CS for CS for SB 1720                            First Engrossed
       
       
       
       
       
       
       
       
       20131720e1
       
    1                        A bill to be entitled                      
    2         An act relating to education; amending s. 11.45, F.S.;
    3         revising actions to be taken by the Legislative
    4         Auditing Committee relating to audits of state
    5         universities and Florida College System institutions;
    6         amending s. 1001.02, F.S.; requiring the State Board
    7         of Education to specify the college credit courses
    8         that may be taken by Florida College System
    9         institution students who are concurrently
   10         participating in developmental education; requiring
   11         the State Board of Education to establish the tuition
   12         and out-of-state fees for certain credit instruction,
   13         rather than college-preparatory instruction; revising
   14         the minimum standards, definitions, and guidelines
   15         that the State Board of Education must prescribe by
   16         rule for Florida College System institutions; amending
   17         s. 1001.64, F.S.; authorizing a board of trustees at a
   18         Florida College System institution to contract with
   19         the board of trustees of a state university for the
   20         Florida College System institution to provide
   21         developmental education; creating s. 1001.7065, F.S.;
   22         establishing a collaborative partnership between the
   23         Board of Governors and the Legislature to elevate the
   24         academic and research preeminence of this state’s
   25         highest performing state research universities;
   26         establishing academic and research excellence
   27         standards for a university to be designated a
   28         preeminent state research university; providing for a
   29         preeminent state research university to establish an
   30         institute for online learning; providing duties and
   31         responsibilities of an advisory board, the university,
   32         and the Board of Governors to provide high-quality,
   33         fully online baccalaureate degree programs, including
   34         establishment of a tuition structure for the
   35         institute; providing for the award of funding to
   36         preeminent state research universities based upon
   37         performance and subject to appropriation; authorizing
   38         a preeminent state research university to establish
   39         special course requirements; providing for preeminent
   40         state research university flexibility; encouraging the
   41         Board of Governors to promote additional programs of
   42         excellence; amending s. 1004.02, F.S.; defining the
   43         term “developmental education” as it relates to public
   44         postsecondary education; amending s. 1004.43, F.S.;
   45         transferring oversight of the H. Lee Moffitt Cancer
   46         Center and Research Institute to the Board of Trustees
   47         of the University of South Florida; requiring the
   48         Board of Trustees to enter into a lease agreement for
   49         use of certain land and facilities; providing for the
   50         terms of the lease; requiring the University of South
   51         Florida and the Florida not-for-profit corporation
   52         that governs and operates the H. Lee Moffitt Cancer
   53         Center and Research Institute to enter into an
   54         agreement to review construction plans and
   55         specifications for consistency of certain criteria;
   56         revising the membership of the board of directors for
   57         the not-for-profit corporation; deleting the
   58         requirement that the Board of Governors provide for
   59         certain approvals of the articles of incorporation of
   60         the not-for-profit corporation and use of land and
   61         facilities for certain purposes; requiring the not
   62         for-profit corporation to cause to be prepared annual
   63         financial audits; requiring the not-for-profit
   64         corporation to provide equal employment opportunities;
   65         providing for the governance and operation of the
   66         facilities if the agreement between the not-for-profit
   67         corporation and the Board of Trustees of the
   68         University of South Florida, rather than the Board of
   69         Governors, is terminated; requiring the chief
   70         executive officer to report annually to the Board of
   71         Governors on the educational activities of the not
   72         for-profit corporation; providing for the creation and
   73         duties of an external advisory board; repealing s.
   74         1004.58, F.S., relating to the Leadership Board for
   75         Applied Research and Public Service; amending s.
   76         1004.93, F.S.; deleting provisions relating to the
   77         levels and courses of instruction to be funded through
   78         the college-preparatory program; amending s. 1006.735,
   79         F.S.; establishing the Complete Florida Degree Program
   80         to recruit, recover, and retain adult learners and
   81         assist them in completing degrees aligned to high
   82         wage, high-skill workforce needs; specifying program
   83         components and the tuition and fee structure;
   84         requiring submission of a project plan to the
   85         Legislature; amending s. 1007.23, F.S.; revising the
   86         number of semester hours in which a student who is
   87         seeking an associate in arts degree is required to
   88         indicate a baccalaureate degree program; amending s.
   89         1007.25, F.S.; revising general education courses,
   90         common prerequisites, and degree requirements;
   91         conforming terminology to changes made by the act;
   92         amending s. 1007.263, F.S.; revising the rules that
   93         the board of trustees of a Florida College System
   94         institution may adopt with regard to admissions
   95         counseling; requiring each board of trustees to
   96         establish policies that notify students about options
   97         they may use to attain the communication and
   98         computation skills that are essential to perform
   99         college-level work; deleting a prohibition against a
  100         student’s enrollment in credit courses under certain
  101         circumstances; amending s. 1007.271, F.S.; conforming
  102         provisions to changes made by the act; creating s.
