SENATE BILL No. 451

 

 

April 22, 2009, Introduced by Senator CLARKE and referred to the Committee on Education.

 

 

 

     A bill to amend 1976 PA 451, entitled

 

"The revised school code,"

 

by amending section 1280 (MCL 380.1280), as amended by 2006 PA 123,

 

and by adding section 1280c.

 

THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN ENACT:

 

     Sec. 1280. (1) The board of a school district that does not

 

want to be subject to the measures described in this section shall

 

ensure that each public school within the school district is

 

accredited.

 

     (2) As used in subsection (1), and subject to subsection (6),

 

"accredited" means certified by the superintendent of public

 

instruction as having met or exceeded standards established under

 

this section for 6 areas of school operation: administration and

 


school organization, curricula, staff, school plant and facilities,

 

school and community relations, and school improvement plans and

 

student performance. The building-level evaluation used in the

 

accreditation process shall include, but is not limited to, school

 

data collection, self-study, visitation and validation,

 

determination of performance data to be used, and the development

 

of a school improvement plan.

 

     (3) The department shall develop and distribute to all public

 

schools proposed accreditation standards. Upon distribution of the

 

proposed standards, the department shall hold statewide public

 

hearings for the purpose of receiving testimony concerning the

 

standards. After a review of the testimony, the department shall

 

revise and submit the proposed standards to the superintendent of

 

public instruction. After a review and revision, if appropriate, of

 

the proposed standards, the superintendent of public instruction

 

shall submit the proposed standards to the senate and house

 

committees that have the responsibility for education legislation.

 

Upon approval by these committees, the department shall distribute

 

to all public schools the standards to be applied to each school

 

for accreditation purposes. The superintendent of public

 

instruction shall review and update the accreditation standards

 

annually using the process prescribed under this subsection.

 

     (4) The superintendent of public instruction shall develop and

 

distribute to all public schools standards for determining that a

 

school is eligible for summary accreditation under subsection (6).

 

The standards shall be developed, reviewed, approved, and

 

distributed using the same process as prescribed in subsection (3)

 


for accreditation standards, and shall be finally distributed and

 

implemented not later than December 31, 1994.

 

     (5) The standards for accreditation or summary accreditation

 

under this section shall include as criteria pupil performance on

 

Michigan education assessment program (MEAP) tests and on the

 

Michigan merit examination under section 1279g, and, until the

 

Michigan merit examination has been fully implemented, the

 

percentage of pupils achieving state endorsement under section

 

1279, but shall not be based solely on pupil performance on MEAP

 

tests or the Michigan merit examination. or on the percentage of

 

pupils achieving state endorsement under section 1279. The

 

standards shall also include as criteria multiple year change in

 

pupil performance on MEAP tests and the Michigan merit examination.

 

and, until after the Michigan merit examination is fully

 

implemented, multiple year change in the percentage of pupils

 

achieving state endorsement under section 1279. If it is necessary

 

for the superintendent of public instruction to revise

 

accreditation or summary accreditation standards established under

 

subsection (3) or (4) to comply with this subsection, the revised

 

standards shall be developed, reviewed, approved, and distributed

 

using the same process as prescribed in subsection (3).

 

     (6) If the superintendent of public instruction determines

 

that a public school has met the standards established under

 

subsection (4) or (5) for summary accreditation, the school is

 

considered to be accredited without the necessity for a full

 

building-level evaluation under subsection (2).

 

     (7) If the superintendent of public instruction determines

 


that a school has not met the standards established under

 

subsection (4) or (5) for summary accreditation but that the school

 

is making progress toward meeting those standards, or if, based on

 

a full building-level evaluation under subsection (2), the

 

superintendent of public instruction determines that a school has

 

not met the standards for accreditation but is making progress

 

toward meeting those standards, the school is in interim status and

 

is subject to a full building-level evaluation as provided in this

 

section.

