SENATE BILL NO. 57
January 27, 2021, Introduced by Senator HORN
and referred to the Committee on Education and Career Readiness.
A bill to amend 1976 PA 451, entitled
"The revised school code,"
by amending sections 1249b and 1250 (MCL 380.1249b and 380.1250), section 1249b as amended by 2019 PA 5 and section 1250 as amended by 2018 PA 601.
the people of the state of michigan enact:
Sec. 1249b. (1)
The board of a school district or intermediate school district or board of directors
of a public school academy shall ensure that the performance evaluation system
for building-level school administrators and for central-office-level school
administrators who are regularly involved in instructional matters meets all of
the following:
(a) The Subject to subdivision (i), the performance
evaluation system must include at least an annual evaluation for all school
administrators described in this subsection by the school district
superintendent or his or her designee, intermediate superintendent or his or
her designee, or chief administrator of the public school academy, as
applicable. However, a superintendent or chief administrator shall must
be evaluated by the board or board of directors or, if the
superintendent or chief administrator is not employed directly by the board or board
of directors, by the designee of the board or board of directors.
(b)
For the 2018-2019 school year, 25% of the annual evaluation must be based on
student growth and assessment data. Beginning with the 2019-2020 school year,
40% of the annual evaluation must be based on student growth and assessment
data. The student growth and assessment data to be used for the school
administrator annual evaluation are the aggregate student growth and assessment
data that are used in teacher annual year-end evaluations in each school in
which the school administrator works as an administrator or, for a
central-office-level school administrator, for the entire school district or
intermediate school district.
(b)
(c) For the purposes
of conducting annual evaluations under the performance evaluation system, the
school district, intermediate school district, or public school academy shall
develop or adopt and implement an evaluation tool for school administrators. The portion of a school administrator's annual
evaluation that is not based on student growth must be based primarily on the
school administrator's performance as measured by this evaluation tool.
(c)
(d) The portion of
the annual evaluation that is not based on
student growth and assessment data as provided under subdivision (b) or on
an evaluation tool as provided under subdivision (c)
(b) must be based on at least the
following for each school in which the school administrator works as an
administrator or, for a central-office-level school administrator, for the
entire school district or intermediate school district:
(i) If the school
administrator conducts teacher performance evaluations, the school
administrator's proficiency in using the evaluation tool for teachers used by
the school district, intermediate school district, or public school academy
under section 1249. If the school administrator designates another person to
conduct teacher performance evaluations, the evaluation of the school
administrator on this factor must be based on the designee's proficiency in
using the evaluation tool for teachers used by the school district, intermediate
school district, or public school academy under section 1249, with the
designee's performance to be counted as if it were the school administrator
personally conducting the teacher performance evaluations.
(ii) The progress made by the school or school district in
meeting the goals set forth in the school's school improvement plan or the
school district's school improvement plans.
(iii) Pupil attendance in the school or school district.
(iv) Student, parent, and teacher feedback, as available, and
other information considered pertinent by the superintendent or other school
administrator conducting the performance evaluation or the board or board of
directors.
(d) (e) For the
purposes of conducting annual evaluations under the performance evaluation
system, by the beginning of the 2016-2017 school year, the school district,
intermediate school district, or public school academy shall adopt and
implement 1 or more of the evaluation tools for school administrators that are
included on the list under subsection (3). However, if a school district,
intermediate school district, or public school academy has 1 or more local
evaluation tools for school administrators or modifications of an evaluation tool
on the list under subsection (3), and the school district, intermediate school
district, or public school academy complies with subsection (2), the school
district, intermediate school district, or public school academy may conduct
annual year-end evaluations for school administrators using 1 or more local
evaluation tools or modifications.
(e) (f) The
evaluation tool and other measures used by the school district, intermediate
school district, or public school academy in its performance evaluation system
for school administrators must be used consistently across the schools operated
by a school district, intermediate school district, or public school academy so
that all similarly situated school administrators are evaluated using the same
measures.
(f) (g) The
performance evaluation system must assign an effectiveness rating to each
school administrator described in this subsection of highly effective,
effective, minimally effective, or ineffective.
(g) (h) The
performance evaluation system must ensure that if a school administrator
described in this subsection is rated as minimally effective or ineffective,
the person or persons conducting the evaluation shall develop and require the
school administrator to implement an improvement plan to correct the deficiencies.
The improvement plan must recommend professional development opportunities and
other actions designed to improve the rating of the school administrator on his
or her next annual evaluation.
(h) (i) The
performance evaluation system must provide that, if a school administrator
described in this subsection is rated as ineffective on 3 consecutive annual
evaluations, the school district, intermediate school district, or public
school academy shall dismiss the school administrator from his or her employment.
This subdivision does not affect the ability of a school district, intermediate
school district, or public school academy to dismiss a school administrator
from his or her employment regardless of whether the school administrator is
rated as ineffective on 3 consecutive annual evaluations.
(i) (j) The
performance evaluation system must provide that, if a school administrator is
rated as highly effective on 3 consecutive annual evaluations, the school
district, intermediate school district, or public school academy may choose to
conduct an evaluation biennially instead of annually. However, if a school
administrator is not rated as highly effective on 1 of these biennial
evaluations, the school administrator shall must again be provided with annual evaluations.
