South Carolina General Assembly
113th Session, 1999-2000

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Bill 1307


Indicates Matter Stricken
Indicates New Matter


                    Current Status

Bill Number:                      1307
Type of Legislation:              General Bill GB
Introducing Body:                 Senate
Introduced Date:                  20000404
Primary Sponsor:                  Short
All Sponsors:                     Short and Gregory
Drafted Document Number:          l:\council\bills\gjk\21200sd00.doc
Residing Body:                    Senate
Current Committee:                Education Committee 04 SED
Subject:                          Underperforming students, assessment and 
                                  probation procedures; academics; School 
                                  districts, Curriculum


                        History

Body    Date      Action Description                     Com     Leg Involved
______  ________  ______________________________________ _______ ____________
Senate  20000404  Introduced, read first time,           04 SED
                  referred to Committee


              Versions of This Bill

View additional legislative information at the LPITS web site.


(Text matches printed bills. Document has been reformatted to meet World Wide Web specifications.)

A BILL

TO AMEND SECTION 59-18-500, AS AMENDED, CODE OF LAWS OF SOUTH CAROLINA, 1976, RELATING TO ACADEMIC PLANS FOR STUDENTS LACKING SKILLS TO PERFORM IN THE CURRENT GRADE LEVEL, SO AS TO REVISE THE MANNER IN WHICH SUCH STUDENTS SHALL BE ASSESSED, TO AUTHORIZE ACADEMIC PROBATIONS FOR A PERIOD OF ONE YEAR, AND TO PROVIDE FOR FURTHER PROCEDURES AND REQUIREMENTS IN REGARD TO THE PROMOTION AND RETENTION OF THESE STUDENTS.

Be it enacted by the General Assembly of the State of South Carolina:

SECTION 1. Section 59-18-500 of the 1976 Code, as last amended by Act 100 of 1999, is further amended to read:

"Section 59-18-500. (A) Beginning in 1998-99 and annually thereafter, at At the beginning of each school year, the school must notify the parents of the need for a conference for each student in grades three through eight who lacks the skills to perform at his current grade level based on assessment results, school work, or and teacher judgment. At the conference, the student, parent, and appropriate school personnel will discuss the steps needed to ensure student success at the next grade level. An academic plan will be developed to outline additional services the school and district will provide and the actions the student and the parents will undertake to further student success.

(B) The participants in the conference will sign off on the academic plan, including any requirement for summer school attendance. Should a parent, after attempts by the school to schedule the conference at their convenience, not attend the conference, the school will appoint a school mentor, either a teacher or adult volunteer, to work with the student and advocate for services. A copy of the academic plan will be sent to the parents by certified mail.

(C) At the end of the school year, the student's performance will be reviewed by appropriate school personnel. If the student's work has not been at grade level or if the terms of the academic plan have not been met, the student may be retained, he may be required to attend summer school, or he may be required to attend a comprehensive remediation program the following year designed to address objectives outlined in the academic plan for promotion. Students required to participate the following year in a comprehensive remediation program must be considered on academic probation. Comprehensive remediation programs established by the district shall operate outside of the normal school day and must meet the guidelines established for these programs by the State Board of Education. If there is a compelling reason why the student should not be required to attend summer school or be retained, the parent or student may appeal to a district review panel.

(D) At the end of summer school, a district panel must review the student's progress and report to the parents whether the student's academic progress indicates readiness to achieve grade level standards for the next grade. If the student is not at grade level or the students, based on assessment results show standards are not met, school work, and teacher judgment, the student must may be retained or may be placed on academic probation the following year. A conference of the student, parents, and appropriate school personnel must revise the academic plan to address academic difficulties. At the conference it must be stipulated that academic probation means if either school work is not up to grade level or if assessment results again show standards are not met, the student will be retained. The district's appeals process remains in effect. At the end of the academic probation year, the student may be promoted or retained based on local board policy established in accordance with subsection (F) of this section.

(E) However, beginning with school year 2000-2001 and with the students in the third grade class, if a student has been on academic probation and school work, teacher judgement and assessment results indicate the student is not at grade level, then the student must be retained. Should there be a compelling reason why retention is not in the best interest of the student, then the parents, student, or school may appeal the retention to the district review panel. Based on the information presented at the appeal, if the review panel finds that retention is not in the best interest of the student, the student may be promoted to the next grade.

(E)(F) Each district board of trustees will establish policies on academic conferences, individual student academic plans, promotion and retention, and district level reviews. Information on these policies must be given to every student and parent. Each district is to monitor the implementation of academic plans as a part of the local accountability plan. Districts are to use Act 135 of 1993 academic assistance funds to carry out academic plans, including required summer school attendance. Districts' policies regarding retention of students in grades one and two remain in effect.

(F)(G) The State Board of Education, working with the Oversight Committee, will establish guidelines until regulations are promulgated to carry out this section. The State Board of Education, working with the Accountability Division, will promulgate regulations requiring the reporting of the number of students retained at each grade level, the number of students on probation, number of students retained after being on probation, and number of students removed from probation. This data will be used as a performance indicator for accountability."

SECTION 2. This act takes effect upon approval by the Governor.

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