Texas 2013 - 83rd Regular

Texas House Bill HB3417 Latest Draft

Bill / Introduced Version

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                            83R6848 EAH-D
 By: Lavender H.B. No. 3417


 A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 AN ACT
 relating to high school curriculum and assessment requirements for
 public school students.
 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
 SECTION 1.  Section 7.062(e), Education Code, is amended to
 read as follows:
 (e)  The rules must:
 (1)  limit the amount of assistance provided through a
 grant to not more than:
 (A)  for a construction project, $200 per square
 foot of the science laboratory to be constructed; or
 (B)  for a renovation project, $100 per square
 foot of the science laboratory to be renovated;
 (2)  require a school district to demonstrate, as a
 condition of eligibility for a grant, that the existing district
 science laboratories are insufficient in number to comply with the
 curriculum requirements imposed for the foundation [recommended
 and advanced] high school program [programs] under Section 28.025
 [28.025(b-1)(1)]; and
 (3)  provide for ranking school districts that apply
 for grants on the basis of wealth per student and giving priority in
 the award of grants to districts with low wealth per student.
 SECTION 2.  Section 28.014(b), Education Code, is amended to
 read as follows:
 (b)  A student who successfully completes a course developed
 under this section may use the credit earned in the course toward
 satisfying the applicable mathematics or science curriculum
 requirement for the foundation [recommended or advanced] high
 school program under Section 28.025.
 SECTION 3.  (a)  Sections 28.014(a) and (f), Education Code,
 are amended to read as follows:
 (a)  The commissioner of education and the commissioner of
 higher education shall develop and recommend to the State Board of
 Education for adoption under Section 28.002 the essential knowledge
 and skills of courses in college preparatory mathematics, science,
 social studies, and English language arts. The courses must be
 designed:
 (1)  for students at the 12th grade level who do not
 meet college readiness standards on an [end-of-course] assessment
 instrument required under Section 39.023(c); and
 (2)  to prepare students for success in entry-level
 college courses.
 (f)  To the extent applicable, the commissioner shall draw
 from curricula and instructional materials developed under Section
 [Sections] 28.008 [and 61.0763] in developing a course and related
 instructional materials under this section.  Not later than
 September 1, 2010, the State Board of Education shall adopt
 essential knowledge and skills for each course developed under this
 section.  The State Board of Education shall make each course
 developed under this section and the related instructional
 materials available to school districts not later than the
 2014-2015 school year.  [As required by Subsection (c), a school
 district shall adopt a policy requiring a student's performance on
 an end-of-course assessment instrument administered under that
 subsection to account for 15 percent of the student's grade for a
 course developed under this section not later than the 2014-2015
 school year.]  This subsection expires September 1, 2015.
 (b)  This section applies beginning with the 2013-2014
 school year.
 SECTION 4.  Section 28.025, Education Code, is amended by
 amending Subsections (a), (b), (b-1), (b-2), (b-3), (b-4), (b-5),
 (b-7), (b-9), (b-10), (b-11), and (e) and adding Subsections
 (b-13), (c-1), (c-3), (e-1), (h), and (h-1) to read as follows:
 (a)  The State Board of Education by rule shall determine
 curriculum requirements for the foundation [minimum, recommended,
 and advanced] high school program [programs] that are consistent
 with the required curriculum under Section 28.002. The [Subject to
 Subsection (b-1), the] State Board of Education shall designate the
 specific courses in the foundation curriculum as required under
 [for a student participating in] the foundation [minimum,
 recommended, or advanced] high school program.  Except as provided
 by Subsection (b-1), the State Board of Education may not designate
 a specific course or a specific number of credits in the enrichment
 curriculum as requirements for the [recommended] program.
 (b)  A school district shall ensure that each student enrolls
 in the courses necessary to complete the curriculum requirements
 identified by the State Board of Education under Subsection (a) for
 the foundation [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 signed by each party that the
 student should be permitted to take courses under the minimum high
 school program and the student:
 [(1)  is at least 16 years of age;
 [(2)     has completed two credits required for graduation
 in each subject of the foundation curriculum under Section
 28.002(a)(1); or
 [(3)     has failed to be promoted to the tenth grade one
 or more times as determined by the school district].
 (b-1)  The State Board of Education by rule shall require
 that [:
 [(1) except as provided by Subsection (b-2),] the
 curriculum requirements for the foundation [recommended and
 advanced] high school program [programs] under Subsection (a)
 include a requirement that students successfully complete:
 (1) [(A)]  four credits in English language arts [each
 subject of the foundation curriculum] under Section
 28.002(a)(1)(A), including one credit in English I, one credit in
 English II, one credit in English III, and one credit in English IV
 or an advanced English course authorized under Subsection (b-2);
 (2)  three credits in mathematics under Section
 28.002(a)(1)(B), including one credit in Algebra I, one credit in
 geometry, and one credit in Algebra II or an advanced mathematics
 course authorized under Subsection (b-2);
 (3)  two credits in science under Section
 28.002(a)(1)(C), including one credit in biology and one credit in
 integrated physics and chemistry or an advanced science course
 authorized under Subsection (b-2);
 (4)  three credits in social studies under Section
 28.002(a)(1)(D) [28.002(a)(1)], including one credit in world
 history, world geography, or an advanced social studies course
 authorized under Subsection (b-2), one credit in United States
 history, and at least one-half credit in government and at least
 one-half credit in economics [to meet the social studies
 requirement];
 (5)  [(B)  for the recommended high school program,]
 two credits in the same language in a language other than English
 under Section 28.002(a)(2)(A) [and, for the advanced high school
 program, three credits in the same language in a language other than
 English under Section 28.002(a)(2)(A)]; [and]
 (6)  10 [(C)     for the recommended high school program,
 six] elective credits [and, for the advanced high school program,
 five elective credits];
 (7) [(2)     one or more credits offered in the required
 curriculum for the recommended and advanced high school programs
 include a research writing component; and
 [(3)     the curriculum requirements for the minimum,
 recommended, and advanced high school programs under Subsection (a)
 include a requirement that students successfully complete:
 [(A)]  one credit in fine arts under Section
 28.002(a)(2)(D); and
 (8) [(B)]  except as provided by Subsection (b-11), one
 credit in physical education under Section 28.002(a)(2)(C).
