SB 520,
as amended, Steinberg. Student instruction: California Online Studentbegin delete Access Platform.end deletebegin insert Incentive Grant programs.end insert
(1) The Donahoe Higher Education Act authorizes the activities of the 4 segments of the postsecondary education system in the state. These segments include the 3 public postsecondary segments: the University of California, administered by the Regents of the University of California, the California State University, administered by the Trustees of the California State University, and the California Community Colleges, administered by the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges. Private and independent postsecondary educational institutions constitute the other segment.
Provisions of the Donahoe Higher Education Act apply to the University of California only to the extent that the regents act, by resolution, to make them applicable.
This bill would establish the
California Online Student Accessbegin delete Platformend deletebegin insert Incentive Grant programs as 3 separate programsend insert under the administration of the President of the University of California, the Chancellor of the California State University, and the Chancellor of the California Community Colleges,begin delete jointly, with the academic senates of the respective segmentsend deletebegin insert for each segment respectively, in consultation with their respective statewide academic senatesend insert.begin delete The bill would require the platform, among other things, to provide an efficient statewide mechanism for online course providers to offer transferable courses for credit and to create a pool of these online courses.end delete
The bill would require the President of the University of California, the Chancellor of the California State University, and the Chancellor of the California Community Colleges,begin delete jointly, with the academic senates of the respective segmentsend deletebegin insert in consultation with their respective statewide academic senatesend insert, tobegin insert eachend insert develop a list ofbegin delete the 50 most impactedend deletebegin insert 20 high-demandend insert lower division coursesbegin delete, as defined,end delete atbegin delete the University of California, the California State University, and the
California Community Collegesend deletebegin insert his or her segmentend insert that are deemed necessary for program completion, deemed satisfactory for meeting general education requirements, or in areas defined asbegin delete high-demandend delete transferable lower division courses under the Intersegmental General Education Transfer Curriculum. For thesebegin delete causesend deletebegin insert coursesend insert, the bill would require thebegin delete president,end deletebegin insert president andend insert chancellors,begin delete and senatesend deletebegin insert
in consultation with their respective academic senates,end insert tobegin delete jointlyend deletebegin insert each provide up to 15 incentive grants to faculty and campuses toend insert facilitatebegin delete certainend delete intersegmental and intrasegmental partnerships and partnerships between online course technology providers and facultybegin delete of the University of California, the California State University, and the California Community Colleges, as a method to achieve the goal ofend deletebegin insert
toend insert significantlybegin delete increasingend deletebegin insert increaseend insert onlinebegin delete courseend delete
options for studentsbegin insert and high school pupilsend insert for the fall term of thebegin delete 2014--15end deletebegin insert 2014-15end insert academic year.
The bill would require the online coursesbegin delete approved
through the platformend deletebegin insert supported by incentive grant fundsend insert to be placed in the California Virtual Campus. The bill would require that matriculated students of campuses of the University of California,begin insert theend insert California State University, orbegin insert theend insert California Community Colleges, and California high school pupils, who complete online coursesbegin delete developed through the platformend deletebegin insert supported by incentive grant fundsend insert and achieve a passing score on corresponding course examinations, be awarded full academic credit forbegin delete an equivalentend deletebegin insert
theend insert course at the University of California, the California State University, or the California Community Colleges, as applicable.
The bill would provide that funding for the implementation of this provision would be provided in the annual Budget Act, and express the intent of the Legislature that the receipt of funding by the University of California for the implementation of this provision be contingent on its compliance with its requirements.
The bill would prohibit public funds from being used to fund any private aspect of a partnership developed under the bill between faculty of the University of California,begin insert theend insert California State University, or the California Community Colleges and an online course technology provider. This bill would provide thatbegin delete the state would retain all appropriate rights toend delete
intellectual propertybegin delete it creates or developsend deletebegin insert developed by a segmentend insert in the implementation of the billbegin insert would be owned and managed by that segment according to its existing policiesend insert.
