AB 2303, as amended, Bloom. State Recognition Program of Multiple Pathways to Biliteracy.
Existing law requires the Superintendent of Public Instruction to award a State Seal of Biliteracy. Existing law provides that the State Seal of Biliteracy certifies attainment of a high level of proficiency by a graduating high school pupil in one or more languages, in addition to English, and certifies that the graduate meets specified criteria, including, but not limited to, passing the California Standards Test in English language arts administered in grade 11 at the proficient level or above. Existing law also requires a pupil in grades 9 to 12, inclusive, whose primary language is other than English, to meet these same requirements and to also attain the early advanced proficiency level on the English language development test in order to qualify for the State Seal of Biliteracy.
This bill would establish the State Recognition Program of Multiple Pathways to Biliteracy to be administered annually by the State Department of Education beginning November 2016 to recognize school districts and county offices of education that voluntarily demonstrate excellence in providing and supporting multiple opportunities for pupils to attain high achievement and linguistic biliteracy in grades 1 to 12, inclusive, through biliteracy programs, as specified.begin insert The bill would require this program to be implemented only to the extent moneys are available to the department for purposes of the program from any source.end insert
Vote: majority. Appropriation: no. Fiscal committee: yes. State-mandated local program: no.
The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
(a) The Legislature finds and declares all of the
2following:
3(1) In 2012, California became the first state in the nation to
4award a State Seal of Biliteracy, pursuant to Article 6 (commencing
5with Section 51460) of Chapter 3 of Part 28 of Division 4 of Title
62 of the Education Code, to graduating seniors with demonstrated
7proficiency in two or more languages.
8(2) This groundbreaking step was acknowledgment of the
9economic and social value of multilingualism, the realities of a
10global century, and of the high level of academic achievement
11associated with
attainment of literacy in multiple languages.
12(3) In the context of the rollout of new common core standards,
13the State Seal of Biliteracy also rounded out the very notion of
14college and career readiness for this diverse and global 21st century
15world.
16(4) Ten thousand Seals of Biliteracy were awarded in the first
17year for proficiency in 29 languages, including American Sign
18Language.
19(5) By June 2013, the number had more than doubled with 170
20school districts, 19 charter schools, and six county offices of
21education providing 21,655 awards to graduating seniors.
22(6) Across the nation, other states were inspired to follow
23California’s lead. In 2013, New York
and Illinois adopted State
24Seals of Biliteracy, and three additional states have pending
25legislation.
26(7) In addition to the establishment of the State Seal of
27Biliteracy, other major changes recognizing the benefits of
28biliteracy have occurred, including all of the following:
P3 1(A) Increased numbers of two-way immersion programs in our
2public education system.
3(B) Adoption in 2009 of California’s first World Language
4Content Standards providing direction for the state’s world
5language programs and the acknowledgment for the need for
6developing “global competency.”
7(C) Inclusion of the recommendation to “ensure English literacy
8and biliteracy through
a statewide campaign to better prepare
9parents and students to support literacy” in the Blueprint for Great
10Schools developed by the Transition Advisory Team of the
11Superintendent of Public Instruction Tom Torlakson in 2011.
12(8) These changes have led to an increased awareness and
13acknowledgment of the benefits of multilingual proficiency and
14result in the desire for additional opportunities to obtain
15multilingual proficiency. However, these efforts are not enough.
16(9) It is clear that increasing the number of graduating pupils
17with multilingual skills is critical for the economic and societal
18needs of our state.
19(10) California needs people with biliteracy skills and
20cross-cultural competencies to work in and fuel our economy,
to
21strengthen our social cohesion, and to enrich the quality of life in
22our communities.
23(11) Pathways toward the global competency and linguistic
24skills of pupils need to be established. These pathways can address
25a shortfall in needed skills in our communities and economy. It is
26a recognition of the vibrancy and value of cultural diversity, and
27it helps address the achievement gap for our English learners.
28(12) California, the most ethnically and linguistically diverse
29state in the nation and the birthplace of the State Seal of Biliteracy,
30is the place to break new ground in the creation of comprehensive,
31articulated, and powerful pathways to biliteracy.
32(13) A powerful first step in establishing these pathways
is to
33provide state recognition to school districts and county offices of
34education that establish and maintain comprehensive, articulated
35pathways to biliteracy that include multiple entry points, provide
36a continuum of language development in prekindergarten,
37kindergarten, and grades 1 to 12, inclusive, and lead to the
38attainment of the State Seal of Biliteracy.
39(b) Therefore, it is the intent of the Legislature to do both of the
40following:
P4 1(1) Establish state recognition to school districts and county
2offices of education that provide multiple programs moving pupils
3through a language learning continuum of study that is well
4articulated and comprehensive for the purpose of attaining
5biliteracy by its pupils.
6(2) Identify multiple pathways to biliteracy that school districts
7and county offices of education may utilize in developing their
8comprehensive multiple pathways biliteracy programs.
