BILL NUMBER: SB 1425 INTRODUCED
BILL TEXT
INTRODUCED BY Senator Block
FEBRUARY 21, 2014
An act to add Article 1.7 (commencing with Section 78025) to
Chapter 1 of Part 48 of Division 7 of Title 3 of the Education Code,
relating to community colleges.
LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
SB 1425, as introduced, Block. Community colleges: retroactive
awarding of degrees.
(1) Existing law establishes the California Community Colleges,
under the administration of the Board of Governors of the California
Community Colleges, as one of the segments of the public
postsecondary education in this state. Existing law establishes
community college districts throughout the state, and authorizes
those districts to provide instruction at community college campuses.
The bill would require the Chancellor of the California Community
Colleges to develop or identify a commercially available utility to
conduct systemwide automatic degree audits that would enable
community college student services staff to monitor student progress
toward completion of a certificate or degree, or the credits required
to meet the transfer requirements of the California State University
or the Intersegmental General Education Transfer Curriculum.
The bill would require each community college campus, before the
beginning of an academic year, to conduct an inquiry, using the
online degree audit system that would be created under the bill, to
identify the students or former students who are within 12 semester
units or 18 quarter units of completing the requirements for a
certificate, degree, or transfer, as prescribed. The bill would
require community college campus staff to notify those students or
former students of the courses needed to complete those requirements.
The bill would require that certificates or degrees be awarded
retroactively to students or former students who are found, pursuant
to an audit of credits earned in the 5 academic years immediately
preceding the 2015-16 academic year, to have met requirements for
those certificates or degrees, if the students choose to receive
them.
The bill would require the chancellor to submit a report to the
Legislature and the Governor on the progress of the implementation of
the retroactive degree awarding and online degree audit system on or
before December 31, 2017, and on or before December 31 of each year
thereafter.
This bill would not be operative until the board of governors
certifies that sufficient funds have been received from state,
federal, or private sources to implement the online degree audit
system that would be created under the bill.
Because this bill would impose new duties on community college
districts, it would constitute a state-mandated local program.
(2) 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:
SECTION 1. (a) The Legislature finds and declares all of the
following:
(1) California is falling behind in producing the necessary
postsecondary education to ensure our state's prosperity and
opportunities for individuals in the 21st century.
(2) California faces a degree and certificate gap, and is
projected to need one million more workers with bachelor's degrees
and an additional 1.3 million workers with associate degrees or
certificates by 2025. Today, one in every four jobs requires at least
an associate degree.
(3) In the near future, one in every three jobs will require at
least an associate degree. Failure to make significant improvements
in degree completion will result in a less productive economy, lower
incomes for residents, less tax revenue for the state, and more
dependence on social services. Awarding retroactive associate degrees
to the approximately 250,000 students whose records qualify them for
degrees but who never received those degrees, and encouraging other
students to return to school by making them aware that they are close
to completing their associate degree, will mitigate this projected
degree shortage.
(4) The California Community Colleges are the state's largest
workforce provider, offering associate degrees and short-term job
training certificates in more than 175 different fields.
(5) In community colleges across the country, approximately 16
percent of the students in each cohort have either qualified for a
degree but never received it, or are within 12 semester units of an
associate degree and have left the system. This percentage represents
approximately 250,000 students in the California Community Colleges
system.
(6) Meeting the current and future need for higher education
requires that postsecondary institutions improve their success rates
with current students and attract, and graduate, individuals from
groups that have been traditionally underrepresented in postsecondary
education.
(7) Degree audit systems efficiently support student persistence
and success efforts, and thereby save money for the institutions in
the longer term. This will be especially true of a degree audit
system that is centralized at the Chancellor's Office of the
California Community Colleges and paired with the online educational
planner that is being developed as part of the Seymour-Campbell
Student Success Act of 2012.
(8) In California, only about one-third of community colleges have
online degree audit systems that can be used to inform their
students about their progress, leaving the remainder of the state's
112 community colleges without a mechanism to identify already earned
degrees.
(9) As movement toward performance-based budgeting continues,
retroactive degree awarding and degree audit systems better position
an institution to improve student outcomes.
(10) Earning a certificate or degree from a community college
doubles an individual's chance of obtaining a job. At a time when
unemployment rates are nearly 9 percent, certificates and degrees are
all the more valuable.
(11) Earning a degree or certificate from a California community
college, on average, nearly doubles an individual's earnings within
three years, from $25,600 to $45,571.
(12) A national effort, Project Win-Win, is tackling this issue in
nine other states and is showing promising results. This project
introduces degree audit systems at colleges to accomplish all of the
following:
(A) Award degrees retroactively.
(B) Identify and bring back students who are marginally short of
an associate degree to complete it.
(C) Ensure that, moving forward, students have real-time
information about their progress toward obtaining a degree.
