AB 288, as amended, Holden. Public schools: College and Career Access Pathways partnerships.
Existing law authorizes the governing board of a school district to allow pupils whom the district has determined would benefit from advanced scholastic or vocational work to attend community college as special part-time or full-time students, subject to parental permission. Existing law requires credit to be awarded to these pupils, as specified, authorizes a school principal to recommend a pupil for community college summer session if the pupil meets specified criteria, and prohibits the principal from recommending more than 5% of the total number of pupils from any particular grade level who completed that grade immediately before the time of recommendation for summer session attendance.
This bill would authorize the governing board of a community college district to enter into a College and Career Access Pathways partnership with the governing board of a school district with the goal of developing seamless pathways from high school to community college for career technical education or preparation for transfer, improving high school graduation rates, or helping high school pupils achieve college and career readiness. The bill would require the partnership agreement to outline the terms of the partnership, as specified, and to establish protocols for information sharing, joint facilities use, and parental consent for high school pupils to enroll in community college courses.
The bill would authorize specified high school pupils to enroll in up to 15 units per term if those units are required for these pupils’ partnership programs and specified conditions are satisfied, and would authorize a community college district to exempt special part-time and full-time students taking up to a maximum of 15 units per term from specified fee requirements. The bill would prohibit a district from receiving a state allowance or apportionment for an instructional activity for which the partnering district has been, or will be, paid an allowance or apportionment under a concurrent enrollment partnership agreement. The bill would require, for each partnership agreement entered into under the bill, the affected community college district and school district to provide an annual report, containing specified data, to the office of the Chancellor of the California Community Colleges.
Vote: majority. Appropriation: no. Fiscal committee: yes. State-mandated local program: no.
The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
The Legislature finds and declares all of the
2following:
3(a) Research has shown that dual enrollment can be an effective
4means of improving the educational outcomes for a broad range
5of students.
6(b) Dual enrollment has historically targeted high-achieving
7students; however, increasingly, educators and policymakers are
8looking toward dual enrollment as a strategy to help students who
9struggle academically or who are at risk of dropping out.
10(c) Allowing a greater and more varied segment of high school
11pupils to take
community college courses could provide numerous
12benefits to both the pupils and the state, such as reducing the
13number of high school dropouts, increasing the number of
14community college students who transfer and complete a degree,
P3 1shortening the time to completion of educational goals, and
2improving the level of preparation of students to successfully
3complete for-credit, college-level, courses.
4(d) California should rethink its policies governing dual
5enrollment, and establish a policy framework under which school
6districts and community college districts could create dual
7enrollment partnerships as one strategy to provide critical support
8for underachieving students, those from groups underrepresented
9in postsecondary education, those who are seeking advanced
10studies while in high school, and those seeking a career technical
11education
credential or certificate.
12(e) Through dual enrollment partnerships, school districts and
13community college districts could create clear pathways of aligned,
14sequenced coursework that would allow students to more easily
15and successfully transition to for-credit, college-level coursework
16leading to an associate degree, transfer to the University of
17California or the California State University, or to a program
18leading to a career technical education credential or certificate.
19(f) To facilitate the establishment of dual enrollment
20partnerships, the state should remove fiscal penalties and policy
21barriers that discourage dual enrollment opportunities. By reducing
22some of these restrictions, it will be possible to expand dual
23enrollment opportunities, thereby saving both students
and the
24state valuable time, money, and scarce educational resources.
Section 76004 is added to the Education Code, to read:
Notwithstanding Section 76001 or any other law:
27(a) The governing board of a community college district may
28enter into a College and Career Access Pathways (CCAP)
29partnership with the governing board of a school district for the
30purpose of offering or expanding dual enrollment opportunities
31with the goal of developing seamless pathways from high school
32to community college for career technical education or preparation
33for transfer, improving high school graduation rates, or helping
34high school pupils achieve college and career readiness.
