shall adopt, at least
  945  annually, based upon recommendations by the Commissioner of
  946  Education, the CAPE Industry Certification Funding List that
  947  assigns categories of certificates and certifications as
  948  provided for in s. 1003.4203 additional full-time equivalent
  949  membership to certifications identified in the Master
  950  Credentials List under s. 445.004(4) which meet that meets a
  951  statewide, regional, or local demand. Supplemental Additional
  952  full-time equivalent membership funding for regional and local
  953  demand certifications may only be earned in those areas with
  954  regional or local demand as identified by the Credentials Review
  955  Committee. The CAPE Industry Certification Funding List may
  956  include the following certificates and certifications:
  957         (a) CAPE industry certifications identified as credentials
  958  of value that meet the framework of quality under s. 445.004(4),
  959  that must be applied in the distribution of funding to school
  960  districts under s. 1011.62(1)(o). The CAPE Industry
  961  Certification Funding List shall incorporate by reference the
  962  industry certifications on the career pathways list approved for
  963  the Florida Gold Seal CAPE Scholars award.
  964         (b) CAPE Digital Tool certificates selected by the
  965  department under s. 1003.4203(2) that do not articulate for
  966  college credit. The certificates must be made available to
  967  students in elementary school and middle school grades and, if
  968  earned by a student, must be eligible for additional full-time
  969  equivalent membership under s. 1011.62(1)(o)1. The department
  970  shall annually review available assessments that meet the
  971  requirements for inclusion on the list.
  972         (c) CAPE Acceleration Industry Certifications that
  973  articulate for 15 or more college credit hours under s.
  974  1003.4203(4). Such certifications must, if successfully
  975  completed, be eligible for additional full-time equivalent
  976  membership under s. 1011.62(1)(o)1.
  977         (d) The Commissioner of Education shall conduct a review of
  978  the methodology used to determine additional full-time
  979  equivalent membership weights assigned in s. 1011.62(1)(o) and,
  980  if necessary, recommend revised weights. The weights must factor
  981  in the prioritization of critical shortages of labor market
  982  demand and middle-level to high-level wage earning outcomes as
  983  identified by the Credentials Review Committee under s. 445.004.
  984  The results of the review and the commissioner’s recommendations
  985  must be submitted to the Governor, the President of the Senate,
  986  and the Speaker of the House of Representatives no later than
  987  December 1, 2023.
  988         (4)(a) CAPE industry certifications and CAPE Digital Tool
  989  certificates placed on the CAPE Industry Certification Funding
  990  List must include the version of the certifications and
  991  certificates available at the time of the adoption and, without
  992  further review and approval, include the subsequent updates to
  993  the certifications and certificates on the approved list, unless
  994  the certifications and certificates are specifically removed
  995  from the CAPE Industry Certification Funding List by the
  996  Commissioner of Education.
  997         (b) Effective for the 2026-2027 fiscal year, the
  998  Commissioner of Education shall may limit CAPE industry
  999  certifications placed on the CAPE Industry Certification Funding
 1000  List and CAPE Digital Tool certificates to students in certain
 1001  grades based upon the alignment of the industry certification to
 1002  career and technical education programs and the appropriate
 1003  grade level placement within those programs. The eligible grade
 1004  levels must be adopted annually on the funding list.
 1005         (c) The Articulation Coordinating Committee shall review
 1006  statewide articulation agreement proposals for industry
 1007  certifications and make recommendations to the State Board of
 1008  Education for approval. After an industry certification is
 1009  approved by CareerSource Florida, Inc., under s. 445.004(4), the
 1010  Chancellor of Career and Adult Education, within 90 days, must
 1011  provide to the Articulation Coordinating Committee
 1012  recommendations for articulation of postsecondary credit for
 1013  related degrees for the approved certifications.
 1014         Section 15. Section 1010.20, Florida Statutes, is amended
 1015  to read:
 1016         1010.20 Cost accounting and reporting for school
 1017  districts.—
 1018         (1) COST ACCOUNTING.—Each school district shall account for
 1019  expenditures of all state, local, and federal funds on a school
 1020  by-school and a district-aggregate basis in accordance with the
 1021  manual developed by the Department of Education or as provided
 1022  by law.
 1023         (2) COST REPORTING.—
 1024         (a) Each district shall report on a district-aggregate
 1025  basis expenditures for inservice training pursuant to s.
 1026  1011.62(3) and for categorical programs as provided in s.
 1027  1011.62(18) s. 1011.62(17).
 1028         (b) Each district shall report to the department on a
 1029  school-by-school and on an aggregate district basis expenditures
 1030  for:
 1031         1. Each program funded in s. 1011.62(1)(c).
 1032         2. Total operating costs as reported pursuant to s.
 1033  1010.215.
 1034         3. Expenditures for classroom instruction pursuant to the
 1035  calculation in s. 1010.215(4)(b)1. and 2.
 1036         (c) The department shall:
 1037         1. Categorize all public schools and districts into
 1038  appropriate groups based primarily on average full-time
 1039  equivalent student enrollment as reported on the most recent
 1040  student membership survey under s. 1011.62 and in state board
 1041  rule to determine groups of peer schools and districts.
 1042         2. Annually calculate for each public school, district, and
 1043  for the entire state, the percentage of classroom expenditures
 1044  to total operating expenditures reported in subparagraphs (b)2.
 1045  and 3. The results shall be categorized pursuant to this
 1046  paragraph.
 1047         3. Annually calculate for all public schools, districts,
 1048  and the state, the average percentage of classroom expenditures
 1049  to total operating expenditures reported in subparagraphs (b)2.
 1050  and 3. The results shall be categorized pursuant to this
 1051  paragraph.
 1052         4. Develop a web-based fiscal transparency tool that
 1053  identifies public schools and districts that produce high
 1054  academic achievement based on the ratio of classroom instruction
 1055  expenditures to total expenditures. The fiscal transparency tool
 1056  shall combine the data calculated pursuant to this paragraph
 1057  with the student performance measurements calculated pursuant to
 1058  s. 1012.34(7) to determine the financial efficiency of each
 1059  public school and district. The results shall be displayed in an
 1060  easy to use format that enables the user to compare performance
 1061  among public schools and districts.
 1062         (d) The Commissioner of Education shall present to the
 1063  Legislature, prior to the opening of the regular session each
 1064  year, a district-by-district report of the expenditures reported
 1065  pursuant to paragraphs (a) and (b). The report shall include
 1066  total expenditures, a detailed analysis showing expenditures for
 1067  each program, and such other data as may be useful for
 1068  management of the education system. The Commissioner of
 1069  Education shall also compute cost factors relative to the base
 1070  student allocation for each funded program in s. 1011.62(1)(c).
 1071         (3) PROGRAM EXPENDITURE REQUIREMENTS.—
 1072         (a) Each district shall expend at least the percent of the
 1073  funds generated by each of the programs listed in this section
 1074  on the aggregate total school costs for such programs:
 1075         1. Kindergarten and grades 1, 2, and 3, 90 percent.
 1076         2. Grades 4, 5, 6, 7, and 8, 80 percent.
 1077         3. Grades 9, 10, 11, and 12, 80 percent.
 1078         4. Programs for exceptional students, on an aggregate
 1079  program basis, 90 percent.
 1080         5. Grades 7 through 12 career education programs, on an
 1081  aggregate program basis, 80 percent.
 1082         6. Students-at-risk programs, on an aggregate program
 1083  basis, 80 percent.
 1084         7. Juvenile justice programs, on an aggregate program
 1085  basis, 95 percent.
 1086         8. Any new program established and funded under s.
 1087  1011.62(1)(c), that is not included under subparagraphs 1.-7.,
 1088  on an aggregate basis as appropriate, 80 percent.
 1089         (b) Funds for inservice training established in s.
 1090  1011.62(3) and for categorical programs established in s.
 1091  1011.62(18) s. 1011.62(17) shall be expended for the costs of
 1092  the identified programs as provided by law and in accordance
 1093  with the rules of the State Board of Education.
 1094         Section 16. Section 1011.61, Florida Statutes, is amended
 1095  to read:
 1096         1011.61 Definitions.—Notwithstanding the provisions of s.
 1097  1000.21, the following terms are defined as follows for the
 1098  purposes of the Florida Education Finance Program:
 1099         (1) A “full-time equivalent student” in each program of the
 1100  district is defined in terms of full-time students and part-time
 1101  students as follows:
 1102         (a) A “full-time student” is one student on the membership
 1103  roll of one school program or a combination of school programs
 1104  listed in s. 1011.62(1)(c) for the school year or the equivalent
 1105  for:
 1106         1. Instruction in a standard school, comprising not less
 1107  than 900 net hours for a student in or at the grade level of 4
 1108  through 12, or not less than 720 net hours for a student in or
 1109  at the grade level of kindergarten through grade 3 or in an
 1110  authorized prekindergarten exceptional program; or
 1111         2. Instruction comprising the appropriate number of net
 1112  hours set forth in subparagraph 1. for students who, within the
 1113  past year, have moved with their parents for the purpose of
 1114  engaging in the farm labor or fish industries, if a plan
 1115  furnishing such an extended school day or week, or a combination
 1116  thereof, has been approved by the commissioner. Such plan may be
 1117  approved to accommodate the needs of migrant students only or
 1118  may serve all students in schools having a high percentage of
 1119  migrant students. The plan described in this subparagraph is
 1120  optional for any school district and is not mandated by the
 1121  state.
 1122         (b) A “part-time student” is a student on the active
 1123  membership roll of a school program or combination of school
 1124  programs listed in s. 1011.62(1)(c) who is less than a full-time
 1125  student. A student who receives instruction in a school that
 1126  operates for less than the minimum term shall generate full-time
 1127  equivalent student membership proportional to the amount of
 1128  instructional hours provided by the school divided by the
 1129  minimum term requirement as provided in s. 1011.60(2).
