Z-0705.3 _______________________________________________
HOUSE BILL 1912
_______________________________________________
State of Washington 52nd Legislature 1991 Regular Session
By Representatives Peery, Brough, Ebersole, Holland, Dorn, Vance and Inslee; by request of Superintendent of Public Instruction and Board of Education.
Read first time February 14, 1991. Referred to Committee on Education.
AN ACT Relating to education; amending RCW 28A.150.200, 28A.150.220, 28A.150.230, 28A.150.260, 28A.150.290, 28A.195.010, 28A.230.090, 28A.230.100, and 28A.170.100; adding new sections to chapter 28A.150 RCW; and repealing RCW 28A.150.210, 28A.230.110, 28A.305.140, 28A.320.210, and 28A.320.220.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON:
NEW SECTION. Sec. 1. RCW 28A.150.200 through 28A.150.295 and sections 1 through 3, 5, and 14 of this act shall be known and cited as the local control of education act.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 2. The public policy purpose of the local control of education act is to provide local school district boards of directors greater authority to determine the fundamental policies and practices related to education, including the authority to structure the education program to meet the needs of students as defined by the patrons in local communities. In order to accomplish this public policy goal it is necessary, within the local control of education act, to repeal or amend laws that impede local control of schools. Specifically, under the local control of education act, unnecessary state control components of the basic education act of 1977 are repealed and replaced with basic program of education requirements, as specified in RCW 28A.150.220.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 3. The board of directors of each school district may exercise the following powers:
(1) Such powers as expressly authorized by law;
(2) Such powers as are necessary or fairly implied in powers expressly authorized by law; and
(3) The additional broad discretionary power to determine and adopt written policies and rules not in conflict with other law that provide for the development and implementation of programs, activities, services, or practices that the board determines will:
(a) Benefit the education, health, or safety of citizens; or
(b) Promote the effective, efficient, or safe maintenance and operation of school district programs, activities, services, or practices.
The adoption of any such policy or rule shall be preceded by notice in accordance with the open public meeting law of chapter 42.30 RCW which furthermore sets forth or reasonably describes the proposed policy or regulation, plus a reasonable opportunity for public written and oral comment and consideration of the comment by the board of directors.
Sec. 4. RCW 28A.150.200 and 1990 c 33 s 104 are each amended to read as follows:
((This
1977 amendatory act shall be known and may be cited as "The Washington
Basic Education Act of 1977." The program evolving from the Basic
Education Act shall include (1) the goal of the school system as defined in RCW
28A.150.210, (2) those program requirements enumerated in RCW 28A.150.220, and
(3) the determination and distribution of state resources as defined in RCW
28A.150.250 and 28A.150.260.))
The
requirements of the ((Basic Education Act)) local control of
education act are deemed by the legislature to comply with the requirements
of Article IX, section 1 of the state Constitution, which states that "It
is the paramount duty of the state to make ample provision for the education of
all children residing within its borders, without distinction or preference on
account of race, color, caste, or sex," and are adopted pursuant to
Article IX, section 2 of the state Constitution, which states that "The
legislature shall provide for a general and uniform system of public schools."
NEW SECTION. Sec. 5. Unless the context clearly requires otherwise, the definitions in the section shall apply throughout RCW 28A.150.200 through 28A.150.295 and sections 1 through 3 and 14 of this act.
(1) "Instructional hours" means those hours students are provided the opportunity to engage in educational activity planned by and under the direction of school district staff, as directed by the administration and board of directors of the district, inclusive of intermissions for class changes, recess, and teacher/parent-guardian conferences that are planned and scheduled by the district for the purpose of discussing students' educational needs or progress, and exclusive of time actually spent for meals.
(2) "Instruction in work force skills" means applied learning that strengthens and reinforces an individual's academic knowledge, critical thinking, problem-solving skills, and work ethics, and thereby develops employability, occupational skills, and the ability to manage home and work responsibilities necessary for economic independence. Such instruction shall include but is not limited to technology education/ industrial arts, home and family life education, business education, marketing education, agricultural education, health occupations education, trade and industrial education, and technical education.
