Texas 2023 - 88th Regular

Texas House Bill HB2661 Latest Draft

Bill / Introduced Version Filed 02/22/2023

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                            88R6139 JES-D
 By: Rosenthal H.B. No. 2661


 A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 AN ACT
 relating to eliminating the requirement to use public school
 assessment instruments as indicators of achievement under the
 public school accountability system.
 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
 SECTION 1.  Section 28.0258(j), Education Code, is amended
 to read as follows:
 (j)  Notwithstanding any action taken by an individual
 graduation committee under this section, a school district shall
 administer an end-of-course assessment instrument to any student
 who fails to perform satisfactorily on an end-of-course assessment
 instrument as provided by Section 39.025(b).  [For purposes of
 Section 39.053(c)(1), an assessment instrument administered as
 provided by this subsection is considered an assessment instrument
 required for graduation retaken by a student.]
 SECTION 2.  Section 29.062(a), Education Code, is amended to
 read as follows:
 (a)  The legislature recognizes that compliance with this
 subchapter is an imperative public necessity.  Therefore, in
 accordance with the policy of the state, the agency shall evaluate
 the effectiveness of programs under this subchapter based on the
 achievement indicators adopted under Section 39.053(c)[, including
 the results of assessment instruments].  The agency may combine
 evaluations under this section with federal accountability
 measures concerning emergent bilingual students.
 SECTION 3.  Section 29.190(a), Education Code, is amended to
 read as follows:
 (a)  A student is entitled to a subsidy under this section
 if:
 (1)  the student:
 (A)  successfully completes the career and
 technology program of a school district in which the student
 receives training and instruction for employment; or
 (B)  is enrolled in a special education program
 under Subchapter A; and
 (2)  the student passes a certification examination to
 qualify for a license or certificate that is an industry
 certification for purposes of Section 39.053(c)(1)(C)
 [39.053(c)(1)(B)(v)], administered while the student is enrolled
 in a school district.
 SECTION 4.  Section 39.033(b), Education Code, is amended to
 read as follows:
 (b)  An agreement under this section must require the private
 school to:
 (1)  as determined appropriate by the commissioner,
 provide to the commissioner the information described by Section
 [Sections 39.053(c) and] 39.301(c); and
 (2)  maintain confidentiality in compliance with
 Section 39.030.
 SECTION 5.  Sections 39.053(c), (g), (g-1), (g-2), (g-3),
 and (g-4), Education Code, are amended to read as follows:
 (c)  School districts and campuses must be evaluated based on
 three domains of indicators of achievement adopted under this
 section that include:
 (1)  in the student achievement domain, indicators of
 student achievement that must include [:
 [(A)  for evaluating the performance of districts
 and campuses generally:
 [(i)  an indicator that accounts for the
 results of assessment instruments required under Sections
 39.023(a), (c), and (l), as applicable for the district and campus,
 including the results of assessment instruments required for
 graduation retaken by a student, aggregated across grade levels by
 subject area, including:
 [(a)  for the performance standard
 determined by the commissioner under Section 39.0241(a), the
 percentage of students who performed satisfactorily on the
 assessment instruments, aggregated across grade levels by subject
 area; and
 [(b)  for the college readiness
 performance standard as determined under Section 39.0241, the
 percentage of students who performed satisfactorily on the
 assessment instruments, aggregated across grade levels by subject
 area; and
 [(ii)  an indicator that accounts for the
 results of assessment instruments required under Section
 39.023(b), as applicable for the district and campus, including the
 percentage of students who performed satisfactorily on the
 assessment instruments, as determined by the performance standard
 adopted by the agency, aggregated across grade levels by subject
 area; and
 [(B)  for] evaluating the performance of high
 school campuses and districts that include high school campuses,
 indicators that account for:
 (A)  [(i)  students who satisfy the Texas Success
 Initiative (TSI) college readiness benchmarks prescribed by the
 Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board under Section 51.334 on
 an assessment instrument in reading or mathematics designated by
 the coordinating board under that section;
 [(ii)  students who satisfy relevant
 performance standards on advanced placement tests or similar
 assessments;]
 [(iii)]  students who earn dual course
 credits in the dual credit courses;
 (B) [(iv)]  students who enlist in the armed
 forces of the United States or the Texas National Guard;
