zais' letter to district superintendents
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STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA
DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION
Mick Zais 1429 Senate Street
Superintendent Columbia, South Carolina 29201
phone: 803-734-8492 ● fax: 803-734-3389 ● ed.sc.gov
MEMORANDUM
TO: District Superintendents
FROM: Mick Zais, State Superintendent of Education
DATE: September 10, 2013
SUBJECT: District Flexibility and Schools of Choice
From the beginning, providing school districts, schools, and teachers more flexibility has been a
cornerstone of my vision to transform education. This was outlined on Page 32 of my vision
presentation, which you can view online at http://ed.sc.gov/agency/superintendent/vision/index.cfm.
The purpose of this memorandum is to remind district superintendents there is some regulatory relief
already permitted in statute and regulations. From my conversations with superintendents, principals,
and teachers, there is a desire to be more innovative in our schools and often these options are
overlooked while working to increase student learning. I want to share with you and encourage you to
seek flexibility already available to districts. You may contact the Office of Federal and State
Accountability at (803) 734-8118 or by visiting our website at http://ed.sc.gov/agency/ac/Federal-and-
State-Accountability/.
The above list is not exhaustive. It simply illustrates some of the ways in which statute and regulation
provide a path to innovative practices in areas where regulation or statute might otherwise limit
flexibility.
Let me be clear: I strongly encourage you to seek this flexibility. I also invite you to submit ideas
and proposals for flexibility that you would like to have and would increase student achievement.
I firmly believe that best ideas don’t emanate from Washington D.C. or Columbia; they reside in
the classrooms of our state.
Educator Evaluation
Forty-one states and the District of Columbia, including South Carolina, have approved Elementary and
Secondary Education Act (ESEA) Flexibility Requests. As you know, one of the four principles of
South Carolina’s ESEA Flexibility Request is to implement a statewide educator evaluation system that
uses, for the first time, measures of student learning.
District Superintendents
Page 2
September 10, 2013
The South Carolina Department of Education (SCDE) and dozens of schools are participating in a pilot
program this year. However, even when the new educator evaluation system is implemented statewide,
districts will still have some flexibility in the design of their evaluation instruments. State Board of
Education (SBE) Regulation 43-205.1 already provides districts this flexibility. Some districts have
used alternative evaluations to the statewide ADEPT system for many years. I encourage you to
seriously consider this flexibility or consider joining the pilot program already in progress throughout
the state.
Career and Technology Education
Career and Technology education is critical to meeting the needs of industry. State law requires districts
to demonstrate at least 50 percent of the graduates from a workforce preparation program available for
placement in an area of training are placed in a job for which they were trained. Programs failing to
meet this placement threshold are subject to discontinuation, possibly hampering a district’s willingness
to even explore forming programs in emerging industries. However, this requirement may be waived by
making a request to the State Board of Education. This flexibility provides districts a tremendous
opportunity to be responsive to the employment needs of business and industry in their communities.
School Operations
Existing law already provides flexibility for the operations of schools. SBE Regulation 43-261 provides
that “Upon request of a district board of trustees or its designee, the State Board of Education may waive
any regulation that would impede the implementation of an approved district strategic plan or school
renewal plan.” The authority is very broad. Districts can apply, for example, to the SBE for flexibility
pertaining to administrative and professional personnel qualifications, duties, and workloads at the
district level. The SBE can waive requirements affecting student ratios for elementary and middle
school principals, assistant principals/directors, curriculum coordinators, guidance counselors, library
media specialists, and teachers in music, art or physical education. Flexibility for these requirements
requires only a letter from the district superintendent (or designee) sent to the SCDE along with any
supporting documentation to validate the need for flexibility. The SCDE will facilitate such requests
through the SBE.
Gifted and Talented Education
Districts are obligated to provide learning opportunities for gifted and talented students. However,
districts may request flexibility from the SBE to combine classes across small schools that may, on their
own, not be able to provide courses for gifted and talented students that will meet the needs of the
students they serve. Specifically, for artistically gifted and talented students, districts can pursue and the
SBE can grant flexibility that would allow districts to set up alternative programs that better serve
artistically gifted and talented students.