Because this provision would require community colleges to award academic credit under these circumstances, it would constitute a state-mandated local program.
(2) Existing law, until January 1, 2014, establishes the California Virtual Campus to facilitate ongoing collaboration and joint efforts relating to the use of technology resources and high-speed Internet connectivity to support teaching, learning, workforce
development, and research. Existing law, until January 1, 2014, authorizes the California Virtual Campus grant recipient to convene at least 4 leadership stakeholder group meetings annually comprised of representatives from the State Department of Education, the California Technology Assistance Project, and other related programs administered through the department, including adult education, localbegin delete educationend deletebegin insert educationalend insert agencies, the California Community Colleges, the California State University, the University of California, independent colleges and universities, the California State Library, and representatives from community-based organizations to ensure the efforts affecting segments represented are appropriately meeting the needs of those segments.
This bill would extend the provisions establishing the California Virtual Campus until January 1, 2017. This bill would require the representatives in the stakeholder group meetings from the California Community Colleges, the California State University, and the University of California to include, but not be limited to, faculty members from these institutions. This bill would make additional nonsubstantive changes in these provisions. By requiring faculty members from community college districts to attend these meetings, this bill would impose a state-mandated local program.
(3) The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.
This bill would provide that, if the Commission on State Mandates determines that the bill contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement for those costs shall be made pursuant to these statutory provisions.
Vote: majority. Appropriation: no. Fiscal committee: yes. State-mandated local program: yes.
The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
The Legislature finds and declares all of the
2following:
3(a) In recent years, California’s public higher education
4institutions have faced skyrocketing demand for enrollment at a
5time when they lack capacity to provide students with access to
6courses necessary for program completion and success.
7(b) In the 2012-13 academic year, 85 percent of California
8Community Colleges (CCC) reported having waiting lists for their
9fall 2012 course sections, with a statewide average of more than
10
7,000 students on waiting lists per college.
11(c) Similarly, impacted courses have contributed significantly
12to difficulties within the University of California (UC) and
13California State University (CSU) systems, with figures indicating
14that only 60 percent and 16 percent of students, respectively, are
15able to earn a degree within four years, with lack of access to key
16courses a factor in increased time-to-degree.
17(d) With rapidly developing innovation in online course delivery
18models, California’s public institutions of higher education have
19a unique opportunity to meet critical demands for enrollment and
20reduce time-to-degree by providing students with access to
21high-quality, alternative, online pathways to successfully complete
22and obtain credit for the most impacted lower
division courses.
23(e) California could significantly benefit frombegin delete a statutorily begin insert an incentive grant program aimed at assisting faculty
24enacted, quality-first, faculty-led framework that increases
25partnerships between faculty and online course technology
26providers aimed at allowing students in strategically selected lower
27division areas to take online courses for credit at the UC, CSU,
28and CCC systems. While providing easy access to these courses,
P5 1these systems could also continually assess the value of the courses
2and the rates of student success in utilizing these alternative online
3pathwaysend delete
4and individual campuses within the UC, CSU, and CCC systems
5to provide
students increased opportunities to take strategically
6selected lower division coursesend insertbegin insert onlineend insert.
Section 66409.3 is added to the Education Code, to
8read:
(a) The California Online Student Access Platformis
10hereby established. The platform shall be developed and
11administered by the President of the University of California, the
12Chancellor of the California State University, and the Chancellor
13of the California Community Colleges, jointly, with the academic
14senates of the respective segments. As used in this section,
15“platform” means the California Online Student Access Platform
16established by this section.
