MISSISSIPPI LEGISLATURE
2013 Regular Session
To: Education
By: Representative Dixon
AN ACT TO AMEND SECTION 37-13-92, MISSISSIPPI CODE OF 1972, TO PROVIDE THAT UPON THE COMPLETION OF THE REQUIRED TIME IMPOSED UPON A CHILD WITHIN A JUVENILE FACILITY, THAT CHILD SHALL BE RETURNED TO THE TRADITIONAL SCHOOL SETTING AS OPPOSED TO HAVING AN ASSESSMENT CONDUCTED TO DETERMINE TRADITIONAL OR ALTERNATIVES SCHOOL PLACEMENT; TO REMOVE THE REQUIREMENT THAT THE SCHOOL DISTRICT CONDUCT AN INDIVIDUAL ASSESSMENT OF ANY CHILD TO BE PLACED IN THE ALTERNATIVE SCHOOL SETTING; TO PROVIDE THAT ONLY THE CONDUCT OF A CHILD THAT OCCURS DURING THE COURSE OF AN ACADEMIC SCHOOL YEAR SHALL BE TAKEN INTO CONSIDERATION WHEN DETERMINING ALTERNATIVE SCHOOL PLACEMENT OF THE CHILD FOR DISRUPTIVE, DELINQUENT AND VOLATILE BEHAVIOR; AND FOR RELATED PURPOSES.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI:
SECTION 1. Section 37-13-92, Mississippi Code of 1972, is amended as follows:
37-13-92. (1) Beginning with the school year 2004-2005, the school boards of all school districts shall establish, maintain and operate, in connection with the regular programs of the school district, an alternative school program or behavior modification program as defined by the State Board of Education for, but not limited to, the following categories of compulsory-school-age students:
(a) Any compulsory-school-age child who has been suspended for more than ten (10) days or expelled from school, except for any student expelled for possession of a weapon or other felonious conduct;
(b) Any compulsory-school-age child referred to such alternative school based upon a documented need for placement in the alternative school program by the parent, legal guardian or custodian of such child due to disciplinary problems;
(c) Any compulsory-school-age child referred to such alternative school program by the dispositive order of a chancellor or youth court judge, with the consent of the superintendent of the child's school district;
(d) Any compulsory-school-age child whose presence in the classroom, in the determination of the school superintendent or principal, is a disruption to the educational environment of the school or a detriment to the interest and welfare of the students and teachers of such class as a whole; and
(e) No
school district is required to place a child returning from out-of-home
placement in the mental health, juvenile justice or foster care system in
alternative school. Placement of a child in the alternative school shall be
done consistently, and for students identified under the Individuals with
Disabilities Education Act (IDEA), shall adhere to the requirements of the
Individuals with Disabilities Education Improvement Act of 2004. * * *
If a school district chooses to place a child in alternative school the
district will make an individual assessment and evaluation of that child in the
following time periods:
A child who successfully completes the requirements of the penalty imposed for detention in a juvenile center, upon release, shall be reintegrated into the traditional classroom setting until such a time that the child displays volatile and disruptive behavior.
* * *
(2) The principal or program administrator of any such alternative school program shall require verification from the appropriate guidance counselor of any such child referred to the alternative school program regarding the suitability of such child for attendance at the alternative school program. Before a student may be removed to an alternative school education program, the superintendent of the student's school district must determine that the written and distributed disciplinary policy of the local district is being followed. The policy shall include standards for:
(a) The removal of a student to an alternative education program that will include a process of educational review to develop the student's individual instruction plan and the evaluation at regular intervals of the student's educational progress; the process shall include classroom teachers and/or other appropriate professional personnel, as defined in the district policy, to ensure a continuing educational program for the removed student;
(b) The duration of alternative placement; and
(c) The notification of parents or guardians, and their appropriate inclusion in the removal and evaluation process, as defined in the district policy. Nothing in this paragraph should be defined in a manner to circumvent the principal's or the superintendent's authority to remove a student to alternative education.