 (C) [(v)]  students who earn industry
 certifications;
 (D) [(vi)]  students admitted into postsecondary
 industry certification programs that require as a prerequisite for
 entrance successful performance at the secondary level;
 (E) [(vii)]  students whose successful completion
 of a course or courses under Section 28.014 indicates the student's
 preparation to enroll and succeed, without remediation, in an
 entry-level general education course for a baccalaureate degree or
 associate degree;
 (F) [(viii)]  students who successfully met
 standards on a composite of indicators that through research
 indicates the student's preparation to enroll and succeed, without
 remediation, in an entry-level general education course for a
 baccalaureate degree or associate degree;
 (G) [(ix)]  high school graduation rates,
 computed in accordance with standards and definitions adopted in
 compliance with the Every Student Succeeds Act (20 U.S.C. Section
 6301 et seq.) subject to the exclusions provided by Subsections
 (g), (g-1), (g-2), (g-3), and (g-4);
 (H) [(x)]  students who successfully completed an
 OnRamps dual enrollment course;
 (I) [(xi)]  students who successfully completed a
 practicum or internship approved by the State Board of Education;
 (J) [(xii)]  students who are awarded an
 associate degree; and
 (K) [(xiii)]  students who successfully completed
 a program of study in career and technical education;
 (2)  in the school progress domain, indicators for
 effectiveness in promoting student learning, which must include[:
 [(A)  for assessment instruments, including
 assessment instruments under Subdivisions (1)(A)(i) and (ii), the
 percentage of students who met the standard for improvement, as
 determined by the commissioner; and
 [(B)  for] evaluating relative performance, by
 comparing the performance of districts and campuses [compared] to
 similar districts or campuses; and
 (3)  in the closing the gaps domain, the use of
 disaggregated data to demonstrate the differentials among students
 from different racial and ethnic groups, socioeconomic
 backgrounds, and other factors, including:
 (A)  students formerly receiving special
 education services;
 (B)  students continuously enrolled; and
 (C)  students who are mobile.
 (g)  In computing dropout and completion rates such as high
 school graduation rates under Subsection (c)(1)(G)
 [(c)(1)(B)(ix)], the commissioner may not consider as a dropout a
 student whose failure to attend school results from:
 (1)  the student's expulsion under Section 37.007; and
 (2)  as applicable:
 (A)  adjudication as having engaged in delinquent
 conduct or conduct indicating a need for supervision, as defined by
 Section 51.03, Family Code; or
 (B)  conviction of and sentencing for an offense
 under the Penal Code.
 (g-1)  In computing dropout and completion rates such as high
 school graduation rates under Subsection (c)(1)(G)
 [(c)(1)(B)(ix)], the commissioner shall exclude:
 (1)  students who are ordered by a court to attend a
 high school equivalency certificate program but who have not yet
 earned a high school equivalency certificate;
 (2)  students who were previously reported to the state
 as dropouts, including a student who is reported as a dropout,
 reenrolls, and drops out again, regardless of the number of times of
 reenrollment and dropping out;
 (3)  students in attendance who are not in membership
 for purposes of average daily attendance;
 (4)  students whose initial enrollment in a school in
 the United States in grades 7 through 12 was as an unschooled asylee
 or refugee as defined by Section 39.027(a-1);
 (5)  students who are detained at a county
 pre-adjudication or post-adjudication juvenile detention facility
 and:
 (A)  in the district exclusively as a function of
 having been detained at the facility but are otherwise not students
 of the district in which the facility is located; or
 (B)  provided services by an open-enrollment
 charter school exclusively as the result of having been detained at
 the facility;
 (6)  students who are incarcerated in state jails and
 federal penitentiaries as adults and as persons certified to stand
 trial as adults; and
 (7)  students who have suffered a condition, injury, or
 illness that requires substantial medical care and leaves the
 student:
 (A)  unable to attend school; and
 (B)  assigned to a medical or residential
 treatment facility.
 (g-2)  In computing completion rates such as high school
 graduation rates under Subsection (c)(1)(G) [(c)(1)(B)(ix)], the
 commissioner shall exclude students who:
 (1)  are at least 18 years of age as of September 1 of
 the school year as reported for the fall semester Public Education
 Information Management System (PEIMS) submission and have
 satisfied the credit requirements for high school graduation;
 (2)  have not completed their individualized education
 program under 19 T.A.C. Section 89.1070(b)(2) and the Individuals
 with Disabilities Education Act (20 U.S.C. Section 1400 et seq.);
 and
 (3)  are enrolled and receiving individualized
 education program services.