Sec. 6. RCW 28A.150.220 and 1990 c 33 s 105 are each amended to read as follows:
(1) ((For
the purposes of this section and RCW 28A.150.250 and 28A.150.260:
(a)
The term "total program hour offering" shall mean those hours when
students are provided the opportunity to engage in educational activity planned
by and under the direction of school district staff, as directed by the
administration and board of directors of the district, inclusive of
intermissions for class changes, recess and teacher/parent‑guardian
conferences which are planned and scheduled by the district for the purpose of
discussing students' educational needs or progress, and exclusive of time
actually spent for meals.
(b)
"Instruction in work skills" shall include instruction in one or more
of the following areas: Industrial arts, home and family life education,
business and office education, distributive education, agricultural education,
health occupations education, vocational education, trade and industrial
education, technical education and career education.
(2))) The
basic program of education provided by the state, in conformance with Article
IX, section 1 of the state Constitution, shall consist of the following:
(a) The basic education allowance to school districts as provided in RCW 28A.150.100, 28A.150.250, 28A.150.260, and 28A.150.410;
(b) The appropriation for handicapped programs as provided in RCW 28A.150.390 and the requirements related therein within chapter 28A.155 RCW;
(c) The part-time student enrollment as provided in RCW 28A.150.350;
(d) The student transportation allocations as provided in RCW 28A.160.150, 28A.160.160, 28A.160.180, 28A.160.190, and 28A.160.200;
(e) The learning assistance program as provided in chapter 28A.165 RCW;
(f) The transitional bilingual instructional program as provided in chapter 28A.180 RCW;
(g) A program of education in school districts with high schools of sufficient size, scope, and quality to permit students enrolled therein to meet graduation requirements established by law or rule of the state board of education;
(h)
Satisfaction of the basic education ((goal)) program requirements
identified in ((RCW 28A.150.210)) section 2 of this 1991 act
shall be considered to be implemented by the following program ((requirements)):
(((a)))
(i) Each school district shall make available to all students enrolled
in kindergarten at least a total ((program)) instructional
offering of four hundred fifty hours. The program shall include instruction
in reading, arithmetic, and language skills ((and such other
subjects and such activities as the school district shall determine to be
appropriate for the education of the school district's students enrolled in
such program));
(((b)))
(ii) Each school district shall make available to students enrolled
in grades one through ((three)) twelve, at least a district-wide
annual average total ((program)) instructional hour offering
of ((two thousand seven hundred)) one thousand hours. ((A
minimum of ninety‑five percent of the total program hour offerings)) Effective
May 1, 1992, a school district may schedule the last thirty instructional hours
of any school year for noninstructional purposes in the case of students who
are graduating from high school, including, but not limited to, the observance
of graduation and early release from school upon the request of a student, and
all such students may be claimed as full-time equivalent students to the extent
they could otherwise have been so claimed for the purposes of RCW 28A.150.250
and 28A.150.260. The state board of education may define alternatives to
classroom instructional time for students in grades nine through twelve
enrolled in alternative learning experiences. The state board of education
shall establish rules to determine annual average instructional hours for
districts including fewer than twelve grades. The program shall ((be in
the basic skills areas of)) include, in one or more of the grades one
through twelve, instruction in reading/language arts (((which may
include)), foreign languages(())), mathematics, social studies,
science, music, art, health ((and)), physical education, and
work force skills. The requirements in this subsection may be met through
interdisciplinary offerings. ((The remaining five percent of the total
program hour offerings may include such subjects and activities as the school
district shall determine to be appropriate for the education of the school
district's students in such grades;
(c)
Each school district shall make available to students in grades four through
six at least a total program hour offering of two thousand nine hundred seventy
hours. A minimum of ninety percent of the total program hour offerings shall
be in the basic skills areas of reading/language arts (which may include
foreign languages), mathematics, social studies, science, music, art, health
and physical education. The remaining ten percent of the total program hour
offerings may include such subjects and activities as the school district shall
determine to be appropriate for the education of the school district's students
in such grades;
(d)
Each school district shall make available to students in grades seven through
