82R7660 CAS-D By: Walle H.B. No. 1740 A BILL TO BE ENTITLED AN ACT relating to providing information to parents regarding changes in state law affecting public school students. BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS: SECTION 1. Chapter 26, Education Code, is amended by adding Section 26.015 to read as follows: Sec. 26.015. PARENT INFORMATION REGARDING CHANGES IN STATE LAW. (a) As soon as practicable after a legislative session, the agency shall prepare a document to inform parents of significant changes in state law, including additions to law, made during that legislative session that affect public school students. The document must also include, to the greatest extent practicable, information concerning any administrative rule adopted in association with a change in law and provide information that is as specific as practicable regarding dates on which state-administered assessment instruments will be administered during the school year during which the document will, in accordance with Subsection (e), be distributed. The document may also include information concerning significant changes in law affecting public school students made during the legislative session preceding the session concerning which information is required by this subsection. (b) This section applies to a special legislative session only if the agency determines that there were significant changes in state law made during the special legislative session that affect public school students. (c) The document required under Subsection (a) must: (1) be designed to explain to parents the manner in which state law has changed and the effect of the change on public school students; (2) focus on changes in law as a result of which a parent can act to affect the education of the parent's child; (3) be as specific as necessary to provide a parent with the informational tools needed to affect the education of the parent's child; and (4) be written in language that is easy to understand. (d) The document required under Subsection (a) may be included as part of the student handbook. (e) As early in each school year as practicable, each school district and open-enrollment charter school shall: (1) distribute, at a time the district or charter school distributes other information for parents, the most recent document prepared under this section; and (2) post the document on the district's Internet website. (f) The agency shall prepare the initial document under this section to be distributed by a school district or open-enrollment charter school during the 2012-2013 school year. Notwithstanding Subsection (a), the initial document must inform parents of significant changes in state law that affect public school students made: (1) during the 82nd Regular Session of the legislature; and (2) during the 81st Regular Session of the legislature under the following provisions of this code, including the information described by this subdivision, and under any other law as determined by the agency: (A) Section 28.0211, which: (i) no longer prohibits promotion to the fourth grade of a student who fails to perform satisfactorily on the state-administered third grade reading assessment instrument; (ii) requires accelerated instruction for students who fail to perform satisfactorily on the third, fourth, fifth, sixth, seventh, or eighth grade state-administered assessment instrument; and (iii) requires a school district to assign a student who is promoted despite failure to perform satisfactorily on a state-administered assessment instrument to a teacher in the subject covered by the assessment instrument who meets all state and federal qualifications to teach that subject and grade level; (B) Section 28.025, which requires a student to enroll in the courses necessary to complete the curriculum requirements for the recommended or advanced high school program unless the student, the student's parent or other person standing in parental relation to the student, and a school counselor or school administrator agree in writing that the student be permitted to take courses under the minimum high school program; (C) Section 39.024, which adds a measure of college readiness; (D) Sections 39.025(a), (a-2), and (a-3), which impose the following requirements for a student to receive a high school diploma: (i) requires a student to achieve, in each subject in the foundation curriculum, a satisfactory cumulative score on end-of-course assessment instruments; (ii) requires a student to achieve a minimum score on an end-of-course assessment instrument for the score to count toward the student's cumulative score described by Subparagraph (i); (iii) requires a student to achieve a score that meets or exceeds the score for satisfactory performance, as determined by the commissioner, on English III and Algebra II end-of-course assessment instruments to graduate under the recommended high school program; and (iv) requires a student to achieve a score that meets or exceeds the score indicating college readiness, as determined by the commissioner, on English III and Algebra II end-of-course assessment instruments to graduate under the advanced high school program; (E) Section 39.025(f), which provides transition provisions for assessment and for receipt of a high school diploma, including, for a student entering a grade above the ninth grade during the 2011-2012 school year, a requirement that the student: (i) be administered exit-level assessment instruments rather than end-of-course assessment instruments; and (ii) be required to perform satisfactorily on each exit-level assessment instrument to receive a high school diploma; (F) Section 39.027, which amends provisions for exemptions of and other accommodations for students of limited English proficiency concerning state-administered assessment instruments; (G) Section 39.106, which amends duties imposed on a campus intervention team assigned to a campus that fails to meet certain standards; and (H) Section 39.116, which adds transitional interventions and sanctions during the transition to the new public school accreditation system established by the 81st Regular Session of the legislature. (g) This subsection and Subsection (f) expire September 1, 2013. SECTION 2. 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, 2011.