South Carolina Code of Laws
(Unannotated)
Current through the end of the 2006 Regular Session
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For purposes of this chapter (1) "public higher education" shall mean
state-supported education in the post-secondary field, including
comprehensive and technical education; (2) "public institution of
higher learning" shall mean any state-supported-post-secondary
educational institution and shall include technical and comprehensive
educational institutions.
SECTION 59-103-10. State Commission on Higher Education created; membership.
There is created the State Commission on Higher Education. The
commission shall consist of fourteen members appointed by the Governor.
The membership must consist of one at-large member to serve as
chairman, one representative from each of the six congressional
districts, three members appointed from the State at-large, three
representatives of the public colleges and universities, and one
representative of the independent colleges and universities of South
Carolina.
The membership of the Commission on Higher Education must be as follows:
(1) Nine members, six to represent each of the congressional districts
of this State appointed by the Governor upon the recommendation of a
majority of the senators and a majority of the members of the House of
Representatives comprising the legislative delegation from the district
and three members appointed from the State at-large upon the advice and
consent of the Senate. Each representative of a congressional district
must be a resident of the congressional district he represents. In
order to qualify for appointment, the representatives from the
congressional districts and those appointed at large must have
experience in at least one of the following areas: business, the
education of future leaders and teachers, management, or policy. A
member representing the congressional districts or appointed at large
must not have been, during the succeeding five years, a member of a
governing body of a public institution of higher learning in this State
and must not be employed or have immediate family members employed by
any of the public colleges and universities of this State. These
members must be appointed for terms of four years and shall not serve
on the commission for more than two consecutive terms. However, the
initial term of office for a member appointed from an even-numbered
congressional district shall be two years.
If the boundaries of the congressional districts are changed, members
serving on the commission shall continue to serve until the expiration
of their current terms, but successors to members whose terms expire
must be appointed from the newly defined congressional districts. If a
congressional district is added, the commission must be enlarged to
include a representative from that district.
(2) Three members to serve ex officio to represent the public colleges
and universities appointed by the Governor with the advice and consent
of the Senate. It shall not be a conflict of interest for any voting ex
officio member to vote on matters pertaining to their individual
college or university. One member must be serving on the board of
trustees of one of the public senior research institutions, one member
must be serving on the board of trustees of one of the four-year public
institutions of higher learning, and one member must be a member of one
of the local area technical education commissions or the State Board
for Technical and Comprehensive Education to represent the State Board
for Technical and Comprehensive Education. These members must be
appointed to serve terms of two years with terms to rotate among the
institutions.
(3) One ex officio member to represent the independent colleges and
universities by the Governor upon the advice and consent of the Senate.
The individual appointed must be serving as a member of the Advisory
Council of Private College Presidents. This member must be appointed
for a term of two years and shall serve as a nonvoting member.
(4) One at-large member to serve as chairman appointed by the Governor
with the advice and consent of the Senate. This member must be
appointed for a term of four years and may be reappointed for one
additional term; however, he may serve only one term as chairman.
The Governor, by his appointments, shall assure that various economic
interests and minority groups, especially women and blacks, are fairly
represented on the commission and shall attempt to assure that the
graduates of no one public or private college or technical college are
dominant on the commission. Vacancies must be filled in the manner of
the original appointment for the unexpired portion of the term. All
members of the commission shall serve until their successors are
appointed and qualify.
SECTION 59-103-15. Higher education mission and goals.
(A)(1) The General Assembly has determined that the mission for
higher education in South Carolina is to be a global leader in
providing a coordinated, comprehensive system of excellence in
education by providing instruction, research, and life-long learning
opportunities which are focused on economic development and benefit the
State of South Carolina.
(2) The goals to be achieved through this mission are:
(a) high academic quality;
(b) affordable and accessible education;
(c) instructional excellence;
(d) coordination and cooperation with public education;
(e) cooperation among the General Assembly, Commission on Higher
Education, Council of Presidents of State Institutions, institutions of
higher learning, and the business community;
(f) economic growth;
(g) clearly defined missions.