 (b-2)  In adopting rules under Subsection (b-1), the State
 Board of Education shall provide for [allow] a student to comply
 with the curriculum requirements for an advanced English course
 under Subsection (b-1)(1) taken after successful completion of
 English I, English II, and English III, for an advanced [a]
 mathematics course under Subsection (b-1)(2) [(b-1)(1)] taken
 after the successful completion of Algebra I and geometry, for an
 advanced [and either after the successful completion of or
 concurrently with Algebra II or a] science course under Subsection
 (b-1)(3) [(b-1)(1)] taken after the successful completion of
 biology, and for an advanced social studies course under Subsection
 (b-1)(4) [and chemistry and either after the successful completion
 of or concurrently with physics] by successfully completing a
 course in the appropriate content area that has been approved as an
 advanced course by board rule [career and technical course
 designated by the State Board of Education as containing
 substantively similar and rigorous academic content.     A student
 may use the option provided by this subsection for not more than two
 courses].
 (b-3)  In adopting rules for purposes of Subsection (b-2) [to
 provide students with the option described by Subsection
 (b-1)(1)(A)], the State Board of Education must approve a variety
 of advanced English, mathematics, [and] science, and social studies
 courses that may be taken [after the completion of Algebra II and
 physics] to comply with the foundation high school [recommended]
 program requirements.
 (b-4)  A school district may offer the curriculum described
 in Subsections (b-1)(1) through (4) [Subsection (b-1)(1)(A)] in an
 applied manner.  Courses delivered in an applied manner must cover
 the essential knowledge and skills[, and the student shall be
 administered the applicable end-of-course assessment instrument as
 provided by Sections 39.023(c) and 39.025].
 (b-5)  A school district may offer a mathematics or science
 course to be taken by a student after completion of Algebra II and
 integrated physics and chemistry or another advanced science course
 authorized under Subsection (b-2) [to comply with the recommended
 program requirements in Subsection (b-1)(1)(A)].  A course
 approved under this subsection must be endorsed by an institution
 of higher education as a course for which the institution would
 award course credit or as a prerequisite for a course for which the
 institution would award course credit.
 (b-7)  The State Board of Education, in coordination with the
 Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board, shall adopt rules to
 ensure that a student may comply with the curriculum requirements
 under the foundation [minimum, recommended, or advanced] high
 school program for each subject of the foundation curriculum under
 Section 28.002(a)(1) and for languages other than English under
 Section 28.002(a)(2)(A) by successfully completing appropriate
 courses in the core curriculum of an institution of higher
 education under Section 61.822.
 (b-9)  The agency shall establish a pilot program allowing a
 student [attending school in a county with a population of more than
 one million and in which more than 75 percent of the population
 resides in a single municipality] to satisfy the fine arts credit
 required under Subsection (b-1)(7) [(b-1)(3)(A)] by participating
 in a fine arts program not provided by the school district in which
 the student is enrolled.  The fine arts program may be provided on
 or off a school campus and outside the regular school day. [Not
 later than December 1, 2010, the agency shall provide to the
 legislature a report regarding the pilot program, including the
 feasibility of expanding the pilot program statewide.]
 (b-10)  A school district, with the approval of the
 commissioner, may allow a student to comply with the curriculum
 requirements for the physical education credit required under
 Subsection (b-1)(8) [(b-1)(3)(B)] by participating in a private or
 commercially sponsored physical activity program provided on or off
 a school campus and outside the regular school day.
 (b-11)  In adopting rules under Subsection (b-1), the State
 Board of Education shall allow a student who is unable to
 participate in physical activity due to disability or illness to
 substitute one credit in English language arts,
 mathematics,  science, or social studies or one academic elective
 credit for the physical education credit required under Subsection
 (b-1)(8) [(b-1)(3)(B)].  A credit allowed to be substituted under
 this subsection may not also be used by the student to satisfy a
 graduation requirement other than completion of the physical
 education credit.  The rules must provide that the determination
 regarding a student's ability to participate in physical activity
 will be made by:
 (1)  if the student receives special education services
 under Subchapter A, Chapter 29, the student's admission, review,
 and dismissal committee;
 (2)  if the student does not receive special education
 services under Subchapter A, Chapter 29, but is covered by Section
 504, Rehabilitation Act of 1973 (29 U.S.C. Section 794), the
 committee established for the student under that Act; or
 (3)  if each of the committees described by
 Subdivisions (1) and (2) is inapplicable, a committee established
 by the school district of persons with appropriate knowledge
 regarding the student.
 (b-13)  In addition to rules adopted by the State Board of
 Education under Subsection (b-2), the commissioner may adopt
 courses in English language arts, mathematics, science, and social
 studies as advanced courses that satisfy the requirements of the
 foundation high school program.
 (c-1)  A student may earn an endorsement on the student's
 diploma and transcript by successfully completing curriculum
 requirements for that endorsement adopted by the State Board of
 Education by rule. An endorsement under this subsection may be
 earned by successfully completing at least five credits in any of
 the following categories:
 (1)  science, technology, engineering, and
 mathematics, which includes courses directly related to
 technology, advanced mathematics and sciences, engineering, and
 environmental systems;
 (2)  business and industry, which includes courses
 directly related to database management, information technology,
 communications, accounting, finance, marketing, graphic design,
 architecture, construction, welding, logistics, automotive
 technology, and heating, ventilation, and air conditioning;
 (3)  human services, which includes courses directly
 related to health sciences and occupations, education, law,
 culinary arts, hospitality, and agricultural science;
 (4)  humanities, which includes courses directly
 related to political science, world languages, cultural studies,
 English literature, history, and fine arts; and
 (5)  general studies, which includes five credits to be
 taken from a combination of other endorsements, including at least
 one course from each category of endorsement listed under this
 subsection.