 

     (8) If a school has not met the standards established under

 

subsection (4) or (5) for summary accreditation and is not eligible

 

for interim status under subsection (7), the school is unaccredited

 

and subject to the measures provided in this section.

 

     (9) Beginning with the 2002-2003 school year, if If at least

 

5% of a public school's answer sheets from the administration of

 

the Michigan educational assessment program (MEAP) tests are lost

 

by the department or by a state contractor and if the public school

 

can verify that the answer sheets were collected from pupils and

 

forwarded to the department or the contractor, the department shall

 

not assign an accreditation score or school report card grade to

 

the public school for that subject area for the corresponding year

 

for the purposes of determining state accreditation under this

 

section. The department shall not assign an accreditation score or

 

school report card grade to the public school for that subject area

 

until the results of all tests for the next year are available.

 

     (10) Subsection (9) does not preclude the department from

 

determining whether a public school or a school district has

 


achieved adequate yearly progress for the school year in which the

 

answer sheets were lost for the purposes of the no child left

 

behind act of 2001, Public Law 107-110. However, the department

 

shall ensure that a public school or the school district is not

 

penalized when determining adequate yearly progress status due to

 

the fact that the public school's MEAP answer sheets were lost by

 

the department or by a state contractor, but shall not require a

 

public school or school district to retest pupils or produce scores

 

from another test for this purpose.

 

     (11) The superintendent of public instruction shall annually

 

review and evaluate for accreditation purposes the performance of

 

each school that is unaccredited and as many of the schools that

 

are in interim status as permitted by the department's resources.

 

     (12) The superintendent of public instruction shall, and the

 

intermediate school district to which a school district is

 

constituent, a consortium of intermediate school districts, or any

 

combination thereof may, provide technical assistance, as

 

appropriate, to a school that is unaccredited or that is in interim

 

status upon request of the board of the school district in which

 

the school is located. If requests to the superintendent of public

 

instruction for technical assistance exceed the capacity, priority

 

shall be given to unaccredited schools.

 

     (13) A school that has been unaccredited for 3 consecutive

 

years or that has failed to achieve the federal pupil performance

 

standard, as determined by the department, for 5 or more

 

consecutive years is subject to 1 or more of the following

 

measures, as determined by the superintendent of public instruction

 


and, if the school district operating the school has at least

 

60,000 pupils in membership, is subject to the measures described

 

in sections 1280c to 1280e.

 

     (a) The superintendent of public instruction or his or her

 

designee shall appoint at the expense of the affected school

 

district an administrator of the school until the school becomes

 

accredited or has been determined by the department to have

 

achieved the federal pupil performance standard for 2 consecutive

 

years.

 

     (b) A parent, legal guardian, or person in loco parentis of a

 

child who attends the school may send his or her child to any

 

accredited public school with an appropriate grade level within the

 

school district that is either accredited or has achieved the pupil

 

performance standard, as determined by the department, for the most

 

recent year for which a determination has been made.

 

     (c) The school, with the approval of the superintendent of

 

public instruction, shall align itself with an existing research-

 

based school improvement model or establish an affiliation for

 

providing assistance to the school with a college or university

 

located in this state.

 

     (d) The school shall be closed.

 

     (14) The superintendent of public instruction shall evaluate

 

the school accreditation program and the status of schools under

 

this section and shall submit an annual report based upon the

 

evaluation to the senate and house committees that have the

 

responsibility for education legislation. The report shall address

 

the reasons each unaccredited school is not accredited and shall

 


recommend legislative action that will result in the accreditation

 

of all public schools in this state.

 

     (15) Beginning with the 2008-2009 school year, a high school

 

shall not be accredited by the department unless the department

 

determines that the high school is providing or has otherwise

 

ensured that all pupils have access to all of the elements of the

 

curriculum required under sections 1278a and 1278b. If it is

 

necessary for the superintendent of public instruction to revise

 

accreditation or summary accreditation standards established under

 

subsection (3) or (4) to comply with the changes made to this

 

section by the amendatory act that added this subsection, the

 

revised standards shall be developed, reviewed, approved, and

 

distributed using the same process as prescribed in subsection (3).

