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H. B. No. 397 As IntroducedAs Introduced
129th General Assembly | Regular Session | 2011-2012 |
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Cosponsors:
Representatives Brenner, Foley, Driehaus, Ruhl, Henne, Yuko, Murray, Stebelton, Buchy, Stinziano, Ramos, O'Brien, Hagan, R., Garland, Letson, Clyde
A BILL
To amend section 3313.603 of the Revised Code to
specify that school districts and chartered
nonpublic schools may excuse from high school
physical education students who play rugby in a
school club.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF OHIO:
Section 1. That section 3313.603 of the Revised Code be
enacted to read as follows:
Sec. 3313.603. (A) As used in this section:
(1) "One unit" means a minimum of one hundred twenty hours of
course instruction, except that for a laboratory course, "one
unit" means a minimum of one hundred fifty hours of course
instruction.
(2) "One-half unit" means a minimum of sixty hours of course
instruction, except that for physical education courses, "one-half
unit" means a minimum of one hundred twenty hours of course
instruction.
(B) Beginning September 15, 2001, except as required in
division (C) of this section and division (C) of section 3313.614
of the Revised Code, the requirements for graduation from every
high school shall include twenty units earned in grades nine
through twelve and shall be distributed as follows:
(1) English language arts, four units;
(2) Health, one-half unit;
(3) Mathematics, three units;
(4) Physical education, one-half unit;
(5) Science, two units until September 15, 2003, and three
units thereafter, which at all times shall include both of the
following:
(a) Biological sciences, one unit;
(b) Physical sciences, one unit.
(6) Social studies, three units, which shall include both of
the following:
(a) American history, one-half unit;
(b) American government, one-half unit.
(7) Elective units, seven units until September 15, 2003, and
six units thereafter.
Each student's electives shall include at least one unit, or
two half units, chosen from among the areas of
business/technology, fine arts, and/or foreign language.
(C) Beginning with students who enter ninth grade for the
first time on or after July 1, 2010, except as provided in
divisions (D) to (F) of this section, the requirements for
graduation from every public and chartered nonpublic high school
shall include twenty units that are designed to prepare students
for the workforce and college. The units shall be distributed as
follows:
(1) English language arts, four units;
(2) Health, one-half unit, which shall include instruction in
nutrition and the benefits of nutritious foods and physical
activity for overall health;
(3) Mathematics, four units, which shall include one unit of
algebra II or the equivalent of algebra II;
(4) Physical education, one-half unit;
(5) Science, three units with inquiry-based laboratory
experience that engages students in asking valid scientific
questions and gathering and analyzing information, which shall
include the following, or their equivalent:
(a) Physical sciences, one unit;
(b) Life sciences, one unit;
(c) Advanced study in one or more of the following sciences,
one unit:
(i) Chemistry, physics, or other physical science;
(ii) Advanced biology or other life science;
(iii) Astronomy, physical geology, or other earth or space
science.
(6) Social studies, three units, which shall include both of
the following:
(a) American history, one-half unit;
(b) American government, one-half unit.
Each school shall integrate the study of economics and
financial literacy, as expressed in the social studies academic
content standards adopted by the state board of education under
division (A)(1) of section 3301.079 of the Revised Code and the
academic content standards for financial literacy and
entrepreneurship adopted under division (A)(2) of that section,
into one or more existing social studies credits required under
division (C)(6) of this section, or into the content of another
class, so that every high school student receives instruction in
those concepts. In developing the curriculum required by this
paragraph, schools shall use available public-private partnerships
and resources and materials that exist in business, industry, and
through the centers for economics education at institutions of
higher education in the state.
(7) Five units consisting of one or any combination of
foreign language, fine arts, business, career-technical education,
family and consumer sciences, technology, agricultural education,
a junior reserve officer training corps (JROTC) program approved
by the congress of the United States under title 10 of the United
States Code, or English language arts, mathematics, science, or
social studies courses not otherwise required under division (C)
of this section.
Ohioans must be prepared to apply increased knowledge and
skills in the workplace and to adapt their knowledge and skills
quickly to meet the rapidly changing conditions of the
twenty-first century. National studies indicate that all high
school graduates need the same academic foundation, regardless of
the opportunities they pursue after graduation. The goal of Ohio's
system of elementary and secondary education is to prepare all
students for and seamlessly connect all students to success in
life beyond high school graduation, regardless of whether the next
step is entering the workforce, beginning an apprenticeship,
engaging in post-secondary training, serving in the military, or
pursuing a college degree.
The Ohio core curriculum is the standard expectation for all
students entering ninth grade for the first time at a public or
chartered nonpublic high school on or after July 1, 2010. A
student may satisfy this expectation through a variety of methods,
including, but not limited to, integrated, applied,
career-technical, and traditional coursework.
