Bill Text: CA AB3096 | 2017-2018 | Regular Session | Amended
NOTE: There are more recent revisions of this legislation. Read Latest Draft
Bill Title: School Accountability Report Card.
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 1-0)
Status: (Engrossed - Dead) 2018-08-16 - In committee: Held under submission. [AB3096 Detail]
Download: California-2017-AB3096-Amended.html
(1)The Superintendent shall develop a standardized School Accountability Report Card pursuant to Section 33126 intended to simplify the process
and make the information more meaningful to the public.
Section 35256 of the Education Code is amended to read:
Section 35256.1 of the Education Code is repealed.
Section 35258 of the Education Code is amended to read:
Section 41409 of the Education Code is amended to read:
Section 41409.3 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 10.SEC. 13.
The Legislature finds and declares that this act furthers the purposes of the Classroom Instructional Improvement and Accountability Act.
If the Commission on State Mandates determines that this act contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement to local agencies and school districts for those costs shall be made pursuant to Part 7 (commencing with Section 17500) of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Government Code.
Bill Title: School Accountability Report Card.
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 1-0)
Status: (Engrossed - Dead) 2018-08-16 - In committee: Held under submission. [AB3096 Detail]
Download: California-2017-AB3096-Amended.html
Amended
IN
Assembly
May 01, 2018 |
Amended
IN
Assembly
March 22, 2018 |
CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE—
2017–2018 REGULAR SESSION
Assembly Bill | No. 3096 |
Introduced by Assembly Member Rubio |
February 16, 2018 |
An act to amend Sections 32286, 33126, 33126.1, 33352, 35256, 35258, and 41409 41409, 56366, and 60800 of, and to repeal Sections 33126.15, 35256.1, and 41409.3 of, the Education Code, relating to school accountability.
LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
AB 3096, as amended, Rubio.
School Accountability Report Card.
(1) The Classroom Instructional Improvement and Accountability Act, an initiative approved by the voters as Proposition 98 at the November 8, 1988, statewide general election, requires the governing board of each school maintaining an elementary or secondary school to develop and cause to be implemented for each school in the school district a school accountability report card that includes specified information. The act prohibits any change to its provisions, except a change to further its purposes enacted by a bill passed by a vote of 2/3 of the Legislature and signed by the Governor.
This bill would revise and recast the provisions relating to the School Accountability Report Card. The bill would revise the provisions
requiring specified information to be included in the School Accountability Report Card. The bill would require the Superintendent of Public Instruction to develop a standardized School Accountability Report Card to simplify the process and make the information more meaningful to the public. The bill would require the Superintendent to annually post post, to the extent possible, the completed and viewable School Accountability Report Card for each school on the Internet, on or before February 1.
The bill would require the governing board of each school district to annually publicize the availability of the School Accountability Report Card for each school in the school district, and would require each school district that is connected to the Internet to provide a link to the
information contained in the School Accountability Report Card on the school district’s Internet Web site. To the extent the bill would impose additional requirements on school districts, the bill would impose a state-mandated local program.
The bill would state that the Legislature finds and declares that the changes made to the act by these provisions further the purposes of the act.
(2) This bill would also delete obsolete provisions and make clarifying and conforming changes.
(3) The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.
This bill would provide that, if the Commission on State Mandates determines that the bill
contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement for those costs shall be made pursuant to the statutory provisions noted above.
Digest Key
Vote: 2/3 Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: YESBill Text
The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
SECTION 1.
Section 32286 of the Education Code is amended to read:32286.
(a) Each school shall adopt its comprehensive school safety plan by March 1, 2000, and shall review and update its plan by March 1, every year thereafter. A new school campus that begins offering classes to pupils after March 1, 2001, shall adopt a comprehensive school safety plan within one year of initiating operation, and shall review and update its plan by March 1, every year thereafter.(b) Commencing with the 2019–20 school year, each school annually shall report on the status of its school safety plan, including a description of its key elements, for purposes of the California Longitudinal Pupil Achievement Data System, or any successor data system.
the key elements, to the Superintendent on or before October 31.
