E2SSB 5329 -
By Committee on Education
NOT CONSIDERED 04/15/2013
Strike everything after the enacting clause and insert the following:
"Sec. 1 RCW 28A.657.005 and 2010 c 235 s 101 are each amended to
read as follows:
(1) The legislature finds that an effective educational
accountability system is premised on creating and maintaining
partnerships between the state and local school district boards of
directors. The legislature also recognizes it takes time to make
significant changes that are sustainable over the long term in an
educational system that serves more than one million students from
diverse communities.
(2) The legislature further finds that it is the state's
responsibility to create a coherent and effective accountability
framework for the continuous improvement ((for)) of all schools and
school districts. This system must provide an excellent and equitable
education for all students((;)), an aligned ((federal/state)) federal
and state accountability system((;)), and the tools necessary for
schools and school districts to be accountable. These tools include
((the necessary)) accounting and data reporting systems, assessment
systems to monitor student achievement, and a comprehensive system of
((general)) differentiated support, targeted assistance, and, if
necessary, intervention.
(3) 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.
(4) 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.
The legislature finds that state takeover of persistently lowest-achieving schools is unlikely to produce long-term improvement in
student achievement because takeover is an unsustainable approach to
school governance and an inadequate response to addressing the
underlying barriers to improved outcomes for all students. However, in
the rare case of a persistently lowest-achieving school that continues
to fail to improve even after required action and supplemental
assistance, it is appropriate and necessary to assign the
superintendent of public instruction the responsibility to intercede,
provide robust technical assistance, and direct the necessary
interventions. Even though the superintendent of public instruction
continues to work in partnership with the local school board, the
superintendent of public instruction is accountable for assuring that
adequate steps are taken to improve student achievement in these
schools.
(5) 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)) Washington achievement index adopted by the state
board of education. The state board of education shall have ongoing
collaboration with the ((achievement)) educational opportunity 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.
(6) Phase II of this accountability system will work toward
implementing the ((state board of education's accountability))
Washington achievement index for identification of challenged schools
in need of improvement, including those that are not Title I schools,
and the use of state and local intervention models and federal and
state funds through a ((required action process)) comprehensive system
of differentiated support, targeted assistance, and intervention
beginning in ((2013, in addition to the federal program)) the 2014-15
school year. If federal approval of the ((state board of education's
accountability)) Washington achievement index ((must be)) is not
obtained ((or else)), the federal guidelines for ((persistently lowest-achieving)) identifying schools will continue to be used. If it ever
becomes necessary, a process is established to assign responsibility to
the superintendent of public instruction to intervene in persistently
lowest-achieving schools that have failed to improve despite required
action.
(7) 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.
Sec. 2 RCW 28A.657.010 and 2010 c 235 s 112 are each amended to
read as follows:
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 or English language arts 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).
(3) "Turnaround principles" include but are not limited to the
following:
(a) Providing strong leadership;
(b) Ensuring teachers are effective and able to improve
instruction;
(c) Increasing learning time;
(d) Strengthening the school's instructional program;
(e) Using data to inform instruction;
(f) Establishing a safe and supportive school environment; and
(g) Engaging families and communities.
Sec. 3 RCW 28A.657.020 and 2010 c 235 s 102 are each amended to
read as follows:
(1) Beginning in 2010, and each year thereafter((, by)) through
December ((1st)) 1, 2012, 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.
(3)(a) Beginning December 1, 2013, and each December thereafter,
the superintendent of public instruction shall annually identify
challenged schools in need of improvement and a subset of such schools
that are the persistently lowest-achieving schools in the state.
(b) The criteria for determining whether a school is a challenged
school in need of improvement shall be established by the
superintendent of public instruction. The criteria must meet all
applicable federal requirements under Title I of the elementary and
secondary education act of 1965 and other federal rules or guidance,
including applicable requirements for the receipt of federal school
improvement funds if available, but shall apply equally to Title I,
Title I-eligible, and non-Title I schools in the state. The criteria
must take into account the academic achievement of the "all students"
group and subgroups of students in a school in terms of proficiency on
the state assessments in reading or English language arts and
mathematics and a high school's graduation rate for all students and
subgroups of students. The superintendent may establish tiered
categories of challenged schools based on the relative performance of
all students, subgroups of students, and other factors.
(c) The superintendent of public instruction shall also establish
criteria for determining whether a challenged school in need of
improvement is also a persistently lowest-achieving school for purposes
of the required action district process under this chapter, which shall
include the school's lack of progress for all students and subgroups of
students over a number of years. The criteria for identifying
persistently lowest-achieving schools shall also take into account the
level of state or federal resources available to implement a required
action plan.
