HOUSE BILL REPORT
SHB 1708
As Amended by the Senate
Title: An act relating to dropout prevention.
Brief Description: Regarding dropout prevention.
Sponsors: By House Committee on Education (originally sponsored by Representatives Lovick, Quall, Dickerson, Cox, Haigh, Kenney, McDermott, O'Brien, Sells, B. Sullivan, Appleton, Simpson, Kagi, Darneille, Morrell, Green, P. Sullivan, Ormsby, McCoy, Chase and Moeller).
Brief History:
Education: 2/14/05, 2/15/05 [DPS].
Floor Activity:
Passed House: 3/7/05, 98-0.
Senate Amended.
Passed Senate: 4/15/05, 48-0.
Brief Summary of Substitute Bill |
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HOUSE COMMITTEE ON EDUCATION
Majority Report: The substitute bill be substituted therefor and the substitute bill do pass. Signed by 11 members: Representatives Quall, Chair; P. Sullivan, Vice Chair; Talcott, Ranking Minority Member; Anderson, Assistant Ranking Minority Member; Curtis, Haigh, Hunter, McDermott, Santos, Shabro and Tom.
Staff: Sydney Forrester (786-7120).
Background:
Dropout Definitions
Dropouts typically are defined as students who leave school before graduating from high
school with a diploma, but there is no universally accepted definition for the term dropout.
For purposes of state statistics, dropouts are defined as students who leave high school
without a regular diploma and do not transfer to another school. Under this definition,
students who continue beyond their senior year in order to complete graduation requirements
are not dropouts. Likewise, students who participate in GED preparation courses also are not
dropouts if they re-enter school to complete graduation requirements before turning 21 years
of age.
Under the No Child Left Behind Act of 2001(NCLB), on-time graduation rates are an
additional indicator of adequate yearly progress (AYP). Graduation rates under the NCLB,
however, can reflect only the "percentage of students who graduate from secondary school
with a regular diploma in the standard number of years." Under this definition, students who
continue beyond their senior year and earn a diploma before turning age 21 still are counted
as dropouts.
Washington's Graduation Rate Goals
The A+ Commission is authorized, but not required, to establish dropout reduction and
graduation rate goals for students in grades seven through 12. Goals must be established by
rule, and require legislative review prior to adoption.
The current graduation rate goals established by the A+ Commission were adopted in 2003
and apply only to schools serving 30 or more high school students. For each of the years
2004 through 2013, the graduation rate goal is the lesser of: (a) the statewide average
graduation rate for the class of 2002 (approximately 66 percent); or (b) the school's own 2003
graduation rate plus one percentage point annually. In 2014, the graduation rate goal for all
high schools is 85 percent, and this goal applies to all subgroups defined in the NCLB.
At its December 2004 meeting, the A+ Commission considered the establishment of dropout
reduction goals for grades seven and eight, but elected to postpone action on this issue until it
can be determined whether the data reporting capabilities for seventh and eighth grade
students are sufficiently in place. At its February 2005 meeting the Commission established
proposed revisions to high school graduation rate goals, and recently requested to schedule
legislative review of those proposed revisions.
School District Reporting and Graduation and Dropout Statistics
School districts are required to report annually to the SPI regarding the number of high
school students who drop out in each of the grades nine through 12, including the dropout
rates of students according to ethnicity, gender, socioeconomic status, and disability status.
Districts also report regarding the causes and reasons attributed to dropping out as reported
by students.
In the 2002-03 school year, an estimated 7 percent of all high school students dropped out of
school. Of the 2003 graduating class cohort (those students who entered grade nine in 1999),
approximately 24 percent dropped out before graduating, and another 10 percent still were
enrolled at the end of 12th grade. The on-time graduation rate for Washington high school
students in 2003 was approximately 66 percent.
Dropout Prevention Programs
The strategies for dropout prevention can be organized into two general categories:
comprehensive school improvement and reform programs, and targeted programs focused at
reaching students who are at risk of dropping out.
