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Sub. H. B. No. 367 As Enrolled
(130th General Assembly)
(Substitute House Bill Number 367)
AN ACT
To amend sections 3301.0711, 3301.0712, 3301.0715,
3313.60, 3313.603, 3313.608, 3313.618, 3313.672,
3313.68, 3314.06, 3317.034, 3319.227, 3319.261,
4729.291, and 4729.541 and to enact section
4731.056 of the Revised Code and to amend Sections
263.20 and 263.320 of Am. Sub. H.B. 59 of the
130th General Assembly, as subsequently amended,
and Section 9 of Am. Sub. H.B. 487 of the 130th
General Assembly to require the health curriculum
of each school district to include instruction in
prescription opioid abuse prevention, to establish
requirements regarding controlled substances
containing buprenorphine used for the purpose of
treating drug dependence or addiction, to revise
the law regarding state assessments and academic
performance reporting, to make other changes
regarding primary and secondary education
programs, and to make an appropriation.
Be it enacted by the General Assembly of the State of Ohio:
SECTION 1. That sections 3301.0711, 3301.0712, 3301.0715,
3313.60, 3313.603, 3313.608, 3313.618, 3313.672, 3313.68, 3314.06,
3317.034, 3319.227, 3319.261, 4729.291, and 4729.541 be amended
and section 4731.056 of the Revised Code be enacted to read as
follows:
Sec. 3301.0711. (A) The department of education shall:
(1) Annually furnish to, grade, and score all assessments
required by divisions (A)(1) and (B)(1) of section 3301.0710 of
the Revised Code to be administered by city, local, exempted
village, and joint vocational school districts, except that each
district shall score any assessment administered pursuant to
division (B)(10) of this section. Each assessment so furnished
shall include the data verification code of the student to whom
the assessment will be administered, as assigned pursuant to
division (D)(2) of section 3301.0714 of the Revised Code. In
furnishing the practice versions of Ohio graduation tests
prescribed by division (D) of section 3301.0710 of the Revised
Code, the department shall make the tests available on its web
site for reproduction by districts. In awarding contracts for
grading assessments, the department shall give preference to
Ohio-based entities employing Ohio residents.
(2) Adopt rules for the ethical use of assessments and
prescribing the manner in which the assessments prescribed by
section 3301.0710 of the Revised Code shall be administered to
students.
(B) Except as provided in divisions (C) and (J) of this
section, the board of education of each city, local, and exempted
village school district shall, in accordance with rules adopted
under division (A) of this section:
(1) Administer the English language arts assessments
prescribed under division (A)(1)(a) of section 3301.0710 of the
Revised Code twice annually to all students in the third grade who
have not attained the score designated for that assessment under
division (A)(2)(c) of section 3301.0710 of the Revised Code.
(2) Administer the mathematics assessment prescribed under
division (A)(1)(a) of section 3301.0710 of the Revised Code at
least once annually to all students in the third grade.
(3) Administer the assessments prescribed under division
(A)(1)(b) of section 3301.0710 of the Revised Code at least once
annually to all students in the fourth grade.
(4) Administer the assessments prescribed under division
(A)(1)(c) of section 3301.0710 of the Revised Code at least once
annually to all students in the fifth grade.
(5) Administer the assessments prescribed under division
(A)(1)(d) of section 3301.0710 of the Revised Code at least once
annually to all students in the sixth grade.
(6) Administer the assessments prescribed under division
(A)(1)(e) of section 3301.0710 of the Revised Code at least once
annually to all students in the seventh grade.
(7) Administer the assessments prescribed under division
(A)(1)(f) of section 3301.0710 of the Revised Code at least once
annually to all students in the eighth grade.
(8) Except as provided in division (B)(9) of this section,
administer any assessment prescribed under division (B)(1) of
section 3301.0710 of the Revised Code as follows:
(a) At least once annually to all tenth grade students and at
least twice annually to all students in eleventh or twelfth grade
who have not yet attained the score on that assessment designated
under that division;
(b) To any person who has successfully completed the
curriculum in any high school or the individualized education
program developed for the person by any high school pursuant to
section 3323.08 of the Revised Code but has not received a high
school diploma and who requests to take such assessment, at any
time such assessment is administered in the district.
(9) In lieu of the board of education of any city, local, or
exempted village school district in which the student is also
enrolled, the board of a joint vocational school district shall
administer any assessment prescribed under division (B)(1) of
section 3301.0710 of the Revised Code at least twice annually to
any student enrolled in the joint vocational school district who
has not yet attained the score on that assessment designated under
that division. A board of a joint vocational school district may
also administer such an assessment to any student described in
division (B)(8)(b) of this section.
(10) If the district has a three-year average graduation rate
of not more than seventy-five per cent, administer each assessment
prescribed by division (D) of section 3301.0710 of the Revised
Code in September to all ninth grade students, beginning in the
school year that starts July 1, 2005 who entered ninth grade prior
to July 1, 2014.
Except as provided in section 3313.614 of the Revised Code
for administration of an assessment to a person who has fulfilled
the curriculum requirement for a high school diploma but has not
passed one or more of the required assessments, the assessments
prescribed under division (B)(1) of section 3301.0710 of the
Revised Code and the practice assessments prescribed under
division (D) of that section and required to be administered under
divisions (B)(8), (9), and (10) of this section shall not be
administered after July 1, 2015 the date specified in the rules
adopted by the state board of education under division (D)(1) of
section 3301.0712 of the Revised Code.
(11) Administer the assessments prescribed by division (B)(2)
of section 3301.0710 and section 3301.0712 of the Revised Code in
accordance with the timeline and plan for implementation of those
assessments prescribed by rule of the state board adopted under
division (D)(1) of section 3301.0712 of the Revised Code.
(C)(1)(a) In the case of a student receiving special
education services under Chapter 3323. of the Revised Code, the
individualized education program developed for the student under
that chapter shall specify the manner in which the student will
participate in the assessments administered under this section.
The individualized education program may excuse the student from
taking any particular assessment required to be administered under
this section if it instead specifies an alternate assessment
method approved by the department of education as conforming to
requirements of federal law for receipt of federal funds for
disadvantaged pupils. To the extent possible, the individualized
education program shall not excuse the student from taking an
assessment unless no reasonable accommodation can be made to
enable the student to take the assessment.
(b) Any alternate assessment approved by the department for a
student under this division shall produce measurable results
comparable to those produced by the assessment it replaces in
order to allow for the student's results to be included in the
data compiled for a school district or building under section
3302.03 of the Revised Code.
(c) Any student enrolled in a chartered nonpublic school who
has been identified, based on an evaluation conducted in
accordance with section 3323.03 of the Revised Code or section 504
of the "Rehabilitation Act of 1973," 87 Stat. 355, 29 U.S.C.A.
794, as amended, as a child with a disability shall be excused
from taking any particular assessment required to be administered
under this section if a plan developed for the student pursuant to
rules adopted by the state board excuses the student from taking
that assessment. In the case of any student so excused from taking
an assessment, the chartered nonpublic school shall not prohibit
the student from taking the assessment.
(2) A district board may, for medical reasons or other good
cause, excuse a student from taking an assessment administered
under this section on the date scheduled, but that assessment
shall be administered to the excused student not later than nine
days following the scheduled date. The district board shall
annually report the number of students who have not taken one or
more of the assessments required by this section to the state
board of education not later than the thirtieth day of June.
(3) As used in this division, "limited English proficient
student" has the same meaning as in 20 U.S.C. 7801.
No school district board shall excuse any limited English
proficient student from taking any particular assessment required
to be administered under this section, except that any limited
English proficient student who has been enrolled in United States
schools for less than one full school year shall not be required
to take any reading, writing, or English language arts assessment.
However, no board shall prohibit a limited English proficient
student who is not required to take an assessment under this
division from taking the assessment. A board may permit any
limited English proficient student to take an assessment required
to be administered under this section with appropriate
accommodations, as determined by the department. For each limited
English proficient student, each school district shall annually
assess that student's progress in learning English, in accordance
with procedures approved by the department.
The governing authority of a chartered nonpublic school may
excuse a limited English proficient student from taking any
assessment administered under this section. However, no governing
authority shall prohibit a limited English proficient student from
taking the assessment.
(D)(1) In the school year next succeeding the school year in
which the assessments prescribed by division (A)(1) or (B)(1) of
section 3301.0710 of the Revised Code or former division (A)(1),
(A)(2), or (B) of section 3301.0710 of the Revised Code as it
existed prior to September 11, 2001, are administered to any
student, the board of education of any school district in which
the student is enrolled in that year shall provide to the student
intervention services commensurate with the student's performance,
including any intensive intervention required under section
3313.608 of the Revised Code, in any skill in which the student
failed to demonstrate at least a score at the proficient level on
the assessment.
(2) Following any administration of the assessments
prescribed by division (D) of section 3301.0710 of the Revised
Code to ninth grade students, each school district that has a
three-year average graduation rate of not more than seventy-five
per cent shall determine for each high school in the district
whether the school shall be required to provide intervention
services to any students who took the assessments. In determining
which high schools shall provide intervention services based on
the resources available, the district shall consider each school's
graduation rate and scores on the practice assessments. The
district also shall consider the scores received by ninth grade
students on the English language arts and mathematics assessments
prescribed under division (A)(1)(f) of section 3301.0710 of the
Revised Code in the eighth grade in determining which high schools
shall provide intervention services.
Each high school selected to provide intervention services
under this division shall provide intervention services to any
student whose results indicate that the student is failing to make
satisfactory progress toward being able to attain scores at the
proficient level on the Ohio graduation tests. Intervention
services shall be provided in any skill in which a student
demonstrates unsatisfactory progress and shall be commensurate
with the student's performance. Schools shall provide the
intervention services prior to the end of the school year, during
the summer following the ninth grade, in the next succeeding
school year, or at any combination of those times.
(E) Except as provided in section 3313.608 of the Revised
Code and division (M) of this section, no school district board of
education shall utilize any student's failure to attain a
specified score on an assessment administered under this section
as a factor in any decision to deny the student promotion to a
higher grade level. However, a district board may choose not to
promote to the next grade level any student who does not take an
assessment administered under this section or make up an
assessment as provided by division (C)(2) of this section and who
is not exempt from the requirement to take the assessment under
division (C)(3) of this section.
(F) No person shall be charged a fee for taking any
assessment administered under this section.
(G)(1) Each school district board shall designate one
location for the collection of assessments administered in the
spring under division (B)(1) of this section and those
administered under divisions (B)(2) to (7) of this section. Each
district board shall submit the assessments to the entity with
which the department contracts for the scoring of the assessments
as follows:
(a) If the district's total enrollment in grades kindergarten
through twelve during the first full school week of October was
less than two thousand five hundred, not later than the Friday
after all of the assessments have been administered;
(b) If the district's total enrollment in grades kindergarten
through twelve during the first full school week of October was
two thousand five hundred or more, but less than seven thousand,
not later than the Monday after all of the assessments have been
administered;
(c) If the district's total enrollment in grades kindergarten
through twelve during the first full school week of October was
seven thousand or more, not later than the Tuesday after all of
the assessments have been administered.
However, any assessment that a student takes during the
make-up period described in division (C)(2) of this section shall
be submitted not later than the Friday following the day the
student takes the assessment.
(2) The department or an entity with which the department
contracts for the scoring of the assessment shall send to each
school district board a list of the individual scores of all
persons taking an assessment prescribed by division (A)(1) or
(B)(1) of section 3301.0710 of the Revised Code within sixty days
after its administration, but in no case shall the scores be
returned later than the fifteenth day of June following the
administration. For assessments administered under this section by
a joint vocational school district, the department or entity shall
also send to each city, local, or exempted village school district
a list of the individual scores of any students of such city,
local, or exempted village school district who are attending
school in the joint vocational school district.
(H) Individual scores on any assessments administered under
this section shall be released by a district board only in
accordance with section 3319.321 of the Revised Code and the rules
adopted under division (A) of this section. No district board or
its employees shall utilize individual or aggregate results in any
manner that conflicts with rules for the ethical use of
assessments adopted pursuant to division (A) of this section.
(I) Except as provided in division (G) of this section, the
department or an entity with which the department contracts for
the scoring of the assessment shall not release any individual
scores on any assessment administered under this section. The
state board of education shall adopt rules to ensure the
protection of student confidentiality at all times. The rules may
require the use of the data verification codes assigned to
students pursuant to division (D)(2) of section 3301.0714 of the
Revised Code to protect the confidentiality of student scores.
(J) Notwithstanding division (D) of section 3311.52 of the
Revised Code, this section does not apply to the board of
education of any cooperative education school district except as
provided under rules adopted pursuant to this division.
(1) In accordance with rules that the state board of
education shall adopt, the board of education of any city,
exempted village, or local school district with territory in a
cooperative education school district established pursuant to
divisions (A) to (C) of section 3311.52 of the Revised Code may
enter into an agreement with the board of education of the
cooperative education school district for administering any
assessment prescribed under this section to students of the city,
exempted village, or local school district who are attending
school in the cooperative education school district.
