Transcript Slide 1

Curriculum Update
Graduation Requirements
Copyright © Texas Education Agency 2010. All rights reserved.
© 2010 by the Texas Education Agency
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Copyright © Texas Education Agency 2009. All rights reserved.
House Bill 3
TEC, Section 28.025
Subject to Subsection (b-1), the State Board of
Education shall designate the specific courses in the
foundation curriculum required for a student
participating in the minimum, recommended, or
advanced high school program.
Except as provided by Subsection (b-1), the State
Board of Education may not designate a specific
course or a specific number of credits in the
enrichment curriculum as requirements for the
recommended program.
Copyright © Texas Education Agency 2010. All rights reserved.
Layers of Graduation Requirements
State Law (TEC)
SBOE Rule (TAC)
Local District Policy
Minimum High School Program
State Law
In order for a student to opt into the minimum high school
program, the student must
(1)
(2)
(3)
be at least 16 years of age;
have completed two credits required for graduation
in each subject of the foundation curriculum; or
have failed to be promoted to the tenth grade one or
more times as determined by the school district.
Minimum High School Program
State Law
• A student must meet one of the 3 circumstances.
• A student has the right to re-enroll in the RHSP at
any time.
• A student must satisfy all the course requirements
listed in 19 TAC Chapter 74 for a total of 22 credits
to graduate.
Fine Arts
• Implementation of the fine arts requirement for
students on the Minimum High School Program
(MHSP) will begin with students who enter Grade 9
in 2010-11.
• The new rule adds the new CTE course Principles
and Elements of Floral Design as a course that may
satisfy the fine arts graduation requirement under
all three graduation programs.
Speech
• The law limits the SBOE’s authority to require specific
courses in the enrichment curriculum beyond what is
required in law for the RHSP.
• Speech is part of English language arts and reading
and the foundation curriculum.
• The new SBOE rule continues to require one-half
credit of speech for all three graduation programs.
• The new SBOE rule adds the CTE course Professional
Communications as a course that may satisfy the
speech graduation requirement.
Health Education
• By law, students on the Recommended High School
Program (RHSP) are no longer required to complete a
health credit for graduation beginning with the 2009-10
school year.
• The new SBOE rule eliminates the one-half health credit
requirement for the MHSP and Distinguished Achievement
Program (DAP) for consistency with the RHSP beginning
with the 2010-11 school year.
• TEC, Section 28.002(p) requires the p.a.p.a. program to be
part of “the district’s high school health curriculum.” The
p.a.p.a. program must be part of any high school health
class that is offered.
Technology
Applications
• By law, students on the RHSP are no longer required to
complete a technology applications credit for graduation
beginning with the 2009-10 school year.
• The new SBOE rule eliminates the one credit technology
applications requirement for the MHSP and DAP for
consistency with the RHSP beginning with the 2010-11
school year.
• Review and revision of the technology applications TEKS
will begin in Spring 2010.
Physical Education
• By law, students on the RHSP are required to complete one
credit of physical education for graduation beginning with the
2009-10 school year.
• By law, students on the RHSP may no longer be required to take
Foundations of Personal Fitness to satisfy the physical
education graduation requirement beginning with the 2009-10
school year.
• The new SBOE rule requires only one credit of P.E. on the
MHSP and DAP for consistency with the RHSP beginning with
the 2010-11 school year.
• The new SBOE rule eliminates the Foundations of Personal
fitness requirement in the MHSP and DAP for consistency with
the RHSP beginning with the 2010-11 school year.
Physical Education
• There are currently five ½ credit TEKS-based P.E. courses that would
allow a student to earn up to 2 and ½ credits toward graduation.
• Current SBOE rule allows the following substitutions:
 drill team, marching band, and cheerleading during the fall semester
 JROTC
 athletics
 Dance I-IV
 two- or three-credit career and technical work-based training
courses
• There is currently no limit on the number of P.E. substitutions that may
be counted toward graduation requirements for the RHSP.
• The SBOE retains the authority to determine course substitutions for
physical education.
Physical Education
• The following courses will be expanded to be one-half to
one credit each:

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Foundations of Personal Fitness
Adventure/Outdoor Education
Aerobic Activities
Team or Individual Sports
• Students may satisfy the one credit of P.E. by taking any
combination of these courses.
Physical Education
• Students may earn credit for any of the TEKS-based P.E. courses
through participation in athletics, JROTC, or appropriate private or
commercially-sponsored physical activity programs conducted on or off
campus for up to four credits toward graduation.