(d) If the Washington achievement index is approved by the United
States department of education for use in identifying schools for
federal purposes, the superintendent of public instruction shall use
the approved index to identify schools under (b) and (c) of this
subsection.
Sec. 4 RCW 28A.657.030 and 2010 c 235 s 103 are each amended to
read as follows:
(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 according to the criteria established by the
superintendent of public instruction under RCW 28A.657.020 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 RCW
28A.657.040 through 28A.657.100.
Sec. 5 RCW 28A.657.050 and 2012 c 53 s 10 are each amended to
read as follows:
(1)(a) 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.
(b) The superintendent of public instruction shall provide a
district with assistance in developing its plan if requested, and shall
develop and publish guidelines for the development of required action
plans. The superintendent of public instruction, in consultation with
the state board of education, shall also publish a list of research and
evidence-based school improvement models, consistent with turnaround
principles, that are approved for use in required action plans.
(c) 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 and state guidelines, as applicable. After the office of
the superintendent of public instruction has approved that the plan is
consistent with federal and state 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)) an
approved school improvement model((s)) required for the receipt of
((a)) federal or state funds for 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)) approved school improvement 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. The required action plan for districts
with multiple persistently lowest-achieving schools must include
separate plans for each school as well as a plan for how the school
district will support the schools collectively;
(b) Submission of an application for ((a federal school improvement
grant or a grant from other)) federal or state funds for school
improvement 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 and how the district intends to address
the findings of the academic performance audit; and
(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 closing the
educational opportunity gap, improving mathematics and reading or
English language arts student achievement, and improving 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 June 10, 2010, 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. For any district applying to participate in a
collaborative schools for innovation and success pilot project under
RCW 28A.630.104, the parties to any collective bargaining agreement
negotiated, renewed, or extended under chapter 41.59 or 41.56 RCW after
June 7, 2012, must reopen the agreement, or negotiate an addendum, if
needed, to make changes to terms and conditions of employment that are
necessary to implement an innovation and success 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
in the case of a required action district, or the comprehensive needs
assessment in the case of a collaborative schools for innovation and
success pilot project.
(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 or innovation and success 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 or a grant from
other)) federal or state funds for school improvement to the district
from the office of the superintendent of public instruction to
implement ((one of the four federal intervention)) an approved school
improvement model((s)). In the case of an innovation and success plan,
the court must enter an order selecting the proposal for inclusion in
the plan that best responds to the issues raised in the school's
comprehensive needs assessment. 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 or
other)) federal or state funds for school improvement 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)) an approved school improvement model((s)) in a
required action plan.
Sec. 6 RCW 28A.657.050 and 2010 c 235 s 105 are each amended to
read as follows:
(1)(a) 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.
(b) The superintendent of public instruction shall provide a
district with assistance in developing its plan if requested, and shall
develop and publish guidelines for the development of required action
plans. The superintendent of public instruction, in consultation with
the state board of education, shall also publish a list of research and
evidence-based school improvement models, consistent with turnaround
principles, that are approved for use in required action plans.
(c) 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 and state guidelines, as applicable. After the office of
the superintendent of public instruction has approved that the plan is
consistent with federal and state 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)) an
approved school improvement model((s)) required for the receipt of
((a)) federal or state funds for 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)) approved school improvement 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. The required action plan for districts
with multiple persistently lowest-achieving schools must include
separate plans for each school as well as a plan for how the school
district will support the schools collectively;
(b) Submission of an application for ((a federal school improvement
grant or a grant from other)) federal or state funds for school
improvement 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 and how the district intends to address
the findings of the academic performance audit; and
(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 closing the
educational opportunity gap, improving mathematics and reading or
English language arts student achievement, and improving 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 June 10, 2010, 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 or a grant from
other)) federal or state funds for school improvement to the district
from the office of the superintendent of public instruction to
implement ((one of the four federal intervention)) an approved school
improvement model((s)). 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 or other)) federal or
state funds for school improvement 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)) an approved school improvement model((s)) in a
required action plan.