  103         1008.02, F.S.; providing definitions for the purpose
  104         of ch. 1008, F.S., relating to assessment and
  105         accountability for the K-20 education system; amending
  106         s. 1008.30, F.S.; providing that alternative
  107         assessments that may be accepted in lieu of the common
  108         placement test must be identified in rule; requiring
  109         the State Board of Education, in conjunction with the
  110         Board of Governors, to approve a series of meta
  111         majors, academic pathways, and degree maps that
  112         identify the gateway courses required for success in
  113         each meta-major; providing requirements for the common
  114         placement testing program; requiring the State Board
  115         of Education to adopt rules that require high schools
  116         to evaluate certain students for college readiness;
  117         requiring the State Board of Education to establish by
  118         rule the test scores a student must achieve to
  119         demonstrate readiness to perform college-level work;
  120         deleting provisions to conform to changes made by the
  121         act; conforming terminology; requiring the State Board
  122         of Education to adopt rules by a specified date to
  123         implement developmental education; requiring local
  124         policies and practices set by each Florida College
  125         System institution board of trustees to outline the
  126         student achievements considered by the institution for
  127         placement determinations, identify instructional
  128         options available to students, and describe student
  129         costs and financial aid opportunities associated with
  130         each instructional option; creating s. 1008.322, F.S.;
  131         requiring the Board of Governors of the State
  132         University System to oversee the performance of state
  133         university boards of trustees in the enforcement of
  134         laws, rules, and regulations; providing that state
  135         university presidents are responsible for the accuracy
  136         of the information and data reported to the Board of
  137         Governors; authorizing the Chancellor of the State
  138         University System to investigate allegations of
  139         noncompliance with law or Board of Governors’ rule or
  140         regulation and determine probable cause; requiring the
  141         chancellor to report determinations of probable cause
  142         to the Board of Governors; authorizing the Board of
  143         Governors to initiate specified actions if the board
  144         determines that the state university board of trustees
  145         is unwilling or unable to comply with the law, certain
  146         rules or regulations, or audit recommendations;
  147         amending ss. 1008.37, 1009.22, and 1009.23, F.S.;
  148         conforming provisions to changes made by the act;
  149         amending s. 1009.26, F.S.; authorizing certain Florida
  150         College System institutions to waive certain fees;
  151         repealing s. 1009.28, F.S., relating to fees for
  152         repeated enrollment in college-preparatory classes;
  153         amending s. 1009.285, F.S.; requiring a student
  154         enrolled in the same undergraduate college-credit
  155         course more than once, except for students enrolled in
  156         a gateway course for an extended period of time, to
  157         pay tuition at 100 percent of the full cost of
  158         instruction; reducing the number of times certain
  159         coursework, which is excluded for the reduction of
  160         fees, is repeated for certain purposes; amending s.
  161         1009.286, F.S.; excluding remedial courses from those
  162         courses that are counted when calculating credit hours
  163         earned toward a baccalaureate degree; amending s.
  164         1009.40, F.S.; providing that undergraduate students
  165         participating in developmental education are eligible
  166         to receive financial aid for a specified number of
  167         semesters or quarters; conforming provisions to
  168         changes made by the act; amending s. 1009.53, F.S.;
  169         conforming terminology to changes made by the act;
  170         repealing s. 1009.531(7), F.S., relating to the
  171         eligibility of a student for an initial reward or
  172         renewal reward under the Florida Bright Futures
  173         Scholarship Program; amending s. 1011.84, F.S.;
  174         conforming provisions to changes made by the act;
  175         providing a directive to the Division of Law Revision
  176         and Information; providing an effective date.
  177  
  178  Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida:
  179  
  180         Section 1. Paragraph (j) of subsection (7) of section
  181  11.45, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
  182         11.45 Definitions; duties; authorities; reports; rules.—
  183         (7) AUDITOR GENERAL REPORTING REQUIREMENTS.—
  184         (j) The Auditor General shall notify the Legislative
  185  Auditing Committee of any financial or operational audit report
  186  prepared pursuant to this section which indicates that a state
  187  university or Florida College System institution has failed to
  188  take full corrective action in response to a recommendation that
  189  was included in the two preceding financial or operational audit
  190  reports.
  191         1. The committee may direct the governing body of the state
  192  university or Florida College System institution to provide a
  193  written statement to the committee explaining why full
  194  corrective action has not been taken or, if the governing body
  195  intends to take full corrective action, describing the
  196  corrective action to be taken and when it will occur.
  197         2. If the committee determines that the written statement
  198  is not sufficient, the committee may require the chair of the
  199  governing body of the state university or Florida College System
  200  institution, or the chair’s designee, to appear before the
  201  committee.
  202         3. If the committee determines that the state university or
  203  Florida College System institution has failed to take full
  204  corrective action for which there is no justifiable reason or
  205  has failed to comply with committee requests made pursuant to
  206  this section, the committee shall refer the matter to the State
  207  Board of Education or the Board of Governors, as appropriate, to
  208  proceed in accordance with ss. 1008.32 and 1008.322,
  209  respectively may proceed in accordance with s. 11.40(2).
