High School Diplomas. To graduate from high school, a student must satisfy requirements set by the State Board of Education (SBE), satisfy credit requirements, complete a High School and Beyond Plan, and meet the requirements of a graduation pathway. In addition, a student must meet any additional requirements set by the student's public high school or school district.
Upon students' satisfactory completion of all local and state graduation requirements, school districts must issue diplomas to students signifying graduation from high school.
In 2002, the Legislature gave districts the ability to issue a high school diploma to certain groups of veterans of the armed forces, including to an individual on behalf of a deceased veteran.
At the request of the parent, guardian, or custodian, a school district must issue a high school diploma to a deceased student if the student:
The high school diploma may not be issued before the graduation date of the class in which the student was enrolled. Districts are not required to award the diploma at the same ceremony or event as other students.
The act may be known and cited as Evitan's Law.
PRO: Parents have received varying responses from districts when requesting a diploma. Parents have felt that at times the awarding of a diploma has been conditional on the means of death. For some families, their student would have been the first student to have graduated high school. Some students pass away with only a few credits left for graduation, yet are not awarded diplomas by their local district, even when those students have an Individualized Education Program.
OTHER: Many districts already issue these types of diplomas. Some school leaders believe that the decision should remain a local one.