2021 -- H 5076 SUBSTITUTE A | |
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LC000153/SUB A/2 | |
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STATE OF RHODE ISLAND | |
IN GENERAL ASSEMBLY | |
JANUARY SESSION, A.D. 2021 | |
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A N A C T | |
RELATING TO EDUCATION -- EDUCATION ACCOUNTABILITY ACT | |
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Introduced By: Representative Joseph M. McNamara | |
Date Introduced: January 22, 2021 | |
Referred To: House Health, Education & Welfare | |
It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows: | |
1 | SECTION 1. Section 16-97.1-1 of the General Laws in Chapter 16-97.1 entitled |
2 | "Education Accountability Act" is hereby amended to read as follows: |
3 | 16-97.1-1. Performances of local education agencies and individual public schools -- |
4 | Evaluation system -- Assessment instruments -- Reports. |
5 | (a) The board of education (the "board") shall adopt a system for evaluating, on an annual |
6 | basis, the performance of both local education agencies ("LEAs") and individual public schools. |
7 | The system shall: |
8 | (1) Include instruments designed to assess the extent to which schools and LEAs succeed |
9 | in improving or fail to improve student performance, as defined by: |
10 | (i) Student acquisition of the skills, competencies, and knowledge called for by the |
11 | academic standards and embodied in the curriculum frameworks established in the areas of |
12 | mathematics, English language arts, science and technology, history and social studies, world |
13 | languages, and the arts; and |
14 | (ii) Other gauges of student learning judged by the board to be relevant and meaningful to |
15 | students, parents, teachers, administrators, and taxpayers. |
16 | (2) Be designed both to measure outcomes and results regarding student performance, and |
17 | to improve the effectiveness of curriculum and instruction. |
18 | (3) In its design and application, strike a balance among considerations of accuracy, |
19 | fairness, expense, and administration. |
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1 | (4) Employ a variety of assessment instruments on either a comprehensive or statistically |
2 | valid sampling basis. Such instruments shall: |
3 | (i) Be criterion-referenced, assessing whether students are meeting the academic standards |
4 | described in this chapter; |
5 | (ii) As much as is practicable, especially in the case of students whose performance is |
6 | difficult to assess using conventional methods, include consideration of work samples, projects, |
7 | and portfolios, and shall facilitate authentic and direct gauges of student performance; |
8 | (iii) Provide the means to compare student performance among the various school systems |
9 | and communities in the state, and between students in other states and in other nations, especially |
10 | those nations that compete with the state for employment and economic opportunities; |
11 | (iv) Be designed to avoid gender, cultural, ethnic, or racial stereotypes; and |
12 | (v) Recognize sensitivity to different learning styles and impediments to learning, which |
13 | may include issues related, but not limited to, cultural, financial, emotional, health, and social |
14 | factors. |
15 | (5) Take into account, on a nondiscriminatory basis, the cultural and language diversity of |
16 | students in the state and the particular circumstances of students with special needs. |
17 | (6) Comply with federal requirements for accommodating children with special needs. |
18 | (7) Allow all potential English-proficient students from language groups in which English |
19 | language learner programs are offered opportunities for assessment of their performance in the |
20 | language that best allows them to demonstrate educational achievement and mastery of academic |
21 | standards and curriculum frameworks. |
22 | (8) Identify individual schools and LEAs that need comprehensive support and |
23 | improvement. |
24 | (b) The board shall take all appropriate action to bring about and continue the state's |
25 | participation in the assessment activities of the National Assessment of Educational Progress and |
26 | in the development of standards and assessments by the New Standards Program. |
27 | (c) In addition, comprehensive diagnostic assessment of individual students shall be |
28 | conducted at least in the fourth, eighth, and tenth or eleventh grades. The diagnostic assessments |
29 | shall identify academic achievement levels of all students in order to inform teachers, parents, |
30 | administrators, and the students themselves, as to individual academic performance. |
31 | (d) The board shall develop procedures for updating, improving, or refining the assessment |
32 | system. |
33 | (e) The commissioner of elementary and secondary education (the "commissioner") is |
34 | authorized and directed to gather information, including the information specified herein and such |
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1 | other information as the board shall require, for the purposes of evaluating individual public |
2 | schools, school districts, and the efficacy and equity of state and federallymandated programs. All |
3 | information gathered pursuant to this section shall be filed in the manner and form prescribed by |
4 | the department of education (the "department"). |
5 | (f) The board shall establish and maintain a data system to collect information from school |
