Texas 2009 81st Regular

Texas House Bill HB708 Senate Committee Report / Bill

Filed 02/01/2025

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                    By: Rose (Senate Sponsor - Shapiro) H.B. No. 708
 (In the Senate - Received from the House May 18, 2009;
 May 19, 2009, read first time and referred to Committee on Higher
 Education; May 25, 2009, reported adversely, with favorable
 Committee Substitute by the following vote: Yeas 4, Nays 0;
 May 25, 2009, sent to printer.)
 COMMITTEE SUBSTITUTE FOR H.B. No. 708 By: Patrick


 A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 AN ACT
 relating to higher education transfer practices, articulation
 agreements, policies for dropping courses, and special-purpose
 centers and to the formula funding for certain credit hours.
 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
 SECTION 1. Sections 51.907(a) and (b), Education Code, are
 amended to read as follows:
 (a) In this section, "governing board," [and] "institution
 of higher education," and "public junior college" have the meanings
 assigned by Section 61.003.
 (b) This section applies only to an undergraduate student
 who drops a course at an institution of higher education other than
 a public junior college and only if:
 (1) the student was able to drop the course without
 receiving a grade or incurring an academic penalty;
 (2) the student's transcript indicates or will
 indicate that the student was enrolled in the course; and
 (3) the student is not dropping the course in order to
 withdraw from the institution.
 SECTION 2. (a) Section 61.0595(d), Education Code, is
 amended to read as follows:
 (d) The following are not counted for purposes of
 determining whether the student has previously earned the number of
 semester credit hours specified by Subsection (a):
 (1) semester credit hours earned by the student before
 receiving an associate or [a] baccalaureate degree that has
 previously been awarded to the student;
 (2) semester credit hours earned by the student by
 examination or under any other procedure by which credit is earned
 without registering for a course for which tuition is charged;
 (3) credit for a remedial education course, a
 technical course, a workforce education course funded according to
 contact hours, or another course that does not count toward a degree
 program at the institution; [and]
 (4) semester credit hours earned by the student at a
 private institution or an out-of-state institution; and
 (5)  semester credit hours earned by the student before
 graduating from high school and used to satisfy high school
 graduation requirements.
 (b) The change in law made by this section to Section
 61.0595, Education Code, applies beginning with the funding
 recommendations made under Section 61.059, Education Code, for the
 2011-2012 academic year.
 SECTION 3. Section 61.821, Education Code, is amended by
 amending Subdivision (1) and adding Subdivision (4) to read as
 follows:
 (1) "Core curriculum" means the curriculum in liberal
 arts, humanities, and sciences and political, social, and cultural
 history that all undergraduate students of an institution of higher
 education are required to complete before receiving a bachelor's
 [an academic undergraduate] degree.
 (4)  "Statewide articulated transfer curricula" means,
 with respect to engineering disciplines, sets of courses, up to the
 level of an associate's degree, that will satisfy the
 lower-division requirements for bachelor's degrees in specific
 engineering disciplines, including biomedical, chemical, civil,
 computer, electrical, environmental, industrial, mechanical,
 nuclear, and petroleum engineering at a general academic teaching
 institution.
 SECTION 4. Section 61.822(b), Education Code, is amended to
 read as follows:
 (b) Each institution of higher education shall adopt a core
 curriculum of no less than 42 semester credit hours, including
 specific courses comprising the curriculum. The core curriculum
 shall be consistent with the common course numbering system
 approved by the board and with the statement, recommendations, and
 rules issued by the board. The minimum core curriculum requirement
 for all academic associate's degrees shall be 42 semester credit
 hours, except for programs designated under board-approved field of
 study curricula or statewide articulated transfer curricula. An
 institution may have a core curriculum of other than 42 semester
 credit hours only if approved by the board.
 SECTION 5. Section 61.830, Education Code, is amended to
 read as follows:
 Sec. 61.830. PUBLICATION OF TRANSFER GUIDELINES;
 [ADDRESSING] TRANSFER PRACTICES. (a) In its course catalogs and
 on its website, each institution of higher education shall publish:
 (1) guidelines addressing the practices of the
 institution regarding the transfer of course credit, under which
 courses are identified[. In the guidelines, the institution must
 identify a course by] using the common course numbering system
 approved by the board; and
 (2)  in a format designated by the commissioner, all
 institutional and statewide articulation agreements concerning the
 transfer of courses.
 (b)  Each institution of higher education shall post on the
 institution's website the dates for which each published
 articulation agreement is valid and shall remove an expired
 articulation agreement from the website not later than the 30th day
 after the date of its expiration.
