Bill113th Congress

H.R. 1977

Growth to Excellence Act of 2013

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Introduced
May 14, 2013
Origin Chamber
House
Policy Area
Education
Latest Action
Jul 8, 2013

Sponsor

Rep. Polis, Jared [D-CO-2]

Democrat·CO-2
Bioguide ID: P000598
First Name: Jared
Last Name: Polis
By Request: N
0
Cosponsors
1
Committees
4
Actions
0
Amendments
1
Related Bills
3
Subjects
1
Summaries
3
Titles
1
Text Versions

Bill Details

Update Date
Jan 11, 2023
Origin Chamber
House
Bill Type
HR
Bill Number
1,977
Congress
113
Introduced Date
May 14, 2013
Policy Area
Education
Is Law
No
Jul 8, 2013Committee

Referred to the Subcommittee on Early Childhood, Elementary, and Secondary Education.

Source: House committee actions

May 14, 2013IntroReferralH11100

Referred to the House Committee on Education and the Workforce.

Source: House floor actions

May 14, 2013IntroReferralIntro-H

Introduced in House

Source: Library of Congress

May 14, 2013IntroReferral1000

Introduced in House

Source: Library of Congress

Introduced in House· May 14, 20130

Growth to Excellence Act of 2013 - Amends part A of title I of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 to allow states to measure student progress toward academic achievement standards using adaptive assessments that are computerized, aligned with grade-level academic content standards, and measure student growth above and below grade level.

Allows states, upon the Secretary of Education's approval, to adopt an alternative accountability model requiring their local educational agencies (LEAs) and public elementary and secondary schools to achieve adequate student growth toward college and career readiness standards.

Requires such states to: (1) adopt college and career ready academic content standards; (2) adopt college and career ready assessments that measure annual student growth in mathematics and reading or the language arts; (3) measure secondary school graduation rates; (4) assess at least two additional specified indicators of students' college or career readiness; and (5) provide a comprehensive system of accountability for schools that do not meet annual progress targets, which shall categorize schools based on student performance, include supports and consequences based on such categorization, and provide incentives for schools that consistently exceed such targets.

Requires an alternative accountability model to establish annual progress targets for each school that: (1) aim to reduce by half, in less than six years, the difference between the percentage of students (overall and in specified student subgroups) at the top performing schools who meet the college and career readiness standards or make adequate student growth, and the percentage of such students at each school that is not a top performing school; (2) ensure that students are making adequate yearly growth to be college and career ready by the end of the 2019-2020 school year; or (3) are calculated in another manner, but result in ambitious and achievable targets for students overall and in specified student subgroups.

Requires annual progress targets for secondary schools that: (1) aim to reduce by half, in less than six years, the difference between the percentage of students (overall and in specified student subgroups) who graduate and 90%; or (2) establish another single graduation rate goal for each specified student subgroup that is ambitious and achievable.

Requires states using an alternative accountability model to establish a system of categorization and related interventions and rewards that groups LEAs based on their schools' and students' annual progress toward such targets.

Describes what shall be considered adequate student growth toward college and career readiness standards.

Education and the Workforce Committee

House· Standing
Academic performance and assessmentsEducation of the disadvantagedElementary and secondary education

Introduced in House

May 14, 2013

Growth to Excellence Act of 2013 — Informed