1008.22 Student assessment program for
public schools.--
(1) PURPOSE.--The primary purposes of the
student assessment program are to provide information
needed to improve the public schools by enhancing the
learning gains of all students and to inform parents of
the educational progress of their public school
children. The program must be designed to:
(a) Assess the annual learning gains of
each student toward achieving the Sunshine State
Standards appropriate for the student's grade level.
(b) Provide data for making decisions
regarding school accountability and recognition.
(c) Identify the educational strengths and
needs of students and the readiness of students to be
promoted to the next grade level or to graduate from
high school with a standard or special high school
diploma.
(d) Assess how well educational goals and
performance standards are met at the school, district,
and state levels.
(e) Provide information to aid in the
evaluation and development of educational programs and
policies.
(f) Provide information on the performance
of Florida students compared with that of other students
across the United States.
(2) NATIONAL EDUCATION COMPARISONS.--It is
Florida's intent to participate in the measurement of
national educational goals. The Commissioner of
Education shall direct Florida school districts to
participate in the administration of the National
Assessment of Educational Progress, or a similar
national assessment program, both for the national
sample and for any state-by-state comparison programs
which may be initiated. Such assessments must be
conducted using the data collection procedures, the
student surveys, the educator surveys, and other
instruments included in the National Assessment of
Educational Progress or similar program being
administered in Florida. The results of these
assessments shall be included in the annual report of
the Commissioner of Education specified in this section.
The administration of the National Assessment of
Educational Progress or similar program shall be in
addition to and separate from the administration of the
statewide assessment program.
(3) STATEWIDE ASSESSMENT PROGRAM.--The
commissioner shall design and implement a statewide
program of educational assessment that provides
information for the improvement of the operation and
management of the public schools, including schools
operating for the purpose of providing educational
services to youth in Department of Juvenile Justice
programs. The commissioner may enter into contracts for
the continued administration of the assessment, testing,
and evaluation programs authorized and funded by the
Legislature. Contracts may be initiated in 1 fiscal year
and continue into the next and may be paid from the
appropriations of either or both fiscal years. The
commissioner is authorized to negotiate for the sale or
lease of tests, scoring protocols, test scoring
services, and related materials developed pursuant to
law. Pursuant to the statewide assessment program, the
commissioner shall:
(a) Submit to the State Board of Education
a list that specifies student skills and competencies to
which the goals for education specified in the state
plan apply, including, but not limited to, reading,
writing, science, and mathematics. The skills and
competencies must include problem-solving and
higher-order skills as appropriate and shall be known as
the Sunshine State Standards as defined in s. 1000.21.
The commissioner shall select such skills and
competencies after receiving recommendations from
educators, citizens, and members of the business
community. The commissioner shall submit to the State
Board of Education revisions to the list of student
skills and competencies in order to maintain continuous
progress toward improvements in student proficiency.
(b) Develop and implement a uniform system
of indicators to describe the performance of public
school students and the characteristics of the public
school districts and the public schools. These
indicators must include, without limitation, information
gathered by the comprehensive management information
system created pursuant to s. 1008.385
and student achievement information obtained pursuant to
this section.
(c) Develop and implement a student
achievement testing program known as the Florida
Comprehensive Assessment Test (FCAT) as part of the
statewide assessment program to measure reading,
writing, science, and mathematics. Other content areas
may be included as directed by the commissioner. The
assessment of reading and mathematics shall be
administered annually in grades 3 through 10. The
assessment of writing and science shall be administered
at least once at the elementary, middle, and high school
levels. The commissioner must document the procedures
used to ensure that the versions of the FCAT which are
taken by students retaking the grade 10 FCAT are equally
as challenging and difficult as the tests taken by
students in grade 10 which contain performance tasks.
The testing program must be designed so that:
1. The tests measure student skills and
competencies adopted by the State Board of Education as
specified in paragraph (a). The tests must measure and
report student proficiency levels of all students
assessed in reading, writing, mathematics, and science.
The commissioner shall provide for the tests to be
developed or obtained, as appropriate, through contracts
and project agreements with private vendors, public
vendors, public agencies, postsecondary educational
institutions, or school districts. The commissioner
shall obtain input with respect to the design and
implementation of the testing program from state
educators, assistive technology experts, and the public.
2. The testing program will include a
combination of norm-referenced and criterion-referenced
tests and include, to the extent determined by the
commissioner, questions that require the student to
produce information or perform tasks in such a way that
the skills and competencies he or she uses can be
measured.
3. Each testing program, whether at the
elementary, middle, or high school level, includes a
test of writing in which students are required to
produce writings that are then scored by appropriate and
timely methods.
4. A score is designated for each subject
area tested, below which score a student's performance
is deemed inadequate. The school districts shall provide
appropriate remedial instruction to students who score
below these levels.