• Students may earn up to one credit for any of the TEKS-based P.E.
courses listed above through participation in Drill Team, Marching
Band, or Cheerleading.
• In order for a student to earn credit for one of these activities, the
activity must include at least 100 minutes per five-day school week of
moderate to vigorous physical activity.
Physical Education
• Credit may not be earned for any P.E. course more than
once and no more than four substitutions may be earned
through any combination of allowable substitutions.
• Students may no longer substitute Dance or two- or threecredit career and technology work-based training courses
for P.E. credit.
• Students who earned their P.E. credit through a Dance or
CTE substitution prior to the start of the 2010-11 school
year will still get credit for that substitution.
Physical Education
Options for earning credit:
• Credit by Examination
• Correspondence Courses or Distance Learning
• Summer School
• A school district must ensure that sufficient time is provided for
teachers to teach and for students to learn the subjects in the required
curriculum. The school district may provide instruction in a variety of
arrangements and settings, including mixed-age programs designed to
permit flexible learning arrangements for developmentally appropriate
instruction for all student populations to support student attainment of
course and grade level standards.
Mathematics
• The new SBOE rule adds the following courses as
options for satisfying the fourth mathematics credit
requirement for the RHSP:
 Mathematical Applications in Agriculture, Food and Natural
Resources (if taken before Algebra II)
 Engineering Mathematics
 Statistics and Risk Management
• The new SBOE rule adds the following courses as
options for satisfying the fourth mathematics credit
requirement for the DAP:
 Engineering Mathematics
 Statistics and Risk Management
Science
• IPC will continue to be an option for satisfying a science credit
requirement for the RHSP.
• A student who takes IPC, must also complete a biology course,
a chemistry course, and a physics course.
• IPC must be successfully completed prior to chemistry and
physics.
• A student who successfully completed IPC and chemistry prior
to the 2010-11 school year has satisfied the requirement that a
student complete two out of the three courses (IPC, chemistry
and/or physics).
• If a student took IPC prior to 2010-11, the student may take
either chemistry or physics in 2010-11 or later to satisfy the
requirement. The student does not need to take both chemistry
and physics to satisfy the requirement.
Science
The new SBOE rule adds the following courses as
options for satisfying the fourth science credit
requirement for the RHSP and DAP:
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Advanced Animal Science
Advanced Biotechnology
Advanced Plant and Soil Science
Food Science
Forensic Science
Science
The following courses will continue to count as
options for satisfying the fourth science credit
requirement for the RHSP and DAP:
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Anatomy and Physiology
Medical Microbiology
Pathophysiology
Scientific Research and Design
High School
Course Offering
• Per 19 TAC §74.3. school districts and charters are
required to make available the subjects in the
enrichment curriculum but are not required to offer every
course in each subject or to enroll and instruct each
student in each subject.
• Students must have access to courses in the enrichment
curriculum, but districts may determine how often
courses are offered and which individual courses are
offered.
• Whenever a district offers a course in the enrichment
curriculum, all of the essential knowledge and skills for
that course must be taught.
High School
Course Offering
A school district must offer the courses listed below and maintain
evidence that students have the opportunity to take these courses:
• English language arts--English I, II, III, and IV
• mathematics--Algebra I, Algebra II, Geometry, Precalculus, and
Mathematical Models with Applications
• science--IPC, Biology, Chemistry, and Physics
• social studies--U.S. History Studies Since Reconstruction, World
History Studies, U.S. Government, and World Geography Studies
• economics--Economics with Emphasis on the Free Enterprise
System and Its Benefits;
• physical education--at least two courses selected from
Foundations of Personal Fitness; Adventure/Outdoor Education;
Aerobic Activities; or Team or Individual Sports;
• health education--Health 1;
High School
Course Offering
A school district must offer the courses listed below and maintain
evidence that students have the opportunity to take these courses:
• fine arts--courses selected from at least two of the four fine arts
areas (art, music, theatre, and dance)--Art I, II, III, IV; Music I, II, III,
IV; Theatre I, II, III, IV; or Dance I, II, III, IV
• career and technical education--coherent sequences of courses
selected from at least three of the sixteen career clusters
• languages other than English--Levels I, II, and III or higher of the
same language
• technology applications--at least four courses selected from
Computer Science I, Computer Science II, Desktop Publishing,
Digital Graphics/Animation, Multimedia, Video Technology, Web
Mastering, or Independent Study in Technology Applications; and
• speech--Communication Applications
Questions?