 (c-3)  The commissioner may adopt additional areas of study
 to be added to a category of endorsement under Subsection (c-1) and
 courses that may be taken to satisfy a category of endorsement.
 (e)  Each school district shall report the academic
 achievement record of students who have completed the foundation [a
 minimum, recommended, or advanced] high school program on
 transcript forms adopted by the State Board of Education. The
 transcript forms adopted by the board must be designed to clearly
 [differentiate between each of the high school programs and]
 identify whether a student received a diploma or a certificate of
 coursework completion.
 (e-1)  A school district shall clearly indicate an
 endorsement described by Subsection (c-1) on the diploma and
 transcript of a student who satisfies the applicable requirements.
 The State Board of Education shall adopt rules as necessary to
 administer this subsection.
 (h)  The commissioner by rule shall adopt a transition plan
 to implement and administer the amendments made by __.B. No. __,
 83rd Legislature, Regular Session, 2013, replacing the minimum,
 recommended, and advanced high school programs with the foundation
 high school program beginning with the 2014-2015 school year.
 Under the transition plan, a student who entered the ninth grade
 before the 2014-2015 school year must be permitted to complete the
 curriculum requirements required for high school graduation under:
 (1)  the foundation high school program, if the student
 chooses during the 2014-2015 school year to take courses under that
 program;
 (2)  the minimum high school program, as that program
 existed before the adoption of __.B. No. __, 83rd Legislature,
 Regular Session, 2013, if the student was participating in that
 program before the 2014-2015 school year;
 (3)  the recommended high school program, as that
 program existed before the adoption of __.B. No. __, 83rd
 Legislature, Regular Session, 2013, if the student was
 participating in that program before the 2014-2015 school year; or
 (4)  the advanced high school program, as that program
 existed before the adoption of __.B. No. __, 83rd Legislature,
 Regular Session, 2013, if the student was participating in that
 program before the 2014-2015 school year.
 (h-1)  This subsection and Subsection (h) expire September
 1, 2018.
 SECTION 5.  Section 28.0253(e), Education Code, is amended
 to read as follows:
 (e)  A student who receives a high school diploma through the
 pilot program is considered to have completed the foundation
 [recommended] high school program adopted under Section 28.025
 [28.025(a)].  The student is not guaranteed admission to any
 institution of higher education or to any academic program at an
 institution of higher education solely on the basis of having
 received the diploma through the program.
 SECTION 6.  Section 28.027(b), Education Code, is amended to
 read as follows:
 (b)  The State Board of Education shall establish a process
 under which an applied STEM course may be reviewed and approved for
 purposes of satisfying the mathematics and science curriculum
 requirements for the foundation [recommended] high school program
 [imposed] under Section 28.025 [28.025(b-1)(1)(A)] through
 substitution of the applied STEM course for a specific mathematics
 or science course otherwise authorized [required] under the
 foundation [recommended] high school program [and completed during
 the student's fourth year of mathematics or science course work].
 The State Board of Education may only approve a course to substitute
 for a mathematics course taken after successful completion of
 Algebra I and geometry and after successful completion of or
 concurrently with Algebra II.  The State Board of Education may only
 approve a course to substitute for a science course taken after
 successful completion of biology [and chemistry and after
 successful completion of or concurrently with physics].
 SECTION 7.  Section 29.096(e), Education Code, is amended to
 read as follows:
 (e)  The commissioner shall establish minimum standards for
 a local collaborative agreement, including a requirement that the
 agreement must be signed by an authorized school district or
 open-enrollment charter school officer and an authorized
 representative of each of the other participating entities that is
 a partner in the collaboration. The program must:
 (1)  limit participation in the program to students
 authorized to participate by a parent or other person standing in
 parental relationship;
 (2)  have as a primary goal graduation from high school
 [under at least the recommended high school program];
 (3)  provide for local businesses or other employers to
 offer paid employment or internship opportunities and advanced
 career and vocational training;
 (4)  include an outreach component and a lead
 educational staff member to identify and involve eligible students
 and public and private entities in participating in the program;
 (5)  serve a population of students of which at least 50
 percent are identified as students at risk of dropping out of
 school, as described by Section 29.081(d);
 (6)  allocate not more than 15 percent of grant funds
 and matching funds, as determined by the commissioner, to
 administrative expenses;
 (7)  include matching funds from any of the
 participating entities; and
 (8)  include any other requirements as determined by
 the council.
 SECTION 8.  Section 29.402(b), Education Code, is amended to
 read as follows:
 (b)  A person who is under 26 years of age is eligible to
 enroll in a dropout recovery program under this subchapter if the
 person:
 (1)  must complete not more than three course credits
 to complete the curriculum requirements [for the minimum,
 recommended, or advanced high school program, as appropriate,] for
 high school graduation; or
 (2)  has failed to perform satisfactorily on an
 [end-of-course] assessment instrument administered under Section
 39.023(c) or an assessment instrument administered under Section
 39.023(c) as that section existed before amendment by Chapter 1312
 (S.B. 1031), Acts of the 80th Legislature, Regular Session, 2007.
 SECTION 9.  Section 29.904(d), Education Code, is amended to
 read as follows:
 (d)  A plan developed under this section:
 (1)  must establish clear, achievable goals for
 increasing the percentage of the school district's graduating
 seniors, particularly the graduating seniors attending a high
 school described by Subsection (a), who enroll in an institution of
 higher education for the academic year following graduation;
 (2)  must establish an accurate method of measuring
 progress toward the goals established under Subdivision (1) that
 may include the percentage of district high school students and the
 percentage of students attending a district high school described
 by Subsection (a) who:
 (A)  are enrolled in a course for which a student
 may earn college credit, such as an advanced placement or
 international baccalaureate course or a course offered through
 concurrent enrollment in high school and at an institution of
 higher education;
 (B)  are enrolled in courses that meet the
 curriculum requirements for the foundation [recommended or
 advanced] high school program as determined under Section 28.025;
 (C)  have submitted a free application for federal
 student aid (FAFSA);
 (D)  are exempt under Section 51.3062(p) or (q)
 from administration of an assessment instrument under Section
 51.3062 or have performed successfully on an assessment instrument
 under Section 51.3062;
 (E)  graduate from high school;
 (F)  graduate from an institution of higher
 education; and
 (G)  have taken college entrance examinations and
 the average score of those students on the examinations;
 (3)  must cover a period of at least five years; and
 (4)  may be directed at district students at any level
 of primary or secondary education.