District Superintendents
Page 3
September 10, 2013
Proficiency-based Education
Proficiency-based credit for high school coursework is available upon request. Under this provision,
schools can offer students credits in units as small as ¼ unit and up to a full unit of credit for a course.
In order to pursue this flexibility, superintendents need only submit a letter and a plan to the SCDE for
approval by the agency.
Summer School
Summer school programs are required to meet the same rigor and standards required during the regular
school year. However, districts can submit plans to the SBE that would allow them to seek flexibility in
seat time and class size restrictions in their summer school programs.
Schools of Choice
In May 2012, Governor Haley signed H.3241, a bill to strengthen South Carolina’s Charter School Act.
This was my top legislative priority for the 119th South Carolina General Assembly. The conference
report accompanying the legislation received unanimous support in the South Carolina Senate and
strong bipartisan support (87 Yeas, 15 Nays) in the South Carolina House.
Many district superintendents have indicated to me that if districts had the same level of flexibility as
public charter schools, you could raise student achievement in your districts. The General Assembly has
now provided districts the opportunity to seek such flexibility to deploy innovative programs. I
challenge each of you to give serious consideration to seeking this flexibility.
Included in the legislation is a provision I have supported for nearly three years: more flexibility for
schools and school districts. In November 2011, I sent a memorandum encouraging you to apply for
flexibility already available to you under current law. A few superintendents have accepted this offer,
but not nearly as many as I had anticipated. Flexibility is one of the top requests I hear from you when I
visit your schools, so I am taking this opportunity to encourage you (again) to apply for flexibility
already available to you under current law. Innovation is not the product of top-down solutions;
innovation happens when barriers and restrictions are removed and the creativity of our educators is
unleashed.
H.3241 contained language to allow each school district to create a “school of choice.” While these
schools are not public charter schools because they are not autonomous from a local school board, they
do provide an “an avenue for new, innovative, and more flexible ways of educating children” and create
options for parents. A “school of choice” is not exempt from the state and federal accountability, but I
am confident that with the flexibility provided under this law districts will have the ability to innovate
and meet accountability standards.
I have enclosed the text of the two-year-old statute, Section 59-19-350, at the end of this memorandum.
I strongly encourage you to take advantage of this flexibility, as well as the flexibility found in other
statutes, at the earliest possibility.
District Superintendents
Page 4
September 10, 2013
Section 59-19-350
(A) A local school district board of trustees of this State desirous of creating an avenue for new,
innovative, and more flexible ways of educating children within their district, may create a school of
choice within the district that is exempt from state statutes which govern other schools in the district and
regulations promulgated by the State Board of Education. To achieve the status of exemption from
specific statutes and regulations, the local board of trustees, at a public meeting, shall identify specific
statutes and regulations which will be considered for exemption. The exemption may be granted by the
governing board of the district only if there is a two-thirds affirmative vote of the board for each
exemption and the proposed exemption is approved by the State Board of Education.
(B) In seeking exemptions, the local board of trustees may not exempt:
(1) federal and state laws and constitutional provisions prohibiting discrimination on the basis of
disability, race, creed, color, national origin, religion, ancestry, or need for special education services;
(2) health, safety, civil rights, and disability rights requirements as are applied to other public schools
operating in the district;
(3) minimum student attendance requirements;
(4) state assessment requirements; and
(5) certification requirements for teachers in the core academic areas as defined by the federal No
Child Left Behind Act, Public Law 107-110; however, up to twenty-five percent of the teaching staff of
the school may be employed if the individual possesses a baccalaureate or graduate degree in the subject
he is hired to teach.
(C) Any school created pursuant to this section shall admit all children eligible to attend the school
subject to space limitations and may not limit or deny admission or show preference in admission
decisions to any individual or group of individuals.
(D) A local school district that provides exemptions pursuant to subsection (A) shall provide the State
Department of Education with documentation of the approved exemptions and shall submit evaluation
documentation to be reviewed by the State Board of Education after three years of the exemption to
ensure that the district continues to meet the needs of its students. Upon review, if the State Board of
Education determines the continuation of the exemption does not meet the needs of the students
attending the district school of choice, the board may suspend exemptions granted by the local board of
trustees with a two-thirds vote. Before suspending the exemptions, the State Board of Education shall
notify the district and provide the district with any opportunity to defend the continuation of approved
exemptions.
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