(3) The local school board or the superintendent shall provide for the continuing education of a student who has been removed to an alternative school program.
(4) A school district, in its discretion, may provide a program of general educational development (GED) preparatory instruction in the alternative school program. However, any GED preparation program offered in an alternative school program must be administered in compliance with the rules and regulations established for such programs under Sections 37-35-1 through
37-35-11 and by the State Board for Community and Junior Colleges. The school district may administer the General Educational Development (GED) Testing Program under the policies and guidelines of the GED Testing Service of the American Council on Education in the alternative school program or may authorize the test to be administered through the community/junior college district in which the alternative school is situated.
(5) Any such alternative school program operated under the authority of this section shall meet all appropriate accreditation requirements of the State Department of Education.
(6) The alternative school program may be held within such school district or may be operated by two (2) or more adjacent school districts, pursuant to a contract approved by the State Board of Education. When two (2) or more school districts contract to operate an alternative school program, the school board of a district designated to be the lead district shall serve as the governing board of the alternative school program. Transportation for students attending the alternative school program shall be the responsibility of the local school district. The expense of establishing, maintaining and operating such alternative school program may be paid from funds contributed or otherwise made available to the school district for such purpose or from local district maintenance funds.
(7) The State Board of Education shall promulgate minimum guidelines for alternative school programs. The guidelines shall require, at a minimum, the formulation of an individual instruction plan for each student referred to the alternative school program and, upon a determination that it is in a student's best interest for that student to receive general educational development (GED) preparatory instruction, that the local school board assign the student to a GED preparatory program established under subsection (4) of this section. The minimum guidelines for alternative school programs shall also require the following components:
(a) Clear guidelines and procedures for placement of students into alternative education programs which at a minimum shall prescribe due process procedures for disciplinary and general educational development (GED) placement;
(b) Clear and consistent goals for students and parents;
(c) Curricula addressing cultural and learning style differences;
(d) Direct supervision of all activities on a closed campus;
(e) Attendance requirements that allow for educational and workforce development opportunities;
(f) Selection of program from options provided by the local school district, Division of Youth Services or the youth court, including transfer to a community-based alternative school;
(g) Continual monitoring and evaluation and formalized passage from one (1) step or program to another;
(h) A motivated and culturally diverse staff;
(i) Counseling for parents and students;
(j) Administrative and community support for the program; and
(k) Clear procedures for annual alternative school program review and evaluation.
(8) On request of a school district, the State Department of Education shall provide the district informational material on developing an alternative school program that takes into consideration size, wealth and existing facilities in determining a program best suited to a district.
(9) Any compulsory-school-age child who becomes involved in any criminal or violent behavior shall be removed from such alternative school program and, if probable cause exists, a case shall be referred to the youth court.
(10) The State Board of Education shall promulgate guidelines for alternative school programs which provide broad authority to school boards of local school districts to establish alternative education programs to meet the specific needs of the school district.
(11) Each school district having an alternative school program shall submit a report annually to the State Department of Education describing the results of its annual alternative school program review and evaluation undertaken pursuant to subsection (7)(k). The report shall include a detailed account of any actions taken by the school district during the previous year to comply with substantive guidelines promulgated by the State Board of Education under subsection (7)(a) through (j).
(12) The implications of a child's conduct that would qualify the child for placement in an alternative school program shall only apply to volatile, disruptive or delinquent conduct that occurs during the operational hours of school, on school premises, at school-sponsored events and any other conduct for which reprimand and discipline is the corrective action during the course of an academic school year. A child shall not be subject to alternative school placement for delinquent conduct occurring during any interim period of school. For the purpose of this section the term "interim period" means any time during the summer months and holidays between school terms when the child is not enrolled in school.
SECTION 2. This act shall take effect and be in force from and after July 1, 2013.