  210         Section 2. Paragraph (g) of subsection (4), subsection (5),
  211  and paragraphs (c) and (d) of subsection (6) of section 1001.02,
  212  Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
  213         1001.02 General powers of State Board of Education.—
  214         (4) The State Board of Education shall:
  215         (g) Specify, by rule, the college credit courses that may
  216  be taken by Florida College System institution students who are
  217  concurrently participating in developmental education enrolled
  218  in college-preparatory instruction.
  219         (5) The State Board of Education is responsible for
  220  reviewing and administering the state program of support for the
  221  Florida College System institutions and, subject to existing
  222  law, shall establish the tuition and out-of-state fees for
  223  college-preparatory instruction and for credit instruction that
  224  may be counted toward an associate in arts degree, an associate
  225  in applied science degree, or an associate in science degree.
  226         (6) The State Board of Education shall prescribe minimum
  227  standards, definitions, and guidelines for Florida College
  228  System institutions that will ensure the quality of education,
  229  coordination among the Florida College System institutions and
  230  state universities, and efficient progress toward accomplishing
  231  the Florida College System institution mission. At a minimum,
  232  these rules must address:
  233         (c) Program offerings and classification, including
  234  college-level communication and computation skills associated
  235  with successful performance in college and with tests and other
  236  assessment procedures that measure student achievement of those
  237  skills. The performance measures must provide that students
  238  moving from one level of education to the next acquire the
  239  necessary competencies for that level.
  240         (d) Provisions for curriculum development, graduation
  241  requirements, college calendars, and program service areas.
  242  These provisions must include rules that:
  243         1. Provide for the award of an associate in arts degree to
  244  a student who successfully completes 60 semester credit hours at
  245  the Florida College System institution.
  246         2. Require all of the credits accepted for the associate in
  247  arts degree to be in the statewide course numbering system as
  248  credits toward a baccalaureate degree offered by a state
  249  university or a Florida College System institution.
  250         3. Beginning with students initially entering a Florida
  251  College System institution in 2014-2015 and thereafter, Require
  252  no more than 36 30 semester credit hours in general education
  253  courses in the subject areas of communication, mathematics,
  254  social sciences, humanities, and natural sciences.
  255  
  256  The rules should encourage Florida College System institutions
  257  to enter into agreements with state universities that allow
  258  Florida College System institution students to complete upper
  259  division-level courses at a Florida College System institution.
  260  An agreement may provide for concurrent enrollment at the
  261  Florida College System institution and the state university and
  262  may authorize the Florida College System institution to offer an
  263  upper-division-level course or distance learning.
  264         Section 3. Subsection (9) of section 1001.64, Florida
  265  Statutes, is amended to read:
  266         1001.64 Florida College System institution boards of
  267  trustees; powers and duties.—
  268         (9) A board of trustees may contract with the board of
  269  trustees of a state university for the Florida College System
  270  institution to provide developmental education college
  271  preparatory instruction on the state university campus.
  272         Section 4. Section 1001.7065, Florida Statutes, is created
  273  to read:
  274         1001.7065Preeminent state research universities program.—
  275         (1)STATE UNIVERSITY SYSTEM SHARED GOVERNANCE
  276  COLLABORATION.—A collaborative partnership is established
  277  between the Board of Governors and the Legislature to elevate
  278  the academic and research preeminence of Florida’s highest
  279  performing state research universities in accordance with this
  280  section. The partnership stems from the State University System
  281  Governance Agreement executed on March 24, 2010, wherein the
  282  Board of Governors and leaders of the Legislature agreed to a
  283  framework for the collaborative exercise of their joint
  284  authority and shared responsibility for the State University
  285  System. The governance agreement confirmed the commitment of the
  286  Board of Governors and the Legislature to continue collaboration
  287  on accountability measures, the use of data, and recommendations
  288  derived from such data.
  289         (2)ACADEMIC AND RESEARCH EXCELLENCE STANDARDS.—Effective
  290  July 1, 2013, the following academic and research excellence
  291  standards are established for the Preeminent State Research
  292  Universities Program:
  293         (a)An average weighted grade point average of 4.0 or
  294  higher on a 4.0 scale and an average SAT score of 1800 or higher
  295  for fall-semester incoming freshmen, as reported annually.
  296         (b)A top-50 ranking on at least two well-known and highly
  297  respected national public university rankings, reflecting
  298  national preeminence, using most recent rankings.
  299         (c)A freshman retention rate of 90 percent or higher for
  300  full-time, first-time-in-college students, as reported annually
  301  to the Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System (IPEDS).
  302         (d)A 6-year graduation rate of 70 percent or higher for
  303  full-time, first-time-in-college students, as reported annually
  304  to the IPEDS.
  305         (e)Six or more faculty members at the state university who
  306  are members of a national academy, as reported by the Center for
  307  Measuring University Performance in the Top American Research
  308  Universities (TARU) annual report.
  309         (f)Total annual research expenditures, including federal
  310  research expenditures, of $200 million or more, as reported
  311  annually by the National Science Foundation (NSF).
