WEST virginia legislature
2017 regular session
Committee Substitute
for
Committee Substitute
for
Senate Bill 186
By Senators Jeffries, Ojeda, Facemire and Woelfel
[Originating in the Committee on Finance; reported on March 13, 2017]
A BILL to amend and reenact §18-5-18 and §18-5-44 of the Code of West Virginia, 1931, as amended; and to amend and reenact §18-8-1a of said code, all relating to adjusting the date upon which children become eligible for certain school programs and school attendance requirements; changing the kindergarten age attainment requirement from age five prior to September 1 to age five prior to July 1, with the July 1 date to become enforceable with the 2019-2020 school year; changing the early childhood education program age attainment date requirement from age four prior to September 1 to age four prior to July 1, with the July 1 date becoming enforceable with the 2018-2019 school year; and changing the age for which compulsory attendance begins to those who attain age six by July 1 of each year, with the July 1 date becoming enforceable with the 2019-2020 school year.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of West Virginia:
That §18-5-18 and §18-5-44 of the Code of West Virginia, 1931, as amended, be amended and reenacted; and that §18-8-1a of said code be amended and reenacted, all to read as follows:
ARTICLE 5. COUNTY BOARD OF EDUCATION.
§18-5-18. Kindergarten programs.
(a) County boards shall provide kindergarten programs for all children who have attained the age of five prior to September 1 of the school year in which the pupil enters the kindergarten program and may, pursuant to the provisions of section forty-four of this article, establish kindergarten programs designed for children below the age of five. The programs for children who shall have attained the age of five shall be full-day everyday programs.
(b) Beginning in the school year 2019-2020, county boards shall provide kindergarten programs for all children who have attained the age of five prior to July 1 of the school year in which the pupil enters the kindergarten program and may, pursuant to the provisions of section forty-four of this article, establish kindergarten programs designed for children below the age of five. The programs for children who shall have attained the age of five shall be full-day everyday programs.
(b) (c) Persons
employed as kindergarten teachers, as distinguished from paraprofessional
personnel, shall be required to hold a certificate valid for teaching at the
assigned level as prescribed by rules established by the state board. The state
board shall establish the minimum requirements for all paraprofessional
personnel employed in kindergarten programs established pursuant to the
provisions of this section and no such paraprofessional personnel may be employed
in any kindergarten program unless he or she meets the minimum requirements.
Beginning July 1, 2014, any person previously employed as an aide in a
kindergarten program and who is employed in the same capacity on and after that
date and any new person employed in that capacity in a kindergarten program on
and after that date shall hold the position of aide and either Early Childhood
Classroom Assistant Teacher I, Early Childhood Classroom Assistant Teacher II
or Early Childhood Classroom Assistant Teacher III. Any person employed as an
aide in a kindergarten program that is eligible for full retirement benefits
before July 1, 2020, may remain employed as an aide in that position and shall
be granted an Early Childhood Classroom Assistant Teacher permanent
authorization by the state superintendent pursuant to section two-a, article
three, chapter eighteen-a of this code.
(c) (d) The
state board, with the advice of the state superintendent, shall establish and
prescribe guidelines and criteria relating to the establishment, operation and
successful completion of kindergarten programs in accordance with the other
provisions of this section. Guidelines and criteria so established and
prescribed also are intended to serve for the establishment and operation of
nonpublic kindergarten programs and shall be used for the evaluation and
approval of those programs by the state superintendent, provided application
for the evaluation and approval is made in writing by proper authorities in
control of the programs. The state superintendent, annually, shall publish a
list of nonpublic kindergarten programs, including Montessori kindergartens
that have been approved in accordance with the provisions of this section.
Montessori kindergartens established and operated in accordance with usual and
customary practices for the use of the Montessori method which have teachers
who have training or experience, regardless of additional certification, in the
use of the Montessori method of instruction for kindergartens shall be considered
to be approved.
(d) (e) Pursuant
to the guidelines and criteria, and only pursuant to the guidelines and
criteria, the county boards may establish programs taking kindergarten to the
homes of the children involved, using educational television, paraprofessional
personnel in addition to and to supplement regularly certified teachers, mobile
or permanent classrooms and other means developed to best carry kindergarten to
the child in its home and enlist the aid and involvement of its parent or
parents in presenting the program to the child; or may develop programs of a
more formal kindergarten type, in existing school buildings, or both, as the
county board may determine, taking into consideration the cost, the terrain,
the existing available facilities, the distances each child may be required to
travel, the time each child may be required to be away from home, the child’s
health, the involvement of parents and other factors as each county board may
find pertinent. The determinations by any county board are final and
conclusive.
