Site icon CCIS – California Consortium for Independent Study

Changes in Law 2017 – Assessment and Accountability

High School Students Taking Exam

Capitol Advisors Group has produced a series of comprehensive client briefs detailing new education laws that were passed by the Legislature and signed into law by Governor Brown in 2017. Each brief is organized by subject area and includes an executive summary highlighting major changes we think you should know about. Bills signed by the Governor take effect on January 1, 2018, unless the bill specifically states otherwise. A PDF version of this report is available here.


Stalemate over State’s Accountability System. The Legislature and Governor continue to debate changes to the State’s accountability system, with most legislative proposals to expand accountability either dying in the Legislature or facing a veto. Much of the debate has centered on the implementation of the Local Control Funding Formula (LCFF) and the degree to which the Local Control Accountability Plans (LCAPs) provide enough transparency regarding how the funding generated by the unduplicated students (low income, foster/homeless, and English learners) is spent on services for those students. For example, Assembly Member Shirley Weber (D-San Diego) authored AB 1321 to require the state to ensure that districts and schools report per-pupil expenditures (by fund source) in state and federal reporting. The bill was co-sponsored by Children Now and Education Trust West and supported by a vast array of civil rights and English learner advocate organizations. It is important to acknowledge that the bill received unanimous support as it moved through the State Assembly and Senate, but ultimately stalled in the Senate Appropriations Committee over concerns from the Administration. Governor Brown continues to hold firm on implementing the existing accountability system before making changes. We expect the accountability debate to continue in 2018 and likely become more serious in 2019, once Governor Brown terms out of office. Stay tuned…

The California High School Exit Exam (CAHSEE) is Officially Off the Books. After years of debate over the future of the CAHSEE, Governor Brown signed AB 830 by Assembly Member Ash Kalra (D-San Jose), officially ending the exam’s existence in the Education Code.

The CAHSEE was established in 1999 to assess pupils in the areas of English language arts and mathematics. Beginning with the graduating class of 2006, passage of the CAHSEE was required for a student to receive a high school diploma. In 2010, the State Board of Education (SBE) approved the adoption of the Common Core State Standards, which led to the development of new assessments. Since the establishment of the new state assessments, which include a test in Grade 11, the CAHSEE has been suspended.

Smarter Balanced Assessment Consortium (SBAC) Interim Assessments Bolstered. In response to teacher complaints over the SBAC interim assessments’ usefulness in informing instruction (feedback is too broad and not timely) and a Human Resources Research Organization (HUMRRO) report on the state’s assessment system that backed up those complaints, the Governor signed AB 1035 by Assembly Education Committee Chair Patrick O’Donnell (D-Long Beach). The bill adds further specificity to the definition of “interim assessments” in the Education Code to better describe the type of information available from the interim assessment results. It also requires an LEA that elects to use state-provided interim assessments to ensure that teachers have access to all functions and information relating to the assessments and student performance on the assessments, and establishes parameters for the local use of interim assessment data.


The Governor signed the following assessment and accountability bills this year:

Assessments

Data

Graduation Requirements

Exit mobile version