89R24365 AMF-D
 
  By: Buckley, Bernal, Ashby, et al. H.B. No. 4
 
  Substitute the following for H.B. No. 4:
 
  By:  Buckley C.S.H.B. No. 4
 
 
 
A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 
AN ACT
  relating to public school accountability, including the
  implementation of an instructionally supportive assessment program
  and the adoption and administration of assessment instruments in
  public schools, indicators of achievement and public school
  performance ratings under the public school accountability system,
  a grant program for school district local accountability plans, and
  actions challenging Texas Education Agency decisions related to
  public school accountability.
         BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
         SECTION 1.  Section 28.0211(a-8), Education Code, is amended
  to read as follows:
         (a-8)  A school district may not be required to provide
  supplemental instruction under Subsection (a-1)(2) to a student in
  more than two subject areas per school year.  If the district would
  otherwise be required to provide supplemental instruction to a
  student in more than two subject areas for a school year, the
  district shall prioritize providing supplemental instruction to
  the student in mathematics and reading[, or Algebra I, English I, or
  English II, as applicable,] for that school year.
         SECTION 2.  Section 39.022, Education Code, is amended to
  read as follows:
         Sec. 39.022.  INSTRUCTIONALLY SUPPORTIVE ASSESSMENT
  PROGRAM. (a) To ensure school accountability for student
  achievement that achieves the goals provided under Section 4.002,
  the [The] State Board of Education by rule shall create and
  implement an instructionally supportive [a] statewide assessment
  program that:
               (1)  provides for progress monitoring;
               (2)  is balanced, innovative, and streamlined; and
               (3)  is knowledge- and skills-based [to ensure school
  accountability for student achievement that achieves the goals
  provided under Section 4.002].
         (b)  The primary objective of an instructionally supportive
  assessment program created and implemented under this section is to
  benefit the students of this state.
         (c)  After adopting rules under this section, the State Board
  of Education shall consider the importance of maintaining stability
  in the instructionally supportive [statewide] assessment program
  when adopting any subsequent modification of the rules.
         (d) [(b)]  It is the policy of this state that the
  instructionally supportive [statewide] assessment program be
  designed to:
               (1)  provide information regarding student academic
  achievement and learning progress to:
                     (A)  public schools for the purpose of improving
  student instruction [provide assessment instruments that are as
  short as practicable];
                     (B)  students, parents, and teachers for the
  purpose of guiding learning objectives;
                     (C)  education researchers for the purpose of
  comparing student academic achievement and learning progress data
  at the national and statewide levels; and
                     (D)  the public for the purpose of allowing the
  public to assess the costs and benefits of using public money for
  the assessment program;
               (2)  evaluate the achievement level and learning
  progress of each assessed student in reading, mathematics, and
  science;
               (3)  provide information to the agency for the purpose
  of making decisions regarding public school accountability, campus
  recognition, and the improvement of public school operations and
  management;
               (4)  identify the educational strengths and needs of
  individual students and the readiness of those students to be
  promoted to the next grade level or to graduate from high school;
               (5)  assess whether educational goals and curricular
  standards are being met at the campus, district, state, and
  national levels;
               (6)  provide information to help evaluate and develop
  educational programs and policies; and
               (7)  provide instructional staff with immediate,
  actionable, and useful information regarding student achievement
  of standards and benchmarks that may be used to improve the staff's
  delivery of student instruction [and
               [(2) minimize the disruption to the educational
  program].
         SECTION 3.  Section 39.023, Education Code, is amended by
  amending Subsections (a), (a-1), (a-2), (a-11), (a-12), (a-13),
  (c), (c-1), (c-8), (e), and (h), and adding Subsections (a-5),
  (a-10), (d-1), (o-1), (q), and (r) to read as follows:
         (a)  In creating and implementing the instructionally
  supportive assessment program under Section 39.022, the [The]
  agency shall adopt nationally norm-referenced [or develop
  appropriate criterion-referenced] assessment instruments that are
  capable of being administered at the beginning, middle, and end of
  the school year and designed to assess essential knowledge and
  skills in reading, mathematics, [social studies,] and science.