 

     (16) As used in this section:

 

     (a) "Achieved the federal pupil performance standard" means

 

that the department has determined that the school has achieved

 

adequate yearly progress under the no child left behind act of

 

2001, Public Law 107-110, or has met a successor federal standard

 

that the superintendent of public instruction has identified as

 

being a standard established by the federal government that is

 

based on pupil performance and is required to be met in order to

 

receive full federal funding.

 

     (b) "Failed to achieve the federal pupil performance standard"

 

means that the department has determined that the school has failed

 

to achieve adequate yearly progress under the no child left behind

 

act of 2001, Public Law 107-110, or has failed to meet a successor

 

federal standard that the superintendent of public instruction has

 


identified as being a standard established by the federal

 

government that is based on pupil performance and is required to be

 

met in order to receive full federal funding.

 

     Sec. 1280c. (1) If the department determines that a school has

 

been unaccredited under section 1280 for 3 consecutive years or has

 

failed to achieve the federal pupil performance standard for 5 or

 

more consecutive years, and if the school district that operates

 

the school has the greatest number of pupils in membership among

 

all school districts in this state, the department shall notify the

 

board of the school district that operates the school that the

 

school is subject to reorganization under this section. Not later

 

than the beginning of the next school year that begins after this

 

notification, the board shall ensure that the school is reorganized

 

as necessary to ensure that the school meets all of the following

 

by the beginning of the next school year:

 

     (a) Meets the following school and class size requirements:

 

     (i) School enrollment is between 125 and 500 pupils.

 

     (ii) Class size is not more than 16 pupils per classroom.

 

     (b) Provides relationship-based learning by providing the

 

following:

 

     (i) Placement of pupils in homerooms with an advisor who works

 

with the pupils throughout their entire high school career.

 

     (ii) Adult mentors from the workplace and community.

 

     (c) Provides individualized learning plans and project-based

 

learning for all pupils.

 

     (d) Provides a college-preparatory curriculum.

 

     (e) Engages in community partnerships with institutions of

 


higher education, cultural institutions, businesses, government,

 

and community organizations in developing a core curriculum and

 

identity-building activities.

 

     (f) Provides morals-based instruction designed to teach pupils

 

all of the following:

 

     (i) The importance of honesty, courage, humility, kindness, and

 

generosity.

 

     (ii) The ability to make moral distinctions between right and

 

wrong.

 

     (iii) The value of self-discipline, self-esteem, embracing

 

responsibilities, and respect for the rights of others.

 

     (2) In addition to the measures under subsection (1), the

 

board of a school district described in subsection (1) shall

 

consider establishing and implementing an extended calendar for a

 

school described in subsection (1), including at least considering

 

alternatives that add school days, extend school hours, or shorten

 

summer vacation and shorten or extend other vacation periods.

 

     (3) The board of a school district described in subsection (1)

 

shall adopt and implement a plan to utilize school buildings in the

 

school district, including currently closed school buildings, as

 

centers for educating adults, community meeting places, recreation

 

centers, and locations for health and social services and municipal

 

programs and libraries, to be funded in coordination with other

 

governmental, nonprofit, or for-profit entities. The board may

 

establish a task force, advisory committee, or other community

 

group to develop the plan. If there is a financial manager in place

 

for the school district, the board's actions under this subsection

 


are subject to the approval of the financial manager.

 

     (4) As used in this section, "failed to achieve the federal

 

pupil performance standard" means that the department has

 

determined that the school has failed to achieve adequate yearly

 

progress under the no child left behind act of 2001, Public Law

 

107-110, or has failed to meet a successor federal standard that

 

the superintendent of public instruction has identified as being a

 

standard established by the federal government that is based on

 

pupil performance and is required to be met in order to receive

 

full federal funding.