School Pathways has compiled a reference list of items to assist your school in passing the audit process. The State frequently updates its interpretation of codes governing independent study programs. And charter independent study programs. Therefore, it is an essential responsibility of administrators and teachers to stay current on California Educational Code.
This document provides critical information in regard to Independent Study Operations Manual published by the CDE. It also gives information on the Self-Assessment 2012 Compliance Guide developed by the California Consortium for Independent Study (CCIS) compliance team. Two vital areas are board policy and administrative regulations which are essential for apportionment. This document will touch on board policy but mainly focuses on Administrative regulations. Our recommendations on student record keeping are merely suggestions.
Master agreements must be concise documents. Adding more information than is needed can actually lose ADA rather than retain it. If you have other items you would like your students/families to agree upon, you might consider developing a separate agreement to be kept in a non-auditable file. Acknowledgment of Responsibilities is SPs own solution to a document that can be used for such a purpose.
The School Pathways Master Agreement complies with the CCIS Compliance Manuals legal recommendations. The Master Agreement has been approved by auditors as well as attorneys as meeting all requirements. Please refer to Educational Code §51747 and §51748 for specific requirements.
Two items on the Report Writer Info page are important to the master agreement are the following:
If still using ReportWriter, you need to make sure they are completed for two reasons:
Other information that is required on the Master Agreement is:
* Student Name * Student Birth Date * Student Address * Student Phone Number * Student ID Number * Student Enrollment Date * Grade Level
Other Basic information that is required (and inputted on the MA in ReportWriter or the web based PLS) is as follows
Student assignment/Work Records are required for each learning period of a student’s attendance at your school. These records supplement the Master Agreement and must match this document in the area of the course plan. Teachers are required by the state to coordinate and assign a bulk of work to their students each learning period and then to assess that work when it is due [Ed. Code §51747.5. (a)(b) and CA code of Regulations §117000(f) (j)]. The amount of work assigned during this period should match the amount of work a student would be given if they were in the regular classroom. The student assignment and work record should contain the following:
Representative work samples of student work must be on file for each student and these samples must be evaluated by a certificated teacher. As of July 2014, teacher signature and date are no longer required on student work samples. Representative work samples are defined in your board policy. Since each school’s definition is different, you might have one school that kept one sample per day hitting each subject throughout the week while having another school that keeps two samples during the semester. The “norm” is one sample per subject per month. The important thing is, once your board policy is set, you must follow the policy.
Required on Work Samples:
A notation of the assessment evaluation for attendance credit (number of days/ hours the sample represents) is suggested. It is also recommended by the CCIS Compliance Team that a value determination be made on work samples, although this is not evident in Ed. Code. See the following [CA. Code of Regulations §11703(b) (3)]. ReportWriter© and the PLS handle this by having the teacher enter the number of apportionment days possible and earned on the front of the Assignment and Work Record OR Work Summary Report.
Work Samples should also include subject of sample, student’s name, and date of assignment
Auditors are looking for specific files only. Giving files to an auditor that are not required could hurt rather than help your audit outcome. All the files mentioned below must be kept for a three year period. Beyond the specific student files (discussed in the next section), the following files must be made readily available to auditors:
Student files are often the first stop for auditors. These files will either set up your audit for success or signal the beginning of a search and destroy operation of your school. Student files should have specific items and no more. Other items you may be saving on your students should be kept in a separate file that is not auditable. Student files should only be stored for three years plus the current school year.
School Pathways recommends you have two files. One file is for student specific documents and the other for the Student Assignment/Work Records and representative learning samples. The second file can become quite large and cumbersome because of students work samples. Keep these two files together in your records. Some schools color code so files are easily retrievable.
If you are using School Pathways electronic archiving, all auditable documents are stored in the SIS archive compliance area. Check with your auditor to get approval for the electronic signatures and archiving documents in the SIS.
These are usually kept in same area as File 2 although in a separate file.
This file shows Learning Logs (required for Charter IS only) on the left and the Master Agreement(s), Report Cards, and Enrollment forms on the right. More pages will be added to each side as the year passes. This folder can be kept for more than one semester. Actual attendance sheet would be submitted to the office. These forms are produced in ReportWriter and the PLS.
This is the actual assignment and Work Record the student used during the learning period need to be attached behind the Work Summary report. This is one option as shown in the picture above. These forms are produced in ReportWriter© or PLS.
The Work Samples should have an evaluation by the credentialed teacher. Many schools require a time evaluation, for example “20 minutes”. This is not Ed. Code requirement.
Please contact School Pathways Team for further clarification on compliance issues. If we don’t know the answer, we will steer you in the right direction!
The foregoing reference list and synopsis of the “Self-Assessment 2009 Compliance Guide” is intended to assist you in satisfying state requirements and passing an audit. However, compliance with the reference list is not a guarantee of success. School Pathways makes no representation that any particular course of action will assure compliance with a state audit. School Pathways recommends that you refer to the completer compliance guide for further assistance and seek professional audit and legal aid.