Rhode Island General Laws
Chapter 16-22 - Curriculum [See Title 16 Chapter 97 — the Rhode Island Board of Education Act]
Section 16-22-32. - High quality curriculum and materials.

§ 16-22-32. High quality curriculum and materials.
(a)(1) The council on elementary and secondary education (the “council”) shall direct the commissioner of elementary and secondary education (the “commissioner”) to institute a process for reviewing and identifying curriculum and materials for mathematics, English language arts, and science and technology that meet the following requirements:
(i) Is aligned with the academic standards provided in § 16-22-30;
(ii) Is aligned with the curriculum frameworks provided in § 16-22-31;
(iii) Is aligned with the RICAS, or any other test that is adopted as a statewide standardized test; and
(iv) Is of high quality.
(2) The commissioner shall identify at least five (5) examples each of curricula for mathematics and English language arts pursuant to this section by no later than January 1, 2021, for science and technology pursuant to this section by no later than January 1, 2024, and again as required by the council’s procedures set forth in subsection (a)(8) of this section. Once identified, the curricula shall be made available to the public, subject to copyright considerations.
(3) The commissioner shall direct all local education agencies (“LEAs”) to select one of the identified high-quality curricula and materials by the time of their next adoption cycle, but in any case, no later than June 30, 2023, for mathematics and English language arts, and no later than June 30, 2025, for science and technology. LEAs shall select curriculum and materials that are responsive to the LEA’s cultural and linguistic needs, and support culturally responsive practices. LEAs shall implement the high-quality curricula and materials at the start of the school year that immediately follows the selection. If an LEA is unable to implement the high-quality curricula and materials fully due to financial hardship, the commissioner may grant the LEA an extension of time, provided that the LEA demonstrates continued efforts to complete the implementation.
(4) The commissioner shall institute a waiver process for LEAs that would like to use a curriculum other than any identified by the commissioner pursuant to this section. Part of that process may include, but is not limited to, asking the LEA to:
(i) Develop local curriculum goals;
(ii) Communicate the rationale for selecting the proposed curriculum over any of the curricula identified by the commissioner; and
(iii) Engage a third-party reviewer that has a proven track record of curriculum audits to review the proposed curriculum to ensure it aligns with state standards, establishes the scope and sequence of instruction, is of high quality, is culturally relevant, and to discuss any other strengths and weaknesses.
(5) Waiver determinations made pursuant to subsection (a)(4) of this section shall be appealable to the board of education.
(6) Any LEA that has at least seventy-five percent (75%) of its students meeting expectations on state assessments and also has no student subgroup identified for targeted assistance under Rhode Island’s accountability process may select and use curricula and materials other than any identified by the commissioner pursuant to this section for that subject area, only; provided, however, that if the LEA no longer has at least seventy-five percent (75%) of its students meeting expectations on state assessments, or if any student subgroup is identified for targeted assistance under Rhode Island’s accountability process, the LEA must select and implement one of the curricula identified by the commissioner pursuant to this section.
(7) LEAs shall develop and execute a curriculum implementation plan that includes professional development to ensure that all teachers and administrators are prepared to implement the new curriculum with the necessary skill and knowledge.
(8) The council shall develop procedures for updating the identification of curricula and materials pursuant to this section by no later than September 1, 2021. The procedures shall include a requirement that the council review and evaluate the identified curricula and materials regularly to ensure that the high quality of the curricula and materials is maintained. The review cycle shall begin in 2025, with subsequent reviews taking place in 2029, 2033, and every four (4) years thereafter.
(b) On or before December 1, 2020, and annually thereafter on or before December 1, the commissioner shall report to the governor, president of the senate, and the speaker of the house, regarding the progress toward fulfilling the requirements of this section, including, but not limited to, the high-quality curricula and materials identified, selected, and implemented by LEAs pursuant to this section.
(c) The state shall establish a professional development fund to provide professional learning to LEAs that elect to use prioritized curricula and materials in mathematics and English language arts as identified by the commissioner.
(d) For the purposes of this section, “local education agencies” (“LEAs”) shall include all of the following within the state of Rhode Island:
(1) Public school districts;
(2) Regional school districts;
(3) State-operated schools;
(4) Regional collaborative schools; and
(5) Charter schools.
History of Section.P.L. 2019, ch. 89, § 1; P.L. 2019, ch. 150, § 1.

Structure Rhode Island General Laws

Rhode Island General Laws

Title 16 - Education

Chapter 16-22 - Curriculum [See Title 16 Chapter 97 — the Rhode Island Board of Education Act]

Section 16-22-1. - Repealed.

Section 16-22-2. - Civics education.

Section 16-22-3. - Instruction in physiology and hygiene.

Section 16-22-4. - Instruction in health and physical education.

Section 16-22-4.1. - Rhode Island healthy weight pilot program established.

Section 16-22-4.2. - Free-play recess.

Section 16-22-5. - Course in fire prevention prescribed.

Section 16-22-6. - Duty of school officials to arrange for fire prevention course.

Section 16-22-7. - Repealed.

Section 16-22-8. - Foreign language courses.

Section 16-22-9. - Uniform testing.

Section 16-22-9.1. - Foster care youth academic reports.

Section 16-22-10. - Voting instruction.

Section 16-22-11. - Pledge of allegiance.

Section 16-22-12. - Required courses on alcohol and substance abuse.

Section 16-22-13. - Consumer education.

Section 16-22-14. - Suicide prevention awareness.

Section 16-22-15. - Cardiopulmonary resuscitation training.

Section 16-22-16. - Blocked air passage treatment training.

Section 16-22-17. - AIDS education program.

Section 16-22-18. - Health and family life courses.

Section 16-22-19. - Electronic news or educational programming.

Section 16-22-20. - Animal dissection and vivisection — Right to refuse — Alternate learning project required.

Section 16-22-21. - Community service learning.

Section 16-22-22. - Genocide and human rights education.

Section 16-22-23. - Mathematics, English/Language Arts, and Science.

Section 16-22-24. - Dating violence education.

Section 16-22-25. - Lyme disease awareness and prevention program.

Section 16-22-26. - Age appropriate sexual abuse and assault awareness education.

Section 16-22-27. - Availability of instruction in musical performance education.

Section 16-22-28. - Instruction in media literacy.

Section 16-22-29. - Field trips to nature preserve, reserve, or conservatory.

Section 16-22-30. - Statewide academic standards.

Section 16-22-31. - Curriculum frameworks.

Section 16-22-32. - High quality curriculum and materials.

Section 16-22-33. - Curriculum implementation accountability.

Section 16-22-34. - The basic education program.

Section 16-22-35. - Littering prevention and recycling awareness program.

Section 16-22-36. - Asian American, Native Hawaiian, and Pacific Islander history study.

Section 16-22-37. - Dual language immersion model policy and timeline.

Section 16-22-38. - Career and technical education programs. [Effective January 1, 2023.]