§18-5-44. Early childhood education programs.
(a) For the purposes of this section, an “early childhood education program” means a program created under this section for children who have attained the age of four prior to September 1 of the school year in which the children enter the program.
(b) For the purposes of this section beginning in the school year 2018-2019, an “early childhood education program” means a program created under this section for children who have attained the age of four prior to July 1 of the school year in which the children enter the program.
(b) (c)
Findings. –
(1) Among other positive outcomes, early childhood education programs have been determined to:
(A) Improve overall readiness when children enter school;
(B) Decrease behavioral problems;
(C) Improve student attendance;
(D) Increase scores on achievement tests;
(E) Decrease the percentage of students repeating a grade; and
(F) Decrease the number of students placed in special education programs;
(2) Quality early childhood education programs improve school performance and low-quality early childhood education programs may have negative effects, especially for at-risk children;
(3) West Virginia has the lowest percentage of its adult population twenty-five years of age or older with a bachelor’s degree and the education level of parents is a strong indicator of how their children will perform in school;
(4) During the 2006-2007 school year, West Virginia ranked thirty-ninth among the fifty states in the percentage of school children eligible for free and reduced lunches and this percentage is a strong indicator of how the children will perform in school;
(5) For the school year 2008-2009, 13,135 students were enrolled in prekindergarten, a number equal to approximately sixty-three percent of the number of students enrolled in kindergarten;
(6) Excluding projected increases due to increases in enrollment in the early childhood education program, projections indicate that total student enrollment in West Virginia will decline by one percent, or by approximately 2,704 students, by the school year 2012-2013;
(7) In part, because of the dynamics of the state aid formula, county boards will continue to enroll four-year-old students to offset the declining enrollments;
(8) West Virginia has a comprehensive kindergarten program for five-year-olds, but the program was established in a manner that resulted in unequal implementation among the counties, which helped create deficit financial situations for several county boards;
(9) Expansion of current efforts to implement a comprehensive early childhood education program should avoid the problems encountered in kindergarten implementation;
(10) Because of the dynamics of the state aid formula, counties experiencing growth are at a disadvantage in implementing comprehensive early childhood education programs; and
(11) West Virginia citizens will benefit from the establishment of quality comprehensive early childhood education programs.
(c) (d)
Beginning no later than the school year 2012-2013 and continuing thereafter,
county boards shall provide early childhood education programs for all children
who have attained the age of four prior to September 1 of the school year in
which the children enter the early childhood education program. Beginning no
later than the school year 2016-2017 and continuing thereafter, these early
childhood education programs shall provide at least forty-eight thousand
minutes annually and no less than fifteen hundred minutes of instruction per
week.
(e) Beginning in the school year 2018-2019, county boards shall provide early childhood education programs for all children who have attained the age of four prior to July 1 of the school year in which the children enter the early childhood education program.
(d) (f)
The program shall meet the following criteria:
(1) It shall be voluntary, except that, upon enrollment, the provisions of section one-a, article eight of this chapter apply to an enrolled student, subject to subdivision (4) of this subsection;
(2) It shall be open to all children meeting the age requirement set forth in this section;
(3) It shall provide no less than fifteen hundred minutes of instruction per week, in a full-day program with at least forty-eight thousand minutes of instruction annually; and
(4) It shall permit a parent of an enrolled child to withdraw the child from that program by notifying the district in writing. A child withdrawn under this section is not subject to the attendance provisions of this chapter until that child again enrolls in a public school in this state.
(e) (g)
Enrollment of students in Head Start, or in any other program approved by the
state superintendent as provided in this section, may be counted toward
satisfying the requirement of subsection (c) of this section.
(f) (h)
For the purposes of implementation financing, all counties are encouraged to
make use of funds from existing sources, including:
(1) Federal funds provided under the Elementary and Secondary Education Act pursuant to 20 U. S. C. §6301, et seq.;
(2) Federal funds provided for Head Start pursuant to 42 U. S. C. §9831, et seq.;
(3) Federal funds for temporary assistance to needy families pursuant to 42 U. S. C. §601, et seq.;
(4) Funds provided by the School Building Authority pursuant to article nine-d of this chapter;
(5) In the case of counties with declining enrollments, funds from the state aid formula above the amount indicated for the number of students actually enrolled in any school year; and
(6) Any other public or private funds.