 (c)  The board shall adopt a standard format for the
 publication of articulation agreements under this section. The
 format must provide students with access to the requirements of
 each articulation agreement to allow students enrolled in public
 junior colleges, public state colleges, and public technical
 institutes to plan and coordinate course schedules to meet those
 requirements.
 (d)  The board shall provide links to each website described
 under Subsection (a) in a prominent, easily accessible, and
 identifiable location on the board's college information website.
 (e)  Not later than September 30 of each even-numbered year,
 the commissioner shall make recommendations to each standing
 committee of the legislature with primary jurisdiction over higher
 education to improve:
 (1)  the publication of transfer policies and
 articulation agreements for the benefit of transfer students; and
 (2)  the level of participation of institutions of
 higher education in articulation agreements for the purpose of
 facilitating the transfer of students between institutions.
 (f)  A student who enrolls in a public junior college, public
 state college, or public technical institute under an articulation
 agreement is entitled to transfer to the general academic teaching
 institution that is a party to the agreement not later than the
 fourth anniversary of the date the student first enrolled in the
 public junior college, public state college, or public technical
 institute.
 SECTION 6. Subchapter S, Chapter 61, Education Code, is
 amended by adding Section 61.833 to read as follows:
 Sec. 61.833.  STATEWIDE ARTICULATED TRANSFER CURRICULA FOR
 ENGINEERING DISCIPLINES; PILOT PROGRAM. (a)  The board shall
 establish a pilot program to develop and assess methods to increase
 the number of students earning a baccalaureate degree in
 engineering. The program shall:
 (1)  develop levels of academic attainment, including,
 if feasible, standard associate's degrees:
 (A)  for specific engineering disciplines,
 including biomedical, chemical, civil, computer, electrical,
 environmental, industrial, mechanical, nuclear, and petroleum
 engineering; or
 (B)  that provide a foundation in any engineering
 discipline;
 (2)  develop a well-defined process for transitioning
 students who earn an associate's degree or other level of academic
 attainment in an engineering discipline into an accredited
 engineering degree program at a four-year institution; and
 (3)  establish methods to provide orientation and
 advising to support students in choosing an engineering discipline
 and in completing a baccalaureate degree in engineering.
 (b)  Not later than January 1, 2011, the board, with the
 assistance of advisory committees equitably composed of
 representatives of institutions of higher education, shall develop
 statewide articulated transfer curricula for the purpose of
 developing levels of academic attainment, including, if feasible,
 standard associate's degrees, for engineering disciplines. Each
 university system or independent institution of higher education
 that offers a degree program for which a statewide articulated
 transfer curriculum is proposed may nominate an individual to
 participate on the advisory committee for that particular
 engineering curriculum.
 (c) The statewide articulated transfer curricula shall:
 (1)  have the same rigor and content as the equivalent
 course work at an engineering program accredited by ABET,
 Incorporated, that is offered at a general academic teaching
 institution;
 (2)  minimize the time and course work required to
 complete a baccalaureate degree in engineering; and
 (3) be consistent with:
 (A)  the common course numbering system approved
 by the board; and
 (B) the recommendations and rules of the board.
 (d)  Each institution of higher education that offers an
 undergraduate degree program in an engineering discipline may
 participate in the pilot program by adopting the statewide
 articulated transfer curriculum for that discipline.
 (e)  A student who meets institutional and engineering
 degree program admission requirements and successfully completes
 the statewide articulated transfer curriculum for an engineering
 discipline developed by the board under the pilot program:
 (1)  may transfer the credit hours earned under that
 curriculum and apply those credit hours to a participating
 four-year institution's engineering degree program in a discipline
 for which the curriculum was developed; and
 (2)  shall receive full academic credit toward that
 engineering degree program for the credit hours transferred.
 (f)  A student who meets institutional and degree program
 admission requirements and who transfers from one institution of
 higher education to another without completing the statewide
 articulated transfer curriculum developed by the board for that
 engineering discipline shall receive full academic credit from a
 participating institution for each of the courses that the student
 has successfully completed in the statewide articulated transfer
 curriculum. Following receipt of credit for each of those courses,
 the student shall be required to satisfy any additional course
 requirements in the degree program of the receiving institution.
 (g)  The board, with the assistance of advisory committees
 established under this section, shall periodically evaluate
 whether the statewide articulated transfer curricula for
 engineering disciplines:
 (1)  effectively facilitate the transition of junior
 college students and students of other two-year institutions of
 higher education into accredited four-year engineering degree
 programs; and
 (2)  have contributed to increasing the number of
 transfer students who successfully complete baccalaureate degree
 programs in engineering.