6 | districts for the purpose of assessing the effectiveness of district evaluation systems in ensuring |
7 | effective teaching and administrative leadership in the public schools. The information shall be |
8 | made available in the aggregate to the public; provided, however, that the following information |
9 | shall be considered personnel information and shall not be subject to disclosure: |
10 | (1) Any data or information that school districts, the department, or both, create, send, or |
11 | receive in connection with an educator assessment that is evaluative in nature and that may be |
12 | linked to an individual educator, including information concerning: |
13 | (i) An educator's formative assessment or evaluation; |
14 | (ii) An educator's summative evaluation or performance rating; or |
15 | (iii) The student learning, growth, and achievement data that may be used as part of an |
16 | individual educator's evaluation. |
17 | (g) Each school district shall maintain individual records on every student and employee. |
18 | Each student record shall contain a unique and confidential identification number, basic |
19 | demographic information, program and course information, and such other information as the |
20 | department shall determine necessary. The records shall conform to parameters established by the |
21 | department. |
22 | (h) For the purposes of improving the performance of school districts, individual public |
23 | schools, and the efficacy and equity of state and federal programs, each district shall file with the |
24 | commissioner once in each three-year (3) period a comprehensive, three-year (3) district |
25 | improvement plan. The plan shall: |
26 | (1) Be developed and submitted in a manner and form prescribed by the department of |
27 | education. |
28 | (2) To the extent feasible, be designed to fulfill all planning requirements of state and |
29 | federal education laws. |
30 | (3) Include, but not be limited to: |
31 | (i) An analysis of student and subgroup achievement gaps in core subjects; |
32 | (ii) Identification of specific improvement objectives; |
33 | (iii) A description of the strategic initiatives the district will undertake to achieve its |
34 | improvement objectives; and |
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1 | (iv) Performance benchmarks and processes for evaluating the effect of district |
2 | improvement initiatives. |
3 | (4) Describe the professional development activities that will support each district |
4 | improvement initiative and the teacher induction and mentoring activities that will be undertaken |
5 | to support successful implementation of the district's improvement efforts. |
6 | (i) On an annual basis, not later than September 1 of each year, each district shall prepare |
7 | and have available for state review an annual action plan. The district annual action plan shall: |
8 | (1) Enumerate the specific activities, persons responsible, and timelines for action to be |
9 | taken as part of the strategic initiatives set forth in the district's three-year (3) improvement plan; |
10 | and |
11 | (2) Identify the staff and financial resources allocated to support these activities. |
12 | (j) Annually, the principal of each school shall: |
13 | (1) In consultation with the school improvement team, adopt student performance goals for |
14 | the schools consistent with the school performance goals established by the department of |
15 | education pursuant to state and federal law and regulations; |
16 | (2) Consistent with any educational policies established for the district, assess the needs of |
17 | the school in light of those goals; and |
18 | (3) Formulate a school plan to advance such goals and improve student performance. The |
19 | school's plan to support improved student performance shall: |
20 | (i) Include, but not be limited to, the same components required for the district |
21 | improvement plan; |
22 | (ii) Conform to department and district specifications to ensure that such school |
23 | improvement plans meet state and federal law requirements; and |
24 | (iii) Be submitted to the superintendent who shall review and approve the plan, after |
25 | consultation with the school committee, not later than July 1 of the year in which the plan is to be |
26 | implemented, according to a plan development and review schedule established by the district |
27 | superintendent. |
28 | (4) Prepare and have available for district and state review by July 1 annually, a report, |
29 | based on SurveyWorks or other data collection, which shall provide aggregated graduating student |
30 | data on race, ethnicity and gender for the following: |
31 | (i) The total number of students graduating; |
32 | (ii) The total number of students graduating who are applying for admission to a college, |
33 | university or vocational training program; |
34 | (iii) The total number of students completing a free application for federal student aid |
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1 | ("FAFSA") form; and |
2 | (iv) The total number of students who are eligible to fill out and submit a FAFSA form. |
3 | (5) The department shall include, in SurveyWorks or an equivalent data collection tool, |
4 | inquiries to collect the data and information referenced in subsection (j)(4) of this section. |
5 | (k) The three-year (3) comprehensive district plan, annual district action plan, and annual |