Sec. 7 RCW 28A.657.060 and 2010 c 235 s 106 are each amended to
read as follows:
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 RCW 28A.657.050. The state board of
education shall approve a plan proposed by a school district only if
the plan meets the requirements in RCW 28A.657.050 and provides
sufficient remedies to address the findings in the academic performance
audit to improve student achievement. Any addendum or modification to
an existing collective bargaining agreement, negotiated under RCW
28A.657.050 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 RCW 28A.657.080. 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) [(1)])) (1) Submit a new plan to the state board
of education for approval within forty days of notification that its
plan was rejected, or (((b) [(2)])) (2) submit a request to the
required action plan review panel established under RCW 28A.657.070 for
reconsideration of the state board's rejection within ten days of the
notification that the plan was rejected. If federal or state funds for
school improvement are not available, the plan is not required to be
implemented until such funding becomes available. If federal or state
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.
Sec. 8 RCW 28A.657.070 and 2010 c 235 s 107 are each amended to
read as follows:
(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 or reconsideration of a level two
required action plan developed only by the superintendent of public
instruction as provided under section 11 of this act. The review and
reconsideration by the panel shall be based on whether the state board
of education or the superintendent of public instruction gave
appropriate consideration to the unique circumstances and
characteristics identified in the academic performance audit or level
two needs assessment and review 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 school 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)) educational
opportunity 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. Appointments shall be for a four-year term, with
opportunity for reappointment. Reappointments in the case of a vacancy
shall be made expeditiously so that all requests are considered in a
timely manner.
(3)(a) In the case of a rejection of a required action plan, 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.
(b) In the case of a level two required action plan where the local
school district and the superintendent of public instruction have not
come to agreement, the required action plan review panel may reaffirm
the level two required action plan submitted by the superintendent of
public instruction or recommend changes to the plan that should be
considered by the state board of education, the superintendent of
public instruction, and the local school district. The state board of
education shall consider the recommendations of the panel and issue a
decision in writing to the local school district, the superintendent of
public instruction, and the panel.
(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 RCW 28A.657.060.
Sec. 9 RCW 28A.657.090 and 2010 c 235 s 109 are each amended to
read as follows:
A school district must implement a required action plan upon
approval by the state board of education. The office of (([the])) the
superintendent of public instruction must provide the required action
district with technical assistance and ((federal school improvement
grant funds or other)) federal or state funds for school improvement,
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.
Sec. 10 RCW 28A.657.100 and 2010 c 235 s 110 are each amended to
read as follows:
(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)) using the criteria established under RCW
28A.657.020 including progress in closing the educational opportunity
gap; 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((,)) after at
least three years of implementing a required action plan, the board may
recommend that the district remain((s)) in required action and ((must))
submit a new or revised plan under the process in RCW 28A.657.050, or
the board may direct that the school district be assigned to level two
of the required action process as provided in section 11 of this act.
Before making a determination of whether to recommend that a school
district that is not making progress remain in required action or be
assigned to level two of the required action process, the state board
of education must submit its findings to the education accountability
system oversight committee under section 13 of this act and provide an
opportunity for the oversight committee to review and comment.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 11 A new section is added to chapter 28A.657
RCW to read as follows:
(1) School districts assigned by the state board of education to
level two of the required action process under this chapter are those
with one or more schools that have remained as persistently lowest-achieving for more than three years and have not demonstrated recent
and significant improvement or progress toward exiting persistently
lowest-achieving status, despite implementation of a required action
plan.
(2) Within ninety days following assignment of a school district to
level two of the required action process, the superintendent of public
instruction shall direct that a needs assessment and review be
conducted to determine the reasons why the previous required action
plan did not succeed in improving student achievement.
(3)(a) Based on the results of the needs assessment and review, the
superintendent of public instruction shall work collaboratively with
the school district board of directors to develop a revised required
action plan for level two.
(b) The level two required action plan must explicitly address the
reasons why the previous plan did not succeed and must specify the
interventions that the school district must implement, which may
include assignment or reassignment of personnel, reallocation of
resources, use of specified curriculum or instructional strategies, use
of a specified school improvement model, or any other conditions
determined by the superintendent of public instruction to be necessary
for the level two required action plan to succeed, which conditions
shall be binding on the school district. The level two required action
plan shall also include the specific technical assistance and support
to be provided by the office of the superintendent of public
instruction, which may include assignment of school improvement
specialists to have a regular on-site presence in the school and
technical assistance provided through the educational service district.
Individuals assigned as on-site school improvement specialists must
have demonstrated experience in school turnaround and cultural
competence.
(c) The level two required action plan must be submitted to the
state board of education for approval.