 SECTION 10.  Section 33.007(b), Education Code, is amended
 to read as follows:
 (b)  During the first school year a student is enrolled in a
 high school or at the high school level in an open-enrollment
 charter school, and again during a student's senior year, a
 counselor shall provide information about higher education to the
 student and the student's parent or guardian.  The information must
 include information regarding:
 (1)  the importance of higher education;
 (2)  [the advantages of completing the recommended or
 advanced high school program adopted under Section 28.025(a);
 [(3)]  the disadvantages of taking courses to prepare
 for a high school equivalency examination relative to the benefits
 of taking courses leading to a high school diploma;
 (3) [(4)]  financial aid eligibility;
 (4) [(5)]  instruction on how to apply for federal
 financial aid;
 (5) [(6)]  the center for financial aid information
 established under Section 61.0776;
 (6) [(7)]  the automatic admission of certain students
 to general academic teaching institutions as provided by Section
 51.803;
 (7) [(8)]  the eligibility and academic performance
 requirements for the TEXAS Grant as provided by Subchapter M,
 Chapter 56; and
 (8) [(9)]  the availability of programs in the district
 under which a student may earn college credit, including advanced
 placement programs, dual credit programs, joint high school and
 college credit programs, and international baccalaureate programs.
 SECTION 11.  (a) Sections 39.023(a), (b), (c), (c-3), and
 (n), Education Code, are amended to read as follows:
 (a)  The agency shall adopt the Iowa Test of Basic Skills
 (ITBS) [or develop appropriate criterion-referenced assessment
 instruments designed] to assess essential knowledge and skills in
 reading, writing, mathematics, social studies, and science. All
 [Except as provided by Subsection (a-2), all] students, other than
 students assessed under Subsection (b) or (l) or exempted under
 Section 39.027, shall be assessed annually in grades three through
 eight using that assessment instrument[:
 [(1)     mathematics, annually in grades three through
 seven without the aid of technology and in grade eight with the aid
 of technology on any assessment instrument that includes algebra;
 [(2)  reading, annually in grades three through eight;
 [(3)     writing, including spelling and grammar, in
 grades four and seven;
 [(4)  social studies, in grade eight;
 [(5)  science, in grades five and eight;] and in
 [(6)]  any other subject and grade as required by
 federal law.
 (b)  The agency shall develop or adopt appropriate
 [criterion-referenced]  alternative assessment instruments to be
 administered to each student in a special education program under
 Subchapter A, Chapter 29, for whom the [an] assessment instrument
 adopted under Subsection (a), even with allowable accommodations,
 would not provide an appropriate measure of student achievement, as
 determined by the student's admission, review, and dismissal
 committee.
 (c)  The agency shall administer to students in grade 11 the
 American College Test (ACT) or the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT)
 and the SAT Subject Test in Biology.  A student may select whether
 to be administered the American College Test (ACT) or the
 Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT) and the SAT Subject Test in
 Biology [also adopt end-of-course assessment instruments for
 secondary-level courses in Algebra I, Algebra II, geometry,
 biology, chemistry, physics, English I, English II, English III,
 world geography, world history, and United States history.     The
 Algebra I, Algebra II, and geometry end-of-course assessment
 instruments must be administered with the aid of technology].  A
 school district shall comply with State Board of Education rules
 regarding administration of the assessment instruments listed in
 this subsection [and shall adopt a policy that requires a student's
 performance on an end-of-course assessment instrument for a course
 listed in this subsection in which the student is enrolled to
 account for 15 percent of the student's final grade for the
 course.     If a student retakes an end-of-course assessment
 instrument for a course listed in this subsection, as provided by
 Section 39.025, a school district is not required to use the
 student's performance on the subsequent administration or
 administrations of the assessment instrument to determine the
 student's final grade for the course].  If a student is in a special
 education program under Subchapter A, Chapter 29, the student's
 admission, review, and dismissal committee shall determine whether
 any allowable modification is necessary in administering to the
 student an assessment instrument required under this subsection.
 [The State Board of Education shall administer the assessment
 instruments.     The State Board of Education shall adopt a schedule
 for the administration of end-of-course assessment instruments
 that complies with the requirements of Subsection (c-3).]
 (c-3)  In adopting a schedule for the administration of
 assessment instruments under this section, the State Board of
 Education shall require[:
 [(1)]  assessment instruments administered under
 Subsection (a) to be administered on a schedule so that the first
 assessment instrument is administered at least two weeks later than
 the date on which the first assessment instrument was administered
 under Subsection (a) during the 2006-2007 school year[; and
 [(2)     the spring administration of end-of-course
 assessment instruments under Subsection (c) to occur in each school
 district not earlier than the first full week in May, except that
 the spring administration of the end-of-course assessment
 instruments in English I, English II, and English III must be
 permitted to occur at an earlier date].
 (n)  This subsection applies only to a student who is
 determined to have dyslexia or a related disorder and who is an
 individual with a disability under 29 U.S.C. Section 705(20) and
 its subsequent amendments. The agency shall adopt or develop
 appropriate [criterion-referenced] assessment instruments
 designed to assess the ability of and to be administered to each
 student to whom this subsection applies for whom the assessment
 instruments adopted under Subsection (a), even with allowable
 modifications, would not provide an appropriate measure of student
 achievement, as determined by the committee established by the
 board of trustees of the district to determine the placement of
 students with dyslexia or related disorders. The committee shall
 determine whether any allowable modification is necessary in
 administering to a student an assessment instrument required under
 this subsection. The assessment instruments required under this
 subsection shall be administered on the same schedule as the
 assessment instruments administered under Subsection (a).