(g) (i)
Each county board shall develop a plan for implementing the program required by
this section. The plan shall include the following elements:
(1) An analysis of the demographics of the county related to early childhood education program implementation;
(2) An analysis of facility and personnel needs;
(3) Financial requirements for implementation and potential sources of funding to assist implementation;
(4) Details of how the county board will cooperate and collaborate with other early childhood education programs including, but not limited to, Head Start, to maximize federal and other sources of revenue;
(5) Specific time lines for implementation; and
(6) Any other items the state board may require by policy.
(h) (j)
A county board shall submit its plan to the Secretary of the Department of
Health and Human Resources. The secretary shall approve the plan if the
following conditions are met:
(1) The county board has maximized the use of federal and other available funds for early childhood programs; and
(2) The county board has provided for the maximum implementation of Head Start programs and other public and private programs approved by the state superintendent pursuant to the terms of this section; or
(3) The secretary finds that, if the county board has not met one or more of the requirements of this subsection, the county board has acted in good faith and the failure to comply was not the primary fault of the county board. Any denial by the secretary may be appealed to the circuit court of the county in which the county board is located.
(i) (k)
The county board shall submit its plan for approval to the state board. The
state board shall approve the plan if the county board has complied
substantially with the requirements of subsection (g) of this section and has
obtained the approval required in subsection (h) of this section.
(j) (l)
Every county board shall submit its plan for reapproval by the Secretary of the
Department of Health and Human Resources and by the state board at least every
two years after the initial approval of the plan and until full implementation
of the early childhood education program in the county. As part of the
submission, the county board shall provide a detailed statement of the progress
made in implementing its plan. The standards and procedures provided for the
original approval of the plan apply to any reapproval.
(k) (m)
A county board may not increase the total number of students enrolled in the
county in an early childhood program until its program is approved by the
Secretary of the Department of Health and Human Resources and the state board.
(l) (n)
The state board annually may grant a county board a waiver for total or partial
implementation if the state board finds that all of the following conditions
exist:
(1) The county board is unable to comply either because:
(A) It does not have sufficient facilities available; or
(B) It does not and has not had available funds sufficient to implement the program;
(2) The county has not experienced a decline in enrollment at least equal to the total number of students to be enrolled; and
(3) Other agencies of government have not made sufficient funds or facilities available to assist in implementation.
Any county board seeking a waiver shall apply with the supporting data to meet the criteria for which they are eligible on or before March 25 for the following school year. The state superintendent shall grant or deny the requested waiver on or before April 15 of that same year.
(m) (o)
The provisions of subsections (b), (c) and (d), section eighteen of this
article relating to kindergarten apply to early childhood education programs in
the same manner in which they apply to kindergarten programs.
(n) (p)
Except as required by federal law or regulation, no county board may enroll
students who will be less than four years of age prior to September 1 for the
year they enter school.
(q) Except as required by federal law or regulation, beginning in the school year 2018-2019, no county board may enroll students who will be less than four years of age prior to July 1 for the year they enter school.
(o) (r)
Neither the state board nor the state department may provide any funds to any
county board for the purpose of implementing this section unless the county
board has a plan approved pursuant to subsections (h), (i) and (j) of this
section.
(p) (s)
The state board shall promulgate a rule in accordance with the provisions of
article three-b, chapter twenty-nine-a of this code for the purposes of
implementing the provisions of this section. The state board shall consult
with the Secretary of the Department of Health and Human Resources in the
preparation of the rule. The rule shall contain the following:
(1) Standards for curriculum;
(2) Standards for preparing students;
(3) Attendance requirements;
(4) Standards for personnel; and
(5) Any other terms necessary to implement the provisions of this section.