(4) If the superintendent of public instruction and the school
district board of directors are unable to come to an agreement on a
level two required action plan within ninety days of the completion of
the needs assessment and review conducted under subsection (2) of this
section, the superintendent of public instruction shall complete and
submit a level two required action plan directly to the state board of
education for approval. The school district board of directors may
submit a request to the required action plan review panel established
under RCW 28A.657.070 for reconsideration of the superintendent's level
two required action plan within ten days of the submission of the plan
to the state board of education. After the state board of education
considers the recommendations of the required action plan review panel,
the decision of the board regarding the level two required action plan
is final and not subject to further reconsideration.
(5) If changes to a collective bargaining agreement are necessary
to implement a level two required action plan, the parties must reopen
the agreement, or negotiate an addendum, using the process outlined
under RCW 28A.657.050. If the level two required action plan is
developed by the superintendent of public instruction under subsection
(4) of this section, a designee of the superintendent shall participate
in the discussions among the parties to the collective bargaining
agreement.
(6) While a school district is assigned to level two of the
required action process under this chapter, the superintendent of
public instruction is responsible and accountable for assuring that the
level two required action plan is implemented with fidelity. The
superintendent of public instruction shall defer to the school district
board of directors as the governing authority of the school district
and continue to work in partnership with the school district to
implement the level two required action plan. However, if the
superintendent of public instruction finds that the level two required
action plan is not being implemented as specified, including the
implementation of any binding conditions within the plan, the
superintendent may direct actions that must be taken by school district
personnel to implement the level two required action plan or the
binding conditions. If necessary, the superintendent of public
instruction may exercise authority under RCW 28A.505.120 regarding
allocation of funds.
(7) The superintendent of public instruction shall include in the
budget estimates and information submitted to the governor under RCW
28A.300.170 a request for sufficient funds to support implementation of
the level two required action plans established under this section.
(8) The superintendent of public instruction must recommend to the
state board of education that a school district be released from
assignment to level two of the required action process after the
district implements the level two required action plan for a period of
three years; has made progress, as defined by the superintendent of
public instruction using the criteria established under RCW
28A.657.020; and no longer has a school within the district identified
as persistently lowest-achieving. The state board of education shall
release a school district from the level two assignment upon
confirmation that the school district has met the requirements for a
release.
Sec. 12 RCW 28A.657.110 and 2010 c 235 s 111 are each amended to
read as follows:
(1) By November 1, 2013, the state board of education shall
((continue to refine the development of)) propose rules for adoption
establishing 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. The board must seek input from the
public and interested groups in developing the framework. Based on the
framework, the superintendent of public instruction shall design a
comprehensive system of specific strategies for recognition, provision
of differentiated support and targeted assistance, and, if necessary,
requiring intervention in schools and school districts. The
superintendent shall submit the system design to the state board of
education for review. The state board of education shall recommend
approval or modification of the system design to the superintendent no
later than January 1, 2014, and the system must be implemented
statewide no later than the 2014-15 school year. To the extent state
funds are appropriated for this purpose, the system must apply equally
to Title I, Title I-eligible, and non-Title I schools in the state.
(2) The state board of education shall develop ((an
accountability)) a Washington achievement index to identify schools and
school 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 school districts, as well as parents
and community members. The index must identify five categories of
schools and school districts, which must be labeled as follows based on
relative performance on the criteria used in the index: Exemplary,
very good, good, fair, and struggling. It is the legislature's intent
that the index provide feedback to schools and school 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.
(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)) Washington achievement index. The state
board of education shall have ongoing collaboration with the
((achievement)) educational opportunity 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.
(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)) Washington
achievement index and the state system of differentiated support,
assistance, and intervention((,)) to replace the federal accountability
system under P.L. 107-110, the no child left behind act of 2001.
(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)) RCW 28A.290.020 to determine the feasibility of using the
prototypical funding allocation model as not only a tool for allocating
resources to schools and school districts but also as a tool for
schools and school 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. 13 A new section is added to chapter 28A.657
RCW to read as follows:
(1) The education accountability system oversight committee is
established to provide ongoing monitoring of the outcomes of the
comprehensive system of recognition, support, and intervention for
schools and school districts established under this chapter.
(2) The oversight committee shall be composed of the following
members:
(a) Two members from each of the largest caucuses of the house of
representatives, to be appointed by the speaker of the house of
representatives;
(b) Two members from each of the largest caucuses of the senate, to
be appointed by the president of the senate;
(c) Two members appointed by the governor; and
(d) One nonlegislative member of the educational opportunity gap
oversight and accountability committee.