 (b)  This section applies beginning with the 2013-2014
 school year.
 SECTION 12.  (a)  Sections 39.025(a) and (b), Education
 Code, are amended to read as follows:
 (a)  [The commissioner shall adopt rules requiring a student
 participating in the recommended or advanced high school program to
 be administered each end-of-course assessment instrument listed in
 Section 39.023(c) and requiring a student participating in the
 minimum high school program to be administered an end-of-course
 assessment instrument listed in Section 39.023(c) only for a course
 in which the student is enrolled and for which an end-of-course
 assessment instrument is administered.]  A student is required to
 achieve on an assessment instrument administered under Section
 39.023(c) [, in each subject in the foundation curriculum under
 Section 28.002(a)(1), a cumulative score that is at least equal to
 the product of the number of end-of-course assessment instruments
 administered to the student in that subject and] a [scale] score
 that indicates satisfactory performance in mathematics and
 satisfactory performance in English language arts, as determined by
 the commissioner under Section 39.0241(a).  [A student must
 achieve a minimum score as determined by the commissioner to be
 within a reasonable range of the scale score under Section
 39.0241(a) on an end-of-course assessment instrument for the score
 to count towards the student's cumulative score.     For purposes of
 this subsection, a student's cumulative score is determined using
 the student's highest score on each end-of-course assessment
 instrument administered to the student.]  A student may not receive
 a high school diploma until the student has performed
 satisfactorily on the [end-of-course] assessment instruments in
 the manner provided under this subsection.  This subsection does
 not require a student to demonstrate readiness to enroll in an
 institution of higher education.
 (b)  Each time an [end-of-course] assessment instrument is
 administered, a student who failed to perform satisfactorily
 [achieve a minimum score] under Subsection (a) shall retake the
 assessment instrument. A [student who fails to perform
 satisfactorily on an Algebra II or English III end-of-course
 assessment instrument under the college readiness performance
 standard, as provided under Section 39.024(b), may retake the
 assessment instrument. Any other] student may retake an
 [end-of-course] assessment instrument for any reason.  [A student
 is not required to retake a course as a condition of retaking an
 end-of-course assessment instrument.]
 (b)  This section applies beginning with the 2013-2014
 school year.
 SECTION 13.  Section 39.0261(a), Education Code, is amended
 to read as follows:
 (a)  In addition to the assessment instruments otherwise
 authorized or required by this subchapter:
 (1)  each school year and at state cost, a school
 district shall administer to students in the spring of the eighth
 grade an established, valid, reliable, and nationally
 norm-referenced preliminary college preparation assessment
 instrument for the purpose of diagnosing the academic strengths and
 deficiencies of students before entrance into high school; and
 (2)  each school year and at state cost, a school
 district shall administer to students in the 10th grade an
 established, valid, reliable, and nationally norm-referenced
 preliminary college preparation assessment instrument for the
 purpose of measuring a student's progress toward readiness for
 college and the workplace[; and
 [(3)     high school students in the spring of the 11th
 grade or during the 12th grade may select and take once, at state
 cost, one of the valid, reliable, and nationally norm-referenced
 assessment instruments used by colleges and universities as part of
 their undergraduate admissions processes].
 SECTION 14.  Section 39.053(f), Education Code, is amended
 to read as follows:
 (f)  Annually, the commissioner shall define the state
 standard for the current school year for each student achievement
 indicator described by Subsection (c) and shall project the state
 standards for each indicator for the following two school years.
 The commissioner shall periodically raise the state standards for
 the student achievement indicator described by Subsection
 (c)(1)(B)(i) for accreditation as necessary to reach the goals of
 achieving, by not later than the 2019-2020 school year:
 (1)  student performance in this state, disaggregated
 by race, ethnicity, and socioeconomic status, that ranks nationally
 in the top 10 states in terms of college readiness; and
 (2)  student performance, [including the percentage of
 students graduating under the recommended or advanced high school
 program,] with no significant achievement gaps by race, ethnicity,
 and socioeconomic status.
 SECTION 15.  Section 39.057(a), Education Code, is amended
 to read as follows:
 (a)  The commissioner shall authorize special accreditation
 investigations to be conducted:
 (1)  when excessive numbers of absences of students
 eligible to be tested on state assessment instruments are
 determined;
 (2)  when excessive numbers of allowable exemptions
 from the required state assessment instruments are determined;
 (3)  in response to complaints submitted to the agency
 with respect to alleged violations of civil rights or other
 requirements imposed on the state by federal law or court order;
 (4)  in response to established compliance reviews of
 the district's financial accounting practices and state and federal
 program requirements;
 (5)  when extraordinary numbers of student placements
 in disciplinary alternative education programs, other than
 placements under Sections 37.006 and 37.007, are determined;
 (6)  in response to an allegation involving a conflict
 between members of the board of trustees or between the board and
 the district administration if it appears that the conflict
 involves a violation of a role or duty of the board members or the
 administration clearly defined by this code;
 (7)  when excessive numbers of students in special
 education programs under Subchapter A, Chapter 29, are assessed
 through assessment instruments developed or adopted under Section
 39.023(b);
 (8)  in response to an allegation regarding or an
 analysis using a statistical method result indicating a possible
 violation of an assessment instrument security procedure
 established under Section 39.0301, including for the purpose of
 investigating or auditing a school district under that section;
 (9)  when a significant pattern of decreased academic
 performance has developed as a result of the promotion in the
 preceding two school years of students who did not perform
 satisfactorily as determined by the commissioner under Section
 39.0241(a) on assessment instruments administered under Section
 39.023(a), (c), or (l);
 (10)  [when excessive numbers of students graduate
 under the minimum high school program;
 [(11)]  when excessive numbers of students eligible to
 enroll fail to complete an advanced mathematics [Algebra II] course
 or any other advanced course determined by the commissioner [as
 distinguishing between students participating in the recommended
 high school program from students participating in the minimum high
 school program];
 (11) [(12)]  when resource allocation practices as
 evaluated under Section 39.0821 indicate a potential for
 significant improvement in resource allocation; or
 (12) [(13)]  as the commissioner otherwise determines
 necessary.