eight, at least a total program hour offering of one thousand nine hundred
eighty hours. A minimum of eighty‑five percent of the total program hour
offerings shall be in the basic skills areas of reading/language arts (which
may include foreign languages), mathematics, social studies, science, music,
art, health and physical education. A minimum of ten percent of the total
program hour offerings shall be in the area of work skills. The remaining five
percent of the total program hour offerings may include such subjects and
activities as the school district shall determine to be appropriate for the
education of the school district's students in such grades;
(e)
Each school district shall make available to students in grades nine through
twelve at least a total program hour offering of four thousand three hundred
twenty hours. A minimum of sixty percent of the total program hour offerings
shall be in the basic skills areas of language arts, foreign language,
mathematics, social studies, science, music, art, health and physical
education. A minimum of twenty percent of the total program hour offerings
shall be in the area of work skills. The remaining twenty percent of the total
program hour offerings may include traffic safety or such subjects and
activities as the school district shall determine to be appropriate for the
education of the school district's students in such grades, with not less than
one‑half thereof in basic skills and/or work skills: PROVIDED, That each
school district shall have the option of including grade nine within the
program hour offering requirements of grades seven and eight so long as such
requirements for grades seven through nine are increased to two thousand nine
hundred seventy hours and such requirements for grades ten through twelve are
decreased to three thousand two hundred forty hours.
(3)
In order to provide flexibility to the local school districts in the setting of
their curricula, and in order to maintain the intent of this legislation, which
is to stress the instruction of basic skills and work skills, any local school
district may establish minimum course mix percentages that deviate by up to
five percentage points above or below those minimums required by subsection (2)
of this section, so long as the total program hour requirement is still met.
(4))) (2)
Nothing contained in subsection (((2))) (1)(h) of this section
shall be construed to require individual students to attend school for any
particular number of hours per day or to take any particular courses.
(((5)))
(3) Each school district's kindergarten through twelfth grade basic
educational program shall be accessible to all students who are five years of
age, as provided by RCW 28A.225.160, and less than twenty‑one years of
age ((and shall consist of a minimum of one hundred eighty school days per
school year in such grades as are conducted by a school district, and one
hundred eighty half‑days of instruction, or equivalent, in kindergarten:
PROVIDED, That effective May 1, 1979, a school district may schedule the last
five school days of the one hundred and eighty day school year for
noninstructional purposes in the case of students who are graduating from high
school, including, but not limited to, the observance of graduation and early
release from school upon the request of a student, and all such students may be
claimed as a full time equivalent student to the extent they could otherwise
have been so claimed for the purposes of RCW 28A.150.250 and 28A.150.260)).
(((6)))
(4) The state board of education shall adopt rules to implement and
ensure compliance with the program requirements imposed by this section, RCW
28A.150.250 and 28A.150.260, and such related supplemental program approval
requirements as the state board may establish((: PROVIDED, That each school
district board of directors shall establish the basis and means for determining
and monitoring the district's compliance with the basic skills and work skills
percentage and course requirements of this section. The certification of the
board of directors and the superintendent of a school district that the district
is in compliance with such basic skills and work skills requirements may be
accepted by the superintendent of public instruction and the state board of
education.
(7)
Handicapped education programs, vocational‑technical institute programs,
state institution and state residential school programs, all of which programs
are conducted for the common school age, kindergarten through secondary school
program students encompassed by this section, shall be exempt from the basic
skills and work skills percentage and course requirements of this section in
order that the unique needs, abilities or limitations of such students may be
met.
(8)
Any school district may petition the state board of education for a reduction
in the total program hour offering requirements for one or more of the grade
level groupings specified in this section. The state board of education shall
grant all such petitions that are accompanied by an assurance that the minimum
total program hour offering requirements in one or more other grade level
groupings will be exceeded concurrently by no less than the number of hours of
the reduction)).