(2) In accordance with rules that the state board of
education shall adopt, the board of education of any city,
exempted village, or local school district with territory in a
cooperative education school district established pursuant to
section 3311.521 of the Revised Code shall enter into an agreement
with the cooperative district that provides for the administration
of any assessment prescribed under this section to both of the
following:
(a) Students who are attending school in the cooperative
district and who, if the cooperative district were not
established, would be entitled to attend school in the city,
local, or exempted village school district pursuant to section
3313.64 or 3313.65 of the Revised Code;
(b) Persons described in division (B)(8)(b) of this section.
Any assessment of students pursuant to such an agreement
shall be in lieu of any assessment of such students or persons
pursuant to this section.
(K)(1)(a) Except as otherwise provided in division (K)(1)(a)
or (K)(1)(c) of this section, each chartered nonpublic school for
which at least sixty-five per cent of its total enrollment is made
up of students who are participating in state scholarship programs
shall administer the elementary assessments prescribed by section
3301.0710 of the Revised Code. In accordance with procedures and
deadlines prescribed by the department, the parent or guardian of
a student enrolled in the school who is not participating in a
state scholarship program may submit notice to the chief
administrative officer of the school that the parent or guardian
does not wish to have the student take the elementary assessments
prescribed for the student's grade level under division (A) of
section 3301.0710 of the Revised Code. If a parent or guardian
submits an opt-out notice, the school shall not administer the
assessments to that student. This option does not apply to any
assessment required for a high school diploma under section
3313.612 of the Revised Code.
(b) If a chartered nonpublic school is educating students in
grades nine through twelve, it shall administer the assessments
prescribed by divisions (B)(1) and (2) of section 3301.0710 of the
Revised Code as a condition of compliance with section 3313.612 of
the Revised Code.
(c) A chartered nonpublic school may submit to the
superintendent of public instruction a request for a waiver from
administering the elementary assessments prescribed by division
(A) of section 3301.0710 of the Revised Code. The state
superintendent shall approve or disapprove a request for a waiver
submitted under division (K)(1)(c) of this section. No waiver
shall be approved for any school year prior to the 2015-2016
school year.
To be eligible to submit a request for a waiver, a chartered
nonpublic school shall meet the following conditions:
(i) At least ninety-five per cent of the students enrolled in
the school are children with disabilities, as defined under
section 3323.01 of the Revised Code, or have received a diagnosis
by a school district or from a physician, including a
neuropsychiatrist or psychiatrist, or a psychologist who is
authorized to practice in this or another state as having a
condition that impairs academic performance, such as dyslexia,
dyscalculia, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, or
Asperger's syndrome.
(ii) The school has solely served a student population
described in division (K)(1)(c)(i) of this section for at least
ten years.
(iii) The school provides to the department at least five
years of records of internal testing conducted by the school that
affords the department data required for accountability purposes,
including diagnostic assessments and nationally standardized
norm-referenced achievement assessments that measure reading and
math skills.
(d) Any chartered nonpublic school that is not subject to
division (K)(1)(a) of this section may participate in the
assessment program by administering any of the assessments
prescribed by division (A) of section 3301.0710 of the Revised
Code. The chief administrator of the school shall specify which
assessments the school will administer. Such specification shall
be made in writing to the superintendent of public instruction
prior to the first day of August of any school year in which
assessments are administered and shall include a pledge that the
nonpublic school will administer the specified assessments in the
same manner as public schools are required to do under this
section and rules adopted by the department.
(2) The department of education shall furnish the assessments
prescribed by section 3301.0710 or 3301.0712 of the Revised Code
to each chartered nonpublic school that is subject to division
(K)(1)(a) of this section or participates under division (K)(1)(b)
of this section.
(L)(1) The superintendent of the state school for the blind
and the superintendent of the state school for the deaf shall
administer the assessments described by sections 3301.0710 and
3301.0712 of the Revised Code. Each superintendent shall
administer the assessments in the same manner as district boards
are required to do under this section and rules adopted by the
department of education and in conformity with division (C)(1)(a)
of this section.
(2) The department of education shall furnish the assessments
described by sections 3301.0710 and 3301.0712 of the Revised Code
to each superintendent.
(M) Notwithstanding division (E) of this section, a school
district may use a student's failure to attain a score in at least
the proficient range on the mathematics assessment described by
division (A)(1)(a) of section 3301.0710 of the Revised Code or on
an assessment described by division (A)(1)(b), (c), (d), (e), or
(f) of section 3301.0710 of the Revised Code as a factor in
retaining that student in the current grade level.
(N)(1) In the manner specified in divisions (N)(3), (4), and
(6) of this section, the assessments required by division (A)(1)
of section 3301.0710 of the Revised Code shall become public
records pursuant to section 149.43 of the Revised Code on the
thirty-first day of July following the school year that the
assessments were administered.
(2) The department may field test proposed questions with
samples of students to determine the validity, reliability, or
appropriateness of questions for possible inclusion in a future
year's assessment. The department also may use anchor questions on
assessments to ensure that different versions of the same
assessment are of comparable difficulty.
Field test questions and anchor questions shall not be
considered in computing scores for individual students. Field test
questions and anchor questions may be included as part of the
administration of any assessment required by division (A)(1) or
(B) of section 3301.0710 and division (B) of section 3301.0712 of
the Revised Code.
(3) Any field test question or anchor question administered
under division (N)(2) of this section shall not be a public
record. Such field test questions and anchor questions shall be
redacted from any assessments which are released as a public
record pursuant to division (N)(1) of this section.
(4) This division applies to the assessments prescribed by
division (A) of section 3301.0710 of the Revised Code.
(a) The first administration of each assessment, as specified
in former section 3301.0712 of the Revised Code, shall be a public
record.
(b) For subsequent administrations of each assessment prior
to the 2011-2012 school year, not less than forty per cent of the
questions on the assessment that are used to compute a student's
score shall be a public record. The department shall determine
which questions will be needed for reuse on a future assessment
and those questions shall not be public records and shall be
redacted from the assessment prior to its release as a public
record. However, for each redacted question, the department shall
inform each city, local, and exempted village school district of
the statewide academic standard adopted by the state board of
education under section 3301.079 of the Revised Code and the
corresponding benchmark to which the question relates. The
preceding sentence does not apply to field test questions that are
redacted under division (N)(3) of this section.
(c) The administrations of each assessment in the 2011-2012,
2012-2013, and 2013-2014 school years shall not be a public
record.
(5) Each assessment prescribed by division (B)(1) of section
3301.0710 of the Revised Code shall not be a public record.
(6) Beginning with the spring administration for the
2014-2015 school year, questions on the assessments prescribed
under division (A) of section 3301.0710 and division (B)(2) of
section 3301.0712 of the Revised Code and the corresponding
preferred answers that are used to compute a student's score shall
become a public record as follows:
(a) Forty per cent of the questions and preferred answers on
the assessments on the thirty-first day of July following the
administration of the assessment;
(b) Twenty per cent of the questions and preferred answers on
the assessment on the thirty-first day of July one year after the
administration of the assessment;
(c) The remaining forty per cent of the questions and
preferred answers on the assessment on the thirty-first day of
July two years after the administration of the assessment.
The entire content of an assessment shall become a public
record within three years of its administration.
The department shall make the questions that become a public
record under this division readily accessible to the public on the
department's web site. Questions on the spring administration of
each assessment shall be released on an annual basis, in
accordance with this division.
(O) As used in this section:
(1) "Three-year average" means the average of the most recent
consecutive three school years of data.
(2) "Dropout" means a student who withdraws from school
before completing course requirements for graduation and who is
not enrolled in an education program approved by the state board
of education or an education program outside the state. "Dropout"
does not include a student who has departed the country.
(3) "Graduation rate" means the ratio of students receiving a
diploma to the number of students who entered ninth grade four
years earlier. Students who transfer into the district are added
to the calculation. Students who transfer out of the district for
reasons other than dropout are subtracted from the calculation. If
a student who was a dropout in any previous year returns to the
same school district, that student shall be entered into the
calculation as if the student had entered ninth grade four years
before the graduation year of the graduating class that the
student joins.
(4) "State scholarship programs" means the educational choice
scholarship pilot program established under sections 3310.01 to
3310.17 of the Revised Code, the autism scholarship program
established under section 3310.41 of the Revised Code, the Jon
Peterson special needs scholarship program established under
sections 3310.51 to 3310.64 of the Revised Code, and the pilot
project scholarship program established under sections 3313.974 to
3313.979 of the Revised Code.
Sec. 3301.0712. (A) The state board of education, the
superintendent of public instruction, and the chancellor of the
Ohio board of regents shall develop a system of college and work
ready assessments as described in division (B) of this section to
assess whether each student upon graduating from high school is
ready to enter college or the workforce. Beginning with students
who enter the ninth grade for the first time on or after July 1,
2014, the system shall replace the Ohio graduation tests
prescribed in division (B)(1) of section 3301.0710 of the Revised
Code as a measure of student academic performance and one
determinant of eligibility for a high school diploma in the manner
prescribed by rule of the state board adopted under division (D)
of this section.
(B) The college and work ready assessment system shall
consist of the following:
(1) A nationally Nationally standardized assessment
assessments that measures measure college and career readiness, is
and are used for college admission, and includes components in
English, mathematics, science, and social studies. The assessment
assessments shall be selected jointly by the state superintendent
and the chancellor, and one of which shall be selected by each
school district or school to administer to its students. The
assessment assessments prescribed under division (B)(1) of this
section shall be administered to all eleventh-grade students in
the spring of the school year.
(2) Seven end-of-course examinations, one in each of the
areas of English language arts I, English language arts II,
physical science, Algebra I, geometry, American history, and
American government. The end-of-course examinations shall be
selected jointly by the state superintendent and the chancellor in
consultation with faculty in the appropriate subject areas at
institutions of higher education of the university system of Ohio.
Advanced placement examinations, and international baccalaureate
examinations, and dual enrollment or advanced standing program
examinations, as prescribed under section 3313.6013 of the Revised
Code, in the areas of physical science, American history, and
American government may be used as end-of-course examinations in
accordance with division (B)(4)(a)(i) of this section.
Final
course grades for courses taken under any other advanced standing
program, as prescribed under section 3313.6013 of the Revised
Code, in the areas of science, American history, and American
government may be used in lieu of end-of-course examinations in
accordance with division (B)(4)(a)(ii) of this section.
(3)(a) Not later than July 1, 2013, each school district
board of education shall adopt interim end-of-course examinations
that comply with the requirements of divisions (B)(3)(b)(i) and
(ii) of this section to assess mastery of American history and
American government standards adopted under division (A)(1)(b) of
section 3301.079 of the Revised Code and the topics required under
division (M) of section 3313.603 of the Revised Code. Each high
school of the district shall use the interim examinations until
the state superintendent and chancellor select end-of-course
examinations in American history and American government under
division (B)(2) of this section.
(b) Not later than July 1, 2014, the state superintendent and
the chancellor shall select the end-of-course examinations in
American history and American government.
(i) The end-of-course examinations in American history and
American government shall require demonstration of mastery of the
American history and American government content for social
studies standards adopted under division (A)(1)(b) of section
3301.079 of the Revised Code and the topics required under
division (M) of section 3313.603 of the Revised Code.
(ii) At least twenty per cent of the end-of-course
examination in American government shall address the topics on
American history and American government described in division (M)
of section 3313.603 of the Revised Code.
(4)(a) Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in this
section, beginning with the 2014-2015 school year, if both of the
following shall apply:
(i) If a student is enrolled in an appropriate advanced
placement or international baccalaureate course or is enrolled
under any other dual enrollment or advanced standing program, that
student shall take the advanced placement or international
baccalaureate examination or applicable examination under dual
enrollment or advanced standing in lieu of the physical science,
American history, or American government end-of-course
examinations prescribed under division (B)(2) of this section. The
state board shall specify the score levels for each advanced
placement examination, and international baccalaureate
examination, and examination required under other dual enrollment
or advanced standing programs for purposes of calculating the
minimum cumulative performance score that demonstrates the level
of academic achievement necessary to earn a high school diploma.
(ii) If a student is enrolled in an appropriate course under
any other advanced standing program, as described in section
3313.6013 of the Revised Code, that student shall not be required
to take the science, American history, or American government
end-of-course examination, whichever is applicable, prescribed
under division (B)(2) of this section. Instead, that student's
final course grade shall be used in lieu of the applicable
end-of-course examination prescribed under that section. The state
superintendent, in consultation with the chancellor, shall adopt
guidelines for purposes of calculating the corresponding final
course grades that demonstrate the level of academic achievement
necessary to earn a high school diploma.
Division (B)(4)(a)(ii) of this section shall apply only to
courses for which students receive transcripted credit, as defined
in division (U) of section 3365.01 of the Revised Code. It shall
not apply to remedial or developmental courses.
(b) No student shall take a substitute examination or
examination prescribed under division (B)(4)(a) of this section in
place of the end-of-course examinations in English language arts
I, English language arts II, Algebra I, or geometry prescribed
under division (B)(2) of this section.