 1130         (c)1. A “full-time equivalent student” is:
 1131         a. A full-time student in any one of the programs listed in
 1132  s. 1011.62(1)(c); or
 1133         b. A combination of full-time or part-time students in any
 1134  one of the programs listed in s. 1011.62(1)(c) which is the
 1135  equivalent of one full-time student based on the following
 1136  calculations:
 1137         (I) A full-time student in a combination of programs listed
 1138  in s. 1011.62(1)(c) shall be a fraction of a full-time
 1139  equivalent membership in each special program equal to the
 1140  number of net hours per school year for which he or she is a
 1141  member, divided by the appropriate number of hours set forth in
 1142  subparagraph (a)1. The difference between that fraction or sum
 1143  of fractions and the maximum value as set forth in subsection
 1144  (4) for each full-time student is presumed to be the balance of
 1145  the student’s time not spent in a special program and shall be
 1146  recorded as time in the appropriate basic program.
 1147         (II) A prekindergarten student with a disability shall meet
 1148  the requirements specified for kindergarten students.
 1149         (III) A full-time equivalent student for students in
 1150  kindergarten through grade 12 in a full-time virtual instruction
 1151  program under s. 1002.45 or a virtual charter school under s.
 1152  1002.33 shall consist of six full-credit completions or the
 1153  prescribed level of content that counts toward promotion to the
 1154  next grade in programs listed in s. 1011.62(1)(c). Credit
 1155  completions may be a combination of full-credit courses or half
 1156  credit courses.
 1157         (IV) A full-time equivalent student for students in
 1158  kindergarten through grade 12 in a part-time virtual instruction
 1159  program under s. 1002.45 shall consist of six full-credit
 1160  completions in programs listed in s. 1011.62(1)(c)1. and 3.
 1161  Credit completions may be a combination of full-credit courses
 1162  or half-credit courses.
 1163         (V) A Florida Virtual School full-time equivalent student
 1164  shall consist of six full-credit completions or the prescribed
 1165  level of content that counts toward promotion to the next grade
 1166  in the programs listed in s. 1011.62(1)(c)1. and 3. for students
 1167  participating in kindergarten through grade 12 part-time virtual
 1168  instruction and the programs listed in s. 1011.62(1)(c) for
 1169  students participating in kindergarten through grade 12 full
 1170  time virtual instruction. Credit completions may be a
 1171  combination of full-credit courses or half-credit courses.
 1172         (VI) Each successfully completed full-credit course earned
 1173  through an online course delivered by a district other than the
 1174  one in which the student resides shall be calculated as 1/6 FTE.
 1175         (VII) A full-time equivalent student for courses requiring
 1176  passage of a statewide, standardized end-of-course assessment
 1177  under s. 1003.4282 to earn a standard high school diploma shall
 1178  be defined and reported based on the number of instructional
 1179  hours as provided in this subsection.
 1180         (VIII) For students enrolled in a school district as a
 1181  full-time student, the district may report 1/6 FTE for each
 1182  student who passes a statewide, standardized end-of-course
 1183  assessment without being enrolled in the corresponding course.
 1184         2. A student in membership in a program scheduled for more
 1185  or less than 180 school days or the equivalent on an hourly
 1186  basis as specified by rules of the State Board of Education is a
 1187  fraction of a full-time equivalent membership equal to the
 1188  number of instructional hours in membership divided by the
 1189  appropriate number of hours set forth in subparagraph (a)1.;
 1190  however, for the purposes of this subparagraph, membership in
 1191  programs scheduled for more than 180 days is limited to students
 1192  enrolled in:
 1193         a. Juvenile justice education programs.
 1194         b. The Florida Virtual School.
 1195         c. Virtual instruction programs and virtual charter schools
 1196  for the purpose of course completion and credit recovery
 1197  pursuant to ss. 1002.45 and 1003.498. Course completion applies
 1198  only to a student who is reported during the second or third
 1199  membership surveys and who does not complete a virtual education
 1200  course by the end of the regular school year. The course must be
 1201  completed no later than the deadline for amending the final
 1202  student enrollment survey for that year. Credit recovery applies
 1203  only to a student who has unsuccessfully completed a traditional
 1204  or virtual education course during the regular school year and
 1205  must retake the course in order to be eligible to graduate with
 1206  the student’s class.
 1207  
 1208  The full-time equivalent student enrollment calculated under
 1209  this subsection is subject to the requirements in subsection
 1210  (3)(4).
 1211  
 1212  The department shall determine and implement an equitable method
 1213  of equivalent funding for schools operating under emergency
 1214  conditions, which schools have been approved by the department
 1215  to operate for less than the minimum term as provided in s.
 1216  1011.60(2).
 1217         (2) A “full-time equivalent student” is a student in grades
 1218  4 through 8 who is participating in a student-teacher adviser
 1219  program conducted during homeroom period, who is a fraction of a
 1220  full-time equivalent membership based on net hours in the
 1221  program, with a maximum of 36 net hours in any fiscal year. Each
 1222  district program shall be approved by the Department of
 1223  Education.
 1224         (2)(3) For the purpose of calculating the Florida Education
 1225  Finance Program funds, “current operation program,” a student is
 1226  in membership until he or she withdraws or until the close of
 1227  the 11th consecutive school day of his or her absence, whichever
 1228  comes first.
 1229         (3)(4) The maximum value for funding a student in
 1230  kindergarten through grade 12 or in a prekindergarten program
 1231  for exceptional children as provided in s. 1003.21(1)(e) shall
 1232  be the sum of the calculations in paragraphs (a), (b), and (c)
 1233  as calculated by the department.
 1234         (a) The sum of the student’s full-time equivalent student
 1235  membership value for the school year or the equivalent derived
 1236  from paragraphs (1)(a) and (b), subparagraph (1)(c)1., and sub
 1237  subparagraphs (1)(c)2.b. and c., and subsection (2). If the sum
 1238  is greater than 1.0, the full-time equivalent student membership
 1239  value for each program or course shall be reduced by an equal
 1240  proportion so that the student’s total full-time equivalent
 1241  student membership value is equal to 1.0.
 1242         (b) If the result in paragraph (a) is less than 1.0 full
 1243  time equivalent student and the student has full-time equivalent
 1244  student enrollment pursuant to sub-sub-subparagraph
 1245  (1)(c)1.b.(VIII), calculate an amount that is the lesser of the
 1246  value in sub-sub-subparagraph (1)(c)1.b.(VIII) or the value of
 1247  1.0 less the value in paragraph (a).
 1248         (c) The full-time equivalent student enrollment value in
 1249  sub-subparagraph (1)(c)2.a.
 1250         (4)(5) The “Florida Education Finance Program” includes all
 1251  programs and costs as provided in ss. 1003.03, 1011.62, 1011.68,
 1252  and 1011.685.
 1253         (5)(6) “Basic programs” include, but are not limited to,
 1254  language arts, mathematics, art, music, physical education,
 1255  science, and social studies.
 1256         Section 17. Present subsections (17) and (18) of section
 1257  1011.62, Florida Statutes, are redesignated as subsection (18)
 1258  and (19), a new subsection (17) is added to that section, and
 1259  subsections (1), (2), (3), (5) through (10), (12), (13), (15),
 1260  and (16) of that section are amended, to read:
 1261         1011.62 Funds for operation of schools.—If the annual
 1262  allocation from the Florida Education Finance Program to each
 1263  district for operation of schools is not determined in the
 1264  annual appropriations act or the substantive bill implementing
 1265  the annual appropriations act, it shall be determined as
 1266  follows:
 1267         (1) COMPUTATION OF THE BASE FLORIDA EDUCATION FINANCE
 1268  PROGRAM BASIC AMOUNT TO BE INCLUDED FOR OPERATION.—The following
 1269  procedure shall be followed in determining the base Florida
 1270  Education Finance Program funds for annual allocation to each
 1271  district for operation:
 1272         (a)1.Determination of full-time equivalent membership.
 1273  During the fiscal year each of several school weeks, including
 1274  scheduled intersessions of a year-round school program during
 1275  the fiscal year, each district shall complete full-time
 1276  equivalent surveys a program membership survey of each school
 1277  shall be made by each district by aggregating the full-time
 1278  equivalent student membership of each program by school and by
 1279  district. The department shall establish the number and interval
 1280  of membership calculations, except that for basic and special
 1281  programs such calculations shall not exceed nine for any fiscal
 1282  year. The district’s full-time equivalent membership shall be
 1283  computed and currently maintained in accordance with regulations
 1284  of the commissioner.
 1285         2.All final reported full-time equivalent survey data must
 1286  include the unduplicated count of both school district full-time
 1287  equivalent students and full-time equivalent Family Empowerment
 1288  Scholarship students.
 1289         (b) Determination of base student allocation.—The base
 1290  student allocation for the Florida Education Finance Program for
 1291  kindergarten through grade 12 shall be determined annually by
 1292  the Legislature and shall be that amount prescribed in the
 1293  current year’s General Appropriations Act.
 1294         (c) Determination of programs.—Cost factors based on
 1295  desired relative cost differences between the following programs
 1296  shall be established in the annual General Appropriations Act.
 1297  The cost factor for secondary career education programs must be
 1298  greater than the cost factor for basic programs grade 9 through
 1299  12. The Commissioner of Education shall specify a matrix of
 1300  services and intensity levels to be used by districts in the
 1301  determination of the two weighted cost factors for exceptional
 1302  students with the highest levels of need. For these students,
 1303  the funding support level shall fund the exceptional students’
 1304  education program, with the exception of extended school year
 1305  services for students with disabilities.
 1306         1. Basic programs.—
 1307         a. Kindergarten and grades 1, 2, and 3.
 1308         b. Grades 4, 5, 6, 7, and 8.
 1309         c. Grades 9, 10, 11, and 12.
 1310         2. Programs for exceptional students.—
 1311         a. Support Level IV.
 1312         b. Support Level V.
 1313         3. Secondary career education programs.
 1314         4. English for Speakers of Other Languages.
