E2SSB 6696 -
By Committee on Education
NOT CONSIDERED 03/05/2010
Strike everything after the enacting clause and insert the following:
NEW SECTION. Sec. 101 The legislature finds that it is the
state's responsibility to create a coherent and effective
accountability framework for the continuous improvement for all schools
and districts. This system must provide an excellent and equitable
education for all students; an aligned federal/state accountability
system; and the tools necessary for schools and districts to be
accountable. These tools include the necessary accounting and data
reporting systems, assessment systems to monitor student achievement,
and a system of general support, targeted assistance, and if necessary,
intervention.
The office of the superintendent of public instruction is
responsible for developing and implementing the accountability tools to
build district capacity and working within federal and state
guidelines. The legislature assigned the state board of education
responsibility and oversight for creating an accountability framework.
This framework provides a unified system of support for challenged
schools that aligns with basic education, increases the level of
support based upon the magnitude of need, and uses data for decisions.
Such a system will identify schools and their districts for recognition
as well as for additional state support. For a specific group of
challenged schools, defined as persistently lowest-achieving schools,
and their districts, it is necessary to provide a required action
process that creates a partnership between the state and local district
to target funds and assistance to turn around the identified lowest-achieving schools.
Phase I of this accountability system will recognize schools that
have done an exemplary job of raising student achievement and closing
the achievement gaps using the state board of education's
accountability index. The state board of education shall have ongoing
collaboration with the achievement gap oversight and accountability
committee regarding the measures used to measure the closing of the
achievement gaps and the recognition provided to the school districts
for closing the achievement gaps. Phase I will also target the lowest
five percent of persistently lowest-achieving schools defined under
federal guidelines to provide federal funds and federal intervention
models through a voluntary option in 2010, and for those who do not
volunteer and have not improved student achievement, a required action
process beginning in 2011.
Phase II of this accountability system will work toward
implementing the state board of education's accountability index for
identification of schools in need of improvement, including those that
are not Title I schools, and the use of state and local intervention
models and state funds through a required action process beginning in
2013, in addition to the federal program. Federal approval of the
state board of education's accountability index must be obtained or
else the federal guidelines for persistently lowest-achieving schools
will continue to be used.
The expectation from implementation of this accountability system
is the improvement of student achievement for all students to prepare
them for postsecondary education, work, and global citizenship in the
twenty-first century.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 102 (1) Beginning in 2010, and each year
thereafter, by December 1st, the superintendent of public instruction
shall annually identify schools as one of the state's persistently
lowest-achieving schools if the school is a Title I school, or a school
that is eligible for but does not receive Title I funds, that is among
the lowest-achieving five percent of Title I or Title I eligible
schools in the state.
(2) The criteria for determining whether a school is among the
persistently lowest-achieving five percent of Title I schools, or Title
I eligible schools, under subsection (1) of this section shall be
established by the superintendent of public instruction. The criteria
must meet all applicable requirements for the receipt of a federal
school improvement grant under the American recovery and reinvestment
act of 2009 and Title I of the elementary and secondary education act
of 1965, and take into account both:
(a) The academic achievement of the "all students" group in a
school in terms of proficiency on the state's assessment, and any
alternative assessments, in reading and mathematics combined; and
(b) The school's lack of progress on the mathematics and reading
assessments over a number of years in the "all students" group.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 103 (1) Beginning in January 2011, the
superintendent of public instruction shall annually recommend to the
state board of education school districts for designation as required
action districts. A district with at least one school identified as a
persistently lowest-achieving school shall be designated as a required
action district if it meets the criteria developed by the
superintendent of public instruction. However, a school district shall
not be recommended for designation as a required action district if the
district was awarded a federal school improvement grant by the
superintendent in 2010 and for three consecutive years following
receipt of the grant implemented a federal school intervention model at
each school identified for improvement. The state board of education
may designate a district that received a school improvement grant in
2010 as a required action district if after three years of voluntarily
implementing a plan the district continues to have a school identified
as persistently lowest-achieving and meets the criteria for designation
established by the superintendent of public instruction.
(2) The superintendent of public instruction shall provide a school
district superintendent with written notice of the recommendation for
designation as a required action district by certified mail or personal
service. A school district superintendent may request reconsideration
of the superintendent of public instruction's recommendation. The
reconsideration shall be limited to a determination of whether the
school district met the criteria for being recommended as a required
action district. A request for reconsideration must be in writing and
served on the superintendent of public instruction within ten days of
service of the notice of the superintendent's recommendation.
(3) The state board of education shall annually designate those
districts recommended by the superintendent in subsection (1) of this
section as required action districts. A district designated as a
required action district shall be required to notify all parents of
students attending a school identified as a persistently lowest-achieving school in the district of the state board of education's
designation of the district as a required action district and the
process for complying with the requirements set forth in sections 104
through 110 of this act.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 104 (1) The superintendent of public
instruction shall contract with an external review team to conduct an
academic performance audit of the district and each persistently
lowest-achieving school in a required action district to identify the
potential reasons for the school's low performance and lack of
progress. The review team must consist of persons under contract with
the superintendent who have expertise in comprehensive school and
district reform and may not include staff from the agency, the school
district that is the subject of the audit, or members or staff of the
state board of education.
(2) The audit must be conducted based on criteria developed by the
superintendent of public instruction and must include but not be
limited to an examination of the following:
(a) Student demographics;
(b) Mobility patterns;
(c) School feeder patterns;
(d) The performance of different student groups on assessments;
(e) Effective school leadership;
(f) Strategic allocation of resources;
(g) Clear and shared focus on student learning;
(h) High standards and expectations for all students;
(i) High level of collaboration and communication;
(j) Aligned curriculum, instruction, and assessment to state
standards;
(k) Frequency of monitoring of learning and teaching;
(l) Focused professional development;
(m) Supportive learning environment;
(n) High level of family and community involvement; and
(o) Alternative secondary schools best practices.
(3) Audit findings must be made available to the local school
district, its staff, the community, and the state board of education.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 105 (1) The local district superintendent and
local school board of a school district designated as a required action
district must submit a required action plan to the state board of
education for approval. Unless otherwise required by subsection (3) of
this section, the plan must be submitted under a schedule as required
by the state board. A required action plan must be developed in
collaboration with administrators, teachers, and other staff, parents,
unions representing any employees within the district, students, and
other representatives of the local community. The superintendent of
public instruction shall provide a district with assistance in
developing its plan if requested. The school board must conduct a
public hearing to allow for comment on a proposed required action plan.
The local school district shall submit the plan first to the office of
the superintendent of public instruction to review and approve that the
plan is consistent with federal guidelines. After the office of the
superintendent of public instruction has approved that the plan is
consistent with federal guidelines, the local school district must
submit its required action plan to the state board of education for
approval.
(2) A required action plan must include all of the following:
(a) Implementation of one of the four federal intervention models
required for the receipt of a federal school improvement grant, for
those persistently lowest-achieving schools that the district will be
focusing on for required action. However, a district may not establish
a charter school under a federal intervention model without express
legislative authority. The intervention models are the turnaround,
restart, school closure, and transformation models. The intervention
model selected must address the concerns raised in the academic
performance audit and be intended to improve student performance to
allow a school district to be removed from the list of districts
designated as a required action district by the state board of
education within three years of implementation of the plan;
(b) Submission of an application for a federal school improvement
grant to the superintendent of public instruction;
(c) A budget that provides for adequate resources to implement the
federal model selected and any other requirements of the plan;
(d) A description of the changes in the district's or school's
existing policies, structures, agreements, processes, and practices
that are intended to attain significant achievement gains for all
students enrolled in the school;
(e) Identification of the measures that the school district will
use in assessing student achievement at a school identified as a
persistently lowest-achieving school, which include improving
mathematics and reading student achievement and graduation rates as
defined by the office of the superintendent of public instruction that
enable the school to no longer be identified as a persistently lowest-achieving school.
(3)(a) For any district designated for required action, the parties
to any collective bargaining agreement negotiated, renewed, or extended
under chapter 41.59 or 41.56 RCW after the effective date of this
section must reopen the agreement, or negotiate an addendum, if needed,
to make changes to terms and conditions of employment that are
necessary to implement a required action plan.
(b) If the school district and the employee organizations are
unable to agree on the terms of an addendum or modification to an
existing collective bargaining agreement, the parties, including all
labor organizations affected under the required action plan, shall
request the public employment relations commission to, and the
commission shall, appoint an employee of the commission to act as a
mediator to assist in the resolution of a dispute between the school
district and the employee organizations. Beginning in 2011, and each
year thereafter, mediation shall commence no later than April 15th.
All mediations held under this section shall include the employer and
representatives of all affected bargaining units.
(c) If the executive director of the public employment relations
commission, upon the recommendation of the assigned mediator, finds
that the employer and any affected bargaining unit are unable to reach
agreement following a reasonable period of negotiations and mediation,
but by no later than May 15th of the year in which mediation occurred,
the executive director shall certify any disputed issues for a decision
by the superior court in the county where the school district is
located. The issues for determination by the superior court must be
limited to the issues certified by the executive director.
(d) The process for filing with the court in this subsection (3)(d)
must be used in the case where the executive director certifies issues
for a decision by the superior court.
(i) The school district shall file a petition with the superior
court, by no later than May 20th of the same year in which the issues
were certified, setting forth the following:
(A) The name, address, and telephone number of the school district
and its principal representative;
(B) The name, address, and telephone number of the employee
organizations and their principal representatives;
(C) A description of the bargaining units involved;
(D) A copy of the unresolved issues certified by the executive
director for a final and binding decision by the court; and
(E) The academic performance audit that the office of the
superintendent of public instruction completed for the school district.
(ii) Within seven days after the filing of the petition, each party
shall file with the court the proposal it is asking the court to order
be implemented in a required action plan for the district for each
issue certified by the executive director. Contemporaneously with the
filing of the proposal, a party must file a brief with the court
setting forth the reasons why the court should order implementation of
its proposal in the final plan.
(iii) Following receipt of the proposals and briefs of the parties,
the court must schedule a date and time for a hearing on the petition.
The hearing must be limited to argument of the parties or their counsel
regarding the proposals submitted for the court's consideration. The
parties may waive a hearing by written agreement.
(iv) The court must enter an order selecting the proposal for
inclusion in a required action plan that best responds to the issues
raised in the school district's academic performance audit, and allows
for the award of a federal school improvement grant to the district
from the office of the superintendent of public instruction to
implement one of the four federal intervention models. The court's
decision must be issued no later than June 15th of the year in which
the petition is filed and is final and binding on the parties; however
the court's decision is subject to appeal only in the case where it
does not allow the school district to implement a required action plan
consistent with the requirements for the award of a federal school
improvement grant by the superintendent of public instruction.
(e) Each party shall bear its own costs and attorneys' fees
incurred under this statute.
(f) Any party that proceeds with the process in this section after
knowledge that any provision of this section has not been complied with
and who fails to state its objection in writing is deemed to have
waived its right to object.
(4) All contracts entered into between a school district and an
employee must be consistent with this section and allow school
districts designated as required action districts to implement one of
the four federal models in a required action plan.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 106 A required action plan developed by a
district's school board and superintendent must be submitted to the
state board of education for approval. The state board must accept for
inclusion in any required action plan the final decision by the
superior court on any issue certified by the executive director of the
public employment relations commission under the process in section 105
of this act. The state board of education shall approve a plan
proposed by a school district only if it meets the requirements set
forth in section 105 of this act. Any addendum or modification to an
existing collective bargaining agreement, negotiated under section 105
of this act or by agreement of the district and the exclusive
bargaining unit, related to student achievement or school improvement
shall not go into effect until approval of a required action plan by
the state board of education. If the state board does not approve a
proposed plan, it must notify the local school board and local
district's superintendent in writing with an explicit rationale for why
the plan was not approved. Nonapproval by the state board of education
of the local school district's initial required action plan submitted
is not intended to trigger any actions under section 108 of this act.
With the assistance of the office of the superintendent of public
instruction, the superintendent and school board of the required action
district shall either: (a) Submit a new plan to the state board of
education for approval within forty days of notification that its plan
was rejected, or (b) submit a request to the required action plan
review panel established under section 107 of this act for
reconsideration of the state board's rejection within ten days of the
notification that the plan was rejected. If federal funds are not
available, the plan is not required to be implemented until such
funding becomes available. If federal funds for this purpose are
available, a required action plan must be implemented in the immediate
school year following the district's designation as a required action
district.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 107 (1) A required action plan review panel
shall be established to offer an objective, external review of a
request from a school district for reconsideration of the state board
of education's rejection of the district's required action plan. The
review and reconsideration by the panel shall be based on whether the
state board of education gave appropriate consideration to the unique
circumstances and characteristics of the local school district whose
required action plan was rejected.
(2)(a) The panel shall be composed of five individuals with
expertise in school improvement, school and district restructuring, or
parent and community involvement in schools. Two of the panel members
shall be appointed by the speaker of the house of representatives; two
shall be appointed by the president of the senate; and one shall be
appointed by the governor.
(b) The speaker of the house of representatives, president of the
senate, and governor shall solicit recommendations for possible panel
members from the Washington association of school administrators, the
Washington state school directors' association, the association of
Washington school principals, the achievement gap oversight and
accountability committee, and associations representing certificated
teachers, classified school employees, and parents.
(c) Members of the panel shall be appointed no later than December
1, 2010, but the superintendent of public instruction shall convene the
panel only as needed to consider a school district's request for
reconsideration. Reappointments in the case of a vacancy shall be made
expeditiously so that all requests are considered in a timely manner.
(3) The required action plan review panel may reaffirm the decision
of the state board of education, recommend that the state board
reconsider the rejection, or recommend changes to the required action
plan that should be considered by the district and the state board of
education to secure approval of the plan. The state board of education
shall consider the recommendations of the panel and issue a decision in
writing to the local school district and the panel. If the school
district must submit a new required action plan to the state board of
education, the district must submit the plan within forty days of the
board's decision.
(4) The state board of education and superintendent of public
instruction must develop timelines and procedures for the deliberations
under this section so that school districts can implement a required
action plan within the time frame required under section 106 of this
act.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 108 The state board of education may direct
the superintendent of public instruction to require a school district
that has not submitted a final required action plan for approval, or
has submitted but not received state board of education approval of a
required action plan by the beginning of the school year in which the
plan is intended to be implemented, to redirect the district's Title I
funds based on the academic performance audit findings.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 109 A school district must implement a
required action plan upon approval by the state board of education.
The office of superintendent of public instruction must provide the
required action district with technical assistance and federal school
improvement grant funds, if available, to implement an approved plan.
The district must submit a report to the superintendent of public
instruction that provides the progress the district is making in
meeting the student achievement goals based on the state's assessments,
identifying strategies and assets used to solve audit findings, and
establishing evidence of meeting plan implementation benchmarks as set
forth in the required action plan.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 110 (1) The superintendent of public
instruction must provide a report twice per year to the state board of
education regarding the progress made by all school districts
designated as required action districts.