  312         (g)Total annual research expenditures in diversified
  313  nonmedical sciences of $150 million or more, based on data
  314  reported annually by the NSF.
  315         (h)A top-100 university national ranking for research
  316  expenditures in five or more science, technology, engineering,
  317  or mathematics fields of study, as reported annually by the NSF.
  318         (i)One hundred or more total patents awarded by the United
  319  States Patent and Trademark Office for the most recent 3-year
  320  period.
  321         (j)Four hundred or more doctoral degrees awarded annually,
  322  as reported in the Board of Governors Annual Accountability
  323  Report.
  324         (k)Two hundred or more postdoctoral appointees annually,
  325  as reported in the TARU annual report.
  326         (l)An endowment of $500 million or more, as reported in
  327  the Board of Governors Annual Accountability Report.
  328         (3)PREEMINENT STATE RESEARCH UNIVERSITY DESIGNATION.—The
  329  Board of Governors shall designate each state research
  330  university that meets at least 11 of the 12 academic and
  331  research excellence standards identified in subsection (2) a
  332  preeminent state research university.
  333         (4)PREEMINENT STATE RESEARCH UNIVERSITY INSTITUTE FOR
  334  ONLINE LEARNING.—The state research university that has attained
  335  the highest level on the academic and research excellence
  336  standards identified in subsection (2), as verified by the Board
  337  of Governors, shall establish an institute for online learning.
  338  The institute shall establish a robust offering of high-quality,
  339  fully online baccalaureate degree programs at an affordable cost
  340  in accordance with this subsection.
  341         (a)By August 1, 2013, the Board of Governors shall convene
  342  an advisory board to support the development of high-quality,
  343  fully online baccalaureate degree programs at the preeminent
  344  university.
  345         (b)The advisory board shall:
  346         1.Offer expert advice, as requested by the preeminent
  347  university, in the development and implementation of a business
  348  plan to expand the offering of high-quality, fully online
  349  baccalaureate degree programs.
  350         2.Authorize the release of funding to the preeminent
  351  university subject to appropriation in the General
  352  Appropriations Act and upon approval by the Board of Governors
  353  of the plan developed by the preeminent university.
  354         3.Monitor, evaluate, and report on the implementation of
  355  the plan to the Board of Governors, the Governor, the President
  356  of the Senate, and the Speaker of the House of Representatives.
  357         (c)The advisory board shall be composed of the following
  358  five members:
  359         1.The chair of the Board of Governors or the chair’s
  360  permanent designee.
  361         2.A member with expertise in online learning, appointed by
  362  the Board of Governors.
  363         3.A member with expertise in global marketing, appointed
  364  by the Governor.
  365         4.A member with expertise in cloud virtualization,
  366  appointed by the President of the Senate.
  367         5.A member with expertise in disruptive innovation,
  368  appointed by the Speaker of the House of Representatives.
  369         (d) The president of the preeminent university shall be
  370  consulted on the advisory board member appointments.
  371         (e)A majority of the advisory board constitutes a quorum,
  372  elect the chair, and appoint an executive director.
  373         (f)By September 1, 2013, the university shall submit to
  374  the advisory board a comprehensive plan to expand high-quality,
  375  fully online baccalaureate degree program offerings. The plan
  376  must include:
  377         1.Existing on-campus general education courses and
  378  baccalaureate degree programs that will be offered online.
  379         2.New courses that will be developed and offered online.
  380         3.Support services that will be offered to students
  381  enrolled in online baccalaureate degree programs.
  382         4.A tuition and fee structure that meets the requirements
  383  in paragraph (k) for online courses, baccalaureate degree
  384  programs, and student support services.
  385         5.A timeline for offering, marketing, and enrolling
  386  students in the online baccalaureate degree programs.
  387         6.A budget for developing and marketing the online
  388  baccalaureate degree programs.
  389         7.Detailed strategies for ensuring the success of students
  390  and the sustainability of the online baccalaureate degree
  391  programs.
  392  
  393  Upon recommendation of the plan by the advisory board and
  394  approval by the Board of Governors, the Board of Governors shall
  395  award the university funds for implementation of the online
  396  baccalaureate degree program, as provided in the General
  397  Appropriations Act.
  398         (g)Beginning in January 2014, the university shall offer
  399  high-quality, fully online baccalaureate degree programs that:
  400         1.Accept full-time, first-time-in-college students.
  401         2.Have the same rigorous admissions criteria as equivalent
  402  on-campus degree programs.
  403         3.Offer curriculum of equivalent rigor to on-campus degree
  404  programs.
  405         4.Offer rolling enrollment or multiple opportunities for
  406  enrollment throughout the year.
  407         5.Do not require any on-campus courses. However, for
  408  courses or programs that require clinical training or
  409  laboratories that cannot be delivered online, the university
  410  shall offer convenient locational options to the student, which
  411  may include, but are not limited to, the option to complete such
  412  requirements at a summer-in-residence on the university campus.