6 | school improvement plan shall replace any district and school plans previously required under the |
7 | general laws or regulation, that, in the professional opinion of the commissioner, would be most |
8 | effectively presented as part of the coordinated district or school plan for improving student |
9 | achievement. The department shall identify any additional reports or plans called for by any general |
10 | law or regulation that can be incorporated into this single filing in order to reduce paperwork and |
11 | eliminate duplication. |
12 | (l) Each school district in which more than twenty percent (20%) of the students do not |
13 | meet grade-level expectations of at least proficient or its equivalent on the Rhode Island |
14 | comprehensive assessment system exam ("RICAS") shall submit a RICAS success plan to the |
15 | department. The plan shall describe the school district's strategies for helping each student to master |
16 | the skills, competencies, and knowledge required for the competency determination. In recognition |
17 | of the department's mission as a district support agency, then at the request of the district or in |
18 | response to reporting data provided under this subsection, the department shall: |
19 | (1) Determine the elements that shall be required to be included in such plan. These |
20 | elements may include, but are not limited to, the following: |
21 | (i) A plan to assess each student's strengths, weaknesses, and needs; |
22 | (ii) A plan to use summer school, after school, and other additional support to provide each |
23 | child with the assistance needed; and |
24 | (iii) A plan for involving the parents of students. |
25 | (2) Examine each district's plan and determine if it has a reasonable prospect of |
26 | significantly reducing the school district's failure rates. |
27 | (3) Coordinate oversight of the RICAS success plans with existing education review and |
28 | oversight functions and with the RICAS grant program. |
29 | (m) Each school district shall file a report with the department every year by a date and in |
30 | a format determined by the board. The report shall include, but not be limited to, the following: |
31 | (1) An outline of the curriculum and graduation requirements of the district; |
32 | (2) Pupil/teacher ratios and class size policy and practice; |
33 | (3) Teacher and administrator evaluation procedures; |
34 | (4) Statistics, policies, and procedures relative to truancy and dropouts; |
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1 | (5) Statistics, policies, and procedures relative to expulsions and in-school and out-of- |
2 | school suspensions; |
3 | (6) Percent of school-age children attending public schools: |
4 | (7) Racial composition of teaching and administrative staff; |
5 | (8) Enrollment and average daily attendance; and |
6 | (9) The annual budgets and expenditures for both the district and the individual schools in |
7 | the district. |
8 | (n) Each school district shall file a description of the following instructional procedures |
9 | and programs with the department every year: |
10 | (1) Art and music programs; |
11 | (2) Technology education; |
12 | (3) Programs for gifted and talented students; |
13 | (4) Adult education programs; |
14 | (5) Library and media facilities; |
15 | (6) Condition of instructional materials, including textbooks, workbooks, audio-visual |
16 | materials, and laboratory materials; |
17 | (7) Types and condition of computers and computer software; |
18 | (8) Basic skills remediation programs; |
19 | (9) Drug, tobacco, and alcohol abuse programs; |
20 | (10) Multi-cultural education training for students and teachers; |
21 | (11) Global education; and |
22 | (12) Nutrition and wellness programs. |
23 | (o) Each school district and charter school shall file an annual report for the current school |
24 | year regarding implementation with the department on or before every November 1 in a format |
25 | determined by the board. The report shall include, but not be limited to, the following: |
26 | (1) The number of children receiving services within each disability category; |
27 | (2) The number of children, by grade level, within each disability category and the costs of |
28 | services provided by each such category for such children receiving their education in a publicly |
29 | operated day school program; |
30 | (3) The number of children, by grade level, within each disability category and the costs of |
31 | services provided by each category for these children receiving their education in a private day |
32 | setting; |
33 | (4) The number of children, by grade level, within each such disability category and the |
34 | costs of services provided by each such category for such children receiving their education in a |
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1 | private residential setting; |
2 | (5) The number of children who remain in the regular education program full-time; the |
3 | number of children who are removed from the regular classroom for up to twenty-five percent |
4 | (25%) of the day; the number of children who are removed from the regular classroom between |
5 | twenty-five percent (25%) and sixty percent (60%) of the day; |
6 | (6) The number of children who are placed in substantially separate classrooms on a regular |
7 | education school site; |
8 | (7) The number of children, ages three (3) and four (4) who are educated in integrated and |
9 | separate classrooms; and the assignment, by sex, national origin, economic status, and race, of |