(j) (k) The school
district, intermediate school district, or public school academy shall provide
training to school administrators on the measures used by the school district,
intermediate school district, or public school academy in its performance
evaluation system for school administrators and on how each of the measures is
used. This training may be provided by a school district, intermediate school
district, or public school academy, or by a consortium consisting of 2 or more
of these.
(k) (l) A school district, intermediate school district, or public school
academy shall ensure that training is provided to all evaluators and observers.
The training must be provided by an individual who has expertise in the
evaluation tool or tools used by the school district, intermediate school
district, or public school academy , which that may include
either a consultant on that evaluation tool or framework or an individual who
has been trained to train others in the use of the evaluation tool or tools.
This subdivision does not prohibit a school district, intermediate school
district, public school academy, or consortium consisting of 2 or more of
these, from providing the training in the use of the evaluation tool or tools
if the trainer has expertise in the evaluation tool or tools.
(2) A school district,
intermediate school district, or public school academy shall post on its public
website all of the following information about the measures it uses for its
performance evaluation system for school administrators:
(a) The research base
for the evaluation framework, instrument, and process or, if the school
district, intermediate school district, or public school academy adapts or
modifies an evaluation tool from the list under subsection (3), the research
base for the listed evaluation tool and an assurance that the adaptations or
modifications do not compromise the validity of that research base.
(b) The identity and
qualifications of the author or authors or, if the school district,
intermediate school district, or public school academy adapts or modifies an
evaluation tool from the list under subsection (3), the identity and
qualifications of a person with expertise in teacher evaluations who has
reviewed the adapted or modified evaluation tool.
(c) Either evidence of
reliability, validity, and efficacy or a plan for developing that evidence or,
if the school district, intermediate school district, or public school academy
adapts or modifies an evaluation tool from the list under subsection (3), an
assurance that the adaptations or modifications do not compromise the reliability,
validity, or efficacy of the evaluation tool or the evaluation process.
(d) The evaluation
frameworks and rubrics, with detailed descriptors for each performance level on
key summative indicators.
(e) A description of the
processes for collecting evidence, conducting evaluation conferences,
developing performance ratings, and developing performance improvement plans.
(f) A description of the
plan for providing evaluators and observers with training.
(3) The department shall
establish and maintain a list of school administrator evaluation tools that
have demonstrated evidence of efficacy and that may be used for the purposes of
this section. That list initially must include at least the 2 evaluation models
recommended in the final recommendations released by the Michigan council on
educator effectiveness in July 2013. The list must include a statement
indicating that school districts, intermediate school districts, and public
school academies are not limited to only using the evaluation tools that are
included on the list. A school district, intermediate school district, or
public school academy is not required to use an evaluation tool for school
administrator evaluations that is the same as it uses for teacher evaluations
or that has the same author or authors as the evaluation tool it uses for
teacher evaluations. The department shall promulgate rules establishing standards
and procedures for adding an evaluation tool to or removing an evaluation tool
from the list. These rules must include a process for a school district,
intermediate school district, or public school academy to submit its own
evaluation tool for review for placement on the list.
(4) The training required under subsection (1) must be paid
for from the funds available in the educator evaluation reserve fund created
under section 95a of the state school aid act of 1979, MCL 388.1695a.
Sec. 1250. (1) Except as otherwise provided in this section,
a school district, public school academy, or intermediate
school district, or public school academy shall
implement and maintain a method of compensation for its teachers and school
administrators that includes job performance and job accomplishments as a
significant factor in determining compensation and additional compensation. The
assessment of job performance shall must incorporate a rigorous, transparent, and fair
evaluation system that evaluates a teacher's or school administrator's
performance. at least in
part based upon data on student growth as measured by assessments and other
objective criteria.
(2) If a collective bargaining agreement is in effect for
teachers or school administrators of a school district, public school academy,
or intermediate school district as of January 4, 2010, and if that collective
bargaining agreement prevents compliance with subsection (1), then subsection
(1) does not apply to that school district, public school academy, or intermediate
school district until after the expiration of that collective bargaining
agreement.
(2) (3) For teachers and school administrators who are hired by a community
district after September 1, 2019, the community district shall implement and
maintain a method of compensation that includes job performance and job
accomplishments as the primary factor in determining compensation and
additional compensation. A teacher's or school administrator's job performance shall must be evaluated
based on the teacher's annual evaluation under section 1249 or the school
administrator's annual evaluation under section 1249b, as applicable.
(3) (4) For
teachers and school administrators who are hired by a community district after
September 1, 2019, the community district shall not use length of service or
achievement of an advanced degree as a factor in compensation levels or
adjustments in compensation except as follows:
(a) For a teacher with a
secondary level teaching certificate who has a subject area endorsement and who
teaches in that subject area, an advanced degree achieved in that subject area
may be considered as a factor in the teacher's base compensation.
(b) For a teacher with
an elementary level teaching certificate who teaches in an elementary grade, an
advanced degree in elementary education may be considered as a factor in the
teacher's base compensation.
Enacting section 1. This amendatory act does not take effect unless Senate Bill No. 56 of the 101st Legislature is enacted into law.