  Except as provided by Subsection (a-2), all students, other than
  students assessed under Subsection (b) or (l) or exempted under
  Section 39.027, shall be assessed in:
               (1)  mathematics, annually in grades three through
  eight;
               (2)  reading, annually in grades three through eight;
               (3)  [social studies, in grade eight;
               [(4)]  science, in grades five and eight; and
               (4) [(5)]  any other subject and grade required by
  federal law.
         (a-1)  An [The agency shall develop] assessment instrument
  adopted [instruments required] under Subsection (a) must provide
  for the assessment of students in a manner that [allows, to the
  extent practicable]:
               (1)  ensures the score a student receives provides [to
  provide] reliable information relating to a student's satisfactory
  performance for each performance standard under Section 39.0241;
  [and]
               (2)  allows for an appropriate range of performances to
  serve as a valid indication of growth in student achievement;
               (3)  focuses primarily on supporting excellent
  instruction, while also providing essential summative information
  that fulfills applicable federal requirements;
               (4)  consists only of questions written at the
  appropriate reading level for the applicable grade level, as
  determined by Lexile measures or another research-based
  readability metric approved by the agency in coordination with the
  advisory committees established under Section 39.02302;
               (5)  does not require a student to complete a separate,
  standalone essay or extended constructed response component;
               (6)  for a reading assessment, assesses writing skills
  through questions integrated within the context of the overall
  assessment;
               (7)  is adaptive to each student-appropriate
  measurement of individual student performance and growth;
               (8)  provides, not later than 24 hours after the date
  the assessment instrument is administered, detailed diagnostic
  reports of individual student results that include recommendations
  based on a student's performance on the assessment instrument for
  teachers and parents regarding practical and useful instructional
  strategies to better meet the individual needs of the student;
               (9)  for a beginning-of-year or middle-of-year
  assessment instrument, includes instructional growth projections
  for individual students based on each student's results; and
               (10)  for an end-of-year assessment:
                     (A)  measures student performance in relation to
  state curriculum and performance standards, with results
  aggregated by grade level and student population category and at
  the campus, district, and state levels;
                     (B)  measures a student's annual through-year
  instructional growth;
                     (C)  fulfills the state's public school
  accountability plan for purposes of satisfying federal public
  school accountability requirements;
                     (D)  provides valid, reliable, and useful
  results; and
                     (E)  complies with applicable peer review
  requirements under federal law.
         (a-2)  Except as required by federal law, a student is not
  required to be assessed in a subject otherwise assessed at the
  student's grade level under Subsection (a) if the student:
               (1)  is enrolled in a course in the subject intended for
  students above the student's grade level and will be administered
  an assessment instrument adopted [or developed] under Subsection
  (a) that aligns with the curriculum for the course in which the
  student is enrolled; or
               (2)  is enrolled in a course in the subject for which
  the student will receive high school academic credit and will be
  administered an end-of-course assessment instrument adopted under
  Subsection (c) for the course.
         (a-5)  The agency shall annually review and validate the
  readability of each item on an assessment instrument adopted under
  Subsection (a) to confirm alignment of the item with grade-level
  expectations and ensure that the item accurately measures student
  mastery of essential knowledge and skills without introducing undue
  complexity that is not related to the assessed standard.
         (a-10)  An assessment instrument adopted under Subsection
  (a) must be administered as closely as possible to the following
  schedule:
               (1)  for a beginning-of-year assessment instrument,
  between October 1 and October 31;
               (2)  for a middle-of-year assessment instrument,
  between January 13 and February 21; and
               (3)  for an end-of-year assessment instrument, between
  May 15 and May 30.
         (a-11)  Before an assessment instrument adopted [or
  developed] under Subsection (a) may be administered under that
  subsection, the assessment instrument must, on the basis of
  empirical evidence, be determined to be valid and reliable by an
  entity that is independent of the agency and of any other entity
  that developed the assessment instrument.