Sec. 7. RCW 28A.150.230 and 1990 c 33 s 106 are each amended to read as follows:
(1) It is the intent and purpose of this section to guarantee that each common school district board of directors, whether or not acting through its respective administrative staff, be held accountable for the proper operation of their district to the local community and its electorate. In accordance with the provisions of Title 28A RCW, as now or hereafter amended, each common school district board of directors shall be vested with the final responsibility for the setting of policies ensuring quality in the content and extent of its educational program and that such program provide students with the opportunity to achieve those skills which are generally recognized as requisite to learning.
(2) In conformance with the provisions of Title 28A RCW, as now or hereafter amended, it shall be the responsibility of each common school district board of directors, acting through its respective administrative staff, to:
(a) Establish programs, pursuant to RCW 28A.230.130, for students whose educational plans include application for entrance to a baccalaureate degree-granting institution after being granted a high school diploma. In addition, programs shall be established, directly or otherwise, that prepare students for employment or further technical training after being granted a high school diploma;
(b) Establish policies and procedures that provide for the results of the Washington state high school and beyond assessment program to be used to assist each student to plan and prepare for high school and posthigh school career steps;
(c) Establish performance criteria and an evaluation process for its certificated personnel, including administrative staff, and for all programs constituting a part of such district's curriculum;
(((b)))
(d) Determine the final assignment of staff, certificated or classified,
according to board enumerated classroom and program needs. Persons employed
by such a district in positions requiring certification shall possess the
appropriate, current, and valid certificate;
(((c)))
(e) Determine the amount of instructional hours necessary for any
student to acquire a quality education in such district, in not less than an
amount otherwise required in RCW 28A.150.220, or rules and regulations of the
state board of education;
(((d)))
(f) Determine the allocation of staff time, whether certificated or
classified;
(((e)))
(g) Establish final curriculum standards consistent with law and rules
and regulations of the state board of education, relevant to the particular
needs of district students or the unusual characteristics of the district, and
ensuring a quality education for each student in the district; and
(((f)))
(h) Evaluate teaching materials, including text books, teaching aids,
handouts, or other printed material, in public hearing upon complaint by
parents, guardians or custodians of students who consider dissemination of such
material to students objectionable.
(3) In
keeping with the accountability purpose expressed in this section and to insure
that the local community and electorate have access to information on the
educational programs in the school districts, each school district's board of
directors shall ensure compliance with the provisions of the self-study
process as required by RCW 28A.320.200. The school district board of directors
shall also annually publish a descriptive guide to the district's common
schools pursuant to rules that may be developed by the state board of
education. This guide shall be made available at each school in the
district for examination by the public. ((The guide shall include, but not
be limited to, the following:
(a)
Criteria used for written evaluations of staff members pursuant to RCW
28A.405.100;
(b)
A summary of program objectives pursuant to RCW 28A.320.210;
(c)
Results of comparable testing for all schools within the district; and
(d)
Budget information which will include the following:
(i)
Student enrollment;
(ii)
Number of full time equivalent personnel per school in the district itemized
according to classroom teachers, instructional support, and building
administration and support services, including itemization of such personnel by
program;
(iii)
Number of full time equivalent personnel assigned in the district to central
administrative offices, itemized according to instructional support, building
and central administration, and support services, including itemization of such
personnel by program;
(iv)
Total number of full time equivalent personnel itemized by classroom teachers,
instructional support, building and central administration, and support
services, including itemization of such personnel by program; and
(v)
Special levy budget request presented by program and expenditure for purposes
over and above those requirements identified in RCW 28A.150.220.))
Sec. 8. RCW 28A.150.260 and 1990 c 33 s 108 are each amended to read as follows:
The basic education allocation for each annual average full time equivalent student shall be determined in accordance with the following procedures:
(1) The governor shall and the superintendent of public instruction may recommend to the legislature a formula based on a ratio of students to staff for the distribution of a basic education allocation for each annual average full time equivalent student enrolled in a common school. The distribution formula shall have the primary objective of equalizing educational opportunities and shall provide appropriate recognition of the following costs among the various districts within the state:
(a) Certificated instructional staff and their related costs;
(b) Certificated administrative staff and their related costs;
(c) Classified staff and their related costs;
(d) Nonsalary costs;
(e) Extraordinary costs of remote and necessary schools and small high schools, including costs of additional certificated and classified staff; and
(f) The attendance of students pursuant to RCW 28A.335.160 and 28A.225.250 who do not reside within the servicing school district.