5. Except as provided in s. 1003.428(8)(b)
or s. 1003.43(11)(b),
students must earn a passing score on the grade 10
assessment test described in this paragraph or attain
concordant scores as described in subsection (9) in
reading, writing, and mathematics to qualify for a
standard high school diploma. The State Board of
Education shall designate a passing score for each part
of the grade 10 assessment test. In establishing passing
scores, the state board shall consider any possible
negative impact of the test on minority students. The
State Board of Education shall adopt rules which specify
the passing scores for the grade 10 FCAT. Any such
rules, which have the effect of raising the required
passing scores, shall only apply to students taking the
grade 10 FCAT for the first time after such rules are
adopted by the State Board of Education.
6. Participation in the testing program is
mandatory for all students attending public school,
including students served in Department of Juvenile
Justice programs, except as otherwise prescribed by the
commissioner. If a student does not participate in the
statewide assessment, the district must notify the
student's parent and provide the parent with information
regarding the implications of such nonparticipation. A
parent must provide signed consent for a student to
receive classroom instructional accommodations that
would not be available or permitted on the statewide
assessments and must acknowledge in writing that he or
she understands the implications of such instructional
accommodations. The State Board of Education shall adopt
rules, based upon recommendations of the commissioner,
for the provision of test accommodations for students in
exceptional education programs and for students who have
limited English proficiency. Accommodations that negate
the validity of a statewide assessment are not allowable
in the administration of the FCAT. However,
instructional accommodations are allowable in the
classroom if included in a student's individual
education plan. Students using instructional
accommodations in the classroom that are not allowable
as accommodations on the FCAT may have the FCAT
requirement waived pursuant to the requirements of s. 1003.428(8)(b)
or s. 1003.43(11)(b).
7. A student seeking an adult high school
diploma must meet the same testing requirements that a
regular high school student must meet.
8. District school boards must provide
instruction to prepare students to demonstrate
proficiency in the skills and competencies necessary for
successful grade-to-grade progression and high school
graduation. If a student is provided with instructional
accommodations in the classroom that are not allowable
as accommodations in the statewide assessment program,
as described in the test manuals, the district must
inform the parent in writing and must provide the parent
with information regarding the impact on the student's
ability to meet expected proficiency levels in reading,
writing, and math. The commissioner shall conduct
studies as necessary to verify that the required skills
and competencies are part of the district instructional
programs.
9. District school boards must provide
opportunities for students to demonstrate an acceptable
level of performance on an alternative standardized
assessment approved by the State Board of Education
following enrollment in summer academies.
10. The Department of Education must
develop, or select, and implement a common battery of
assessment tools that will be used in all juvenile
justice programs in the state. These tools must
accurately measure the skills and competencies
established in the Sunshine State Standards.
11. For students seeking a special diploma
pursuant to s. 1003.438,
the Department of Education must develop or select and
implement an alternate assessment tool that accurately
measures the skills and competencies established in the
Sunshine State Standards for students with disabilities
under s. 1003.438.
The commissioner may, based on collaboration and
input from school districts, design and implement
student testing programs, for any grade level and
subject area, necessary to effectively monitor
educational achievement in the state, including the
measurement of educational achievement of the Sunshine
State Standards for students with disabilities.
Development and refinement of assessments shall include
universal design principles and accessibility standards
that will prevent any unintended obstacles for students
with disabilities while ensuring the validity and
reliability of the test. These principles should be
applicable to all technology platforms and assistive
devices available for the assessments. The field testing
process and psychometric analyses for the statewide
assessment program must include an appropriate
percentage of students with disabilities and an
evaluation or determination of the effect of test items
on such students.
(d) Conduct ongoing research to develop
improved methods of assessing student performance,
including, without limitation, the use of technology to
administer tests, score, or report the results of, the
use of electronic transfer of data, the development of
work-product assessments, and the development of process
assessments.
(e) Conduct ongoing research and analysis
of student achievement data, including, without
limitation, monitoring trends in student achievement by
grade level and overall student achievement, identifying
school programs that are successful, and analyzing
correlates of school achievement.
1(f) Provide technical
assistance to school districts in the implementation of
state and district testing programs and the use of the
data produced pursuant to such programs.
(g) Study the cost and student achievement
impact of secondary end-of-course assessments, including
web-based and performance formats, and report to the
Legislature prior to implementation.
(4) DISTRICT TESTING PROGRAMS.--Each
district school board shall periodically assess student
performance and achievement within each school of the
district. The assessment programs must be based upon
local goals and objectives that are compatible with the
state plan for education and that supplement the skills
and competencies adopted by the State Board of
Education. All school districts must participate in the
statewide assessment program designed to measure annual
student learning and school performance. All district
school boards shall report assessment results as
required by the state management information system.
