Bill Text: GA HB186 | 2011-2012 | Regular Session | Introduced
NOTE: There are more recent revisions of this legislation. Read Latest Draft
Bill Title: High school students; expand career pathway options; provisions
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Republican 7-0)
Status: (Passed) 2011-05-13 - Effective Date [HB186 Detail]
Download: Georgia-2011-HB186-Introduced.html
Bill Title: High school students; expand career pathway options; provisions
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Republican 7-0)
Status: (Passed) 2011-05-13 - Effective Date [HB186 Detail]
Download: Georgia-2011-HB186-Introduced.html
11 LC
33 3932
House
Bill 186
By:
Representatives Nix of the
69th,
Davis of the
109th,
Coleman of the
97th,
Carter of the
175th,
Clark of the
104th,
and others
A
BILL TO BE ENTITLED
AN ACT
AN ACT
To
amend Article 6 of Chapter 2 of Title 20 of the Official Code of Georgia
Annotated, relating to the "Quality Basic Education Act," so as to provide and
expand career pathway options for high school students to ensure their career
and college readiness; to provide for legislative findings; to provide measures
to minimize the need for remedial course work for students in postsecondary
institutions; to require academic core standards to be embedded in career,
technical, and agricultural education courses; to provide for end-of-course
assessments for career, technical, and agricultural education courses with
embedded academic standards; to provide for course credit for demonstrated
proficiency; to amend Chapter 14 of Title 34 of the Official Code of Georgia
Annotated, relating to the Georgia Workforce Investment Board, so as to provide
for the establishment of soft skills certification by the Governor's Office of
Workforce Development; to provide for collaboration with the Department of
Education to enable high school students to attain soft skills certification; to
provide for related matters; to provide for an effective date; to repeal
conflicting laws; and for other purposes.
BE
IT ENACTED BY THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF GEORGIA:
SECTION
1.
The
General Assembly finds:
(1)
Our state's long-term prosperity depends on supporting an education system that
is designed to prepare our students for a global economy;
(2)
High school students must understand that they have options and pathways
available to them that provide for a high school diploma and prepare them for
success in postsecondary education, a career, or both;
(3)
Local school systems must provide every student with choices that are
academically rigorous and relevant to a career and to technical
pathways;
(4)
Both the Department of Education and postsecondary institutions must work
together so that academic courses that are embedded within career, technical,
and agricultural education courses (CTAE) and CTAE standards that are embedded
in academic courses are recognized and given appropriate academic credit at the
high school and postsecondary levels;
(5)
Teachers should be provided with professional development opportunities that
enforce the academically rigorous standards in relevant, project based
coursework;
(6)
High school students should clearly understand the options for dual high school
and postsecondary credit, and the state should properly fund these
options;
(7)
Every state education agency, postsecondary institution, and local school system
should have as a goal to graduate every student with postsecondary
credit;
(8)
Georgia's strategic industries must be partners in our public education system
(secondary and postsecondary) so that they are assured that our high school
graduates are prepared for success in the workforce;
(9)
Georgia's public education system must incorporate many different types of
assessments and certificates into their programs so that a student's skill level
is assessed and that it also has meaning to them for postsecondary and career
success; and
(10)
Georgia's students must understand that a high school diploma is the key to
success in the workforce.
SECTION
2.
Article
6 of Chapter 2 of Title 20 of the Official Code of Georgia Annotated, relating
to the "Quality Basic Education Act," is amended by revising Code Section
20-2-140, relating to the establishment of competencies and a uniformly
sequenced core curriculum, as follows:
"20-2-140.
(a)
The State Board of Education shall establish competencies that each student is
expected to master prior to completion of the student's public school education.
The state board shall also establish competencies for which each student should
be provided opportunities, at the discretion of the student and the student's
parents, to master. Based upon these foregoing competencies, the state board
shall adopt a uniformly sequenced core curriculum for grades kindergarten
through 12. Each local unit of administration shall include this uniformly
sequenced core curriculum as the basis for its own curriculum, although each
local unit may
sequence,
expand,
and enrich this curriculum to the extent it deems necessary and appropriate for
its students and communities.
(b)
Stronger coordination between high schools and institutions of higher education
is necessary to prepare students for more challenging postsecondary endeavors
and to lessen the need for academic remediation in college, thereby reducing the
costs of higher education for students, families, and the state. The State
Board of Education, the Board of Regents of the University System of Georgia,
and the Board of Technical and Adult Education shall develop policies to ensure
that students who complete the core curriculum established pursuant to this Code
section shall meet the requirements for postsecondary college admission. The
Board of Regents of the University System of Georgia and the Board of Technical
and Adult Education shall require their institutions to accept core curriculum
coursework for acceptance of credit at the postsecondary level. This shall apply
beginning with students entering school in the fall of
2011."