  413  The university may provide a network of sites at convenient
  414  locations and contract with commercial testing centers or
  415  identify other secure testing services for the purpose of
  416  proctoring assessments or testing.
  417         6.Apply the university’s existing policy for accepting
  418  credits for both freshman applicants and transfer applicants.
  419         (h)The university may offer a fully online Masters in
  420  Business Administration degree program and other masters degree
  421  programs.
  422         (i)The university may develop and offer degree programs
  423  and courses that are competency based as appropriate for the
  424  quality and success of the program.
  425         (j)The university shall periodically expand its offering
  426  of online baccalaureate degree programs to meet student and
  427  market demands.
  428         (k)The university shall establish a tuition structure for
  429  its online institute in accordance with this paragraph,
  430  notwithstanding any other provision of law.
  431         1.For students classified as residents for tuition
  432  purposes, tuition for an online baccalaureate degree program
  433  shall be set at no more than 75 percent of the tuition rate as
  434  specified in the General Appropriations Act pursuant to s.
  435  1009.24(4) and 75 percent of the tuition differential pursuant
  436  to s. 1009.24(16). No distance learning fee, fee for campus
  437  facilities, or fee for on-campus services may be assessed,
  438  except that online students shall pay the university’s
  439  technology fee, financial aid fee, and Capital Improvement Trust
  440  Fund fee. The revenues generated from the Capital Improvement
  441  Trust Fund fee shall be dedicated to the university’s institute
  442  for online learning.
  443         2.For students classified as nonresidents for tuition
  444  purposes, tuition may be set at market rates in accordance with
  445  the business plan.
  446         3.Tuition for an online degree program must include all
  447  costs associated with instruction, materials, and enrollment,
  448  excluding costs associated with the provision of textbooks
  449  pursuant to s. 1004.085 and physical laboratory supplies.
  450         4.Subject to the limitations in subparagraph 1., tuition
  451  may be differentiated by degree program as appropriate to the
  452  instructional and other costs of the program in accordance with
  453  the business plan. Pricing must incorporate innovative
  454  approaches that incentivize persistence and completion,
  455  including, but not limited to, a fee for assessment, a bundled
  456  or all-inclusive rate, and sliding scale features.
  457         5.The university shall accept advance payment contracts
  458  and student financial aid.
  459         6.Fifty percent of the net revenues generated from the
  460  online institute of the university shall be used to enhance and
  461  enrich the online institute offerings, and 50 percent of the net
  462  revenues generated from the online institute shall be used to
  463  enhance and enrich the university’s campus state-of-the-art
  464  research programs and facilities.
  465         7.The institute may charge additional local user fees
  466  pursuant to s. 1009.24(14) upon the approval of the Board of
  467  Governors.
  468         8.The institute shall submit a proposal to the president
  469  of the university authorizing additional user fees for the
  470  provision of voluntary student participation in activities and
  471  additional student services.
  472         (5)PREEMINENT STATE RESEARCH UNIVERSITY SUPPORT.—The state
  473  research university that has attained the highest level on the
  474  academic and research excellence standards identified in
  475  subsection (2), as verified by the Board of Governors, shall
  476  submit to the Board of Governors a 5-year benchmark plan with
  477  target rankings on key performance metrics for national
  478  excellence. Upon approval by the Board of Governors, and upon
  479  the university’s meeting the benchmark plan goals annually, the
  480  Board of Governors shall award the university funding for this
  481  purpose, as provided in the General Appropriations Act.
  482         (6)PREEMINENT STATE RESEARCH UNIVERSITY ENHANCEMENT
  483  INITIATIVE.—The state research university that has attained the
  484  second highest level on the academic and research excellence
  485  standards identified in subsection (2), as verified by the Board
  486  of Governors, shall submit to the Board of Governors a 5-year
  487  benchmark plan with target rankings on key performance metrics
  488  for national excellence. Upon the university’s meeting the
  489  benchmark plan goals annually, the Board of Governors shall
  490  award the university funding as provided in the General
  491  Appropriations Act for the purpose of recruiting National
  492  Academy Members, expediting the provision of a masters degree in
  493  cloud virtualization, and instituting an entrepreneurs-in
  494  residence program throughout its campus.
  495         (7)PREEMINENT STATE RESEARCH UNIVERSITY SPECIAL COURSE
  496  REQUIREMENT AUTHORITY.—In order to provide a jointly shared
  497  educational experience, a university that is designated a
  498  preeminent state research university may require its incoming
  499  first-time-in-college students to take a 9-to-12-credit set of
  500  unique courses specifically determined by the university and
  501  published on the university’s website. The university may
  502  stipulate that credit for such courses may not be earned through
  503  any acceleration mechanism pursuant to s. 1007.27 or s. 1007.271
  504  or any other transfer credit. All accelerated credits earned up
  505  to the limits specified in ss. 1007.27 and 1007.271 shall be
  506  applied toward graduation at the student’s request.
