THE SENATE |
S.B. NO. |
1220 |
THIRTIETH LEGISLATURE, 2019 |
S.D. 1 |
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STATE OF HAWAII |
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A BILL FOR AN ACT
RELATING TO EARLY CHILDHOOD EDUCATION.
BE IT
ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF HAWAII:
SECTION
1. The legislature finds that according
to a joint statement drafted by the National Association for the Education of
Young Children, with support from a host of other national organizations known
as leaders in addressing early childhood education, every year, as many as
8,710 three- and four-year-olds may be expelled from or pushed out of their
state-funded preschool or prekindergarten classroom at a rate more than three
times that of their peers in kindergarten through grade twelve.
The
legislature further finds that the data reflects severe racial disparities in
the number of children who get suspended.
Data from the federal Department of Education Office for Civil Rights
indicates a significant percentage of these children are also suspended more
than once, leaving them with few supports and fewer options to ensure they are
able to participate in high-quality early learning.
The
legislature additionally finds that this is particularly troubling given such
suspensions and expulsions occur during a critical period in a child's
development, when their brains are developing rapidly. The earliest years of a child's life are
critical to laying the foundation of learning and wellness needed for success
in school and beyond. It is especially
during these years that systems should ensure the State's youngest children
have access to opportunities that will set them up to reach their highest
potential. By suspending or expelling
them, the youngest children are set off in the wrong direction before they even
reach kindergarten.
Well-established
research indicates that school suspension and expulsion practices are
associated with adverse educational and life outcomes. Suspension and expulsion early in a child's
life predicts suspension and expulsion later in school. Children who are suspended or expelled from
school are as many as ten times more likely to drop out of high school,
experience academic failure, hold negative school attitudes, and face
incarceration than their peers who were never suspended or expelled.
Though
each case is different, suspensions and expulsions may be the result of the
lack of, or misguided, policies, or insufficient training and support services
for staff, especially in managing challenging behaviors, recognizing trauma,
and promoting socioemotional development.
The executive office on early learning makes it a priority to provide
professional learning support to executive office on early learning public
prekindergarten program staff as well as work with school leadership on
staffing, and has been partnering with the University of Hawaii system to
strengthen the pipeline of early childhood educators in these areas. The executive office on early learning makes
this a focus of its work because the target population for the executive office
on early learning public prekindergarten program is underserved or at-risk
children – those who stand to benefit the most from high-quality early learning
and should be assured of the opportunity for such, rather than be denied due to
suspension or expulsion.
In
December 2014, the federal Department of Health and Human Services and federal
Department of Education issued a joint policy statement and recommendations to
assist states and their public and private local early childhood programs to
prevent and severely limit suspensions and expulsions in early learning
settings. The policy statement affirmed
the departments' efforts to prevent and eventually eliminate suspension and
expulsion in all early childhood settings and support young children's social,
emotional, and behavioral development.
The
federal Head Start Program has already prohibited its programs from expelling
or un-enrolling children due to a child's behavior. It also requires its programs to prohibit or
severely limit the use of suspension due to a child's behavior. Programs are required to partner with
families, consult with specialists, help the child and family obtain additional
services as appropriate, and take all possible steps to ensure the child's
successful participation in the program.
Therefore,
the purpose of this Act is to prohibit the suspension and expulsion of children
participating in the executive office on early learning public prekindergarten
program, except in very limited circumstances, in alignment with national best
practices and the federal government's efforts along these lines to most
appropriately support our youngest children.
SECTION
2. Section 302A-1134, Hawaii Revised
Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (a) to read as follows:
"(a) If for any reason a child becomes a detriment
to the morals or discipline of any school, the child may be precluded from
attending school by the principal, with the approval of the complex area
superintendent[.]; provided that this section shall not apply to
children participating in the executive office on early learning public
prekindergarten program pursuant to section 302L-7. The department shall seek the active
participation of other public and private agencies in providing help to these
children before and after they have left school. An appeal may be taken on behalf of the child
to the superintendent of education within ten days from the date of such
action."