(c) The state board shall consider additional assessments
that may be used, beginning with the 2016-2017 school year, as
substitute examinations in lieu of the end-of-course examinations
prescribed under division (B)(2) of this section.
(5)(a) The state board shall determine do all of the
following:
(a) Determine and designate at least five ranges of scores on
each of the end-of-course examinations prescribed under division
(B)(2) of this section, and substitute examinations prescribed
under division (B)(4) of this section. Each range of scores shall
be considered to demonstrate a level of achievement so that any
student attaining a score within such range has achieved one of
the following:
(i) An advanced level of skill;
(ii) An accelerated level of skill;
(iii) A proficient level of skill;
(iv) A basic level of skill;
(v) A limited level of skill.
(b) Determine a method by which to calculate a cumulative
performance score based on the results of a student's
end-of-course examinations or substitute examinations;
(c) Determine the minimum cumulative performance score that
demonstrates the level of academic achievement necessary to earn a
high school diploma;
(d) Develop a table of corresponding score equivalents for
the end-of-course examinations and substitute examinations in
order to calculate student performance consistently across the
different examinations.
(6) Any student who received high school credit prior to July
1, 2014, for a course for which an end-of-course examination is
prescribed by division (B)(2) of this section shall not be
required to take that end-of-course examination. Receipt (a) A
student who meets both of the following conditions shall not be
required to take an end-of-course examination:
(i) The student received high school credit prior to July 1,
2015, for a course for which the end-of-course examination is
prescribed.
(ii) The examination was not available for administration
prior to July 1, 2015.
Receipt of credit for that the course described in division
(B)(6)(a)(i) of this section shall satisfy the requirement to take
the end-of-course examination. A student exempted under division
(B)(6)(a) of this section may take the applicable end-of-course
examination at a later date.
(b) For purposes of determining whether a student who is
exempt from taking an end-of-course examination under division
(B)(6)(a) of this section has attained the cumulative score
prescribed by division (B)(5)(c) of this section, such student
shall select either of the following:
(i) The student is considered to have attained a proficient
score on the end-of-course examination from which the student is
exempt;
(ii) The student's final course grade shall be used in lieu
of a score on the end-of-course examination from which the student
is exempt.
The state superintendent, in consultation with the
chancellor, shall adopt guidelines for purposes of calculating the
corresponding final course grades and the minimum cumulative
performance score that demonstrates the level of academic
achievement necessary to earn a high school diploma.
(7)(a) Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in this
section, the state board may replace the algebra I end-of-course
examination prescribed under division (B)(2) of this section with
an algebra II end-of-course examination, beginning with the
2016-2017 school year for students who enter ninth grade on or
after July 1, 2016.
(b) If the state board replaces the algebra I end-of-course
examination with an algebra II end-of-course examination as
authorized under division (B)(7)(a) of this section, a both of the
following shall apply:
(i) A student who is enrolled in an advanced placement or
international baccalaureate course in algebra II or is enrolled
under any other dual enrollment or advanced standing program in
algebra II shall take the advanced placement or international
baccalaureate examination or applicable examination under dual
enrollment or advanced standing in lieu of the algebra II
end-of-course examination.
(ii) A student who is enrolled in an algebra II course under
any other advanced standing program, as described in section
3313.6013 of the Revised Code, shall not be required to take the
algebra II end-of-course examination. Instead, that student's
final course grade shall be used in lieu of the examination.
(c) If a school district or school utilizes an integrated
approach to mathematics instruction, the district or school may do
either or both of the following:
(i) Administer an integrated mathematics I end-of-course
examination in lieu of the prescribed algebra I end-of-course
examination;
(ii) Administer an integrated mathematics II end-of-course
examination in lieu of the prescribed geometry end-of-course
examination.
(8)(a) For students entering the ninth grade for the first
time on or after July 1, 2014, but prior to July 1, 2015, the
assessment in the area of science shall be physical science or
biology. For students entering the ninth grade for the first time
on or after July 1, 2015, the assessment in the area of science
shall be biology.
(b) Until July 1, 2019, the department of education shall
make available the end-of-course examination in physical science
for students who entered the ninth grade for the first time on or
after July 1, 2014, but prior to July 1, 2015, and who wish to
retake the examination.
(c) Not later than July 1, 2016, the state board shall adopt
rules prescribing the requirements for the end-of-course
examination in science for students who entered the ninth grade
for the first time on or after July 1, 2014, but prior to July 1,
2015, and who have not met the requirement prescribed by section
3313.618 of the Revised Code by July 1, 2019, due to a student's
failure to satisfy division (A)(2) of section 3313.618 of the
Revised Code.
(9) Neither the state board nor the department of education
shall develop or administer an end-of-course examination in the
area of world history.
(C) The state board shall convene a group of national
experts, state experts, and local practitioners to provide advice,
guidance, and recommendations for the alignment of standards and
model curricula to the assessments and in the design of the
end-of-course examinations prescribed by this section.
(D) Upon completion of the development of the assessment
system, the state board shall adopt rules prescribing all of the
following:
(1) A timeline and plan for implementation of the assessment
system, including a phased implementation if the state board
determines such a phase-in is warranted;
(2) The date after which a person shall meet the requirements
of the entire assessment system as a prerequisite for a diploma of
adult education under section 3313.611 of the Revised Code;
(3) Whether and the extent to which a person may be excused
from an American history end-of-course examination and an American
government end-of-course examination under division (H) of section
3313.61 and division (B)(3) of section 3313.612 of the Revised
Code;
(4) The date after which a person who has fulfilled the
curriculum requirement for a diploma but has not passed one or
more of the required assessments at the time the person fulfilled
the curriculum requirement shall meet the requirements of the
entire assessment system as a prerequisite for a high school
diploma under division (B) of section 3313.614 of the Revised
Code;
(5) The extent to which the assessment system applies to
students enrolled in a dropout recovery and prevention program for
purposes of division (F) of section 3313.603 and section 3314.36
of the Revised Code.
(E) Not later than forty-five days prior to the state board's
adoption of a resolution directing the department of education to
file the rules prescribed by division (D) of this section in final
form under section 119.04 of the Revised Code, the superintendent
of public instruction shall present the assessment system
developed under this section to the respective committees of the
house of representatives and senate that consider education
legislation.
(F)(1) Any person enrolled in a nonchartered nonpublic school
or any person who has been excused from attendance at school for
the purpose of home instruction under section 3321.04 of the
Revised Code may choose to participate in the system of
assessments administered under divisions (B)(1) and (2) of this
section. However, no such person shall be required to participate
in the system of assessments.
(2) The department shall adopt rules for the administration
and scoring of any assessments under division (F)(1) of this
section.
(G) Not later than December 31, 2014, the state board shall
select at least one nationally recognized job skills assessment.
Each school district shall administer that assessment to those
students who opt to take it. The state shall reimburse a school
district for the costs of administering that assessment. The state
board shall establish the minimum score a student must attain on
the job skills assessment in order to demonstrate a student's
workforce readiness and employability. The administration of the
job skills assessment to a student under this division shall not
exempt a school district from administering the assessments
prescribed in division (B) of this section to that student.
Sec. 3301.0715. (A) Except as otherwise required under
division (B)(1) of section 3313.608 of the Revised Code, the board
of education of each city, local, and exempted village school
district shall administer each applicable diagnostic assessment
developed and provided to the district in accordance with section
3301.079 of the Revised Code to the following:
(1) Any student who transfers into the district or to a
different school within the district if each applicable diagnostic
assessment was not administered by the district or school the
student previously attended in the current school year, within
thirty days after the date of transfer. If the district or school
into which the student transfers cannot determine whether the
student has taken any applicable diagnostic assessment in the
current school year, the district or school may administer the
diagnostic assessment to the student. However, if a student
transfers into the district prior to the administration of the
diagnostic assessments to all students under division (B) of this
section, the district may administer the diagnostic assessments to
that student on the date or dates determined under that division.
(2) Each kindergarten student, not earlier than the first day
of the school year and not later than the first day of November,
except that the language and reading skills portion of the
assessment shall be administered by the thirtieth day of September
to fulfill the requirements of division (B) of section 3313.608 of
the Revised Code.
For the purpose of division (A)(2) of this section, the
district shall administer the kindergarten readiness assessment
provided by the department of education. In no case shall the
results of the readiness assessment be used to prohibit a student
from enrolling in kindergarten.
(3) Each student enrolled in first, second, or third grade.
Division (A) of this section does not apply to students with
significant cognitive disabilities, as defined by the department
of education.
(B) Each district board shall administer each diagnostic
assessment when the board deems appropriate, provided the
administration complies with section 3313.608 of the Revised Code.
However, the board shall administer any diagnostic assessment at
least once annually to all students in the appropriate grade
level. A district board may administer any diagnostic assessment
in the fall and spring of a school year to measure the amount of
academic growth attributable to the instruction received by
students during that school year.
(C) Any district that received a grade of "A" or "B" for the
performance index score under division (A)(1)(b), (B)(1)(b), or
(C)(1)(b) of section 3302.03 of the Revised Code or for the
value-added progress dimension under division (A)(1)(e),
(B)(1)(e), or (C)(1)(e) of section 3302.03 of the Revised Code for
the immediately preceding school year may use different diagnostic
assessments from those adopted under division (D) of section
3301.079 of the Revised Code in order to satisfy the requirements
of division (A)(3) of this section.
(D) Each district board shall utilize and score any
diagnostic assessment administered under division (A) of this
section in accordance with rules established by the department.
After the administration of any diagnostic assessment, each
district shall provide a student's completed diagnostic
assessment, the results of such assessment, and any other
accompanying documents used during the administration of the
assessment to the parent of that student, and shall include all
such documents and information in any plan developed for the
student under division (C) of section 3313.608 of the Revised
Code. Each district shall submit to the department, in the manner
the department prescribes, the results of the diagnostic
assessments administered under this section, regardless of the
type of assessment used under section 3313.608 of the Revised
Code. The department may issue reports with respect to the data
collected. The department may report school and district level
kindergarten diagnostic assessment data and use diagnostic
assessment data to calculate the measure prescribed by divisions
(B)(1)(g) and (C)(1)(g) of section 3302.03 of the Revised Code.
(E) Each district board shall provide intervention services
to students whose diagnostic assessments show that they are
failing to make satisfactory progress toward attaining the
academic standards for their grade level.
Sec. 3313.60. Notwithstanding division (D) of section
3311.52 of the Revised Code, divisions (A) to (E) of this section
do not apply to any cooperative education school district
established pursuant to divisions (A) to (C) of section 3311.52 of
the Revised Code.
(A) The board of education of each city, exempted village,
and local school district and the board of each cooperative
education school district established, pursuant to section
3311.521 of the Revised Code, shall prescribe a curriculum for all
schools under its control. Except as provided in division (E) of
this section, in any such curriculum there shall be included the
study of the following subjects:
(1) The language arts, including reading, writing, spelling,
oral and written English, and literature;
(2) Geography, the history of the United States and of Ohio,
and national, state, and local government in the United States,
including a balanced presentation of the relevant contributions to
society of men and women of African, Mexican, Puerto Rican, and
American Indian descent as well as other ethnic and racial groups
in Ohio and the United States;
(3) Mathematics;
(4) Natural science, including instruction in the
conservation of natural resources;
(5) Health education, which shall include instruction in:
(a) The nutritive value of foods, including natural and
organically produced foods, the relation of nutrition to health,
and the use and effects of food additives;
(b) The harmful effects of and legal restrictions against the
use of drugs of abuse, alcoholic beverages, and tobacco;
(c) Venereal disease education, except that upon written
request of the student's parent or guardian, a student shall be
excused from taking instruction in venereal disease education;
(d) In grades kindergarten through six, instruction in
personal safety and assault prevention, except that upon written
request of the student's parent or guardian, a student shall be
excused from taking instruction in personal safety and assault
prevention;
(e) In grades seven through twelve, age-appropriate
instruction in dating violence prevention education, which shall
include instruction in recognizing dating violence warning signs
and characteristics of healthy relationships.
In order to assist school districts in developing a dating
violence prevention education curriculum, the department of
education shall provide on its web site links to free curricula
addressing dating violence prevention.
If the parent or legal guardian of a student less than
eighteen years of age submits to the principal of the student's
school a written request to examine the dating violence prevention
instruction materials used at that school, the principal, within a
reasonable period of time after the request is made, shall allow
the parent or guardian to examine those materials at that school.
(f) Prescription opioid abuse prevention, with an emphasis on
the prescription drug epidemic and the connection between
prescription opioid abuse and addiction to other drugs, such as
heroin.
(6) Physical education;
(7) The fine arts, including music;
(8) First aid, including a training program in
cardiopulmonary resuscitation, safety, and fire prevention, except
that upon written request of the student's parent or guardian, a
student shall be excused from taking instruction in
cardiopulmonary resuscitation.
