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Nonclassroom-Based Independent Study ADA

Letter Head: Jack O'Connell, State Superintendent of Public Instruction, Phone number 916-319-0800

December 2004

Dear Charter School Administrators and Authorizers:

Charter school officials have asked what the required attendance accounting audit trail is for their schools' nonclassroom-based independent study average daily attendance (ADA).

Education Code (EC) Section 47612.5 External link opens in new window or tab. sets forth specific requirements with which charter schools must comply as conditions of apportionment. Among other things, requires that charter schools that provide nonclassroom-based independent study must comply with the provisions of Article 5.5 (commencing with EC Section 51745 External link opens in new window or tab.) of Chapter 5 of Part 28 of the Education Code and implementing regulations adopted thereunder.

Within the referenced Article 5.5, EC Section 51747.5(b) External link opens in new window or tab. specifically limits the amount of apportionment credit that may be claimed for nonclassroom-based independent study to the extent of the time value of student work products, as personally judged in each instance by a certificated teacher. Pursuant to EC Section 47612.5 External link opens in new window or tab. and EC Section 51747.5(b) External link opens in new window or tab. thereby clearly requires that charter school nonclassroom-based independent study teachers, as one condition of apportionment, assess and record the time value of their students' work.

In traditional schools, teachers assess the time value of nonclassroom-based independent study work to determine the completion of at least the "minimum day" defined in law for the grade level of the student and thereby record a "day of attendance." Those minimum day definitions do not apply to charter schools, however. Charter nonclassroom-based independent study school teachers, therefore, have no statutory standards on which they must base their time value calculations. The absence of a statutory minimum day standard for charter schools also means that EC Section 51747.5(b) External link opens in new window or tab. alone cannot reasonably provide a complete basis for determining apportionment credit for nonclassroom-based independent study. EC Section 51747.5(b) External link opens in new window or tab. acts as a nonclassroom-based independent study-only requirement beyond the fundamental charter school ADA provisions in Title 5, which can be found by searching the California Code of Regulations (CCR) External link opens in new window or tab..

CCR Section 11960, which can be found by searching the California Code of Regulations (CCR) External link opens in new window or tab. defines "attendance," for use in calculating charter school ADA, as occurring when "charter school pupils [are] engaged in educational activities required of them by their charter schools on days when school is actually taught in their charter schools" - with the proviso that "no charter school pupil may generate more than one day of attendance in a calendar day." To those provisions, then, EC Section 51747.5(b) External link opens in new window or tab. in effect adds the requirement that the amount of work done by the student on a day of nonclassroom-based independent study attendance must have a time value, judged as required, of at least one day.

To put the matter another way, the minimum amount of work necessary to constitute a charter school day of nonclassroom-based independent study attendance is within the charter school's and teacher's discretion to determine - but whatever that minimum amount of work is, it must be done on the scheduled school day for which it is claimed as attendance for ADA purposes. Any amount of work done beyond the minimum on that day generates no further ADA credit. The central elements of the audit trail for charter school nonclassroom-based independent study ADA, then, are (1) the calendar showing which days are school days and (2) contemporaneous records for each student identifying clearly each school day in that calendar on which the student "engaged in [required] educational activities" to an extent sufficient to constitute at least one day of time value. Charter schools annual calendar must meet or exceed 175 days in any fiscal year in order to generate full apportionment credit, unless the charter school has a State Board of Education approved waiver. In addition, EC Section 47612.5 External link opens in new window or tab. requires charters to "offer at a minimum, the same number of minutes of instruction set forth in EC Section 46201 External link opens in new window or tab. for the appropriate grade levels."

Other record-keeping requirements specific to nonclassroom-based independent study are set forth in CCR Section 11703 which can be found by searching the California Code of Regulations (CCR) External link opens in new window or tab.. CCR Section 11700. which can be found by searching the California Code of Regulations (CCR) External link opens in new window or tab., is one of the "implementing regulations" referred to in EC Section 47612.5 External link opens in new window or tab., meaning that all its provisions are applicable to charter schools as conditions of apportionment.

We conclude that both methods of attendance accounting are required for charter schools offering nonclassroom-based independent study instruction. We strongly recommend charter schools work directly with their auditor to develop appropriate and adequate record keeping and bookkeeping procedures to insure that the charter school remains compliant with both time value and contemporaneous record requirements.

For additional information, you may contact the Charter Schools Division at 916-322-6029 or the School Fiscal Services Division at 916-324-4541.

Sincerely,

Marta Reyes, Director
Charter Schools Division

Scott Hannan, Director
School Fiscal Services Division

Last Reviewed: Tuesday, November 12, 2024
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