(B) The General Assembly has determined that the primary mission or
focus for each type of institution of higher learning or other
post-secondary school in this State is as follows:
(1) Research institutions
(a) college-level baccalaureate education, master's, professional, and
doctor of philosophy degrees which lead to continued education or
employment;
(b) research through the use of government, corporate, nonprofit-organization grants, or state resources, or both;
(c) public service to the State and the local community;
(2) Four-year colleges and universities
(a) college-level baccalaureate education and selected master's degrees
which lead to employment or continued education, or both, except for
doctoral degrees currently being offered;
(b) limited and specialized research;
(c) public service to the State and the local community;
(3) Two-year institutions - branches of the University of South Carolina
(a) college-level pre-baccalaureate education necessary to confer
associates' degrees which lead to continued education at a four-year or
research institution;
(b) public service to the State and the local community;
(4) State technical and comprehensive education system
(a) all post-secondary vocational, technical, and occupational diploma
and associate degree programs leading directly to employment or
maintenance of employment and associate degree programs which enable
students to gain access to other post-secondary education;
(b) up-to-date and appropriate occupational and technical training for adults;
(c) special school programs that provide training for prospective
employees for prospective and existing industry in order to enhance the
economic development of South Carolina;
(d) public service to the State and the local community;
(e) continue to remain technical, vocational, or occupational colleges
with a mission as stated in item (4) and primarily focused on technical
education and the economic development of the State.
SECTION 59-103-20. Studies of institutions of higher learning.
The commission shall meet regularly and shall have the authority and
responsibility for a coordinated, efficient, and responsive higher
education system in this State consistent with the missions of each
type of institution as stipulated in Section 59-103-15. In meeting this
responsibility and in performing its duties and functions, the
commission shall coordinate and collaborate at a minimum with the
Council of Presidents of State Institutions, the council of board
chairs of the various public institutions of higher learning, and the
business community. The commission also is charged with examining the
state's institutions of higher learning relative to both short and
long-range programs and missions which include:
(a) the role of state-supported higher education in serving the needs
of the State and the roles and participation of the individual
institutions in the statewide program;
(b) enrollment trends, student costs, business management practices,
accounting methods, operating results and needs, and capital fund
requirements;
(c) the administrative setup and curriculum offerings of the several
institutions and of the various departments, schools, institutes, and
services within each institution and the respective relationships to
the services and offerings of other institutions;
(d) areas of state-level coordination and cooperation with the
objective of reducing duplication, increasing effectiveness, and
achieving economies and eliminating sources of friction and
misunderstanding;
(e) efforts to promote a clearer understanding and greater unity and
good will among all institutions of higher learning, both public and
private, in the interest of serving the educational needs of the people
of South Carolina on a statewide level.
SECTION 59-103-25. Publication of legislation; standing committees.
The commission shall compile and publish legislation applicable to it
so that the relationships among the commission, the governing bodies of
public institutions of higher education, the General Assembly and the
executive branches of government may be more clearly established and
understood.
The commission shall create from among its membership such standing
committees as it may deem necessary. The creation of the committees and
their duties shall be prescribed by a two-thirds vote of the membership
of the commission. Special committees may be created and their duties
prescribed by a majority vote of the membership of the commission.
SECTION 59-103-30. Critical success factors and performance indicators.
(A) The General Assembly has determined that the critical
success factors, in priority order, for academic quality in the several
institutions of higher learning in this State are as follows:
(1) Mission Focus;
(2) Quality of Faculty;
(3) Classroom Quality;
(4) Institutional Cooperation and Collaboration;
(5) Administrative Efficiency;
(6) Entrance Requirements;
(7) Graduates' Achievements;
(8) User-friendliness of the Institution;
(9) Research Funding.
(B) The General Assembly has determined that whether or not an
institution embodies these critical success factors can be measured by
the following performance indicators as reflected under the critical
success factors below:
(1) Mission Focus
(a) expenditure of funds to achieve institutional mission;
(b) curricula offered to achieve mission;
(c) approval of a mission statement;
(d) adoption of a strategic plan to support the mission statement;
(e) attainment of goals of the strategic plan.