(b) Therefore, it is the intent of the Legislature to do all of
the following:
(1) Build on national and local efforts to identify current or
former students who are eligible or nearly eligible to obtain their
certificate or degree, or to attain the necessary credits for
transfer, and notify those students, as appropriate.
(2) Award degrees and certificates retroactively to those students
who have completed degree or certificate requirements.
(3) Establish a central auditing system at the California
Community Colleges that enables individual community colleges to
audit student records, identify the students who are eligible or
nearly eligible for a certificate or degree, and notify these
students of this valuable information.
SEC. 2. Article 1.7 (commencing with Section 78025) is added to
Chapter 1 of Part 48 of Division 7 of Title 3 of the Education Code,
to read:
Article 1.7. Retroactive Awarding of Degrees
78025. (a) The board of governors shall require all community
colleges to award degrees retroactively in accordance with this
article.
(b) Prior to the beginning of the spring term of the 2015-16
academic year, each community college shall perform an inquiry to
identify the students who have completed the semester or quarter
required units to receive a degree, certificate, or the California
State University (CSU) or the Intersegmental General Education
Transfer Curriculum (IGETC) transfer requirements during the previous
five academic years.
(c) A community college campus shall notify those students
identified pursuant to subdivision (b) that they are eligible to
receive a degree or certificate. Those students shall have the choice
to opt out or to receive the degree or certificate.
78026. (a) The Chancellor of the California Community Colleges
shall develop or identify a commercially available utility to conduct
systemwide automatic degree audits for these purposes. The system
shall satisfy all of the following conditions:
(1) It shall comply with all pertinent privacy and security
considerations and requirements.
(2) It shall be centrally housed at the Chancellor's Office of the
California Community Colleges.
(3) It shall enable community college counselors, advisors, and
other student services staff to monitor student progress toward
completing a degree or certificate program, or achieving the minimum
requirements for CSU or IGETC transfer.
(4) It shall be accessible to community college personnel and
students through an Internet Web portal that provides a degree
progress profile, generated for each student upon request, that
includes all information regarding credits earned that is available
in the community college's data.
(b) Prior to the beginning of each spring term, each community
college shall perform an inquiry to identify students who are within
12 semester units or 18 quarter units of completing a degree or
certificate, or achieving the minimum requirements for CSU or IGETC
transfer.
(c) A community college shall notify those students or former
students identified pursuant to subdivision (b) of the courses needed
to complete a degree, a certification, or transfer requirements.
78027. (a) Each community college district, with the assistance
of the chancellor, shall study and to evaluate the effectiveness of
the retroactive degree awarding and audit program established by this
article and of any other programs or services designed to facilitate
students' completion of their educational goals and courses of
study. Notwithstanding Section 10231.5 of the Government Code, the
chancellor shall submit a report to the Legislature and the Governor
on the progress of the implementation of the retroactive degree
awarding and online degree audit system on or before December 31,
2017, and on or before December 31 of each year thereafter.
(b) The report required by this section shall be submitted in
compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code.
78028. (a) The metrics to be determined and reported pursuant to
Section 78027 shall include, but not necessarily be limited to, all
of the following:
(1) The number and percentage of community college students who
were identified, reenrolled, and were awarded associate degrees or
certificates, or who completed the CSU or IGETC transfer requirements
because of the degree audit system.
(2) The average amount of time spent and number of units earned by
community college students in order to complete their associate
degree, certificate, or transfer requirements, after being notified
that they were within the 12 semester units or 18 quarter units of
completion.
(3) The estimated economic benefits for the college and labor
market.
(4) Other relevant indicators of student success.
(b) Information specified in subdivision (a) shall be
disaggregated data, classified by ethnicity, gender, disability, age,
and socioeconomic status, to the extent this information is
available.
(c) The evaluation required by Section 78027 shall include an
assessment of the effectiveness of the programs and services in
attaining at least the following objectives:
(1) Identifying students within 12 semester units or 18 quarter
units of meeting the requirements for a degree or certificate or
completing the CSU or IGETC transfer requirements.
(2) Assisting institutions in reenrolling these students,
assessing these students' educational needs, and identifying
appropriate course placement for these students.
(3) Helping support students' successful completion of associate
degree, certificate, or transfer requirements.
(4) Matching institutional resources with students' educational
needs.
79029. This article shall not be operative until the board of
governors certifies that sufficient funds have been received from
state, federal, or private sources to implement the online degree
audit system that would be created under this section. The board of
governors shall prominently post this certification promptly on its
Internet Web site.
SEC. 3. If the Commission on State Mandates determines that this
act contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement to local
agencies and school districts for those costs shall be made pursuant
to Part 7 (commencing with Section 17500) of Division 4 of Title 2 of
the Government Code.