22 Pa. Code § 4.51b - Keystone Exams
(a) The
Department will develop or cause to be developed Keystone Exams as provided in
this subsection. (This subsection is intended by the Board to be a continuation
of §
4.51(f) (relating
to State assessment system) as published at 40 Pa.B. 240 (January 9, 2010) and
referenced in section 102 of the School Code (24 P.S. §
1-102).)
(1)
One assessment aligned with the Mathematics standards, contained in Appendix
A-2, that assesses the academic content traditionally included in an Algebra I
course.
(2) One assessment aligned
with select English Language Arts standards, contained in Appendix A-2, that
assesses academic content traditionally included in a high school literature
course.
(3) Through June 30, 2025,
one assessment aligned with select standards for Science, Technology,
Environment and Ecology, contained in Appendix B, that assesses academic
content traditionally included in a high school level Biology course. Beginning
July 1, 2025, one assessment aligned with select standards for Science,
Environment and Ecology, contained in Appendix B-1, that assesses academic
content traditionally included in a high school level Biology course.
(b) Keystone Exams shall be
offered at least three times each year: once each in the fall, spring and
summer.
(c) Keystone Exams shall be
administered, reviewed and scored so that scores for candidates for graduation
are provided to schools no later than 10 calendar days prior to graduation. A
school district, ACTS or charter school, including a cyber charter school, may
request the Department to approve alternative test administration and scoring
time frames. The Department will publish guidelines and procedures for
approving alternative test administration and scoring time frames on its web
site. The guidelines will provide for approval of all requests unless the
approval is contrary to standards of test validity and scoring.
(d) A student shall be permitted to retake
any Keystone Exam, or Keystone Exam module, in which the student did not score
proficient or above at the next available testing date. There is not a limit on
the number of times a student who did not score proficient on a Keystone Exam
is permitted to retake the Keystone Exam or Keystone Exam module. A student who
has achieved a score of proficient or advanced on a Keystone Exam shall be
permitted to retake a Keystone Exam only if the student or parent submits a
request in writing to the school entity.
(e) Each Keystone Exam will be designed in
modules that reflect distinct, related academic content that is common to the
traditional progression of coursework to allow students who do not score
proficient or above to retake those portions of the test in which they did not
score proficient or above.
(f) A
student taking Keystone Exams, or Keystone Exam modules, who did not score
proficient on a Keystone Exam, or Keystone Exam module, may be provided
supplemental instruction consistent with the student's educational program by
the student's school district, ACTS or charter school, including a cyber
charter school, consistent with section 121(c.4) of the School Code
(24
P.S. §
1-121(c.4)).
(g) Performance levels for Keystone Exams
shall be set at the advanced, proficient, basic and below basic levels. In
consultation with the Performance Level Advisory Committee, the Department will
develop and recommend to the Board for its approval performance level
descriptors and performance level cut scores for the Keystone Exams and any
alternative assessments developed to assess students with disabilities as
permitted by the Every Student Succeeds Act (Pub.L. No. 114-95 ). The
Department will use widely-accepted psychometric procedures to establish the
cut scores. Cut scores shall be presented at a public meeting of the Board for
its review at least 2 weeks prior to scheduled Board action on the cut
scores.
(h) The Department will
provide guidance to school districts, ACTSs and charter schools, including
cyber charter schools, as to the appropriate accommodations school entities
shall provide to students with disabilities, students who are gifted and
English language learners, when appropriate.
(i) Beginning in the 2012-2013 school year,
Keystone Exams in the following subjects will be developed by the Department
and made available for use by school districts, ACTSs and charter schools,
including cyber charter schools, for the purpose of assessing high school
graduation requirements in §
4.24(c)(1)(iii)
(relating to high school graduation requirements):
Algebra I
Literature
Biology
(j) The Department will seek to have the
Keystone Exams approved as the high school level single accountability system
under the Every Student Succeeds Act (20 U.S.C.A. §§
6301-7981) or
its successor Federal statute. If the Keystone Exams receive approval as the
high school level accountability measure, school districts, ACTSs and charter
schools, including cyber charter schools, shall administer the Literature,
Algebra I and Biology exams as end-of-course tests in the grade level in which
students complete the relevant coursework.
(k) The 11th grade PSSA exams in Reading,
Writing, Math and Science shall be discontinued upon implementation of the
Keystone Exams as the approved assessment system under section 1111(b)(2)(C) of
the No Child Left Behind Act of 2001 (20 U.S.C.A. §
6311(b)(2)(C)).
(l) At least once every 5 years, the
Department will contract with a qualified, independent research organization to
perform a validity study of the Keystone Exams using generally accepted
education research standards. These studies will determine, at a minimum, the
degree to which the Keystone Exams and performance level cut scores are valid
for the purposes for which they are used; aligned with State academic
standards; aligned with performance levels of other states; internationally
benchmarked; and predict college and career success. In addition, all Keystone
Exams, performance level descriptors and cut scores will be subject to the best
available forms of content, criterion and consequential validation.
(m) The Department will establish a State
Assessment Validation Advisory Committee (Committee). The Committee will advise
the Department on its plans to conduct the validity study and review and
provide feedback on its findings.
(n) The Department and the Committee will
investigate the use of a certificate based on industry approved standards and
performance on an NOCTI exam as an alternative pathway to graduation and will
make a report and recommendation to the Board by January 10, 2011.
Notes
The provisions of this § 4.51b issued under sections 121, 2603-B and 2604-B of the Public School Code of 1949 (24 P.S. §§ 1-121, 26-2603-B and 26-2604-B); amended under sections 2603-B and 2604-B of the Public School Code of 1949 (24 P.S. §§ 26-2603-B and 26-2604-B).
State regulations are updated quarterly; we currently have two versions available. Below is a comparison between our most recent version and the prior quarterly release. More comparison features will be added as we have more versions to compare.
No prior version found.