  507         (8)PREEMINENT STATE RESEARCH UNIVERSITY FLEXIBILITY
  508  AUTHORITY.—The Board of Governors is encouraged to identify and
  509  grant all reasonable, feasible authority and flexibility to
  510  ensure that a designated preeminent state research university is
  511  free from unnecessary restrictions.
  512         (9)PROGRAMS OF EXCELLENCE THROUGHOUT THE STATE UNIVERSITY
  513  SYSTEM.—The Board of Governors is encouraged to establish
  514  standards and measures whereby individual programs in state
  515  universities which objectively reflect national excellence can
  516  be identified and make recommendations to the Legislature as to
  517  how any such programs could be enhanced and promoted.
  518         Section 5. Subsection (11) of section 1004.02, Florida
  519  Statutes, is amended to read:
  520         1004.02 Definitions.—As used in this chapter:
  521         (11) “Developmental education” “College-preparatory
  522  instruction” means instruction courses through which a high
  523  school graduate who applies for and enrolls in any college
  524  credit program may attain the communication and computation
  525  skills necessary to perform college-level work while also
  526  enrolled enroll in college credit instruction.
  527         Section 6. Section 1004.43, Florida Statutes, is amended to
  528  read:
  529         1004.43 H. Lee Moffitt Cancer Center and Research
  530  Institute.—There is established the H. Lee Moffitt Cancer Center
  531  and Research Institute, a statewide resource for basic and
  532  clinical research and multidisciplinary approaches to patient
  533  care.
  534         (1) The Board of Trustees of the University of South
  535  Florida Governors shall enter into a lease an agreement for the
  536  use utilization of the lands and facilities on the campus of the
  537  University of South Florida to be known as the H. Lee Moffitt
  538  Cancer Center and Research Institute, including all furnishings,
  539  equipment, and other chattels used in the operation of such
  540  facilities, with a Florida not-for-profit corporation organized
  541  solely for the purpose of governing and operating the H. Lee
  542  Moffitt Cancer Center and Research Institute. The lease
  543  agreement with the not-for-profit corporation must be rent free
  544  so long as the not-for-profit corporation and its subsidiaries
  545  use the lands and facilities primarily for research, education,
  546  treatment, prevention, and the early detection of cancer or for
  547  teaching and research programs conducted by the state
  548  universities or other accredited medical schools or research
  549  institutes. The lease agreement must provide for review of
  550  construction plans and specifications by the university for
  551  consistency with the university’s campus master plan, impact on
  552  the university’s utilities infrastructure, and compliance with
  553  applicable building code and general design characteristics and
  554  compatibility with university architecture, as appropriate. The
  555  not-for-profit corporation may, with the prior approval of the
  556  Board of Governors, create either for-profit or not-for-profit
  557  corporate subsidiaries, or both, to fulfill its mission. The
  558  not-for-profit corporation and any approved not-for-profit
  559  subsidiary are shall be conclusively deemed corporations
  560  primarily acting as instrumentalities of the state, pursuant to
  561  s. 768.28(2), for purposes of sovereign immunity. For-profit
  562  subsidiaries of the not-for-profit corporation may not compete
  563  with for-profit health care providers in the delivery of
  564  radiation therapy services to patients. The not-for-profit
  565  corporation and its subsidiaries may are authorized to receive,
  566  hold, invest, and administer property and any moneys received
  567  from private, local, state, and federal sources, as well as
  568  technical and professional income generated or derived from
  569  practice activities of the institute, for the benefit of the
  570  institute and the fulfillment of its mission. The affairs of the
  571  corporation shall be managed by a board of directors who shall
  572  serve without compensation. The President of the University of
  573  South Florida and the chair of the Board of Governors, or his or
  574  her designee, shall be directors of the not-for-profit
  575  corporation, together with 5 representatives of the state
  576  universities and no more than 14 nor fewer than 10 directors who
  577  are not medical doctors or state employees. Each director has
  578  shall have only one vote, serves shall serve a term of 3 years,
  579  and may be reelected to the board. Other than the President of
  580  the University of South Florida and the chair of the Board of
  581  Governors, directors shall be elected by a majority vote of the
  582  board. The chair of the board of directors shall be selected by
  583  majority vote of the directors.
  584         (2) The Board of Governors shall provide in the agreement
  585  with the not-for-profit corporation for the following:
  586         (a) Approval of the articles of incorporation of the not
  587  for-profit corporation by the Board of Governors.
  588         (b) Approval of the articles of incorporation of any not
  589  for-profit corporate subsidiary created by the not-for-profit
  590  corporation.
  591         (c) Utilization of lands, facilities, and personnel by the
  592  not-for-profit corporation and its subsidiaries for research,
  593  education, treatment, prevention, and the early detection of
  594  cancer and for mutually approved teaching and research programs
  595  conducted by the state universities or other accredited medical
  596  schools or research institutes.