 SECTION 16.  Section 39.301(c), Education Code, is amended
 to read as follows:
 (c)  Indicators for reporting purposes must include:
 (1)  [the percentage of graduating students who meet
 the course requirements established by State Board of Education
 rule for the minimum high school program, the recommended high
 school program, and the advanced high school program;
 [(2)]  the results of the SAT, ACT, articulated
 postsecondary degree programs described by Section 61.852, and
 certified workforce training programs described by Chapter 311,
 Labor Code;
 (2)  [(3)] for students who have failed to perform
 satisfactorily, under each performance standard under Section
 39.0241, on an assessment instrument required under Section
 39.023(a) or (c), the performance of those students on subsequent
 assessment instruments required under those sections, aggregated
 by grade level and subject area;
 (3)  [(4)     for each campus, the number of students,
 disaggregated by major student subpopulations, that agree under
 Section 28.025(b) to take courses under the minimum high school
 program;
 [(5)]  the percentage of students, aggregated by grade
 level, provided accelerated instruction under Section 28.0211(c),
 the results of assessment instruments administered under that
 section, the percentage of students promoted through the grade
 placement committee process under Section 28.0211, the subject of
 the assessment instrument on which each student failed to perform
 satisfactorily under each performance standard under Section
 39.0241, and the performance of those students in the school year
 following that promotion on the assessment instruments required
 under Section 39.023;
 (4) [(6)]  the percentage of students of limited
 English proficiency exempted from the administration of an
 assessment instrument under Sections 39.027(a)(1) and (2);
 (5) [(7)]  the percentage of students in a special
 education program under Subchapter A, Chapter 29, assessed through
 assessment instruments developed or adopted under Section
 39.023(b);
 (6) [(8)]  the percentage of students who satisfy the
 college readiness measure;
 (7) [(9)]  the measure of progress toward dual language
 proficiency under Section 39.034(b), for students of limited
 English proficiency, as defined by Section 29.052;
 (8) [(10)]  the percentage of students who are not
 educationally disadvantaged;
 (9) [(11)]  the percentage of students who enroll and
 begin instruction at an institution of higher education in the
 school year following high school graduation; and
 (10) [(12)]  the percentage of students who
 successfully complete the first year of instruction at an
 institution of higher education without needing a developmental
 education course.
 SECTION 17.  Section 39.305(b), Education Code, is amended
 to read as follows:
 (b)  The report card shall include the following
 information:
 (1)  where applicable, the student achievement
 indicators described by Section 39.053(c) and the reporting
 indicators described by Sections 39.301(c)(1) through (3) [(5)];
 (2)  average class size by grade level and subject;
 (3)  the administrative and instructional costs per
 student, computed in a manner consistent with Section 44.0071; and
 (4)  the district's instructional expenditures ratio
 and instructional employees ratio computed under Section 44.0071,
 and the statewide average of those ratios, as determined by the
 commissioner.
 SECTION 18.  Section 51.3062(q-1), Education Code, is
 amended to read as follows:
 (q-1)  A student who has completed the foundation [a
 recommended or advanced] high school program as determined under
 Section 28.025 and demonstrated the performance standard for
 college readiness as provided by Section 39.024 on the Algebra II
 and English III end-of-course assessment instruments is exempt from
 the requirements of this section with respect to those content
 areas.  The commissioner of higher education by rule shall
 establish the period for which an exemption under this subsection
 is valid.
 SECTION 19.  Sections 51.803(a) and (d), Education Code, are
 amended to read as follows:
 (a)  Subject to Subsection (a-1), each general academic
 teaching institution shall admit an applicant for admission to the
 institution as an undergraduate student if the applicant graduated
 with a grade point average in the top 10 percent of the student's
 high school graduating class in one of the two school years
 preceding the academic year for which the applicant is applying for
 admission and:
 (1)  the applicant graduated from a public or private
 high school in this state accredited by a generally recognized
 accrediting organization or from a high school operated by the
 United States Department of Defense;
 (2)  the applicant:
 (A)  successfully completed:
 (i)  at a public high school, the curriculum
 requirements established under Section 28.025 for the foundation
 [recommended or advanced] high school program; or
 (ii)  at a high school to which Section
 28.025 does not apply, a curriculum that is equivalent in content
 and rigor to the foundation [recommended or advanced] high school
 program; or
 (B)  satisfied ACT's College Readiness Benchmarks
 on the ACT assessment applicable to the applicant or earned on the
 SAT assessment a score of at least 1,500 out of 2,400 or the
 equivalent; and
 (3)  if the applicant graduated from a high school
 operated by the United States Department of Defense, the applicant
 is a Texas resident under Section 54.052 or is entitled to pay
 tuition fees at the rate provided for Texas residents under Section
 54.241(d) [54.058(d)] for the term or semester to which admitted.
 (d)  For purposes of Subsection (c)(2), a student's official
 transcript or diploma must, not later than the end of the student's
 junior year, indicate[:
 [(1)]  whether the student has satisfied or is on
 schedule to satisfy the requirements of Subsection (a)(2)(A)(i) or
 (ii), as applicable[; or
 [(2)     if Subsection (b) applies to the student, whether
 the student has completed the portion of the recommended or
 advanced curriculum or of the curriculum equivalent in content and
 rigor, as applicable, that was available to the student].
 SECTION 20.  Section 51.804, Education Code, is amended to
 read as follows:
 Sec. 51.804.  ADDITIONAL AUTOMATIC ADMISSIONS:  SELECTED
 INSTITUTIONS. For each academic year, the governing board of each
 general academic teaching institution shall determine whether to
 adopt an admissions policy under which an applicant to the
 institution as a first-time freshman student, other than an
 applicant eligible for admission under Section 51.803, shall be
 admitted to the institution if the applicant:
 (1)  graduated from a public or private high school in
 this state accredited by a generally recognized accrediting
 organization with a grade point average in the top 25 percent of the
 applicant's high school graduating class; and
 (2)  satisfies the requirements of:
 (A)  Section 51.803(a)(2)(A) or (B) [51.803(b),
 as applicable to the student, or Section 51.803 (a)(2)(B)]; and
 (B)  Sections 51.803(c)(2) and 51.803(d).