 (g-3)  In the computation of dropout and completion rates
 such as high school graduation rates under Subsection (c)(1)(G)
 [(c)(1)(B)(ix)], a student who is released from a juvenile
 pre-adjudication secure detention facility or juvenile
 post-adjudication secure correctional facility and fails to enroll
 in school or a student who leaves a residential treatment center
 after receiving treatment for fewer than 85 days and fails to enroll
 in school may not be considered to have dropped out from the school
 district or campus serving the facility or center unless that
 district or campus is the one to which the student is regularly
 assigned.  The agency may not limit an appeal relating to dropout
 computations under this subsection.
 (g-4)  For purposes of the computation of dropout and
 completion rates such as high school graduation rates under
 Subsection (c)(1)(G) [(c)(1)(B)(ix)], the commissioner shall
 exclude a student who was reported as having dropped out of school
 under Section 48.009(b-4), and the student may not be considered to
 have dropped out from the school district or campus in which the
 student was last enrolled.
 SECTION 6.  Sections 39.0548(b) and (c), Education Code, are
 amended to read as follows:
 (b)  Notwithstanding Section 39.053(c)(1)(G)
 [39.053(c)(1)(B)(ix)], the commissioner shall use the alternative
 completion rate under this subsection to determine the graduation
 rate indicator under Section 39.053(c)(1)(G) [39.053(c)(1)(B)(ix)]
 for a dropout recovery school.  The alternative completion rate
 shall be the ratio of the total number of students who graduate,
 continue attending school into the next academic year, or receive a
 high school equivalency certificate to the total number of students
 in the longitudinal cohort of students.
 (c)  Notwithstanding Section 39.053(c)(1)(G)
 [39.053(c)(1)(B)(ix)], in determining the performance rating under
 Section 39.054 of a dropout recovery school, the commissioner shall
 include any student described by Section 39.053(g-1) who graduates
 or receives a high school equivalency certificate.
 SECTION 7.  Section 39.055, Education Code, is amended to
 read as follows:
 Sec. 39.055.  STUDENT ORDERED BY A JUVENILE COURT OR STUDENT
 IN RESIDENTIAL FACILITY NOT CONSIDERED FOR ACCOUNTABILITY
 PURPOSES.  Notwithstanding any other provision of this code except
 to the extent otherwise provided under Section 39.053(g-3), for
 purposes of determining the performance of a school district,
 campus, or open-enrollment charter school under this chapter, a
 student ordered by a juvenile court into a residential program or
 facility operated by or under contract with the Texas Juvenile
 Justice Department, a juvenile board, or any other governmental
 entity or any student who is receiving treatment in a residential
 facility is not considered to be a student of the school district in
 which the program or facility is physically located or of an
 open-enrollment charter school, as applicable.  The performance of
 such a student on an [assessment instrument or other] achievement
 indicator adopted under Section 39.053 or reporting indicator
 adopted under Section 39.301 shall be determined, reported, and
 considered separately from the performance of students attending a
 school of the district in which the program or facility is
 physically located or an open-enrollment charter school, as
 applicable.
 SECTION 8.  Section 39.0552, Education Code, is amended to
 read as follows:
 Sec. 39.0552.  MEMORANDUM OF UNDERSTANDING BETWEEN SCHOOL
 DISTRICT AND STATE HOSPITAL FOR ACCOUNTABILITY PURPOSES.  A
 memorandum of understanding between a school district and a state
 hospital under which the district provides educational services to
 a student who resides in the state hospital must provide that the
 school district include the performance of the student on an
 [assessment instrument or other] achievement indicator adopted
 under Section 39.053 or a reporting indicator adopted under Section
 39.301 in determining the performance of that school district.
 SECTION 9.  The following provisions of the Education Code
 are repealed:
 (1)  Sections 39.053(c-2), (c-3), (d), and (d-1); and
 (2)  Section 39.0548(d).
 SECTION 10.  This Act applies beginning with the 2024-2025
 school year.
 SECTION 11.  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, 2023.