  597         (2)(d)The not-for-profit corporation shall cause the
  598  Preparation of an annual financial audits audit of the not-for
  599  profit corporation’s accounts and records to be prepared and the
  600  accounts and records of any subsidiaries to be conducted by an
  601  independent certified public accountant. Each The annual
  602  financial audit report must shall include a management letter,
  603  as defined in s. 11.45, and must shall be submitted to the
  604  Auditor General and the Board of Governors. The Board of
  605  Governors, the Auditor General, and the Office of Program Policy
  606  Analysis and Government Accountability may shall have the
  607  authority to require and receive from the not-for-profit
  608  corporation and any subsidiaries or from their independent
  609  auditor any detail or supplemental data relative to the
  610  operation of the not-for-profit corporation or subsidiary.
  611         (e) Provision by The not-for-profit corporation and its
  612  subsidiaries shall provide of equal employment opportunities to
  613  all persons regardless of race, color, religion, sex, age, or
  614  national origin.
  615         (3) The Board of Governors may is authorized to secure
  616  comprehensive general liability protection, including
  617  professional liability protection, for the not-for-profit
  618  corporation and its subsidiaries pursuant to s. 1004.24. The
  619  not-for-profit corporation and its subsidiaries are shall be
  620  exempt from any participation in any property insurance trust
  621  fund established by law, including any property insurance trust
  622  fund established pursuant to chapter 284, so long as the not
  623  for-profit corporation and its subsidiaries maintain property
  624  insurance protection with comparable or greater coverage limits.
  625         (4) If In the event that the agreement between the not-for
  626  profit corporation and the Board of Trustees of the University
  627  of South Florida Governors is terminated for any reason, the
  628  Board of Governors shall resume governance and operation of such
  629  facilities.
  630         (5) The institute shall be administered by a chief
  631  executive officer who serves shall serve at the pleasure of the
  632  board of directors of the not-for-profit corporation and who has
  633  shall have the following powers and duties subject to the
  634  approval of the board of directors:
  635         (a) The chief executive officer shall establish programs
  636  that which fulfill the mission of the institute in research,
  637  education, treatment, prevention, and the early detection of
  638  cancer; however, the chief executive officer may shall not
  639  establish academic programs for which academic credit is awarded
  640  and which terminate in the conference of a degree without prior
  641  approval of the Board of Governors.
  642         (b) The chief executive officer has shall have control over
  643  the budget and the dollars appropriated or donated to the
  644  institute from private, local, state, and federal sources, as
  645  well as technical and professional income generated or derived
  646  from practice activities of the not-for-profit corporation and
  647  its subsidiaries. Technical and professional income generated
  648  from practice activities may be shared between the not-for
  649  profit corporation and its subsidiaries as determined by the
  650  chief executive officer. However, professional income generated
  651  by state university employees from practice activities at the
  652  not-for-profit corporation and its subsidiaries must shall be
  653  shared between the university and the not-for-profit corporation
  654  and its subsidiaries only as determined by the chief executive
  655  officer and the appropriate university dean or vice president.
  656         (c) The chief executive officer shall appoint members to
  657  carry out the research, patient care, and educational activities
  658  of the institute and determine compensation, benefits, and terms
  659  of service. Members of the institute are shall be eligible to
  660  hold concurrent appointments at affiliated academic
  661  institutions. State university faculty are shall be eligible to
  662  hold concurrent appointments at the institute.
  663         (d) The chief executive officer has shall have control over
  664  the use and assignment of space and equipment within the
  665  facilities.
  666         (e) The chief executive officer has shall have the power to
  667  create the administrative structure necessary to carry out the
  668  mission of the institute.
  669         (f) The chief executive officer shall report annually have
  670  a reporting relationship to the Board of Governors or its
  671  designee on the educational activities of the not-for-profit
  672  corporation.
  673         (g) The chief executive officer shall provide a copy of the
  674  institute’s annual report to the Governor and Cabinet, the
  675  President of the Senate, the Speaker of the House of
  676  Representatives, and the chair of the Board of Governors.
  677         (6) The board of directors of the not-for-profit
  678  corporation shall create an external advisory board a council of
  679  scientific advisers to the chief executive officer comprised of
  680  leading researchers, physicians, and scientists. This board
  681  council shall review programs and recommend research priorities
  682  and initiatives so as to maximize the state’s investment in the
  683  institute. The board council shall be appointed by the board of
  684  directors of the not-for-profit corporation. Each member of the
  685  board council shall be appointed to serve a 2-year term and may
  686  be reappointed to the council.
  687         (7) In carrying out the provisions of this section, the
  688  not-for-profit corporation and its subsidiaries are not
  689  “agencies” within the meaning of s. 20.03(11).
  690         (8)(a) Records of the not-for-profit corporation and of its
  691  subsidiaries are public records unless made confidential or
  692  exempt by law.