(B) Except as provided in division (E) of this section, every
school or school district shall include in the requirements for
promotion from the eighth grade to the ninth grade one year's
course of study of American history. A board may waive this
requirement for academically accelerated students who, in
accordance with procedures adopted by the board, are able to
demonstrate mastery of essential concepts and skills of the eighth
grade American history course of study.
(C) As specified in divisions (B)(6) and (C)(6) of section
3313.603 of the Revised Code, except as provided in division (E)
of this section, every high school shall include in the
requirements for graduation from any curriculum one-half unit each
of American history and government.
(D) Except as provided in division (E) of this section, basic
instruction or demonstrated mastery in geography, United States
history, the government of the United States, the government of
the state of Ohio, local government in Ohio, the Declaration of
Independence, the United States Constitution, and the Constitution
of the state of Ohio shall be required before pupils may
participate in courses involving the study of social problems,
economics, foreign affairs, United Nations, world government,
socialism, and communism.
(E) For each cooperative education school district
established pursuant to section 3311.521 of the Revised Code and
each city, exempted village, and local school district that has
territory within such a cooperative district, the curriculum
adopted pursuant to divisions (A) to (D) of this section shall
only include the study of the subjects that apply to the grades
operated by each such school district. The curriculums for such
schools, when combined, shall provide to each student of these
districts all of the subjects required under divisions (A) to (D)
of this section.
(F) The board of education of any cooperative education
school district established pursuant to divisions (A) to (C) of
section 3311.52 of the Revised Code shall prescribe a curriculum
for the subject areas and grade levels offered in any school under
its control.
(G) Upon the request of any parent or legal guardian of a
student, the board of education of any school district shall
permit the parent or guardian to promptly examine, with respect to
the parent's or guardian's own child:
(1) Any survey or questionnaire, prior to its administration
to the child;
(2) Any textbook, workbook, software, video, or other
instructional materials being used by the district in connection
with the instruction of the child;
(3) Any completed and graded test taken or survey or
questionnaire filled out by the child;
(4) Copies of the statewide academic standards and each model
curriculum developed pursuant to section 3301.079 of the Revised
Code, which copies shall be available at all times during school
hours in each district school building.
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) History and government, one unit, which shall comply with
division (M) of this section and shall include both of the
following:
(a) American history, one-half unit;
(b) American government, one-half unit.
(7) Social studies, two units.
Beginning with students who enter ninth grade for the first
time on or after July 1, 2017, the two units of instruction
prescribed by division (B)(7) of this section shall include at
least one-half unit of instruction in the study of world history
and civilizations.
(8) 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) History and government, one unit, which shall comply with
division (M) of this section and shall include both of the
following:
(a) American history, one-half unit;
(b) American government, one-half unit.
(7) Social studies, two units.
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)(7) 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.
Beginning with students who enter ninth grade for the first
time on or after July 1, 2017, the two units of instruction
prescribed by division (C)(7) of this section shall include at
least one-half unit of instruction in the study of world history
and civilizations.
(8) 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 requirements for graduation prescribed in division (C) of
this section are 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 when
completing the requirements for graduation, 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 requirements for graduation prescribed
in division (C) of this section 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 broadcast educational media
commission, chancellor, 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, 2016, may qualify for graduation from a public or
chartered nonpublic high school even though the student has not
completed the requirements for graduation prescribed in division
(C) of this section if all of the following conditions are
satisfied:
(1) During the student's third year of attending high school,
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
requirements for graduation prescribed in division (C) of this
section and acknowledging that one consequence of not completing
those requirements 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. Annually, each district or school
shall notify the department of education of the number of students
who choose to qualify for graduation under division (D) of this
section and the number of students who complete the student's
success plan and graduate from high school.
(3) The student and the student's parent, guardian, or
custodian and a representative of the student's high school
jointly develop a student success plan for the student in the
manner described in division (C)(1) of section 3313.6020 of the
Revised Code that specifies the student matriculating to a
two-year degree program, acquiring a business and
industry-recognized 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)(a) Except as provided in division (D)(5)(b) of this
section, the student successfully completes, at a minimum, the
curriculum prescribed in division (B) of this section.
(b) Beginning with students who enter ninth grade for the
first time on or after July 1, 2014, a student shall be required
to complete successfully, at the minimum, the curriculum
prescribed in division (B) of this section, except as follows:
(i) Mathematics, four units, one unit which shall be one of
the following:
(I) Probability and statistics;
(II) Computer programming;
(III) Applied mathematics or quantitative reasoning;
(IV) Any other course approved by the department using
standards established by the superintendent not later than October
1, 2014.
(ii) Elective units, five units;
(iii) Science, three units as prescribed by division (B) of
this section which shall include inquiry-based laboratory
experience that engages students in asking valid scientific
questions and gathering and analyzing information.
The department, 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, 2016. The department
shall submit its findings and any recommendations not later than
December 1, 2015, 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 challenging 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 requirements for graduation 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)(5) of section 3301.0712 of the Revised Code, division (B)(2)
of that section.
(4) The program develops a student success plan for the
student in the manner described in division (C)(1) of section
3313.6020 of the Revised Code that specifies the student's
matriculating to a two-year degree program, acquiring a business
and industry-recognized 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
requirements for graduation prescribed in division (C) of this
section and acknowledging that one consequence of not completing
those requirements 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.
(8) Prior to receiving the waiver, the program has submitted
to the department a policy on career advising that satisfies the
requirements of section 3313.6020 of the Revised Code, with an
emphasis on how every student will receive career advising.
(9) Prior to receiving the waiver, the program has submitted
to the department a written agreement outlining the future
cooperation between the program and any combination of local job
training, postsecondary education, nonprofit, and health and
social service organizations to provide services for students in
the program and their families.
Divisions (F)(8) and (9) of this section apply only to
waivers granted on or after July 1, 2015.
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)(8) 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)(8) 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, 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.
(M) It is important that high school students learn and
understand United States history and the governments of both the
United States and the state of Ohio. Therefore, beginning with
students who enter ninth grade for the first time on or after July
1, 2012, the study of American history and American government
required by divisions (B)(6) and (C)(6) of this section shall
include the study of all of the following documents:
(1) The Declaration of Independence;
(2) The Northwest Ordinance;
(3) The Constitution of the United States with emphasis on
the Bill of Rights;
(4) The Ohio Constitution.
The study of each of the documents prescribed in divisions
(M)(1) to (4) of this section shall include study of that document
in its original context.
The study of American history and government required by
divisions (B)(6) and (C)(6) of this section shall include the
historical evidence of the role of documents such as the
Federalist Papers and the Anti-Federalist Papers to firmly
establish the historical background leading to the establishment
of the provisions of the Constitution and Bill of Rights.
Sec. 3313.608. (A)(1) Beginning with students who enter
third grade in the school year that starts July 1, 2009, and until
June 30, 2013, unless the student is excused under division (C) of
section 3301.0711 of the Revised Code from taking the assessment
described in this section, for any student who does not attain at
least the equivalent level of achievement designated under
division (A)(3) of section 3301.0710 of the Revised Code on the
assessment prescribed under that section to measure skill in
English language arts expected at the end of third grade, each
school district, in accordance with the policy adopted under
section 3313.609 of the Revised Code, shall do one of the
following:
(a) Promote the student to fourth grade if the student's
principal and reading teacher agree that other evaluations of the
student's skill in reading demonstrate that the student is
academically prepared to be promoted to fourth grade;
(b) Promote the student to fourth grade but provide the
student with intensive intervention services in fourth grade;
(c) Retain the student in third grade.
(2) Beginning with students who enter third grade in the
2013-2014 school year, unless the student is excused under
division (C) of section 3301.0711 of the Revised Code from taking
the assessment described in this section, no school district shall
promote to fourth grade any student who does not attain at least
the equivalent level of achievement designated under division
(A)(3) of section 3301.0710 of the Revised Code on the assessment
prescribed under that section to measure skill in English language
arts expected at the end of third grade, unless one of the
following applies:
(a) The student is a limited English proficient student who
has been enrolled in United States schools for less than three
full school years and has had less than three years of instruction
in an English as a second language program.
(b) The student is a child with a disability entitled to
special education and related services under Chapter 3323. of the
Revised Code and the student's individualized education program
exempts the student from retention under this division.
(c) The student demonstrates an acceptable level of
performance on an alternative standardized reading assessment as
determined by the department of education.
(d) All of the following apply:
(i) The student is a child with a disability entitled to
special education and related services under Chapter 3323. of the
Revised Code.
(ii) The student has taken the third grade English language
arts achievement assessment prescribed under section 3301.0710 of
the Revised Code.
(iii) The student's individualized education program or plan
under section 504 of the "Rehabilitation Act of 1973," 87 Stat.
355, 29 U.S.C. 794, as amended, shows that the student has
received intensive remediation in reading for two school years but
still demonstrates a deficiency in reading.
(iv) The student previously was retained in any of grades
kindergarten to three.
(e)(i) The student received intensive remediation for reading
for two school years but still demonstrates a deficiency in
reading and was previously retained in any of grades kindergarten
to three.
(ii) A student who is promoted under division (A)(2)(e)(i) of
this section shall continue to receive intensive reading
instruction in grade four. The instruction shall include an
altered instructional day that includes specialized diagnostic
information and specific research-based reading strategies for the
student that have been successful in improving reading among
low-performing readers.
(B)(1) Beginning in the 2012-2013 school year, to assist
students in meeting the third grade guarantee established by this
section, each school district board of education shall adopt
policies and procedures with which it annually shall assess the
reading skills of each student, except those students with
significant cognitive disabilities or other disabilities as
authorized by the department on a case-by-case basis, enrolled in
kindergarten to third grade by the thirtieth day of September and
shall identify students who are reading below their grade level.
Each district shall use the diagnostic assessment to measure
reading ability for the appropriate grade level adopted under
section 3301.079 of the Revised Code, or a comparable tool
approved by the department of education, to identify such
students. The policies and procedures shall require the students'
classroom teachers to be involved in the assessment and the
identification of students reading below grade level.
(2) For each student identified by the diagnostic assessment
prescribed under this section as having reading skills below grade
level, the district shall do both of the following:
(a) Provide to the student's parent or guardian, in writing,
all of the following:
(i) Notification that the student has been identified as
having a substantial deficiency in reading;
(ii) A description of the current services that are provided
to the student;
(iii) A description of the proposed supplemental
instructional services and supports that will be provided to the
student that are designed to remediate the identified areas of
reading deficiency;
(iv) Notification that if the student attains a score in the
range designated under division (A)(3) of section 3301.0710 of the
Revised Code on the assessment prescribed under that section to
measure skill in English language arts expected at the end of
third grade, the student shall be retained unless the student is
exempt under division (A) of this section. The notification shall
specify that the assessment under section 3301.0710 of the Revised
Code is not the sole determinant of promotion and that additional
evaluations and assessments are available to the student to assist
parents and the district in knowing when a student is reading at
or above grade level and ready for promotion.
(b) Provide intensive reading instruction services and
regular diagnostic assessments to the student immediately
following identification of a reading deficiency until the
development of the reading improvement and monitoring plan
required by division (C) of this section. These intervention
services shall include research-based reading strategies that have
been shown to be successful in improving reading among
low-performing readers and instruction targeted at the student's
identified reading deficiencies.
(3) For each student retained under division (A) of this
section, the district shall do all of the following:
(a) Provide intense remediation services until the student is
able to read at grade level. The remediation services shall
include intensive interventions in reading that address the areas
of deficiencies identified under this section including, but not
limited to, not less than ninety minutes of reading instruction
per day, and may include any of the following:
(i) Small group instruction;
(ii) Reduced teacher-student ratios;
(iii) More frequent progress monitoring;
(iv) Tutoring or mentoring;
(v) Transition classes containing third and fourth grade
students;
(vi) Extended school day, week, or year;
(vii) Summer reading camps.
(b) Establish a policy for the mid-year promotion of a
student retained under division (A) of this section who
demonstrates that the student is reading at or above grade level;
(c) Provide each student with a teacher who satisfies one or
more of the criteria set forth in division (H) of this section.
The district shall offer the option for students to receive
applicable services from one or more providers other than the
district. Providers shall be screened and approved by the district
or the department of education. If the student participates in the
remediation services and demonstrates reading proficiency in
accordance with standards adopted by the department prior to the
start of fourth grade, the district shall promote the student to
that grade.
(4) For each student retained under division (A) of this
section who has demonstrated proficiency in a specific academic
ability field, each district shall provide instruction
commensurate with student achievement levels in that specific
academic ability field.
As used in this division, "specific academic ability field"
has the same meaning as in section 3324.01 of the Revised Code.