(c) The department shall report the status of the school safety plan, including a description of the key elements, for each school in the annual School Accountability Report Card prepared pursuant to Sections 33126 and 33126.1.
SEC. 2.
Section 33126 of the Education Code is amended to read:33126.
(a) The School Accountability Report Card shall provide data by which a parent can make meaningful comparisons between public schools that will enable him or her to make informed decisions on the school in which to enroll his or her children.(b) The School Accountability Report Card shall include, but is not limited to, assessment of the following school conditions:
(1) (A) Pupil achievement by grade level, as measured by the statewide assessment system pursuant to Article 4 (commencing with Section 60640) of Chapter 5 of Part 33,
33 of Division 4, or any successor assessment approved by the state board.
(B) Pupil achievement by grade level, as measured by the results of the statewide assessment pursuant to Section 60800, or any successor assessment approved by the state board.
(2) High school dropout rates and high school graduation rates.
(3) Actual expenditures per pupil and types of services funded. This information shall include the per-pupil expenditures of federal, state, and local funds, including actual personnel expenditures and actual nonpersonnel expenditures of federal, state, and local funds, disaggregated by source of funds, for each local educational agency and each school served by the local educational agency.
funds.
(4) The distribution of class sizes at the schoolsite by grade level and the average class size, as reported by the California Longitudinal Pupil Achievement Data System, or any successor data system.
(5) The total number of the school’s fully credentialed teachers, the number of teachers relying upon emergency credentials, the number of teachers working without credentials, any assignment of teachers outside their subject areas of competence, misassignments, including misassignments of teachers of English learners, and the number of vacant teacher positions for the most recent three-year
period, positions, subject to the availability of the data to the Superintendent.
(A)For purposes of this paragraph, “vacant teacher position” means a position to which a single-designated certificated employee has not been assigned at the beginning of the year for an entire year or, if the position is for a one-semester course, a position of which a single-designated certificated employee has not been assigned at the beginning of a semester for an entire semester.
(B)
(A) For purposes of this paragraph, “misassignment” means the placement of a certificated employee educator, which has the same meaning as certificated person as defined in Section 44006, in a teaching or services position for which the employee certificated educator does not hold a legally recognized certificate or credential or
credential, as defined in Section 44002, with the appropriate authorization,
the placement of a certificated employee educator in a teaching or services position that the employee certificated educator is not otherwise authorized by statute to hold. hold, or a vacant teacher position as defined in subparagraph (B).
(B) For purposes of
this paragraph, “vacant teacher position” means a position to which a single-designated certificated educator has not been assigned at the beginning of the year for an entire year or, if the position is for a one-semester course, a position to which a single-designated certificated educator has not been assigned at the beginning of a semester for an entire semester.
(6) The availability number of qualified personnel to provide counseling and other pupil support services.
(7) Suspension and expulsion rates.
(8) The percentage of pupils who have
completed course requirements for entrance to the University of California and the California State University, including the course requirements for high school graduation pursuant to Section 51225.3, and the percentage of pupils enrolled in those courses, as reported by the California Longitudinal Pupil Achievement Data System, or any successor data system.
(9) The number of advanced placement courses offered, by subject.
(10) Career technical education data measures, including all of the following:
(A) A list of career technical education courses offered by the school.
(B) The number of pupils participating in career technical education.
(C) The percentage of pupils that complete a career technical education program and earn a high school diploma.
(D) The percentage of career technical education courses that are sequenced or articulated between a school and institutions of postsecondary education.
(11) The status of the school safety plan, including a description of the key elements, pursuant to Section 32286.
(c) If the Commission on State Mandates finds a school district is eligible for a reimbursement of costs incurred complying with this section, the school district shall be
reimbursed.
(d) It is the intent of the Legislature that schools make a concerted effort to notify parents of the purpose of the School Accountability Report Cards, as described in this section, to ensure that local educational agencies with access to the Internet make the report cards available through the
Internet, and to ensure that administrators and teachers are available to answer any questions regarding the report cards.
SEC. 3.