(q) (t)
The rule shall include the following elements relating to curriculum standards:
(1) A requirement that the curriculum be designed to address the developmental needs of four-year-old children consistent with prevailing research on how children learn;
(2) A requirement that the curriculum be designed to achieve long-range goals for the social, emotional, physical and academic development of young children;
(3) A method for including a broad range of content that is relevant, engaging and meaningful to young children;
(4) A requirement that the curriculum incorporate a wide variety of learning experiences, materials and equipment, and instructional strategies to respond to differences in prior experience, maturation rates and learning styles that young children bring to the classroom;
(5) A requirement that the curriculum be designed to build on what children already know in order to consolidate their learning and foster their acquisition of new concepts and skills;
(6) A requirement that the curriculum meet the recognized standards of the relevant subject matter disciplines;
(7) A requirement that the curriculum engage children actively in the learning process and provide them with opportunities to make meaningful choices;
(8) A requirement that the curriculum emphasize the development of thinking, reasoning, decisionmaking and problem-solving skills;
(9) A set of clear guidelines for communicating with parents and involving them in decisions about the instructional needs of their children; and
(10) A systematic plan for evaluating program success in meeting the needs of young children and for helping them to be ready to succeed in school.
(r) (u) After the school year
2012-2013, on or before July 1 of each year, each county board shall report the
following information to the Secretary of the Department of Health and Human
Resources and the state superintendent:
(1) Documentation indicating the extent to which county boards are maximizing resources by using the existing capacity of community-based programs, including, but not limited to, Head Start and child care; and
(2) For those county boards that are including eligible children attending approved, contracted community-based programs in their net enrollment for the purposes of calculating state aid pursuant to article nine-a of this chapter, documentation that the county board is equitably distributing funding for all children regardless of setting.
ARTICLE 8. COMPULSORY SCHOOL ATTENDANCE.
§18-8-1a. Commencement and termination of compulsory school attendance; public school entrance requirements; exceptions.
(a) Notwithstanding the provisions of section one of this article, compulsory school attendance begins with the school year in which the sixth birthday is reached prior to September 1 of such year or upon enrolling in a publicly supported kindergarten program and, subject to subdivision (3) of this subsection, continues to the sixteenth birthday or for as long as the student continues to be enrolled in a school system after the sixteenth birthday.
(1) A child may be removed from such kindergarten program when the principal, teacher and parent or guardian concur that the best interest of the child would not be served by requiring further attendance: Provided, That the principal shall make the final determination with regard to compulsory school attendance in a publicly supported kindergarten program.
(2) The compulsory school attendance provision of this article shall be enforced against a person eighteen years of age or older for as long as the person continues to be enrolled in a school system and may not be enforced against the parent, guardian or custodian of the person.
(3) Beginning with the 2011-2012 high school freshman cohort class of students, and notwithstanding the provisions of section one of this article, compulsory school attendance begins with the school year in which the sixth birthday is reached prior to September 1 of such year or upon enrolling in a publicly supported kindergarten program and continues to the seventeenth birthday or for as long as the student continues to be enrolled in a school system after the seventeenth birthday: Provided, That beginning in the school year 2019-2020, compulsory school attendance begins with the school year in which the sixth birthday is reached prior to July 1 of such year or upon enrolling in a publicly supported kindergarten program.
(b) Attendance at a state-approved or Montessori kindergarten, as provided in section eighteen, article five of this chapter, is deemed school attendance for purposes of this section. Prior to entrance into the first grade in accordance with section five, article two of this chapter, each child must have either:
(1) Successfully completed such publicly or privately supported, state-approved kindergarten program or Montessori kindergarten program; or
(2) Successfully completed an entrance test of basic readiness skills approved by the county in which the school is located. The test may be administered in lieu of kindergarten attendance only under extraordinary circumstances to be determined by the county board.
(c) Notwithstanding the provisions of this section, section five, article two of this chapter and section eighteen, article five of this chapter, a county board may provide for advanced entrance or placement under policies adopted by said board for any child who has demonstrated sufficient mental and physical competency for such entrance or placement.
(d) This section does not prevent a student from another state from enrolling in the same grade in a public school in West Virginia as the student was enrolled at the school from which the student transferred.
NOTE: The purpose of this bill is to adjust the date upon which children become eligible for certain school programs and school attendance requirements. The bill changes the kindergarten age attainment requirement from age five prior to September 1, to age five prior to July 1. The bill changes the early childhood education program age attainment date requirement from age four prior to September 1, to age four prior to July 1. The bill changes the age for which compulsory attendance begins to those who attain age six by July 1, of each year.
Strike-throughs indicate language that would be stricken from a heading or the present law and underscoring indicates new language that would be added.