17(b) The platform shall facilitate
appropriate partnerships
18including, but not necessarily limited to, intersegmental and
19intrasegmental partnerships developed pursuant to Section 66950
20and partnerships between online course providers and faculty
21members of the University of California, California State
22University, and the California Community Colleges for the
23development and deployment of high-quality online options for
24strategically selected lower division courses. The platform shall
25accomplish all of the following objectives:
26(1) Provide statewide
facilitation of intersegmental and
27intrasegmental partnerships developed pursuant to Section 66950
28and appropriate partnerships between
faculty members of the
29University of California, the California State University, and the
30California
Community Colleges, and online course technology
31providers to offer transferable courses for credit.
32(2) Create a pool of up to 50 approved and transferable online
33courses for credit through which students seeking to enroll may
34easily access those courses and related content.
35(3) Provide a state-level faculty-led process that places the
36highest priority on educational quality through which online
37courses can be subjected to high-quality standards and review.
38(4) Allow the state, the public, students, faculty, and other
39stakeholders to examine student success rates within the platform.
P6 1(c) For purposes of accomplishing all of the objectives of the
2platform as specified in subdivision (b), the
President of the
3University of California, the Chancellor of the California State
4University, and the Chancellor of the California Community
5Colleges, jointly, with the academic senates of the respective
6segments, shall do all of the following:
7(1) (A) Develop a list of the 50 most impacted lower division
8courses at the University of California, the California State
9University, and the California Community Colleges that are
10deemed necessary for program completion , deemed satisfactory
11for meeting general education
requirements, or in areas defined
12as high-demand transferable lower division courses under the
13Intersegmental General Education Transfer Curriculum.
14(B) For purposes of this paragraph, “impacted lower division
15course” means a course in which, during most academic terms,
16the number of students seeking to enroll in the course exceeds the
17number of spaces available in the course.
18(2) For any of the courses that meet the
criteria identified under
19paragraph (1), facilitate partnerships, including, but not necessarily
20limited to, intersegmental and intrasegmental partnerships
21developed pursuant to Section 66950 and partnerships between
22online course technology providers and faculty of the University
23of California, the California State University, and the California
24Community Colleges with the goal of significantly increasing
25online course options for students for the fall term of the 2014-15
26academic
year.
27(3) Create and administer a standardized review and approval
28process for online courses developed
pursuant to paragraph (2) for
29matriculated students of the University of California, California
30State University, and California Community Colleges, and for
31California high school pupils. No course shall be approved for
32purposes of this section unless the course has associated with it a
33faculty sponsor who is a member of the faculty of the University
34of California, the California State University, or the California
35Community Colleges and is approved by the academic senate of
36the appropriate segment.
An online course developed pursuant to
37this paragraph shall be deemed to meet the lower division transfer
38and degree requirements for the University of California, the
39California State University, and the California Community
40Colleges.
P7 1 (4) When online courses are reviewed pursuant to this section,
2at a minimum, the extent to which each course does the following
3shall be considered:
4(A) Provides students with instructional support and related
5services to promote retention and success.
6(B) Provides students with interaction with instructors and other
7students.
8(C) Contains a proctored student assessment and examination
9process that
ensures academic integrity and satisfactorily measures
10student learning.
11(D) Provides a student with an opportunity to assess the extent
12to which he or she is suited for online learning prior to enrolling.
13(E) Utilizes, as the primary course text or as a wholly acceptable
14alternative, content, where it exists, from the California Digital
15Open Source Library established pursuant to Section 66408.
16(F) Includes adaptive learning technology systems or comparable
17technologies that can provide significant improvement in the
18learning of students.
19(5) Regularly
solicits from each of the respective statewide
20student associations of the University of California, the California
21State University, and the California Community Colleges, and
22considers, advice and guidance on implementation of the platform.
23(6) Collect, review, and make public data and other information
24related to student success within the platform by gathering and
25reporting data on accepted student success metrics, including, but
26not necessarily limited to, student enrollment in approved online
27courses through the platform, and student retention and completion
28rates.
29(7) Utilize the state’s current common course numbering system
30for approved
courses so as to simplify the identification and
31articulation of comparable courses.