Section 33126.1 of the Education Code is amended to read:33126.1.
(a)(2)The School Accountability Report Card shall include a description of data available on the DataQuest Internet Web site of the department, including the Uniform Resource Locator for that Internet Web site.
(b) When the School Accountability Report Card for a school is completed, it should enable parents and guardians to compare the manner in which local schools compare to other schools within that school district as well as other schools in the state.
(c) The
Superintendent shall develop
and make available definitions for inclusion in the School Accountability Report Card as well as a timetable for the further development of definitions and data collection procedures. Card.
(d) The Superintendent annually shall post post, to the extent possible, the completed and viewable School Accountability Report Card for each school pursuant to Sections 33126 and 35256 on the Internet, on or before February 1.
The completed and viewable School Accountability Report Card posted by the Superintendent shall include the data specified in subdivision (b) of Section 33126 to the extent possible. If the required data are not included, the Superintendent shall report the reasons to the Department of Finance and the appropriate policy and budget committees of the Legislature with an explanation of why and a description of corrective actions. The School Accountability Report Card shall be designed to allow schools or school districts to download or print the School Accountability Report Card from the Internet. The department shall establish model guidelines and safeguards that may be used by school districts with secured access only for those school officials authorized to make modifications.
(e) The department shall maintain current Internet links with the Internet Web sites of local educational agencies pursuant to subdivision (a) of Section 35258.
(e)
(f) A school for which a School Accountability Report Card is not available shall report the data for its School Accountability Report Card in a manner that is consistent with the definitions developed pursuant to subdivision (c).
(f)
(g) The Superintendent shall provide recommendations for changes to the California Longitudinal Pupil Achievement Data System, or a successor data system, and other data collection mechanisms to ensure that the information will be preserved and available in the future.
(g)
(h) The Superintendent shall monitor the compliance of local educational agencies with the requirements contained in this section, subdivision (c) of Section 35256, and
Section 35258.
SEC. 4.
Section 33126.15 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 5.
Section 33352 of the Education Code is amended to read:33352.
(a) The department shall exercise general supervision over the courses of physical education in elementary and secondary schools of the state; advise school officials, school boards, and teachers in the development and improvement of their physical education and activity programs; and investigate the work in physical education in the public schools.(b) The department shall ensure that the data collected through the categorical program monitoring indicates the extent to which each school within the jurisdiction of a school district or county office of education does all of the following that are applicable to the school:
(1) Provides Provides
instruction in physical education for a total period of time of not less than 200 minutes each 10 schooldays to pupils in grades 1 to 6, inclusive, as required pursuant to paragraph (7) of subdivision (g) (a) of Section 51210.
(2) Provides Provides instruction in physical education for a total period of time of not less than 400 minutes each 10 schooldays to pupils in grades 7 to 12, inclusive, as required pursuant to subdivision (a) of
Section 51222.
(3) Provides instruction in physical education for a total period of time of not less than 200 minutes each 10 schooldays to pupils in an elementary school maintaining grades 1 to 8, inclusive, as required pursuant to Section 51233.
51223.
(4) Conducts physical fitness testing of pupils as required pursuant to Chapter 6 (commencing with Section 60800) of Part 33. 33 of Division 4.
(5) Includes the results of physical fitness testing of pupils in the school accountability report card School Accountability Report Card as required pursuant to subparagraph (C)
(B) of paragraph (1) of subdivision (b) of Section 33126.
(6) Offers pupils exempted from required attendance in physical education courses pursuant to paragraph (1) of either subdivision (b) or (c) of Section 51241 a variety of elective physical education courses of not less than 400 minutes every 10 schooldays.
(7) Provides a course of study in physical education to pupils in any of grades 9 to 12, inclusive, that includes a developmentally appropriate sequence of instruction, including the effects of physical activity upon dynamic health, the mechanics of body movement, aquatics, gymnastics and tumbling, individual and dual sports, rhythms and dance, team sports, and combatives.
(8) Provides instruction in physical education to pupils that provides equal opportunities for
participation regardless of gender.