(3) The oversight committee shall choose a chair from among its
membership who shall serve as chair for no more than one consecutive
year.
(4) The committee shall:
(a) Monitor the progress and outcomes of the education
accountability system established under this chapter, including but not
limited to the effectiveness in improving student achievement of the
tiered system of assistance and intervention provided to challenged
schools in need of improvement, persistently lowest-achieving schools
in required action districts, and level two required action districts;
(b) Review and make recommendations to the state board of education
regarding the proposed assignment of a required action district to
level two of the required action process under section 11 of this act;
(c) Make recommendations to the state board of education, the
superintendent of public instruction, the governor, and the legislature
as necessary if the oversight committee finds that changes to the
accountability system should be made; and
(d) Report biennially to the education committees of the
legislature.
(5) Staff support for the oversight committee must be provided by
the senate committee services and the house of representatives office
of program research.
(6) Legislative members of the oversight committee may be
reimbursed for travel expenses in accordance with RCW 44.04.120.
Nonlegislative members are entitled to be reimbursed for travel
expenses in accordance with RCW 43.03.050 and 43.03.060.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 14 RCW 28A.657.125 (Joint select committee on
education accountability -- Reports) and 2010 c 235 s 114 are each
repealed.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 15 Section 5 of this act expires June 30,
2019.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 16 Section 6 of this act takes effect June 30,
2019."
Correct the title.
EFFECT: Replaces all provisions of the underlying bill with the
following:
Updates the criteria used by the OSPI to identify schools in need
of improvement to conform to revised federal rules and guidance.
Requires use of a Washington Achievement Index to identify schools once
federally approved.
Directs that the criteria be applied equally to Title I and non-
Title I schools.
Specifies that persistently lowest-achieving (PLA) schools are a
subset of other schools needing improvement for purposes of the state
required action district (RAD) process and that criteria for
identifying them must include availability of funds to implement a
required action plan.
Permits state as well as federal funds to be used for school
improvement in a RAD.
Replaces a requirement that RADs must use one of four federal
intervention models with a requirement that RADs must use a school
improvement model, consistent with turnaround principles, that is
approved by the OSPI.
Directs the OSPI to develop guidelines for RAD plans.
Requires that closing the educational opportunity gap be one of the
measures of improvement included in a RAD plan.
Provides that if a RAD has not demonstrated sufficient improvement
after at least three years, the SBE may require a new plan or assign
the district to a new Level II RAD process. Requires that before
making this determination, the SBE must submit its findings to an
Education Accountability System Oversight Committee for review.
Requires the SPI to direct a needs assessment and review on why the
previous plan did not succeed.
Directs the SPI to work with the school board to develop a Level II
plan that addresses the reasons identified in the needs assessment and
specifies interventions and other necessary conditions to be
implemented, which are binding.
Requires the plan also to specify assistance provided from the SPI,
which may include assignment of on-site specialists with experience in
school turnaround and cultural competence and assistance from the ESD.
Provides that if the SPI and the school board do not agree, the SPI
must develop a plan and submit it to the SBE.
Allows the school board to request a reconsideration from a
Required Action Plan Review Panel established under current law.
Requires school districts to reopen bargaining agreements if
necessary, and requires that the SPI participate in discussions if the
plan is developed by the SPI.
Provides that the SPI is responsible for assuring a Level II plan
is implemented.
Directs the SPI to defer to the local school board, but provides
that if the plan is not being implemented as specified, the SPI may
direct actions that must be taken by school personnel.
Specifies that if binding conditions are not being followed, the
SPI may withhold funds as provided in current law.
Directs the OSPI to design a system of support, assistance, and
intervention that is subject to review by the SBE, applies equally to
Title I and non-Title I schools to the extent state funds are
appropriated for this purpose, and is implemented in the 2014-15 school
year.
Requires the Achievement Index to specify five categories of
schools with the following labels: Exemplary, very good, good, fair,
and struggling.
Establishes an Education Accountability System Oversight Committee
to monitor outcomes from the system of support and intervention
established.
Provides membership of 8 legislators, 2 Governor-appointees, and
one nonlegislative member of the EOGOAC.
Directs the Committee to:
Monitor the effectiveness of the system in improving student
achievement;
Review and make recommendations on SBE determinations to assign a
district to Level II RAD;
Make recommendations to the SBE, SPI, Governor, and Legislature as
necessary; and
Submit a biennial report.
Repeals a Joint Select Committee on Education Accountability.