 1315         (d) Funding model for exceptional student education
 1316  programs.—The funding model for exceptional student education
 1317  programs shall include all of the following:
 1318         1. For programs for exceptional students in support levels
 1319  IV and V as established in paragraph (c), the funding model
 1320  shall include program cost factors.
 1321         a. Exceptional education cost factors are determined by
 1322  using a matrix of services to document the services that each
 1323  support level IV and support level V exceptional student will
 1324  receive. The nature and intensity of the services indicated on
 1325  the matrix shall be consistent with the services described in
 1326  each exceptional student’s individual educational plan.
 1327         b. In order to generate funds using one of the two weighted
 1328  cost factors, a matrix of services must be completed at the time
 1329  of the student’s initial placement into an exceptional student
 1330  education program and at least once every 3 years by personnel
 1331  who have received approved training. Nothing listed in the
 1332  matrix shall be construed as limiting the services a school
 1333  district must provide in order to ensure that exceptional
 1334  students are provided a free, appropriate public education.
 1335         2. For students identified as exceptional in accordance
 1336  with chapter 6A-6, Florida Administrative Code, who do not have
 1337  a matrix of services as specified in subparagraph 1. and for
 1338  students who are gifted in grades kindergarten through 8, the
 1339  funding model shall include the funds generated on the basis of
 1340  full-time equivalent student membership in the Florida Education
 1341  Finance Program at the same funding level per student as
 1342  provided for a basic student and additional funds provided by
 1343  the exceptional student education guaranteed allocation
 1344  established pursuant to subsection (8).
 1345         (e) Calculation of additional full-time equivalent
 1346  membership for small school district exceptional student
 1347  education.—An additional value per full-time equivalent student
 1348  membership is provided to school districts with a full-time
 1349  equivalent student membership of fewer than 10,000 and fewer
 1350  than three full-time equivalent students in exceptional student
 1351  education support levels IV and V. The Department of Education
 1352  shall set the amount of the additional value based on documented
 1353  evidence of the difference between the cost of the school
 1354  district’s exceptional student education support levels IV and V
 1355  services and the applicable Florida Education Finance Program
 1356  funds appropriated in the General Appropriations Act. The total
 1357  statewide value may not exceed a value per weighted full-time
 1358  equivalent student as specified in the General Appropriations
 1359  Act. The additional value for an eligible school district shall
 1360  not exceed three full-time equivalent students for each of the
 1361  exceptional student education support levels IV and V.
 1362         (f) Small district factor.—An additional value per full
 1363  time equivalent student membership is provided to each school
 1364  district with a full-time equivalent student membership of fewer
 1365  than 20,000 full-time equivalent students which is in a fiscally
 1366  constrained county as described in s. 218.67(1). The amount of
 1367  the additional value shall be specified in the General
 1368  Appropriations Act.
 1369         (g) Education for speakers of other languages.—A school
 1370  district or a full-time virtual instruction program is eligible
 1371  to report full-time equivalent student membership in the ESOL
 1372  program in the Florida Education Finance Program provided the
 1373  following conditions are met:
 1374         1. The school district or the full-time virtual instruction
 1375  program has a plan approved by the Department of Education.
 1376         2. The eligible student is identified and assessed as
 1377  limited English proficient based on assessment criteria.
 1378         3.a. An eligible student may be reported for funding in the
 1379  ESOL program for a base period of 3 years. However, a student
 1380  whose English competency does not meet the criteria for
 1381  proficiency after 3 years in the ESOL program may be reported
 1382  for a fourth, fifth, and sixth year of funding, provided his or
 1383  her limited English proficiency is assessed and properly
 1384  documented prior to his or her enrollment in each additional
 1385  year beyond the 3-year base period.
 1386         b. If a student exits the program and is later reclassified
 1387  as limited English proficient, the student may be reported in
 1388  the ESOL program for funding for an additional year, or extended
 1389  annually for a period not to exceed a total of 6 years pursuant
 1390  to this paragraph, based on an annual evaluation of the
 1391  student’s status.
 1392         4. An eligible student may be reported for funding in the
 1393  ESOL program for membership in ESOL instruction in English and
 1394  ESOL instruction or home language instruction in the basic
 1395  subject areas of mathematics, science, social studies, and
 1396  computer literacy.
 1397         (h) Small, isolated schools.—Districts that levy the
 1398  maximum nonvoted discretionary millage, exclusive of millage for
 1399  capital outlay purposes levied pursuant to s. 1011.71(2), may
 1400  calculate full-time equivalent students for small, isolated
 1401  district-operated schools by multiplying the number of
 1402  unweighted full-time equivalent students times 2.75. The
 1403  following schools may be considered small, isolated schools
 1404  under this paragraph:
 1405         1. A high school that is located at least 28 miles by the
 1406  shortest route from another high school; has been serving
 1407  students primarily in basic studies provided by sub
 1408  subparagraphs (c)1.b. and c. and may include subparagraph (c)4.;
 1409  and has a membership of at least 28, but no more than 100,
 1410  students in grades 9 through 12; or
 1411         2. A district elementary school with a grade configuration
 1412  of kindergarten through grade 5, but which may also include
 1413  prekindergarten, grade 6, grade 7, or grade 8, that is located
 1414  at least 35 miles by the shortest route from another elementary
 1415  school within the district; has been serving students primarily
 1416  in basic studies provided by sub-subparagraphs (c)1.a. and b.
 1417  and may include subparagraph (c)4.; has a student population in
 1418  which 75 percent or greater of students are eligible for free
 1419  and reduced-price school lunch; and has a membership of at least
 1420  28, but no more than 100, students.
 1421         (i) Calculation of full-time equivalent membership with
 1422  respect to dual enrollment instruction.—
 1423         1. Full-time equivalent students.—Students enrolled in dual
 1424  enrollment instruction pursuant to s. 1007.271 may be included
 1425  in calculations of full-time equivalent student memberships for
 1426  basic programs for grades 9 through 12 by a district school
 1427  board. Instructional time for dual enrollment may vary from 900
 1428  hours; however, the full-time equivalent student membership
 1429  value shall be subject to the provisions in s. 1011.61(3) s.
 1430  1011.61(4). Dual enrollment full-time equivalent student
 1431  membership shall be calculated in an amount equal to the hours
 1432  of instruction that would be necessary to earn the full-time
 1433  equivalent student membership for an equivalent course if it
 1434  were taught in the school district. Students in dual enrollment
 1435  courses may also be calculated as the proportional shares of
 1436  full-time equivalent enrollments they generate for a Florida
 1437  College System institution or university conducting the dual
 1438  enrollment instruction. Early admission students shall be
 1439  considered dual enrollments for funding purposes. Students may
 1440  be enrolled in dual enrollment instruction provided by an
 1441  eligible independent college or university and may be included
 1442  in calculations of full-time equivalent student memberships for
 1443  basic programs for grades 9 through 12 by a district school
 1444  board. However, those provisions of law which exempt dual
 1445  enrolled and early admission students from payment of
 1446  instructional materials and tuition and fees, including
 1447  laboratory fees, shall not apply to students who select the
 1448  option of enrolling in an eligible independent institution. An
 1449  independent college or university, which is not for profit, is
 1450  accredited by a regional or national accrediting agency
 1451  recognized by the United States Department of Education, and
 1452  confers degrees as defined in s. 1005.02 shall be eligible for
 1453  inclusion in the dual enrollment or early admission program.
 1454  Students enrolled in dual enrollment instruction shall be exempt
 1455  from the payment of tuition and fees, including laboratory fees.
 1456  No student enrolled in college credit mathematics or English
 1457  dual enrollment instruction shall be funded as a dual enrollment
 1458  unless the student has successfully completed the relevant
 1459  section of the entry-level examination required pursuant to s.
 1460  1008.30.
 1461         2. Additional full-time equivalent student membership.—For
 1462  students enrolled in an early college program pursuant to s.
 1463  1007.273, a value of 0.16 full-time equivalent student
 1464  membership shall be calculated for each student who completes a
 1465  general education core course through the dual enrollment
 1466  program with a grade of “A” or better. For students who are not
 1467  enrolled in an early college program, a value of 0.08 full-time
 1468  equivalent student membership shall be calculated for each
 1469  student who completes a general education core course through
 1470  the dual enrollment program with a grade of “A.” A value of 0.08
 1471  full-time equivalent student membership must be calculated for
 1472  each student who completes a career course through the dual
 1473  enrollment program with a grade of “A” in a pathway that leads
 1474  to an industry certification that is included on the CAPE
 1475  Industry Certification Funding List. In addition, a value of 0.3
 1476  full-time equivalent student membership shall be calculated for
 1477  any student who receives an associate degree through the dual
 1478  enrollment program with a 3.0 grade point average or better.
 1479  This value shall be added to the total full-time equivalent
 1480  student membership in basic programs for grades 9 through 12 in
 1481  the subsequent fiscal year. This section shall be effective for
 1482  credit earned by dually enrolled students for courses taken in
 1483  the 2020-2021 school year and each school year thereafter. If
 1484  the associate degree described in this paragraph is earned in
 1485  2020-2021 following completion of courses taken in the 2020-2021
 1486  school year, then courses taken toward the degree as part of the
 1487  dual enrollment program before 2020-2021 may not preclude
 1488  eligibility for the 0.3 additional full-time equivalent student
 1489  membership bonus. Each school district shall allocate at least
 1490  50 percent of the funds received from the dual enrollment bonus
 1491  FTE funding, in accordance with this paragraph, to the schools
 1492  that generated the funds to support student academic guidance
 1493  and postsecondary readiness.
 1494         3. Qualifying courses.—For the purposes of this paragraph,
 1495  general education core courses are those that are identified in
 1496  rule by the State Board of Education and in regulation by the
 1497  Board of Governors pursuant to s. 1007.25(3).
 1498         (j) Instruction in exploratory career education.—Students
 1499  in grades 7 through 12 who are enrolled for more than four
 1500  semesters in exploratory career education may not be counted as
 1501  full-time equivalent students for this instruction.