32(d) Online courses approved
through the platform pursuant to
33this section shall be placed in the California Virtual Campus,
34through which students may access the courses. A matriculated
35student of a campus of the University of California, California
36State University, or California Community Colleges, or a California
37high school pupil, who completes an online course
developed
38through the platform and achieves a passing score on the
39corresponding course examination shall be awarded full academic
40credit for an equivalent course at the University of California, the
P8 1California State University, or the California Community Colleges,
2as applicable.
3(e) Funding for the implementation of this section shall be
4provided in the annual Budget Act. It is the intent of the Legislature
5that, notwithstanding Section 67400, the receipt of funding by the
6University of California for the implementation of this section be
7contingent on its compliance with the requirements of this section.
8(f) No public funds shall be used to fund any private aspect of
9a partnership developed pursuant
to this section between faculty
10of the University of California, the California State University, or
11the California Community Colleges and an online course
12technology provider.
13(g) The state shall retain all appropriate rights to intellectual
14property it creates or develops in the implementation of this section.
begin insertSection 66409.3 is added to the end insertbegin insertEducation Codeend insertbegin insert, to
16read:end insert
(a) The California Online Student Access Incentive
18Grant programs are hereby established. The grant programs shall
19be developed and administered by the President of the University
20of California, the Chancellor of the California State University,
21and the Chancellor of the California Community Colleges, for
22each segment respectively, in consultation with his or her
23respective statewide academic senate.
24(b) The three grant programs shall provide incentive grants to
25faculty and campuses to facilitate appropriate partnerships
26including, but not necessarily limited to, intersegmental and
27intrasegmental partnerships, and partnerships between online
28course providers and faculty members of the University of
29California, the California State
University, and the California
30Community Colleges for the development and deployment of
31high-quality online options for strategically selected lower division
32courses.
33(c) For purposes of accomplishing the objectives of the grant
34programs as specified in subdivision (b), the President of the
35University of California, the Chancellor of the California State
36University, and the Chancellor of the California Community
37Colleges shall each, in consultation with his or her segment’s
38statewide academic senate, do both of the following:
39(1) Develop a list of 20 high-demand lower division courses at
40his or her segment that are deemed necessary for program
P9 1completion, deemed satisfactory for meeting general education
2requirements, or defined as transferable lower division courses
3under the Intersegmental General Education Transfer Curriculum.
4(2) (A) For up to 15 of the courses selected under paragraph
5(1), provide incentive grants to faculty and campuses of his or her
6segment with the goal of facilitating up to 15 appropriate
7partnerships, including, but not necessarily limited to,
8intersegmental and intrasegmental partnerships, and partnerships
9between online course technology providers and faculty of the
10segment providing the grant and, if the grantor deems it
11appropriate, faculty of one or both of the other segments, to
12significantly increase online options for matriculated students and
13high school pupils for the fall term of the 2014-15 academic year.
14(B) When choosing recipients for incentive grants pursuant to
15this paragraph, the president or chancellor of each segment shall
16give priority to courses that have also been selected by one or both
17of the other segments pursuant to paragraph (1).
18(d) Incentive grants shall not be provided to facilitate any
19partnership to develop or deploy a course pursuant to this section
20unless the course has associated with it a member of the faculty
21of the segment providing the grant who serves as the instructor of
22record, and the course is approved by the academic senate of that
23segment. A course developed or deployed with incentive grant
24funds pursuant to this section shall be deemed to meet the lower
25division transfer and degree requirements for the University of
26California, the California State University, or the California
27Community Colleges, as applicable, and shall be made available
28to students systemwide, regardless of the campus at which they
29are enrolled.
30(e) When evaluating a potential faculty or campus grantee to
31receive an incentive grant pursuant to this section, the President
32of the University of California, the Chancellor of the California
33State University, and the
Chancellor of the California Community
34Colleges shall consider the extent to which the developed or
35deployed course will do each of the following:
36(1) Provide students with instructional support and related
37services to promote retention and success.