(2) Quality of Faculty
(a) academic and other credentials of professors and instructors;
(b) performance review system for faculty to include student and peer evaluations;
(c) post-tenure review for tenured faculty;
(d) compensation of faculty;
(e) availability of faculty to students outside the classroom;
(f) community and public service activities of faculty for which no extra compensation is paid.
(3) Instructional Quality
(a) class sizes and student/teacher ratios;
(b) number of credit hours taught by faculty;
(c) ratio of full-time faculty as compared to other full-time employees;
(d) accreditation of degree-granting programs;
(e) institutional emphasis on quality teacher education and reform.
(4) Institutional Cooperation and Collaboration
(a) sharing and use of technology, programs, equipment, supplies, and
source matter experts within the institution, with other institutions,
and with the business community;
(b) cooperation and collaboration with private industry.
(5) Administrative Efficiency
(a) percentage of administrative costs as compared to academic costs;
(b) use of best management practices;
(c) elimination of unjustified duplication of and waste in administrative and academic programs;
(d) amount of general overhead costs.
(6) Entrance Requirements
(a) SAT and ACT scores of student body;
(b) high school class standing, grade point averages, and activities of student body;
(c) post-secondary nonacademic achievements of student body;
(d) priority on enrolling in-state residents.
(7) Graduates' Achievements
(a) graduation rate;
(b) employment rate for graduates;
(c) employer feedback on graduates who were employed or not employed;
(d) scores of graduates on post-undergraduate professional, graduate,
or employment-related examinations and certification tests;
(e) number of graduates who continued their education;
(f) credit hours earned of graduates.
(8) User-Friendliness of Institution
(a) transferability of credits to and from the institution;
(b) continuing education programs for graduates and others;
(c) accessibility to the institution of all citizens of the State.
(9) Research Funding
(a) financial support for reform in teacher education;
(b) amount of public and private sector grants.
(C) The commission, when using the critical success factors for the
purpose of funding recommendations for institutions of higher learning,
is required to use objective, measurable criteria.
(D) Critical success factors developed and used for the purpose of
funding recommendations shall be those which are directly related to
the missions of the particular type of institution as outlined in
Section 59-103-15(B) and not those factors which are not relevant to
the success factors of the particular type of institution.
SECTION 59-103-35. Submission of budget; new and existing programs.
All public institutions of higher learning shall submit annual budget
requests to the commission in the manner set forth in this section. The
State Board for Technical and Comprehensive Education shall submit an
annual budget request to the commission representing the total requests
of all area-wide technical and comprehensive educational institutions.
The budget submitted by each institution and the State Board for
Technical and Comprehensive Education must include all state funds,
federal grants, tuition, and fees other than funds derived wholly from
athletic or other student contests, from the activities of student
organizations, from approved private practice plans, and from the
operation of canteens and bookstores which may be retained by the
institutions and be used as determined by the respective governing
boards, subject to annual audit by the State. Fees established by the
respective governing boards for programs, activities, and projects not
covered by appropriations or other revenues may be retained and used by
each institution as previously determined by the respective governing
boards, subject to annual audit by the State. The budget request for
the public higher education system shall be submitted by the commission
to the Governor and appropriate standing committees of the General
Assembly in conjunction with the preparation of the annual general
appropriations act for the applicable year.
Supplemental appropriations requests from any public institution of
higher education must be submitted first to the commission. If the
commission does not concur in the requests, the affected institution
may request a hearing on the requests before the appropriate committee
of the General Assembly. The commission may appear at the hearing and
present its own recommendations and findings to the same committee. The
provisions of this paragraph do not apply to any capital improvement
projects funded in whole or in part prior to July 30, 1996.
No new program may be undertaken by any public institution of higher
education without the approval of the commission. The provisions of
this chapter apply to all college parallel, transferable, and associate
degree programs of technical and comprehensive education institutions.
All other programs and offerings of technical and comprehensive
education institutions are excluded from this chapter.
SECTION 59-103-36. Military students included in count of full-time students.
Military students in the senior colleges and universities of this State
shall be included in the count of full-time equivalent students for the
purpose of determining the appropriation of each institution. The
Commission on Higher Education and the Budget and Control Board may
make whatever audit adjustments are necessary to carry out this intent.