SECTION
3. Section 302L-7, Hawaii Revised
Statutes, is amended to read as follows:
"§302L-7
Executive office on early learning public prekindergarten program;
public preschools. (a) There is established within the early
learning system an early childhood education program to be known as the
executive office on early learning public prekindergarten program and to be
administered by the office pursuant to rules adopted by the office. The program shall:
(1) Be provided through the executive office on
early learning, which may partner with the department of education;
(2) Prepare children for school and active
participation in society through the use of either of the State's two official
languages; and
(3) Provide access to high-quality early learning
that addresses children's physical, cognitive, linguistic, social, and
emotional development.
(b) The program shall serve children in the year
prior to the year of kindergarten eligibility, with priority extended to
underserved or at-risk children, as defined in section 302L-1. Enrollment priority shall be given but is not
limited to children who attend prekindergarten at schools to which the children
will be assigned upon entering kindergarten under section 302A-1143.
(c) Enrollment in the program shall be
voluntary. A child who is enrolled in,
or is eligible to attend, a public elementary school, or who is required to
attend school pursuant to section 302A-1132, shall not be eligible for
enrollment in the program.
(d) The program shall incorporate high-quality
standards pursuant to rules adopted by the office. High-quality standards shall be
research-based, developmentally-appropriate practices associated with better
educational outcomes for children, such as:
(1) Positive teacher-child interactions;
(2) Use of individual child assessments that are
used for ongoing instructional planning, based upon all areas of childhood
development and learning, including cognitive, linguistic, social, and
emotional approaches to learning and health and physical development;
(3) Family engagement; and
(4) Alignment with the Hawaii early learning and
development standards, which align with department of education standards,
state content and performance standards, and general learner outcomes for
grades kindergarten to twelve, to facilitate a seamless and high-quality
educational experience for children.
The office shall monitor
implementation of the high-quality educational experience for children.
(e) Prior to opening a public prekindergarten
class in a school, the principal, and other school personnel as required by the
office, shall participate in an early learning induction program.
(f) The office shall provide support to
incorporate the high-quality standards developed pursuant to subsection (d),
including support related to teacher-child interactions, individual child
assessments, and family engagement.
(g) The office shall coordinate with other
agencies and programs to facilitate comprehensive services for early learning.
(h)
The office shall collect data to:
(1) Evaluate the services provided;
(2) Inform policy; and
(3) Make any improvements to the program.
(i) The department of education and any public
charter school existing pursuant to chapter 302D, may use available classrooms
for public preschool programs statewide.
The office shall give priority to public charter schools that serve high
populations of underserved or at-risk children.
Preschool classrooms established pursuant to this section shall be in
addition to any classrooms used for the pre-plus program established pursuant
to rules adopted by the department pursuant to chapter 91.
(j) The office shall prohibit the use of
suspension in the program due to a child's behavior; provided that a temporary
suspension may be used when there is a serious safety threat as determined by
the administrator of the school.
The
office shall prohibit the permanent removal of a student from the program due
to a child's behavior; provided that when a child exhibits persistent and
serious challenging behaviors, the administrator of the school shall consult
with the office on how to address the behaviors.
[(j)]
(k) The office shall adopt rules
pursuant to chapter 91 necessary to carry out the purposes of this section,
including compliance with all applicable state and federal laws[.];
provided that the office shall be subject to chapter 8-19, Hawaii
Administrative Rules, to carry out the purposes of subsection (j) until such a
time that the office develops and adopts rules pursuant to chapter 91."
SECTION
4. Statutory material to be repealed is
bracketed and stricken. New statutory
material is underscored.
SECTION
5. This Act shall take effect upon its
approval.
Report Title:
Executive Office on Early Learning Public Prekindergarten Program; Suspension and Expulsion
Description:
Prohibits the suspension and expulsion of children participating in the Executive Office on Early Learning Public Prekindergarten Program. (SD1)
The summary description
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not legislation or evidence of legislative intent.