(2)(a) This formula for distribution of basic education funds shall be reviewed biennially by the superintendent and governor. The recommended formula shall be subject to approval, amendment or rejection by the legislature. The formula shall be for allocation purposes only. While the legislature intends that the allocations for additional instructional staff be used to increase the ratio of such staff to students, nothing in this section shall require districts to reduce the number of administrative staff below existing levels.
(b) The formula adopted by the legislature for the 1987‑88 school year shall reflect the following ratios at a minimum: (i) Forty‑eight certificated instructional staff to one thousand annual average full time equivalent students enrolled in grades kindergarten through three; (ii) forty‑six certificated instructional staff to one thousand annual average full time equivalent students enrolled in grades four through twelve; (iii) four certificated administrative staff to one thousand annual average full time equivalent students enrolled in grades kindergarten through twelve; and (iv) sixteen and sixty‑seven one‑hundredths classified personnel to one thousand annual average full time equivalent students enrolled in grades kindergarten through twelve.
(c) Commencing with the 1988‑89 school year, the formula adopted by the legislature shall reflect the following ratios at a minimum: (i) Forty‑nine certificated instructional staff to one thousand annual average full time equivalent students enrolled in grades kindergarten through three; (ii) forty‑six certificated instructional staff to one thousand annual average full time equivalent students in grades four through twelve; (iii) four certificated administrative staff to one thousand annual average full time equivalent students in grades kindergarten through twelve; and (iv) sixteen and sixty‑seven one‑hundredths classified personnel to one thousand annual average full time equivalent students enrolled in grades kindergarten through twelve.
(d) In the event the legislature rejects the distribution formula recommended by the governor, without adopting a new distribution formula, the distribution formula for the previous school year shall remain in effect: PROVIDED, That the distribution formula developed pursuant to this section shall be for state apportionment and equalization purposes only and shall not be construed as mandating specific operational functions of local school districts other than those program requirements identified in RCW 28A.150.220 and 28A.150.100. The enrollment of any district shall be the annual average number of full time equivalent students and part time students as provided in RCW 28A.150.350, enrolled on the first school day of each month and shall exclude full time equivalent handicapped students recognized for the purposes of allocation of state funds for programs under RCW 28A.155.010 through 28A.155.100. The definition of full time equivalent student shall be determined by rules and regulations of the superintendent of public instruction: PROVIDED, That the definition shall be included as part of the superintendent's biennial budget request: PROVIDED, FURTHER, That any revision of the present definition shall not take effect until approved by the house appropriations committee and the senate ways and means committee:
PROVIDED, FURTHER, That the office of financial management shall make a monthly review of the superintendent's reported full time equivalent students in the common schools in conjunction with RCW 43.62.050.
(3)(a) Certificated instructional staff shall include those persons employed by a school district who are nonsupervisory employees within the meaning of RCW 41.59.020(8): PROVIDED, That in exceptional cases, people of unusual competence but without certification may teach students so long as a certificated person exercises general supervision: PROVIDED, FURTHER, That the hiring of such noncertificated people shall not occur during a labor dispute and such noncertificated people shall not be hired to replace certificated employees during a labor dispute.
(b) Certificated administrative staff shall include all those persons who are chief executive officers, chief administrative officers, confidential employees, supervisors, principals, or assistant principals within the meaning of RCW 41.59.020(4).
(((4)
Each annual average full time equivalent certificated classroom teacher's
direct classroom contact hours shall average at least twenty‑five hours
per week. Direct classroom contact hours shall be exclusive of time required
to be spent for preparation, conferences, or any other nonclassroom instruction
duties. Up to two hundred minutes per week may be deducted from the twenty‑five
contact hour requirement, at the discretion of the school district board of
directors, to accommodate authorized teacher/parent‑guardian conferences,
recess, passing time between classes, and informal instructional activity.
Implementing rules to be adopted by the state board of education pursuant to
RCW 28A.150.220(6) shall provide that compliance with the direct contact hour
requirement shall be based upon teachers' normally assigned weekly
instructional schedules, as assigned by the district administration.