Article 11 (commencing with Section 33460) is added
10to Chapter 3 of Part 20 of Division 2 of Title 2 of the Education
11Code, to read:
12
For purposes of this article, “biliteracy” means the
17ability to express oneself with clarity and cogency, to read and
18write cogently, and to compute and think critically in two or more
19languages. It includes the ability to function in and across language
20communities. For English learners, this includes the development
21of academic proficiency in the pupil’s primary language as well
22as in English.
(a) The State Recognition Program of Multiple
24Pathways to Biliteracy is hereby established to be administered
25annually by the department beginning November 2016 to recognize
26school districts and county offices of education demonstrating
27excellence in providing and
supporting multiple opportunities for
28pupils to attain high achievement and linguistic biliteracy in grades
291 to 12, inclusive, through biliteracy programs.
30(b) The department shall use appropriate state and federal
31moneys to implement this article.
32(c) The program established pursuant to this section shall be a
33voluntary program. Neither a school district nor a county office
34of education shall be required to participate.
(a) The department shall recognize the governing board
36of a school district or a county office of education under the State
37Recognition Program of Multiple Pathways to Biliteracy if the
38school district or county office of education meets any of the
39following criteria:
P5 1(1) Has established and maintained for pupils in grades 9 to 12,
2inclusive, for at least two years, a well-articulated State Seal of
3Biliteracy program meeting the requirements established in Section
451461 and has established and maintained multiple pathways to
5biliteracy pursuant to Section 33463.
6(2) Has established and maintained for
pupils in prekindergarten,
7kindergarten, and grades 1 through 8, inclusive, a system of
8benchmarking progress and recognition of pupil participation and
9progress along a continuum toward high-level proficiency in two
10or more languages. This may include the creation of pathway
11awards aligned to milestones and critical developmental points
12along the pathway towards biliteracy, culminating in the awarding
13of the State Seal of Biliteracy at graduation from high school.
14Critical development points include, but are not limited to, the
15completion of preschool, third grade, elementary school, and
16middle school.
17(3) Has met the criteria of paragraphs (1) and (2) for pupils in
18prekindergarten, kindergarten, and grades 1 to 12, inclusive.
19(b) In addition to the requirements of subdivision (a), a
school
20district or county office of education also shall meet all of the
21following criteria:
22(1) Has a well-articulated plan for pupils in prekindergarten,
23kindergarten, and grades 1 to 12, inclusive, that describes the
24language programs that comprise a coherent set of language
25development opportunities. The plan shall include consideration
26of all of the following:
27(A) Integration of English learner services with world language
28programs.
29(B) The amount of time allotted to language study, sequencing,
30and articulation.
31(C) Inclusion of multiple entry points into language learning.
32(D) Equitable access to language learning.
33(E) Inclusion of a developmental window from 4 to 8 years of
34age, inclusive, for language learning in which pupils are able to
35develop native-like proficiency in multiple languages.
36(F) Consideration of language priorities where the governing
37board of a school district or a county office of education has to
38carefully consider a balance between a desire to offer multiple
39languages and the realities of investment and space within school
P6 1schedules to accommodate the sequence of courses involved in
2building to high levels of proficiency.
3(2) Has supported quality implementation, including qualified
4language teachers; a retention, recruitment, and professional
5development
system that results in identifying and hiring teachers
6with needed skills; collaboration and planning time for teachers
7to align and articulate the language curriculum across grade levels
8and schools; and provided teachers with professional development
9support to effectively implement research-based language strategies
10and methodologies.
11(3) Has created a districtwide, communitywide, countywide,
12and school culture that celebrates language and cultural diversity
13in the pursuit of biliteracy as a needed 21st century skill.
For purposes of demonstrating whether a school district
15or a county office of education qualifies for the State Recognition
16Program of Multiple Pathways to Biliteracy, the governing board
17of a school district or a county office of education may implement
18
any comprehensive program for the study of world languages that
19includes, but is not limited to, any of the following:
20(a) “FLEX” (Foreign Language experience, exposure,
21enrichment, or exploratory) may be implemented for a regular
22schoolday or an extended schoolday for prekindergarten,
23kindergarten, and grades 1 to 8, inclusive, and includes all of the
24following:
25(1) Has classes that meet only once or twice a week.
26(2) Has classes that are introductory and provide exposure.
27(3) May be delivered during school or after school.
28(4) Introduces pupils to one or more languages and cultures
29
other than their own in order to motivate them to pursue further
30
language study.
31(5) Has varied objectives depending on the specific program,
32length of instruction, and type of instruction.
33(b) “FLES” (Foreign Language in Elementary Schools) may be
34implemented as a period within a schoolday or an extended
35schoolday for kindergarten and grades 1 to 6, inclusive, and
36includes all of the following:
37(1) Are less intensive than immersion.
38(2) Teaches the target language for designated periods of time,
39but varies a great deal in the amount of time devoted to foreign
40language learning.
P7 1(3) Follows the natural sequence of language learning to
2
understand, speak, read, and write.
