S-0742.2  _______________________________________________

 

                         SENATE BILL 5328

          _______________________________________________

 

State of Washington      57th Legislature     2001 Regular Session

 

By Senators Carlson, Eide, Finkbeiner, Kohl‑Welles, Winsley, Shin, Hewitt, Regala, Johnson, McDonald, Hochstatter, Swecker, Long, Horn, McCaslin, Morton, Roach, Sheahan, Honeyford and Parlette

 

Read first time 01/19/2001.  Referred to Committee on Education.

Changing school improvement goals reporting.


    AN ACT Relating to school improvement goals reporting; and amending RCW 28A.655.050.

 

BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON:

 

    Sec. 1.  RCW 28A.655.050 and 1999 c 388 s 201 are each amended to read as follows:

    (1) Each school district board of directors shall:

    (a) Select the reading standard results on either the 1997 or 1998 fourth grade Washington assessment of student learning as the school district's initial baseline reading standard.  Districts may select the 1997 results only if all of the elementary schools with fourth grade students administered the assessment;

    (b) By December 15, 2001, select the mathematics standard results on the 1998, 1999, or 2000 fourth grade Washington assessment of student learning as the school district's fourth grade baseline mathematics standard, using for its baseline a year in which all of the elementary schools with fourth grade students administered the assessment;

    (c) Establish three-year, district-wide goals to increase, by the end of the 2000-01 school year, the percentage of students who meet or exceed the reading standard, and by the 2003-04 school year, the percentage of students who meet or exceed the mathematics standard on the fourth grade Washington assessment of student learning.  The three-year percentage increase goal in each subject may not be less than the district's total percentage of students who did not meet the baseline standard in each subject multiplied by twenty-five percent;

    (d) Specify the annual district-wide percentage improvement increments to meet the goals; and

    (e) Direct each elementary school to establish three-year goals for its fourth grade students, subject to approval by the board.  The aggregate of the elementary school goals must meet or exceed the district-wide goals established by the board.

    (2) By December 15, 2001, each school district board of directors shall:

    (a) Select the mathematics standard results on the 1998, 1999, 2000, or 2001 seventh grade Washington assessment of student learning as the school district's seventh grade baseline mathematics standard;

    (b) Establish a three-year district-wide goal to increase, by the end of the 2003-04 school year, the percentage of students who meet or exceed the mathematics standard, on the seventh grade Washington assessment of student learning.  The district shall select for its baseline a year in which all of the schools with seventh grade students administered the assessment.  The percentage increase goal may not be less than the district's total percentage of students who did not meet the baseline standard in mathematics multiplied by twenty-five percent;

    (c) Specify the annual district-wide percentage improvement increments necessary to meet the goal; and

    (d) Direct each middle or junior high school, as appropriate, to establish a mathematics goal for its seventh grade students, subject to approval by the board.  The aggregate of the middle or junior high school goals must meet or exceed the district-wide goals established by the board in each subject.

    (3)(a) If a student does not take the reading component of the fourth grade Washington assessment of student learning, then the student's score shall not count against the school district or school and shall not be used when determining the percentage of students who meet or exceed the reading standard or the percentage of improvement toward the district-wide or school reading goal.  If a student does not take the mathematics component of the fourth grade Washington assessment of student learning, then the student's score shall not count against the school district or school and shall not be used when determining the percentage of students who meet or exceed the mathematics standard or the percentage of improvement toward the district-wide or school mathematics goal.

    (b) If a student does not take the mathematics component of the seventh grade Washington assessment of student learning, then the student's score shall not count against the school district or school and shall not be used when determining the percentage of students who meet or exceed the reading standard or the percentage of improvement toward the district-wide or school mathematics goal.

    (4) Schools and school districts in which ten or fewer students are eligible to be assessed in a grade level are not required to establish numerical improvement goals and performance relative to the goals.

 


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