SECTION 59-103-40. Council of presidents of State institutions of higher learning.
The Commission shall establish a council of presidents consisting of
the presidents of the State institutions of higher learning. The
council of presidents shall appoint a chairman and such other officers
and committees as it may see fit. It shall meet at least four times a
year, of which two meetings will be held jointly with the Commission.
The council of presidents shall establish committees consisting of
qualified personnel representing the various State-supported
institutions of higher learning, either upon request of the Commission
or upon its own initiative, to investigate, study and report to the
Commission on such subjects as:
(a) Academic planning
(b) Business and financial coordination
(c) Library utilization and coordination.
SECTION 59-103-45. Additional duties and functions of commission regarding public institutions of higher learning.
In addition to the powers, duties, and functions of the Commission on
Higher Education as provided by law, the commission, notwithstanding
any other provision of law to the contrary, shall have the following
additional duties and functions with regard to the various public
institutions of higher education:
(1) establish procedures for the transferability of courses at the
undergraduate level between two-year and four-year institutions or
schools;
(2) coordinate with the State Board of Education in the approval of
secondary education courses for the purpose of determining minimum
college entrance requirements, and define minimum academic expectations
for prospective post-secondary students, communicate these expectations
to the State Board of Education, and work with the state board to
ensure these expectations are met;
(3) review minimum undergraduate admissions standards for in-state and out-of-state students;
(4)(a) develop standards for determining how well an institution has
met or achieved the performance indicators for quality academic success
as enumerated in Section 59-103-30, and develop mechanisms for
measuring the standards of achievement of particular institutions.
These standards and measurement mechanisms shall be developed in
consultation and cooperation with, at a minimum but not limited to, the
Council of Presidents of State Institutions, the chairmen of the
governing boards of the various institutions and the business
community;
(b) base the higher education funding formula in part on the
achievement of the standards set for these performance indicators
including base-line funding for institutions meeting the standards of
achievement, incentive funding for institutions exceeding the standards
of achievement, and reductions in funding for institutions which do not
meet the standards of achievement, provided that each institution under
the formula until July 1, 1999, must receive at least its fiscal year
1996-1997 formula amount;
(c) promulgate regulations to implement the provisions of subitems (a)
and (b) above and submit such regulations to the General Assembly for
its review pursuant to the Administrative Procedures Act not later than
the beginning of the 1997 Session of the General Assembly.
(d) develop a higher education funding formula based entirely on an
institution's achievement of the standards set for these performance
indicators, this formula to be used beginning July 1, 1999. This new
funding formula also must be contained in regulations promulgated by
the commission and submitted to the General Assembly for its review in
accordance with the Administrative Procedures Act;
(5) reduce, expand, or consolidate any institution of higher learning
including those which do not meet the standards of achievement in
regard to the performance indicators for quality academic success
enumerated in Section 59-103-30, and beginning July 1, 1999, close any
institution which does not meet the standards of achievement in regard
to the performance indicators for quality academic success enumerated
in Section 59-103-30. The process to be followed for the closure,
reduction, expansion, or consolidation of an institution under this
item (5) shall be as promulgated in regulations of the commission which
shall be submitted to and approved by the General Assembly;
(6) review and approve each institutional mission statement to ensure
it is within the overall mission of that particular type of institution
as stipulated by Section 59-103-15 and is within the overall mission of
the State;
(7) ensure access and equity opportunities at each institution of
higher learning for all citizens of this State regardless of race,
gender, color, creed, or national origin within the parameters provided
by law.
SECTION 59-103-50. Advisory Council of Private College Presidents.
There shall be established, under the auspices of the commission, an
Advisory Council of Private College Presidents to counsel with and
advise the commission with regard to matters concerning nonpublic
colleges and their role in overall programs of higher education in the
State. The council shall consist of eight members selected by the South
Carolina College Council. Terms of members shall be for two years. A
chairman shall be elected by the members. The council shall meet upon
the call of the chairman and shall meet at least once annually with the
commission. The members of the council serving on this section's
effective date may continue to serve until the expiration of their
terms.
