Adopted: MSBA/MASA Model Policy 604
Orig.
1995
Revised: Rev.
2023
604 INSTRUCTIONAL CURRICULUM
I. PURPOSE
The purpose of this policy is to provide for the development
of course offerings for students.
II. GENERAL
STATEMENT OF POLICY
A. Instruction
must be provided in at least the following subject areas:
1. basic
communication skills including reading and writing, literature, and fine arts;
2. mathematics
and science;
3. social
studies, including history, geography, economics, government, and citizenship
that includes civics (see II.I.);
4. health and
physical education;
5. The arts;
6. Career and
technical education; and
7. World
languages.
B. The basic
instructional program shall include all courses required for each grade level
by the Minnesota Department of Education (MDE) and courses required in all
elective subject areas. The
instructional approach will be nonsexist and multicultural.
C. Public elementary
and middle schools must offer at least three and require at least two, of the
following four art areas: dance, music,
theater, and visual arts. High schools
shall offer at least three, and require at least one, of the following five arts
areas: dance, media arts, music,
theater, and visual arts.
D. The school
district must establish and regularly review its own standards for career and
technical education (CTE) programs. Standards must align with CTE frameworks
developed by the Department of Education, standards developed by national CTE
organizations, or recognized industry standards.
E. The school
board, at its discretion, may offer additional courses in the instructional
program at any grade level.
F. Each instructional
program shall be planned for optimal benefit taking into consideration the
financial condition of the school district and other relevant factors. Each program plan should contain goals and
objectives, materials, minimum student competency levels, and methods for
student evaluation.
G. The
superintendent shall have discretionary authority to develop guidelines and
directives to implement school board policy relating to instructional
curriculum.
H. The school district or charter school may not discriminate against or
discipline a teacher or principal on the basis of incorporating into curriculum
contributions of persons in a federally protected class or state protected
class when the included contribution is in alignment with standards and
benchmarks adopted under Minnesota Statutes, sections 120B.021 and 120B.023.
III. REQUIRED
ACADEMIC STANDARDS
A. The
following subject areas are required for statewide accountability:
1. language
arts;
2. mathematics,
encompassing algebra II, integrated mathematics III, or an equivalent in high
school, and to be prepared for the three credits of mathematics in grades 9
through 12, the grade 8 standards include the completion of algebra;
3. science,
including earth and space science, life science, and the physical sciences,
including chemistry and physics;
4. social
studies, including history, geography, economics, and government and
citizenship that includes civics;
5. physical
education;
6. health, for
which locally developed academic standards apply; and
7. the arts.
B. Elementary
and middle schools must offer at least three and require at least two of the
following five arts areas: dance, media arts, music, theater, and visual arts. High schools must offer at least three and
require at least one of the following five arts areas: media arts, dance,
music, theater, and visual arts.
IV. PARENTAL
CURRICULUM REVIEW
The school district shall have a procedure for a
parent, guardian, or an adult student, 18 years of age or older, to review the
content of the instructional materials to be provided to a minor child or to an
adult student and, if the parent, guardian, or adult student objects to the
content, to make reasonable arrangements with school personnel for alternative
instruction. Alternative instruction may be provided by the parent, guardian,
or adult student if the alternative instruction, if any, offered by the school
board does not meet the concerns of the parent, guardian, or adult student. The
school board is not required to pay for the costs of alternative instruction
provided by a parent, guardian, or adult student. School personnel may not
impose an academic or other penalty upon a student merely for arranging
alternative instruction under this section. School personnel may evaluate and
assess the quality of the student's work.
V. CPR AND AED INSTRUCTION
The
school district will provide onetime cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) and
automatic external defibrillator (AED) instruction as part of its grade 7 to 12
curriculum.
A. In the school district’s discretion,
training and instruction may result in CPR certification.
B. CPR
and AED instruction must include CPR and AED training that have been developed:
1. by the American Heart Association or
the American Red Cross and incorporate psychomotor skills to support the
instruction; or
2. using nationally recognized, evidence-based
guidelines for CPR and incorporate psychomotor skills to support the
instruction. “Psychomotor skills” means hands-on practice to support cognitive
learning; it does not mean cognitive-only instruction and training.
C. The school district may use community
members such as emergency medical technicians, paramedics, police officers,
firefighters, and representatives of the Minnesota Resuscitation Consortium,
the American Heart Association, or the American Red Cross, among others, to
provide instruction and training.