 1502         (k) Study hall.—A student who is enrolled in study hall may
 1503  not be included in the calculation of full-time equivalent
 1504  student membership for funding under this section.
 1505         (l) Calculation of additional full-time equivalent
 1506  membership based on International Baccalaureate examination
 1507  scores of students.—A value of 0.16 full-time equivalent student
 1508  membership shall be calculated for each student enrolled in an
 1509  International Baccalaureate course who receives a score of 4 or
 1510  higher on a subject examination. A value of 0.3 full-time
 1511  equivalent student membership shall be calculated for each
 1512  student who receives an International Baccalaureate diploma.
 1513  Such value shall be added to the total full-time equivalent
 1514  student membership in basic programs for grades 9 through 12 in
 1515  the subsequent fiscal year. Each school district shall allocate
 1516  80 percent of the funds received from International
 1517  Baccalaureate bonus FTE funding to the school program whose
 1518  students generate the funds and to school programs that prepare
 1519  prospective students to enroll in International Baccalaureate
 1520  courses. Funds shall be expended solely for the payment of
 1521  allowable costs associated with the International Baccalaureate
 1522  program. Allowable costs include International Baccalaureate
 1523  annual school fees; International Baccalaureate examination
 1524  fees; salary, benefits, and bonuses for teachers and program
 1525  coordinators for the International Baccalaureate program and
 1526  teachers and coordinators who prepare prospective students for
 1527  the International Baccalaureate program; supplemental books;
 1528  instructional supplies; instructional equipment or instructional
 1529  materials for International Baccalaureate courses; other
 1530  activities that identify prospective International Baccalaureate
 1531  students or prepare prospective students to enroll in
 1532  International Baccalaureate courses; and training or
 1533  professional learning for International Baccalaureate teachers.
 1534  School districts shall allocate the remaining 20 percent of the
 1535  funds received from International Baccalaureate bonus FTE
 1536  funding for programs that assist academically disadvantaged
 1537  students to prepare for more rigorous courses. The school
 1538  district shall distribute to each classroom teacher who provided
 1539  International Baccalaureate instruction:
 1540         1. A bonus in the amount of $50 for each student taught by
 1541  the International Baccalaureate teacher in each International
 1542  Baccalaureate course who receives a score of 4 or higher on the
 1543  International Baccalaureate examination.
 1544         2. An additional bonus of $500 to each International
 1545  Baccalaureate teacher in a school designated with a grade of “D”
 1546  or “F” who has at least one student scoring 4 or higher on the
 1547  International Baccalaureate examination, regardless of the
 1548  number of classes taught or of the number of students scoring a
 1549  4 or higher on the International Baccalaureate examination.
 1550  
 1551  Bonuses awarded under this paragraph shall be in addition to any
 1552  regular wage or other bonus the teacher received or is scheduled
 1553  to receive. For such courses, the teacher shall earn an
 1554  additional bonus of $50 for each student who has a qualifying
 1555  score.
 1556         (m) Calculation of additional full-time equivalent
 1557  membership based on Advanced International Certificate of
 1558  Education examination scores of students.—A value of 0.16 full
 1559  time equivalent student membership shall be calculated for each
 1560  student enrolled in a full-credit Advanced International
 1561  Certificate of Education course who receives a score of E or
 1562  higher on a subject examination. A value of 0.08 full-time
 1563  equivalent student membership shall be calculated for each
 1564  student enrolled in a half-credit Advanced International
 1565  Certificate of Education course who receives a score of E or
 1566  higher on a subject examination. A value of 0.3 full-time
 1567  equivalent student membership shall be calculated for each
 1568  student who receives an Advanced International Certificate of
 1569  Education diploma. Such value shall be added to the total full
 1570  time equivalent student membership in basic programs for grades
 1571  9 through 12 in the subsequent fiscal year. Each school district
 1572  shall allocate at least 80 percent of the funds received from
 1573  the Advanced International Certificate of Education bonus FTE
 1574  funding, in accordance with this paragraph, to the school
 1575  program that generated the funds and to school programs
 1576  administered by the University of Cambridge Local Examinations
 1577  Syndicate that prepare prospective students to enroll in
 1578  Advanced International Certificate of Education courses. These
 1579  funds shall be expended solely for the payment of costs
 1580  associated with the application and registration process;
 1581  program fees and site licenses; training, professional learning,
 1582  salaries, benefits, and bonuses for instructional personnel and
 1583  program coordinators; examination and diploma fees; membership
 1584  fees; supplemental books; instructional supplies, materials, and
 1585  equipment; and other activities that identify prospective
 1586  Advanced International Certificate of Education students or
 1587  prepare prospective students to enroll in Advanced International
 1588  Certificate of Education courses. The school district shall
 1589  distribute to each classroom teacher who provided Advanced
 1590  International Certificate of Education or International General
 1591  Certificate of Secondary Education (pre-AICE) instruction:
 1592         1. A bonus in the amount of $50 for each student taught by
 1593  the Advanced International Certificate of Education teacher in
 1594  each Advanced International Certificate of Education course who
 1595  receives a score of E or higher on the Advanced International
 1596  Certificate of Education examination. A bonus in the amount of
 1597  $25 for each student taught by the pre-AICE teacher in each pre
 1598  AICE course who receives a score of E or higher on the pre-AICE
 1599  examination.
 1600         2. An additional bonus of $500 to each Advanced
 1601  International Certificate of Education teacher in a school
 1602  designated with a grade of “D” or “F” who has at least one
 1603  student scoring E or higher on the Advanced International
 1604  Certificate of Education examination, regardless of the number
 1605  of classes taught or of the number of students scoring an E or
 1606  higher on the Advanced International Certificate of Education
 1607  examination.
 1608         3. Additional bonuses of $250 each to teachers of pre-AICE
 1609  classes in a school designated with a grade of “D” or “F” which
 1610  has at least one student scoring an E or higher on the pre-AICE
 1611  examination in that class. Teachers receiving an award under
 1612  subparagraph 2. are not eligible for a bonus under this
 1613  subparagraph.
 1614  
 1615  Bonuses awarded to a teacher according to this paragraph shall
 1616  be in addition to any regular wage or other bonus the teacher
 1617  received or is scheduled to receive.
 1618         (n) Calculation of additional full-time equivalent
 1619  membership based on college board advanced placement scores of
 1620  students and earning college board advanced placement capstone
 1621  diplomas.—A value of 0.16 full-time equivalent student
 1622  membership shall be calculated for each student in each advanced
 1623  placement course who receives a score of 3 or higher on the
 1624  College Board Advanced Placement Examination for the prior year
 1625  and added to the total full-time equivalent student membership
 1626  in basic programs for grades 9 through 12 in the subsequent
 1627  fiscal year. A value of 0.3 full-time equivalent student
 1628  membership shall be calculated for each student who receives a
 1629  College Board Advanced Placement Capstone Diploma and meets the
 1630  requirements for a standard high school diploma under s.
 1631  1003.4282. Such value shall be added to the total full-time
 1632  equivalent student membership in basic programs for grades 9
 1633  through 12 in the subsequent fiscal year. Each district must
 1634  allocate at least 80 percent of the funds provided to the
 1635  district for advanced placement instruction, in accordance with
 1636  this paragraph, to the high school that generates the funds. The
 1637  school district shall distribute to each classroom teacher who
 1638  provided advanced placement instruction:
 1639         1. A bonus in the amount of $50 for each student taught by
 1640  the Advanced Placement teacher in each advanced placement course
 1641  who receives a score of 3 or higher on the College Board
 1642  Advanced Placement Examination.
 1643         2. An additional bonus of $500 to each Advanced Placement
 1644  teacher in a school designated with a grade of “D” or “F” who
 1645  has at least one student scoring 3 or higher on the College
 1646  Board Advanced Placement Examination, regardless of the number
 1647  of classes taught or of the number of students scoring a 3 or
 1648  higher on the College Board Advanced Placement Examination.
 1649  
 1650  Bonuses awarded under this paragraph shall be in addition to any
 1651  regular wage or other bonus the teacher received or is scheduled
 1652  to receive. For such courses, the teacher shall earn an
 1653  additional bonus of $50 for each student who has a qualifying
 1654  score.
 1655         (o) Calculation of additional full-time equivalent
 1656  membership based on successful completion of a career-themed
 1657  course pursuant to ss. 1003.491-1003.493, or courses with
 1658  embedded CAPE industry certifications or CAPE Digital Tool
 1659  certificates, and issuance of industry certification identified
 1660  on the CAPE Industry Certification Funding List pursuant to
 1661  rules adopted by the State Board of Education or CAPE Digital
 1662  Tool certificates pursuant to s. 1003.4203.
 1663         1.a. A value of 0.025 full-time equivalent student
 1664  membership shall be calculated for CAPE Digital Tool
 1665  certificates earned by students in elementary and middle school
 1666  grades.
 1667         b. A value of 0.1 or 0.2 full-time equivalent student
 1668  membership shall be calculated for each student who completes a
 1669  course as defined in s. 1003.493(1)(b) or courses with embedded
 1670  CAPE industry certifications and who is issued an industry
 1671  certification identified annually on the CAPE Industry
 1672  Certification Funding List approved under rules adopted by the
 1673  State Board of Education. A value of 0.2 full-time equivalent
 1674  membership shall be calculated for each student who is issued a
 1675  CAPE industry certification that has a statewide articulation
 1676  agreement for college credit approved by the State Board of
 1677  Education. For CAPE industry certifications that do not
 1678  articulate for college credit, the Department of Education shall
 1679  assign a full-time equivalent value of 0.1 for each
 1680  certification. Middle grades students who earn additional FTE
 1681  membership for a CAPE Digital Tool certificate pursuant to sub
 1682  subparagraph a. may not rely solely on the previously funded
 1683  examination to satisfy the requirements for earning an industry
 1684  certification under this sub-subparagraph. The State Board of
 1685  Education shall include the assigned values on the CAPE Industry
 1686  Certification Funding List under rules adopted by the state
 1687  board. Such value shall be added to the total full-time
 1688  equivalent student membership for grades 6 through 12 in the
 1689  subsequent year. CAPE industry certifications earned through
 1690  dual enrollment must be reported and funded pursuant to s.