(5) SCHOOL TESTING PROGRAMS.--Each public
school shall participate in the statewide assessment
program, unless specifically exempted by state board
rule based on serving a specialized population for which
standardized testing is not appropriate. Student
performance data shall be analyzed and reported to
parents, the community, and the state. Student
performance data shall be used in developing objectives
of the school improvement plan, evaluation of
instructional personnel, evaluation of administrative
personnel, assignment of staff, allocation of resources,
acquisition of instructional materials and technology,
performance-based budgeting, and promotion and
assignment of students into educational programs. The
analysis of student performance data also must identify
strengths and needs in the educational program and
trends over time. The analysis must be used in
conjunction with the budgetary planning processes
developed pursuant to s. 1008.385
and the development of the programs of remediation.
(6) REQUIRED ANALYSES.--The commissioner
shall provide, at a minimum, for the following analyses
of data produced by the student achievement testing
program:
(a) The statistical system for the annual
assessments shall use measures of student learning, such
as the FCAT, to determine teacher, school, and school
district statistical distributions, which shall be
determined using available data from the FCAT, and other
data collection as deemed appropriate by the Department
of Education, to measure the differences in student
prior year achievement compared to the current year
achievement for the purposes of accountability and
recognition.
(b) The statistical system shall provide
the best estimates of teacher, school, and school
district effects on student progress. The approach used
by the department shall be approved by the commissioner
before implementation.
(c) The annual testing program shall be
administered to provide for valid statewide comparisons
of learning gains to be made for purposes of
accountability and recognition. The commissioner shall
establish a schedule for the administration of the
statewide assessments. In establishing such schedule,
the commissioner is charged with the duty to accomplish
the latest possible administration of the statewide
assessments and the earliest possible provision of the
results to the school districts feasible within
available technology and specific appropriation.
District school boards shall not establish school
calendars that jeopardize or limit the valid testing and
comparison of student learning gains.
(7) LOCAL ASSESSMENTS.--Measurement of the
learning gains of students in all subjects and grade
levels other than subjects and grade levels required for
the state student achievement testing program is the
responsibility of the school districts.
(8) APPLICABILITY OF TESTING STANDARDS.--A
student must meet the testing requirements for high
school graduation that were in effect at the time the
student entered 9th grade, provided the student's
enrollment was continuous.
(9) CONCORDANT SCORES FOR THE FCAT.--
(a) The State Board of Education shall
analyze the content and concordant data sets for widely
used high school achievement tests, including, but not
limited to, the PSAT, PLAN, SAT, ACT, and College
Placement Test, to assess if concordant scores for FCAT
scores can be determined for high school graduation,
college placement, and scholarship awards. In cases
where content alignment and concordant scores can be
determined, the Commissioner of Education shall adopt
those scores as meeting the graduation requirement in
lieu of achieving the FCAT passing score and may adopt
those scores as being sufficient to achieve additional
purposes as determined by rule. Each time that test
content or scoring procedures are changed for the FCAT
or one of the identified tests, new concordant scores
must be determined.
(b) In order to use a concordant subject
area score pursuant to this subsection to satisfy the
assessment requirement for a standard high school
diploma as provided in s. 1003.429(6)(a),
s. 1003.43(5)(a),
or s. 1003.428,
a student must take each subject area of the grade 10
FCAT a total of three times without earning a passing
score. The requirements of this paragraph shall not
apply to a new student who enters the Florida public
school system in grade 12, who may either achieve a
passing score on the FCAT or use an approved subject
area concordant score to fulfill the graduation
requirement.
(c) The State Board of Education may
define by rule the allowable uses, other than to satisfy
the high school graduation requirement, for concordant
scores as described in this subsection. Such uses may
include, but need not be limited to, achieving
appropriate standardized test scores required for the
awarding of Florida Bright Futures Scholarships and
college placement.
(10) REPORTS.--The Department of Education
shall annually provide a report to the Governor, the
President of the Senate, and the Speaker of the House of
Representatives on the following:
(a) Longitudinal performance of students
in mathematics and reading.
(b) Longitudinal performance of students
by grade level in mathematics and reading.
(c) Longitudinal performance regarding
efforts to close the achievement gap.
(d) Longitudinal performance of students
on the norm-referenced component of the FCAT.
(e) Other student performance data based
on national norm-referenced and criterion-referenced
tests, when available, and numbers of students who after
8th grade enroll in adult education rather than other
secondary education.
(11) RULES.--The State Board of Education
shall adopt rules pursuant to ss. 120.536(1)
and 120.54
to implement the provisions of this section.
History.--s. 368, ch. 2002-387; s. 7, ch.
2003-8; s. 2, ch. 2003-413; s. 49, ch. 2004-41; s. 3,
ch. 2004-42; s. 5, ch. 2004-271; s. 40, ch. 2006-74.
1Note.--Section 40, ch. 2006-74,
purported to amend paragraph (3)(f) but did not publish
the amended paragraph. Absent affirmative evidence of
legislative intent to repeal it, paragraph (3)(f) is
published here, pending clarification by the
Legislature.