         (a-12)  An assessment instrument adopted [or developed]
  under Subsection (a) must be designed to minimize the impact on
  student instructional time [may not have more than three parts. A
  part of an assessment instrument must be designed] so that:
               (1)  for a beginning-of-year or middle-of-year
  assessment instrument [if] administered to students in grades three
  and four, 85 percent of students are expected [will be able] to
  complete the assessment instrument [that part] within 60 minutes;
  [and]
               (2)  for a beginning-of-year or middle-of-year
  assessment instrument [if] administered to students in grades five
  through eight, 85 percent of students are expected [will be able] to
  complete the assessment instrument [that part] within 75 minutes;
  and
               (3)  for an end-of-year assessment instrument
  administered to students in grades three through eight, 85 percent
  of students are expected to complete the assessment instrument
  within 90 minutes.
         (a-13)  The amount of time allowed for administration of an
  assessment instrument in reading, mathematics, or science adopted
  [or developed] under Subsection (a) may not exceed six [eight]
  hours, and the administration may occur in multiple parts over more
  than one day.
         (c)  The agency shall also adopt end-of-course assessment
  instruments for secondary-level courses in reading, mathematics,
  and science, for the purpose of complying with the Every Student
  Succeeds Act (20 U.S.C. Section 6301 et seq.), to be administered
  only as necessary to meet the minimum requirements of that law
  [Algebra I, biology, English I, English II, and United States
  history. The Algebra I end-of-course assessment instrument must be
  administered with the aid of technology, but may include one or more
  parts that prohibit the use of technology. The English I and English
  II end-of-course assessment instruments must each assess essential
  knowledge and skills in both reading and writing and must provide a
  single score]. A school district shall comply with State Board of
  Education rules regarding administration of the assessment
  instruments listed in this subsection. If a student is in a special
  education program under Subchapter A, Chapter 29, the student's
  admission, review, and dismissal committee shall determine whether
  any allowable modification is necessary in administering to the
  student an assessment instrument required under this subsection.
  The State Board of Education shall administer the assessment
  instruments. An end-of-course assessment instrument may be
  administered in multiple parts over more than one day. The State
  Board of Education shall adopt a schedule for the administration of
  end-of-course assessment instruments that complies with the
  requirements of Subsection (c-3).
         (c-1)  An [The agency shall develop any] assessment
  instrument adopted by the agency [required] under this section must
  allow [in a manner that allows] for the measurement of annual
  improvement in student achievement as required by Sections
  39.034(c) and (d).
         (c-8)  Not [Beginning with the 2022-2023 school year, not]
  more than 25 [75] percent of the available points on an assessment
  instrument adopted [developed] under Subsection (a) or (c) may be
  attributable to questions presented as technology-enhanced or
  constructed-response items [in a multiple choice format].
         (d-1)  Under rules adopted by the State Board of Education
  for the 2025-2026 and 2026-2027 school years and subject to
  Subsection (e), the agency shall release the questions and answer
  keys to each end-of-year or end-of-course assessment instrument
  administered under Subsection (a), (b), (c), (d), or (l), excluding
  any assessment instrument administered to a student for the purpose
  of retaking the assessment instrument, after the last time the
  instrument is administered for the applicable school year. This
  subsection expires September 1, 2027.
         (e)  Under rules adopted by the State Board of Education,
  beginning with the 2027-2028 school year and every third year
  thereafter, the agency shall release the questions and answer keys
  to each assessment instrument administered under Subsection (a),
  (b), (c), (d), or (l), excluding any assessment instrument
  administered to a student for the purpose of retaking the
  assessment instrument, after the last time the instrument is
  administered for that school year. To ensure a valid bank of
  questions for use each year, the agency is not required to release a
  question that is being field-tested and was not used to compute the
  student's score on the instrument. The agency shall also release[,
  under board rule,] each question that is no longer being
  field-tested and that was not used to compute a student's score.
  [During the 2014-2015 and 2015-2016 school years, the agency shall
  release the questions and answer keys to assessment instruments as
  described by this subsection each year.]