Additional record‑keeping by classroom teachers as a means of accounting
for contact hours shall not be required. However, upon request from the board
of directors of any school district, the provisions relating to direct
classroom contact hours for individual teachers in that district may be waived
by the state board of education if the waiver is necessary to implement a
locally approved plan for educational excellence and the waiver is limited to
those individual teachers approved in the local plan for educational
excellence. The state board of education shall develop criteria to evaluate
the need for the waiver. Granting of the waiver shall depend upon verification
that: (a) The students' classroom instructional time will not be reduced; and
(b) the teacher's expertise is critical to the success of the local plan for
excellence.))
Sec. 9. RCW 28A.150.290 and 1990 c 33 s 111 are each amended to read as follows:
(1) The superintendent of public instruction shall have the power and duty to make such rules and regulations as are necessary for the proper administration of this chapter and RCW 28A.160.150 through 28A.160.220, 28A.300.170, and 28A.500.010 not inconsistent with the provisions thereof, and in addition to require such reports as may be necessary to carry out his or her duties under this chapter and RCW 28A.160.150 through 28A.160.220, 28A.300.170, and 28A.500.010.
(2)
The superintendent of public instruction shall have the authority to make rules
and regulations which establish the terms and conditions for allowing school
districts to receive state basic education moneys as provided in RCW
28A.150.250 when said districts are unable to fulfill for one or more schools
as officially scheduled the requirement of ((a full school year of one
hundred eighty days or)) the annual average total ((program))
instructional hour offering((, teacher contact hour, or course mix
and percentage requirements)) imposed by RCW 28A.150.220 and 28A.150.260
due to one or more of the following conditions:
(a) An unforeseen natural event, including, but not necessarily limited to, a fire, flood, explosion, storm, earthquake, epidemic, or volcanic eruption that has the direct or indirect effect of rendering one or more school district facilities unsafe, unhealthy, inaccessible, or inoperable; and
(b) An unforeseen mechanical failure or an unforeseen action or inaction by one or more persons, including negligence and threats, that (i) is beyond the control of both a school district board of directors and its employees and (ii) has the direct or indirect effect of rendering one or more school district facilities unsafe, unhealthy, inaccessible, or inoperable. Such actions, inactions or mechanical failures may include, but are not necessarily limited to, arson, vandalism, riots, insurrections, bomb threats, bombings, delays in the scheduled completion of construction projects, and the discontinuance or disruption of utilities such as heating, lighting and water: PROVIDED, That an unforeseen action or inaction shall not include any labor dispute between a school district board of directors and any employee of the school district.
A condition is foreseeable for the purposes of this subsection to the extent a reasonably prudent person would have anticipated prior to August first of the preceding school year that the condition probably would occur during the ensuing school year because of the occurrence of an event or a circumstance which existed during such preceding school year or a prior school year. A board of directors of a school district is deemed for the purposes of this subsection to have knowledge of events and circumstances which are a matter of common knowledge within the school district and of those events and circumstances which can be discovered upon prudent inquiry or inspection.
(3) The superintendent of public instruction shall make every effort to reduce the amount of paperwork required in administration of this chapter and RCW 28A.160.150 through 28A.160.220, 28A.300.170, and 28A.500.010; to simplify the application, monitoring and evaluation processes used; to eliminate all duplicative requests for information from local school districts; and to make every effort to integrate and standardize information requests for other state education acts and federal aid to education acts administered by the superintendent of public instruction so as to reduce paperwork requirements and duplicative information requests.
Sec. 10. RCW 28A.195.010 and 1990 c 33 s 176 are each amended to read as follows:
The legislature hereby recognizes that private schools should be subject only to those minimum state controls necessary to insure the health and safety of all the students in the state and to insure a sufficient basic education to meet usual graduation requirements. The state, any agency or official thereof, shall not restrict or dictate any specific educational or other programs for private schools except as hereinafter in this section provided.
