Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Reporting Industry Certifications and Career & Professional Academies Tara Goodman Tara McLarnon Division of Career and Adult Education.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Reporting Industry Certifications and Career & Professional Academies Tara Goodman Tara McLarnon Division of Career and Adult Education."— Presentation transcript:

1 Reporting Industry Certifications and Career & Professional Academies Tara Goodman Tara McLarnon Division of Career and Adult Education

2 Purposes for Reporting Industry Certifications Florida Career and Professional Education Act (aka CAPE Act) School Grades ◦ Industry Certifications from the Industry Certification Funding List counts in the High School Grade, beginning in 2009-10 Carl D. Perkins Career and Technical Education Act ◦ Technical Skill Attainment Requirements 2

3 2011 Legislative Changes Statutory changes to the CAPE Act were included in the following bills: SB2120 – Chapter 2011-55, Laws of Florida http://laws.flrules.org/files/Ch_2011- 055.pdf http://laws.flrules.org/files/Ch_2011- 055.pdf HB1255 http://www.flsenate.gov/Session/Bill/2011/ 1255/BillText/er/PDF http://www.flsenate.gov/Session/Bill/2011/ 1255/BillText/er/PDF 3

4 2011 Legislative Changes Require SBE to adopt weights for each industry certification ◦ Three weights: 0.1, 0.2, or 0.3 ◦ Criteria must be based 50 percent on rigor and 50 percent on employment value ◦ Rigor = number of instructional hours, plus work experience hours, with bonus for certifications with a statewide articulation agreement ◦ Employment Value = average annual openings, growth rate, and entry wage for the primary occupation linked to the certification ◦ Calculation will be specified in the SBE rule for the industry certification process 4

5 2011 Legislative Changes Middle schools ◦ Creation of middle school career and professional academies ◦ Inclusion of industry certifications earned in middle school in the school grades calculation ◦ Inclusion of industry certifications earned in middle school in the FEFP calculation when the student graduates 5

6 2011 Legislative Changes Academies ◦ Performance criteria was changed ◦ An element was removed from the original 13 required components ◦ One element was changed – requirement for the Ready to Work credential was removed, replaced with requirement to include a plan to sustain career and professional academies 6

7 Key Florida Statutes for Career and Professional Academies s. 1003.492, F.S. – Industry Certified Career Education Programs ◦ Authority for the State Board of Education Rule (Rule 6A-6.0573, F.A.C.) ◦ Requires the Department to collect student achievement and performance data in industry-certified career education programs  Annual report required by December 31  2009-10 Report: http://www.fldoe.org/workforce/pdf/capepr0910.pdf http://www.fldoe.org/workforce/pdf/capepr0910.pdf 7

8 Key Florida Statutes for Career and Professional Academies s. 1003.493, F.S. – Industry Certified Career Education Programs ◦ A "career and professional academy" is a research-based program that integrates a rigorous academic curriculum with an industry-specific curriculum aligned directly to priority workforce needs established by the regional workforce board. ◦ 11 required elements in the law that define a career and professional academy. 8

9 Key Florida Statutes for Career and Professional Academies s. 1011.62(1)(o) – Calculation of additional full-time equivalence membership based on certification of successful completion of industry-certified career and professional academy pursuant to s. 1003.492 ◦ Student eligibility for additional FTE is based on the following:  Enrollment in a registered career and professional academy  Completion of a certification on the approved list  Receipt of standard high school diploma ◦ Students earning certification through dual enrollment are not eligible for the additional FTE calculation. ◦ NEW – Each certification was weighted in 0.3 in the original legislation; now each certification will be weighted 0.1, 0.2, or 0.3. 9

10 State Board Rule - 6A-6.0573 Will be revised in Summer 2011 to conform with new statutory requirements Including the formula for the calculation of weights for each industry certification 10

11 “The Lists” Comprehensive Industry Certification List Industry Certification Funding List Perkins IV Technical Skill Attainment Inventory (Secondary Programs) 11

