(1) The legislature has made a
commitment to rigorous academic standards for receipt of a high
school diploma. The primary way that students will demonstrate
that they meet the standards in reading, writing, mathematics,
and science is through the Washington assessment of student learning. Only objective
assessments that are comparable in rigor to the state assessment
are authorized as an alternative assessment. Before seeking an
alternative assessment, the legislature expects students to make
a genuine effort to meet state standards, through regular and
consistent attendance at school and participation in extended
learning and other assistance programs.
(2) Under RCW 28A.655.061, beginning in the 2006-07 school
year, the superintendent of public instruction shall implement
objective alternative assessment methods as provided in this
section for students to demonstrate achievement of the state
standards in content areas in which the student has not yet met
the standard on the high school Washington assessment of student learning. A student may access
an alternative if the student meets applicable eligibility
criteria in RCW 28A.655.061 and this section and other
eligibility criteria established by the superintendent of public
instruction, including but not limited to attendance criteria and
participation in the remediation or supplemental instruction
contained in the student learning plan developed under RCW 28A.655.061. A school district may waive attendance and/or
remediation criteria for special, unavoidable circumstances.
(3) For the purposes of this section, "applicant" means a
student seeking to use one of the alternative assessment methods
in this section.
(4) One alternative assessment method shall be a combination
of the applicant's grades in applicable courses and the
applicant's highest score on the high school Washington assessment of student learning, as provided in this
subsection. A student is eligible to apply for the alternative
assessment method under this subsection (4) if the student has a
cumulative grade point average of at least 3.2 on a four point
grading scale. The superintendent of public instruction shall
determine which high school courses are applicable to the
alternative assessment method and shall issue guidelines to
school districts.
(a) Using guidelines prepared by the superintendent of
public instruction, a school district shall identify the group of
students in the same school as the applicant who took the same
high school courses as the applicant in the applicable content
area. From the group of students identified in this manner, the
district shall select the comparison cohort that shall be those
students who met or slightly exceeded the state standard on the Washington assessment of student learning.
(b) The district shall compare the applicant's grades in
high school courses in the applicable content area to the grades
of students in the comparison cohort for the same high school
courses. If the applicant's grades are equal to or above the
mean grades of the comparison cohort, the applicant shall be
deemed to have met the state standard on the alternative
assessment.
(c) An applicant may not use the alternative assessment
under this subsection (4) if there are fewer than six students in
the comparison cohort.
(5) The superintendent of public instruction shall develop
an alternative assessment method that shall be an evaluation of a
collection of work samples prepared and submitted by the
applicant. Effective September 1, 2009, collection of work
samples may be submitted only in content areas where meeting the
state standard on the high school assessment is required for
purposes of graduation.
(a) The superintendent of public instruction shall develop
guidelines for the types and number of work samples in each
content area that may be submitted as a collection of evidence
that the applicant has met the state standard in that content
area. Work samples may be collected from academic, career and
technical, or remedial courses and may include performance tasks
as well as written products. The superintendent shall submit the
guidelines for approval by the state board of education.
(b) The superintendent shall develop protocols for
submission of the collection of work samples that include
affidavits from the applicant's teachers and school district that
the samples are the work of the applicant and a requirement that
a portion of the samples be prepared under the direct supervision
of a classroom teacher. The superintendent shall submit the
protocols for approval by the state board of education.
(c) The superintendent shall develop uniform scoring
criteria for evaluating the collection of work samples and submit
the scoring criteria for approval by the state board of
education. Collections shall be scored at the state level or
regionally by a panel of educators selected and trained by the
superintendent to ensure objectivity, reliability, and rigor in
the evaluation. An educator may not score work samples submitted
by applicants from the educator's school district. If the panel
awards an applicant's collection of work samples the minimum
required score, the applicant shall be deemed to have met the
state standard on the alternative assessment.