         (h)  The agency shall notify school districts and campuses of
  the results of end-of-year and end-of-course assessment
  instruments administered under this section and preliminary
  academic accountability ratings assigned to the district and campus
  by the agency based on those results not later than the 14th [21st]
  day after the date the applicable end-of-year or end-of-course
  assessment instrument is administered. The school district shall
  disclose to each district teacher the results of assessment
  instruments administered to students taught by the teacher in the
  subject for the school year in which the assessment instrument is
  administered.
         (o-1)  The agency shall adopt the following optional
  assessment instruments that a school district or open-enrollment
  charter school may elect to administer:
               (1)  an assessment instrument in social studies for
  students in grade eight; and
               (2)  an end-of-course assessment instrument for United
  States history.
         (q)  If there is a conflict between this section and a
  federal law or regulation, including the Every Student Succeeds Act
  (20 U.S.C. Section 6301 et seq.), the agency shall seek a waiver
  from the application of the conflicting federal law or regulation.
         (r)  Notwithstanding any provision of this section or other
  law, if changes to federal law or regulations, including the Every
  Student Succeeds Act (20 U.S.C. Section 6301 et seq.), reduce the
  number or frequency of assessment instruments required to be
  administered to students, the State Board of Education shall adopt
  rules reducing the number or frequency of assessment instruments
  required to be administered to students under state law, and the
  agency shall ensure that students are not required to be assessed in
  subject areas or in grade levels that are no longer required to meet
  the minimum requirements of the law.
         SECTION 4.  Section 39.0237, Education Code, is amended to
  read as follows:
         Sec. 39.0237.  CONSIDERATION OF PREKINDERGARTEN THROUGH
  SECOND GRADE ASSESSMENT INSTRUMENTS PROHIBITED. Performance on an
  assessment instrument administered to students in prekindergarten,
  first grade, or second grade may not be considered for any purpose
  under this chapter or Chapter 39A.
         SECTION 5.  Sections 39.025(a-1) and (a-3), Education Code,
  are amended to read as follows:
         (a-1)  A student enrolled in a college preparatory
  mathematics or English language arts course under Section 28.014
  who satisfies the Texas Success Initiative (TSI) college readiness
  benchmarks prescribed by the Texas Higher Education Coordinating
  Board under Section 51.334 on an assessment instrument designated
  by the coordinating board under that section administered at the
  end of the college preparatory mathematics or English language arts
  course satisfies the requirements concerning and is exempt from the
  administration of the applicable mathematics or reading [Algebra I
  or the English I and English II] end-of-course assessment
  instruments[, as applicable,] as prescribed by Section 39.023(c),
  even if the student did not perform satisfactorily on a previous
  administration of the applicable end-of-course assessment
  instrument. A student who fails to perform satisfactorily on the
  assessment instrument designated by the coordinating board under
  Section 51.334 administered as provided by this subsection may
  retake that assessment instrument for purposes of this subsection
  or may take the appropriate end-of-course assessment instrument.
         (a-3)  A student who, after retaking an end-of-course
  assessment instrument for mathematics or reading [Algebra I or
  English II], has failed to perform satisfactorily as required by
  Subsection (a), but who receives a score of proficient on the Texas
  Success Initiative (TSI) diagnostic assessment for the
  corresponding subject for which the student failed to perform
  satisfactorily on the end-of-course assessment instrument
  satisfies the requirement concerning the mathematics or reading
  [Algebra I or English II] end-of-course assessment, as applicable.
         SECTION 6.  Section 39.028, Education Code, is amended to
  read as follows:
         Sec. 39.028.  COMPARISON OF STATE RESULTS TO NATIONAL
  RESULTS. The state assessment program shall obtain nationally
  comparative results for the subject areas and grade levels for
  which norm-referenced or criterion-referenced assessment
  instruments are adopted under Section 39.023.