(2) The superintendent of public instruction must recommend to the
state board of education that a school district be released from the
designation as a required action district after the district implements
a required action plan for a period of three years; has made progress,
as defined by the superintendent of public instruction, in reading and
mathematics on the state's assessment over the past three consecutive
years; and no longer has a school within the district identified as
persistently lowest achieving. The state board shall release a school
district from the designation as a required action district upon
confirmation that the district has met the requirements for a release.
(3) If the state board of education determines that the required
action district has not met the requirements for release, the district
remains in required action and must submit a new or revised plan under
the process in section 105 of this act.
Sec. 111 RCW 28A.305.225 and 2009 c 548 s 503 are each amended to
read as follows:
(1) The state board of education shall continue to refine the
development of an accountability framework that creates a unified
system of support for challenged schools, that aligns with basic
education, increases the level of support based upon the magnitude of
need, and uses data for decisions.
(2) The state board of education shall develop an accountability
index to identify schools and districts for recognition, for continuous
improvement, and for additional state support. The index shall be
based on criteria that are fair, consistent, and transparent.
Performance shall be measured using multiple outcomes and indicators
including, but not limited to, graduation rates and results from
statewide assessments. The index shall be developed in such a way as
to be easily understood by both employees within the schools and
districts, as well as parents and community members. It is the
legislature's intent that the index provide feedback to schools and
districts to self-assess their progress, and enable the identification
of schools with exemplary student performance and those that need
assistance to overcome challenges in order to achieve exemplary student
performance. ((Once the accountability index has identified schools
that need additional help, a more thorough analysis will be done to
analyze specific conditions in the district including but not limited
to the level of state resources a school or school district receives in
support of the basic education system, achievement gaps for different
groups of students, and community support.)) (3) The state board of education, in cooperation with the
office of the superintendent of public instruction, shall annually
recognize schools for exemplary performance as measured on the state
board of education accountability index. The state board of education
shall have ongoing collaboration with the achievement gap oversight and
accountability committee regarding the measures used to measure the
closing of the achievement gaps and the recognition provided to the
school districts for closing the achievement gaps.
(3) Based on the accountability index and in consultation with the
superintendent of public instruction, the state board of education
shall develop a proposal and timeline for implementation of a
comprehensive system of voluntary support and assistance for schools
and districts. The timeline must take into account and accommodate
capacity limitations of the K-12 educational system. Changes that have
a fiscal impact on school districts, as identified by a fiscal analysis
prepared by the office of the superintendent of public instruction,
shall take effect only if formally authorized by the legislature
through the omnibus appropriations act or other enacted legislation.
(4)(a) The state board of education shall develop a proposal and
implementation timeline for a more formalized comprehensive system
improvement targeted to challenged schools and districts that have not
demonstrated sufficient improvement through the voluntary system. The
timeline must take into account and accommodate capacity limitations of
the K-12 educational system. The proposal and timeline shall be
submitted to the education committees of the legislature by December 1,
2009, and shall include recommended legislation and recommended
resources to implement the system according to the timeline developed.
(b) The proposal shall outline a process for addressing performance
challenges that will include the following features: (i) An academic
performance audit using peer review teams of educators that considers
school and community factors in addition to other factors in developing
recommended specific corrective actions that should be undertaken to
improve student learning; (ii) a requirement for the local school board
plan to develop and be responsible for implementation of corrective
action plan taking into account the audit findings, which plan must be
approved by the state board of education at which time the plan becomes
binding upon the school district to implement; and (iii) monitoring of
local district progress by the office of the superintendent of public
instruction. The proposal shall take effect only if formally
authorized by the legislature through the omnibus appropriations act or
other enacted legislation.
(5)
(4) In coordination with the superintendent of public instruction,
the state board of education shall seek approval from the United States
department of education for use of the accountability index and the
state system of support, assistance, and intervention, to replace the
federal accountability system under P.L. 107-110, the no child left
behind act of 2001.
(((6))) (5) The state board of education shall work with the
education data center established within the office of financial
management and the technical working group established in section 112,
chapter 548, Laws of 2009 to determine the feasibility of using the
prototypical funding allocation model as not only a tool for allocating
resources to schools and districts but also as a tool for schools and
districts to report to the state legislature and the state board of
education on how the state resources received are being used.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 112 The definitions in this section apply
throughout this chapter unless the context clearly requires otherwise.
(1) "All students group" means those students in grades three
through eight and high school who take the state's assessment in
reading and mathematics required under 20 U.S.C. Sec. 6311(b)(3).
(2) "Title I" means Title I, part A of the federal elementary and
secondary education act of 1965 (ESEA) (20 U.S.C. Secs. 6311-6322).
NEW SECTION. Sec. 113 The superintendent of public instruction
and the state board of education may each adopt rules in accordance
with chapter 34.05 RCW as necessary to implement this chapter.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 114 (1) The legislature finds that a unified
and equitable system of education accountability must include
expectations and benchmarks for improvement, along with support for
schools and districts to make the necessary changes that will lead to
success for all students. Such a system must also clearly address the
consequences for persistent lack of improvement. Establishing a
process for school districts to prepare and implement a required action
plan is one such consequence. However, to be truly accountable to
students, parents, the community, and taxpayers, the legislature must
also consider what should happen if a required action district
continues not to make improvement after an extended period of time.
Without an answer to this significant question, the state's system of
education accountability is incomplete. Furthermore, accountability
must be appropriately shared among various levels of decision makers,
including in the building, in the district, and at the state.
(2)(a) A joint select committee on education accountability is
established with the following members:
(i) The president of the senate shall appoint two members from each
of the two largest caucuses of the senate.
(ii) The speaker of the house of representatives shall appoint two
members from each of the two largest caucuses of the house of
representatives.
(b) The committee shall choose its cochairs from among its
membership.
(3) The committee shall:
(a) Identify and analyze options for a complete system of education
accountability, particularly consequences in the case of persistent
lack of improvement by a required action district;
(b) Identify and analyze appropriate decision-making
responsibilities and accompanying consequences at the building,
district, and state level within such an accountability system;
(c) Examine models and experiences in other states;
(d) Identify the circumstances under which significant state action
may be required; and
(e) Analyze the financial, legal, and practical considerations that
would accompany significant state action.
(4) Staff support for the committee must be provided by the senate
committee services and the house of representatives office of program
research.
(5) The committee shall submit an interim report to the education
committees of the legislature by September 1, 2011, and a final report
with recommendations by September 1, 2012.
(6) This section expires June 30, 2013.
Sec. 201 RCW 28A.150.230 and 2006 c 263 s 201 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 to adopt policies to:
(a) Establish performance criteria and an evaluation process for
its superintendent, classified staff, certificated personnel, including
administrative staff, and for all programs constituting a part of such
district's curriculum. Each district shall report annually to the
superintendent of public instruction the following for each employee
group listed in this subsection (2)(a): (i) Evaluation criteria and
rubrics; (ii) a description of each rating; and (iii) the number of
staff in each rating;
(b) Determine the final assignment of staff, certificated or
classified, according to board enumerated classroom and program needs
and data, based upon a plan to ensure that the assignment policy: (i)
Supports the learning needs of all the students in the district; and
(ii) gives specific attention to high-need schools and classrooms;
(c) Provide information to the local community and its electorate
describing the school district's policies concerning hiring, assigning,
terminating, and evaluating staff, including the criteria for
evaluating teachers and principals;
(d) 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 of the
state board of education;
(((d))) (e) Determine the allocation of staff time, whether
certificated or classified;
(((e))) (f) Establish final curriculum standards consistent with
law and rules of the superintendent of public instruction, 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))) (g) 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.
Sec. 202 RCW 28A.405.100 and 1997 c 278 s 1 are each amended to
read as follows:
(1)(a) Except as provided in subsection (2) of this section, the
superintendent of public instruction shall establish and may amend from
time to time minimum criteria for the evaluation of the professional
performance capabilities and development of certificated classroom
teachers and certificated support personnel. For classroom teachers
the criteria shall be developed in the following categories:
Instructional skill; classroom management, professional preparation and
scholarship; effort toward improvement when needed; the handling of
student discipline and attendant problems; and interest in teaching
pupils and knowledge of subject matter.
(b) Every board of directors shall, in accordance with procedure
provided in RCW 41.59.010 through 41.59.170, 41.59.910 and 41.59.920,
establish evaluative criteria and procedures for all certificated
classroom teachers and certificated support personnel. The evaluative
criteria must contain as a minimum the criteria established by the
superintendent of public instruction pursuant to this section and must
be prepared within six months following adoption of the superintendent
of public instruction's minimum criteria. The district must certify to
the superintendent of public instruction that evaluative criteria have
been so prepared by the district.
(2)(a) Pursuant to the implementation schedule established in
subsection (7)(b) of this section, every board of directors shall, in
accordance with procedures provided in RCW 41.59.010 through 41.59.170,
41.59.910, and 41.59.920, establish revised evaluative criteria and a
four-level rating system for all certificated classroom teachers.
(b) The minimum criteria shall include: (i) Centering instruction
on high expectations for student achievement; (ii) demonstrating
effective teaching practices; (iii) recognizing individual student
learning needs and developing strategies to address those needs; (iv)
providing clear and intentional focus on subject matter content and
curriculum; (v) fostering and managing a safe, positive learning
environment; (vi) using multiple student data elements to modify
instruction and improve student learning; (vii) communicating and
collaborating with parents and school community; and (viii) exhibiting
collaborative and collegial practices focused on improving
instructional practice and student learning.
(c) The four-level rating system used to evaluate the certificated
classroom teacher must describe performance along a continuum that
indicates the extent to which the criteria have been met or exceeded.
When student growth data, if available and relevant to the teacher and
subject matter, is referenced in the evaluation process it must be
based on multiple measures that can include classroom-based, school-based, district-based, and state-based tools. As used in this
subsection, "student growth" means the change in student achievement
between two points in time.
(3)(a) Except as provided in subsection (((5))) (10) of this
section, it shall be the responsibility of a principal or his or her
designee to evaluate all certificated personnel in his or her school.
During each school year all classroom teachers and certificated support
personnel((, hereinafter referred to as "employees" in this section,))
shall be observed for the purposes of evaluation at least twice in the
performance of their assigned duties. Total observation time for each
employee for each school year shall be not less than sixty minutes. An
employee in the third year of provisional status as defined in RCW
28A.405.220 shall be observed at least three times in the performance
of his or her duties and the total observation time for the school year
shall not be less than ninety minutes. Following each observation, or
series of observations, the principal or other evaluator shall promptly
document the results of the observation in writing, and shall provide
the employee with a copy thereof within three days after such report is
prepared. New employees shall be observed at least once for a total
observation time of thirty minutes during the first ninety calendar
days of their employment period.
(b) As used in this subsection and subsection (4) of this section,
"employees" means classroom teachers and certificated support
personnel.
(4)(a) At any time after October 15th, an employee whose work is
not judged ((unsatisfactory)) satisfactory based on district evaluation
criteria shall be notified in writing of the specific areas of
deficiencies along with a reasonable program for improvement. During
the period of probation, the employee may not be transferred from the
supervision of the original evaluator. Improvement of performance or
probable cause for nonrenewal must occur and be documented by the
original evaluator before any consideration of a request for transfer
or reassignment as contemplated by either the individual or the school
district. A probationary period of sixty school days shall be
established. The establishment of a probationary period does not
adversely affect the contract status of an employee within the meaning
of RCW 28A.405.300. The purpose of the probationary period is to give
the employee opportunity to demonstrate improvements in his or her
areas of deficiency. The establishment of the probationary period and
the giving of the notice to the employee of deficiency shall be by the
school district superintendent and need not be submitted to the board
of directors for approval. During the probationary period the
evaluator shall meet with the employee at least twice monthly to
supervise and make a written evaluation of the progress, if any, made
by the employee. The evaluator may authorize one additional
certificated employee to evaluate the probationer and to aid the
employee in improving his or her areas of deficiency; such additional
certificated employee shall be immune from any civil liability that
might otherwise be incurred or imposed with regard to the good faith
performance of such evaluation. The probationer may be removed from
probation if he or she has demonstrated improvement to the satisfaction
of the principal in those areas specifically detailed in his or her
initial notice of deficiency and subsequently detailed in his or her
improvement program. Lack of necessary improvement during the
established probationary period, as specifically documented in writing
with notification to the probationer and shall constitute grounds for
a finding of probable cause under RCW 28A.405.300 or 28A.405.210.
(b) Immediately following the completion of a probationary period
that does not produce performance changes detailed in the initial
notice of deficiencies and improvement program, the employee may be
removed from his or her assignment and placed into an alternative
assignment for the remainder of the school year. This reassignment may
not displace another employee nor may it adversely affect the
probationary employee's compensation or benefits for the remainder of
the employee's contract year. If such reassignment is not possible,
the district may, at its option, place the employee on paid leave for
the balance of the contract term.
(((2))) (5) Every board of directors shall establish evaluative
criteria and procedures for all superintendents, principals, and other
administrators. It shall be the responsibility of the district
superintendent or his or her designee to evaluate all administrators.
Except as provided in subsection (6) of this section, such evaluation
shall be based on the administrative position job description. Such
criteria, when applicable, shall include at least the following
categories: Knowledge of, experience in, and training in recognizing
good professional performance, capabilities and development; school
administration and management; school finance; professional preparation
and scholarship; effort toward improvement when needed; interest in
pupils, employees, patrons and subjects taught in school; leadership;
and ability and performance of evaluation of school personnel.
(((3))) (6)(a) Pursuant to the implementation schedule established
by subsection (7)(b) of this section, every board of directors shall
establish revised evaluative criteria and a four-level rating system
for principals.
(b) The minimum criteria shall include: (i) Creating a school
culture that promotes the ongoing improvement of learning and teaching
for students and staff; (ii) demonstrating commitment to closing the
achievement gap; (iii) providing for school safety; (iv) leading the
development, implementation, and evaluation of a data-driven plan for
increasing student achievement, including the use of multiple student
data elements; (v) assisting instructional staff with alignment of
curriculum, instruction, and assessment with state and local district
learning goals; (vi) monitoring, assisting, and evaluating effective
instruction and assessment practices; (vii) managing both staff and
fiscal resources to support student achievement and legal
responsibilities; and (viii) partnering with the school community to
promote student learning.
(c) The four-level rating system used to evaluate the principal
must describe performance along a continuum that indicates the extent
to which the criteria have been met or exceeded. When available,
student growth data that is referenced in the evaluation process must
be based on multiple measures that can include classroom-based, school-based, district-based, and state-based tools. As used in this
subsection, "student growth" means the change in student achievement
between two points in time.