(d) Using an open and public process that includes
consultation with district superintendents, school principals,
and other educators, the state board of education shall consider
the guidelines, protocols, scoring criteria, and other
information regarding the collection of work samples submitted by
the superintendent of public instruction. The collection of work
samples may be implemented as an alternative assessment after the
state board of education has approved the guidelines, protocols,
and scoring criteria and determined that the collection of work
samples: (i) Will meet professionally accepted standards for a
valid and reliable measure of the grade level expectations and
the essential academic learning requirements; and (ii) is
comparable to or exceeds the rigor of the skills and knowledge
that a student must demonstrate on the Washington assessment of student learning in the applicable
content area. The state board shall make an approval decision
and determination no later than December 1, 2006, and thereafter
may increase the required rigor of the collection of work
samples.
(e) By September of 2006, the superintendent of public
instruction shall develop informational materials for parents,
teachers, and students regarding the collection of work samples
and the status of its development as an alternative assessment
method. The materials shall provide specific guidance regarding
the type and number of work samples likely to be required,
include examples of work that meets the state learning standards,
and describe the scoring criteria and process for the collection.
The materials shall also encourage students in the graduating
class of 2008 to begin creating a collection if they believe they
may seek to use the collection once it is implemented as an
alternative assessment.
(6)(a) For students enrolled in a career and technical
education program approved under RCW 28A.700.030, the
superintendent of public instruction shall develop additional
guidelines for collections of work samples that are tailored to
different career and technical programs. The additional
guidelines shall:
(i) Provide multiple examples of work samples that are
related to the particular career and technical program;
(ii) Permit work samples based on completed activities or
projects where demonstration of academic knowledge is inferred;
and
(iii) Provide multiple examples of work samples drawn from
career and technical courses.
(b) The purpose of the additional guidelines is to provide a
clear pathway toward a certificate of academic achievement for
career and technical students by showing them applied and
relevant opportunities to demonstrate their knowledge and skills,
and to provide guidance to teachers in integrating academic and
career and technical instruction and assessment and assisting
career and technical students in compiling a collection. The
superintendent of public instruction shall develop and
disseminate additional guidelines for no fewer than ten career
and technical education programs representing a variety of
program offerings by no later than September 1, 2008. Guidelines
for ten additional programs shall be developed and disseminated
no later than June 1, 2009.
(c) The superintendent shall consult with community and
technical colleges, employers, the workforce training and
education coordinating board, apprenticeship programs, and other
regional and national experts in career and technical education
to create appropriate guidelines and examples of work samples and
other evidence of a career and technical student's knowledge and
skills on the state academic standards.
(7) The superintendent of public instruction shall study the
feasibility of using existing mathematics assessments in
languages other than English as an additional alternative
assessment option. The study shall include an estimation of the
cost of translating the tenth grade mathematics assessment into
other languages and scoring the assessments should they be
implemented.
(8) The superintendent of public instruction shall
implement:
(a) By June 1, 2006, a process for students to appeal the
score they received on the high school assessments; and
(b) By January 1, 2007, guidelines and appeal processes for
waiving specific requirements in RCW 28A.655.061 pertaining to
the certificate of academic achievement and to the certificate of
individual achievement for students who: (i) Transfer to a
Washington public school in their junior or senior year with the
intent of obtaining a public high school diploma, or (ii) have
special, unavoidable circumstances.
(9) The state board of education shall examine opportunities
for additional alternative assessments, including the possible
use of one or more standardized norm-referenced student
achievement tests and the possible use of the reading, writing,
or mathematics portions of the ACT ASSET and ACT COMPASS test
instruments as objective alternative assessments for
demonstrating that a student has met the state standards for the
certificate of academic achievement. The state board shall
submit its findings and recommendations to the education
committees of the legislature by January 10, 2008.
(10) The superintendent of public instruction shall adopt
rules to implement this section.
[2009 c 556 § 19; 2008 c 170 § 205; 2007 c 354 § 6; 2006 c 115 § 1.]
NOTES:
Findings -- Intent -- Part headings not law -- 2008 c 170: See RCW 28A.700.005 and 28A.700.901.
Findings -- Intent -- 2007 c 354: See note following RCW 28A.655.061.