(C) For each student required to be provided intervention
services under this section, the district shall develop a reading
improvement and monitoring plan within sixty days after receiving
the student's results on the diagnostic assessment or comparable
tool administered under division (B)(1) of this section. The
district shall involve the student's parent or guardian and
classroom teacher in developing the plan. The plan shall include
all of the following:
(1) Identification of the student's specific reading
deficiencies;
(2) A description of the additional instructional services
and support that will be provided to the student to remediate the
identified reading deficiencies;
(3) Opportunities for the student's parent or guardian to be
involved in the instructional services and support described in
division (C)(2) of this section;
(4) A process for monitoring the extent to which the student
receives the instructional services and support described in
division (C)(2) of this section;
(5) A reading curriculum during regular school hours that
does all of the following:
(a) Assists students to read at grade level;
(b) Provides scientifically based and reliable assessment;
(c) Provides initial and ongoing analysis of each student's
reading progress.
(6) A statement that if the student does not attain at least
the equivalent level of achievement designated under division
(A)(3) of section 3301.0710 of the Revised Code on the assessment
prescribed under that section to measure skill in English language
arts expected by the end of third grade, the student may be
retained in third grade.
Each student with a reading improvement and monitoring plan
under this division who enters third grade after July 1, 2013,
shall be assigned to a teacher who satisfies one or more of the
criteria set forth in division (H) of this section.
The district shall report any information requested by the
department about the reading improvement monitoring plans
developed under this division in the manner required by the
department.
(D) Each school district shall report annually to the
department on its implementation and compliance with this section
using guidelines prescribed by the superintendent of public
instruction. The superintendent of public instruction annually
shall report to the governor and general assembly the number and
percentage of students in grades kindergarten through four reading
below grade level based on the diagnostic assessments administered
under division (B) of this section and the achievement assessments
administered under divisions (A)(1)(a) and (b) of section
3301.0710 of the Revised Code in English language arts, aggregated
by school district and building; the types of intervention
services provided to students; and, if available, an evaluation of
the efficacy of the intervention services provided.
(E) Any summer remediation services funded in whole or in
part by the state and offered by school districts to students
under this section shall meet the following conditions:
(1) The remediation methods are based on reliable educational
research.
(2) The school districts conduct assessment before and after
students participate in the program to facilitate monitoring
results of the remediation services.
(3) The parents of participating students are involved in
programming decisions.
(F) Any intervention or remediation services required by this
section shall include intensive, explicit, and systematic
instruction.
(G) This section does not create a new cause of action or a
substantive legal right for any person.
(H)(1) Except as provided under divisions (H)(2), (3), and
(4) of this section, each student described in division (B)(3) or
(C) of this section who enters third grade for the first time on
or after July 1, 2013, shall be assigned a teacher who has at
least one year of teaching experience and who satisfies one or
more of the following criteria:
(a) The teacher holds a reading endorsement on the teacher's
license and has attained a passing score on the corresponding
assessment for that endorsement, as applicable.
(b) The teacher has completed a master's degree program with
a major in reading.
(c) The teacher was rated "most effective" for reading
instruction consecutively for the most recent two years based on
assessments of student growth measures developed by a vendor and
that is on the list of student assessments approved by the state
board under division (B)(2) of section 3319.112 of the Revised
Code.
(d) The teacher was rated "above expected value added," in
reading instruction, as determined by criteria established by the
department, for the most recent, consecutive two years.
(e) The teacher has earned a passing score on a rigorous test
of principles of scientifically research-based reading instruction
as approved by the state board.
(f) The teacher holds an educator license for teaching grades
pre-kindergarten through three or four through nine issued on or
after July 1, 2017.
(2) Notwithstanding division (H)(1) of this section, a
student described in division (B)(3) or (C) of this section who
enters third grade for the first time on or after July 1, 2013,
may be assigned to a teacher with less than one year of teaching
experience provided that the teacher meets one or more of the
criteria described in divisions (H)(1)(a) to (f) of this section
and that teacher is assigned a teacher mentor who meets the
qualifications of division (H)(1) of this section.
(3) Notwithstanding division (H)(1) of this section, a
student described in division (B)(3) or (C) of this section who
enters third grade for the first time on or after July 1, 2013,
but prior to July 1, 2016, may be assigned to a teacher who holds
an alternative credential approved by the department or who has
successfully completed training that is based on principles of
scientifically research-based reading instruction that has been
approved by the department. Beginning on July 1, 2014, the
alternative credentials and training described in division (H)(3)
of this section shall be aligned with the reading competencies
adopted by the state board of education under section 3301.077 of
the Revised Code.
(4) Notwithstanding division (H)(1) of this section, a
student described in division (B)(3) or (C) of this section who
enters third grade for the first time on or after July 1, 2013,
may receive reading intervention or remediation services under
this section from an individual employed as a speech-language
pathologist who holds a license issued by the board of
speech-language pathology and audiology under Chapter 4753. of the
Revised Code and a professional pupil services license as a school
speech-language pathologist issued by the state board of
education.
(5) A teacher, other than a student's teacher of record, may
provide any services required under this section, so long as that
other teacher meets the requirements of division (H) of this
section and the teacher of record and the school principal agree
to the assignment. Any such assignment shall be documented in the
student's reading improvement and monitoring plan.
As used in this division, "teacher of record" means the
classroom teacher to whom a student is assigned.
(I) Notwithstanding division (H) of this section, a teacher
may teach reading to any student who is an English language
learner, and has been in the United States for three years or
less, or to a student who has an individualized education program
developed under Chapter 3323. of the Revised Code if that teacher
holds an alternative credential approved by the department or has
successfully completed training that is based on principles of
scientifically research-based reading instruction that has been
approved by the department. Beginning on July 1, 2014, the
alternative credentials and training described in this division
shall be aligned with the reading competencies adopted by the
state board of education under section 3301.077 of the Revised
Code.
(J) If, on or after the effective date of this amendment June
4, 2013, a school district or community school cannot furnish the
number of teachers needed who satisfy one or more of the criteria
set forth in division (H) of this section for the 2013-2014 school
year, the school district or community school shall develop and
submit a staffing plan by June 30, 2013. The staffing plan shall
include criteria that will be used to assign a student described
in division (B)(3) or (C) of this section to a teacher,
credentials or training held by teachers currently teaching at the
school, and how the school district or community school will meet
the requirements of this section. The school district or community
school shall post the staffing plan on its web site for the
applicable school year.
Not later than March 1, 2014, and on the first day of March
in each year thereafter, a school district or community school
that has submitted a plan under this division shall submit to the
department a detailed report of the progress the district or
school has made in meeting the requirements under this section.
A school district or community school may request an
extension of a staffing plan beyond the 2013-2014 school year.
Extension requests must be submitted to the department not later
than the thirtieth day of April prior to the start of the
applicable school year. The department may grant extensions valid
through the 2015-2016 school year.
Until June 30, 2015, the department annually shall review all
staffing plans and report to the state board not later than the
thirtieth day of June of each year the progress of school
districts and community schools in meeting the requirements of
this section.
(K) The department of education shall designate one or more
staff members to provide guidance and assistance to school
districts and community schools in implementing the third grade
guarantee established by this section, including any standards or
requirements adopted to implement the guarantee and to provide
information and support for reading instruction and achievement.
Sec. 3313.618. (A) In addition to the applicable curriculum
requirements, each student entering ninth grade for the first time
on or after July 1, 2014, shall satisfy at least one of the
following conditions in order to qualify for a high school
diploma:
(1) Be remediation-free, in accordance with standards adopted
under division (F) of section 3345.061 of the Revised Code, on
each of the nationally standardized assessments in English,
mathematics, and reading;
(2) Attain a score specified under division (B)(5)(c) of
section 3301.0712 of the Revised Code on the end-of-course
examinations prescribed under division (B) of section 3301.0712 of
the Revised Code. For any student who is exempt from taking an
end-of-course examination under division (B)(6) of section
3301.0712 of the Revised Code, in determining whether that student
has attained the cumulative score prescribed by division (B)(5)(c)
of that section, that student shall be considered to have attained
a proficient score on the exempted examination.
(3) Attain a score that demonstrates workforce readiness and
employability on a nationally recognized job skills assessment
selected by the state board of education under division (G) of
section 3301.0712 of the Revised Code and obtain either an
industry-recognized credential, as described under division
(B)(2)(d) of section 3302.03 of the Revised Code, or a license
issued by a state agency or board for practice in a vocation that
requires an examination for issuance of that license.
The state board shall approve the industry-recognized
credentials and licenses that may qualify a student for a high
school diploma under division (A)(3) of this section.
A student may choose to qualify for a high school diploma by
satisfying any of the separate requirements prescribed by
divisions (A)(1) to (3) of this section. If the student's school
district or school does not administer the examination prescribed
by one of those divisions that the student chooses to take to
satisfy the requirements of this section, the school district or
school may require that student to arrange for the applicable
scores to be sent directly to the district or school by the
company or organization that administers the examination.
(B) The state board of education shall not create or require
any additional assessment for the granting of any type of high
school diploma other than as prescribed by this section. The state
board shall not create any endorsement or designation that may be
affiliated with a high school diploma.
Sec. 3313.672. (A)(1) At the time of initial entry to a
public or nonpublic school, a pupil shall present to the person in
charge of admission any records given the pupil by the public or
nonpublic elementary or secondary school the pupil most recently
attended; a certified copy of an order or decree, or modification
of such an order or decree allocating parental rights and
responsibilities for the care of a child and designating a
residential parent and legal custodian of the child, as provided
in division (B) of this section, if that type of order or decree
has been issued; a copy of a power of attorney or caretaker
authorization affidavit, if either has been executed with respect
to the child pursuant to sections 3109.51 to 3109.80 of the
Revised Code; and a certification of birth issued pursuant to
Chapter 3705. of the Revised Code, a comparable certificate or
certification issued pursuant to the statutes of another state,
territory, possession, or nation, or a document in lieu of a
certificate or certification as described in divisions (A)(1)(a)
to (e) of this section. Any of the following shall be accepted in
lieu of a certificate or certification of birth by the person in
charge of admission:
(a) A passport or attested transcript of a passport filed
with a registrar of passports at a point of entry of the United
States showing the date and place of birth of the child;
(b) An attested transcript of the certificate of birth;
(c) An attested transcript of the certificate of baptism or
other religious record showing the date and place of birth of the
child;
(d) An attested transcript of a hospital record showing the
date and place of birth of the child;
(e) A birth affidavit.
(2) If a pupil requesting admission to a school of the school
district in which the pupil is entitled to attend school under
section 3313.64 or 3313.65 of the Revised Code has been discharged
or released from the custody of the department of youth services
under section 5139.51 of the Revised Code just prior to requesting
admission to the school, no school official shall admit that pupil
until the records described in divisions (D)(4)(a) to (d) of
section 2152.18 of the Revised Code have been received by the
superintendent of the school district.
(3) No public or nonpublic school official shall deny a
protected child admission to the school solely because the child
does not present a birth certificate described in division (A)(1)
of this section, a comparable certificate or certification from
another state, territory, possession, or nation, or another
document specified in divisions (A)(1)(a) to (e) of this section
upon registration for entry into the school. However, the
protected child, or the parent, custodian, or guardian of that
child, shall present a birth certificate or other document
specified in divisions (A)(1)(a) to (e) of this section to the
person in charge of admission of the school within ninety days
after the child's initial entry into the school.
(4) Except as otherwise provided in division (A)(2) or (3) of
this section, within twenty-four hours of the entry into the
school of a pupil described in division (A)(1) of this section, a
school official shall request the pupil's official records from
the public or nonpublic elementary or secondary school the pupil
most recently attended. If the public or nonpublic school the
pupil claims to have most recently attended indicates that it has
no record of the pupil's attendance or the records are not
received within fourteen days of the date of request, or if the
pupil does not present a certification of birth described in
division (A)(1) of this section, a comparable certificate or
certification from another state, territory, possession, or
nation, or another document specified in divisions (A)(1)(a) to
(e) of this section, the principal or chief administrative officer
of the school shall notify the law enforcement agency having
jurisdiction in the area where the pupil resides of this fact and
of the possibility that the pupil may be a missing child, as
defined in section 2901.30 of the Revised Code.
(B)(1) Whenever an order or decree allocating parental rights
and responsibilities for the care of a child and designating a
residential parent and legal custodian of the child, including a
temporary order, is issued resulting from an action of divorce,
alimony, annulment, or dissolution of marriage, and the order or
decree pertains to a child who is a pupil in a public or nonpublic
school, the residential parent of the child shall notify the
school of those allocations and designations by providing the
person in charge of admission at the pupil's school with a
certified copy of the order or decree that made the allocation and
designation. Whenever there is a modification of any order or
decree allocating parental rights and responsibilities for the
care of a child and designating a residential parent and legal
custodian of the child that has been submitted to a school, the
residential parent shall provide the person in charge of admission
at the pupil's school with a certified copy of the order or decree
that makes the modification.
(2) Whenever a power of attorney is executed under sections
3109.51 to 3109.62 of the Revised Code that pertains to a child
who is a pupil in a public or nonpublic school, the attorney in
fact shall notify the school of the power of attorney by providing
the person in charge of admission with a copy of the power of
attorney. Whenever a caretaker authorization affidavit is executed
under sections 3109.64 to 3109.73 of the Revised Code that
pertains to a child who is in a public or nonpublic school, the
grandparent who executed the affidavit shall notify the school of
the affidavit by providing the person in charge of admission with
a copy of the affidavit.