(7)(a) The superintendent of public instruction, in collaboration
with state professional associations representing teachers, principals,
and administrators, shall create models for implementing the evaluation
system criteria, student growth tools, professional development
programs, and evaluator training for certificated classroom teachers
and principals. Human resources specialists, professional development
experts, and assessment experts must also be consulted. Due to the
diversity of teaching assignments and the many developmental levels of
students, classroom teachers and principals must be prominently
represented in this work. The models must be available for use in the
2011-12 school year.
(b) A new certificated classroom teacher evaluation system that
implements the provisions of subsection (2) of this section and a new
principal evaluation system that implements the provisions of
subsection (6) of this section shall be phased-in beginning with the
2010-11 school year by districts identified in (c) of this subsection
and implemented in all school districts beginning with the 2013-14
school year.
(c) A set of school districts shall be selected by the
superintendent of public instruction to participate in a collaborative
process resulting in the development and piloting of new certificated
classroom teacher and principal evaluation systems during the 2010-11
and 2011-12 school years. These school districts must be selected
based on: (i) The agreement of the local associations representing
classroom teachers and principals to collaborate with the district in
this developmental work and (ii) the agreement to participate in the
full range of development and implementation activities, including:
Development of rubrics for the evaluation criteria and ratings in
subsections (2) and (6) of this section; identification of or
development of appropriate multiple measures of student growth in
subsections (2) and (6) of this section; development of appropriate
evaluation system forms; participation in professional development for
principals and classroom teachers regarding the content of the new
evaluation system; participation in evaluator training; and
participation in activities to evaluate the effectiveness of the new
systems and support programs. The school districts must submit to the
office of the superintendent of public instruction data that is used in
evaluations and all district-collected student achievement, aptitude,
and growth data regardless of whether the data is used in evaluations.
If the data is not available electronically, the district may submit it
in nonelectronic form. The superintendent of public instruction must
analyze the districts' use of student data in evaluations, including
examining the extent that student data is not used or is underutilized.
The superintendent of public instruction must also consult with
participating districts and stakeholders, recommend appropriate
changes, and address statewide implementation issues. The
superintendent of public instruction shall report evaluation system
implementation status, evaluation data, and recommendations to
appropriate committees of the legislature and governor by July 1, 2011,
and at the conclusion of the development phase by July 1, 2012. In the
July 1, 2011 report, the superintendent shall include recommendations
for whether a single statewide evaluation model should be adopted,
whether modified versions developed by school districts should be
subject to state approval, and what the criteria would be for
determining if a school district's evaluation model meets or exceeds a
statewide model. The report shall also identify challenges posed by
requiring a state approval process.
(8) Each certificated ((employee)) classroom teacher and
certificated support personnel shall have the opportunity for
confidential conferences with his or her immediate supervisor on no
less than two occasions in each school year. Such confidential
conference shall have as its sole purpose the aiding of the
administrator in his or her assessment of the employee's professional
performance.
(((4))) (9) The failure of any evaluator to evaluate or supervise
or cause the evaluation or supervision of certificated ((employees))
classroom teachers and certificated support personnel or administrators
in accordance with this section, as now or hereafter amended, when it
is his or her specific assigned or delegated responsibility to do so,
shall be sufficient cause for the nonrenewal of any such evaluator's
contract under RCW 28A.405.210, or the discharge of such evaluator
under RCW 28A.405.300.
(((5))) (10) After ((an employee)) a certificated classroom teacher
or certificated support personnel has four years of satisfactory
evaluations under subsection (1) of this section or has received one of
the two top ratings for four years under subsection (2) of this
section, a school district may use a short form of evaluation, a
locally bargained evaluation emphasizing professional growth, an
evaluation under subsection (1) or (2) of this section, or any
combination thereof. The short form of evaluation shall include either
a thirty minute observation during the school year with a written
summary or a final annual written evaluation based on the criteria in
subsection (1) or (2) of this section and based on at least two
observation periods during the school year totaling at least sixty
minutes without a written summary of such observations being prepared.
A locally bargained short-form evaluation emphasizing professional
growth must provide that the professional growth activity conducted by
the certificated classroom teacher be specifically linked to one or
more of the certificated classroom teacher evaluation criteria.
However, the evaluation process set forth in subsection (1) or (2) of
this section shall be followed at least once every three years unless
this time is extended by a local school district under the bargaining
process set forth in chapter 41.59 RCW. The employee or evaluator may
require that the evaluation process set forth in subsection (1) or (2)
of this section be conducted in any given school year. No evaluation
other than the evaluation authorized under subsection (1) or (2) of
this section may be used as a basis for determining that an employee's
work is ((unsatisfactory)) not satisfactory under subsection (1) or (2)
of this section or as probable cause for the nonrenewal of an
employee's contract under RCW 28A.405.210 unless an evaluation process
developed under chapter 41.59 RCW determines otherwise.
Sec. 203 RCW 28A.405.220 and 2009 c 57 s 2 are each amended to
read as follows:
(1) Notwithstanding the provisions of RCW 28A.405.210, every person
employed by a school district in a teaching or other nonsupervisory
certificated position shall be subject to nonrenewal of employment
contract as provided in this section during the first ((two)) three
years of employment by such district, unless: (a) The employee has
previously completed at least two years of certificated employment in
another school district in the state of Washington, in which case the
employee shall be subject to nonrenewal of employment contract pursuant
to this section during the first year of employment with the new
district; or (b) the school district superintendent may make a
determination to remove an employee from provisional status if the
employee has received one of the top two evaluation ratings during the
second year of employment by the district. Employees as defined in
this section shall hereinafter be referred to as "provisional
employees(("))."
(2) In the event the superintendent of the school district
determines that the employment contract of any provisional employee
should not be renewed by the district for the next ensuing term such
provisional employee shall be notified thereof in writing on or before
May 15th preceding the commencement of such school term, or if the
omnibus appropriations act has not passed the legislature by May 15th,
then notification shall be no later than June 15th, which notification
shall state the reason or reasons for such determination. Such notice
shall be served upon the provisional employee personally, or by
certified or registered mail, or by leaving a copy of the notice at the
place of his or her usual abode with some person of suitable age and
discretion then resident therein. The determination of the
superintendent shall be subject to the evaluation requirements of RCW
28A.405.100.
(3) Every such provisional employee so notified, at his or her
request made in writing and filed with the superintendent of the
district within ten days after receiving such notice, shall be given
the opportunity to meet informally with the superintendent for the
purpose of requesting the superintendent to reconsider his or her
decision. Such meeting shall be held no later than ten days following
the receipt of such request, and the provisional employee shall be
given written notice of the date, time and place of meeting at least
three days prior thereto. At such meeting the provisional employee
shall be given the opportunity to refute any facts upon which the
superintendent's determination was based and to make any argument in
support of his or her request for reconsideration.
(4) Within ten days following the meeting with the provisional
employee, the superintendent shall either reinstate the provisional
employee or shall submit to the school district board of directors for
consideration at its next regular meeting a written report recommending
that the employment contract of the provisional employee be nonrenewed
and stating the reason or reasons therefor. A copy of such report
shall be delivered to the provisional employee at least three days
prior to the scheduled meeting of the board of directors. In taking
action upon the recommendation of the superintendent, the board of
directors shall consider any written communication which the
provisional employee may file with the secretary of the board at any
time prior to that meeting.
(5) The board of directors shall notify the provisional employee in
writing of its final decision within ten days following the meeting at
which the superintendent's recommendation was considered. The decision
of the board of directors to nonrenew the contract of a provisional
employee shall be final and not subject to appeal.
(6) This section applies to any person employed by a school
district in a teaching or other nonsupervisory certificated position
after June 25, 1976. This section provides the exclusive means for
nonrenewing the employment contract of a provisional employee and no
other provision of law shall be applicable thereto, including, without
limitation, RCW 28A.405.210 and chapter 28A.645 RCW.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 204 A new section is added to chapter 28A.405
RCW to read as follows:
(1) Representatives of the office of the superintendent of public
instruction and statewide associations representing administrators,
principals, human resources specialists, and certificated classroom
teachers shall analyze how the evaluation systems in RCW 28A.405.100
(2) and (6) affect issues related to a change in contract status.
(2) The analysis shall be conducted during each of the phase-in
years of the certificated classroom teacher and principal evaluation
systems. The analysis shall include: Procedures, timelines,
probationary periods, appeal procedures, and other items related to the
timely exercise of employment decisions and due process provisions for
certificated classroom teachers and principals.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 205 A new section is added to chapter 28A.405
RCW to read as follows:
If funds are provided for professional development activities
designed specifically for first through third-year teachers, the funds
shall be allocated first to districts participating in the evaluation
systems in RCW 28A.405.100 (2) and (6) before the required
implementation date under that section.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 301 The legislature finds that the presence of
highly effective principals in schools has never been more important
than it is today. To enable students to meet high academic standards,
principals must lead and encourage teams of teachers and support staff
to work together, align curriculum and instruction, use student data to
target instruction and intervention strategies, and serve as the chief
school officer with parents and the community. Greater responsibility
should come with greater authority over personnel, budgets, resource
allocation, and programs. But greater responsibility also comes with
greater accountability for outcomes. Washington is putting into place
an updated and rigorous system of evaluating principal performance, one
that will measure what matters. This system will never be truly
effective unless the results are meaningfully used.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 302 A new section is added to chapter 28A.405
RCW to read as follows:
(1) Any certificated employee of a school district under this
section who is first employed as a principal after the effective date
of this section shall be subject to transfer as provided under this
section, at the expiration of the term of his or her employment
contract, to any subordinate certificated position within the school
district. "Subordinate certificated position" as used in this section
means any administrative or nonadministrative certificated position for
which the annual compensation is less than the position currently held
by the administrator. This section applies only to school districts
with an annual average student enrollment of more than thirty-five
thousand full-time equivalent students.
(2) During the first three consecutive school years of employment
as a principal by the school district, or during the first full school
year of such employment in the case of a principal who has been
previously employed as a principal by another school district in the
state for three or more consecutive school years, the transfer of the
principal to a subordinate certificated position may be made by a
determination of the superintendent that the best interests of the
school district would be served by the transfer.
(3) Commencing with the fourth consecutive school year of
employment as a principal, or the second consecutive school year of
such employment in the case of a principal who has been previously
employed as a principal by another school district in the state for
three or more consecutive school years, the transfer of the principal
to a subordinate certificated position shall be based on the
superintendent's determination that the results of the evaluation of
the principal's performance using the evaluative criteria and rating
system established under RCW 28A.405.100 provide a valid reason for the
transfer without regard to whether there is probable cause for the
transfer. If a valid reason is shown, it shall be deemed that the
transfer is reasonably related to the principal's performance. No
probationary period is required. However, provision of support and an
attempt at remediation of the performance of the principal, as defined
by the superintendent, are required for a determination by the
superintendent under this subsection that the principal should be
transferred to a subordinate certificated position.
(4) Any superintendent transferring a principal under this section
to a subordinate certificated position shall notify that principal in
writing on or before May 15th before the beginning of the school year
of that determination, or if the omnibus appropriations act has not
passed the legislature by May 15th, then notification shall be no later
than June 15th. The notification shall state the reason or reasons for
the transfer and shall identify the subordinate certificated position
to which the principal will be transferred. The notification shall be
served upon the principal personally, or by certified or registered
mail, or by leaving a copy of the notice at the place of his or her
usual abode with some person of suitable age and discretion then
resident therein.
(5) Any principal so notified may request to the president or chair
of the board of directors of the district, in writing and within ten
days after receiving notice, an opportunity to meet informally with the
board of directors in an executive session for the purpose of
requesting the board to reconsider the decision of the superintendent,
and shall be given such opportunity. The board, upon receipt of such
request, shall schedule the meeting for no later than the next
regularly scheduled meeting of the board, and shall give the principal
written notice at least three days before the meeting of the date,
time, and place of the meeting. At the meeting the principal shall be
given the opportunity to refute any evidence upon which the
determination was based and to make any argument in support of his or
her request for reconsideration. The principal and the board may
invite their respective legal counsel to be present and to participate
at the meeting. The board shall notify the principal in writing of its
final decision within ten days following its meeting with the
principal. No appeal to the courts shall lie from the final decision
of the board of directors to transfer a principal to a subordinate
certificated position.
(6) This section provides the exclusive means for transferring a
certificated employee first employed by a school district under this
section as a principal after the effective date of this section to a
subordinate certificated position at the expiration of the term of his
or her employment contract.
Sec. 303 RCW 28A.405.210 and 2009 c 57 s 1 are each amended to
read as follows:
No teacher, principal, supervisor, superintendent, or other
certificated employee, holding a position as such with a school
district, hereinafter referred to as "employee", shall be employed
except by written order of a majority of the directors of the district
at a regular or special meeting thereof, nor unless he or she is the
holder of an effective teacher's certificate or other certificate
required by law or the Washington professional educator standards board
for the position for which the employee is employed.
The board shall make with each employee employed by it a written
contract, which shall be in conformity with the laws of this state, and
except as otherwise provided by law, limited to a term of not more than
one year. Every such contract shall be made in duplicate, one copy to
be retained by the school district superintendent or secretary and one
copy to be delivered to the employee. No contract shall be offered by
any board for the employment of any employee who has previously signed
an employment contract for that same term in another school district of
the state of Washington unless such employee shall have been released
from his or her obligations under such previous contract by the board
of directors of the school district to which he or she was obligated.
Any contract signed in violation of this provision shall be void.
In the event it is determined that there is probable cause or
causes that the employment contract of an employee should not be
renewed by the district for the next ensuing term such employee shall
be notified in writing on or before May 15th preceding the commencement
of such term of that determination, or if the omnibus appropriations
act has not passed the legislature by May 15th, then notification shall
be no later than June 15th, which notification shall specify the cause
or causes for nonrenewal of contract. Such determination of probable
cause for certificated employees, other than the superintendent, shall
be made by the superintendent. Such notice shall be served upon the
employee personally, or by certified or registered mail, or by leaving
a copy of the notice at the house of his or her usual abode with some
person of suitable age and discretion then resident therein. Every
such employee so notified, at his or her request made in writing and
filed with the president, chair or secretary of the board of directors
of the district within ten days after receiving such notice, shall be
granted opportunity for hearing pursuant to RCW 28A.405.310 to
determine whether there is sufficient cause or causes for nonrenewal of
contract: PROVIDED, That any employee receiving notice of nonrenewal
of contract due to an enrollment decline or loss of revenue may, in his
or her request for a hearing, stipulate that initiation of the
arrangements for a hearing officer as provided for by RCW
28A.405.310(4) shall occur within ten days following July 15 rather
than the day that the employee submits the request for a hearing. If
any such notification or opportunity for hearing is not timely given,
the employee entitled thereto shall be conclusively presumed to have
been reemployed by the district for the next ensuing term upon
contractual terms identical with those which would have prevailed if
his or her employment had actually been renewed by the board of
directors for such ensuing term.