SECTION 59-103-55. Representation of four-year colleges on commission councils, advisory groups, committees and task forces.
Each four-year campus of each state-supported public institution of
higher learning, as defined in Section 59-103-5, shall have equal
representation on all formal and informal councils, advisory groups,
committees, and task forces of the commission. Independent four-year
colleges shall have representation on all formal and informal
committees and commissions dealing with higher education statewide
issues.
SECTION 59-103-60. Recommendations to Governor's Office and General Assembly.
The commission shall make such recommendations to the Governor's Office
and the General Assembly as to policies, programs, curricula,
facilities, administration, and financing of all state-supported
institutions of higher learning as may be considered desirable. The
House Ways and Means Committee, the Senate Finance Committee, and the
State Budget and Control Board may refer to the commission for
investigation, study, and report any requests of institutions of higher
learning for new or additional appropriations for operating and for
other purposes and for the establishment of new or expanded programs.
SECTION 59-103-65. Close of institution; reallocation of funds.
If an institution beginning July 1, 1999, is closed by the commission,
the institution shall be treated as a terminated agency under Section
1-20-30 and as such terminated in the manner provided therein. However,
any remaining funds shall not revert to the general fund as provided in
Section 1-20-30 but instead shall be reallocated to higher education
funding through use of the higher education funding formula in the
manner the commission shall provide.
The Commission shall make reports to the Governor and the General
Assembly at least annually on the status and progress of higher
education in the State, with such recommendations as may be
appropriate.
SECTION 59-103-80. Expenses; compensation of Commission members.
Funds for the necessary technical, administrative and clerical
assistance and other expenses of the Commission, including stationery,
shall be carried in the annual appropriation act for the State. The
members of the Commission shall be allowed such per diem and mileage as
authorized by law for members of boards, commissions and committees.
The sum appropriated for the use of the Commission shall be expended
upon warrants signed by the chairman.
An executive director must be appointed by the commission to manage and
carry out the duties of the commission as prescribed by law and
assigned by the commission. The executive director is not subject to
the State Employee Grievance Procedure Act of 1982 and may be dismissed
without cause.
A professional staff complement shall be established by the executive
director who shall ensure that there are persons on the staff who have
the professional competence and experience to carry out the duties
assigned and to ensure that there are persons on the staff who are
familiar with the problems and capabilities of all of the principal
types of state-supported institutions in the State. Provision shall be
made for persons of high competence and strong professional experience
in the areas of academic affairs, public service and extension
programs, business and financial affairs, institutional studies and
long-range planning, student affairs, research and development, legal
affairs, health affairs, institutional development, and for state and
federal programs administered by the commission. The hiring of
additional staff members to any position for which funds were not
specifically appropriated by the General Assembly shall require prior
approval by the General Assembly.
SECTION 59-103-100. Federal and private research grants not to be limited.
The provisions of this chapter shall not be construed to limit federal
and private grants which are made for research and are not connected
with teaching programs.
SECTION 59-103-110. Approval for new construction; exemptions.
No public institution of higher learning shall be authorized to
construct or purchase any new permanent facility at any location other
than on a currently approved campus or on property immediately
contiguous thereto unless such new location or purchase of improved or
unimproved real property has been approved by the commission.
SECTION 59-103-120. Accreditation and chartering of chiropractic colleges.
One hundred and eighty days from the effective date of this act, the
State Commission on Higher Education shall publish a list of the
accrediting agency or agencies, which may include itself, approved by
it for accreditation of chiropractic colleges or schools doing business
in this State. Any chiropractic college or school doing business in
this State shall, upon publication of said list of such accrediting
agency or agencies, forthwith apply for such accreditation or candidate
status and furnish the State Commission on Higher Education documented
evidence of such application.
Failure to obtain such accreditation or candidate status within
nineteen months after publication of the list of approved agencies
shall result in the Commission on Higher Education revoking the status
of such college or school as a recognized college or school of
chiropractic.
