NOTE: Until such time as the content list for Health Education is included in Me. Dept. of Ed. Reg. 131, health education shall continue to include instruction in community health, consumer health, environmental health, family life, growth and development, nutritional health, personal health including mental and emotional health, prevention and control of disease and disorders, safety and accident prevention, and substance use and abuse, including the effects of tobacco, alcohol, and other drugs.
Each school board that operates a secondary school shall adopt at least one course of study to be provided in the secondary school(s) under its direction and supervision.
Each school unit shall make available applied technology instruction in accordance with Me. Dept. of Ed. Reg. 231, 232, and 236. Curricula of applied technology programs shall be aligned with the content standards of the system of Learning Results. Students may meet the content standards of the system of Learning Results as part of an applied technology program, either through separate or integrated study of the content areas as described in 6.01(B)(1) above.
Assessment of student performance of an applied technology curriculum, as recommended by the applied technology program, shall be a component of the local assessment system adopted by the sending school board. The sending school board shall consider results of assessments of applied technology programs as part of the basis for awarding a diploma for participating students.
Secondary school students are eligible for extended years of study to complete the requirements of a diploma if they have not reached the age of 20 at the start of the school year. Students eligible for extended years of study may be referred to adult education or similar resources suitable to young adult learners. Extended study for students with disabilities shall be specified in the student's I.E.P. The cost of extended study shall be part of the school unit's secondary school budget.
Diploma requirements shall be published and distributed to students entering the ninth grade.
Prior to the start of the 2006-2007 school year, diplomas shall be awarded to students who meet the minimum requirements as established in this subsection. School Boards shall adopt policies that phase in the new requirements. "Credit" means an award for completion of a course of instruction plus assigned homework for an entire school year. A total of at least 16 credits shall be required for the awarding of a diploma. Credit may be awarded to students enrolled in grades 9-12, except that schools may award credits to adults, under policies adopted by the school board that measure whether the students have acquired the equivalent learning experiences. Credit for equivalent instruction in non-approved schools or through home instruction may be awarded based on the receiving school's assessment of the value of that educational experience. The following credits and skills shall be required:
Beginning with the 2006-2007 school year, diplomas may be awarded only to students who have met the content standards of the system of Learning Results as determined by the local assessment system adopted by the school board for the following content areas: English Language Arts, Health and Physical Education, Mathematics, Science and Technology, and Social Studies. The school board may specify additional diploma requirements, including minimum attendance requirements and/or accumulation of credits or courses. However, this accumulation shall not, in and of itself, be sufficient evidence that a student has met the standards in a content area.
Beginning with the 2009-2010 school year, diplomas may be awarded only to students who have successfully met the content standards of all content areas of the system of Learning Results as determined by the local assessment system, and additional diploma requirements as specified in local school board policy.
For students who transfer into a secondary school from another state or an educational program that is not required to meet the standards of the system of Learning Results, the principal of the receiving school shall determine the value of the prior educational experience toward meeting the standards through the local assessment system.
The intent of the system of Learning Results is to provide the time that students need in order to meet the content standards. This may involve more or less than the typical four years of secondary school. Nothing in these rules shall prevent the local school board from awarding of a diploma to a student who has completed all state and local diploma requirements in fewer than four years of study.
05-071 C.M.R. ch. 127, § 7