This section shall not be applicable to "provisional employees" as
so designated in RCW 28A.405.220; transfer to a subordinate
certificated position as that procedure is set forth in RCW 28A.405.230
or section 302 of this act shall not be construed as a nonrenewal of
contract for the purposes of this section.
Sec. 304 RCW 28A.405.230 and 2009 c 57 s 3 are each amended to
read as follows:
Any certificated employee of a school district employed as an
assistant superintendent, director, principal, assistant principal,
coordinator, or in any other supervisory or administrative position,
hereinafter in this section referred to as "administrator", shall be
subject to transfer, at the expiration of the term of his or her
employment contract, to any subordinate certificated position within
the school district. "Subordinate certificated position" as used in
this section, shall mean any administrative or nonadministrative
certificated position for which the annual compensation is less than
the position currently held by the administrator.
Every superintendent determining that the best interests of the
school district would be served by transferring any administrator to a
subordinate certificated position shall notify that administrator in
writing on or before May 15th preceding the commencement of such school
term of that determination, or if the omnibus appropriations act has
not passed the legislature by May 15th, then notification shall be no
later than June 15th, which notification shall state the reason or
reasons for the transfer, and shall identify the subordinate
certificated position to which the administrator will be transferred.
Such notice shall be served upon the administrator personally, or by
certified or registered mail, or by leaving a copy of the notice at the
place of his or her usual abode with some person of suitable age and
discretion then resident therein.
Every such administrator so notified, at his or her request made in
writing and filed with the president or chair, or secretary of the
board of directors of the district within ten days after receiving such
notice, shall be given the opportunity to meet informally with the
board of directors in an executive session thereof for the purpose of
requesting the board to reconsider the decision of the superintendent.
Such board, upon receipt of such request, shall schedule the meeting
for no later than the next regularly scheduled meeting of the board,
and shall notify the administrator in writing of the date, time and
place of the meeting at least three days prior thereto. At such
meeting the administrator shall be given the opportunity to refute any
facts upon which the determination was based and to make any argument
in support of his or her request for reconsideration. The
administrator and the board may invite their respective legal counsel
to be present and to participate at the meeting. The board shall
notify the administrator in writing of its final decision within ten
days following its meeting with the administrator. No appeal to the
courts shall lie from the final decision of the board of directors to
transfer an administrator to a subordinate certificated position:
PROVIDED, That in the case of principals such transfer shall be made at
the expiration of the contract year and only during the first three
consecutive school years of employment as a principal by a school
district; except that if any such principal has been previously
employed as a principal by another school district in the state of
Washington for three or more consecutive school years the provisions of
this section shall apply only to the first full school year of such
employment.
This section applies to any person employed as an administrator by
a school district on June 25, 1976, and to all persons so employed at
any time thereafter, except that section 302 of this act applies to
persons first employed after the effective date of this section as a
principal by a school district meeting the criteria of section 302 of
this act. This section provides the exclusive means for transferring
an administrator subject to this section to a subordinate certificated
position at the expiration of the term of his or her employment
contract.
Sec. 305 RCW 28A.405.300 and 1990 c 33 s 395 are each amended to
read as follows:
In the event it is determined that there is probable cause or
causes for a teacher, principal, supervisor, superintendent, or other
certificated employee, holding a position as such with the school
district, hereinafter referred to as "employee", to be discharged or
otherwise adversely affected in his or her contract status, such
employee shall be notified in writing of that decision, which
notification shall specify the probable cause or causes for such
action. Such determinations of probable cause for certificated
employees, other than the superintendent, shall be made by the
superintendent. Such notices shall be served upon that employee
personally, or by certified or registered mail, or by leaving a copy of
the notice at the house of his or her usual abode with some person of
suitable age and discretion then resident therein. Every such employee
so notified, at his or her request made in writing and filed with the
president, chair of the board or secretary of the board of directors of
the district within ten days after receiving such notice, shall be
granted opportunity for a hearing pursuant to RCW 28A.405.310 to
determine whether or not there is sufficient cause or causes for his or
her discharge or other adverse action against his or her contract
status.
In the event any such notice or opportunity for hearing is not
timely given, or in the event cause for discharge or other adverse
action is not established by a preponderance of the evidence at the
hearing, such employee shall not be discharged or otherwise adversely
affected in his or her contract status for the causes stated in the
original notice for the duration of his or her contract.
If such employee does not request a hearing as provided herein,
such employee may be discharged or otherwise adversely affected as
provided in the notice served upon the employee.
Transfer to a subordinate certificated position as that procedure
is set forth in RCW 28A.405.230 or section 302 of this act shall not be
construed as a discharge or other adverse action against contract
status for the purposes of this section.
Sec. 401 RCW 28A.400.200 and 2002 c 353 s 2 are each amended to
read as follows:
(1) Every school district board of directors shall fix, alter,
allow, and order paid salaries and compensation for all district
employees in conformance with this section.
(2)(a) Salaries for certificated instructional staff shall not be
less than the salary provided in the appropriations act in the
statewide salary allocation schedule for an employee with a
baccalaureate degree and zero years of service; and
(b) Salaries for certificated instructional staff with a master's
degree shall not be less than the salary provided in the appropriations
act in the statewide salary allocation schedule for an employee with a
master's degree and zero years of service;
(3)(a) The actual average salary paid to certificated instructional
staff shall not exceed the district's average certificated
instructional staff salary used for the state basic education
allocations for that school year as determined pursuant to RCW
28A.150.410.
(b) Fringe benefit contributions for certificated instructional
staff shall be included as salary under (a) of this subsection only to
the extent that the district's actual average benefit contribution
exceeds the amount of the insurance benefits allocation provided per
certificated instructional staff unit in the state operating
appropriations act in effect at the time the compensation is payable.
For purposes of this section, fringe benefits shall not include payment
for unused leave for illness or injury under RCW 28A.400.210; employer
contributions for old age survivors insurance, workers' compensation,
unemployment compensation, and retirement benefits under the Washington
state retirement system; or employer contributions for health benefits
in excess of the insurance benefits allocation provided per
certificated instructional staff unit in the state operating
appropriations act in effect at the time the compensation is payable.
A school district may not use state funds to provide employer
contributions for such excess health benefits.
(c) Salary and benefits for certificated instructional staff in
programs other than basic education shall be consistent with the salary
and benefits paid to certificated instructional staff in the basic
education program.
(4) Salaries and benefits for certificated instructional staff may
exceed the limitations in subsection (3) of this section only by
separate contract for additional time, for additional responsibilities,
((or)) for incentives, or for implementing specific measurable
innovative activities, including professional development, specified by
the school district to: (a) Close one or more achievement gaps, (b)
focus on development of science, technology, engineering, and
mathematics (STEM) learning opportunities, or (c) provide arts
education. Supplemental contracts shall not cause the state to incur
any present or future funding obligation. Supplemental contracts shall
be subject to the collective bargaining provisions of chapter 41.59 RCW
and the provisions of RCW 28A.405.240, shall not exceed one year, and
if not renewed shall not constitute adverse change in accordance with
RCW 28A.405.300 through 28A.405.380. No district may enter into a
supplemental contract under this subsection for the provision of
services which are a part of the basic education program required by
Article IX, section 3 of the state Constitution.
(5) Employee benefit plans offered by any district shall comply
with RCW 28A.400.350 and 28A.400.275 and 28A.400.280.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 501 A new section is added to chapter 28A.410
RCW to read as follows:
(1) Beginning with the 2011-12 school year, all professional
educator standards board-approved teacher preparation programs must
administer to all preservice candidates the evidence-based assessment
of teaching effectiveness adopted by the professional educator
standards board. The professional educator standards board shall adopt
rules that establish a date during the 2012-13 school year after which
candidates completing teacher preparation programs must successfully
pass this assessment. Assessment results from persons completing each
preparation program must be reported annually by the professional
educator standards board to the governor and the education and fiscal
committees of the legislature by December 1st.
(2) The professional educator standards board and the
superintendent of public instruction, as determined by the board, may
contract with one or more third parties for:
(a) The administration, scoring, and reporting of scores of the
assessment under this section;
(b) Related clerical and administrative activities; or
(c) Any combination of the purposes of this subsection (2).
(3) Candidates for residency certification who are required to
successfully complete the assessment under this section, and who are
charged a fee for the assessment by a third party contracted with under
this section, shall pay the fee charged by the contractor directly to
the contractor. Such fees shall be reasonably related to the actual
costs of the contractor in providing the assessment.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 502 A new section is added to chapter 28A.410
RCW to read as follows:
(1) By September 30, 2010, the professional educator standards
board shall review and revise teacher and administrator preparation
program approval standards and proposal review procedures at the
residency certificate level to ensure they are rigorous and appropriate
standards for an expanded range of potential providers, including
community college and nonhigher education providers. All approved
providers must adhere to the same standards and comply with the same
requirements.
(2) Beginning September 30, 2010, the professional educator
standards board must accept proposals for community college and
nonhigher education providers of educator preparation programs.
Proposals must be processed and considered by the board as
expeditiously as possible.
(3) By September 1, 2011, all professional educator standards
board- approved residency teacher preparation programs at institutions
of higher education as defined in RCW 28B.10.016 not currently a
partner in an alternative route program approved by the professional
educator standards board must submit to the board a proposal to offer
one or more of the alternative route programs that meet the
requirements of RCW 28A.660.020 and 28A.660.040.
(4)(a) The state board for community and technical colleges shall
select up to three community colleges to develop and offer a program of
study leading to a baccalaureate degree with a residency teaching
certificate. The program must lead to endorsement in a subject matter
shortage area. To the maximum extent possible, the colleges selected
shall be geographically dispersed to enhance access in underserved
areas of the state. The state board for community and technical
colleges and the professional educator standards board shall provide
technical assistance to the colleges in developing and submitting the
program for approval.
(b) A college selected under this subsection (4) may develop the
curriculum for and design and deliver courses leading to a
baccalaureate degree. However, programs developed under this
subsection (4) are subject to approval by the state board for community
and technical colleges under RCW 28B.50.090, the higher education
coordinating board under RCW 28B.76.230, and the professional educator
standards board under RCW 28A.410.210 before the college may enroll
students in upper division courses or apply courses offered toward
required competencies for teacher certification or endorsement. The
boards shall coordinate their review and approval processes to expedite
approval.
(c) The state board for community and technical colleges and the
professional educator standards board shall evaluate the experience of
the programs established under this subsection (4) and submit a report
to the governor and the legislature by January 10, 2014, regarding
whether additional programs should be authorized.
Sec. 503 RCW 28A.660.020 and 2006 c 263 s 816 are each amended to
read as follows:
(1) ((Each)) The professional educator standards board shall
transition the alternative route partnership grant program from a
separate competitive grant program to a preparation program model to be
expanded among approved preparation program providers. Alternative
routes are partnerships between professional educator standards board-approved preparation programs, Washington school districts, and other
partners as appropriate.
(2) Each prospective teacher preparation program provider, in
cooperation with a Washington school district or consortia of school
districts applying ((for the)) to operate alternative route
certification program shall ((submit a)) include in its proposal to the
Washington professional educator standards board ((specifying)):
(a) The route or routes the partnership program intends to offer
and a detailed description of how the routes will be structured and
operated by the partnership;
(b) The estimated number of candidates that will be enrolled per
route;
(c) An identification, indication of commitment, and description of
the role of approved teacher preparation programs ((that are)) and
partnering ((with the)) district or consortia of districts;
(d) An assurance ((of)) that the district ((provision of)) or
approved preparation program provider will provide adequate training
for mentor teachers ((either through participation in a state mentor
training academy or district-provided training that meets state-established mentor-training standards)) specific to the mentoring of
alternative route candidates;
(e) An assurance that significant time will be provided for mentor
teachers to spend with the alternative route teacher candidates
throughout the internship. Partnerships must provide each candidate
with intensive classroom mentoring until such time as the candidate
demonstrates the competency necessary to manage the classroom with less
intensive supervision and guidance from a mentor;
(f) A description of the rigorous screening process for applicants
to alternative route programs, including entry requirements specific to
each route, as provided in RCW 28A.660.040; ((and))
(g) A summary of procedures that provide flexible completion
opportunities for candidates to achieve a residency certificate; and
(h) The design and use of a teacher development plan for each
candidate. The plan shall specify the alternative route coursework and
training required of each candidate and shall be developed by comparing
the candidate's prior experience and coursework with the state's new
performance-based standards for residency certification and adjusting
any requirements accordingly. The plan may include the following
components:
(i) A minimum of one-half of a school year, and an additional
significant amount of time if necessary, of intensive mentorship during
field experience, starting with full-time mentoring and progressing to
increasingly less intensive monitoring and assistance as the intern
demonstrates the skills necessary to take over the classroom with less
intensive support. ((For route one and two candidates,)) Before the
supervision is diminished, the mentor of the teacher candidate at the
school and the supervisor of the teacher candidate from the ((higher
education)) teacher preparation program must both agree that the
teacher candidate is ready to manage the classroom with less intensive
supervision((. For route three and four candidates, the mentor of the
teacher candidate shall make the decision));
(ii) Identification of performance indicators based on the
knowledge and skills standards required for residency certification by
the Washington professional educator standards board;
(iii) Identification of benchmarks that will indicate when the
standard is met for all performance indicators;
(iv) A description of strategies for assessing candidate
performance on the benchmarks;
(v) Identification of one or more tools to be used to assess a
candidate's performance once the candidate has been in the classroom
for about one-half of a school year; ((and))
(vi) A description of the criteria that would result in residency
certification after about one-half of a school year but before the end
of the program; and
(vii) A description of how the district intends for the alternative
route program to support its workforce development plan and how the
presence of alternative route interns will advance its school
improvement plans.
(((2))) (3) To the extent funds are appropriated for this purpose,
((districts)) alternative route programs may apply for program funds to
pay stipends to trained mentor teachers of interns during the mentored
internship. The per intern amount of mentor stipend provided by state
funds shall not exceed five hundred dollars.
Sec. 504 RCW 28A.660.040 and 2009 c 192 s 1 and 2009 c 166 s 1
are each reenacted and amended to read as follows:
((Partnership grants funded)) Alternative route programs under this
chapter shall operate one to four specific route programs. Successful
completion of the program shall make a candidate eligible for residency
teacher certification. ((For route one and two candidates,)) The
mentor of the teacher candidate at the school and the supervisor of the
teacher candidate from the ((higher education)) teacher preparation
program must both agree that the teacher candidate has successfully
completed the program. ((For route three and four candidates, the
mentor of the teacher candidate shall make the determination that the
candidate has successfully completed the program.))
