WEST virginia legislature
2017 regular session
Committee Substitute
for
House Bill 2651
By Delegates Espinosa, Romine, R., Westfall, Dean, Upson, Higginbotham, Kelly, Harshbarger, Cooper, Wagner and Rohrbach
[Originating in the Committee on Education]
February 27, 2017
A BILL to amend and reenact §18-28-3 of the Code of West Virginia, 1931, as amended, relating generally to standardized testing requirements for nonpublic schools; removing outdated language; requiring standardized test to be administered to nonpublic students at same grade levels and subject areas required in public schools; requiring the test administered to be a nationally normed standardized achievement test published or normed within ten years from the date of administration; allowing additional testing at sole discretion of school; limiting accountability for composite scores to grade levels and subject areas required in public schools; removing requirement that every child be tested; and requiring minimum student participation rate on test for composite score to be valid.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of West Virginia:
That §18-28-3 of the Code of West Virginia, 1931, as amended, be amended and reenacted to read as follows:
ARTICLE 28. PRIVATE, PAROCHIAL OR CHURCH SCHOOLS, OR SCHOOLS OF A RELIGIOUS ORDER.
§18-28-3. Standardized testing requirements.
(a) Each private, parochial or church school or school of
a religious order or other nonpublic school electing to operate under this
statute in lieu of the approval requirements set forth as part of section one,
article eight, chapter eighteen, exemption A shall administer on an annual
basis during each school year to every child enrolled therein between the
ages of seven and sixteen years either the comprehensive test of basic skills,
the California achievement test, the Stanford achievement test or the Iowa
tests of basic skills tests of achievement and proficiency students
at the same grade levels as those required in the public schools of the state
for administration of the state-wide summative assessment a nationally normed standardized achievement test which will be selected by the chief administrative
officer of each school in the subjects of English, grammar, reading, social
studies, science and mathematics required in the public schools
of the state for administration of the state-wide summative assessment. The selected test shall be published or normed not
more than ten years from the date of administration and shall be administered under standardized
conditions as set forth by the published instructions of the selected test:
Provided, That any private, parochial, church school, school of a religious
order or other nonpublic school that exclusively teaches special education
students or children with learning disabilities shall not be required to comply
with this subsection or subsection (d) of this section, but shall academically
assess every child enrolled therein between the ages of seven and sixteen
years students at the same grade levels as those required in the
public schools of the state for administration of the state-wide summative
assessment on an annual basis during each
school year by one or more of the following methods: (1) A standardized group
achievement test; (2) a standardized individual achievement test; (3) a written
narrative of an evaluation of a portfolio of samples of a child's work; (4) an
alternative academic assessment of the child's proficiency as mutually agreed
by the county superintendent, parent(s) or legal guardian(s) and the school:
Provided, However, That nothing in this subsection
prohibits any private parochial, church school, school of a religious order or
other nonpublic school from administering standardized achievement tests in
additional subject areas or at additional grade levels as they may choose at
their sole discretion.
(b) Each child's testing results and the school composite test results shall be made available to such child's parents or legal guardians. Upon request of a duly authorized representative of the West Virginia Department of Education, the school composite test results shall be furnished by the school or by a parents organization composed of the parents or guardians of children enrolled in said school to the State Superintendent of Schools.
(c) Each school to which this article applies shall:
(1) Establish curriculum objectives, the attainment of which will enable students to develop the potential for becoming literate citizens.
(2) Provide an instructional program that will make possible the acquisition of competencies necessary to become a literate citizen.
(d) If such school composite
test results for any single year for English, grammar, reading, social
studies, science and mathematics the standardized achievement tests
administered in the same subject areas and grade levels as required in the
public schools of the state for administration of the state-wide summative
assessment fall below the fortieth
percentile on the selected tests, the school as herein described shall initiate
a remedial program to foster achievement above that level. If after two
consecutive calendar years school composite test results are not above the
fortieth percentile level, attendance at the school may no longer satisfy the
compulsory school attendance requirement exemption of exemption K, section one,
article eight, chapter eighteen, until such time as the percentile standards
herein set forth are met. For the purposes of this subsection, the
student participation rate on a standardized achievement test must be at least
ninety percent for a composite score to be considered valid.
Strike-throughs indicate language that would be stricken from a heading or the present law and underscoring indicates new language that would be added.