Principals of private schools or superintendents of private school districts shall file each year with the state superintendent of public instruction a statement certifying that the minimum requirements hereinafter set forth are being met, noting any deviations. After review of the statement, the state superintendent will notify schools or school districts of those deviations which must be corrected. In case of major deviations, the school or school district may request and the state board of education may grant provisional status for one year in order that the school or school district may take action to meet the requirements. Minimum requirements shall be as follows:
(1)
The ((minimum school year for)) total instructional ((purposes))
hour offerings shall consist of no less than ((one hundred eighty
school days or the equivalent in)) the annual minimum ((program))
instructional hour offerings as prescribed in RCW 28A.150.220.
(2) ((The
school day shall be the same as that required in RCW 28A.150.030 and
28A.150.220, except that the percentages of total program hour offerings as
prescribed in RCW 28A.150.220 for basic skills, work skills, and optional
subjects and activities shall not apply to private schools or private sectarian
schools.
(3))) All
classroom teachers shall hold appropriate Washington state certification except
as follows:
(a) Teachers for religious courses or courses for which no counterpart exists in public schools shall not be required to obtain a state certificate to teach those courses.
(b) In exceptional cases, people of unusual competence but without certification may teach students so long as a certified person exercises general supervision. Annual written statements shall be submitted to the office of the superintendent of public instruction reporting and explaining such circumstances.
(((4)))
(3) An approved private school may operate an extension program for
parents, guardians, or persons having legal custody of a child to teach
children in their custody. The extension program shall require at a minimum
that:
(a) The parent, guardian, or custodian be under the supervision of an employee of the approved private school who is certified under chapter 28A.410 RCW;
(b)
The planning by the certified person and the parent, guardian, or person having
legal custody include objectives consistent with this subsection and
subsections (1), (((2))) (4), (5), and (6)((, and (7)))
of this section;
(c) The certified person spend a minimum average each month of one contact hour per week with each student under his or her supervision who is enrolled in the approved private school extension program;
(d) Each student's progress be evaluated by the certified person; and
(e) The certified employee shall not supervise more than thirty students enrolled in the approved private school's extension program.
(((5)))
(4) Appropriate measures shall be taken to safeguard all permanent
records against loss or damage.
(((6)))
(5) The physical facilities of the school or district shall be adequate
to meet the program offered by the school or district: PROVIDED, That each
school building shall meet reasonable health and fire safety requirements. A
residential dwelling of the parent, guardian, or custodian shall be deemed to
be an adequate physical facility when a parent, guardian, or person having
legal custody is instructing his or her child under subsection (((4))) (3)
of this section.
(((7)))
(6) Private school curriculum shall include instruction of the basic
skills of occupational education, science, mathematics, language, social
studies, history, health, reading, writing, spelling, and the development of
appreciation of art and music, all in sufficient units for meeting state board
of education graduation requirements.
(((8)))
(7) Each school or school district shall be required to maintain
up-to-date policy statements related to the administration and operation of the
school or school district.
All
decisions of policy, philosophy, selection of books, teaching material,
curriculum, except as provided in subsection (((7) above provided))
(6) of this section, school rules and administration, or other matters
not specifically referred to in this section, shall be the responsibility of
the administration and administrators of the particular private school
involved.
Sec. 11. RCW 28A.230.090 and 1990 1st ex.s. c 9 s 301 are each amended to read as follows:
(1)
The state board of education shall establish high school graduation
requirements or equivalencies for students ((who commence the ninth grade
subsequent to July 1, 1985, that meet or exceed the following:
SUBJECT CREDITS
English
3
Mathematics
2
Social
Studies
United
States history
and
government 1
Washington
state
history and government 1/2
Contemporary
world
history, geography,
and
problems 1
Science
(1 credit
must
be in
laboratory science) 2
Occupational
Education 1
Physical
Education 2
Electives 5
1/2
Total
18
(2)
For the purposes of this section one credit is equivalent to one year of study.
(3)
The Washington state history and government requirement may be fulfilled by
students in grades seven or eight or both. Students who have completed the
Washington state history and government requirement in grades seven or eight or
both shall be considered to have fulfilled the Washington state history and
government requirement.
