Arizona 2023 2023 Regular Session

Arizona Senate Bill SB1208 Comm Sub / Analysis

Filed 02/01/2023

                    Assigned to ED  	FOR COMMITTEE 
 
 
 
 
ARIZONA STATE SENATE 
Fifty-Sixth Legislature, First Regular Session 
 
FACT SHEET FOR S.B. 1208 
 
dropout recovery programs; revisions 
Purpose 
Authorizes an alternative school within a school district (district school) or an alternative 
charter school with a unique entity number that is not an Arizona Online Instruction (AOI) provider 
to offer a dropout recovery program (DRP) and narrows the prohibition on AOI providers 
operating a DRP to apply to an AOI online course provider or an online school. Modifies DRP 
eligibility, administration and reporting requirements.  
Background 
A school district or charter school that provides high school instruction and is not also an 
AOI provider may offer a DRP to assist students who left the education system achieve a high 
school diploma in an alternative setting. The State Board of Education (SBE) must prescribe 
standards that require a DRP to: 1) provide curriculum aligned to academic standards, required 
standardized tests and support for students; and 2) meet the state graduation requirements. A school 
district or charter school may contract with an educational management organization (EMO) that 
meets prescribed requirements to provide a DRP and may provide curricula online. Schools that 
operate a DRP are classified as alternative schools. 
For the purposes of calculating average daily membership (ADM), a DRP student is in 
attendance if: 1) in the first month, the student completes DRP orientation; 2) the student makes 
satisfactory monthly progress in teacher-facilitated courses for the current or previous month; or 
3) meets the expectations for DRP reentry. A student who does not make satisfactory progress for 
two or more consecutive months may not be counted in ADM. Satisfactory monthly progress is 
progress measurable monthly that, if continued for 12 months would result in the same amount of 
academic credit awarded to the student as would be awarded to a student in a traditional education 
program who completes a full school year (A.R.S. §§ 15-241 and 15-901.06; ADE). 
An alternative school is a school whose mission is to serve a specific population of at-risk 
students that will benefit from an alternative school setting. At least 70 percent of the school's 
enrolled students must be in at least one of the prescribed population categories (ADE).  
If modifying the qualifications of schools who may offer a DRP or the definition of 
satisfactory monthly progress results in a change to ADM calculated for DRP providers, there may 
be change in Basic State Aid costs to the state General Fund. 
Provisions 
1. Authorizes each alternative district school and each alternative charter school, rather than a 
school district or charter school, that provides high school instruction to offer a DRP.  FACT SHEET 
S.B. 1208 
Page 2 
 
 
2. Narrows the prohibition on an AOI provider operating a DRP to apply only to an AOI: 
a) online school which is a school that is selected to participate in AOI and provides at least 
four online academic courses or at least one online course for the equivalent of at least five 
hours each day for 180 school days; or  
b) online course provider which is a school other than an online school that is selected to 
participate in AOI and provides at least one SBE-approved online academic course. 
3. Specifies that, if the school is not an AOI online course provider or online school, an alternative 
district school or an alternative charter school with a unique entity number may provide a DRP.  
4. Requires the Arizona Department of Education (ADE) to create and maintain a list of 
alternative district schools and alternative charter schools that offer a DRP and the EMO, if 
any, that provides DRP services to each school. 
5. Requires ADE to update the DRP schools and EMOs list on a quarterly basis.  
6. Requires a school district or an alternative charter school, 30 days before an alternative district 
school or an alternative charter school begin DRP operations, to:  
a) notify ADE that the school meets the prescribed DRP criteria; and  
b) if applicable, identify the EMO contracted to operate a DRP in the notice.  
7. Directs ADE, within 30 days after receiving the school's notice, to determine whether the DRP 
criteria are met and notify the school district or alternative charter school of the determination. 
8. Provides the school district or alternative charter school 30 days to respond and appeal ADE's 
decision. 
9. Allows an alternative school or alternative charter school that receives ADE-approval to start 
DRP operations 30 days after the school's initial notice to ADE. 
10. Directs an alternative district school or alternative charter school that offers a DRP (DRP 
provider) to notify ADE within 30 days after entering or terminating a contract with an EMO 
for DRP services. 
11. Authorizes a DRP provider to provide up to 2 months of fundable orientation and mentoring 
per student per 12-month period. 
12. Deems that wraparound and support services, including social work sessions, trauma sessions 
and food and housing security sessions are fundable orientation and mentoring. 
13. Adds, to the elements that must be included in a DRP student's written learning plan, whether 
the student will receive wraparound services or support services that count toward the student's 
satisfactory monthly progress. 
14. Directs a DRP provider to identify monthly progress in the school's student information system 
using the following progress markers: 
a) O for orientation; 
b) S for satisfactory; and  
c) U for unsatisfactory.  FACT SHEET 
S.B. 1208 
Page 3 
 
 
15. Requires, by July 31, each school and EMO that provides a DRP to annually report to ADE: 
a) on-track-to-graduate data for the DRP; 
b) the total number of credits earned by students in the DRP; and  
c) the alternative college and career readiness indicator.  
16. Requires ADE’s annual report to the Governor and Legislature to: 
a) be submitted by October 1 and posted on ADE’s website; and 
b) include compiled information submitted by DRP providers, rather than DRP outcomes 
including the number of participating students and the number of participating students 
who graduate. 
17. Redefines eligible pupil as eligible student and modifies the definition by: 
a) removing the criteria that the student must be eligible for placement in an alternative 
school; and 
b) reducing, from 30 to 10, the number of days the student has been withdrawn from a school 
district or charter school. 
18. Allows satisfactory monthly progress to include up to 2 months of fundable orientation and 
mentoring per student over a 12-month period, resulting in a lesser required amount of progress 
over the 12-month period, rather than including a lesser required amount of progress for a 
student's first 2 months of DRP participation. 
19. Makes technical and conforming changes. 
20. Becomes effective on the general effective date. 
Prepared by Senate Research 
January 31, 2023 
LB/slp