(C) If, at the time of a pupil's initial entry to a public or
nonpublic school, the pupil is under the care of a shelter for
victims of domestic violence, as defined in section 3113.33 of the
Revised Code, the pupil or the pupil's parent shall notify the
school of that fact. Upon being so informed, the school shall
inform the elementary or secondary school from which it requests
the pupil's records of that fact.
(D) Whenever a public or nonpublic school is notified by a
law enforcement agency pursuant to division (D) of section 2901.30
of the Revised Code that a missing child report has been filed
regarding a pupil who is currently or was previously enrolled in
the school, the person in charge of admission at the school shall
mark that pupil's records in such a manner that whenever a copy of
or information regarding the records is requested, any school
official responding to the request is alerted to the fact that the
records are those of a missing child. Upon any request for a copy
of or information regarding a pupil's records that have been so
marked, the person in charge of admission immediately shall report
the request to the law enforcement agency that notified the school
that the pupil is a missing child. When forwarding a copy of or
information from the pupil's records in response to a request, the
person in charge of admission shall do so in such a way that the
receiving district or school would be unable to discern that the
pupil's records are marked pursuant to this division but shall
retain the mark in the pupil's records until notified that the
pupil is no longer a missing child. Upon notification by a law
enforcement agency that a pupil is no longer a missing child, the
person in charge of admission shall remove the mark from the
pupil's records in such a way that if the records were forwarded
to another district or school, the receiving district or school
would be unable to discern that the records were ever marked.
(E) As used in this section:
(1) "Protected child" means a child placed in a foster home,
as that term is defined in section 5103.02 of the Revised Code, or
in a residential facility.
(2) "Residential facility" means a group home for children,
children's crisis care facility, children's residential center,
residential parenting facility that provides twenty-four-hour
child care, county children's home, or district children's home.
Sec. 3313.68. (A) The board of education of each city,
exempted village, or local school district may appoint one or more
school physicians and one or more school dentists. Two or more
school districts may unite and employ one such physician and at
least one such dentist whose duties shall be such as are
prescribed by law. Said school physician shall hold a license to
practice medicine in Ohio, and each school dentist shall be
licensed to practice in this state. School physicians and dentists
may be discharged at any time by the board of education. School
physicians and dentists shall serve one year and until their
successors are appointed and shall receive such compensation as
the board of education determines. The board of education may also
employ registered nurses, as defined by section 4723.01 and
licensed as school nurses under section 3319.22 3319.221 of the
Revised Code, to aid in such inspection in such ways as are
prescribed by it, and to aid in the conduct and coordination of
the school health service program. The school dentists shall make
such examinations and diagnoses and render such remedial or
corrective treatment for the school children as is prescribed by
the board of education; provided that all such remedial or
corrective treatment shall be limited to the children whose
parents cannot otherwise provide for same, and then only with the
written consent of the parents or guardians of such children.
School dentists may also conduct such oral hygiene educational
work as is authorized by the board of education.
The board of education may delegate the duties and powers
provided for in this section to the board of health or officer
performing the functions of a board of health within the school
district, if such board or officer is willing to assume the same.
Boards of education shall co-operate with boards of health in the
prevention and control of epidemics.
(B) Notwithstanding any provision of the Revised Code to the
contrary, the board of education of each city, exempted village,
or local school district may contract with an educational service
center for the services of a school nurse, licensed under section
3319.221 of the Revised Code, or of a registered nurse or licensed
practical nurse, licensed under Chapter 4723. of the Revised Code,
to provide services to students in the district pursuant to
section 3313.7112 of the Revised Code.
Sec. 3314.06. The governing authority of each community
school established under this chapter shall adopt admission
procedures that specify the following:
(A) That, except as otherwise provided in this section,
admission to the school shall be open to any individual age five
to twenty-two entitled to attend school pursuant to section
3313.64 or 3313.65 of the Revised Code in a school district in the
state.
Additionally, except as otherwise provided in this section,
admission to the school may be open on a tuition basis to any
individual age five to twenty-two who is not a resident of this
state. The school shall not receive state funds under section
3314.08 of the Revised Code for any student who is not a resident
of this state.
An individual younger than five years of age may be admitted
to the school in accordance with division (A)(2) of section
3321.01 of the Revised Code. The school shall receive funds for an
individual admitted under that division in the manner provided
under section 3314.08 of the Revised Code.
If the school operates a program that uses the Montessori
method endorsed by the American Montessori society, the Montessori
accreditation council for teacher education, or the association
Montessori internationale as its primary method of instruction,
admission to the school may be open to individuals younger than
five years of age, but the school shall not receive funds under
this chapter for those individuals.
Notwithstanding anything to
the contrary in this chapter, individuals younger than five years
of age who are enrolled in a Montessori program shall be offered
at least four hundred fifty-five hours of learning opportunities
per school year.
(B)(1) That admission to the school may be limited to
students who have attained a specific grade level or are within a
specific age group; to students that meet a definition of
"at-risk," as defined in the contract; to residents of a specific
geographic area within the district, as defined in the contract;
or to separate groups of autistic students and nondisabled
students, as authorized in section 3314.061 of the Revised Code
and as defined in the contract.
(2) For purposes of division (B)(1) of this section,
"at-risk" students may include those students identified as gifted
students under section 3324.03 of the Revised Code.
(C) Whether enrollment is limited to students who reside in
the district in which the school is located or is open to
residents of other districts, as provided in the policy adopted
pursuant to the contract.
(D)(1) That there will be no discrimination in the admission
of students to the school on the basis of race, creed, color,
disability, or sex except that:
(a) The governing authority may do either of the following
for the purpose described in division (G) of this section:
(i) Establish a single-gender school for either sex;
(ii) Establish single-gender schools for each sex under the
same contract, provided substantially equal facilities and
learning opportunities are offered for both boys and girls. Such
facilities and opportunities may be offered for each sex at
separate locations.
(b) The governing authority may establish a school that
simultaneously serves a group of students identified as autistic
and a group of students who are not disabled, as authorized in
section 3314.061 of the Revised Code. However, unless the total
capacity established for the school has been filled, no student
with any disability shall be denied admission on the basis of that
disability.
(2) That upon admission of any student with a disability, the
community school will comply with all federal and state laws
regarding the education of students with disabilities.
(E) That the school may not limit admission to students on
the basis of intellectual ability, measures of achievement or
aptitude, or athletic ability, except that a school may limit its
enrollment to students as described in division (B) of this
section.
(F) That the community school will admit the number of
students that does not exceed the capacity of the school's
programs, classes, grade levels, or facilities.
(G) That the purpose of single-gender schools that are
established shall be to take advantage of the academic benefits
some students realize from single-gender instruction and
facilities and to offer students and parents residing in the
district the option of a single-gender education.
(H) That, except as otherwise provided under division (B) of
this section or section 3314.061 of the Revised Code, if the
number of applicants exceeds the capacity restrictions of division
(F) of this section, students shall be admitted by lot from all
those submitting applications, except preference shall be given to
students attending the school the previous year and to students
who reside in the district in which the school is located.
Preference may be given to siblings of students attending the
school the previous year.
Notwithstanding divisions (A) to (H) of this section, in the
event the racial composition of the enrollment of the community
school is violative of a federal desegregation order, the
community school shall take any and all corrective measures to
comply with the desegregation order.
Sec. 3317.034. For purposes of section 3317.03 of the
Revised Code:
(A) A student shall be considered to be enrolled in the
district for any portion of the school year the student is
participating at a college under Chapter 3365. of the Revised
Code.
(B) A student shall be considered to be enrolled in the
district for the period of time beginning on the date on which the
school has both received the documentation of the student's
enrollment from a parent and the student has commenced
participation in learning opportunities offered by the district.
For purposes of applying divisions (B) and (C) of this section,
"learning opportunities" means both classroom-based and
nonclassroom-based learning opportunities overseen by licensed
educational employees of the district that is in compliance with
criteria and documentation requirements for student participation,
which shall be established by the department. Any student's
instruction time in nonclassroom-based learning opportunities
shall be certified by an employee of the district.
(C) A student's enrollment shall be considered to cease on
the date on which any of the following occur:
(1) The district receives documentation from a parent
terminating enrollment of the student.
(2) The district is provided documentation of a student's
enrollment in another public or nonpublic school.
(3) The student fails to participate in learning
opportunities and has not received an excused absence for one
hundred and five continuous hours. If a student is withdrawn from
the district for failure to participate in learning opportunities
under division (C)(1)(a)(v) of this section and the district board
determines that the student is truant, the district shall take the
appropriate action required under sections 3321.19 and 3321.191 of
the Revised Code.
(4) The student ceases to participate in learning
opportunities provided by the school.
(D) No public school may enroll or withdraw a student from
the education management information system established under
section 3310.0714 of the Revised Code later than thirty days after
the student's actual enrollment or withdrawal from the school.
(E) A student in any of grades nine through twelve shall be
considered a full-time equivalent student if the student is
enrolled in at least five units of instruction, as defined in
section 3313.603 of the Revised Code, per school year.
Sec. 3319.227. (A) Notwithstanding any other provision of
the Revised Code or any rule adopted by the state board of
education to the contrary, the state board shall issue a resident
educator license under section 3319.22 of the Revised Code to each
person who is assigned to teach in this state as a participant in
the teach for America program and who meets satisfies the
following conditions for the duration of the program:
(1) Holds a bachelor's degree from an accredited institution
of higher education;
(2) Maintained a cumulative undergraduate grade point average
of at least 2.5 out of 4.0, or its equivalent;
(3) Has passed an examination prescribed by the state board
in the subject area to be taught;
(4) Has successfully completed the summer training institute
operated by teach for America;
(5) Remains an active member of the teach for America
two-year support program.
(B) The state board shall issue a resident educator license
under this section for teaching in any grade level or subject area
for which a person may obtain a resident educator license under
section 3319.22 of the Revised Code. The state board shall not
adopt rules establishing any additional qualifications for the
license beyond those specified in this section.
(C) Notwithstanding any other provision of the Revised Code
or any rule adopted by the state board to the contrary, the state
board shall issue a resident educator license under section
3319.22 of the Revised Code to any applicant who has completed at
least two years of teaching in another state as a participant in
the teach for America program and meets all of the conditions of
divisions (A)(1) to (4) of this section. The state board shall
credit an applicant under this division as having completed two
years of the teacher residency program under section 3319.223 of
the Revised Code.
(D) In order to place teachers in this state, the teach for
America program shall enter into an agreement with one or more
accredited four-year public or private institutions of higher
education in the state to provide optional training of teach for
America participants for the purpose of enabling those
participants to complete an optional master's degree or an
equivalent amount of coursework. Nothing in this division shall
require any teach for America participant to complete a master's
degree as a condition of holding a license issued under this
section.
(E) The state board shall revoke a resident educator license
issued to a participant in the teach for America program who is
assigned to teach in this state if the participant resigns or is
dismissed from the program prior to completion of the two-year
teach for America support program.
Sec. 3319.261. (A) Notwithstanding any other provision of the
Revised Code or any rule adopted by the state board of education
to the contrary, the state board shall issue an alternative
resident educator license under division (C) of section 3319.26 of
the Revised Code to each applicant who meets the following
conditions:
(1) Holds a bachelor's degree from an accredited institution
of higher education;
(2) Has successfully completed a teacher education program
offered by one of the following entities:
(a) Graduation from an The American Montessori
society-affiliated teacher education program society;
(b) Receipt of a certificate from the The association
Montessori internationale;
(c) An institution accredited by the Montessori accreditation
council for teacher education.
(3) Is employed in a school that operates a program that uses
the Montessori method endorsed by the American Montessori society,
the Montessori accreditation council for teacher education, or the
association Montessori internationale as its primary method of
instruction.
(B) The holder of an alternative resident educator license
issued under this section shall be subject to divisions (A), (B),
(D), and (E) of section 3319.26 of the Revised Code and shall be
granted a professional educator license upon successful completion
of the requirements described in division (F) of section 3319.26
of the Revised Code.
Sec. 4729.291. (A) When a licensed health professional
authorized to prescribe drugs personally furnishes drugs to a
patient pursuant to division (B) of section 4729.29 of the Revised
Code, the prescriber shall ensure that the drugs are labeled and
packaged in accordance with state and federal drug laws and any
rules and regulations adopted pursuant to those laws. Records of
purchase and disposition of all drugs personally furnished to
patients shall be maintained by the prescriber in accordance with
state and federal drug statutes and any rules adopted pursuant to
those statutes.
(B) When personally furnishing to a patient RU-486
(mifepristone), a prescriber is subject to section 2919.123 of the
Revised Code. A prescription for RU-486 (mifepristone) shall be in
writing and in accordance with section 2919.123 of the Revised
Code.
