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Oklahoma State Senate
Communications Division
State Capitol
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma 73105
For Immediate Release: March
8, 2005
Audio Clip
Senator Mike Morgan
Senate Approves Education Accountability Legislation
Legislation that will toughen the math curriculum
in Oklahoma’s secondary schools and increase graduation requirements
for high seniors passed out of the Oklahoma State Senate Tuesday
on a unanimous 46-0 vote.
Senate Bill 982, authored by Senate Appropriations Chairman Mike
Morgan, contains Governor Brad Henry’s Achieving Classroom
Excellence initiative and focuses on improving math instruction
at the secondary level.
“Too many students from Oklahoma have to spend valuable time
and money taking remedial math courses once they get to college.
We have to recognize this problem and increase our focus on math
instruction in our public schools,” said Morgan, D-Stillwater.
Chief among the bill’s provisions is including a third year
of math as a high school graduation requirement from a public high
school in Oklahoma.
“We also must recognize that we have to do more than just
make our high school students occupy a desk in a math class for
an additional year. We have to address the issue earlier in the
academic careers of our students and we have to make sure our math
teachers – especially at the middle school level – have
all the tools they need be as effective as possible,” Morgan
said.
The legislation includes an increased emphasis on math and reading
in Oklahoma’s middle schools. It offers a $1,000 bonus for
middle school teachers who successfully complete a professional
development program to improve their math instruction.
The Stillwater senator said that every effort is being made to ensure
that strengthening the math requirements won’t interfere with
opportunities for Oklahoma high school students to take part in
CareerTech programs.
Morgan said other provisions of the bill will measure its overall
effectiveness and hold educators and students more accountable.
It will require eighth-grade students to pass reading and math mastery
exams or be subject to summer school or after school tutoring and
remediation programs.
High school seniors will also be required to pass end of instruction
exams in four of six subjects before receiving a diploma. The college
preparatory curriculum now required of students before they can
receive an Oklahoma Higher Learning Access Program scholarship would
become the default minimum curriculum required for high school graduation
for all students.
The ACE initiative would also pay for high school students to get
a jump on their college careers by paying for college courses they
take concurrently while still in high school.
Morgan said SB 982 also creates the ACE Task Force, which will charged
with developing recommendations for additional end of course instruction
tests, benchmarks and cut scores; student exemptions from mastery
exams; an action plan for remediation; and to hold public hearings
for educators, parents and students.
The19-member task forces will be made up of educators and administrators
from small, mid-size and large school districts; representatives
from all education associations, the State Superintendent of Public
Instruction, the Director of CareerTech; the Chancellor for Higher
Education; and members of the Legislature.
Senate Bill 982 now goes to the Oklahoma House of Representatives
for consideration.
For more
information contact:
Senate Communications Office - (405) 521-5774

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