(9) Provides instruction in physical education to pupils in any of grades 1 to 12, inclusive, by physical education teachers who hold appropriate teaching credentials issued by the Commission on Teacher Credentialing.
(c) The department annually shall do both of the following:
(1) Submit a report to the Governor and the Legislature that summarizes the data collected through categorical program monitoring regarding the items described in paragraphs (1) to (9), inclusive, of subdivision (b).
(2) Post a summary of the data collected through categorical program monitoring regarding the items described in paragraphs (1) to (9), inclusive, of subdivision (b) on the Internet Web site of the
department.
SEC. 5.SEC. 6.
Section 35256 of the Education Code is amended to read:35256.
School Accountability Report Card(a) A School Accountability Report Card shall be maintained for each public elementary or secondary school in the state.
(b) The School Accountability Report Card shall include the conditions listed in
Sections 33126 and 33126.1.
(c) The governing board of each school district annually shall
publicize the availability of the School Accountability Report Card for each school in the school district, and notify parents or guardians of pupils that a hard copy will be provided upon request.
SEC. 6.SEC. 7.
Section 35256.1 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 7.SEC. 8.
Section 35258 of the Education Code is amended to read:35258.
(a) Each school district that is connected to the Internet shall provide a link to the information contained in the School Accountability Report Card developed pursuant to Sections 33126 and 33126.1 on the school district Internet Web site. The School Accountability Report Card information shall be updated annually pursuant to Section 33126.1. In order to ensure the currency of these Internet links, a school district that provides access to the School Accountability Report Card through the Internet shall furnish a current Uniform Resource Locator (URL) for its Internet Web site to the Superintendent.(b) Commencing with the 2008–09 school year, each school district not connected to the Internet shall make hard copies of its annually updated School Accountability Report Card available, pursuant to Section 33126.1 and subdivision (c) of Section
35256.
(c) The School Accountability Report Card shall have a field in which each school district may include additional information. A school district shall use the field to report the data required by paragraph (5) of subdivision (b) of Section 33126 if it is not provided by the Superintendent.
SEC. 8.SEC. 9.
Section 41409 of the Education Code is amended to read:41409.
(a) Commencing with the 1988–89 fiscal year, and annually thereafter, the Superintendent shall determine the statewide average percentage of school district expenditures that are allocated to the salaries of administrative personnel, as that term is defined in accounts 1200, 1300, 1700, 1800, and 2200 in Part I of the California School Accounting Manual published by the department. For school districts using the Standardized Account Code Structure, the term salaries of administrative personnel are defined in object accounts 1300 and 2300 in Part II of the California School Accounting Manual. The Superintendent also shall determine the statewide average percentage of school district expenditures that are allocated to the salaries of teachers, as defined in account 1100 in Parts I and II of the California School Accounting Manual. The statewide averages shall be calculated for the following types and sizes of school districts:District | ADA |
Elementary
........................
| less than 1,000 |
Elementary
........................
| 1,000 to 4,999 |
Elementary
........................
| 5,000 and greater |
High School
........................
| less than 1,000 |
High School
........................
| 1,000 to 3,999 |
High School
........................
| 4,000 and greater |
Unified
........................
| less than 1,500 |
Unified
........................
| 1,500 to 4,999 |
Unified
........................
| 5,000 to 9,999 |
Unified
........................
| 10,000 to 19,999 |
Unified
........................
| 20,000 and
greater |
(b) Commencing with the 1988–89 fiscal year, and annually thereafter, the Superintendent shall determine the statewide average salary, by size and type of school district, for the following:
(1) Beginning, mid-range, and highest salary paid to teachers.
(2) Schoolsite principals.
(3) District superintendents.
SEC. 9.SEC. 10.
Section 41409.3 of the Education Code is repealed.SEC. 11.
Section 56366 of the Education Code is amended to read:56366.