Provided, further, any college of chiropractic applying for a South
Carolina charter must furnish the Commission on Higher Education with
sufficient evidence that such school will qualify for required
accreditation. Upon certification by the Commission on Higher Education
to the Secretary of State, the Secretary of State may issue a charter;
provided, further, however, that any college now chartered must attain
required licensure before one hundred eighty days after the effective
date of this act or have its charter revoked upon a finding by the
Attorney General that such licensure has not been attained by such
date. In addition to other existing criteria, licensure of all
chiropractic colleges shall be renewable annually contingent upon
supplying semiannual reports as to the progress of accreditation to the
Commission on Higher Education and the Commission shall make a
determination if such progress is satisfactory.
SECTION 59-103-130. Colleges and universities to emphasize teaching as career opportunity.
The Commission on Higher Education shall adopt guidelines whereby the
publicly supported colleges and universities of this State shall
emphasize teaching as a career opportunity and provide students
interested in a teaching career with opportunities to tutor other
students.
SECTION 59-103-140. Contracts with colleges and universities for provision of teacher training programs.
The Commission on Higher Education, in consultation with the State
Board of Education, may contract with selected public or private
colleges and universities, or groupings of such institutions, to
provide centers of excellence in programs designed to train teachers.
The Commission shall devise guidelines and procedures by which
institutions, or groups of institutions, may apply for such contracts
by the Commission. Such guidelines and procedures shall include
participation by local schools or school districts in such programs as
may be appropriate. Funds for implementing this activity shall be
appropriated annually to the Commission on Higher Education which, in
consultation with the State Board of Education, shall monitor the
performance of participating institutions and may or may not elect to
renew such contracts to any original college or university.
SECTION 59-103-150. Early retirement plans for faculty of public institutions of higher learning.
(A) As long as there is no impact on state appropriations and
subject to approval by the governing body of the public institution of
higher education, the institution may implement an early retirement
plan for its faculty to accomplish the following objectives:
(1) reallocate institutional resources;
(2) provide an equitable method to increase the flexibility of the institution to effect cost-saving measures;
(3) foster intellectual renewal;
(4) provide increased opportunities for promotion of a younger faculty;
(5) improve the opportunity to recruit qualified women and minorities.
(B) An early retirement plan may include provisions for institutions to pay:
(1) actuarial costs required by Sections 9-1-1850 and 9-11-60;
(2) health, dental, and life insurance costs;
(3) incentive payments;
(4) the costs of single premium annuity plans to provide supplemental benefits.
SECTION 59-103-160. English Fluency in Higher Learning Act.
(A) This section may be cited as the English Fluency in Higher Learning Act.
(B) The following words and phrases when used in this section have the
meanings given to them unless the context clearly indicates otherwise:
"Instructional faculty" means every member of a public institution of
higher learning whose first language is not English, other than
visiting faculty but including graduate teaching assistants, who
teaches one or more undergraduate credit courses at a campus of that
institution within this State except:
(1) courses that are designed to be taught predominately in a foreign language;
(2) student participatory and activity courses such as clinics, studios, and seminars;
(3) special arrangement courses such as individualized instruction and independent study courses; and
(4) continuing education courses.
(C) Each public institution of higher learning shall establish policies to:
(1) ensure that the instructional faculty whose second language is
English possess adequate proficiency in both the written and spoken
English language. Student and faculty input is required in establishing
these policies.
(2) provide students with a grievance procedure regarding an instructor who is not able to write or speak the English language.
(D)(1) Each institution of higher learning must submit its policy or
amendments to the Commission on Higher Education within six months from
the effective date of this section. Any amendments to the policy must
be promptly forwarded to the commission. The commission shall notify
the chairmen of the Senate and House Education Committees of those
institutions not submitting plans and any amendment to the commission.
(2) Each institution of higher learning must report annually to the
Commission on Higher Education and the chairmen of the Senate and House
of Representatives Education Committees grievances filed by students
under the requirement of subsection (C)(2) and the disposition of those
grievances.
SECTION 59-103-162. South Carolina Manufacturing Extension Partnership; review of activities and board membership; budget recommendations.