(C)(1) Except as provided in division (D) of this section, a
no prescriber may not shall do either of the following:
(a) In any thirty-day period, personally furnish to or for
patients, taken as a whole, controlled substances in an amount
that exceeds a total of two thousand five hundred dosage units;
(b) In any seventy-two-hour period, personally furnish to or
for a patient an amount of a controlled substance that exceeds the
amount necessary for the patient's use in a seventy-two-hour
period.
(2) The state board of pharmacy may impose a fine of not more
than five thousand dollars on a prescriber who fails to comply
with the limits established under division (C)(1) of this section.
A separate fine may be imposed for each instance of failing to
comply with the limits. In imposing the fine, the board's actions
shall be taken in accordance with Chapter 119. of the Revised
Code.
(D)(1) None of the following shall be counted in determining
whether the amounts specified in division (C)(1) of this section
have been exceeded:
(a) Methadone provided to patients for the purpose of
treating drug dependence or addiction, if the prescriber meets the
conditions specified in 21 C.F.R. 1306.07;
(b) Buprenorphine provided to patients for the purpose of
treating drug dependence or addiction, if the prescriber is exempt
from separate registration with the United States drug enforcement
administration as part of an opioid treatment program that is the
subject of a current, valid certification from the substance abuse
and mental health services administration of the United States
department of health and human services pursuant to 21 42 C.F.R.
1301.28 8.11 and distributes both buprenorphine and methadone;
(c) Controlled substances provided to research subjects by a
facility conducting clinical research in studies approved by a
hospital-based institutional review board or an institutional
review board accredited by the association for the accreditation
of human research protection programs.
(2) Division (C)(1) of this section does not apply to a
prescriber who is a veterinarian.
Sec. 4729.541. (A) Except as provided in divisions (B) and
(C) of this section, a business entity described in division
(B)(1)(j) or (k) of section 4729.51 of the Revised Code may
possess, have custody or control of, and distribute the dangerous
drugs in category I, category II, and category III, as defined in
section 4729.54 of the Revised Code, without holding a terminal
distributor of dangerous drugs license issued under that section.
(B) If a business entity described in division (B)(1)(j) or
(k) of section 4729.51 of the Revised Code is a pain management
clinic or is operating a pain management clinic, the entity shall
hold a license as a terminal distributor of dangerous drugs with a
pain management clinic classification issued under section
4729.552 of the Revised Code.
(C) Beginning April 1, 2015, a business entity described in
division (B)(1)(j) or (k) of section 4729.51 of the Revised Code
shall hold a license as a terminal distributor of dangerous drugs
in order to possess, have custody or control of, and distribute
dangerous either of the following:
(1) Dangerous drugs that are compounded or used for the
purpose of compounding;
(2) Controlled substances containing buprenorphine that are
used for the purpose of treating drug dependence or addiction.
Sec. 4731.056. (A) As used in this section:
(1) "Controlled substance," "schedule III," "schedule IV,"
and "schedule V" have the same meanings as in section 3719.01 of
the Revised Code.
(2) "Physician" means an individual authorized by this
chapter to practice medicine and surgery or osteopathic medicine
and surgery.
(B) The state medical board shall adopt rules in accordance
with Chapter 119. of the Revised Code that establish standards and
procedures to be followed by physicians in the use of controlled
substances in schedule III, IV, or V to treat opioid dependence or
addiction. The board may limit the application of the rules to
treatment provided through an office-based practice or other
practice type or location specified by the board.
SECTION 2. That existing sections 3301.0711, 3301.0712,
3301.0715, 3313.60, 3313.603, 3313.608, 3313.618, 3313.672,
3313.68, 3314.06, 3317.034, 3319.227, 3319.261, 4729.291, and
4729.541 of the Revised Code are hereby repealed.
SECTION 3. That Section 263.20 of Am. Sub. H.B. 59 of the
130th General Assembly, as amended by Am. Sub. H.B. 487 of the
130th General Assembly, be amended to read as follows:
Sec. 263.20. OPERATING EXPENSES
A portion of the foregoing appropriation item 200321,
Operating Expenses, shall be used by the Department of Education
to provide matching funds under 20 U.S.C. 2321.
EARLY CHILDHOOD EDUCATION
Of the foregoing appropriation item 200408, Early Childhood
Education, up to $50,000 in each fiscal year shall be used to
support the operations of the "Ready, Set, Go...to Kindergarten"
Program at the Horizon Education Center in Lorain County. The
effectiveness of the program shall be evaluated and reported to
the Department of Education in a study that includes statistics on
program participants' scores for the "Get It, Got It, Go!"
assessment and the kindergarten readiness assessment.
The Department of Education shall distribute the remainder of
the foregoing appropriation item 200408, Early Childhood
Education, to pay the costs of early childhood education programs.
The Department shall distribute such funds directly to qualifying
providers.
(A) As used in this section:
(1) "Provider" means a city, local, exempted village, or
joint vocational school district; an educational service center; a
community school; a chartered nonpublic school; an early childhood
education child care provider licensed under Chapter 5104. of the
Revised Code that participates in and meets at least the third
highest tier of the tiered quality rating and improvement system
described in section 5104.30 of the Revised Code; or a combination
of entities described in this paragraph.
(2)(a) In the case of a city, local, or exempted village
school district or early childhood education child care provider
licensed under Chapter 5104. of the Revised Code, "new eligible
provider" means a provider that did not receive state funding for
Early Childhood Education in the previous fiscal year or
demonstrates a need for early childhood programs as defined in
division (D) of this section.
(b) In the case of a community school, "new eligible
provider" means a community school that operates a program that
uses the Montessori method endorsed by the American Montessori
society, the Montessori accreditation council for teacher
education, or the association Montessori internationale as its
primary method of instruction, as authorized by division (A) of
section 3314.06 of the Revised Code, that did not receive state
funding for Early Childhood Education in the previous fiscal year
or demonstrates a need for early childhood programs as defined in
division (D) of this section.
(3) "Eligible child" means a child who is at least three
years of age as of the district entry date for kindergarten, is
not of the age to be eligible for kindergarten, and whose family
earns not more than two hundred per cent of the federal poverty
guidelines as defined in division (A)(3) of section 5101.46 of the
Revised Code. Children with an Individualized Education Program
and where the Early Childhood Education program is the least
restrictive environment may be enrolled on their third birthday.
(4) "Early learning program standards" means early learning
program standards for school readiness developed by the Department
to assess the operation of early learning programs.
(B) In each fiscal year, up to two per cent of the total
appropriation may be used by the Department for program support
and technical assistance. The Department shall distribute the
remainder of the appropriation in each fiscal year to serve
eligible children.
(C) The Department shall provide an annual report to the
Governor, the Speaker of the House of Representatives, and the
President of the Senate and post the report to the Department's
web site, regarding early childhood education programs operated
under this section and the early learning program standards.
(D) After setting aside the amounts to make payments due from
the previous fiscal year, in fiscal year 2014, the Department
shall distribute funds first to recipients of funds for early
childhood education programs under Section 267.10.10 of Am. Sub.
H.B. 153 of the 129th General Assembly, as amended by Am. Sub.
H.B. 487 of the 129th General Assembly, in the previous fiscal
year and the balance to new eligible providers of early childhood
education programs under this section or to existing providers to
serve more eligible children or for purposes of program expansion,
improvement, or special projects to promote quality and
innovation.
After setting aside the amounts to make payments due from the
previous fiscal year, in fiscal year 2015, the Department shall
distribute funds first to providers of early childhood education
programs under this section in the previous fiscal year and the
balance to new eligible providers or to existing providers to
serve more eligible children as outlined under division (E) of
this section or for purposes of program expansion, improvement, or
special projects to promote quality and innovation.
(E) The Department shall distribute any new or remaining
funding to existing providers of early childhood education
programs or any new eligible providers in an effort to invest in
high quality early childhood programs where there is a need as
determined by the Department. The Department shall distribute the
new or remaining funds to existing providers of early childhood
education programs or any new eligible providers to serve
additional eligible children based on community economic
disadvantage, limited access to high quality preschool or
childcare services, and demonstration of high quality preschool
services as determined by the Department using new metrics
developed pursuant to Ohio's Race to the Top—Early Learning
Challenge Grant, awarded to the Department in December 2011.
Awards under divisions (D) and (E) of this section shall be
distributed on a per-pupil basis, and in accordance with division
(I) of this section. The Department may adjust the per-pupil
amount so that the per-pupil amount multiplied by the number of
eligible children enrolled and receiving services on the first day
of December or the business day closest to that date equals the
amount allocated under this section.
(F) Costs for developing and administering an early childhood
education program may not exceed fifteen per cent of the total
approved costs of the program.
All providers shall maintain such fiscal control and
accounting procedures as may be necessary to ensure the
disbursement of, and accounting for, these funds. The control of
funds provided in this program, and title to property obtained,
shall be under the authority of the approved provider for purposes
provided in the program unless, as described in division (K) of
this section, the program waives its right for funding or a
program's funding is eliminated or reduced due to its inability to
meet financial or early learning program standards. The approved
provider shall administer and use such property and funds for the
purposes specified.
(G) The Department may examine a provider's financial and
program records. If the financial practices of the program are not
in accordance with standard accounting principles or do not meet
financial standards outlined under division (F) of this section,
or if the program fails to substantially meet the early learning
program standards, meet a quality rating level in the tiered
quality rating and improvement system developed under section
5104.30 of the Revised Code as prescribed by the Department, or
exhibits below average performance as measured against the
standards, the early childhood education program shall propose and
implement a corrective action plan that has been approved by the
Department. The approved corrective action plan shall be signed by
the chief executive officer and the executive of the official
governing body of the provider. The corrective action plan shall
include a schedule for monitoring by the Department. Such
monitoring may include monthly reports, inspections, a timeline
for correction of deficiencies, and technical assistance to be
provided by the Department or obtained by the early childhood
education program. The Department may withhold funding pending
corrective action. If an early childhood education program fails
to satisfactorily complete a corrective action plan, the
Department may deny expansion funding to the program or withdraw
all or part of the funding to the program and establish a new
eligible provider through a selection process established by the
Department.
(H)(1) If the early childhood education program is licensed
by the Department of Education and is not highly rated, as
determined by the Director of Job and Family Services, under the
tiered quality rating and improvement system described in section
5104.30 of the Revised Code, the program shall do all of the
following:
(a) Meet teacher qualification requirements prescribed by
section 3301.311 of the Revised Code;
(b) Align curriculum to the early learning content standards
developed by the Department;
(c) Meet any child or program assessment requirements
prescribed by the Department;
(d) Require teachers, except teachers enrolled and working to
obtain a degree pursuant to section 3301.311 of the Revised Code,
to attend a minimum of twenty hours every two years of
professional development as prescribed by the Department;
(e) Document and report child progress as prescribed by the
Department;
(f) Meet and report compliance with the early learning
program standards as prescribed by the Department;
(g) Participate in the tiered quality rating and improvement
system developed under section 5104.30 of the Revised Code.
Effective July 1, 2016, all programs shall be rated through the
system.
(2) If the program is highly rated, as determined by the
Director of Job and Family Services, under the tiered quality
rating and improvement system developed under section 5104.30 of
the Revised Code, the program shall comply with the requirements
of that system.
(I) Per-pupil funding for programs subject to this section
shall be sufficient to provide eligible children with services for
a standard early childhood schedule which shall be defined in this
section as a minimum of twelve and one-half hours per school week
as defined in section 3313.62 of the Revised Code for the minimum
school year as defined in sections 3313.48, 3313.481, and 3313.482
of the Revised Code. Nothing in this section shall be construed to
prohibit program providers from utilizing other funds to serve
eligible children in programs that exceed the twelve and one-half
hours per week or that exceed the minimum school year. For any
provider for which a standard early childhood education schedule
creates a hardship or for which the provider shows evidence that
the provider is working in collaboration with a preschool special
education program, the provider may submit a waiver to the
Department requesting an alternate schedule. If the Department
approves a waiver for an alternate schedule that provides services
for less time than the standard early childhood education
schedule, the Department may reduce the provider's annual
allocation proportionately. Under no circumstances shall an annual
allocation be increased because of the approval of an alternate
schedule.
(J) Each provider shall develop a sliding fee scale based on
family incomes and shall charge families who earn more than two
hundred per cent of the federal poverty guidelines, as defined in
division (A)(3) of section 5101.46 of the Revised Code, for the
early childhood education program.
The Department shall conduct an annual survey of each
provider to determine whether the provider charges families
tuition or fees, the amount families are charged relative to
family income levels, and the number of families and students
charged tuition and fees for the early childhood program.
(K) If an early childhood education program voluntarily
waives its right for funding, or has its funding eliminated for
not meeting financial standards or the early learning program
standards, the provider shall transfer control of title to
property, equipment, and remaining supplies obtained through the
program to providers designated by the Department and return any
unexpended funds to the Department along with any reports
prescribed by the Department. The funding made available from a
program that waives its right for funding or has its funding
eliminated or reduced may be used by the Department for new grant
awards or expansion grants. The Department may award new grants or
expansion grants to eligible providers who apply. The eligible
providers who apply must do so in accordance with the selection
process established by the Department.
