Every board of directors, unless otherwise
specifically provided by law, shall:
(1) Prepare, negotiate, set forth in writing and adopt,
policy relative to the selection or deletion of instructional
materials. Such policy shall:
(a) State the school district's goals and principles
relative to instructional materials;
(b) Delegate responsibility for the preparation and
recommendation of teachers' reading lists and specify the
procedures to be followed in the selection of all instructional
materials including text books;
(c) Establish an instructional materials committee to be
appointed, with the approval of the school board, by the school
district's chief administrative officer. This committee shall
consist of representative members of the district's professional
staff, including representation from the district's curriculum
development committees, and, in the case of districts which
operate elementary school(s) only, the educational service
district superintendent, one of whose responsibilities shall be
to assure the correlation of those elementary district adoptions
with those of the high school district(s) which serve their
children. The committee may include parents at the school
board's discretion: PROVIDED, That parent members shall make up
less than one-half of the total membership of the committee;
(d) Provide for reasonable notice to parents of the
opportunity to serve on the committee and for terms of office for
members of the instructional materials committee;
(e) Provide a system for receiving, considering and acting
upon written complaints regarding instructional materials used by
the school district;
(f) Provide free text books, supplies and other
instructional materials to be loaned to the pupils of the school,
when, in its judgment, the best interests of the district will be
subserved thereby and prescribe rules and regulations to preserve
such books, supplies and other instructional materials from
unnecessary damage.
Recommendation of instructional materials shall be by the
district's instructional materials committee in accordance with
district policy. Approval or disapproval shall be by the local
school district's board of directors.
Districts may pay the necessary travel and subsistence
expenses for expert counsel from outside the district. In
addition, the committee's expenses incidental to visits to
observe other districts' selection procedures may be reimbursed
by the school district.
Districts may, within limitations stated in board policy,
use and experiment with instructional materials for a period of
time before general adoption is formalized.
Within the limitations of board policy, a school district's
chief administrator may purchase instructional materials to meet
deviant needs or rapidly changing circumstances.
(2) Establish a depreciation scale for determining the value
of texts which students wish to purchase.
[1989 c 371 § 1; 1979 ex.s. c 134 § 2; 1975 1st ex.s. c 275 § 109; 1971 c 48 § 29; 1969 ex.s. c 223 § 28A.58.103. Prior: 1969 c 53 § 1, part; 1967 ex.s. c 29 § 1, part; 1967 c 12 § 1, part; 1965 ex.s. c 49 § 1, part; 1963 c 104 § 1, part; 1963 c 5 § 1, part; 1961 c 305 § 1, part; 1961 c 237 § 1, part; 1961 c 66 § 1, part; 1955 c 68 § 2, part. Formerly RCW 28A.58.103, 28.58.100 (8) and (9).]
NOTES:
Severability -- 1971 c 48: See note following RCW 28A.310.250.
Disposal of obsolete or surplus reading materials by school districts and libraries: RCW 39.33.070.
Surplus texts and other educational aids, notice of availability -- Student priority as to texts: RCW 28A.335.180.