         SECTION 7.  Subchapter C, Chapter 39, Education Code, is
  amended by adding Section 39.0521 to read as follows:
         Sec. 39.0521.  ASSIGNMENT OF PERFORMANCE RATINGS FOR
  2025-2026 SCHOOL YEAR. (a)  Notwithstanding any other law, a
  reference in this title to the overall performance rating assigned
  to a district or campus under Section 39.054(a) or to a domain
  performance rating assigned to a district or campus under that
  subsection for the 2025-2026 school year means the higher of:
               (1)  the overall performance rating or the applicable
  domain performance rating the school district or campus received
  for the 2024-2025 school year; or
               (2)  the overall performance rating or the applicable
  domain performance rating the school district or campus received
  for the 2025-2026 school year.
         (b)  This section expires August 31, 2026.
         SECTION 8.  Section 39.053, Education Code, is amended by
  amending Subsection (a), (c), and (f) and adding Subsections (c-4),
  (c-5), and (f-1) to read as follows:
         (a)  The commissioner shall adopt rules as necessary to
  implement this section [a set of indicators of the quality of
  learning and achievement, including the indicators under
  Subsection (c)]. The commissioner may modify [periodically shall
  review] the domains or performance indicators adopted under this
  subchapter only with the express approval of the legislature [for
  the consideration of appropriate revisions].
         (c)  School districts and campuses must be evaluated based on
  three domains of indicators of achievement adopted under this
  section that include:
               (1)  in the student achievement domain, indicators of
  student achievement that must include:
                     (A)  for evaluating the performance of districts
  and campuses generally:
                           (i)  an indicator that accounts for the
  results of assessment instruments required under Sections
  39.023(a), (c), and (l), as applicable for the district and campus,
  including the results of assessment instruments required for
  graduation retaken by a student, aggregated across grade levels by
  subject area, including:
                                 (a)  for the performance standard
  determined by the commissioner under Section 39.0241(a), the
  percentage of students who performed satisfactorily on the
  assessment instruments, aggregated across grade levels by subject
  area; and
                                 (b)  for the college readiness
  performance standard as determined under Section 39.0241, the
  percentage of students who performed satisfactorily on the
  assessment instruments, aggregated across grade levels by subject
  area; and
                           (ii)  an indicator that accounts for the
  results of assessment instruments required under Section
  39.023(b), as applicable for the district and campus, including the
  percentage of students who performed satisfactorily on the
  assessment instruments, as determined by the performance standard
  adopted by the agency, aggregated across grade levels by subject
  area; and
                     (B)  for evaluating the performance of high school
  campuses and districts that include high school campuses,
  indicators that account for:
                           (i)  students who satisfy the Texas Success
  Initiative (TSI) college readiness benchmarks prescribed by the
  Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board under Section 51.334 on
  an assessment instrument in reading or mathematics designated by
  the coordinating board under that section;
                           (ii)  students who satisfy relevant
  performance standards on advanced placement tests or similar
  assessments;
                           (iii)  students who earn dual course credits
  in the dual credit courses;
                           (iv)  students who demonstrate military
  readiness:
                                 (a)  through verified enlistment
  [enlist] in the armed forces of the United States or the Texas
  National Guard;
                                 (b)  by achieving a passing score, as
  determined by the commissioner, on the Armed Services Vocational
  Aptitude Battery test; or
                                 (c)  by successfully completing a
  Junior Reserve Officer Training Corps program;
                           (v)  students who earn industry
  certifications;
                           (vi)  students admitted into postsecondary
  industry certification programs that require as a prerequisite for
  entrance successful performance at the secondary level;
                           (vii)  students whose successful completion
  of a course or courses under Section 28.014 indicates the student's
  preparation to enroll and succeed, without remediation, in an
  entry-level general education course for a baccalaureate degree or
  associate degree;
                           (viii)  students who successfully met
  standards on a composite of indicators that through research
  indicates the student's preparation to enroll and succeed, without
  remediation, in an entry-level general education course for a
  baccalaureate degree or associate degree;
                           (ix)  high school graduation rates, computed
  in accordance with standards and definitions adopted in compliance
  with the Every Student Succeeds Act (20 U.S.C. Section 6301 et seq.)