(L) Eligible expenditures for the Early Childhood Education
Program shall be claimed each fiscal year to help meet the state's
TANF maintenance of effort requirement. The Superintendent of
Public Instruction and the Director of Job and Family Services
shall enter into an interagency agreement to carry out the
requirements under this division, which shall include developing
reporting guidelines for these expenditures.
(M) The Early Childhood Advisory Council established under
section 3301.90 of the Revised Code shall provide, by October 1,
2013, recommendations including, but not limited to, the
administration, implementation, and distribution of funding for an
early childhood voucher program, to the Superintendent of Public
Instruction, the Governor's Office of 21st Century Education, the
Speaker of the House of Representatives, the President of the
Senate, and the chairpersons of the standing committees of the
House of Representatives and the Senate that deal primarily with
issues of education. Decisions on the implementation of the
voucher program shall be made by the Governor's Office of 21st
Century Education with recommendations from the State
Superintendent of Public Instruction and the Early Childhood
Advisory Council.
SECTION 4. That existing Section 263.20 of Am. Sub. H.B. 59
of the 130th General Assembly, as amended by Am. Sub. H.B. 487 of
the 130th General Assembly, is hereby repealed.
SECTION 5. That Section 263.320 of Am. Sub. H.B. 59 of the
130th General Assembly, as amended by Am. Sub. H.B. 483 of the
130th General Assembly, be amended to read as follows:
Sec. 263.320. LOTTERY PROFITS EDUCATION FUND
Appropriation item 200612, Foundation Funding (Fund 7017),
shall be used in conjunction with appropriation item 200550,
Foundation Funding (GRF), to provide state foundation payments to
school districts.
The Department of Education, with the approval of the
Director of Budget and Management, shall determine the monthly
distribution schedules of appropriation item 200550, Foundation
Funding (GRF), and appropriation item 200612, Foundation Funding
(Fund 7017). If adjustments to the monthly distribution schedule
are necessary, the Department of Education shall make such
adjustments with the approval of the Director of Budget and
Management.
CAREER ADVISING AND MENTORING PROGRAM
The foregoing appropriation item 200629, Career Advising and
Mentoring, shall be used by the State Superintendent of Public
Instruction to create the Career Advising and Mentoring Grant
Program. The Superintendent shall develop guidelines for the
grants. The program shall award competitive matching grants to
provide funding for local networks of volunteers and organizations
to sponsor career advising and mentoring for students in eligible
school districts. Each grant award shall match up to three times
the funds allocated to the project by the local network. Eligible
school districts are those with a high percentage of students in
poverty, a high number of students not graduating on time, and
other criteria as determined by the State Superintendent. Eligible
school districts shall partner with members of the business
community, civic organizations, or the faith-based community to
provide sustainable career advising and mentoring services.
An amount equal to the unexpended, unencumbered portion of
the foregoing appropriation item 200629, Career Advising and
Mentoring Program, at the end of fiscal year 2015 is hereby
reappropriated to the Department of Education for the same purpose
for fiscal year 2016.
STRAIGHT A FUND
Of the foregoing appropriation item 200648, Straight A Fund,
up to $70,000 in each fiscal year shall be used by Kids Unlimited
of Toledo for quality after-school tutoring and mentoring programs
in two elementary school buildings in Lucas County. The school
buildings may include any community school, chartered nonpublic
school, or building that is part of a city, local, or exempted
village school district. Kids Unlimited of Toledo shall provide
local matching funds equal to the set-aside.
Of the foregoing appropriation item 200648, Straight A Fund,
up to $250,000 in each fiscal year may be used to make competitive
grants in accordance with Section 263.324 of this act.
Of the foregoing appropriation item 200648, Straight A Fund,
up to $6,000,000 in fiscal year 2014 shall be distributed to the
Cleveland Municipal School District to be used, as determined by
the Department of Education, to implement provisions of Am. Sub.
H.B. 525 of the 129th General Assembly.
Of the foregoing appropriation item 200648, Straight A Fund,
up to $5,000,000 in each fiscal year shall be provided to school
districts that meet the conditions prescribed in division (G)(3)
of section 3317.0212 of the Revised Code to support innovations
that improve the efficiency of pupil transportation. This may
include, but is not limited to, the purchase of buses and other
equipment. The Department of Education shall distribute these
funds to districts based on each district's qualifying ridership
as reported under division (B) of section 3317.0212 of the Revised
Code.
The remainder of appropriation item 200648, Straight A Fund,
shall be used to make competitive grants in accordance with
Section 263.325 of this act.
EDCHOICE EXPANSION
The foregoing appropriation item 200666, EdChoice Expansion,
shall be used as follows:
(A) In fiscal year 2014, notwithstanding section 3310.032 of
the Revised Code, the Department of Education shall administer an
expansion of the Educational Choice Scholarship program as
follows:
(1) A student is an "eligible student" for purposes of the
expansion of the Educational Choice Scholarship Pilot Program
under division (A) of this section if the student's resident
district is not a school district in which the pilot project
scholarship program is operating under sections 3313.974 to
3313.979 of the Revised Code and the student's family income is at
or below two hundred per cent of the federal poverty guidelines,
as defined in section 5101.46 of the Revised Code.
(2) The Department shall pay scholarships to attend chartered
nonpublic schools in accordance with section 3310.08 of the
Revised Code. The number of scholarships awarded under division
(A) of this section shall not exceed the number that can be funded
with appropriations made by the general assembly for this purpose.
(3) Scholarships under division (A) of this section shall be
awarded for the 2013-2014 school year, to eligible students who
are entering kindergarten in that school year for the first time.
(4) If the number of eligible students who apply for a
scholarship exceeds the scholarships available based on the
appropriation for division (A) of this section, the department
shall award scholarships in the following order of priority:
(a) First, to eligible students with family incomes at or
below one hundred per cent of the federal poverty guidelines.
(b) Second, to other eligible students who qualify under
division (A) of this section. If the number of students described
in division (A)(4)(b) of this section exceeds the number of
available scholarships after awards are made under division
(A)(4)(a) of this section, the department shall select students
described in division (A)(4)(b) of this section by lot to receive
any remaining scholarships.
(5) A student who receives a scholarship under division (A)
of this section remains an eligible student and may continue to
receive scholarships under section 3310.032 of the Revised Code in
subsequent school years until the student completes grade twelve,
so long as the student satisfies the conditions specified in
divisions (E)(2) and (3) of section 3310.03 of the Revised Code.
Once a scholarship is awarded under this section, the student
shall remain eligible for that scholarship for the current and
subsequent school years, even if the student's family income rises
above the amount specified in division (A) of section 3310.032 of
the Revised Code, provided the student remains enrolled in a
chartered nonpublic school.
(B) In fiscal year 2015, to provide for the scholarships
awarded under the expansion of the educational choice program
established under section 3310.032 of the Revised Code. The number
of scholarships awarded under the expansion of the educational
choice program shall not exceed the number that can be funded with
the appropriations made by the General Assembly for this purpose.
COMMUNITY SCHOOL FACILITIES
The foregoing appropriation item 200684, Community School
Facilities, shall be used to pay each community school established
under Chapter 3314. of the Revised Code that is not an internet-
or computer-based community school and each STEM school
established under Chapter 3326. of the Revised Code an amount
equal to $100 for each full-time equivalent pupil for assistance
with the cost associated with facilities. If the amount
appropriated is not sufficient, the Department of Education shall
prorate the amounts so that the aggregate amount appropriated is
not exceeded.
SECTION 6. That existing Section 263.320 of Am. Sub. H.B. 59
of the 130th General Assembly, as amended by Am. Sub. H.B. 483 of
the 130th General Assembly, is hereby repealed.
SECTION 7. That Section 9 of Am. Sub. H.B. 487 of the 130th
General Assembly be amended to read as follows:
Sec. 9. (A) For the 2014-2015 school year, each school
district, community school established under Chapter 3314., or
STEM school established under Chapter 3326. of the Revised Code
shall administer to third grade students, for purposes of section
3313.608 of the Revised Code, the English language arts assessment
required under division (A)(1)(a) of section 3301.0710 of the
Revised Code
to third grade students for purposes of section
3313.608 of the Revised Code as follows:
(1) For the fall administration of the assessment, each
district or school shall administer the English language arts
assessment for third graders that the school administered for the
previous year under that section 3301.0710 of the Revised Code.
(2) For the spring administration of the assessment to any
student who fails to attain at least the score range prescribed by
division (A)(3) of section 3301.0710 of the Revised Code, each
district or school shall administer the English language arts
assessment for third graders that the school administered for the
previous year under section 3301.0710 of the Revised Code.
(3) For the spring administration of the assessment to any
student who has attained at least the score range prescribed by
division (A)(3) of section 3301.0710 of the Revised Code, each
district or school shall administer the English language arts
assessment developed by the Partnership for Assessment of
Readiness for College and Careers (PARCC).
(B) The Department shall use the assessments described in
divisions division (A)(1) and (2) of this section to calculate a
district's or school's grades on the state report card prescribed
by section 3302.03 of the Revised Code.
SECTION 8. That existing Section 9 of Am. Sub. H.B. 487 of
the 130th General Assembly is hereby repealed.
SECTION 9. Not later than July 1, 2015, the Governor's
Cabinet Opiate Action Team shall develop recommendations for the
instruction in prescription opioid abuse prevention that is
required for a school district's health curriculum under division
(A)(5)(f) of section 3313.60 of the Revised Code, as amended by
this act, and submit them to the Department of Education. Upon
receiving the recommendations, the Department shall publish them
in a prominent location on the Department's web site for use by
school districts in developing their health curricula.
SECTION 10. Notwithstanding division (G)(2) of section
3301.0711 of the Revised Code, for the 2014-2015 school year only,
the Department of Education or an entity with which the Department
contracts for the scoring of the assessments prescribed by
divisions (A)(1) and (B)(1) and (2) of section 3301.0710 of the
Revised Code shall send to each school district board a list of
the individual scores of all persons taking such an assessment for
that school year not later than November 15, 2015.
SECTION 11. (A)(1) For the 2014-2015 school year, if a
student is enrolled in an appropriate course under either of the
dual enrollment programs described in former divisions (A)(1) or
(4) of section 3313.6013 of the Revised Code, as it existed prior
to September 17, 2014, in the area of science, American history,
or American government, that student shall not be required to take
the science, American history, or American government
end-of-course examination, whichever is applicable, prescribed
under division (B)(2) of section 3301.0712 of the Revised Code.
Instead, that student's final course grade shall be used in lieu
of the applicable end-of-course examination prescribed under that
section.
(2) For the 2014-2015 school year, if a student is enrolled
in an appropriate course under the dual enrollment program
described in former division (A)(3) of section 3313.6013 of the
Revised Code, as it existed prior to September 17, 2014, in the
area of science, American history, or American government, that
student shall either:
(a) Take the applicable examination under that dual
enrollment program in lieu of the science, American history, or
American government end-of-course examination, whichever is
applicable, prescribed under division (B)(2) of section 3301.0712
of the Revised Code;
(b) Not be required to take the science, American history, or
American government end-of-course examination, whichever is
applicable, prescribed under division (B)(2) of section 3301.0712
of the Revised Code. Instead, that student's final course grade
shall be used in lieu of the applicable end-of-course examination
prescribed under that section.
Divisions (A)(1) and (A)(2)(b) of this section shall apply
only to courses for which students receive transcripted credit, as
defined in division (U) of section 3365.01 of the Revised Code.
Neither division shall apply to remedial or developmental courses.
(B) For purposes of this section:
(1) The State Board of Education shall specify the score
levels for each examination required under this section for
purposes of calculating the minimum cumulative performance score
that demonstrates the level of academic achievement necessary to
earn a high school diploma.
(2) The Superintendent of Public Instruction, in consultation
with the Chancellor of the Ohio Board of Regents, shall adopt
guidelines for purposes of calculating the corresponding final
course grades that demonstrate the level of academic achievement
necessary to earn a high school diploma.
SECTION 12. (A) Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in
the Revised Code, for the 2014-2015 school year only, except as
provided in division (B) of this section, a chartered nonpublic
school shall not be required to administer, nor shall a student
enrolled in a chartered nonpublic school be required to take, any
of the end-of-course examinations prescribed by division (B) of
section 3301.0712 of the Revised Code. For purposes of section
3313.612 of the Revised Code, a student's final course grade shall
be used in lieu of a score on the corresponding end-of-course
examination from which the student is exempt to determine whether
the student complies with any graduation testing requirements that
may apply to the student in subsequent school years.
The Superintendent of Public Instruction, in consultation
with the Chancellor of the Ohio Board of Regents, shall adopt
guidelines for purposes of calculating the corresponding final
course grades that demonstrate the level of academic achievement
necessary to earn a high school diploma.
(B) Students attending a chartered nonpublic school under a
state scholarship program, as defined in section 3301.0711 of the
Revised Code, shall continue to be subject to section 3310.14 of
the Revised Code and to the graduation requirements of section
3313.618 of the Revised Code.
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