It is the intent of the Legislature that the role of a nonpublic, nonsectarian school or agency shall be maintained and continued as an alternative special education service available to a local educational agency and parents.(a) The master contract for nonpublic, nonsectarian school or agency services shall be developed in accordance with the following provisions:
(1) The master contract shall specify the general administrative and financial agreements, including teacher-to-pupil ratios, between the nonpublic, nonsectarian school or agency and the local educational agency to provide the special education and designated instruction and services, as well as transportation specified in each pupil’s individualized
education program. The administrative provisions of the contract also shall include procedures for recordkeeping and documentation, and the maintenance of school records by the contracting local educational agency to ensure that appropriate high school graduation credit is received by each pupil. The contract may allow for partial or full-time attendance at the nonpublic, nonsectarian school.
(2) (A) The master contract shall include an individual services agreement for each pupil placed by a local educational agency that will be negotiated for the length of time for which nonpublic, nonsectarian school or agency special education and designated instruction and services are specified in the pupil’s individualized education program.
(B) The master contract shall include a description of the process being utilized by the local educational agency to oversee and
evaluate placements in nonpublic, nonsectarian schools, as required by federal law. This description shall include a method for evaluating whether each pupil is making appropriate educational progress. At least once every year, the local educational agency shall do all of the following and, to the extent possible, the following shall be conducted as part of the development and provision of an individualized education program:
(i) Evaluate the educational progress of each pupil placed in a nonpublic, nonsectarian school, including all state assessment results pursuant to the requirements of Section 52052.
(ii) Consider whether or not the needs of the pupil continue to be best met at the nonpublic, nonsectarian school and whether changes to the individualized education program of the pupil are necessary, including whether the pupil may be transitioned to a public school setting.
This consideration shall be made at the meeting required by subdivision (d) of Section 56343.
(C) In the case of a nonpublic, nonsectarian school that is owned, operated by, or associated with a licensed children’s institution, the master contract shall include a method for evaluating whether the nonpublic, nonsectarian school is in compliance with the mandate set forth in Section 56366.9 of this code and subdivision (b) of Section 1501.1 of the Health and Safety Code.
(3) (A) Changes in educational instruction, services, or placement provided under contract may only be made on the basis of revisions to a pupil’s individualized education program.
(B) At any time during the term of the contract or individual services agreement, the parent, the nonpublic, nonsectarian school or agency, or the
local educational agency may request a review of a pupil’s individualized education program by the individualized education program team. Changes in the administrative or financial agreements of the master contract that do not alter the individual services agreement that outlines each pupil’s educational instruction, services, or placement may be made at any time during the term of the contract as mutually agreed by the nonpublic, nonsectarian school or agency and the local educational agency.
(4) The master contract or individual services agreement may be terminated for cause. The cause shall not be the availability of a public class initiated during the period of the contract unless the parent agrees to the transfer of the pupil to a public school program. To terminate the contract either party shall give 20 days’ notice.
(5) The nonpublic, nonsectarian school or agency shall
provide all services specified in an individualized education program, unless the nonpublic, nonsectarian school or agency and the local educational agency agree otherwise in the contract or individual services agreement.
(6) Related services provided pursuant to a nonpublic, nonsectarian agency master contract shall only be provided during the period of a pupil’s regular or extended school year program, or both, unless otherwise specified by the pupil’s individualized education program.
(7) The nonpublic, nonsectarian school or agency shall report attendance of pupils receiving special education and designated instruction and services, as defined by Section 46307, for purposes of submitting a warrant for tuition to each contracting local educational agency.
(8) (A) A nonpublic, nonsectarian
school is subject to the alternative accountability system developed pursuant to Section 52052 in the same manner as public schools and each pupil placed in the nonpublic, nonsectarian school by a local educational agency shall be tested by qualified staff of the nonpublic, nonsectarian school in accordance with that accountability program. The test results shall be reported by the nonpublic, nonsectarian school to the department.