  subject to the exclusions provided by Subsections (g), (g-1),
  (g-2), (g-3), and (g-4);
                           (x)  students who successfully completed an
  OnRamps dual enrollment course;
                           (xi)  students who successfully completed a
  practicum or internship approved by the State Board of Education;
                           (xii)  students who are awarded an associate
  degree; and
                           (xiii)  students who successfully completed
  a program of study in career and technical education;
               (2)  in the school progress domain, indicators for
  effectiveness in promoting student learning, which must include:
                     (A)  for assessment instruments, including
  assessment instruments under Subdivisions (1)(A)(i) and (ii), the
  percentage of students who met the standard for annual through-year
  instructional growth or improvement in reading, mathematics, and
  science, as determined by the commissioner; and
                     (B)  for evaluating relative performance, the
  performance of districts and campuses compared to similar districts
  or campuses; and
               (3)  in the closing the gaps domain, the use of
  disaggregated data to demonstrate the differentials among students
  from different racial and ethnic groups and [,] socioeconomic
  backgrounds[, and other factors, including:
                     [(A)  students formerly receiving special
  education services;
                     [(B)  students continuously enrolled; and
                     [(C)  students who are mobile].
         (c-4)  In addition to the indicators adopted under
  Subsection (c), not later than the July 1 immediately preceding the
  school year for which the district requests consideration of an
  indicator described by this subsection, a school district may
  submit a request to the agency to consider in the student
  achievement domain or the school progress domain, as provided by
  Section 39.054(a-1)(2), one or more of the following student
  engagement and workforce development indicators for use in
  evaluating the performance of campuses that serve students in
  prekindergarten through eighth grade:
               (1)  an indicator that accounts for the percentage of
  students participating in school-sponsored extracurricular or
  cocurricular student activities;
               (2)  for campuses that serve students in
  prekindergarten, an indicator that accounts for student
  participation in full-day prekindergarten programs;
               (3)  for campuses that serve students in kindergarten
  through fifth grade, an indicator that accounts for teacher
  completion rates of the literacy achievement academies and
  mathematics achievement academies established under Sections
  21.4552 and 21.4553;
               (4)  an indicator that accounts for students in grades
  six, seven, and eight who successfully complete a career and
  technology course approved for purposes of the career and
  technology education allotment under Section 48.106; and
               (5)  an indicator that accounts for students who
  successfully complete and receive credit for a course designated
  for a grade higher than the grade in which the student is enrolled.
         (c-5)  Not later than September 1 following the date a school
  district submits a request under Subsection (c-4), the commissioner
  shall notify the district regarding the commissioner's decision to
  approve or deny the request.
         (f)  Not later than July 15 of each year [Annually], the
  commissioner shall define and adopt the state standards [standard]
  for the current school year for each achievement indicator adopted
  under this subchapter in [section. In] consultation with educators,
  parents, and business and industry representatives, as necessary.
  The[, the] commissioner shall increase the rigor by which the
  commissioner determines the overall performance ratings under
  Section 39.054(a) [establish and modify standards] to continuously
  improve student performance to achieve, not later than the 15th
  anniversary after the date the commissioner modifies the
  performance standards under Subsection (f-1), the goals of:
               (1)  eliminating achievement gaps based on race,
  ethnicity, and socioeconomic status; and
               (2)  ensuring [to ensure] this state ranks nationally
  [is a national leader] in the top five states in preparing students
  for postsecondary success in comparison to states with similar
  student demographics and public education enrollment rates.
         (f-1)  The commissioner may increase the scores needed to
  achieve performance standards on indicators adopted under this
  subchapter only every fifth school year. The commissioner shall
  notify each school district of an increase in score under this
  subsection not later than two school years before the school year in
  which the agency intends to evaluate the performance of school
  districts and campuses under that increased score.