 1691  1011.80. However, if a student earns a certification through a
 1692  dual enrollment course and the certification is not a fundable
 1693  certification on the postsecondary certification funding list,
 1694  or the dual enrollment certification is earned as a result of an
 1695  agreement between a school district and a nonpublic
 1696  postsecondary institution, the bonus value shall be funded in
 1697  the same manner as other nondual enrollment course industry
 1698  certifications. In such cases, the school district may provide
 1699  for an agreement between the high school and the technical
 1700  center, or the school district and the postsecondary institution
 1701  may enter into an agreement for equitable distribution of the
 1702  bonus funds.
 1703         c. A value of 0.3 full-time equivalent student membership
 1704  shall be calculated for student completion of at least three
 1705  courses and an industry certification in a single career and
 1706  technical education program or program of study.
 1707         d. A value of 0.5 full-time equivalent student membership
 1708  shall be calculated for CAPE Acceleration Industry
 1709  Certifications that articulate for 15 to 29 college credit
 1710  hours, and 1.0 full-time equivalent student membership shall be
 1711  calculated for CAPE Acceleration Industry Certifications that
 1712  articulate for 30 or more college credit hours pursuant to CAPE
 1713  Acceleration Industry Certifications approved by the
 1714  commissioner pursuant to ss. 1003.4203(4) and 1008.44.
 1715         2. Each district must allocate at least 80 percent of the
 1716  funds provided for CAPE industry certification, in accordance
 1717  with this paragraph, to the program that generated the funds,
 1718  and any remaining funds provided for CAPE industry certification
 1719  for school district career and technical education programs.
 1720  This allocation may not be used to supplant funds provided for
 1721  basic operation of the program.
 1722         3. For CAPE industry certifications earned in the 2013-2014
 1723  school year and in subsequent years, the school district shall
 1724  distribute to each classroom teacher who provided direct
 1725  instruction toward the attainment of a CAPE industry
 1726  certification that qualified for additional full-time equivalent
 1727  membership under subparagraph 1.:
 1728         a. A bonus of $25 for each student taught by a teacher who
 1729  provided instruction in a course that led to the attainment of a
 1730  CAPE industry certification on the CAPE Industry Certification
 1731  Funding List with a weight of 0.1.
 1732         b. A bonus of $50 for each student taught by a teacher who
 1733  provided instruction in a course that led to the attainment of a
 1734  CAPE industry certification on the CAPE Industry Certification
 1735  Funding List with a weight of 0.2.
 1736         c. A bonus of $75 for each student taught by a teacher who
 1737  provided instruction in a course that led to the attainment of a
 1738  CAPE industry certification on the CAPE Industry Certification
 1739  Funding List with a weight of 0.3.
 1740         d. A bonus of $100 for each student taught by a teacher who
 1741  provided instruction in a course that led to the attainment of a
 1742  CAPE industry certification on the CAPE Industry Certification
 1743  Funding List with a weight of 0.5 or 1.0.
 1744  
 1745  Bonuses awarded pursuant to this paragraph shall be provided to
 1746  teachers who are employed by the district in the year in which
 1747  the additional FTE membership calculation is included in the
 1748  calculation. Bonuses shall be calculated based upon the
 1749  associated weight of a CAPE industry certification on the CAPE
 1750  Industry Certification Funding List for the year in which the
 1751  certification is earned by the student. Any bonus awarded to a
 1752  teacher pursuant to this paragraph is in addition to any regular
 1753  wage or other bonus the teacher received or is scheduled to
 1754  receive. A bonus may not be awarded to a teacher who fails to
 1755  maintain the security of any CAPE industry certification
 1756  examination or who otherwise violates the security or
 1757  administration protocol of any assessment instrument that may
 1758  result in a bonus being awarded to the teacher under this
 1759  paragraph.
 1760         (p)Calculation of additional full-time equivalent
 1761  membership based upon early high school graduation.—Each school
 1762  district may receive funding for each student who graduates
 1763  early pursuant to s. 1003.4281. A district may earn 0.25
 1764  additional FTE for a student who graduates one semester in
 1765  advance of the student’s cohort and 0.5 additional FTE for a
 1766  student who graduates 1 year or more in advance of the student’s
 1767  cohort. If the student was enrolled in the district as a full
 1768  time high school student for at least 2 years, the district
 1769  shall report the additional FTE for payment in the subsequent
 1770  fiscal year. If the student was enrolled in the district for
 1771  less than 2 years, the district of enrollment shall report the
 1772  additional FTE and shall transfer a proportionate share of the
 1773  funds earned for early graduation to the district in which the
 1774  student was previously enrolled. Additional FTE included in the
 1775  2014-2015 Florida Education Finance Program for early graduation
 1776  shall be reported and funded pursuant to this paragraph.
 1777         (l)(q)Year-round-school programs.—The Commissioner of
 1778  Education is authorized to adjust student eligibility
 1779  definitions, funding criteria, and reporting requirements of
 1780  statutes and rules in order that year-round-school programs may
 1781  achieve equivalent application of funding requirements with non
 1782  year-round-school programs.
 1783         (m)(r)Extended-school-year program.—It is the intent of
 1784  the Legislature that students be provided additional instruction
 1785  by extending the school year to 210 days or more. Districts may
 1786  apply to the Commissioner of Education for funds to be used in
 1787  planning and implementing an extended-school-year program.
 1788         (n)(s)Determination of the base amount for the Florida
 1789  Education Finance Program basic amount for current operation.
 1790  The base amount for the basic amount for current operation to be
 1791  included in the Florida Education Finance Program for
 1792  kindergarten through grade 12 for each district shall be the
 1793  product of the following:
 1794         1. The full-time equivalent student membership in each
 1795  program, multiplied by
 1796         2. The cost factor for each program, as provided in
 1797  adjusted for the maximum as provided by paragraph (c), added to
 1798  multiplied by
 1799         3.The additional full-time equivalent membership weights
 1800  provided in paragraphs (e) and (h), multiplied by
 1801         4.3. The comparable wage factor, if applicable, multiplied
 1802  by
 1803         5.4. The small district factor, if applicable, and
 1804  multiplied by
 1805         6.5. The base student allocation.
 1806         (t)Computation for funding through the Florida Education
 1807  Finance Program.—The State Board of Education may adopt rules
 1808  establishing programs, industry certifications, and courses for
 1809  which the student may earn credit toward high school graduation
 1810  and the criteria under which a student’s industry certification
 1811  or grade may be rescinded.
 1812         (2) DETERMINATION OF COMPARABLE WAGE FACTOR.—
 1813         (a) The Commissioner of Education shall annually compute
 1814  for each district the current year’s comparable wage factor. The
 1815  comparable wage factor shall be calculated by adding each
 1816  district’s price level index as published in the Florida Price
 1817  Level Index for the most recent 3 years and dividing the
 1818  resulting sum by 3. The result for each district shall be
 1819  multiplied by 0.008 and to the resulting product shall be added
 1820  0.200; the sum thus obtained shall be the comparable wage factor
 1821  for that district for that year.
 1822         (b) The comparable wage factor for each school district is
 1823  used in the calculation of the base Florida Education Finance
 1824  Program basic amount for current operation pursuant to
 1825  subsection (1) if the comparable wage factor is greater than
 1826  1.000.
 1827         (c) The limitation authorized in paragraph (b) applies to
 1828  any categorical funding provided in the Florida Education
 1829  Finance Program that has a calculation methodology that includes
 1830  the comparable wage factor.
 1831         (3) INSERVICE EDUCATIONAL PERSONNEL TRAINING EXPENDITURE.
 1832  Of the amount computed in subsection (1), a percentage of the
 1833  base Florida Education Finance Program basic amount for current
 1834  operation or other funds shall be expended for educational
 1835  training programs as determined by the district school board as
 1836  provided in s. 1012.98.
 1837         (5) DISCRETIONARY MILLAGE COMPRESSION SUPPLEMENT.—The
 1838  Legislature shall prescribe in the General Appropriations Act,
 1839  pursuant to s. 1011.71(1), the rate of nonvoted current
 1840  operating discretionary millage that shall be used to calculate
 1841  a discretionary millage compression supplement. If the
 1842  prescribed millage generates an amount of funds per unweighted
 1843  full-time equivalent student for the district that is less than
 1844  the state average, the district shall receive an amount per
 1845  full-time equivalent student that, when added to the funds per
 1846  full-time equivalent student generated by the designated levy,
 1847  shall equal the state average. The discretionary millage
 1848  compression supplement shall be recalculated during the fiscal
 1849  year based on actual full-time equivalent student membership.
 1850         (6) STATE-FUNDED DISCRETIONARY CONTRIBUTION.—The state
 1851  funded discretionary contribution is created to fund the
 1852  nonvoted discretionary millage for operations pursuant to s.
 1853  1011.71(1) and (3) for developmental research schools (lab
 1854  schools) established in s. 1002.32, charter schools sponsored by
 1855  a Florida College System institution or a state university
 1856  pursuant to s. 1002.33(5), and the Florida Virtual School
 1857  established in s. 1002.37.
 1858         (a) To calculate the state-funded discretionary
 1859  contribution for lab schools, multiply the maximum allowable
 1860  nonvoted discretionary millage for operations pursuant to s.
 1861  1011.71(1) and (3) by the value of 96 percent of the current
 1862  year’s taxable value for school purposes for the school district
 1863  in which the lab school is located; divide the result by the
 1864  total full-time equivalent membership of the school district;
 1865  and multiply the result by the full-time equivalent membership
 1866  of the lab school. The amount obtained shall be appropriated in
 1867  the General Appropriations Act.