12 Comprehensive Industry Certification List Agency for Workforce Innovation (AWI) creates and maintains comprehensive list of highest and best industry-recognized certifications. Must be approved by Workforce Florida, Inc. Includes certifications that may not be earned by students at the secondary level, although the student may take introductory coursework leading to the certification Serves as the basis for the annual “Industry Certification Funding List” 12

13 Comprehensive Industry Certification List Additional industry certifications may be recommended to the Agency for Workforce Innovation or Workforce Florida, Inc. by regional workforce boards and career and professional academies. These submissions will be reviewed and, if approved, will be included on the comprehensive list for that year. 13

14 Timeline for Comprehensive Industry Certification List Time FrameActivity for 2011-12 Comprehensive List August 2010 – September 2010 WFI opens a submission of requests to the 2011-12 comprehensive List October – November 2010 WFI, AWI and DOE staff conduct research on submissions received by WFI December 2010 – January 2011 WFI, AWI, and DOE finalize their recommendations to the State Workforce Board February 2011The State Workforce Board adopts the 2011-12 Comprehensive Industry Certification List March 1, 2011WFI posts the final 2011-12 Comprehensive Industry Certification List 14

15 Industry Certification Funding List Created by the Division of Career and Adult Education Approved by the State Board of Education each year For inclusion: ◦ The certification shall be on the “Comprehensive Industry Certification List.” ◦ The certification shall be achievable by secondary students. ◦ The certification shall require a minimum of 150 hours of instruction. ◦ The certification shall have been offered for at least one year in a school district. (This requirement may be waived by the Commissioner of Education.) 15

16 Timeline for Industry Certification Funding List Time FrameActivity for 2011-12 Funding List March 1, 2011WFI posts the final 2011-12 Comprehensive Industry Certification List March 15, 2011DOE distributes a preliminary 2011-12 Industry Certification Funding List March 15, 2011 to April 15, 2011 DOE has an open submission window during which districts may submit requests for additions to the funding list. April 15 to May 2011DOE staff review the requests to confirm that all of the required criteria are met. August 2011State Board of Education adopts the 2011-12 Industry Certification Funding List 16

17 Registration of Career and Professional Academies DOE will maintain a website for school districts to register career and professional academies that meet the requirements of s. 1003.493, F.S. For 2011-12, this registration will include middle school career academies in a separate reporting window. 17

18 Registration of Career and Professional Academies Superintendents must certify that each academy meets all of the requirements of s. 1003.493, F.S. Eligibility for funding is limited to academies registered with the DOE under s. 1011.62(1)(o), F.S. Registration process creates a 3-digit identifier for the academy ◦ This identifier is used to identify students enrolled in the academy and reported in Surveys 2, 3, and 5 18

19 Eligibility for add-on FTE under S. 1011.62(1)(o) Student must have: ◦ Been enrolled in a registered CAPE academy and earned certification on the Funding List linked to a secondary CTE course and program. ◦ Graduated with a standard diploma. 19

20 Performance Criteria Performance Criteria The performance criteria was changed in 2011 legislation (HB1255) If the passage rate on an industry certification examination that is associated with the career and professional academy falls below 50 percent, the academy must discontinue enrollment of new students the following school year and each year thereafter until such time as the passage rate is above 50 percent or the academy is discontinued. 20

21 Issue 1 – Reporting Students Enrolled in Career and Professional Academies in Surveys 2, 3, and 5 Data on students in registered career and professional academy is reported on the Federal/State Indicator Status format for Surveys 2, 3, and 5, using the Career and Professional Academy Identifier element. ◦ For industry certifications, districts will have until the final close date for Survey 5 to update these records. For example, in the 2009-10 reporting cycle, Survey 5 was closed on February 28, 2011. The survey period dates are approved and published by the Department on an annual basis. 21

22 Issue 2 – Reporting CAPE Students Attempting to Earn Industry Certifications in Survey 5 Data on industry certifications is reported on the Career and Technical Education (CTE) Student Course Schedule format, Survey 5 Districts must report on all industry certifications taken, including those which a student did not successfully complete. Two elements that must be reported: ◦ Industry Certification Identifier ◦ Industry Certification Outcome 22