3(4) Does not include academic study through the language, but
4focuses on language study itself.
5(5) Has proficiency goals and pupil outcomes that vary
6according to the amount and type of instruction.
7(6) Provides initial instruction and exposure to a second
8language.
9(7) Usually meets daily.
10(8) Begins in kindergarten and continues through grade 6, but
11may begin in grade 2, grade 3, or grade 4.
12(c) “Transitional Bilingual” may be implemented as a whole
13schoolday program for
prekindergarten, kindergarten, and grades
141 to 3, inclusive, and includes all of the following:
15(1) Are for English learners.
16(2) Provides academic instruction and initial literacy
17development in the home language along with English language
18development, with increasing amounts of the English language
19leading to full transition to the English language by the end of
20grade 3.
21(3) Provides that the goal is not biliteracy but a transition to
22English.
23(d) “Developmental Bilingual” may be implemented as a whole
24schoolday program for prekindergarten, kindergarten, and grades
251 to 5, inclusive, and includes all of the following:
26(1) Has a program for English learners using both the English
27language and their first language for academic instruction and
28develops literacy skills in both languages.
29(2) Includes an additive approach that continues through grade
305 and an attainment of threshold literacy skills in both languages.
31(3) Has the goal of biliteracy.
32(e) “Immersion” may be implemented as a whole schoolday
33program or a summer enrichment program for prekindergarten,
34kindergarten, and grades 1 to 12, inclusive, and includes all of the
35following:
36(1) Provides that the target language is used for all academic
37instruction
with the exception of language arts in English.
38(2) Maintains a ratio of target language use to English language
39use as high as 80 percent to 20 percent throughout kindergarten
40and grades 1 to 6, inclusive.
P8 1(f) “Two-Way Immersion” (Dual Language) may be
2implemented as a whole schoolday program for prekindergarten,
3kindergarten, and grades 1 to 12, inclusive, and includes all of the
4following:
5(1) Integrates native English language speakers and speakers
6of another language by providing instruction in both languages for
7all pupils.
8(2) Promotes bilingualism and biliteracy, grade-level academic
9achievement, and positive cross-cultural attitudes and behaviors
10in
all pupils.
11(3) Has classes made up of roughly equal numbers of native
12speakers of English and native speakers of the target language.
13(4) Has each language roughly one-half of the time for academic
14instruction in the 50/50 Two-Way Immersion model.
15(5) Has the target language used for 90 percent of instruction
16in the early years, usually tapering to 50 percent by grade 4 in the
1790/10 Two-Way Immersion model. At the secondary level, pupils
18continue to study academic content in the target language for at
19least two periods a day.
20(6) Typically begins in kindergarten or grade 1 and lasts at least
21through grade 5, and preferably through grades 9 to 12, inclusive.
22(g) “Native Speakers Courses” may be implemented as a period
23offered during a schoolday or after school for grades 6 to 12,
24inclusive, and includes all of the following:
25(1) Designed to develop literacy, academic language, and
26proficient skills in a language other than English for native speakers
27of that language.
28(2) Designed for pupils from homes in which the target language
29is spoken and for pupils who speak or understand the target
30language to some extent.
31(3) Has the intent of these courses being to build on existing
32skills of pupils and help them develop full academic proficiency.
33(4) Requires Advanced Placement language courses.
34(h) “Heritage Language” may be implemented as a period
35offered during a schoolday or after school for kindergarten and
36grades 1 to 12, inclusive, and includes all of the following:
37(1) Are additive programs that enable
38English-language-dominant pupils from language minority families
39to reclaim their heritage language and receive an education that
40incorporates a culturally responsive curriculum in school.
P9 1(2) Requires Advanced Placement language courses.
2(i) “World Language Classes” may be implemented as a period
3offered during a schoolday or after school for grades 6 to 12,
4inclusive, and includes all of
the following:
5(1) Begins in middle school or high school.
6(2) Has the curriculum aligned with the A to G requirements of
7the University of California.
8(3) Requires the study of the same world language for two years
9in grades 9 to 12, inclusive, to meet the freshman admissions
10requirements for the University of California and the California
11State University.
12(4) Requires Advanced Placement language classes.
13(j) “Study Abroad, International Student Exchange Program”
14for grades 6 to 12, inclusive, includes both of the following:
15(1) Provides
world language pupils with opportunities to travel,
16live, and study for a short time in another nation.
17(2) Includes trips sponsored by language clubs or language
18courses for a few weeks or full semester, or live-abroad placement
19programs.
begin insertThe State Recognition Program of Multiple Pathways
21to Biliteracy (Article 11 (commencing with Section 33460) of
22Chapter 3 of Part 20 of Division 2 of Title 2 of the Education Code)
23shall be implemented only to the extent moneys are available to
24the State Department of Education forend insertbegin insert purposes of the program
25from any source, including, but not limited to, state moneys, federal
26moneys, and other nonstate funding sources.end insert
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