35(b) A participating community college district may enter into a
36CCAP partnership
with a school district partner that is governed
37by a CCAP partnership agreement approved by the governing
38boards of both districts. As a condition of, and before adopting, a
39CCAP partnership agreement, the governing board of each district,
40at an open public meeting of that board, shall present the dual
P4 1enrollment partnership agreement as an informational item. The
2governing board of each district, at a subsequent open public
3meeting of that board, shall take comments from the public and
4approve or disapprove the proposed agreement.
5(c) (1) The CCAP partnership agreement shall outline the terms
6of the CCAP partnership and shall include, but not necessarily be
7limited to, the scope, nature, time, location, and listing of
8community college courses to be offered, and criteria to assess the
9ability of pupils to
benefit from those courses. The CCAP
10partnership agreement shall also establish protocols for information
11sharing, joint facilities use, and parental consent for high school
12pupils to enroll in community college courses.
13(2) The CCAP partnership agreement shall identify a point of
14contact for the participating community college district and school
15district partner.
16(3) A copy of the CCAP partnership agreement shall be filed
17with the office of the Chancellor of the California Community
18Colleges and with the department before the start of the CCAP
19partnership.
20(d) A community college district participating in a CCAP
21partnership shall not provide physical education course
22opportunities to high school pupils pursuant
to this section or any
23other course opportunities that do not assist in the attainment of
24at least one of the goals listed in subdivision (a).
25(e) A community college district shall not enter into a CCAP
26partnership with a school district within the service area of another
27community college district, except where an agreement exists, or
28is established, between those community college districts
29authorizing that CCAP partnership.
30(e)
end delete
31begin insert(f)end insert A high school pupil enrolled in a course
offered through a
32CCAP partnership shall not be assessed any fee that is prohibited
33by Section 49011.
34(f)
end delete
35begin insert(end insertbegin insertg)end insert A community college district participating in a CCAP
36partnership may assign priority for enrollment and course
37registration to a pupil seeking to enroll in a community college
38course that is required for the pupil’s CCAP partnership program
39that is equivalent to the priority assigned to a pupil attending a
40middle college high school as described in Section 11300 and
P5 1consistent with
middle college high school provisions in Section
276001.
3(g)
end delete
4begin insert(end insertbegin inserth)end insert The CCAP partnership agreement shall certify that any
5community college instructor teaching a course on a high school
6campus has not been convicted of any sex offense as defined in
7Section 87010, or any controlled substance offense as defined in
8Section 87011.
9(h)
end delete
10begin insert(end insertbegin inserti)end insert The CCAP partnership agreement shall certify that any
11community college instructor teaching a course at the partnering
12high school campus has not displaced or resulted in the termination
13of an existing high school teacher teaching the same course on that
14high school campus.
15(i)
end delete
16begin insert(end insertbegin insertj)end insert The CCAP partnership agreement shall certify that a qualified
17high school teacher teaching a course offered for college credit at
18a high school campus has not displaced or resulted in the
19termination of an existing community college faculty member
20teaching the same course at the partnering community college
21campus.
22(j)
end delete
23begin insert(end insertbegin insertk)end insert The CCAP partnership agreement shall certify that a
24community college course offered for college credit at the
25partnering high school campus does not reduce access
to the same
26course offered at the partnering community college campus.
27(k)
end delete
28begin insert(end insertbegin insertl)end insert The CCAP partnership agreement shall certify that both the
29school district and community college district partners comply
30with local collective bargaining agreements and all state and federal
31reporting requirements regarding the qualifications of the teacher
32or faculty member teaching a CCAP partnership course offered
33for high school credit.
34(m) The CCAP partnership agreement shall specify both of the
35following:
36(1) Which participating district will be the employer of record
37for purposes of assignment monitoring and reporting to the county
38office of education.
P6 1(2) Which participating district will assume reporting
2responsibilities pursuant to applicable federal teacher quality
3mandates.
4(l)
end delete
5begin insert(end insertbegin insertn)end insert The CCAP partnership agreement shall certify that remedial
6courses taught by community college faculty at a partnering high
7school campus shall be offered only to high school students who
8test as nonproficient in math, English, or both on a formative
9assessment in grade 10 or 11, as determined by the partnering
10school district.
