Ninth-grade success grant program - created - criteria - use of grant money - report - rules - definitions - repeal.

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(1) As used in this section, unless the context otherwise requires:

  1. "Charter school" means a charter school authorized by a school district pursuant topart 1 of article 30.5 of this title 22 or an institute charter school authorized by the state charter school institute pursuant to part 5 of article 30.5 of this title 22.

  2. "Program" means the ninth-grade success grant program created in this section.

  3. "Small rural school district" means a school district in Colorado that the departmentdetermines is rural based on the geographic size of the school district and the distance of the school district from the nearest large, urbanized area, and that enrolls fewer than one thousand students in kindergarten through twelfth grade.

  4. "Student group" has the same meaning as provided in section 22-11-103.

  5. "Success team" means a cross-disciplinary team of ninth-grade teachers and supportstaff as described in subsection (5) of this section.

(2) (a) There is created in the department the ninth-grade success grant program to provide funding to local education providers and charter schools to implement a ninth-grade success program, as described in subsection (5) of this section, to assist students enrolled in ninth grade to develop the skills they need to successfully persist to high school graduation and succeed in their education and professional careers.

(b) Notwithstanding any provision of this section to the contrary, an alternative education campus designated pursuant to section 22-7-604.5 may not apply for or receive money or services through a grant awarded pursuant to this section.

(3) (a) A local education provider or charter school that serves students enrolled in grades nine through twelve and that chooses to apply for a grant through the program must submit a grant application to the department in accordance with rules adopted by the state board. A local education provider or charter school that is selected to receive a grant must, as a condition of accepting the grant, provide a grant match, which may include in-kind contributions, in an amount set by the state board, which amount must not exceed:

  1. Fifteen percent of the grant amount for a local education provider that is a small ruralschool district or for a charter school; and

  2. Twenty-five percent of the grant amount for all other local education providers.

(b) A grant application at a minimum must include:

  1. The applicant's four-year graduation rate for the three preceding school years;

  2. Whether the applicant has a data system that allows school leaders and teachers realtime access to integrated data concerning a student's behavior, attendance, and grades and allows comparison of the data across demographic categories and student groups;

  3. For a local education provider, designation of the schools in which the local education provider will use the grant money to implement ninth-grade success teams;

  4. Indication of the applicant's ability to provide the required grant match and any typeand value of in-kind contribution that the applicant may provide; and

  5. Any additional information required by rule of the state board that assists the department in determining the likelihood that, in implementing the success teams, the applicant will be successful in improving the success of students enrolled in ninth grade.

  1. The department shall review each of the applications received pursuant to this section and recommend to the state board applicants to receive grants and the amount, duration, and grant match amount of each recommended grant. Beginning in the 2019-20 budget year, the state board, subject to available appropriations, shall award the grants, taking into consideration the recommendations of the department. In awarding a grant, the state board shall specify the amount and duration of the grant and the amount of the grant match, including any type of inkind contribution, that the grant recipient must provide. The department and the state board in recommending and awarding grants shall prioritize applicants that have a four-year graduation rate that, over the preceding three school years, has consistently ranked within the lowest twenty percent of the four-year graduation rates for public high schools in the state. To the extent practicable, the state board shall also ensure that the grant recipients vary in student population size and are located in urban, suburban, and rural areas throughout the state.

  2. A local education provider or charter school that receives a grant through the program must use the grant money to implement a ninth-grade success program that, at a minimum, must include the following elements:

(a) (I) Creating and implementing a cross-disciplinary success team of ninth-grade teachers and support staff, which must include at least one school counselor, school mental health professional, or school social worker. To the extent practicable, a success team must include all of the ninth-grade teachers who teach core courses, as defined in section 22-11-503.5. The local education provider or charter school shall designate a member of the success team to serve as the success team leader and reduce the team leader's workload to a level that allows the team leader sufficient time to complete the leadership duties, which include team logistics, preparing team meeting agendas, and facilitating team meetings.

(II) The success team must meet at least every two weeks, to the extent practicable, throughout the school year to collaborate on identifying and implementing strategies to improve outcomes for ninth-grade students who are found to be at risk of dropping out of school before graduation and to address systems-level barriers to success for all ninth-grade students. The strategies must be informed by data concerning, at a minimum, ninth-grade students' behavior, attendance, and grades across demographic categories and student groups. The local education provider or charter school shall allow success team members time during the work day for planning and collaboration or provide incentives to meet outside of the work day.

  1. Organizing the school staff to ensure that, to the extent practicable, the ninth-gradeclasses are taught by a single group of teachers who teach only or mostly ninth-grade classes;

  2. Implementing a data system that provides real-time access to integrated data concerning a student's behavior, attendance, and grades and provides the ability to compare the data across demographic categories and student groups;

  3. Identifying and prioritizing services for ninth-grade students who are at risk of academic failure in ninth grade;

  4. Providing instructional support for ninth-grade students including attendance support,content-specific academic interventions, tutoring, course-completion programs, social-emotional learning, and trauma-informed instruction;

  5. Ensuring that school leadership, guidance counselors, and key members of the success team receive and review data on all incoming ninth-grade students and plan course work and supports for the students based on the data received;

  6. Ensuring that all ninth-grade teachers receive data concerning the incoming ninthgrade students before the start of the school year and receive professional development concerning how to use the data to inform instruction for the students. To the extent possible, the local education provider or charter school shall ensure that middle school teachers provide information to ninth-grade teachers concerning the incoming ninth-grade students.

  7. Providing summer orientation for incoming ninth-grade students and their parents tointroduce students to the behavioral and academic expectations of high school; and

  8. Evaluating with rigor the impact of the interventions provided through the ninthgrade success program on student attendance, behavior, course completion, academic results, discipline rates, teacher surveys, student surveys, dropout rates, and graduation rates as the information becomes available for ninth-grade students who receive interventions through the program.

  1. The general assembly may annually appropriate money to the department to implement the program, including money from the marijuana tax cash fund created in section 39-28.8-501. In addition, the department may accept and expend gifts, grants, or donations from private or public sources for the purposes of the program; except that the department may not accept a gift, grant, or donation if it is subject to conditions that are inconsistent with this article or any other law of the state.

  2. (a) Each local education provider and charter school that receives a grant through the program shall submit to the department, in accordance with the reporting timelines specified in rules of the state board, information concerning the implementation of the ninth-grade success program and the evaluation of the impact, as described in subsection (5)(i) of this section, in total and disaggregated by student group. The department shall specify the information to be reported to enable the department to prepare the report required in subsection (7)(b) of this section.

(b) On or before March 15, 2022, and on or before March 15 each year thereafter, the department shall prepare and submit to the state board and to the education committees of the house of representatives and the senate, or any successor committees, a report of the ninth-grade success programs implemented using grants received through the program. At a minimum, the report shall:

  1. Specify the grant recipients and the amount and duration of the grants awarded;

  2. Describe the ninth-grade success programs that are implemented using the grant money; and

  3. Provide a summary of the evaluations of the impact of the interventions providedthrough the ninth-grade success programs, as described in subsection (5)(i) of this section, in total and disaggregated by student group.

(c) Notwithstanding the requirement in section 24-1-136 (11)(a)(I), the report required in subsection (7)(b) of this section continues indefinitely.

(8) This section is repealed, effective July 1, 2025.

Source: L. 2019: Entire section added, (SB 19-246), ch. 151, p. 1789, § 7, effective May 10.

Editor's note: Section 20(4) of chapter 151 (SB 19-246), Session Laws of Colorado 2019, provides that the act adding this section takes effect only if HB 19-1276 does not become law. HB 19-1276 did not become law.


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