CHARACTER DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM S.B. 93: FLOOR ANALYSIS




Senate Bill 93 (as reported without amendment)
Sponsor: Senator Valde Garcia
Committee: Education

CONTENT
The bill would amend the Revised School Code to require the Michigan Department of Education, for the 2008-2009 school year and succeeding school years, to develop and make available to school districts and public school academies one or more model character development programs that the districts and academies could adopt and implement. A school board or the board of directors of a public school academy would be encouraged to provide a comprehensive character development program for pupils in each grade level it operated.


The Department's obligation to develop the program and make it available would be limited to the amount of funds the Department had available to fulfill its duties under the bill.


The character development program would have to be similar to the Michigan model for comprehensive school health education character education curriculum, the character counts program, the character first: education series, or the character unlimited program. The character development program also would have to be secular and research-based and have documented effectiveness; teach core ethical values and character qualities such as honesty, fairness, kindness, courtesy, compassion, acceptance, responsibility, respect for self and others, respect for the property of others, and service to others and to the community; and be designed to encourage each pupil to become a responsible, contributing member of society.


The program "should" be incorporated, as much as possible, into each school's regular curriculum and classroom instruction, and be integrated into each school's procedures and environment to develop a school climate that promoted positive character traits.


Proposed MCL 380.1163 Legislative Analyst: Claire Layman

FISCAL IMPACT
To develop a character development program under this legislation, the Department of Education would face increased costs. Specifically, the Department would see increased labor costs for those employees necessary to develop and disseminate a character development curriculum, and there would be associated research, development, and distribution costs. However, if the Department had no available funds to devote to this program development, then that obligation would be removed.


Date Completed: 2-14-05 Fiscal Analyst: Kathryn-Summers Coty




floor\sb93 Analysis available @ http://www.michiganlegislature.org
This analysis was prepared by nonpartisan Senate staff for use by the Senate in its deliberations and does not constitute an official statement of legislative intent.

Analysis was prepared by nonpartisan Senate staff for use by the Senate in its deliberations and does not constitute an official statement of legislative intent. sb93/0506