 1868         (b) To calculate the state-funded discretionary
 1869  contribution for a charter school sponsored by a Florida College
 1870  System institution or a state university and the Florida Virtual
 1871  School, multiply the maximum allowable nonvoted discretionary
 1872  millage for operations pursuant to s. 1011.71(1) and (3) by the
 1873  value of 96 percent of the current year’s taxable value for
 1874  school purposes for the state; divide the result by the total
 1875  full-time equivalent membership of the state; and multiply the
 1876  result by the full-time equivalent membership of the Florida
 1877  Virtual School.
 1878         (c)The state-funded discretionary contribution shall be
 1879  recalculated during the fiscal year based on actual full-time
 1880  equivalent student membership.
 1881         (7) EDUCATIONAL ENRICHMENT ALLOCATION.—
 1882         (a) The educational enrichment allocation is created to
 1883  assist school districts in providing educational enrichment
 1884  activities and services that support and increase the academic
 1885  achievement of students in grades kindergarten through 12.
 1886  Educational enrichment activities and services may be provided
 1887  in a manner and at any time during or beyond the regular 180-day
 1888  term identified by the school district as being the most
 1889  effective and efficient way to best help the student progress
 1890  from grade to grade and graduate from high school. For fiscal
 1891  year 2023-2024, the educational enrichment allocation shall
 1892  consist of a base amount as specified in the General
 1893  Appropriations Act. Beginning in fiscal year 2024-2025, the
 1894  educational enrichment allocation shall consist of the base
 1895  amount that includes a workload adjustment based on changes in
 1896  the unweighted full-time equivalent membership. Beginning in
 1897  fiscal year 2025-2026, and each year thereafter, the statewide
 1898  average base amount as specified in the General Appropriations
 1899  Act shall be used for any new educational entity funded in the
 1900  Florida Education Finance Program.
 1901         (b) For district-managed turnaround schools as identified
 1902  in s. 1008.33(4)(a), schools that earn three consecutive grades
 1903  below a “C,” as identified in s. 1008.33(4)(b)3., and schools
 1904  that have improved to a “C” and are no longer in turnaround
 1905  status, as identified in s. 1008.33(4)(c), a supplemental amount
 1906  shall be added to their educational enrichment allocation for
 1907  purposes of implementing the intervention and support strategies
 1908  identified in the turnaround plan submitted pursuant to s.
 1909  1008.33.
 1910         1. The supplemental amount shall be based on the unweighted
 1911  full-time equivalent student enrollment at the eligible schools
 1912  and a per full-time equivalent funding amount of $500 or as
 1913  provided in the General Appropriations Act.
 1914         2. Services funded by the allocation may include, but are
 1915  not limited to, tutorial and afterschool programs, student
 1916  counseling, nutrition education, parental counseling, and an
 1917  extended school day and school year. In addition, services may
 1918  include models that develop a culture that encourages students
 1919  to complete high school and to attend college or career
 1920  training, set high academic expectations, and inspire character
 1921  development.
 1922         3. A school district may enter into a formal agreement with
 1923  a nonprofit organization that has tax-exempt status under s.
 1924  501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code to implement an
 1925  integrated student support service model that provides students
 1926  and families with access to wrap-around services, including, but
 1927  not limited to, health services, after-school programs, drug
 1928  prevention programs, college and career readiness programs, and
 1929  food and clothing banks.
 1930         (c) The educational enrichment allocation, to include the
 1931  supplemental amount, shall be recalculated during the fiscal
 1932  year based on actual full-time equivalent student membership
 1933  pursuant to paragraph (1)(a). If the recalculated amount is
 1934  greater than the amount provided in the General Appropriations
 1935  Act, the allocation shall be prorated to the level provided to
 1936  support the appropriation, based on each school district’s
 1937  proportionate share of the total allocation.
 1938         (d) Funding on the basis of full-time equivalent membership
 1939  beyond the 180-day regular term shall be provided in the Florida
 1940  Education Finance Program only for students enrolled in juvenile
 1941  justice education programs or in education programs for
 1942  juveniles placed in secure facilities or programs pursuant to s.
 1943  985.19. Funding for instruction beyond the regular 180-day
 1944  school year for all other kindergarten through grade 12 students
 1945  shall be provided through the educational enrichment allocation
 1946  and other state, federal, and local funding sources with
 1947  flexibility for schools to provide educational enrichment
 1948  activities and services to assist students in grades
 1949  kindergarten through 12.
 1950         (8) EXCEPTIONAL STUDENT EDUCATION GUARANTEED ALLOCATION.
 1951  The exceptional student education guaranteed allocation is
 1952  created to fund the additional costs of programs for exceptional
 1953  students specified in subparagraph (1)(d)2. and shall be
 1954  supplemental to the funds appropriated in the Florida Education
 1955  Finance Program for the basic student funding level.
 1956         (a) The amount of each school district’s exceptional
 1957  student education guaranteed allocation shall be the greater of
 1958  either the school district’s prior year exceptional student
 1959  education guaranteed allocation funds per eligible full-time
 1960  equivalent student or the exceptional student education
 1961  guaranteed allocation factor as specified in the General
 1962  Appropriations Act multiplied by the school district’s total
 1963  number of eligible full-time equivalent students.
 1964         (b) The exceptional student education guaranteed allocation
 1965  shall be recalculated during the fiscal year based on actual
 1966  full-time equivalent student membership. If the recalculated
 1967  amount is greater than the amount provided in the General
 1968  Appropriations Act, the total shall be prorated to the level of
 1969  the appropriation based on each school district’s share of the
 1970  total recalculated allocation amount.
 1971         (9) CALCULATION OF SUPPLEMENTAL ALLOCATION FOR JUVENILE
 1972  JUSTICE EDUCATION PROGRAMS.—
 1973         (a) The total kindergarten through grade 12 weighted full
 1974  time equivalent student membership in juvenile justice education
 1975  programs in each school district shall be multiplied by the
 1976  amount of the state average class-size-reduction factor
 1977  multiplied by the comparable wage factor for the school district
 1978  established in subsection (2). An amount equal to the sum of
 1979  this calculation shall be allocated in the Florida Education
 1980  Finance Program to each school district to supplement other
 1981  sources of funding for students in juvenile justice education
 1982  programs. The supplemental allocation for juvenile justice
 1983  education programs shall be recalculated during the fiscal year
 1984  based on actual full-time equivalent student membership.
 1985         (b) Funds allocated under this subsection shall be used to
 1986  provide the juvenile justice education programs pursuant to s.
 1987  1003.52 and may be used to pay for the high school equivalency
 1988  examination fees for juvenile justice students who pass the high
 1989  school equivalency examination in full, or in part, while in a
 1990  juvenile justice education program, the industry credentialing
 1991  testing fees for such students, and the costs associated with
 1992  such juvenile justice students enrolled in career and technical
 1993  education courses that lead to industry-recognized
 1994  certifications.
 1995         (10) FEDERALLY CONNECTED STUDENT SUPPLEMENT.—The federally
 1996  connected student supplement is created to provide supplemental
 1997  funding for school districts to support the education of
 1998  students connected with federally owned military installations,
 1999  National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) real
 2000  property, and Indian lands. To be eligible for this supplement,
 2001  the district must be eligible for federal Impact Aid Program
 2002  funds under s. 8003 of Title VIII of the Elementary and
 2003  Secondary Education Act of 1965. The supplement shall be
 2004  allocated annually to each eligible school district in the
 2005  General Appropriations Act. The supplement shall be the sum of
 2006  the student allocation and an exempt property allocation.
 2007         (a) The student allocation shall be calculated based on the
 2008  number of students reported for federal Impact Aid Program
 2009  funds, including students with disabilities, who meet one of the
 2010  following criteria:
 2011         1. The student has a parent who is on active duty in the
 2012  uniformed services or is an accredited foreign government
 2013  official and military officer. Students with disabilities shall
 2014  also be reported separately for this category.
 2015         2. The student resides on eligible federally owned Indian
 2016  land. Students with disabilities shall also be reported
 2017  separately for this category.
 2018         3. The student resides with a civilian parent who lives or
 2019  works on eligible federal property connected with a military
 2020  installation or NASA. The number of these students shall be
 2021  multiplied by a factor of 0.5.
 2022         (b) The total number of federally connected students
 2023  calculated under paragraph (a) shall be multiplied by a
 2024  percentage of the base student allocation as provided in the
 2025  General Appropriations Act. The total of the number of students
 2026  with disabilities as reported separately under subparagraphs
 2027  (a)1. and 2. shall be multiplied by an additional percentage of
 2028  the base student allocation as provided in the General
 2029  Appropriations Act. The base amount and the amount for students
 2030  with disabilities shall be summed to provide the student
 2031  allocation.
 2032         (c) The exempt property allocation shall be equal to the
 2033  tax-exempt value of federal impact aid lands reserved as
 2034  military installations, real property owned by NASA, or eligible
 2035  federally owned Indian lands located in the district, multiplied
 2036  by the millage authorized and levied under s. 1011.71(2).
 2037         (d) The amount allocated for each eligible school district
 2038  shall be recalculated during the year based on actual full-time
 2039  equivalent using actual student membership, as amended, from the
 2040  most recent February survey and the tax-exempt valuation from
 2041  the most recent assessment roll.
 2042         (12) SAFE SCHOOLS ALLOCATION.—A safe schools allocation is
 2043  created to provide funding to assist school districts in their
 2044  compliance with ss. 1006.07-1006.12, with priority given to
 2045  safe-school officers pursuant to s. 1006.12. Each school
 2046  district shall receive a minimum safe schools allocation in an
 2047  amount provided in the General Appropriations Act. Of the
 2048  remaining balance of the safe schools allocation, one-third
 2049  shall be allocated to school districts based on the most recent
 2050  official Florida Crime Index provided by the Department of Law
 2051  Enforcement and two-thirds shall be allocated based on each
 2052  school district’s proportionate share of the state’s total
 2053  unweighted full-time equivalent student enrollment. If a
 2054  district school board is required by s. 1006.12 to assign a
 2055  school resource officer or school safety officer to a charter
 2056  school, the charter school’s share of costs for such officer may
 2057  not exceed the amount of funds allocated to the charter school
 2058  under this subsection. The safe schools allocation shall be
 2059  recalculated during the fiscal year based on actual full-time
 2060  equivalent student membership.