38(2) Provide students with interaction with instructors and other
39students.
P10 1(3) Contain a proctored student assessment and examination
2process that ensures academic integrity and satisfactorily measures
3student learning.
4(4) Provide a student with an opportunity to assess the extent
5to which he or she is suited for online learning before enrolling.
6(5) Use, as the primary course text or as a wholly acceptable
7alternative, content, where it
exists, from the California Digital
8Open Source Library established pursuant to Section 66408.
9(6) Include adaptive learning technology systems or comparable
10technologies that can provide significant improvement in student
11learning.
12(7) Be made available to students of another system, regardless
13of the system at which they are enrolled.
14(f) In implementing this section, the President of the University
15of California, the Chancellor of the California State University,
16and the Chancellor of the California Community Colleges shall
17do all of the following:
18(1) Regularly solicit and consider from their respective statewide
19student associations advice and guidance on the implementation
20of the incentive grant program.
21(2) Collect, review, and make public data and other information
22related to student success in courses supported by the incentive
23grant program by gathering and reporting data on accepted student
24success metrics, including, but not necessarily limited to, student
25enrollment in online courses supported through the incentive grant
26program, and student retention and completion rates.
27(g) Online courses supported by incentive grants pursuant to
28this section shall be placed in the California Virtual Campus,
29through which students may access the courses. A matriculated
30student of a campus of the University of California, the California
31State University, or the California Community Colleges, or a
32California high school pupil, who completes an online course
33developed through an incentive grant program and achieves a
34passing score on the corresponding course examination shall be
35awarded full
academic credit for the course at the University of
36California, the California State University, or the California
37Community Colleges, as applicable.
38(h) Funding for the implementation of this section shall be
39provided in the annual Budget Act. It is the intent of the Legislature
40that, notwithstanding Section 67400, the receipt of funding by the
P11 1University of California for the implementation of this section be
2contingent on its compliance with the requirements of this section.
3(i) Public funds shall not be used to fund any private aspect of
4a partnership developed pursuant to this section between faculty
5of the University of California, the California State University, or
6the California Community Colleges and an online course
7technology provider.
8(j) Intellectual property created or developed by a segment in
9the
implementation of this act shall be owned and managed by
10that segment according to its existing policies pursuant to
11applicable provisions of this code.
Section 78910.10 of the Education Code is amended
13to read:
(a) (1) The California Virtual Campus, pursuant
15to funding provided to the Board of Governors of the California
16Community Colleges for this purpose in the annual Budget Act,
17may pursue all of the following purposes, to the extent funding is
18available:
19(A) To enrich formal and informal educational experiences and
20improve students’ academic performance by supporting the
21development of highly engaging, research-based innovations in
22teaching and learning in K-12 public schools and the California
23Community Colleges, the California State University, and the
24University of California.
25(B) To enhance
the awareness of, and access to, highly engaging
26online courses of study, emphasizing courses of study that support
27a diverse and highly skilled science, technology, engineering, and
28mathematics workforce.
29(C) To support education research, the implementation of
30research-based practices, and promote economic development
31through the use of next generation advanced network infrastructure,
32services, and network technologies that enable collaboration and
33resource sharing between formal and informal educators in K-12
34public schools, the California Community Colleges, the California
35State University, the University of California, independent colleges
36and universities, public libraries, and community-based
37organizations at locations across the state.
38(D) To increase access to next
generation Internet services, 21st
39century workforce development programs, and e-government
40services for students and staff served or employed by education
P12 1entities and students served primarily online through partnerships
2with public libraries and community-based organizations.
3(E) To enhance access to health care education and training
4programs to current or future health care workers.
5(F) To manage digital assets and develop contracts for services
6necessary to provide the technical and management support needed
7to maximize the benefits of the high-speed, high-bandwidth
8network infrastructure available to public higher education entities
9in California.