SECTION
3.
Said
article is further amended by adding new Code sections to read as
follows:
"20-2-159.1.
(a)
The competencies and curricula established for career, technical, and
agricultural education courses pursuant to Code Section 20-2-140 shall include
embedded standards in academic core subject areas, as appropriate. In
establishing such competencies and curricula, the state board shall work to
ensure that the coursework meets postsecondary requirements for acceptance of
credit for such coursework at the postsecondary level.
(b)
Local school systems and individual charter schools may develop and implement
career, technical, and agricultural courses with embedded standards in academic
core subjects areas including but not limited to English, language arts,
science, social studies, and mathematics.
(c)
Local school systems and individual charter schools may develop and implement
core academic subject areas such as but not limited to English, language arts,
science, social studies, and mathematics with embedded standards in career,
technical, and agricultural courses.
(d)
Students who complete a career, technical, or agricultural education course that
includes embedded standards in an academic core subject area for which an
end-of-course assessment has been adopted pursuant to Code Section 20-2-281
shall be given the opportunity to take such end-of-course assessment upon
completion of the career, technical, or agricultural education course, unless
such student has already passed such end-of-course assessment.
(e)
Students who successfully complete a course in career, technical, and
agricultural education that includes embedded standards in academic core subject
areas, as adopted or approved by the state board, shall receive course credit
for both the career, technical, and agricultural education course as well as for
the academic core coursework embedded in such course. Conversely, students who
successfully complete a course in an academic core subject area that includes
embedded standards in career, technical, and agricultural education, as adopted
or approved by the state board, shall receive course credit for both the
academic core subject course as well as for career, technical, and agricultural
education coursework embedded in such course.
20-2-159.2.
(a)
The State Board of Education, in consultation with the Board of Regents of the
University System of Georgia and the Board of Technical and Adult Education,
shall adopt a state-wide plan implementing methods for students to earn units of
high school credit based on a demonstration of subject area competency, instead
of or in combination with completing hours of classroom instruction. Such plan
shall ensure that credit for demonstrated proficiency is reported on student
transcripts in the same way that seat time credit is recorded. The state board
shall adopt the plan not later than June 30, 2011, and commence phasing in the
plan during the 2011-2012 school year. The plan shall include a standard method
for recording demonstrated proficiency on high school transcripts.
Implementation of the guidelines shall be done at the local school system and
charter school level.
(b)
Each local school system shall comply with the state board's plan adopted
pursuant to this Code section and shall award units of high school credit in
accordance with such plan. Local boards of education and charter schools shall
establish implementation policies and shall be prohibited from setting policies
that negate or otherwise prohibit access to such
plan."
SECTION
4.
Chapter
14 of Title 34 of the Official Code of Georgia Annotated, relating to the
Georgia Workforce Investment Board, is amended in Code Section 34-14-3, relating
to the establishment of the Governor's Office of Workforce Development, as
follows:
"34-14-3.
(a)(1)
The Governor's Office of Workforce Development is hereby established to
implement state workforce development policy as directed by the Governor and to
serve as staff to the board.
(2)
In addition, the office is authorized to establish certification in soft skills,
which may include, but not be limited to, skills relating to punctuality,
ability to learn, and ability to work in a team, as a complement to the current
assessment system utilized in Georgia to measure an individual worker's skill
and knowledge in the areas of applied mathematics, reading for information, and
locating information to determine and indicate to potential employers such
worker's level of work readiness. Such certification is intended to assist both
the existing workforce as well as the state's emerging workforce. The office is
authorized to explore local, national, and international soft skills programs
for the purpose of developing a soft skills certification system.
(3)
The office is authorized and encouraged to work with the state's emerging
workforce, including rising and graduating high school students, with the goal
that, upon graduation, high school students have both a diploma and
certification in soft skills and work readiness to enable them to be successful
in postsecondary education, a career pathway, or both. The office may
collaborate with the Department of Education to facilitate coordination with
high schools so that high school students can attain certification in soft
skills and work readiness.
(b)
The Governor's Office of Workforce Development shall have an executive director
appointed by the Governor whose duties are to implement state-wide workforce
development policy as directed by the Governor, to serve as workforce
development policy advisor to the Governor, and to serve as executive director
to the board.
(c)
The Governor's Office of Workforce Development shall be attached to the Office
of Planning and Budget for administrative purposes only."
SECTION
5.
This
Act shall become effective upon its approval by the Governor or upon its
becoming law without such approval.
SECTION
6.
All
laws and parts of laws in conflict with this Act are repealed.