Summary of Substitute Bill:
The SPI is directed to review and evaluate the most promising dropout prevention programs
and practices, including programs using non-punitive approaches to school discipline, and to
report by December 2005, to the Legislature. The SPI will recommend the most promising
comprehensive dropout prevention programs and practices, and the most promising targeted
dropout prevention programs and practices. The SPI also is directed to recommend policy
and other changes to enhance the ability of career and technical education programs and skills
centers to further contribute to dropout prevention.
The SPI must establish goals for dropout reduction and high school graduation rates for
students in grades seven through 12. The goals must require annual incremental
improvements for schools and districts starting in the 2005-06 school year and must meet or
exceed the 2014 high school graduation rate goal of 85 percent. The setting of goals for
dropout reduction and high school graduation rates is no longer under the authority of the A+
Commission.
School districts are required to include students in grades seven and eight in their annual
reporting of student enrollments and dropout data to the SPI.
EFFECT OF SENATE AMENDMENT(S):
Directs the Office of the Superintendent of Public Instruction (OSPI) to review, evaluate, and
report to the Legislature by December 2005, regarding promising dropout prevention
programs.
Expands the grade range for which school districts must report dropout data by including
grades seven and eight with grades nine through 12.
Removes the provision requiring the OSPI to establish dropout reduction and high school
graduation rate goals for students in grades seven through 12, and maintains the current
authority granted to the Academic Achievement and Accountability Commission to adopt
dropout reduction and high school graduation rate goals for students in these grades.
Adds a requirement directing the OSPI, to the extent funds are appropriated, to convene a
work group to review and evaluate laws and rules related to school attendance, truancy, and
dropout and to report findings of the work group to the Legislature, the Governor, and the
State Board of Education by January 2006.
Appropriation: None.
Fiscal Note: Available.
Effective Date: The bill takes effect 90 days after adjournment of session in which bill is passed.
Testimony For: The Legislature needs to do something to address the dropout problem in
Washington. Currently we keep track of students for dropout purposes when they enter high
school, but studies indicate kids actually begin the mental process of dropping out as early as
fifth or sixth grade. When students dropout before enrolling in high school, they aren't even
on the radar screen. This bill is designed to help us recognize and address potential dropouts
sooner so that we can meet their needs as soon as possible.
The Workforce Training and Education Coordinating Board supports adding the seventh and
eighth grades and the incremental improvements. Minority commissions have provided
anecdotal evidence that some minority students are never enrolling in high school because
they have dropped out in earlier grades. The key is that goals need to be set, prevention
programs put in place, and the investments made to get the job done.
(With concerns) Adding seventh and eighth grades to the dropout reporting grades would
require some technoloy updates. When students leave junior high, but don't request their
transcripts, it could look like a dropout, but it might be that the student has left the state.
The SPI would like to be able to recommend more than just the two most promising
programs, because there are several programs that are already working. The challenge is to
get the information about best practices out to our schools and districts. This could be done
through professional organizations providing in-service opportunities to school building
leaders.
(Neutral) The A+ Commission currently is considering revised graduation rate goals that
would require more rigorous targeted growth from districts already at the statewide average.
These rates would apply to the subgroups as well. The chair of the A+ Commission wanted
to underline that goals should be in place, and that there should be tracking of progress and
consequences for meeting and not meeting the goals. The focus should be on the students
and driving toward improvement. The work a district will have to do will depend on how far
from their goal they are. Even through the slope is steep for some districts, we still need to
encourage districts to reach the goals.
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Testimony Against: None.
Persons Testifying: (In support) Representative Lovick, prime sponsor; Wes Pruitt,
Workforce Training and Education Coordinating Board; Kathleen Lopp, Washington
Association for Career and Technical Education; and Gary King, Washington Education
Association.
(With concerns) Robert Butts and Pete Bylsma, Office of the Superintendent of Public
Instruction; and Don Rash, Association of Washington School Principals.
(Neutral) Chris Thompson, A+ Commission.