(1) ((Partnership grant programs seeking funds to operate))
Alternative route programs operating route one programs shall enroll
currently employed classified instructional employees with transferable
associate degrees seeking residency teacher certification with
endorsements in special education, bilingual education, or English as
a second language. It is anticipated that candidates enrolled in this
route will complete both their baccalaureate degree and requirements
for residency certification in two years or less, including a mentored
internship to be completed in the final year. In addition, partnership
programs shall uphold entry requirements for candidates that include:
(a) District or building validation of qualifications, including
one year of successful student interaction and leadership as a
classified instructional employee;
(b) Successful passage of the statewide basic skills exam((, when
available)); and
(c) Meeting the age, good moral character, and personal fitness
requirements adopted by rule for teachers.
(2) ((Partnership grant programs seeking funds to operate))
Alternative route programs operating route two programs shall enroll
currently employed classified staff with baccalaureate degrees seeking
residency teacher certification in subject matter shortage areas and
areas with shortages due to geographic location. Candidates enrolled
in this route must complete a mentored internship complemented by
flexibly scheduled training and coursework offered at a local site,
such as a school or educational service district, or online or via
video-conference over the K-20 network, in collaboration with the
partnership program's higher education partner. In addition,
partnership grant programs shall uphold entry requirements for
candidates that include:
(a) District or building validation of qualifications, including
one year of successful student interaction and leadership as classified
staff;
(b) A baccalaureate degree from a regionally accredited institution
of higher education. The individual's college or university grade
point average may be considered as a selection factor;
(c) Successful completion of the ((content test, once the state
content test is available)) subject matter assessment required by RCW
28A.410.220(3);
(d) Meeting the age, good moral character, and personal fitness
requirements adopted by rule for teachers; and
(e) Successful passage of the statewide basic skills exam((, when
available)).
(3) ((Partnership grant)) Alternative route programs seeking funds
to operate route three programs shall enroll individuals with
baccalaureate degrees, who are not employed in the district at the time
of application. When selecting candidates for certification through
route three, districts and approved preparation program providers shall
give priority to individuals who are seeking residency teacher
certification in subject matter shortage areas or shortages due to
geographic locations. ((For route three only, the districts may
include additional candidates in nonshortage subject areas if the
candidates are seeking endorsements with a secondary grade level
designation as defined by rule by the professional educator standards
board. The districts shall disclose to candidates in nonshortage
subject areas available information on the demand in those subject
areas.)) Cohorts of candidates for this route shall attend an
intensive summer teaching academy, followed by a full year employed by
a district in a mentored internship, followed, if necessary, by a
second summer teaching academy. In addition, partnership programs
shall uphold entry requirements for candidates that include:
(a) A baccalaureate degree from a regionally accredited institution
of higher education. The individual's grade point average may be
considered as a selection factor;
(b) Successful completion of the ((content test, once the state
content test is available)) subject matter assessment required by RCW
28A.410.220(3);
(c) External validation of qualifications, including demonstrated
successful experience with students or children, such as reference
letters and letters of support from previous employers;
(d) Meeting the age, good moral character, and personal fitness
requirements adopted by rule for teachers; and
(e) Successful passage of statewide basic skills exam((s, when
available)).
(4) ((Partnership grant programs seeking funds to operate))
Alternative route programs operating route four programs shall enroll
individuals with baccalaureate degrees, who are employed in the
district at the time of application, or who hold conditional teaching
certificates or emergency substitute certificates. Cohorts of
candidates for this route shall attend an intensive summer teaching
academy, followed by a full year employed by a district in a mentored
internship. If employed on a conditional certificate, the intern may
serve as the teacher of record, supported by a well-trained mentor. In
addition, partnership programs shall uphold entry requirements for
candidates that include:
(a) A baccalaureate degree from a regionally accredited institution
of higher education. The individual's grade point average may be
considered as a selection factor;
(b) Successful completion of the ((content test, once the state
content test is available)) subject matter assessment required by RCW
28A.410.220(3);
(c) External validation of qualifications, including demonstrated
successful experience with students or children, such as reference
letters and letters of support from previous employers;
(d) Meeting the age, good moral character, and personal fitness
requirements adopted by rule for teachers; and
(e) Successful passage of statewide basic skills exam((s, when
available)).
(5) Applicants for alternative route programs who are eligible
veterans or national guard members and who meet the entry requirements
for the alternative route program for which application is made shall
be given preference in admission.
Sec. 505 RCW 28A.660.050 and 2009 c 539 s 3 and 2009 c 192 s 2
are each reenacted and amended to read as follows:
Subject to the availability of amounts appropriated for these
purposes, the conditional scholarship programs in this chapter are
created under the following guidelines:
(1) The programs shall be administered by the higher education
coordinating board. In administering the programs, the higher
education coordinating board has the following powers and duties:
(a) To adopt necessary rules and develop guidelines to administer
the programs;
(b) To collect and manage repayments from participants who do not
meet their service obligations; and
(c) To accept grants and donations from public and private sources
for the programs.
(2) Requirements for participation in the conditional scholarship
programs are as provided in this subsection (2).
(a) The alternative route conditional scholarship program is
limited to interns of ((the partnership grant)) professional educator
standards board-approved alternative routes to teaching programs under
RCW 28A.660.040. For fiscal year 2011, priority must be given to
fiscal year 2010 participants in the alternative route partnership
program. In order to receive conditional scholarship awards,
recipients shall:
(i) Be accepted and maintain enrollment in alternative
certification routes through ((the partnership grant)) a professional
educator standards board-approved program;
(ii) Continue to make satisfactory progress toward completion of
the alternative route certification program and receipt of a residency
teaching certificate; and
(iii) Receive no more than the annual amount of the scholarship,
not to exceed eight thousand dollars, for the cost of tuition, fees,
and educational expenses, including books, supplies, and transportation
for the alternative route certification program in which the recipient
is enrolled. The board may adjust the annual award by the average rate
of resident undergraduate tuition and fee increases at the state
universities as defined in RCW 28B.10.016.
(b) The pipeline for paraeducators conditional scholarship program
is limited to qualified paraeducators as provided by RCW 28A.660.042.
In order to receive conditional scholarship awards, recipients shall:
(i) Be accepted and maintain enrollment at a community and
technical college for no more than two years and attain an associate of
arts degree;
(ii) Continue to make satisfactory progress toward completion of an
associate of arts degree. This progress requirement is a condition for
eligibility into a route one program of the alternative routes to
teacher certification program for a mathematics, special education, or
English as a second language endorsement; and
(iii) Receive no more than the annual amount of the scholarship,
not to exceed four thousand dollars, for the cost of tuition, fees, and
educational expenses, including books, supplies, and transportation for
the alternative route certification program in which the recipient is
enrolled. The board may adjust the annual award by the average rate of
tuition and fee increases at the state community and technical
colleges.
(c) The retooling to teach mathematics and science conditional
scholarship program is limited to current K-12 teachers ((and
individuals having an elementary education certificate but who are not
employed in positions requiring an elementary education certificate as
provided by RCW 28A.660.045)). In order to receive conditional
scholarship awards:
(i) Individuals currently employed as teachers shall pursue a
middle level mathematics or science, or secondary mathematics or
science endorsement; or
(ii) Individuals who are certificated with an elementary education
endorsement((, but not employed in positions requiring an elementary
education certificate,)) shall pursue an endorsement in middle level
mathematics or science, or both; and
(iii) Individuals shall use one of the pathways to endorsement
processes to receive a mathematics or science endorsement, or both,
which shall include passing a mathematics or science endorsement test,
or both tests, plus observation and completing applicable coursework to
attain the proper endorsement; and
(iv) Individuals shall receive no more than the annual amount of
the scholarship, not to exceed three thousand dollars, for the cost of
tuition, test fees, and educational expenses, including books,
supplies, and transportation for the endorsement pathway being pursued.
(3) The Washington professional educator standards board shall
select individuals to receive conditional scholarships. In selecting
recipients, preference shall be given to eligible veterans or national
guard members.
(4) For the purpose of this chapter, a conditional scholarship is
a loan that is forgiven in whole or in part in exchange for service as
a certificated teacher employed in a Washington state K-12 public
school. The state shall forgive one year of loan obligation for every
two years a recipient teaches in a public school. Recipients who fail
to continue a course of study leading to residency teacher
certification or cease to teach in a public school in the state of
Washington in their endorsement area are required to repay the
remaining loan principal with interest.
(5) Recipients who fail to fulfill the required teaching obligation
are required to repay the remaining loan principal with interest and
any other applicable fees. The higher education coordinating board
shall adopt rules to define the terms for repayment, including
applicable interest rates, fees, and deferments.
(6) The higher education coordinating board may deposit all
appropriations, collections, and any other funds received for the
program in this chapter in the future teachers conditional scholarship
account authorized in RCW 28B.102.080.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 506 A new section is added to chapter 28A.410
RCW to read as follows:
Beginning with the 2010 school year and annually thereafter, each
educational service district, in cooperation with the professional
educator standards board, must convene representatives from school
districts within that region and professional educator standards board-approved educator preparation programs to review district and regional
educator workforce data, make biennial projections of certificate
staffing needs, and identify how recruitment and enrollment plans in
educator preparation programs reflect projected need.
Sec. 507 RCW 28B.76.335 and 2007 c 396 s 17 are each amended to
read as follows:
As part of the state needs assessment process conducted by the
board in accordance with RCW 28B.76.230, the board shall, in
collaboration with the professional educator standards board, assess
the need for additional ((baccalaureate)) degree and certificate
programs in Washington that specialize in teacher preparation ((in
mathematics, science, and technology)) to meet regional or subject area
shortages. If the board determines that there is a need for additional
programs, then the board shall encourage the appropriate institutions
of higher education or institutional sectors to create such a program.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 508 A new section is added to chapter 28B.76
RCW to read as follows:
(1) The board must establish boundaries for service regions for
institutions of higher education as defined in RCW 28B.10.016
implementing professional educator standards board-approved educator
preparation programs. Regions shall be established to encourage and
support, not exclude, the reach of public institutions of higher
education across the state.
(2) Based on the data in the assessment in RCW 28B.76.230 and
28B.76.335, the board shall determine whether reasonable teacher
preparation program access for prospective teachers is available in
each region. If access is determined to be inadequate in a region, the
institution of higher education responsible for the region shall submit
a plan for meeting the access need to the board.
(3) Partnerships with other teacher preparation program providers
and the use of appropriate technology shall be considered. The board
shall review the plan and, as appropriate, assist the institution in
developing support and resources for implementing the plan.
Sec. 509 RCW 28B.50.020 and 2009 c 64 s 2 are each amended to
read as follows:
The purpose of this chapter is to provide for the dramatically
increasing number of students requiring high standards of education
either as a part of the continuing higher education program or for
occupational education and training, or for adult basic skills and
literacy education, by creating a new, independent system of community
and technical colleges which will:
(1) Offer an open door to every citizen, regardless of his or her
academic background or experience, at a cost normally within his or her
economic means;
(2) Ensure that each college district shall offer thoroughly
comprehensive educational, training, and service programs to meet the
needs of both the communities and students served by combining high
standards of excellence in academic transfer courses; realistic and
practical courses in occupational education, both graded and ungraded;
community services of an educational, cultural, and recreational
nature; and adult education, including basic skills and general,
family, and workforce literacy programs and services;
(3) Provide for basic skills and literacy education, and
occupational education and technical training at technical colleges in
order to prepare students for careers in a competitive workforce;
(4) Provide or coordinate related and supplemental instruction for
apprentices at community and technical colleges;
(5) Provide administration by state and local boards which will
avoid unnecessary duplication of facilities or programs; and which will
encourage efficiency in operation and creativity and imagination in
education, training, and service to meet the needs of the community and
students;
(6) Allow for the growth, improvement, flexibility and modification
of the community colleges and their education, training, and service
programs as future needs occur; and
(7) Establish firmly that, except on a pilot basis as provided
under RCW 28B.50.810 and section 502 of this act, community colleges
are, for purposes of academic training, two year institutions, and are
an independent, unique, and vital section of our state's higher
education system, separate from both the common school system and other
institutions of higher learning, and never to be considered for
conversion into four-year liberal arts colleges.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 510 The following acts or parts of acts are
each repealed:
(1) RCW 28A.660.010 (Partnership grant program) and 2004 c 23 s 1
& 2001 c 158 s 2;
(2) RCW 28A.415.100 (Student teaching centers -- Legislative
recognition -- Intent) and 1991 c 258 s 1;
(3) RCW 28A.415.105 (Definitions) and 2006 c 263 s 811, 1995 c 335
s 403, & 1991 c 258 s 2;
(4) RCW 28A.415.125 (Network of student teaching centers) and 2006
c 263 s 812 & 1991 c 258 s 6;
(5) RCW 28A.415.130 (Allocation of funds for student teaching
centers) and 2006 c 263 s 813 & 1991 c 258 s 7;
(6) RCW 28A.415.135 (Alternative means of teacher placement) and
1991 c 258 s 8;
(7) RCW 28A.415.140 (Field experiences) and 1991 c 258 s 9;
(8) RCW 28A.415.145 (Rules) and 2006 c 263 s 814 & 1991 c 258 s 10;
and
(9) RCW 28A.660.030 (Partnership grants -- Selection -- Administration)
and 2004 c 23 s 3, 2003 c 410 s 2, & 2001 c 158 s 4.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 601 A new section is added to chapter 28A.655
RCW to read as follows:
(1) By August 2, 2010, the superintendent of public instruction may
revise the state essential academic learning requirements authorized
under RCW 28A.655.070 for mathematics, reading, writing, and
communication by provisionally adopting a common set of standards for
students in grades kindergarten through twelve. The revised state
essential academic learning requirements may be substantially identical
with the standards developed by a multistate consortium in which
Washington participated, must be consistent with the requirements of
RCW 28A.655.070, and may include additional standards if the additional
standards do not exceed fifteen percent of the standards for each
content area. However, the superintendent of public instruction shall
not take steps to implement the provisionally adopted standards until
the education committees of the house of representatives and the senate
have an opportunity to review the standards.
(2) By January 1, 2011, the superintendent of public instruction
shall submit to the education committees of the house of
representatives and the senate:
(a) A detailed comparison of the provisionally adopted standards
and the state essential academic learning requirements as of the
effective date of this section, including the comparative level of
rigor and specificity of the standards and the implications of any
identified differences; and
(b) An estimated timeline and costs to the state and to school
districts to implement the provisionally adopted standards, including
providing necessary training, realignment of curriculum, adjustment of
state assessments, and other actions.
(3) The superintendent may implement the revisions to the essential
academic learning requirements under this section after the 2011
legislative session unless otherwise directed by the legislature.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 701 A new section is added to chapter 28A.605
RCW to read as follows:
School districts are encouraged to strengthen family, school, and
community partnerships by creating spaces in school buildings, if space
is available, where students and families can access the services they
need, such as after-school tutoring, dental and health services,
counseling, or clothing and food banks.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 702 A new section is added to chapter 28A.655
RCW to read as follows:
(1) Beginning with the 2010-11 school year, each school shall
conduct outreach and seek feedback from a broad and diverse range of
parents, other individuals, and organizations in the community
regarding their experiences with the school. The school shall
summarize the responses in its annual report under RCW 28A.655.110.