10 | children by age level, to special education classes and the distribution of children residing in the |
11 | district, by sex, national origin, economic status, and race of children by age level; and |
12 | (8) The number of children, by grade level, receiving special education services who have |
13 | limited English proficiency. |
14 | (p) Each school district and charter school shall furnish in a timely manner such additional |
15 | information as the department shall request. |
16 | (q) Each school district required to provide an English language learners program shall file |
17 | the following information with the department annually: |
18 | (1) The type of English language learners programs provided; |
19 | (2) With regard to limited English proficient students: |
20 | (i) The number enrolled in each type of English language learners program; |
21 | (ii) The number enrolled in English as a second language who are not enrolled in another |
22 | English language learners program; |
23 | (iii) The results of basic skills, curriculum assessment, achievement, and language |
24 | proficiency testing, whether administered in English or in the native language; |
25 | (iv) The absentee, suspension, expulsion, dropout, and promotion rates; and |
26 | (v) The number of years each limited English proficient student has been enrolled in an |
27 | English language learners program; |
28 | (3) The number of students each year who have enrolled in institutions of higher education |
29 | and were formerly enrolled in an English language learners program; |
30 | (4) The academic progress in regular education of students who have completed an English |
31 | language learners program; |
32 | (5) For each limited English proficient student receiving special education, the number of |
33 | years in the school district prior to special education evaluation and the movement in special |
34 | education programs by program placement; |
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1 | (6) The number of limited English proficient students enrolled in programs of occupational |
2 | or vocational education; |
3 | (7) The name, national origin, native language, certificates held, language proficiency, |
4 | grade levels, and subjects taught by each teacher of an English language learners program, bilingual |
5 | aides or paraprofessionals, bilingual guidance or adjustment counselors, and bilingual school |
6 | psychologists; |
7 | (8) The per-pupil expenditures for each full-time equivalent student enrolled in an English |
8 | language learners program; |
9 | (9) The sources and amounts of all funds expended on students enrolled in English |
10 | language learners programs, broken down by local, state, and federal sources, and whether any such |
11 | funds expended supplanted, rather than supplemented, the local school district obligation; |
12 | (10) The participation of parents through parent advisory councils; |
13 | (11) Whether there were any complaints filed with any federal or state court or |
14 | administrative agency, since the program's inception, concerning the compliance with federal or |
15 | state minimum legal requirements, the disposition of the complaint, and the monitoring and |
16 | evaluation of any such agreement or court order relative to the complaint; and |
17 | (12) This information shall be filed in the form of the total for the school district as well as |
18 | categorized by school, grade, and language. |
19 | (r) The commissioner annually shall analyze and publish data reported by school districts |
20 | under this section regarding English language learners programs and limited English proficient |
21 | students. Publication shall include, but need not be limited to, availability on the department's |
22 | website. The commissioner shall submit annually a report to the committees of jurisdiction for |
23 | education in the house of representatives and senate on this data on a statewide and school district |
24 | basis including, but not limited to, by language group and type of English language learners |
25 | programs. |
26 | (s) For the purposes of this chapter, "local education agencies" shall include all of the |
27 | following within the state of Rhode Island: |
28 | (1) Public school districts; |
29 | (2) Regional school districts; |
30 | (3) State-operated schools; |
31 | (4) Regional collaborative schools; and |
32 | (5) Charter schools and mayoral academies. |
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1 | SECTION 2. This act shall take effect on June 30, 2022. |
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LC000153/SUB A/2 | |
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EXPLANATION | |
BY THE LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL | |
OF | |
A N A C T | |
RELATING TO EDUCATION -- EDUCATION ACCOUNTABILITY ACT | |
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1 | This act would require the principal at each school to provide an annual report on the |
2 | number of graduating students and the number applying for admission to college or vocational |
3 | training. The report would also include the total number of students completing a free application |
4 | for federal student aid ("FAFSA") form and the total number of students eligible to fill out and |
5 | submit a FAFSA form, and would provide data on the race, ethnicity, and gender of the students. |
6 | This act would take effect on June 30, 2022. |
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