10(G) Through the aggregation of demand for network enabled
11technologies
and related services from public education entities,
12and through partnerships with the private sector, to provide
13education entities with access to technical support and staff who
14can facilitate statewide efforts that support innovations in teaching
15and learning that are necessary to provide for a well-educated
16citizenry, and economic and 21st century workforce development.
17(2) To accomplish the purposes of paragraph (1), the California
18Virtual Campus may partner with local educational agencies, the
19State Department of Education, the 11 regional California
20Technology Assistance Projects, the California Community
21Colleges, the California State University, the University of
22California, independent colleges and universities, public libraries,
23and community-based organizations to facilitate ongoing
24collaboration and joint efforts relating to the
use of technology
25resources and high-speed Internet connectivity to support teaching,
26learning, workforce development, and research.
27(3) Efforts conducted as a result of this chapter shall not prohibit
28or otherwise exclude the ability of existing or new educational
29technology programs from being developed, expanded, or
30
enhanced.
31(b) For purposes of this article, the following terms have the
32following meanings:
33(1) “Online courses of study” means any of the following:
34(A) Online teaching, learning, and research resources, including,
35but not necessarily limited to, books, course materials, video
36materials, interactive lessons, tests, or software, the copyrights of
37which have expired, or have been released with an intellectual
38property license that permits their free use or repurposing by others
39without the permission of the original authors or creators of the
40learning materials or resources.
P13 1(B) Professional development opportunities for formal and
2informal
educators who desire to use the resources in subparagraph
3(A).
4(C) Online instruction.
5(2) “Online instruction” means technology enabled online real
6time (synchronous) interaction between the instructor and the
7student, near time (asynchronous) interaction between the instructor
8and the student, or any combination thereof.
9(c) The California Virtual Campus grant recipient may
10accomplish all of the following:
11(1) Convene at least four leadership stakeholder group meetings
12annually composed of representatives from the State Department
13of Education, the California Technology Assistance Project, and
14other related programs administered through the department,
15
including adult education, localbegin delete educationend deletebegin insert educationalend insert agencies,
16the California Community Colleges, the California State
17University, the University of California, independent colleges and
18universities, the California State Library, and representatives from
19community-based organizations to ensure the efforts affecting
20segments represented are appropriately meeting the needs of those
21segments. The leadership stakeholder group shall also coordinate
22and obtain assistance with the implementation of efforts delineated
23in this article, to identify and maintain an up-to-date list of the
24technology resources and tools that are necessary to support
25innovation in teaching and learning, and to identify opportunities
26for
leveraging resources and expertise for meeting those needs in
27an efficient and cost-effective manner. For purposes of this
28paragraph, the representatives from the California Community
29Colleges, the California State University, and the University of
30California shall include, but not be limited to, faculty members
31from these institutions.
32(2) Lead efforts to make online courses of study available across
33the state that include, but are not limited to, the following:
34(A) Developing online courses of study that are pedagogically
35sound and fully accessible, in compliance with the federal
36Americans with Disabilities Actbegin insert of 1990end insert (Public Law 101-336),
37by students with varying learning styles
and disabilities.
38(i) The development of K-12 online courses pursuant to this
39subparagraph shall be achieved in partnership with localbegin delete educationend delete
P14 1begin insert educational end insertagencies and the California Technology Assistance
2Project.
3(ii) Online courses developed for grades K-12 pursuant to this
4subparagraph shall be aligned to the California academic content
5standards and guidelines for online courses.
6(B) Overseeing the development of at least 12 model online
7courses of study that, collectively, would allow students to meet
8the requirements of the Intersegmental General
Education Transfer
9Curriculum (IGETC) and at least two courses that support basic
10skills education courses in English, English as a second language,
11or mathematics.
12(C) Encouraging the entities listed in paragraph (1) to do both
13of the following:
14(i) Make accessible to each other their courses of study that are
15funded by the state.