 2061         (13) MENTAL HEALTH ASSISTANCE ALLOCATION.—The mental health
 2062  assistance allocation is created to provide funding to assist
 2063  school districts in implementing their school-based mental
 2064  health assistance program pursuant to s. 1006.041. These funds
 2065  shall be allocated annually in the General Appropriations Act or
 2066  other law to each eligible school district. Each school district
 2067  shall receive a minimum of $100,000, with the remaining balance
 2068  allocated based on each school district’s proportionate share of
 2069  the state’s total unweighted full-time equivalent student
 2070  enrollment. The mental health assistance allocation shall be
 2071  recalculated during the fiscal year based on actual full-time
 2072  equivalent student membership.
 2073         (15) TOTAL ALLOCATION OF STATE FUNDS TO EACH DISTRICT FOR
 2074  CURRENT OPERATION.—The total annual state allocation to each
 2075  district for current operation for the Florida Education Finance
 2076  Program shall be distributed to districts pursuant to s. 1011.66
 2077  and based on the results of the full-time equivalent membership
 2078  surveys established in paragraph (1)(a) periodically in the
 2079  manner prescribed in the General Appropriations Act.
 2080         (a) When the Florida Education Finance Program allocation
 2081  is recalculated, if the gross state Florida Education Finance
 2082  Program funds If the funds appropriated for current operation of
 2083  the Florida Education Finance Program, including funds
 2084  appropriated pursuant to subsection (18), are not sufficient to
 2085  pay the state requirement in full, the department shall prorate
 2086  the available state funds to each district in the following
 2087  manner:
 2088         1. To calculate the gross state and local Florida Education
 2089  Finance Program funding, add the base Florida Education Finance
 2090  Program and the categorical funds, except for the categorical
 2091  funding provided in subsection (16) and s. 1011.685.
 2092         2. To calculate the gross state Florida Education Finance
 2093  Program funding, subtract the required local effort in
 2094  subsection (4) from the gross and local Florida Education
 2095  Finance Program funding.
 2096         3. To determine the amount that must be prorated among all
 2097  school districts, subtract the gross state Florida Education
 2098  Finance Program and any prior year adjustments pursuant to
 2099  paragraph (b) from the corresponding amount of state funds
 2100  appropriated in the General Appropriations Act.
 2101         4. Each school district’s amount of the proration is
 2102  calculated based on its proportionate share of the gross state
 2103  and local Florida Education Finance Program funding.
 2104         1. Determine the percentage of proration by dividing the
 2105  sum of the total amount for current operation, as provided in
 2106  this paragraph for all districts collectively, and the total
 2107  district required local effort into the sum of the state funds
 2108  available for current operation and the total district required
 2109  local effort.
 2110         2. Multiply the percentage so determined by the sum of the
 2111  total amount for current operation as provided in this paragraph
 2112  and the required local effort for each individual district.
 2113         3. From the product of such multiplication, subtract the
 2114  required local effort of each district; and the remainder shall
 2115  be the amount of state funds allocated to the district for
 2116  current operation. However, no calculation subsequent to the
 2117  appropriation shall result in negative state funds for any
 2118  district.
 2119         (b) The amount thus obtained shall be the net annual
 2120  allocation to each school district. However, if it is determined
 2121  that any school district received an under allocation or over
 2122  allocation for any prior year because of an arithmetical error,
 2123  assessment roll change required by final judicial decision,
 2124  full-time equivalent student membership error, or any allocation
 2125  error revealed in an audit report, the allocation to that
 2126  district shall be appropriately adjusted. An under allocation in
 2127  a prior year caused by a school district’s error may not be the
 2128  basis for a positive allocation adjustment for the current year.
 2129  Beginning with the 2011-2012 fiscal year, If a special program
 2130  cost factor is less than the basic program cost factor, an audit
 2131  adjustment may not result in the reclassification of the special
 2132  program FTE to the basic program FTE. If the Department of
 2133  Education audit adjustment recommendation is based upon
 2134  controverted findings of fact, the Commissioner of Education is
 2135  authorized to establish the amount of the adjustment based on
 2136  the best interests of the state.
 2137         (c) The amount thus obtained shall represent the net annual
 2138  state allocation to each district; however, notwithstanding any
 2139  of the provisions herein, each district shall be guaranteed a
 2140  minimum level of funding in the amount and manner prescribed in
 2141  the General Appropriations Act.
 2142         (16) STATE-FUNDED DISCRETIONARY SUPPLEMENT.—
 2143         (a) The state-funded discretionary supplement is created to
 2144  fund the nonvoted discretionary millage for operations pursuant
 2145  to s. 1011.71(1) and (3) for students awarded a Family
 2146  Empowerment Scholarship in accordance with s. 1002.394. To
 2147  calculate the state-funded discretionary supplement for
 2148  inclusion in the amount of the scholarship funding:
 2149         1. For fiscal year 2023-2024, multiply the maximum
 2150  allowable nonvoted discretionary millage for operations pursuant
 2151  to s. 1011.71(1) and (3) by the value of 96 percent of the
 2152  current year’s taxable value for school purposes for the school
 2153  district where the student is reported for purposes of the
 2154  Florida Education Finance Program as appropriated in the General
 2155  Appropriations Act; divide the result by the school district’s
 2156  total unweighted full-time equivalent membership as appropriated
 2157  in the General Appropriations Act; and multiply the result by
 2158  the total unweighted full-time equivalent membership associated
 2159  with the number of Family Empowerment Scholarship students
 2160  included in the school district’s total unweighted full-time
 2161  equivalent membership. A base amount as specified in the General
 2162  Appropriations Act shall be added to this amount for purposes of
 2163  calculating the total amount of the supplement.
 2164         2. Beginning in fiscal year 2024-2025 and thereafter,
 2165  multiply the maximum allowable nonvoted discretionary millage
 2166  for operations pursuant to s. 1011.71(1) and (3) by the value of
 2167  96 percent of the current year’s taxable value for school
 2168  purposes for the school district where the student is reported
 2169  for purposes of the Florida Education Finance Program as
 2170  appropriated in the General Appropriations Act; divide the
 2171  result by the school district’s total unweighted full-time
 2172  equivalent membership as appropriated in the General
 2173  Appropriations Act; and multiply the result by the total
 2174  unweighted full-time equivalent membership associated with the
 2175  number of Family Empowerment Scholarship students. The prior
 2176  year’s base amount shall be adjusted based on changes in the
 2177  eligible number of unweighted full-time equivalent membership
 2178  associated with the number of Family Empowerment Scholarship
 2179  students.
 2180         (b) The state-funded discretionary supplement shall be
 2181  recalculated during the fiscal year based on actual full-time
 2182  equivalent student membership pursuant to paragraph (1)(a). If
 2183  the recalculated amount is greater than the amount provided in
 2184  the General Appropriations Act, the allocation shall be prorated
 2185  to the level provided to support the appropriation, based on
 2186  each school district’s proportionate share of the total
 2187  allocation.
 2188         (17)ACADEMIC ACCELERATION OPTIONS SUPPLEMENT.—The academic
 2189  acceleration options supplement is created to assist school
 2190  districts in providing academic acceleration options, career
 2191  themed courses, and courses that lead to digital tool
 2192  certificates and industry certifications for prekindergarten
 2193  through grade 12 students and shall be allocated annually in the
 2194  General Appropriations Act.
 2195         (a)1.Each school district shall report its total number of
 2196  academic acceleration values in a format prescribed by the
 2197  Department of Education.
 2198         2.The supplement shall be allocated based on each school
 2199  district’s proportionate share of the state’s total academic
 2200  acceleration values.
 2201         3.For purposes of the amount of the supplement
 2202  appropriated in the fiscal year 2025-2026 General Appropriations
 2203  Act, an adjustment is included which will not be a part of the
 2204  supplement when the Florida Education Finance Program is
 2205  recalculated pursuant to paragraph (1)(a).
 2206         (b)1.A value of 0.16 is assigned to a student enrolled in
 2207  an early college program pursuant to s. 1007.273 who completes a
 2208  general education core course through the dual enrollment
 2209  program with a grade of “A” or better; however, the value is
 2210  0.08 if the student is not enrolled in an early college program.
 2211  A value of 0.08 shall be assigned to a student who completed a
 2212  career course through the dual enrollment program with a grade
 2213  of “A” in a pathway that leads to an industry certification that
 2214  is included on the CAPE Industry Certification Funding List. A
 2215  value of 0.3 shall be assigned to a student who receives an
 2216  associate degree through the dual enrollment program with a 3.0
 2217  grade point average or better.
 2218         2. For the purposes of this paragraph, general education
 2219  core courses are those that are identified in rule by the State
 2220  Board of Education and in regulation by the Board of Governors
 2221  pursuant to s. 1007.25(3).
 2222         3.Each school district shall use the funds received from
 2223  the supplement for expenses associated with the applicable
 2224  courses; however, such funds may not be used by the school
 2225  district to supplant the district’s base Florida Education
 2226  Finance Program funds provided pursuant to paragraph (1)(n).
 2227         (c)1.A value of 0.16 is assigned to a student enrolled in
 2228  an Advanced Placement course who receives a score of 3 or higher
 2229  on the College Board Advanced Placement examination. A value of
 2230  0.3 is assigned to a student who receives an Advanced Placement
 2231  Capstone diploma.
 2232         2.From the funds received from the supplement, each school
 2233  district shall award a $50 bonus to each Advanced Placement
 2234  teacher for each student who achieves a score of 3 or higher on
 2235  the College Board Advanced Placement examination. Each school
 2236  district shall award an additional bonus of $500 to each
 2237  Advanced Placement teacher in a school designated with a grade
 2238  of “D” or “F” who has at least one student scoring 3 or higher
 2239  on the College Board Advanced Placement examination. The school
 2240  district shall use the remaining balance of funds for expenses
 2241  associated with the Advanced Placement courses to include the
 2242  cost for the Advanced Placement examination fee and for teacher
 2243  professional learning; however, such funds may not be used to
 2244  supplant the school district’s base Florida Education Finance
 2245  Program funds provided pursuant to paragraph (1)(n).
 2246         (d)1.A value of 0.16 is assigned to a student enrolled in
 2247  a full-credit Advanced International Certificate of Education
 2248  course and who receives a score of “E” or higher on the Advanced
 2249  International Certificate of Education examination. A value of
 2250  0.08 is assigned for a student enrolled in a half-credit
 2251  Advanced International Certificate of Education course and who
 2252  receives a score of “E” or higher on the Advanced International
 2253  Certificate of Education examination. A value of 0.3 is assigned
 2254  to a student who receives an Advanced International Certificate
 2255  of Education diploma.
