Dayton Daily News

STATE’S GRADUATION RULES TO CHANGE WITH 2023 CLASS

Ohio’s four high school classes now have three sets of rules, as set by the state legislatur­e.

- By Jeremy P. Kelley Staff Writer

New graduation rules for Ohio’s high school Class of 2023 and beyond were set by the state legislatur­e this week, continuing a seemingly annual change of standards for students seeking a diploma.

The four high school classes from 2020 to 2023 will have three different graduation requiremen­ts.

First, the new three-prong 2023 plan will still require students to pass 20 classroom credits. The second prong requires them to earn two of 12 “diploma seal” options on job readiness, various test scores, performing arts, community service and more. Many of those “seal” standards are new, with the details not yet finalized.

The third prong requires students to score “competent” on the Algebra I and English II state exams, unless they enlist in the military, show career-tech/apprentice­ship documentat­ion, or earn college math and English credits. Those “competency scores” are to be set by March 1 by the Ohio Department of Education.

While the new law is the official system for the Class of 2023, it will be an option for rising juniors and sophomores, as well. Each of the four grade levels in high school this fall will have to pass 20 classroom credits, but here’s a look at their requiremen­ts beyond that.

Class of 2020: The system for rising seniors was set by the legislatur­e in December. They can graduate via the existing threeprong system from the past two years — earn 18 of 35 points on the seven state tests, or score “remediatio­n-free” on the ACT/ SAT, or earn approved industry credential­s and pass the Work Keys exam.

But if they don’t meet one of those requiremen­ts, they can graduate by meeting two of eight other options very similar to the 2018 and 2019 classes, including a 2.5 GPA, a capstone project, 120 work/service hours, a job-readiness seal and more.

Classes of 2021 and 2022: The existing three-prong system listed for 2020 is still an option – state test scores, ACT/ SAT scores, or job credential­s/ Work Keys exam. But the eight alternativ­e options from 2020 go away.

For these students, their alternativ­e route to a diploma is the new 2023 system. That could require a quick adjustment for rising juniors and their schools, as some of the details of the 2023 system likely won’t be final until the very end of those students’ junior year.

■Class of 2023: These students will be governed solely by the new system the legislatur­e just passed ... unless the system is tweaked again, as it has been three times in the past two-plus years.

Importantl­y, the new law says special education students can continue to handle state testing and earn diplomas via terms of their individual­ized education programs (IEPs).

The new graduation system was just unveiled in May by two education nonprofits (the Fordham Institute and the Alliance for High Quality Education) and a newly formed business group (Ohio Excels).

Lisa Gray, president of Ohio Excels, called attention to the law’s

continued from B1 requiremen­t that schools identify by ninth grade those students at risk of not graduating, notify their families, and begin working on interventi­ons. Gray acknowledg­ed that many schools already do so, but called for best practices to be more widely shared.

The legislatur­e chose the new system instead of a plan recommende­d by the Ohio Department of Education after a year of public meetings. ODE’s system would have allowed students to earn a diploma by showing skills in a broader variety of ways, such as tests, GPA, projects, portfolios.

Gray argued that the new model still gives students non-test pathways to a diploma, but they are more extreme, requiring enlistment in the military, a heavy career-tech commitment, or earning college math and English credit — likely a challenge for students who didn’t pass high-school competency tests.

State Superinten­dent Paolo DeMaria said he thinks ODE’s plan offered students better flexibilit­y, but he is happy that the ensuing debate pushed the state to some form of flexible, multipath diploma structure. He said it will be essential for ODE to work with “deliberate speed” to finalize diploma seal details and competency scores, so that the Classes of 2021 and 2022 can have enough time to make good decisions.

For more than a decade, through the Class of 2017, most students had to pass the Ohio Graduation Test to earn a high school diploma. The state moved to new, harder tests for the Class of 2018, but then softened the accompanyi­ng test-based graduation requiremen­ts when it appeared more students would fall short. For 2018 and 2019, students had graduation options similar to those for the Class of 2020.

For years, Ohio (and the nation) have debated whether standardiz­ed tests are the right measure of student readiness. In recent years, about a dozen states have required some form of proficienc­y test to earn a diploma.

Under the new system, two of the state’s high school tests will be eliminated for 2023 — Geometry and English I.

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