D. A school administrator may waive this
curriculum requirement for a high school transfer student regardless of whether
or not the student previously received instruction under this section, an
enrolled student absent on the day the instruction occurred under this section,
or an eligible student who has a disability.
VI. COLLEGE AND
CAREER PLANNING
A. The school
district shall assist all students by no later than grade 9 to explore their educational
college and career interests, aptitudes, and aspirations and develop a plan for
a smooth and successful transition to postsecondary education or employment.
All students’ plans must:
1. provide a comprehensive plan to prepare
for and complete career and college-ready curriculum by meeting state and local
academic standards and developing career and employment-related skills such as
teamwork, collaboration, creativity, communication, critical thinking, and good
work habits;
2. emphasize academic rigor and high
expectations and inform the student, and the student’s parent or
guardian if the student is a minor, of the student’s achievement level score on
the Minnesota Comprehensive Assessments that are administered during high
school;
3. help students identify interests,
aptitudes, aspirations, and personal learning styles that may affect their career
and college-ready goals and postsecondary
education and employment choices;
4. set
appropriate career and college-ready goals with timelines that identify
effective means for achieving those goals;
5. help students access education and
career options;
6. integrate strong academic content into
career-focused courses and applied and experiential learning opportunities and
integrate relevant career-focused courses and applied and experiential learning
opportunities into strong academic content;
7. help identify and access appropriate
counseling and other supports and assistance that enable students to complete
required coursework, prepare for postsecondary education and careers, and
obtain information about postsecondary education costs and eligibility for
financial aid and scholarship;
8. help identify collaborative
partnerships among pre-kindergarten through grade 12 schools, postsecondary
institutions, economic development agencies, and local and regional employers
that support students’ transitions to postsecondary education and employment
and provide students with applied and experiential learning opportunities; and
9. be reviewed and revised at least
annually by the student, the student’s parent or guardian, and the school
district to ensure that the student’s course-taking schedule keeps the student
making adequate progress to meet state and local academic standards and high
school graduation requirements and with a reasonable chance to succeed with
employment or postsecondary education without the need to first complete
remedial course work.
B. The
school district may develop grade-level curricula or provide instruction that
introduces students to various careers, but must not require any curriculum,
instruction, or employment-related activity that obligates an elementary or
secondary student to involuntarily select or pursue a career, career interest,
employment goals, or related job training.
C. Educators must possess the knowledge
and skills to effectively teach all English learners in their classrooms. School districts must provide appropriate
curriculum, targeted materials, professional development opportunities for
educators, and sufficient resources to enable English learners to become career
and college ready.
D. When
assisting students in developing a plan for a smooth and successful transition
to postsecondary education and employment, school districts must recognize the
unique possibilities of each student and ensure that the contents of each
student’s plan reflect the student’s unique talents, skills, and abilities as
the student grows, develops, and learns.
E.
If a student with a disability has
an Individualized Education Program (IEP) or standardized written plan that
meets the plan components herein, the IEP satisfies the requirement, and no
additional transition plan is needed.
F.
Students who do not meet or exceed
the Minnesota Academic Standards, as measured by the Minnesota Comprehensive
Assessments that are administered during high school, shall be informed that
admission to a public school is free and available to any resident under 21
years of age or who meets the requirements of the compulsory attendance
law. A student’s plan under this
provision shall continue while a student is enrolled.
Legal References: Minn. Stat. § 120A.22 (Compulsory
Instruction)
Minn. Stat. § 120B.101 (Curriculum)
Minn. Stat. § 120B.125 (Planning for Students’ Successful
Transition to Postsecondary Education and Employment; Personal Learning Plans)
Minn. Stat. § 120B.20 (Parental Curriculum Review)
Minn. Stat. § 120B.021 (Required Academic Standards)
Minn. Stat. § 120B.022 (Elective Standards)
Minn. Stat. § 120B.023 (Benchmarks Implement, Supplement
Statewide Academic Standards)
Minn. Stat. § 120B.234 (Child Sexual Abuse Prevention
Education)
Minn. Stat. § 120B.236 (Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation and
Automatic External Defibrillator Instruction)
Cross References: MSBA/MASA Model Policy 603 (Curriculum
Development)
MSBA/MASA Model Policy 605 (Alternative Programs)