 SECTION 21.  Section 51.805(a), Education Code, is amended
 to read as follows:
 (a)  A graduating student who does not qualify for admission
 under Section 51.803 or 51.804 may apply to any general academic
 teaching institution if the student satisfies the requirements of:
 (1)  Section 51.803(a)(2)(A) or (B) [51.803(b), as
 applicable to the student, or Section 51.803(a)(2)(B)]; and
 (2)  Sections 51.803(c)(2) and 51.803(d).
 SECTION 22.  Section 51.807(b), Education Code, is amended
 to read as follows:
 (b)  The Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board, after
 consulting with the Texas Education Agency, by rule shall establish
 standards for determining for purposes of this subchapter:
 (1)  whether a private high school is accredited by a
 generally recognized accrediting organization; and
 (2)  whether a person completed a high school
 curriculum that is equivalent in content and rigor to the
 curriculum requirements established under Section 28.025 for the
 foundation [recommended or advanced] high school program.
 SECTION 23.  Subchapter A, Chapter 56, Education Code, is
 amended by adding Section 56.009 to read as follows:
 Sec. 56.009.  ELIGIBILITY BASED ON GRADUATION UNDER CERTAIN
 HIGH SCHOOL PROGRAMS. To the extent that a person's eligibility to
 participate in any program under this chapter, including
 Subchapters K, M, Q, and R, is contingent on the person graduating
 under the recommended or advanced high school program, as those
 programs existed before the adoption of __.B. No. _____, 83rd
 Legislature, Regular Session, 2013, the Texas Higher Education
 Coordinating Board and the commissioner of education shall jointly
 adopt rules to modify, clarify, or otherwise establish for affected
 programs appropriate eligibility requirements regarding high
 school curriculum completion.
 SECTION 24.  Section 61.0517(a), Education Code, is amended
 to read as follows:
 (a)  In this section, "applied STEM course" means an applied
 science, technology, engineering, or mathematics course offered as
 part of a school district's career and technology education
 curriculum and approved, as provided by Section 28.027, by the
 State Board of Education for purposes of satisfying the mathematics
 and science curriculum requirements for the foundation
 [recommended] high school program [imposed] under Section 28.025
 [28.025(b-1)(1)(A)].
 SECTION 25.  Section 61.792(b), Education Code, is amended
 to read as follows:
 (b)  To qualify for a scholarship under this section, a
 student must:
 (1)  have graduated with a grade point average in the
 top 20 percent of the student's high school graduating class;
 (2)  have graduated from high school with a grade point
 average of at least 3.5 on a four-point scale or the equivalent in
 mathematics and science courses offered under the foundation
 [recommended or advanced] high school program under Section 28.025
 [28.025(a)]; and
 (3)  maintain an overall grade point average of at
 least 3.0 on a four-point scale at the general academic teaching
 institution or the private or independent institution of higher
 education in which the student is enrolled.
 SECTION 26.  Section 61.852(a), Education Code, is amended
 to read as follows:
 (a)  A tech-prep program is a program of study that:
 (1)  combines at least two years of secondary education
 with at least two years of postsecondary education in a
 nonduplicative, sequential course of study based on the foundation
 [recommended] high school program adopted by the State Board of
 Education under Section 28.025 [28.025(a)];
 (2)  integrates academic instruction and vocational
 and technical instruction;
 (3)  uses work-based and worksite learning where
 available and appropriate;
 (4)  provides technical preparation in a career field
 such as engineering technology, applied science, a mechanical,
 industrial, or practical art or trade, agriculture, health
 occupations, business, or applied economics;
 (5)  builds student competence in mathematics,
 science, reading, writing, communications, economics, and
 workplace skills through applied, contextual academics and
 integrated instruction in a coherent sequence of courses;
 (6)  leads to an associate degree, two-year
 postsecondary certificate, or postsecondary two-year
 apprenticeship with provisions, to the extent applicable, for
 students to continue toward completion of a baccalaureate degree;
 and
 (7)  leads to placement in appropriate employment or to
 further education.
 SECTION 27.  Section 61.855(d), Education Code, is amended
 to read as follows:
 (d)  A tech-prep program must:
 (1)  be implemented under an articulation agreement
 between the participants in the consortium;
 (2)  consist of two to four years of secondary school
 preceding graduation and:
 (A)  two or more years of higher education; or
 (B)  two or more years of apprenticeship following
 secondary instruction;
 (3)  have a common core of required proficiency based
 on the foundation [recommended] high school program adopted by the
 State Board of Education under Section 28.025 [28.025(a)], with
 proficiencies in mathematics, science, reading, writing,
 communications, and technologies designed to lead to an associate's
 degree or postsecondary certificate in a specific career field;
 (4)  include the development of tech-prep program
 curricula for both secondary and postsecondary participants in the
 consortium that:
 (A)  meets academic standards developed by the
 state;
 (B)  links secondary schools and two-year
 postsecondary institutions, and, if practicable, four-year
 institutions of higher education through nonduplicative sequences
 of courses in career fields, including the investigation of
 opportunities for tech-prep students to enroll concurrently in
 secondary and postsecondary course work;
 (C)  uses, if appropriate and available,
 work-based or worksite learning in conjunction with business and
 all aspects of an industry; and
 (D)  uses educational technology and distance
 learning, as appropriate, to involve each consortium participant
 more fully in the development and operation of programs;
 (5)  include in-service training for teachers that:
 (A)  is designed to train vocational and technical
 teachers to effectively implement tech-prep programs;
 (B)  provides for joint training for teachers in
 the tech-prep consortium;
 (C)  is designed to ensure that teachers and
 administrators stay current with the needs, expectations, and
 methods of business and of all aspects of an industry;
 (D)  focuses on training postsecondary education
 faculty in the use of contextual and applied curricula and
 instruction; and
 (E)  provides training in the use and application
 of technology;
 (6)  include training programs for counselors designed
 to enable counselors to more effectively:
 (A)  provide information to students regarding
 tech-prep programs;
 (B)  support student progress in completing
 tech-prep programs;
 (C)  provide information on related employment
 opportunities;
 (D)  ensure that tech-prep students are placed in
 appropriate employment; and
 (E)  stay current with the needs, expectations,
 and methods of business and of all aspects of an industry;
 (7)  provide equal access to the full range of
 tech-prep programs for individuals who are members of special
 populations, including by the development of tech-prep program
 services appropriate to the needs of special populations; and
 (8)  provide for preparatory services that assist
 participants in tech-prep programs.
