Status: Active
Adopted: May 14, 1996
Last Reviewed: December 12, 2013
Section 22.1-253.13:1. Standard 1, Paragraphs C and D
Paragraph C. Local school boards shall develop and implement a program of instruction for grades K through 12 which emphasizes reading, writing, speaking, mathematical concepts and computations, and scientific concepts and processes; essential skills and concepts of citizenship, including knowledge of history, economics, government, foreign languages, international cultures, health, and geography necessary for responsible participation in American society and in the international community; fine arts and practical arts; knowledge and skills needed to qualify for further education and employment or, in the case of some handicapped children, to qualify for appropriate training; and development of the ability to apply such skills and knowledge in preparation for eventual employment and lifelong learning.
Local school boards shall also develop and implement programs of prevention, intervention, or remediation for students who are educationally at risk including, but not limited to, those whose scores are in the bottom national quartile on Virginia State Assessment Program Tests, or who do not pass the literacy test prescribed by the Board of Education. Division superintendents may require such students to take special programs of prevention, intervention, or remediation which may include attendance in public summer school sessions. Based on the number of student attending and the Commonwealth’s share of the per pupil costs, additional state funds shall be provided for summer remediation programs as set forth in the appropriation act.
Paragraph D. Local school boards shall also implement the following:
1. programs in grades K through 3 which emphasize developmentally appropriate learning to enhance success:
2. programs designed to reduce the number of students who drop out of school. As provided in the appropriation act, state funding, in addition to basic aid, shall be allocated to
support programs grounded in sound educational policy to reduce the number of students who drop out of school;
3. career education programs for all students that promote student awareness and knowledge of careers, and emphasize the consequences of leaving school without marketable skills. School boards may include career exploration opportunities in the middle school grades;
4. competency based vocational education programs, which integrate academic outcomes, career guidance and job-seeking skills for all secondary students including those identified as handicapped that reflect employment opportunities, labor market needs, applied basic skills, job-seeking skills, and career guidance. Career guidance shall include employment counseling designed to furnish information on available employment opportunities to all students, including those identified as handicapped, and placement services for students exiting school. Each school board shall develop and implement a plan to ensure compliance with the provisions of this subsection;
5. academic and vocational preparation for students who plan to continue their education beyond secondary school or who plan to enter employment;
6. early identification of handicapped students and enrollment of such students in appropriate instructional programs consistent with state and federal law;
7. early identification of gifted students and enrollment of such students in appropriately differentiated instructional programs’
8. educational alternatives for students whose needs are not met in programs prescribed elsewhere in these standards. Such standards shall be counted in average daily membership (ADM) in accordance with the regulations of the Board of Education;
9. adult education programs for individuals functioning below the high school completion level. Such programs may be conducted by the school board as the primary agency or through a collaborative arrangement between the school board and other agencies; and
10. a plan to make achievements for students who are educationally at risk a division-wide priority which shall include procedures for measuring the progress of such students.