         SECTION 9.  Section 39.054, Education Code, is amended by
  amending Subsections (a-1) and (b) and adding Subsections (f) and
  (g) to read as follows:
         (a-1)  For purposes of assigning an overall performance
  rating for a district or campus under Subsection (a), the
  commissioner shall:
               (1)  consider either the district's or campus's
  performance rating under the student achievement domain under
  Section 39.053(c)(1) or the school progress domain under Section
  39.053(c)(2), whichever performance rating is higher, unless the
  district or campus received a performance rating of F in either
  domain, in which case the district or campus may not be assigned a
  performance rating higher than a B for the composite for the two
  domains; [and]
               (2)  for campuses that serve students in
  prekindergarten through eighth grade, attribute not less than 10
  percent of the performance rating under the student achievement
  domain under Section 39.053(c)(1) or the school progress domain
  under Section 39.053(c)(2), whichever performance rating is
  higher, to the student engagement and workforce development
  indicators described by Section 39.053(c-4) and approved by the
  commissioner under Section 39.053(c-5);
               (3)  attribute not more [less] than five [30] percent
  of the performance rating to the closing the gaps domain under
  Section 39.053(c)(3);
               (4)  for campuses that serve grades three through
  eight, attribute not less than 50 percent of the domain performance
  rating for the student achievement domain under Section
  39.053(c)(1) to the indicators adopted under Section
  39.053(c)(1)(A); and
               (5)  for campuses that serve grades 9 through 12, for
  the student achievement domain under Section 39.053(c)(1),
  attribute not more than:
                     (A)  40 percent of the domain performance rating
  to the indicators adopted under Section 39.053(c)(1)(A);
                     (B)  40 percent of the domain performance rating
  to the college, career, and military readiness indicators adopted
  under Section 39.053(c)(1)(B); and
                     (C)  20 percent of the domain performance rating
  to graduation rates.
         (b)  For purposes of assigning school districts and campuses
  an overall and a domain performance rating under Subsection (a),
  the commissioner shall ensure that:
               (1)  if the agency adds or removes an assessment
  instrument on which student performance is evaluated for the
  purpose of assigning district and campus performance ratings or
  makes significant revisions to the state's assessment program, the
  agency reviews, adjusts, and recalculates the cut scores and
  standards used in evaluating district and campus performance to
  ensure fairness and consistency in the assignment of district and
  campus performance ratings;
               (2)  each campus domain performance rating has minimal
  or no statistical correlation to the percentage of educationally
  disadvantaged students enrolled at the campus in order to identify
  effective campuses regardless of student family income;
               (3)  any changes made to the college, career, or
  military readiness indicators adopted under Section
  39.053(c)(1)(B) or to the methodology that relies on data from
  those indicators for the preceding school year take effect
  beginning with students entering ninth grade in the school year
  immediately following the change, regardless of whether the change
  was made statutorily or by commissioner rule;
               (4)  a campus that is in the first year of operation,
  that is assigned a new campus identification number, or that is
  significantly impacted by demographic shifts due to rezoning,
  closure, or consolidation is not evaluated in the closing the gaps
  domain under Section 39.053(c)(3) for the first year following the
  applicable event; and
               (5)  the method used to evaluate performance is
  implemented in a manner that provides the mathematical possibility
  that all districts and campuses receive an A rating.
         (f)  If the provisions of the Every Student Succeeds Act (20
  U.S.C. Section 6301 et seq.) regarding public school accountability
  and assessment requirements are repealed or otherwise no longer
  have effect, the commissioner shall reallocate any percentage of
  the overall performance ratings attributable to the indicators
  adopted under Section 39.053(c)(3) to the student engagement and
  workforce development indicators described by Section 39.053(c-4),
  if applicable.
         (g)  If the agency fails to assign a performance rating to a
  school district or campus before the deadline established by
  Subsection (a-3), the district or campus shall be automatically
  reissued the performance rating assigned to the district or campus
  for the preceding school year. A performance rating assigned under
  this subsection remains in effect for all official purposes,
  including any interventions or sanctions under Chapter 39A, until
  the agency assigns the district or campus a new rating.
         SECTION 10.  Section 39.0541, Education Code, is amended to
  read as follows:
         Sec. 39.0541.  ADOPTION OF [INDICATORS AND] STANDARDS. (a)
  The commissioner shall [may] adopt performance [indicators and]
  standards under Sections 39.0241 and 39.053(f) not later than the
  July 15 immediately preceding the school year for which the
  commissioner intends to assign school district and campus
  performance ratings under Section 39.054 based on those standards
  [this subchapter at any time during a school year before the
  evaluation of a school district or campus].