23 Issue 2 – Reporting Students Attempting to Earn Industry Certifications Up to two certifications can be reported linked to a single course. For dually enrolled students, certification can be reported by linking to a postsecondary course number. Beginning in 2011-12, Career and Professional Academy Identifier must be reported on the CTE Student Course Format for academy students earning industry certifications. 23

24 Issue 3 – Reporting certifications for students who are not participating in career education. These certifications should be reported using all zeros for the Program Code and Course Number fields. No matching CTE Teacher Course record required. These certifications will not be included in the funding calculation in 1011.62(1)(o), F.S., but may count for school grades All certification reported may count for the high school grades calculation. ◦ See technical assistance on the school grades calculation here: http://schoolgrades.fldoe.org/ http://schoolgrades.fldoe.org/ 24

25 Issue 4 -- Reporting industry certifications during the year in which the student took the coursework In most cases, the industry certification must be reported in the year in which the student took the coursework that lead to the industry certification. For calculation of funding under s. 1011.62(1)(o), the Department will check all standard diploma graduates against a multi- year file of student earning industry certifications while in an academy. 25

26 Issue 5 – Prior year reporting in limited circumstances Districts may report certifications earned during the prior reporting year, in cases where the certification could not have been earned by the end of the update period. ◦ Example: Student had to be 18 to earn the certification and the18 th birthday fell after the standard update period. ◦ This method cannot be used to correct data reporting errors. District may report prior year by using the following elements: ◦ School Year – Record Submission element equals current reporting year. ◦ School Year – Course Taken element equals the prior year. 26

27 Data Reports Available to Districts F71102 - Provides a list of students who were included in the calculation for the industry certification add-on FTE (s. 1011.62(1)(o), F.S. This report is run for the 3 rd and 4 th FEFP calculation 27

28 Data Reports Available to Districts Report NoContent F71015Career and Professional Academies Enrollment F71016 Industry Certification by Academy, Grade, and School F71017Industry Certification Eligible for CAPE F71018Career and Professional Academy Membership F71081Career and Professional Academy Enrollment by Grade F71082Industry Certification by Academy and Grade F71166Perkins Eligible Industry Certification (includes non-CAPE exams) F71171CAPE Industry Certification by School and Grade 28

29 Screen Shots 29

30 Screen Shots 30

31 Data Validation The Division of Career and Adult Education sends academy enrollment and industry certifications reports to districts at the end of each Survey period to ensure that program staff are aware of the information that has been reported 31

32 Web Resources DOE Website – CAPE Act http://www.fldoe.org/workforce/fcpea/default.asp ◦ Industry Certification Funding Lists and Career and Professional Academy registration site are available here. Agency for Workforce Innovation - Comprehensive Industry Certification List http://www.floridajobs.org/CAPE/cape.html ◦ Comprehensive Industry Certification List is available here. Carl D. Perkins Technical Skill Attainment Inventories http://www.fldoe.org/workforce/perkins/perkins_resources.as p ◦ See Header for Secondary and Postsecondary Technical Skill Attainment Inventory ◦ This information is also posted in Appendix Z 32

33 Technical Assistance Paper: Florida Career and Professional Education Act http://www.fldoe.org/workforce/pdf/CAPE-Act- TechAssist.pdf Statewide Memorandum on Industry Certification Data Reporting http://www.fldoe.org/workforce/pdf/icdr.pdf 6A-6.0573, F.A.C.-- Industry Certification Process https://www.flrules.org/gateway/readFile.asp?sid=0&tid=74 90357&type=1&file=6A-6.0573.doc 33

34 Key Contacts Tara Goodman, Division of Career and Adult Education  Email: Tara.Goodman@fldoe.org  Phone: 850-245-9001 Tara McLarnon, Division of Career and Adult Education  Email: Tara.McLarnon@fldoe.org  Phone: 850-245-9005 Larry McIntyre, Agency for Workforce Innovation  Email: Larry.McIntyre@flaawi.com Jayne Burgess, Workforce Florida Inc  Email: jburgess@workforceflorida.com 34


Download ppt "Reporting Industry Certifications and Career & Professional Academies Tara Goodman Tara McLarnon Division of Career and Adult Education."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google