(4)
A candidate for graduation must have in addition earned a minimum of 18 credits
including all required courses. These credits shall consist of the state
requirements listed above and such additional requirements and electives as
shall be established by each district)).
(((5)))
(2) In recognition of the statutory authority of the state board of
education to establish and enforce minimum high school graduation requirements,
the state board shall periodically reevaluate the graduation requirements and
shall report such findings to the legislature in a timely manner as determined
by the state board.
(((6)))
(3) Pursuant to any foreign language requirement established by the
state board of education or a local school district, or both, for purposes of
high school graduation, students who receive instruction in sign language shall
be considered to have satisfied the state or local school district foreign
language graduation requirement.
(((7)))
(4) If requested by the student and his or her family, a student who has
completed high school courses while in seventh and eighth grade shall be given
high school credit which shall be applied to fulfilling high school graduation
requirements if:
(a) The course was taken with high school students and the student has successfully passed by completing the same course requirements and examinations as the high school students enrolled in the class; or
(b) The course would qualify for high school credit, because the course is similar or equivalent to a course offered at a high school in the district as determined by the school district board of directors.
(((8)))
(5) Students who have taken and successfully completed high school
courses under the circumstances in subsection (((7))) (4) of this
section shall not be required to take an additional competency examination or
perform any other additional assignment to receive credit. Subsection (((7)))
(4) of this section shall also apply to students enrolled in high school
on April 11, 1990, who took the courses while they were in seventh and eighth
grade.
Sec. 12. RCW 28A.230.100 and 1990 c 33 s 239 are each amended to read as follows:
The
state board of education shall adopt rules pursuant to chapter 34.05 RCW, to
implement the course requirements set forth ((in)) pursuant to
RCW 28A.230.090. Such rules shall include, as the state board deems necessary,
granting equivalencies for and temporary exemptions from the course
requirements ((in RCW 28A.230.090 and special alterations of the course
requirements in RCW 28A.230.090)) established. In developing such
rules the state board shall recognize the relevance of instruction in work
force skills through vocational education and applied courses and
allow such courses to fulfill in whole or in part the courses required for
graduation ((in RCW 28A.230.090)). Such rules may include provisions
for competency testing in lieu of such courses required for graduation ((in))
pursuant to RCW 28A.230.090.
Sec. 13. RCW 28A.170.100 and 1990 c 33 s 159 are each amended to read as follows:
(1) School districts are encouraged to promote parent and community involvement in drug and alcohol abuse prevention and intervention programs, through parent visits under RCW 28A.605.020 and through any school involvement program established by the district under RCW 28A.615.010 through 28A.615.050.
(2)
Districts are further encouraged to review drug and alcohol prevention and
intervention programs as part of the self-study procedures required under RCW
28A.320.200 and as part of any annual goal-setting process the district may
have established under ((RCW 28A.320.220)) section 2 of this 1991 act.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 14. To implement RCW 28A.150.200 through 28A.150.295 and sections 1 through 3 and 5 of this act, the superintendent of public instruction shall provide technical assistance as requested by school districts in areas including, but not limited to, curriculum development, assessment of student performance, and program evaluation.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 15. The following acts or parts of acts are each repealed:
(1) RCW 28A.150.210 and 1977 ex.s. c 359 s 2;
(2) RCW 28A.230.110 and 1990 c 33 s 240 & 1985 c 3 s 4;
(3) RCW 28A.305.140 and 1990 c 33 s 267 & 1985 c 349 s 6;
(4) RCW 28A.320.210 and 1990 c 33 s 334, 1988 c 256 s 1, 1987 c 505 s 9, 1986 c 137 s 1, 1984 c 278 s 3, 1977 ex.s. c 305 s 1, & 1975-'76 2nd ex.s. c 90 s 1; and
(5) RCW 28A.320.220 and 1984 c 278 s 1.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 16. Sections 1 through 3, 5, and 14 of this act are each added to chapter 28A.150 RCW.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 17. If any provision of this act or its application to any person or circumstance is held invalid, the remainder of the act or the application of the provision to other persons or circumstances is not affected.