11(m)
end delete
12begin insert(end insertbegin inserto)end insert (1) A community college district may limit enrollment in
13a community college course solely to eligible high school students
14if
the course is offered at a high school campus during the regular
15school day and the community college course is offered pursuant
16to a CCAP partnership agreement.
17(2) For purposes of allowances and apportionments from Section
18B of the State School Fund, a community college district
19conducting a closed course on a high school campus pursuant to
20paragraph (1) of subdivision begin delete(n) end deletebegin insert(p) end insertshall be credited with those
21units of full-time equivalent students attributable to the attendance
22of eligible high school pupils.
23(n)
end delete
24begin insert(end insertbegin insertp)end insert A community college district may allow a special part-time
25student participating in a CCAP partnership agreement established
26pursuant to this article to enroll in up to a maximum of 15 units
27per term if all of the following circumstances are satisfied:
28(1) The units constitute no more than four community college
29courses per term.
30(2) The units are part of an academic program that is part of a
31CCAP partnership agreement established pursuant to this article.
32(3) The units are part of an academic program that is designed
33to award students both a high school diploma and an associate’s
34degree.
35(o)
end delete
36begin insert(end insertbegin insertq)end insert The governing board of a community college district
37participating in a CCAP partnership agreement established pursuant
38to this article may, in whole or in part, exempt special part-time
39students described in subdivision begin delete(n) end deletebegin insert(p) end insertfrom the fee requirements
40in Sections 76060.5, 76140, 76223, 76300, 76350, and 79121.
P7 1(p)
end delete
2begin insert(end insertbegin insertr)end insert A district shall not receive a state allowance or apportionment
3for an instructional activity for which the partnering district has
4been, or shall be, paid an allowance or apportionment.
5(q)
end delete
6begin insert(end insertbegin inserts)end insert The attendance of a high school pupil at a community college
7as a special part-time or full-time student pursuant to this section
8is authorized attendance for which the community college shall
9be credited or reimbursed pursuant to Section 48802 or 76002,
10provided that no school district has
received reimbursement for
11the same instructional activity.
12(r)
end delete
13begin insert(end insertbegin insertt)end insert begin insert(1)end insertbegin insert end insert For each CCAP partnership agreement entered into
14pursuant to this section, the affected community college district
15and school district shall report annually to the office of the
16Chancellor of the California Community
Colleges all of the
17following information:
18(1)
end delete
19begin insert(end insertbegin insertA)end insert The total number of high school pupils by schoolsite enrolled
20in each CCAPbegin delete partnership.end deletebegin insert partnership, end insertbegin insertby gender and ethnicity.end insert
21(2)
end delete
22begin insert(end insertbegin insertB)end insert The total number of community college courses by course
23category and type and by school site enrolled in by CCAP
24partnership participants.
25(3)
end delete
26begin insert(end insertbegin insertC)end insert The total number and percentage of successful course
27completions, by course category and type and by schoolsite,
of
28CCAP partnership participants.
29(4)
end delete
30begin insert(end insertbegin insertD)end insert The total number of full-time equivalent students generated
31by CCAP partnership community college district participants.
32(2) The report shall include an evaluation of the CCAP
33partnerships and, based upon the data collected pursuant to this
34section, shall include recommendations for program improvements,
35including, but not necessarily limited to, the need
for additional
36student assistance or academic resources to ensure the overall
37success of the CCAP partnerships.
38(s) Notwithstanding Section 10231.5 of the Government Code,
39the
P8 1begin insert(u)end insertbegin insert end insertbegin insertTheend insert annual report required bybegin delete thisend delete
subdivisionbegin insert
(t)end insert shall also
2be transmitted to all of the following:
3(1) The Legislature, in compliance with Section 9795 of the
4Government Code.
5(2) The Director of Finance.
6(3) The Superintendent.
begin insert
7(v) A community college district that violates this article,
8including, but not necessarily limited to, any restriction imposed
9by the board of governors pursuant to this article, shall be subject
10to the same penalty as may be imposed pursuant to subdivision
11(d) of Section 78032.
O
97