 2256         2.a.From the funds received from the supplement, each
 2257  school district shall award a $50 bonus to each Advanced
 2258  International Certificate of Education teacher for each student
 2259  who receives a score of “E” or higher on the Advanced
 2260  International Certificate of Education examination or a $25
 2261  bonus to a pre-Advanced International Certificate of Education
 2262  teacher if the student received a score of “E” or higher on the
 2263  pre-Advanced International Certificate of Education examination.
 2264  Each school district shall award an additional bonus in the
 2265  amount of $500 to each teacher of an Advanced International
 2266  Certificate of Education course in a school designated with a
 2267  grade of “D” or “F” which has at least one student scoring an
 2268  “E” or higher on the applicable examination. Each school
 2269  district shall award an additional bonus in the amount of $250
 2270  to each teacher of a pre-Advanced International Certificate of
 2271  Education course in a school designated with a grade of “D” or
 2272  “F” which has at least one student scoring an “E” or higher on
 2273  the applicable examination. A teacher receiving a $500 bonus is
 2274  not eligible for the $250 bonus.
 2275         b.The school district shall use the remaining funds for
 2276  expenses associated with the applicable courses to include any
 2277  student program and examination fees; however, such funds may
 2278  not be used to supplant the district’s base Florida Education
 2279  Finance Program funds provided pursuant to paragraph (1)(n).
 2280         (e)1.A value of 0.16 is assigned to a student in an
 2281  International Baccalaureate course who receives a score of 4 or
 2282  higher on a subject examination or a score of “C” or higher on
 2283  the Theory of Knowledge course. A value of 0.3 is assigned to a
 2284  student who receives an International Baccalaureate diploma.
 2285         2.From the funds received from the supplement, each school
 2286  district shall award a $50 bonus to each International
 2287  Baccalaureate teacher for each student who achieves a score of 4
 2288  or higher on an International Baccalaureate examination or a “C”
 2289  or higher in the Theory of Knowledge course. Each school
 2290  district shall award an additional bonus of $500 if the
 2291  International Baccalaureate teacher is in a school designated
 2292  with a grade of “D” or “F” and has at least one student scoring
 2293  4 or higher on the International Baccalaureate examination or a
 2294  “C” or higher in the Theory of Knowledge course. The school
 2295  district shall use the remaining funds for expenses associated
 2296  with the applicable courses to include the cost of the
 2297  assessment fee for the International Baccalaureate diploma;
 2298  however, such funds may not be used to supplant the district’s
 2299  base Florida Education Finance Program funds provided pursuant
 2300  to paragraph (1)(n).
 2301         (f)1.A value of 0.025 is assigned to each student who
 2302  earns a CAPE Digital Tool certificate in elementary and middle
 2303  school grades. Beginning with the 2025-2026 school year, this
 2304  value shall apply only to students in the elementary school
 2305  grades. A value of 0.1 is assigned to each student who completes
 2306  a career-themed course pursuant to ss. 1003.491–1003.493, or a
 2307  course with an embedded CAPE industry certification and is
 2308  issued an approved industry certification specifically
 2309  identified in the CAPE Industry Certification Funding List as a
 2310  CAPE Basic Non-articulated industry certification. A value of
 2311  0.2 is assigned to each student who completes a career-themed
 2312  course pursuant to ss. 1003.491–1003.493, or a course with an
 2313  embedded CAPE industry certification and is issued an approved
 2314  industry certification specifically identified in the CAPE
 2315  Industry Certification Funding List as a CAPE Basic Articulated
 2316  industry certification. A value of 0.3 is assigned to a high
 2317  school student who completes at least three courses and an
 2318  industry certification in a single career and technical
 2319  education program or program of study and who exits with a
 2320  standard high school diploma. Each industry certification must
 2321  be specifically identified in the CAPE Industry Certification
 2322  Funding List as a CAPE Pathways industry certification. A value
 2323  of 0.5 is assigned to a high school student who completes CAPE
 2324  Acceleration industry certifications that articulate for 15 to
 2325  29 college credit hours. A value of 1.0 is assigned to a high
 2326  school student who completes CAPE Acceleration industry
 2327  certifications that articulate for 30 or more college credit
 2328  hours.
 2329         2.From the funds received from the supplement, each school
 2330  district shall award the following bonuses to teachers who
 2331  provided instruction that led to the attainment of the assigned
 2332  student value:
 2333         a.A bonus of $25 for each student with an assigned value
 2334  of 0.1.
 2335         b.A bonus of $50 for each student with an assigned value
 2336  of 0.2.
 2337         c.A bonus of $75 for each student with an assigned value
 2338  of 0.3.
 2339         d.A bonus of $100 for each student with an assigned value
 2340  of 0.5 or 1.0.
 2341         3.The school district shall use the remaining funds for
 2342  expenses associated with the applicable courses; however, such
 2343  funds may not be used to supplant the district’s base Florida
 2344  Education Finance Program funds provided pursuant to paragraph
 2345  (1)(n).
 2346         (g)Bonuses awarded under this subsection shall be in
 2347  addition to any regular wage or other bonus the teacher received
 2348  or is scheduled to receive. A bonus may not be awarded to a
 2349  teacher who fails to maintain the security of any CAPE industry
 2350  certification examination or who otherwise violates the security
 2351  or administration protocol of any assessment instrument that may
 2352  result in a bonus being awarded to the teacher under this
 2353  subsection.
 2354         (h)1. A value of 0.25 is assigned to each student who
 2355  graduates one semester in advance of the student’s cohort and a
 2356  value of 0.5 is assigned to each student who graduates 1 year or
 2357  more in advance of the student’s cohort pursuant to s.
 2358  1003.4281. If the student was enrolled in the district as a
 2359  full-time high school student for at least 2 years, the district
 2360  must report the student in the subsequent fiscal year. If the
 2361  student was enrolled in the district for less than 2 years, the
 2362  district of enrollment must report the students and must
 2363  transfer a proportionate share of the funds earned for early
 2364  graduation to the district in which the student was previously
 2365  enrolled.
 2366         2. Each school district shall use the funds received from
 2367  the supplement for expenses associated with providing students
 2368  with early graduation options established pursuant to s.
 2369  1003.4281; however, such funds may not be used by the school
 2370  district to supplant the district’s base Florida Education
 2371  Finance Program funds provided pursuant to paragraph (1)(n).
 2372         (i)Beginning September 1, 2026, and each year thereafter,
 2373  each school district must report its prior year total
 2374  expenditures of its academic acceleration supplement funds to
 2375  the Legislature in a format prescribed by the Department of
 2376  Education.
 2377         Section 18. Section 1011.65, Florida Statutes, is amended
 2378  to read:
 2379         1011.65 Recalculation of the Florida Education Finance
 2380  Program Appropriation Allocation Conference.—Prior to the
 2381  distribution of any funds appropriated in the General
 2382  Appropriations Act for the K-12 Florida Education Finance
 2383  Program formula and for the formula-funded categorical programs,
 2384  the Commissioner of Education shall conduct an allocation
 2385  conference. Conference principals shall include representatives
 2386  of the Department of Education, the Executive Office of the
 2387  Governor, and the appropriations committees of the Senate and
 2388  the House of Representatives. Conference principals shall
 2389  discuss and agree to all conventions, including rounding
 2390  conventions, and methods of computation to be used to calculate
 2391  Florida Education Finance Program and categorical entitlements
 2392  of the districts for the fiscal year for which the
 2393  appropriations are made. These conventions and calculation
 2394  methods shall remain in effect until further agreements are
 2395  reached in subsequent allocation conferences called by the
 2396  commissioner for that purpose. The commissioner shall also,
 2397  prior to each recalculation of Florida Education Finance
 2398  Program, the Department of Education shall and categorical
 2399  allocations of the districts, provide to the Legislature and the
 2400  Executive Office of the Governor conference principals with all
 2401  data necessary for the Legislature and the Executive Office of
 2402  the Governor to replicate the department’s recalculation of the
 2403  Florida Education Finance Program. The recalculated Florida
 2404  Education Finance Program may not be provided to school
 2405  districts until the Legislature and the Executive Office of the
 2406  Governor provide written notification to the department that the
 2407  recalculated Florida Education Finance Program complies with law
 2408  those allocations precisely. This data shall include a matrix by
 2409  district by program of all full-time equivalent changes made by
 2410  the department as part of its administration of state full-time
 2411  equivalent caps.
 2412         Section 19. (1) No later than July 1, 2028, the Department
 2413  of Education shall recommend to the Legislature a Florida Title
 2414  I performance incentive program to reward Title I schools that
 2415  have demonstrated excellence in student achievement and learning
 2416  gains.
 2417         (2) Recommendations must include, but are not limited to:
 2418         (a) A methodology to determine eligibility based on student
 2419  achievement, learning gains, or comparisons to other Title I
 2420  schools. The Department must consider:
 2421         1. Additional weights for student learning gains.
 2422         2. The percentage of economically disadvantaged students at
 2423  the school and any other school attributes.
 2424         (b) Uses of program funds.
 2425         (c) Projection of award amounts and overall program costs
 2426  based on the recommended methodology.
 2427         Section 20. This act shall take effect July 1, 2025.