 SECTION 28.  Section 61.861(c), Education Code, is amended
 to read as follows:
 (c)  A course developed for purposes of this section must:
 (1)  provide content that enables a student to develop
 the relevant and critical skills needed to be prepared for
 employment or additional training in a high-demand occupation;
 (2)  incorporate college and career readiness skills as
 part of the curriculum;
 (3)  be offered for dual credit; and
 (4)  satisfy a mathematics or science requirement under
 the foundation [recommended or advanced] high school program as
 determined under Section 28.025.
 SECTION 29.  Section 61.864, Education Code, is amended to
 read as follows:
 Sec. 61.864.  REVIEW OF COURSES. Courses for which a grant
 is awarded under this subchapter shall be reviewed by the
 commissioner of higher education and the commissioner of education,
 in consultation with the comptroller and the Texas Workforce
 Commission, once every four years to determine whether the course:
 (1)  is being used by public educational institutions
 in this state;
 (2)  prepares high school students with the skills
 necessary for employment in the high-demand occupation and further
 postsecondary study; and
 (3)  satisfies a mathematics or science requirement for
 the foundation [recommended or advanced] high school program as
 determined under Section 28.025.
 SECTION 30.  Section 78.10(b), Education Code, is amended to
 read as follows:
 (b)  The Texas Academy of Mathematics and Science is a
 division of The University of Texas at Brownsville and is under the
 management and control of the board.  The academy serves the
 following purposes:
 (1)  to provide academically gifted and highly
 motivated junior and senior high school students with a challenging
 university-level curriculum that:
 (A)  allows students to complete high school
 graduation requirements[, including requirements adopted] under
 Section 28.025 for the foundation [advanced] high school program,
 while attending for academic credit a public institution of higher
 education;
 (B)  fosters students' knowledge of real-world
 mathematics and science issues and applications and teaches
 students to apply critical thinking and problem-solving skills to
 those issues and problems;
 (C)  includes the study of English, foreign
 languages, social studies, mathematics, science, and technology;
 and
 (D)  offers students learning opportunities
 related to mathematics and science through in-depth research and
 field-based studies;
 (2)  to provide students with an awareness of
 mathematics and science careers and professional development
 opportunities through seminars, workshops, collaboration with
 postsecondary and university students including opportunities for
 summer studies, internships in foreign countries, and similar
 methods; and
 (3)  to provide students with social development
 activities that enrich the academic curriculum and student life,
 including, as determined appropriate by the academy, University
 Interscholastic League activities and other extracurricular
 activities.
 SECTION 31.  Section 87.505(b), Education Code, is amended
 to read as follows:
 (b)  The Texas Academy of International Studies is a division
 of Texas A&M International University and is under the management
 and control of the board. The academy serves the following
 purposes:
 (1)  to provide academically gifted and highly
 motivated junior and senior high school students with a challenging
 university-level curriculum that:
 (A)  allows students to complete high school
 graduation requirements[, including requirements adopted] under
 Section 28.025 for the foundation [advanced] high school program,
 while attending for academic credit a public institution of higher
 education;
 (B)  fosters students' knowledge of real-world
 international issues and problems and teaches students to apply
 critical thinking and problem-solving skills to those issues and
 problems;
 (C)  includes the study of English, foreign
 languages, social studies, anthropology, and sociology;
 (D)  is presented through an interdisciplinary
 approach that introduces and develops issues, especially issues
 related to international concerns, throughout the curriculum; and
 (E)  offers students learning opportunities
 related to international issues through in-depth research and
 field-based studies;
 (2)  to provide students with an awareness of
 international career and professional development opportunities
 through seminars, workshops, collaboration with postsecondary
 students from other countries, summer academic international
 studies internships in foreign countries, and similar methods; and
 (3)  to provide students with social development
 activities that enrich the academic curriculum and student life,
 including, as determined appropriate by the academy, University
 Interscholastic League activities and other extracurricular
 activities generally offered by public high schools.
 SECTION 32.  The following provisions of the Education Code
 are repealed:
 (1)  Section 28.002(q);
 (2)  Section 28.014(c);
 (3)  Sections 28.025(b-6), (b-8), and (g);
 (4)  Section 39.022;
 (5)  Sections 39.023(a-1), (a-2), (c-1), (c-2), (c-4),
 (c-5), (c-6), (e), (f), (g), (i), and (o);
 (6)  Sections 39.025(a-1), (a-2), (a-3), (b-1), (b-2),
 (e-1), (f), and (g);
 (7)  Section 39.0261(f); and
 (8)  Section 51.803(b).
 SECTION 33.  Section 39.025, Education Code, as amended by
 Section 12 of this Act, as related to reducing testing requirements
 applies only to students who have entered or will enter the ninth
 grade during the 2011-2012 school year or a later school year.
 SECTION 34.  Except as otherwise provided by this Act, this
 Act applies beginning with the 2014-2015 school year.
 SECTION 35.  Except as otherwise provided by this Act:
 (1)  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; and
 (2)  if this Act does not receive the vote necessary for
 immediate effect, this Act takes effect September 1, 2013.