Whereas teacher quality is essential for student success in
completing the Ohio core curriculum, the general assembly shall
appropriate funds for strategic initiatives designed to strengthen
schools' capacities to hire and retain highly qualified teachers
in the subject areas required by the curriculum. Such initiatives
are expected to require an investment of $120,000,000 over five
years.
Stronger coordination between high schools and institutions
of higher education is necessary to prepare students for more
challenging academic endeavors and to lessen the need for academic
remediation in college, thereby reducing the costs of higher
education for Ohio's students, families, and the state. The state
board and the chancellor of the Ohio board of regents shall
develop policies to ensure that only in rare instances will
students who complete the Ohio core curriculum require academic
remediation after high school.
School districts, community schools, and chartered nonpublic
schools shall integrate technology into learning experiences
across the curriculum in order to maximize efficiency, enhance
learning, and prepare students for success in the
technology-driven twenty-first century. Districts and schools
shall use distance and web-based course delivery as a method of
providing or augmenting all instruction required under this
division, including laboratory experience in science. Districts
and schools shall utilize technology access and electronic
learning opportunities provided by the eTech Ohio commission, the
Ohio learning network, education technology centers, public
television stations, and other public and private providers.
(D) Except as provided in division (E) of this section, a
student who enters ninth grade on or after July 1, 2010, and
before July 1, 2014, may qualify for graduation from a public or
chartered nonpublic high school even though the student has not
completed the Ohio core curriculum prescribed in division (C) of
this section if all of the following conditions are satisfied:
(1) After the student has attended high school for two years,
as determined by the school, the student and the student's parent,
guardian, or custodian sign and file with the school a written
statement asserting the parent's, guardian's, or custodian's
consent to the student's graduating without completing the Ohio
core curriculum and acknowledging that one consequence of not
completing the Ohio core curriculum is ineligibility to enroll in
most state universities in Ohio without further coursework.
(2) The student and parent, guardian, or custodian fulfill
any procedural requirements the school stipulates to ensure the
student's and parent's, guardian's, or custodian's informed
consent and to facilitate orderly filing of statements under
division (D)(1) of this section.
(3) The student and the student's parent, guardian, or
custodian and a representative of the student's high school
jointly develop an individual career plan for the student that
specifies the student matriculating to a two-year degree program,
acquiring a business and industry credential, or entering an
apprenticeship.
(4) The student's high school provides counseling and support
for the student related to the plan developed under division
(D)(3) of this section during the remainder of the student's high
school experience.
(5) The student successfully completes, at a minimum, the
curriculum prescribed in division (B) of this section.
The department of education, in collaboration with the
chancellor, shall analyze student performance data to determine if
there are mitigating factors that warrant extending the exception
permitted by division (D) of this section to high school classes
beyond those entering ninth grade before July 1, 2014. The
department shall submit its findings and any recommendations not
later than August 1, 2014, to the speaker and minority leader of
the house of representatives, the president and minority leader of
the senate, the chairpersons and ranking minority members of the
standing committees of the house of representatives and the senate
that consider education legislation, the state board of education,
and the superintendent of public instruction.
(E) Each school district and chartered nonpublic school
retains the authority to require an even more rigorous minimum
curriculum for high school graduation than specified in division
(B) or (C) of this section. A school district board of education,
through the adoption of a resolution, or the governing authority
of a chartered nonpublic school may stipulate any of the
following:
(1) A minimum high school curriculum that requires more than
twenty units of academic credit to graduate;
(2) An exception to the district's or school's minimum high
school curriculum that is comparable to the exception provided in
division (D) of this section but with additional requirements,
which may include a requirement that the student successfully
complete more than the minimum curriculum prescribed in division
(B) of this section;
(3) That no exception comparable to that provided in division
(D) of this section is available.
(F) A student enrolled in a dropout prevention and recovery
program, which program has received a waiver from the department,
may qualify for graduation from high school by successfully
completing a competency-based instructional program administered
by the dropout prevention and recovery program in lieu of
completing the Ohio core curriculum prescribed in division (C) of
this section. The department shall grant a waiver to a dropout
prevention and recovery program, within sixty days after the
program applies for the waiver, if the program meets all of the
following conditions:
(1) The program serves only students not younger than sixteen
years of age and not older than twenty-one years of age.
(2) The program enrolls students who, at the time of their
initial enrollment, either, or both, are at least one grade level
behind their cohort age groups or experience crises that
significantly interfere with their academic progress such that
they are prevented from continuing their traditional programs.
(3) The program requires students to attain at least the
applicable score designated for each of the assessments prescribed
under division (B)(1) of section 3301.0710 of the Revised Code or,
to the extent prescribed by rule of the state board under division
(D)(6) of section 3301.0712 of the Revised Code, division (B)(2)
of that section.