(2) The office of the superintendent of public instruction shall
create a working group with representatives of organizations
representing parents, teachers, and principals as well as diverse
communities. The working group shall also include a representative
from the achievement gap oversight and accountability committee. By
September 1, 2010, the working group shall develop model feedback tools
and strategies that school districts may use to facilitate the feedback
process required in subsection (1) of this section. The model tools
and strategies are intended to provide assistance to school districts.
School districts are encouraged to adapt the models or develop unique
tools and strategies that best fit the circumstances in their
communities.
Sec. 703 RCW 28A.655.110 and 1999 c 388 s 303 are each amended to
read as follows:
(1) Beginning with the 1994-95 school year, to provide the local
community and electorate with access to information on the educational
programs in the schools in the district, each school shall publish
annually a school performance report and deliver the report to each
parent with children enrolled in the school and make the report
available to the community served by the school. The annual
performance report shall be in a form that can be easily understood and
be used by parents, guardians, and other members of the community who
are not professional educators to make informed educational decisions.
As data from the assessments in RCW 28A.655.060 becomes available, the
annual performance report should enable parents, educators, and school
board members to determine whether students in the district's schools
are attaining mastery of the student learning goals under RCW
28A.150.210, and other important facts about the schools' performance
in assisting students to learn. The annual report shall make
comparisons to a school's performance in preceding years ((and shall
include school level goals under RCW 28A.655.050)), student performance
relative to the goals and the percentage of students performing at each
level of the assessment, a comparison of student performance at each
level of the assessment to the previous year's performance, and
information regarding school-level plans to achieve the goals.
(2) The annual performance report shall include, but not be limited
to: (a) A brief statement of the mission of the school and the school
district; (b) enrollment statistics including student demographics; (c)
expenditures per pupil for the school year; (d) a summary of student
scores on all mandated tests; (e) a concise annual budget report; (f)
student attendance, graduation, and dropout rates; (g) information
regarding the use and condition of the school building or buildings;
(h) a brief description of the learning improvement plans for the
school; (i) a summary of the feedback from parents and community
members obtained under section 702 of this act; and (((i))) (j) an
invitation to all parents and citizens to participate in school
activities.
(3) The superintendent of public instruction shall develop by June
30, 1994, and update periodically, a model report form, which shall
also be adapted for computers, that schools may use to meet the
requirements of subsections (1) and (2) of this section. In order to
make school performance reports broadly accessible to the public, the
superintendent of public instruction, to the extent feasible, shall
make information on each school's report available on or through the
superintendent's internet web site.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 704 A new section is added to chapter 28A.300
RCW to read as follows:
There is a sizeable body of research positively supporting the
involvement of parents taking an engaged and active role in their
child's education. Therefore, the legislature intends to provide state
recognition by the center for the improvement of student learning
within the office of the superintendent of public instruction for
schools that increase the level of direct parental involvement with
their child's education. By September 1, 2010, the center for the
improvement of student learning shall determine measures that can be
used to evaluate the level of parental involvement in a school. The
center for the improvement of student learning shall collaborate with
school district family and community outreach programs and educational
service districts to identify and highlight successful models and
practices of parent involvement.
Sec. 801 RCW 41.56.100 and 1989 c 45 s 1 are each amended to read
as follows:
(1) A public employer shall have the authority to engage in
collective bargaining with the exclusive bargaining representative and
no public employer shall refuse to engage in collective bargaining with
the exclusive bargaining representative((: PROVIDED, That nothing
contained herein shall require any)). However, a public employer is
not required to bargain collectively with any bargaining representative
concerning any matter which by ordinance, resolution, or charter of
said public employer has been delegated to any civil service commission
or personnel board similar in scope, structure, and authority to the
board created by chapter 41.06 RCW.
(2) Upon the failure of the public employer and the exclusive
bargaining representative to conclude a collective bargaining
agreement, any matter in dispute may be submitted by either party to
the commission. This subsection does not apply to negotiations and
mediations conducted between a school district employer and an
exclusive bargaining representative under section 105 of this act.
(3) If a public employer implements its last and best offer where
there is no contract settlement, allegations that either party is
violating the terms of the implemented offer shall be subject to
grievance arbitration procedures if and as such procedures are set
forth in the implemented offer, or, if not in the implemented offer, if
and as such procedures are set forth in the parties' last contract.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 802 A new section is added to chapter 41.56
RCW to read as follows:
All collective bargaining agreements entered into between a school
district employer and school district employees under this chapter
after the effective date of this section, as well as bargaining
agreements existing on the effective date of this section but renewed
or extended after the effective date of this section, shall be
consistent with section 105 of this act.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 803 A new section is added to chapter 41.59
RCW to read as follows:
All collective bargaining agreements entered into between a school
district employer and school district employees under this chapter
after the effective date of this section, as well as bargaining
agreements existing on the effective date of this section but renewed
or extended after the effective date of this section, shall be
consistent with section 105 of this act.
Sec. 804 RCW 41.59.120 and 1975 1st ex.s. c 288 s 13 are each
amended to read as follows:
(1) Either an employer or an exclusive bargaining representative
may declare that an impasse has been reached between them in collective
bargaining and may request the commission to appoint a mediator for the
purpose of assisting them in reconciling their differences and
resolving the controversy on terms which are mutually acceptable. If
the commission determines that its assistance is needed, not later than
five days after the receipt of a request therefor, it shall appoint a
mediator in accordance with rules and regulations for such appointment
prescribed by the commission. The mediator shall meet with the parties
or their representatives, or both, forthwith, either jointly or
separately, and shall take such other steps as he may deem appropriate
in order to persuade the parties to resolve their differences and
effect a mutually acceptable agreement. The mediator, without the
consent of both parties, shall not make findings of fact or recommend
terms of settlement. The services of the mediator, including, if any,
per diem expenses, shall be provided by the commission without cost to
the parties. Nothing in this subsection (1) shall be construed to
prevent the parties from mutually agreeing upon their own mediation
procedure, and in the event of such agreement, the commission shall not
appoint its own mediator unless failure to do so would be inconsistent
with the effectuation of the purposes and policy of this chapter.
(2) If the mediator is unable to effect settlement of the
controversy within ten days after his or her appointment, either party,
by written notification to the other, may request that their
differences be submitted to fact-finding with recommendations, except
that the time for mediation may be extended by mutual agreement between
the parties. Within five days after receipt of the aforesaid written
request for fact-finding, the parties shall select a person to serve as
fact finder and obtain a commitment from that person to serve. If they
are unable to agree upon a fact finder or to obtain such a commitment
within that time, either party may request the commission to designate
a fact finder. The commission, within five days after receipt of such
request, shall designate a fact finder in accordance with rules and
regulations for such designation prescribed by the commission. The
fact finder so designated shall not be the same person who was
appointed mediator pursuant to subsection (1) of this section without
the consent of both parties.
The fact finder, within five days after his appointment, shall meet
with the parties or their representatives, or both, either jointly or
separately, and make inquiries and investigations, hold hearings, and
take such other steps as he may deem appropriate. For the purpose of
such hearings, investigations and inquiries, the fact finder shall have
the power to issue subpoenas requiring the attendance and testimony of
witnesses and the production of evidence. If the dispute is not
settled within ten days after his appointment, the fact finder shall
make findings of fact and recommend terms of settlement within thirty
days after his appointment, which recommendations shall be advisory
only.
(3) Such recommendations, together with the findings of fact, shall
be submitted in writing to the parties and the commission privately
before they are made public. Either the commission, the fact finder,
the employer, or the exclusive bargaining representative may make such
findings and recommendations public if the dispute is not settled
within five days after their receipt from the fact finder.
(4) The costs for the services of the fact finder, including, if
any, per diem expenses and actual and necessary travel and subsistence
expenses, and any other incurred costs, shall be borne by the
commission without cost to the parties.
(5) Nothing in this section shall be construed to prohibit an
employer and an exclusive bargaining representative from agreeing to
substitute, at their own expense, their own procedure for resolving
impasses in collective bargaining for that provided in this section or
from agreeing to utilize for the purposes of this section any other
governmental or other agency or person in lieu of the commission.
(6) Any fact finder designated by an employer and an exclusive
representative or the commission for the purposes of this section shall
be deemed an agent of the state.
(7) This section does not apply to negotiations and mediations
conducted under section 105 of this act.
Sec. 901 RCW 28A.300.136 and 2009 c 468 s 2 are each amended to
read as follows:
(1) An achievement gap oversight and accountability committee is
created to synthesize the findings and recommendations from the 2008
achievement gap studies into an implementation plan, and to recommend
policies and strategies to the superintendent of public instruction,
the professional educator standards board, and the state board of
education to close the achievement gap.
(2) The committee shall recommend specific policies and strategies
in at least the following areas:
(a) Supporting and facilitating parent and community involvement
and outreach;
(b) Enhancing the cultural competency of current and future
educators and the cultural relevance of curriculum and instruction;
(c) Expanding pathways and strategies to prepare and recruit
diverse teachers and administrators;
(d) Recommending current programs and resources that should be
redirected to narrow the gap;
(e) Identifying data elements and systems needed to monitor
progress in closing the gap;
(f) Making closing the achievement gap part of the school and
school district improvement process; and
(g) Exploring innovative school models that have shown success in
closing the achievement gap.
(3) Taking a multidisciplinary approach, the committee may seek
input and advice from other state and local agencies and organizations
with expertise in health, social services, gang and violence
prevention, substance abuse prevention, and other issues that
disproportionately affect student achievement and student success.
(4) The achievement gap oversight and accountability committee
shall be composed of the following members:
(a) The chairs and ranking minority members of the house and senate
education committees, or their designees;
(b) One additional member of the house of representatives appointed
by the speaker of the house and one additional member of the senate
appointed by the president of the senate;
(c) A representative of the office of the education ombudsman;
(d) A representative of the center for the improvement of student
learning in the office of the superintendent of public instruction;
(e) A representative of federally recognized Indian tribes whose
traditional lands and territories lie within the borders of Washington
state, designated by the federally recognized tribes; and
(f) Four members appointed by the governor in consultation with the
state ethnic commissions, who represent the following populations:
African-Americans, Hispanic Americans, Asian Americans, and Pacific
Islander Americans.
(5) The governor and the tribes are encouraged to designate members
who have experience working in and with schools.
(6) The committee may convene ad hoc working groups to obtain
additional input and participation from community members. Members of
ad hoc working groups shall serve without compensation and shall not be
reimbursed for travel or other expenses.
(7) The chair or cochairs of the committee shall be selected by the
members of the committee. Staff support for the committee shall be
provided by the center for the improvement of student learning.
Members of the committee shall serve without compensation but must be
reimbursed as provided in RCW 43.03.050 and 43.03.060. Legislative
members of the committee shall be reimbursed for travel expenses in
accordance with RCW 44.04.120.
(8) The superintendent of public instruction, the state board of
education, the professional educator standards board, and the quality
education council shall work collaboratively with the achievement gap
oversight and accountability committee to close the achievement gap.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 1001 (1) An essential aspect of overall
education reform is reform in state financing for basic education, both
in the way that funds are distributed and the overall level of state
support to school districts. Chapter 548, Laws of 2009, took a
significant step in this aspect of education reform by creating a
framework for new funding distribution formulas and directing further
work on this topic and recommendations from the quality education
council and technical working groups. It is the legislature's intent
to continue implementation of the education reforms in chapter 548,
Laws of 2009, by adopting the technical details of a new distribution
formula for the instructional program of basic education and
authorizing a phase-in of implementation of a new distribution formula
for pupil transportation, both to take effect September 1, 2011.
Unless otherwise stated, the numeric values adopted in section 1002 of
this act represent the translation of 2009-2010 state funding levels
for the basic education act into the funding factors of the
prototypical school funding formula, based on the expert advice and
extensive work of the funding formula technical working group
established by the legislature for this purpose. The legislature
intends to continue to review and revise the formulas and may make
revisions as necessary for technical purposes and consistency in the
event of mathematical or other technical errors.
(2) It is also the legislature's intent to adopt an implementation
schedule for phasing-in additional education finance reforms and
enhancements to the baseline funding levels of 2009-10 beginning in the
2011-12 school year for pupil transportation, class size allocations
for grades kindergarten through three, full-day kindergarten, and
allocations for maintenance, supplies, and operating costs.
(3) Finally, it is the legislature's intent to adjust the timelines
for other working groups so that their expertise and advice can be
received as soon as possible and to make technical adjustments to
certain provisions of chapter 548, Laws of 2009.
Sec. 1002 RCW 28A.150.260 and 2009 c 548 s 106 are each amended
to read as follows:
The purpose of this section is to provide for the allocation of
state funding that the legislature deems necessary to support school
districts in offering the minimum instructional program of basic
education under RCW 28A.150.220. The allocation shall be determined as
follows:
(1) The governor shall and the superintendent of public instruction
may recommend to the legislature a formula for the distribution of a
basic education instructional allocation for each common school
district.
(2) The distribution formula under this section shall be for
allocation purposes only. Except as may be required under chapter
28A.155, 28A.165, 28A.180, or ((28A.155)) 28A.185 RCW, or federal laws
and regulations, nothing in this section requires school districts to
use basic education instructional funds to implement a particular
instructional approach or service. Nothing in this section requires
school districts to maintain a particular classroom teacher-to-student
ratio or other staff-to-student ratio or to use allocated funds to pay
for particular types or classifications of staff. Nothing in this
section entitles an individual teacher to a particular teacher planning
period.
(3)(a) To the extent the technical details of the formula have been
adopted by the legislature and except when specifically provided as a
school district allocation, the distribution formula for the basic
education instructional allocation shall be based on minimum staffing
and nonstaff costs the legislature deems necessary to support
instruction and operations in prototypical schools serving high,
middle, and elementary school students as provided in this section.
The use of prototypical schools for the distribution formula does not
constitute legislative intent that schools should be operated or
structured in a similar fashion as the prototypes. Prototypical
schools illustrate the level of resources needed to operate a school of
a particular size with particular types and grade levels of students
using commonly understood terms and inputs, such as class size, hours
of instruction, and various categories of school staff. It is the
intent that the funding allocations to school districts be adjusted
from the school prototypes based on the actual number of annual average
full-time equivalent students in each grade level at each school in the
district and not based on the grade-level configuration of the school
to the extent that data is available. The allocations shall be further
adjusted from the school prototypes with minimum allocations for small
schools and to reflect other factors identified in the omnibus
appropriations act.
(b) For the purposes of this section, prototypical schools are
defined as follows:
(i) A prototypical high school has six hundred average annual full-time equivalent students in grades nine through twelve;
(ii) A prototypical middle school has four hundred thirty-two
average annual full-time equivalent students in grades seven and eight;
and
(iii) A prototypical elementary school has four hundred average
annual full-time equivalent students in grades kindergarten through
six.