 (h)  Not later than January 1, 2011, the board shall report
 to the legislature regarding the board's progress in developing and
 evaluating statewide articulated transfer curricula for
 engineering disciplines required by this section.
 (i) This section expires January 1, 2017.
 SECTION 7. Chapter 111, Education Code, is amended by
 adding Subchapter I to read as follows:
 SUBCHAPTER I. UNIVERSITY OF HOUSTON HURRICANE CENTER FOR
 INNOVATIVE TECHNOLOGY
 Sec. 111.121. DEFINITIONS. In this subchapter:
 (1)  "Board" means the board of regents of the
 University of Houston System.
 (2)  "Center" means the University of Houston Hurricane
 Center for Innovative Technology (UHC-IT) established under this
 subchapter.
 Sec. 111.122.  ESTABLISHMENT.  (a) The University of
 Houston Hurricane Center for Innovative Technology is established
 at the University of Houston.
 (b)  The organization, control, and management of the center
 are vested in the board.
 (c)  The center shall be hosted by the university's College
 of Engineering. Participation in the center's activities shall be
 open to any faculty member of the university who is an active
 researcher in the field of materials, nanotechnology, structural
 engineering, designing of structures, or sensor technology, or in
 another relevant field as determined by the university.
 Sec. 111.123. PURPOSE. The center is created to:
 (1)  promote interdisciplinary research, education,
 and training for the development of state-of-the-art products,
 materials, systems, and technologies designed to mitigate the wind
 and asserted structural damages in the built environment and
 offshore structures caused by hurricanes in the Gulf Coast region;
 and
 (2)  develop protocols for the fast and efficient
 recovery of the public and private sectors, including utilities,
 hospitals, petrochemical industries, offshore platforms, and
 municipalities and other local communities following a hurricane.
 Sec. 111.124. POWERS AND DUTIES. The center shall:
 (1)  collaborate with appropriate federal, state, and
 local agencies and private business or nonprofit entities as
 necessary to coordinate efforts after a hurricane in the Gulf Coast
 region;
 (2)  develop smart materials and devices for use in
 hurricane protection and mitigation systems for structural
 monitoring;
 (3)  develop anchor systems for window and door
 screens, dwellings and other buildings, pipelines, and other
 onshore and offshore structures to withstand hurricane wind damage;
 (4)  develop test facilities for evaluating the
 performance of new products, materials, or techniques designed to
 protect against hurricane wind damage;
 (5)  develop specifications and standards for products
 used for protecting against hurricane wind damage;
 (6)  design buildings, houses, and other structures to
 withstand hurricane wind damage; and
 (7)  provide hurricane-related educational programs,
 seminars, conferences, and workshops to the community designed to
 ensure safety, minimize loss of life, and mitigate the destruction
 of property associated with hurricane wind damage.
 Sec. 111.125.  COLLABORATION WITH OTHER ENTITIES. The
 University of Houston shall encourage public and private entities
 to participate in or support the operation of the center and may
 enter into an agreement with any public or private entity for that
 purpose. An agreement may allow the center to provide information,
 services, or other assistance to an entity in exchange for the
 entity's participation or support.
 Sec. 111.126.  GIFTS AND GRANTS. The board may solicit,
 accept, and administer gifts and grants from any public or private
 source for the purposes of the center.
 Sec. 111.127.  PERSONNEL. The board may employ personnel
 for the center as necessary.
 SECTION 8. (a) Each public institution of higher education
 must satisfy the requirements of Section 61.830, Education Code, as
 amended by this Act, not later than September 30, 2010.
 (b) The Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board shall
 adopt the standard publication format required by Section
 61.830(c), Education Code, as added by this Act, not later than
 December 31, 2009.
 SECTION 9. The changes in law made by this Act in amending
 Sections 61.821 and 61.822, Education Code, and adding Section
 61.833, Education Code, do not make an appropriation. A provision
 in those sections that creates a new governmental program, creates
 a new entitlement, or imposes a new duty on a governmental entity is
 not mandatory during a fiscal period for which the legislature has
 not made a specific appropriation to implement the provision.
 SECTION 10. This Act takes effect immediately if it
 receives a vote of two-thirds of all the members elected to each
 house, as provided by Section 39, Article III, Texas Constitution.
 If this Act does not receive the vote necessary for immediate
 effect, this Act takes effect September 1, 2009.
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