The South Carolina Commission on Higher Education shall review annually
the activities of the South Carolina Manufacturing Extension
Partnership, make a budget recommendation to the General Assembly, and
coordinate the allocation of funds among each participating
institution. The funds appropriated to the University of South
Carolina--Columbia for the South Carolina Manufacturing Extension
Partnership may not be used for any other purpose. The Commission shall
review the membership of the South Carolina Manufacturing Extension
Partnership board to insure appropriate representation of each
participating institution.
ARTICLE 2.
POST-SECONDARY EDUCATION OPTION INFORMATION
SECTION 59-103-165. Information packages for eighth-grade students regarding higher education; pilot programs.
The Commission on Higher Education is directed to work with the state's
public institutions of higher education, and private institutions of
higher education which wish to participate, to develop information
packages for eighth grade students and their parents on the options of
post-secondary education available in South Carolina, the courses
required to attend colleges and universities, and the financial
requirements and assistance available for students pursuing additional
education after high school.
During 1991-92, the commission shall develop the information packages,
and to the extent that funds are appropriated by the General Assembly,
pilot-test the program in a number of school districts. The commission
shall report to the Senate Education Committee and the Education and
Public Works Committee of the House on the pilot-testing.
SECTION 59-103-170. Small group and one-on-one counseling sessions; Education Options Week.
After pilot-testing, the Commission on Higher Education shall work with
this state's public institutions of higher education and private higher
education institutions wishing to participate, to provide annually for
the state's eighth grade students and their parents or guardians small
group and one-on-one counseling on required high school courses and
post-secondary options, financial requirements, and assistance
available for a post-secondary education. These sessions must be held
at each of the state's public schools which house an eighth grade
class. The counseling may be provided during a week declared to be
"Education Options Week" or at another time convenient to the school
and the cooperating institution of higher education.
The annual sessions will be phased-in over two years and by school year
1993-94 will be in the individual schools in accordance with Sections
59-103-165 through 59-103-190.
SECTION 59-103-180. Participation of State Board of Education, State Department of Education, and public schools and districts.
The State Board of Education, the State Department of Education, and
the state's public school districts and schools shall cooperate with
the Commission on Higher Education and the institutions of higher
education in providing the counseling and shall assist in any manner
considered appropriate by them. The schools shall make special efforts
to ensure that as many students and parents or guardians as possible
are made aware of the opportunity, are urged to attend the sessions,
and receive the information.
SECTION 59-103-190. Business and industry requested to participate.
The businesses and industries of this State are requested to provide
the opportunity to their employees with children in the eighth grade to
attend the counseling sessions and to cooperate with institutions of
higher education in presenting at the worksite small group and
one-on-one counseling on required high school courses, post-secondary
options, financial requirements, and assistance for post-secondary
education.
SECTION 59-103-195. Regulation of culinary arts instruction requiring student under 21 to taste alcoholic beverage.
The State Commission on Higher Education shall have review authority in
order to determine the legitimacy and appropriateness of the tasting
requirements pursuant to Sections 20-7-8920 and 20-7-8925. The
commission shall also establish reasonable rules and restrictions
through regulation, as appropriate, with regard to any proposed course
of instruction in the culinary arts which any private or public
institution desires to offer to students under twenty-one years of age
in which the tasting of beer, ale, porter, wine, or other similar malt
or fermented beverage or alcoholic liquor is required. Unless approved
by the commission, no such course and no student under twenty-one years
of age enrolled in such course shall qualify for the exceptions
provided under Sections 20-7-8920, 20-7-8925, 61-6-4070, or 61-4-90. A
course of instruction on bartending or any similar curriculum does not
qualify for exception or approval by the commission under this section.
SECTION 59-103-200. Disposition of duplicate archival material.
Upon approval by the Commission, the agency may remove certain record
and nonrecord materials from its collections by gift to another public
or nonprofit institution or by sale at public auction. This is a
supplemental form of disposition beyond that recognized in the Public
Records Act for the retention, copying, and destruction of public
records, and it pertains only to those accessioned archives materials
having a market value and which duplicate existing archival material,
fall outside the scope of the archives collection policy, or have no
further possible research value. All funds realized through sale by
public auction must be placed in a special account to be used for
improved access to and preservation of the state archives collections.
The Commission shall report annually to the Budget and Control Board
regarding these dispositions.