(((c))) (4)(a) The minimum allocation for each level of
prototypical school shall be based on the number of full-time
equivalent classroom teachers needed to provide instruction over the
minimum required annual instructional hours under RCW 28A.150.220 and
provide at least one teacher planning period per school day, and based
on ((an)) the following general education average class size ((as
specified in the omnibus appropriations act.)) of full-time equivalent
students per teacher:
General education
average
class size
Grades K-3 . . . . . . . . . . . . 25.23
Grade 4 . . . . . . . . . . . . 27.00
Grades 5-6 . . . . . . . . . . . . 27.00
Grades 7-8 . . . . . . . . . . . . 28.53
Grades 9-12 . . . . . . . . . . . . 28.74
(b) Beginning in the 2011-12 school year and beginning with schools
with the highest percentage of students eligible for free and reduced-price meals in the prior school year, the general education average
class size for grades K-3 shall be reduced until the average class size
funded under this subsection (4) is no more than 15.0 full-time
equivalent students per teacher beginning in the 2015-16 school year.
(c) The minimum allocation for each prototypical middle and high
school shall also provide for full-time equivalent classroom teachers
based on the following number of full-time equivalent students per
teacher in career and technical education:
Career and technical
education average
class size
Approved career and technical education offered at
the middle school and high school level . . . . . . . . . . . . 26.57
Skill center programs meeting the standards established
by the office of the superintendent of public instruction . . . . . . . . . . . . 22.76
(d) In addition, the omnibus appropriations act shall at a minimum
specify:
(i) ((Basic average class size;)) A high-poverty average class size in schools where
more than fifty percent of the students are eligible for free and
reduced-price meals; and
(ii) Basic
(((iii))) (ii) A specialty average class size for ((exploratory and
preparatory career and technical education,)) laboratory science,
advanced placement, and international baccalaureate courses((; and)).
(iv) Average class size in grades kindergarten through three
(((d))) (5) The minimum allocation for each level of prototypical
school shall include allocations for the following types of staff in
addition to classroom teachers:
(((i) Principals, including assistant principals, and other
certificated building-level administrators;))
(ii) Teacher librarians, performing functions including information
literacy, technology, and media to support school library media
programs;
(iii) Student health services, a function that includes school
nurses, whether certificated instructional or classified employee, and
social workers;
(iv) Guidance counselors, performing functions including parent
outreach and graduation advisor;
(v) Professional development coaches;
(vi) Teaching assistance, which includes any aspect of educational
instructional services provided by classified employees;
(vii) Office support, technology support, and other
noninstructional aides;
(viii) Custodians, warehouse, maintenance, laborer, and
professional and technical education support employees; and
(ix) Classified staff providing student and staff safety.
(4)(a)
Elementary School | Middle School | High School | |
Principals, assistant principals, and other certificated building-level administrators . . . . . . . . . . . . | 1.253 | 1.353 | 1.880 |
Teacher librarians, a function that includes information literacy, technology, and media to support school library media programs . . . . . . . . . . . . | 0.663 | 0.519 | 0.523 |
Student health services, a function that includes school nurses, whether certificated instructional or classified employee, and social workers . . . . . . . . . . . . | 0.135 | 0.068 | 0.118 |
Guidance counselors, a function that includes parent outreach and graduation advising . . . . . . . . . . . . | 0.493 | 1.116 | 1.909 |
Teaching assistance, including any aspect of educational instructional services provided by classified employees . . . . . . . . . . . . | 0.917 | 0.685 | 0.638 |
Office support and other noninstructional aides . . . . . . . . . . . . | 1.971 | 2.277 | 3.201 |
Custodians . . . . . . . . . . . . | 1.622 | 1.902 | 2.903 |
Classified staff providing student and staff safety . . . . . . . . . . . . | 0.077 | 0.090 | 0.138 |
Sec. 1003 RCW 28A.150.390 and 2009 c 548 s 108 are each amended
to read as follows:
(1) The superintendent of public instruction shall submit to each
regular session of the legislature during an odd-numbered year a
programmed budget request for special education programs for students
with disabilities. Funding for programs operated by local school
districts shall be on an excess cost basis from appropriations provided
by the legislature for special education programs for students with
disabilities and shall take account of state funds accruing through RCW
28A.150.260 (((3)(b), (c)(i), and (d), (4), and (8) and federal medical
assistance and private funds accruing under RCW 74.09.5249 through
74.09.5253 and 74.09.5254 through 74.09.5256)) (4)(a) and (b), (5),
(6), and (8).
(2) The excess cost allocation to school districts shall be based
on the following:
(a) A district's annual average headcount enrollment of students
ages birth through four and those five year olds not yet enrolled in
kindergarten who are eligible for and enrolled in special education,
multiplied by the district's base allocation per full-time equivalent
student, multiplied by 1.15; and
(b) A district's annual average full-time equivalent basic
education enrollment, multiplied by the district's funded enrollment
percent, multiplied by the district's base allocation per full-time
equivalent student, multiplied by 0.9309.
(3) As used in this section:
(a) "Base allocation" means the total state allocation to all
schools in the district generated by the distribution formula under RCW
28A.150.260 (((3)(b), (c)(i), and (d), (4), and (8))) (4)(a) and (b),
(5), (6), and (8), to be divided by the district's full-time equivalent
enrollment.
(b) "Basic education enrollment" means enrollment of resident
students including nonresident students enrolled under RCW 28A.225.225
and students from nonhigh districts enrolled under RCW 28A.225.210 and
excluding students residing in another district enrolled as part of an
interdistrict cooperative program under RCW 28A.225.250.
(c) "Enrollment percent" means the district's resident special
education annual average enrollment, excluding students ages birth
through four and those five year olds not yet enrolled in kindergarten,
as a percent of the district's annual average full-time equivalent
basic education enrollment.
(d) "Funded enrollment percent" means the lesser of the district's
actual enrollment percent or twelve and seven-tenths percent.
Sec. 1004 RCW 28A.150.315 and 2009 c 548 s 107 are each amended
to read as follows:
(1) Beginning with the 2007-08 school year, funding for voluntary
all-day kindergarten programs shall be phased-in beginning with schools
with the highest poverty levels, defined as those schools with the
highest percentages of students qualifying for free and reduced-price
lunch support in the prior school year. Beginning with the 2011-12
school year, funding shall continue to be phased-in incrementally each
year until full statewide implementation of all-day kindergarten is
achieved in the 2017-18 school year. Once a school receives funding
for the all-day kindergarten program, that school shall remain eligible
for funding in subsequent school years regardless of changes in the
school's percentage of students eligible for free and reduced-price
lunches as long as other program requirements are fulfilled.
Additionally, schools receiving all-day kindergarten program support
shall agree to the following conditions:
(a) Provide at least a one thousand-hour instructional program;
(b) Provide a curriculum that offers a rich, varied set of
experiences that assist students in:
(i) Developing initial skills in the academic areas of reading,
mathematics, and writing;
(ii) Developing a variety of communication skills;
(iii) Providing experiences in science, social studies, arts,
health and physical education, and a world language other than English;
(iv) Acquiring large and small motor skills;
(v) Acquiring social and emotional skills including successful
participation in learning activities as an individual and as part of a
group; and
(vi) Learning through hands-on experiences;
(c) Establish learning environments that are developmentally
appropriate and promote creativity;
(d) Demonstrate strong connections and communication with early
learning community providers; and
(e) Participate in kindergarten program readiness activities with
early learning providers and parents.
(2) Subject to funds appropriated for this purpose, the
superintendent of public instruction shall designate one or more school
districts to serve as resources and examples of best practices in
designing and operating a high-quality all-day kindergarten program.
Designated school districts shall serve as lighthouse programs and
provide technical assistance to other school districts in the initial
stages of implementing an all-day kindergarten program. Examples of
topics addressed by the technical assistance include strategic
planning, developing the instructional program and curriculum, working
with early learning providers to identify students and communicate with
parents, and developing kindergarten program readiness activities.
Sec. 1005 2009 c 548 s 112 (uncodified) is amended to read as
follows:
(1) The legislature intends to continue to redefine the
instructional program of education under RCW 28A.150.220 that fulfills
the obligations and requirements of Article IX of the state
Constitution. The funding formulas under RCW 28A.150.260 to support
the instructional program shall be implemented to the extent the
technical details of the formula have been established and according to
an implementation schedule to be adopted by the legislature. The
object of the schedule is to assure that any increases in funding
allocations are timely, predictable, and occur concurrently with any
increases in program or instructional requirements. It is the intent
of the legislature that no increased programmatic or instructional
expectations be imposed upon schools or school districts without an
accompanying increase in resources as necessary to support those
increased expectations.
(2) The office of financial management, with assistance and support
from the office of the superintendent of public instruction, shall
convene a technical working group to:
(a) Develop the details of the funding formulas under RCW
28A.150.260;
(b) Recommend to the legislature an implementation schedule for
phasing-in any increased program or instructional requirements
concurrently with increases in funding for adoption by the legislature;
and
(c) Examine possible sources of revenue to support increases in
funding allocations and present options to the legislature and the
quality education council created in ((section 114 of this act)) RCW
28A.290.010 for consideration.
(3) The working group shall include representatives of the
legislative evaluation and accountability program committee, school
district and educational service district financial managers, the
Washington association of school business officers, the Washington
education association, the Washington association of school
administrators, the association of Washington school principals, the
Washington state school directors' association, the public school
employees of Washington, and other interested stakeholders with
expertise in education finance. The working group may convene advisory
subgroups on specific topics as necessary to assure participation and
input from a broad array of diverse stakeholders.
(4) The working group shall be monitored and overseen by the
legislature and the quality education council established in ((section
114 of this act)) RCW 28A.290.010. The working group shall submit its
recommendations to the legislature by December 1, 2009.
(5) After the 2009 report to the legislature, the office of
financial management and the office of the superintendent of public
instruction shall periodically reconvene the working group to monitor
and provide advice on further development and implementation of the
funding formulas under RCW 28A.150.260 and provide technical assistance
to the ongoing work of the quality education council.
Sec. 1006 2009 c 548 s 302 (uncodified) is amended to read as
follows:
(1) Beginning ((July)) April 1, 2010, the office of financial
management, with assistance and support from the office of the
superintendent of public instruction, shall convene a technical working
group to develop options for a new system of supplemental school
funding through local school levies and local effort assistance.
(2) The working group shall consider the impact on overall school
district revenues of the new basic education funding system established
under ((this act)) chapter 548, Laws of 2009 and shall recommend a
phase-in plan that ensures that no school district suffers a decrease
in funding from one school year to the next due to implementation of
the new system of supplemental funding.
(3) The working group shall also:
(a) Examine local school district capacity to address facility
needs associated with phasing-in full-day kindergarten across the state
and reducing class size in kindergarten through third grade; and
(b) Provide the quality education council with analysis on the
potential use of local funds that may become available for redeployment
and redirection as a result of increased state funding allocations for
pupil transportation and maintenance, supplies, and operating costs.
(4) The working group shall be composed of representatives from the
department of revenue, the legislative evaluation and accountability
program committee, school district and educational service district
financial managers, and representatives of the Washington association
of school business officers, the Washington education association, the
Washington association of school administrators, the association of
Washington school principals, the Washington state school directors'
association, the public school employees of Washington, and other
interested stakeholders with expertise in education finance. The
working group may convene advisory subgroups on specific topics as
necessary to assure participation and input from a broad array of
diverse stakeholders.
(((4))) (5) The local funding working group shall be monitored and
overseen by the legislature and by the quality education council
created in ((section 114 of this act)) RCW 28A.290.010. The working
group shall report to the legislature ((December 1)) June 30, 2011.
Sec. 1007 RCW 43.41.398 and 2009 c 548 s 601 are each amended to
read as follows:
(1) The legislature recognizes that providing students with the
opportunity to access a world-class educational system depends on our
continuing ability to provide students with access to world-class
educators. The legislature also understands that continuing to attract
and retain the highest quality educators will require increased
investments. The legislature intends to enhance the current salary
allocation model and recognizes that changes to the current model
cannot be imposed without great deliberation and input from teachers,
administrators, and classified employees. Therefore, it is the intent
of the legislature to begin the process of developing an enhanced
salary allocation model that is collaboratively designed to ensure the
rationality of any conclusions regarding what constitutes adequate
compensation.
(2) Beginning July 1, 2011, the office of the superintendent of
public instruction, in collaboration with the office of financial
management, shall convene a technical working group to recommend the
details of an enhanced salary allocation model that aligns state
expectations for educator development and certification with the
compensation system and establishes recommendations for a concurrent
implementation schedule. In addition to any other details the
technical working group deems necessary, the technical working group
shall make recommendations on the following:
(a) How to reduce the number of tiers within the existing salary
allocation model;
(b) How to account for labor market adjustments;
(c) How to account for different geographic regions of the state
where districts may encounter difficulty recruiting and retaining
teachers;
(d) The role of and types of bonuses available;
(e) Ways to accomplish salary equalization over a set number of
years; and
(f) Initial fiscal estimates for implementing the recommendations
including a recognition that staff on the existing salary allocation
model would have the option to grandfather in permanently to the
existing schedule.
(3) As part of its work, the technical working group shall conduct
or contract for a preliminary comparative labor market analysis of
salaries and other compensation for school district employees to be
conducted and shall include the results in any reports to the
legislature. For the purposes of this subsection, "salaries and other
compensation" includes average base salaries, average total salaries,
average employee basic benefits, and retirement benefits.
(4) The analysis required under subsection (1) of this section
must:
(a) Examine salaries and other compensation for teachers, other
certificated instructional staff, principals, and other building-level
certificated administrators, and the types of classified employees for
whom salaries are allocated;
(b) Be calculated at a statewide level that identifies labor
markets in Washington through the use of data from the United States
bureau of the census and the bureau of labor statistics; and
(c) Include a comparison of salaries and other compensation to the
appropriate labor market for at least the following subgroups of
educators: Beginning teachers and types of educational staff
associates.
(5) The working group shall include representatives of the
department of personnel, the professional educator standards board, the
office of the superintendent of public instruction, the Washington
education association, the Washington association of school
administrators, the association of Washington school principals, the
Washington state school directors' association, the public school
employees of Washington, and other interested stakeholders with
appropriate expertise in compensation related matters. The working
group may convene advisory subgroups on specific topics as necessary to
assure participation and input from a broad array of diverse
stakeholders.
(6) The working group shall be monitored and overseen by the
legislature and the quality education council created in RCW
28A.290.010. The working group shall make an initial report to the
legislature by ((December 1)) June 30, 2012, and shall include in its
report recommendations for whether additional further work of the group
is necessary.