         (b)  The commissioner may modify the standards, methods,
  measures, or procedures used to evaluate school districts and
  campuses and assign performance ratings on or after the date
  described by Subsection (a) only with the express approval of the
  legislature.
         SECTION 11.  Section 39.0542(a), Education Code, is amended
  to read as follows:
         (a)  Not later than July 15 of each [Each school] year, the
  commissioner shall provide each school district a document in a
  simple, accessible format that explains the accountability
  performance standards adopted under Sections 39.0241 and 39.053(f)
  for the following school year and the measures, methods, and
  procedures that will be applied for that school year in assigning
  each school district and campus a performance rating under Section
  39.054.
         SECTION 12.  Section 39.0544, Education Code, is amended by
  adding Subsections (f) and (g) to read as follows:
         (f)  From money appropriated or otherwise available for the
  purpose, the agency shall establish a grant program to assist at
  least one school district in each education service center region
  in developing a local accountability plan that complies with the
  requirements of this section.
         (g)  The commissioner may adopt rules as necessary to
  implement this section, including rules applying to a school
  district applying for a grant under Subsection (f). If the
  commissioner awards a grant to a district and has not adopted rules
  applying to the district, the district may select and collaborate
  with a third-party organization with expertise in assessment and
  accountability to develop a local accountability plan.
         SECTION 13.  Subchapter F, Chapter 39, Education Code, is
  amended by adding Section 39.152 to read as follows:
         Sec. 39.152.  LIMITATION ON ACTIONS CHALLENGING CERTAIN
  AGENCY DECISIONS; EXPEDITED APPEALS. (a)  A school district or
  open-enrollment charter school may bring an action challenging a
  decision that is made by the agency under this chapter and that is
  based on the lawful exercise of discretion granted to the agency by
  the legislature only if the district's or school's petition alleges
  the agency's decision is unconstitutional, arbitrary, capricious,
  or without lawful authority.
         (b)  In an action brought by a school district or
  open-enrollment charter school described by Subsection (a), a trial
  court shall expedite the action and render a final order or judgment
  not later than the 60th day after the date each defendant has filed
  an answer or other pleading responsive to the petition. The trial
  court may extend the time period within which the court must render
  a final order or judgment under this subsection by not more than 30
  additional days for good cause. The trial court may set deadlines
  for discovery, briefing, trial, and all other proceedings necessary
  to render a final order or judgment in accordance with this
  subsection.
         (c)  If a final order or judgment described by Subsection (b)
  is appealed, the appellate court shall expedite the appeal and
  render a final order or judgment not later than the 60th day after
  the date the appeal is filed. The appellate court may extend the
  time period within which the court must render a final order or
  judgment under this subsection by not more than 30 additional days
  for good cause. The appellate court may set deadlines for briefing,
  oral argument, and all other proceedings necessary to render a
  final order or judgment in accordance with this subsection.
         SECTION 14.  Section 39.203(c), Education Code, is amended
  to read as follows:
         (c)  In addition to the distinction designations described
  by Subsections (a) and (b), a campus that satisfies the criteria
  developed under Section 39.204 shall be awarded a distinction
  designation by the commissioner for outstanding performance in
  academic achievement in reading [English language arts],
  mathematics, or science[, or social studies].
         SECTION 15.  Section 39.023(c-9), Education Code, is
  repealed.
         SECTION 16.  Section 39.152, Education Code, as added by
  this Act, applies to an action filed on or after September 1, 2025.
  An action filed before September 1, 2025, is governed by the law in
  effect on the date the action was filed, and the former law is
  continued in effect for that purpose.
         SECTION 17.  Except as otherwise provided by this Act, this
  Act applies beginning with the 2025-2026 school year.
         SECTION 18.  This Act takes effect immediately if it
  receives a vote of two-thirds of all the members elected to each
  house, as provided by Section 39, Article III, Texas Constitution.  
  If this Act does not receive the vote necessary for immediate
  effect, this Act takes effect September 1, 2025.