(B) Beginning with the 2006–07 school year testing cycle, each nonpublic, nonsectarian school shall determine its California Assessment of Student Performance and Progress period subject to subdivisions (b) and (c) of Section 60640. The nonpublic, nonsectarian school shall determine this period based on completion of 85 percent of the instructional year at that nonpublic, nonsectarian school, plus and minus 10 days, resulting in a 21-day period. Each nonpublic, nonsectarian school shall notify the district of
residence of a pupil enrolled in the school of its testing period. Staff at the nonpublic, nonsectarian school who administer the assessments shall attend the regular testing training sessions provided by the district of residence. If staff from a nonpublic, nonsectarian school have received training from one local educational agency, that training shall be sufficient for all local educational agencies that send pupils to the nonpublic, nonsectarian school. The district of residence shall order testing materials for its pupils that have been placed in the nonpublic, nonsectarian school. The board shall adopt regulations to facilitate the distribution of and collection of testing materials.
(9) With respect to a nonpublic, nonsectarian school, the school shall prepare a school accountability report card
School Accountability Report Card in accordance with Section 33126. 33126 and the definitions developed by the Superintendent pursuant to subdivision (c) of Section 33126.1.
(b) (1) The master contract or individual services agreement shall not include special education transportation provided through the use of services or equipment owned, leased, or contracted by a local educational agency for pupils enrolled in the nonpublic, nonsectarian school or agency unless provided directly or subcontracted by that nonpublic, nonsectarian school or agency.
(2) The Superintendent shall withhold 20 percent of the amount apportioned to a
local educational agency for costs related to the provision of nonpublic, nonsectarian school or agency placements if the Superintendent finds that the local educational agency is in noncompliance with this subdivision. This amount shall be withheld from the apportionments in the fiscal year following the Superintendent’s finding of noncompliance. The Superintendent shall take other appropriate actions to prevent noncompliant practices from occurring and report to the Legislature on those actions.
(c) (1) If a pupil is enrolled in a nonpublic, nonsectarian school or agency with the approval of the local educational agency prior to agreement to a contract or individual services agreement, the local educational agency shall issue a warrant, upon submission of an attendance report and claim, for an amount equal to the number of creditable days of attendance at the per diem tuition rate agreed upon prior to
before the enrollment of the pupil. This provision shall be allowed for 90 days during which time the contract shall be consummated.
(2) If after 60 days the master contract or individual services agreement has not been finalized as prescribed in paragraph (1) of subdivision (a), either party may appeal to the county superintendent of schools, if the county superintendent of schools is not participating in the local plan involved in the nonpublic, nonsectarian school or agency contract, or the Superintendent, if the county superintendent of schools is participating in the local plan involved in the contract, to negotiate the contract. Within 30 days of receipt of this appeal, the county superintendent of schools or the Superintendent, or his or her designee, shall mediate the formulation of a contract, which shall be binding upon both parties.
(d) A master contract for special education and related services provided by a nonpublic, nonsectarian school or agency may shall not be authorized under this part, unless the school or agency has been certified as meeting those standards relating to the required special education and specified related services and facilities for individuals with exceptional needs. The certification shall result in the nonpublic, nonsectarian school or agency receiving approval to educate pupils under this part for a period no longer than 18 months from the date of the initial approval.
(e) By September 30, 1998, the procedures, methods, and regulations for the purposes of contracting for nonpublic, nonsectarian school and agency services pursuant to this
section and for reimbursement pursuant to Sections 56836.165 and 56836.20 shall be developed by the Superintendent in consultation with statewide organizations representing providers of special education and designated instruction and services. The regulations shall be established by rules and regulations issued by the board.
SEC. 12.
Section 60800 of the Education Code is amended to read:60800.
(a) During the month of February, March, April, or May, the governing board of each school district maintaining any of grades 5, 7, and 9 shall administer to each pupil in those grades the physical performance test designated by the state board. Each pupil with a physical disability and each pupil who is physically unable to take all of the physical performance test shall be given as much of the test as his or her condition will permit.(b) Upon request of the department, a school district shall submit to the department, at least once every two years, the results of its physical performance testing.
(c) Pupils shall be provided with their individual results after completing the physical performance
testing. The test results may be provided orally as the pupil completes the testing.
(d) The governing board of a school district Superintendent shall report the aggregate results of its physical performance testing administered pursuant to this section in its annual school accountability report card required by the School Accountability Report Card pursuant to Sections 33126 and 35256.
33126.1.