Sec. 1008 RCW 28A.160.192 and 2009 c 548 s 311 are each amended
to read as follows:
(1) The superintendent of public instruction shall phase-in the
implementation of the distribution formula under this chapter for
allocating state funds to school districts for the transportation of
students to and from school. The phase-in shall ((be according to the
implementation schedule adopted by the legislature and shall)) begin no
later than the ((2013-14)) 2011-12 school year and be fully implemented
by the 2013-14 school year.
(a) The formula must be developed and revised on an ongoing basis
using the major cost factors in student transportation, including basic
and special student loads, school district land area, average distance
to school, roadway miles, and number of locations served. Factors must
include all those site characteristics that are statistically
significant after analysis of the data required by the revised
reporting process.
(b) The formula must allocate funds to school districts based on
the average predicted costs of transporting students to and from
school, using a regression analysis.
(2) During the phase-in period, funding provided to school
districts for student transportation operations shall be distributed on
the following basis:
(a) Annually, each school district shall receive the lesser of the
previous school year's pupil transportation operations allocation, or
the total of allowable pupil transportation expenditures identified on
the previous school year's final expenditure report to the state plus
district indirect expenses using the state recovery rate identified by
the superintendent; and
(b) Annually, any funds appropriated by the legislature in excess
of the maintenance level funding amount for student transportation
shall be distributed among school districts on a prorated basis using
the difference between the amount identified in (a) of this subsection
and the amount determined under the formula in RCW 28A.160.180.
(((3) The superintendent shall develop, implement, and provide a
copy of the rules specifying the student transportation reporting
requirements to the legislature and school districts no later than
December 1, 2009.))
(4) Beginning in December 2009, and continuing until December 2014,
the superintendent shall provide quarterly updates and progress reports
to the fiscal committees of the legislature on the implementation and
testing of the distribution formula.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 1009 A new section is added to chapter 28A.160
RCW to read as follows:
(1) The superintendent of public instruction shall develop,
implement, and provide a copy of the rules specifying the student
transportation reporting requirements to the legislature and school
districts no later than December 1, 2010.
(2) Beginning in December 2010, and continuing until December 2014,
the superintendent shall provide quarterly updates and progress reports
to the fiscal committees of the legislature on the implementation and
testing of the distribution formula.
(3) This section expires June 30, 2015.
Sec. 1010 RCW 28A.150.410 and 2007 c 403 s 1 are each amended to
read as follows:
(1) The legislature shall establish for each school year in the
appropriations act a statewide salary allocation schedule, for
allocation purposes only, to be used to distribute funds for basic
education certificated instructional staff salaries under RCW
28A.150.260. For the purposes of this section, the staff allocations
for classroom teachers, teacher librarians, guidance counselors, and
student health services staff under RCW 28A.150.260 are considered
allocations for certificated instructional staff.
(2) Salary allocations for state-funded basic education
certificated instructional staff shall be calculated by the
superintendent of public instruction by determining the district's
average salary for certificated instructional staff, using the
statewide salary allocation schedule and related documents, conditions,
and limitations established by the omnibus appropriations act.
(3) Beginning January 1, 1992, no more than ninety college quarter-hour credits received by any employee after the baccalaureate degree
may be used to determine compensation allocations under the state
salary allocation schedule and LEAP documents referenced in the omnibus
appropriations act, or any replacement schedules and documents, unless:
(a) The employee has a master's degree; or
(b) The credits were used in generating state salary allocations
before January 1, 1992.
(4) Beginning in the 2007-08 school year, the calculation of years
of service for occupational therapists, physical therapists, speech-language pathologists, audiologists, nurses, social workers,
counselors, and psychologists regulated under Title 18 RCW may include
experience in schools and other nonschool positions as occupational
therapists, physical therapists, speech-language pathologists,
audiologists, nurses, social workers, counselors, or psychologists.
The calculation shall be that one year of service in a nonschool
position counts as one year of service for purposes of this chapter, up
to a limit of two years of nonschool service. Nonschool years of
service included in calculations under this subsection shall not be
applied to service credit totals for purposes of any retirement benefit
under chapter 41.32, 41.35, or 41.40 RCW, or any other state retirement
system benefits.
Sec. 1011 RCW 28A.175.010 and 2005 c 207 s 3 are each amended to
read as follows:
Each school district shall account for the educational progress of
each of its students. To achieve this, school districts shall be
required to report annually to the superintendent of public
instruction:
(1) For students enrolled in each of a school district's high
school programs:
(a) The number of students who graduate in fewer than four years;
(b) The number of students who graduate in four years;
(c) The number of students who remain in school for more than four
years but who eventually graduate and the number of students who remain
in school for more than four years but do not graduate;
(d) The number of students who transfer to other schools;
(e) The number of students in the ninth through twelfth grade who
drop out of school over a four-year period; and
(f) The number of students whose status is unknown.
(2) Dropout rates of students in each of the grades seven through
twelve.
(3) Dropout rates for student populations in each of the grades
seven through twelve by:
(a) Ethnicity;
(b) Gender;
(c) Socioeconomic status; and
(d) Disability status.
(4) The causes or reasons, or both, attributed to students for
having dropped out of school in grades seven through twelve.
(5) The superintendent of public instruction shall adopt rules
under chapter 34.05 RCW to assure uniformity in the information
districts are required to report under subsections (1) through (4) of
this section. In developing rules, the superintendent of public
instruction shall consult with school districts, including
administrative and counseling personnel, with regard to the methods
through which information is to be collected and reported.
(6) In reporting on the causes or reasons, or both, attributed to
students for having dropped out of school, school building officials
shall, to the extent reasonably practical, obtain such information
directly from students. In lieu of obtaining such information directly
from students, building principals and counselors shall identify the
causes or reasons, or both, based on their professional judgment.
(7) The superintendent of public instruction shall report annually
to the legislature the information collected under subsections (1)
through (4) of this section.
(8) The Washington state institute for public policy shall
calculate an annual estimate of the savings to taxpayers resulting from
any improvement compared to the prior school year in the extended
graduation rate, as calculated by the superintendent of public
instruction. The superintendent shall include the estimate from the
institute in an appendix of the report required under subsection (7) of
this section, beginning with the 2010 report.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 1012 A new section is added to chapter 28A.300
RCW to read as follows:
The office of the superintendent of public instruction shall
implement and maintain an internet-based portal that provides ready
public access to the state's prototypical school funding model for
basic education under RCW 28A.150.260. The portal must provide
citizens the opportunity to view, for each local school building, the
staffing levels and other prototypical school funding elements that are
assumed under the state funding formula. The portal must also provide
a matrix displaying how individual school districts are deploying those
same state resources through their allocation of staff and other
resources to school buildings, so that citizens are able to compare the
state assumptions to district allocation decisions for each local
school building.
Sec. 1013 RCW 28A.150.100 and 1990 c 33 s 103 are each amended to
read as follows:
(1) For the purposes of this section and RCW 28A.150.410 and
28A.400.200, "basic education certificated instructional staff"
((shall)) means all full-time equivalent classroom teachers, teacher
librarians, guidance counselors, certificated student health services
staff, and other certificated instructional staff in the following
programs as defined for statewide school district accounting purposes:
Basic education, secondary vocational education, general instructional
support, and general supportive services.
(2) ((In the 1988-89 school year and thereafter,)) Each school
district shall maintain a ratio of at least forty-six basic education
certificated instructional staff to one thousand annual average full
time equivalent students.
Sec. 1014 2009 c 548 s 710 (uncodified) is amended to read as
follows:
(1) RCW 28A.150.030 (School day) and 1971 ex.s. c 161 s 1 & 1969
ex.s. c 223 s 28A.01.010;
(2) RCW 28A.150.060 (Certificated employee) and 2005 c 497 s 212,
1990 c 33 s 102, 1977 ex.s. c 359 s 17, 1975 1st ex.s. c 288 s 21, &
1973 1st ex.s. c 105 s 1;
(3) ((RCW 28A.150.100 (Basic education certificated instructional
staff -- Definition -- Ratio to students) and 1990 c 33 s 103 & 1987 1st
ex.s. c 2 s 203;)) RCW 28A.150.040 (School year -- Beginning -- End) and 1990 c 33
s 101, 1982 c 158 s 5, 1977 ex.s. c 286 s 1, 1975-'76 2nd ex.s. c 118
s 22, & 1969 ex.s. c 223 s 28A.01.020;
(4)
(((5))) (4) RCW 28A.150.370 (Additional programs for which
legislative appropriations must or may be made) and 1995 c 335 s 102,
1995 c 77 s 5, 1990 c 33 s 114, 1982 1st ex.s. c 24 s 1, & 1977 ex.s.
c 359 s 7; and
(((6))) (5) RCW 28A.155.180 (Safety net funds--Application--Technical assistance--Annual survey) and 2007 c 400 s 8.
Sec. 1015 2009 c 548 s 805 (uncodified) is amended to read as
follows:
Sections 304 through 311 of this act take effect September 1,
((2013)) 2011.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 1101 RCW 28A.305.225 is recodified as a
section in the chapter created in section 1102 of this act.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 1102 Sections 101 through 110 and 112 and 113
of this act constitute a new chapter in Title
NEW SECTION. Sec. 1103 2009 c 548 s 112, as amended by section
1005 of this act, is codified as a section in chapter 28A.290 RCW.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 1104 RCW 43.41.398 is recodified as a section
in chapter 28A.400 RCW.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 1105 Sections 1002, 1003, 1004, 1008, 1010,
1013, and 1014 of this act take effect September 1, 2011.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 1106 Section 1006 of this act is necessary for
the immediate preservation of the public peace, health, or safety, or
support of the state government and its existing public institutions,
and takes effect immediately."
Correct the title.
EFFECT: Accountability: Clarifies that a lowest-performing
school is a Title I or Title I eligible school that is among the
lowest-achieving 5 percent of all Title I or Title I eligible schools
in the state.
Creates a Required Action Review Panel composed of five individuals
appointed by the Speaker of the House, President of the Senate, and
Governor but convened by the SPI on an as-needed basis. Authorizes a
district to request consideration by the Panel if a Required Action
Plan is rejected by the State Board of Education. Provides that
reconsideration is based on whether the SBE gave appropriate
consideration to the unique circumstances of the district. Authorizes
the Panel to reaffirm the rejection, recommend approval, or recommend
changes to secure approval. Requires SBE to issue a final decision.
Creates a Joint Select Committee of eight legislative members to
examine options and models for consequences and significant state
action in the case of persistent lack of improvement by a Required
Action district. Requires an interim report by September 1, 2011, and
a final report by September 1, 2012.
Authorizes both SPI and SBE to adopt rules to implement
accountability provisions.
Parents and Community: Requires schools to conduct outreach and
seek feedback from a broad and diverse range of stakeholders in their
communities. Requires a state working group to develop multiple
feedback tools and strategies that districts are encouraged to adapt to
their unique circumstances, and includes representatives of diverse
communities and the Achievement Gap Committee on the group.
Removes a requirement that the Center for Improvement of Student
Learning recognize schools and school districts beginning in 2010-11
based on measures of parent involvement and instead directs CISL to
identify and highlight successful models and practices.
Evaluations: Rather than have the pilot school districts submit
all available student data to SPI, requires them to submit
district-collected student achievement, aptitude, and growth data so
that SPI can analyze how the data is used or not used in evaluations.
Requires the 2011 report from SPI to include recommendations for
whether a single statewide evaluation model should be adopted, whether
modified versions should be subject to state approval, and what the
criteria would be for determining if a school district's evaluation
model meets or exceeds a statewide model, and challenges posed by
requiring a state approval process.
Does not include a parent selected by the PTA in the state group
developing model evaluation criteria and rating systems.
Creates a new process and standard for transferring a principal to
a subordinate position within the district, even if the principal has
been employed for more than three years. Makes the provisions apply
only to principals hired after the effective date of the bill and only
in school districts with more than 35,000 students.
Innovations: Removes a requirement that school districts and OSPI
submit an annual report detailing how TRI contracts support innovative
activities.
Common Core Standards: Authorizes the SPI to adopt a common set of
standards by August 2, 2010, on a provisional basis. Stipulates that
the standards cannot be implemented until the Education Committees have
an opportunity for review. Requires the SPI to submit a detailed
comparison of the standards by January 1, 2011, rather than by April
15th or 30 days after the standards are finalized.
Preservice Assessment: Authorizes the PESB to contract with a
third party to administer, score, and report the scores of the
assessment. Provides that candidates who are charged a fee for the
assessment by the contracted party will pay the contractor directly.
Authorizes the PESB to establish through rule the date during the
2012-13 school year after which candidates must successfully pass the
assessment for residency certification.
Preparation Programs: Requires all educator preparation program
providers approved by the PESB to adhere to the same standards and
comply with the same requirements.
Requires the State Board for Community and Technical Colleges to
select up to three community colleges to offer a BA plus teaching
certificate in a subject matter shortage area. Specifies that programs
are subject to degree and certificate program approval procedures by
the SBCTC, HECB, and PESB.
Clarifies that candidates in all alternative route programs have
their performance evaluated by both their mentor and the preparation
program supervisor before moving to less supervision.
Repeals several additional sections of law pertaining to student
teaching centers and the partnership grant aspects of the alternative
route program.
Removes a duplicate section pertaining to the HECB and needs
assessments for the educator workforce.
Education Reform Finance: Declares that an essential aspect of
overall education reform is reform in state financing for Basic
Education, both in the way that funds are distributed and the overall
level of state support to school districts. Sets forth in statute
baseline values for Basic Education funding, as recommended by a
technical working group and the Quality Education Council, for the
prototypical school funding formula adopted in 2009 legislation,
effective September 1, 2011. Modifies various prototypical school
formula elements and allocation categories.
Increases the maintenance, supplies, and operating costs (MSOC)
factors in the funding formula to a total of $1,082.76 per student over
a three-year period. Provides a K-3 class size allocation of 15.0
students per classroom teacher, to be phased in over a five-year period
starting with high poverty schools. Requires continued incremental
phase-in of full-day kindergarten according to the statutory schedule,
with full implementation in 2018. Implements a new pupil
transportation funding formula as of 2011 rather than 2013, and states
that full funding of the new pupil transportation formula is to be
phased in over a three-year period.
Restores a requirement that school districts maintain a minimum
staffing ratio for Basic Education of 46 Certificated Instructional
Staff per 1,000 students rather than repealing the requirement as of
2011.
Requires a report from a Compensation Working Group by June 30,
2012, rather than December 1, 2012, and changes the lead agency to
OSPI. Starts a Local Finance Working Group immediately with a report
due November 30, 2010. Expands tasks of the Group. Continues the
Funding Formula Technical Working Group to monitor implementation of
the formula and provide technical advice to the Quality Education
Council.
Directs the Washington State Institute for Public Policy to
calculate a savings from improvement in graduation rates and requires
OSPI to publish this in an annual report. Directs OSPI to implement an
internet portal displaying the prototype school allocations compared to
actual allocations, by building.