16(ii) Allow their courses of study to be accessible to the general
17public if they determine access would not inhibit their ability to
18provide appropriate protection of the state’s intellectual property
19rights.
20(3) Ensure that the learning objects created as part of the
21California Virtual Campus online courses of study with
state
22General Fund revenues are linked to digital content libraries that
23include information about course content freely available to
24California educators and students.
25(4) Develop formal partnership agreements between the entities
26listed in paragraph (1) and the California Virtual Campus, including
27course articulation agreements that allow qualified high school
28students to accelerate the completion of requirements for a high
29school diploma and a two-year or four-year degree and agreements
30that provide opportunities for part-time faculty teaching online to
31obtain full-time employment teaching online.
32(5) Develop formal partnership agreements with the entities
33listed in paragraph (1) and others to enhance access to professional
34development courses that introduce faculty,
teachers, staff, and
35college course developers to the conceptual development, creation,
36and production methodologies that underlie the development of
37online courses of study and support students’ successful completion
38of those courses. The professional development opportunities may
39include, but not necessarily be limited to, all of the following:
P15 1(A) Addressing issues relating to copyright, permission for the
2use or reuse of material, use of resources in the public domain,
3and other intellectual property concepts.
4(B) Accessibility for students with disabilities.
5(C) Factors to ensure that content is culturally relevant to a
6diverse student body.
7(D) Delivery
options that incorporate multiple learning styles
8and strategies.
9(6) Develop formal partnership agreements with entities,
10including, but not limited to, those listed in paragraph (1), to ensure
11access to online professional learning communities that incorporate
12the use of Internet-based collaboration tools and to support joint
13discussions between K-12 educators, higher education faculty and
14staff, and others to examine student performance data, student
15learning objectives, curriculum, and other issues that relate to
16students’ academic success and preparation for the workforce.
17(7) In partnership with entities, including those listed in
18paragraph (1), develop an e-portfolio system that allows
19participating students to demonstrate their attainment of academic
20learning objectives,
skills and knowledge that relate to their career
21interests, and completion of prerequisites for participation in
22courses or training programs. The e-portfolio system may do all
23of the following:
24(A) Ensure that student privacy is protected in accordance with
25existing law.
26(B) Comply with accessibility laws for students with disabilities.
27(C) Be designed in a manner that supports the use of e-portfolio
28content in the accreditation requirements of schools, colleges, and
29universities.
30(8) In partnership with entities, including those listed in
31paragraph (1), identify opportunities to enhance students’ access
32to medical education and medical services through the
use of
33high-speed Internet connections to the campuses, and opportunities
34for education programs and services to support the telehealth efforts
35taking place within the state.
36(d) The lead agency for the California Virtual Campus, in
37consultation with the leadership stakeholder group described in
38paragraph (1) of subdivision (c) if that group is convened by the
39California Virtual Campus grant recipient, shall contract with an
40independent third party with expertise in online teaching, learning,
P16 1and the development of online courses of study, as approved by
2the board, to evaluate the California Virtual Campus. The
3evaluation shall include, but not be limited to, an assessment of
4the number of faculty, teachers, consortia, informal educators, and
5students that use the online courses of study, the quality of students’
6experiences, student
grades earned, and the cost of the online
7course content, comparing the online course content with traditional
8textbooks. The board may require additional information that it
9determines to be necessary to evaluate the effectiveness and
10viability of the California Virtual Campus. This evaluation shall
11be submitted to the Legislature no later than three years after the
12enactment of this act.
Section 78910.30 of the Education Code is amended
14to read:
This article shall remain in effect until January 1,
162017, and as of that date is repealed, unless a later enacted statute,
17that is enacted before January 1, 2017, deletes or extends that date.
If the Commission on State Mandates determines that
19this act contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement to
20local agencies and school districts for those costs shall be made
21pursuant to Part 7 (commencing with Section 17500) of Division
224 of Title 2 of the Government Code.
O
95