(4) The program develops an individual career plan for the
student that specifies the student's matriculating to a two-year
degree program, acquiring a business and industry credential, or
entering an apprenticeship.
(5) The program provides counseling and support for the
student related to the plan developed under division (F)(4) of
this section during the remainder of the student's high school
experience.
(6) The program requires the student and the student's
parent, guardian, or custodian to sign and file, in accordance
with procedural requirements stipulated by the program, a written
statement asserting the parent's, guardian's, or custodian's
consent to the student's graduating without completing the Ohio
core curriculum and acknowledging that one consequence of not
completing the Ohio core curriculum is ineligibility to enroll in
most state universities in Ohio without further coursework.
(7) Prior to receiving the waiver, the program has submitted
to the department an instructional plan that demonstrates how the
academic content standards adopted by the state board under
section 3301.079 of the Revised Code will be taught and assessed.
If the department does not act either to grant the waiver or
to reject the program application for the waiver within sixty days
as required under this section, the waiver shall be considered to
be granted.
(G) Every high school may permit students below the ninth
grade to take advanced work. If a high school so permits, it shall
award high school credit for successful completion of the advanced
work and shall count such advanced work toward the graduation
requirements of division (B) or (C) of this section if the
advanced work was both:
(1) Taught by a person who possesses a license or certificate
issued under section 3301.071, 3319.22, or 3319.222 of the Revised
Code that is valid for teaching high school;
(2) Designated by the board of education of the city, local,
or exempted village school district, the board of the cooperative
education school district, or the governing authority of the
chartered nonpublic school as meeting the high school curriculum
requirements.
Each high school shall record on the student's high school
transcript all high school credit awarded under division (G) of
this section. In addition, if the student completed a seventh- or
eighth-grade fine arts course described in division (K) of this
section and the course qualified for high school credit under that
division, the high school shall record that course on the
student's high school transcript.
(H) The department shall make its individual academic career
plan available through its Ohio career information system web site
for districts and schools to use as a tool for communicating with
and providing guidance to students and families in selecting high
school courses.
(I) Units earned in English language arts, mathematics,
science, and social studies that are delivered through integrated
academic and career-technical instruction are eligible to meet the
graduation requirements of division (B) or (C) of this section.
(J) The state board, in consultation with the chancellor,
shall adopt a statewide plan implementing methods for students to
earn units of high school credit based on a demonstration of
subject area competency, instead of or in combination with
completing hours of classroom instruction. The state board shall
adopt the plan not later than March 31, 2009, and commence phasing
in the plan during the 2009-2010 school year. The plan shall
include a standard method for recording demonstrated proficiency
on high school transcripts. Each school district and community
school shall comply with the state board's plan adopted under this
division and award units of high school credit in accordance with
the plan. The state board may adopt existing methods for earning
high school credit based on a demonstration of subject area
competency as necessary prior to the 2009-2010 school year.
(K) This division does not apply to students who qualify for
graduation from high school under division (D) or (F) of this
section, or to students pursuing a career-technical instructional
track as determined by the school district board of education or
the chartered nonpublic school's governing authority.
Nevertheless, the general assembly encourages such students to
consider enrolling in a fine arts course as an elective.
Beginning with students who enter ninth grade for the first
time on or after July 1, 2010, each student enrolled in a public
or chartered nonpublic high school shall complete two semesters or
the equivalent of fine arts to graduate from high school. The
coursework may be completed in any of grades seven to twelve. Each
student who completes a fine arts course in grade seven or eight
may elect to count that course toward the five units of electives
required for graduation under division (C)(7) of this section, if
the course satisfied the requirements of division (G) of this
section. In that case, the high school shall award the student
high school credit for the course and count the course toward the
five units required under division (C)(7) of this section. If the
course in grade seven or eight did not satisfy the requirements of
division (G) of this section, the high school shall not award the
student high school credit for the course but shall count the
course toward the two semesters or the equivalent of fine arts
required by this division.
(L) Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in this section,
the board of education of each school district and the governing
authority of each chartered nonpublic school may adopt a policy to
excuse from the high school physical education requirement each
student who, during high school, has participated in
interscholastic athletics, marching band, a school-sponsored rugby
club played as a team sport, or cheerleading for at least two full
seasons, or in the junior reserve officer training corps for at
least two full school years. If the board or authority adopts such
a policy, the board or authority shall not require the student to
complete any physical education course as a condition to graduate.
However, the student shall be required to complete one-half unit,
consisting of at least sixty hours of instruction, in another
course of study. In the case of a student who has participated in
the junior reserve officer training corps for at least two full
school years, credit received for that participation may be used
to satisfy the requirement to complete one-half unit in another
course of study.
Section 2. That existing section 3313.603 of the Revised
Code is hereby repealed.
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