  693         (b) Proprietary confidential business information is
  694  confidential and exempt from the provisions of s. 119.07(1) and
  695  s. 24(a), Art. I of the State Constitution. However, the Auditor
  696  General, the Office of Program Policy Analysis and Government
  697  Accountability, and the Board of Governors, pursuant to their
  698  oversight and auditing functions, must be given access to all
  699  proprietary confidential business information upon request and
  700  without subpoena and must maintain the confidentiality of
  701  information so received. As used in this paragraph, the term
  702  “proprietary confidential business information” means
  703  information, regardless of its form or characteristics, which is
  704  owned or controlled by the not-for-profit corporation or its
  705  subsidiaries; is intended to be and is treated by the not-for
  706  profit corporation or its subsidiaries as private and the
  707  disclosure of which would harm the business operations of the
  708  not-for-profit corporation or its subsidiaries; has not been
  709  intentionally disclosed by the corporation or its subsidiaries
  710  unless pursuant to law, an order of a court or administrative
  711  body, a legislative proceeding pursuant to s. 5, Art. III of the
  712  State Constitution, or a private agreement that provides that
  713  the information may be released to the public; and which is
  714  information concerning:
  715         1. Internal auditing controls and reports of internal
  716  auditors;
  717         2. Matters reasonably encompassed in privileged attorney
  718  client communications;
  719         3. Contracts for managed-care arrangements, including
  720  preferred provider organization contracts, health maintenance
  721  organization contracts, and exclusive provider organization
  722  contracts, and any documents directly relating to the
  723  negotiation, performance, and implementation of any such
  724  contracts for managed-care arrangements;
  725         4. Bids or other contractual data, banking records, and
  726  credit agreements the disclosure of which would impair the
  727  efforts of the not-for-profit corporation or its subsidiaries to
  728  contract for goods or services on favorable terms;
  729         5. Information relating to private contractual data, the
  730  disclosure of which would impair the competitive interest of the
  731  provider of the information;
  732         6. Corporate officer and employee personnel information;
  733         7. Information relating to the proceedings and records of
  734  credentialing panels and committees and of the governing board
  735  of the not-for-profit corporation or its subsidiaries relating
  736  to credentialing;
  737         8. Minutes of meetings of the governing board of the not
  738  for-profit corporation and its subsidiaries, except minutes of
  739  meetings open to the public pursuant to subsection (9);
  740         9. Information that reveals plans for marketing services
  741  that the corporation or its subsidiaries reasonably expect to be
  742  provided by competitors;
  743         10. Trade secrets as defined in s. 688.002, including:
  744         a. Information relating to methods of manufacture or
  745  production, potential trade secrets, potentially patentable
  746  materials, or proprietary information received, generated,
  747  ascertained, or discovered during the course of research
  748  conducted by the not-for-profit corporation or its subsidiaries;
  749  and
  750         b. Reimbursement methodologies or rates;
  751         11. The identity of donors or prospective donors of
  752  property who wish to remain anonymous or any information
  753  identifying such donors or prospective donors. The anonymity of
  754  these donors or prospective donors must be maintained in the
  755  auditor’s report; or
  756         12. Any information received by the not-for-profit
  757  corporation or its subsidiaries from an agency in this or
  758  another state or nation or the Federal Government which is
  759  otherwise exempt or confidential pursuant to the laws of this or
  760  another state or nation or pursuant to federal law.
  761  
  762  As used in this paragraph, the term “managed care” means systems
  763  or techniques generally used by third-party payors or their
  764  agents to affect access to and control payment for health care
  765  services. Managed-care techniques most often include one or more
  766  of the following: prior, concurrent, and retrospective review of
  767  the medical necessity and appropriateness of services or site of
  768  services; contracts with selected health care providers;
  769  financial incentives or disincentives related to the use of
  770  specific providers, services, or service sites; controlled
  771  access to and coordination of services by a case manager; and
  772  payor efforts to identify treatment alternatives and modify
  773  benefit restrictions for high-cost patient care.
  774         (9) Meetings of the governing board of the not-for-profit
  775  corporation and meetings of the subsidiaries of the not-for
  776  profit corporation at which the expenditure of dollars
  777  appropriated to the not-for-profit corporation by the state are
  778  discussed or reported must remain open to the public in
  779  accordance with s. 286.011 and s. 24(b), Art. I of the State
  780  Constitution, unless made confidential or exempt by law. Other
  781  meetings of the governing board of the not-for-profit
  782  corporation and of the subsidiaries of the not-for-profit
  783  corporation are exempt from s. 286.011 and s. 24(b), Art. I of
  784  the State Constitution.
  785         (10) In addition to the continuing appropriation to the
  786  institute provided in s. 210.20(2), any appropriation to the
  787  institute provided in a general appropriations act shall be paid
  788  directly to the board of directors of the not-for-profit
  789  corporation by warrant drawn by the Chief Financial Officer from
  790  the State Treasury.
  791         Section 7. Section 1004.58, Florida Statutes, is repealed.
  792         Section 8. Subsection (4) of section 1004.93, Florida
  793  Statutes, is amended to read:
  794         1004.93 Adult general education.—
  795         (4)(a) Adult general education shall be evaluated and
  796  funded as provided in s. 1011.80.
  797         (b) Fees for adult basic instruction are to be charged in
  798  accordance with chapter 1009.
  799         (c) The State Board of Education shall define, by rule, the
  800  levels and courses of instruction to be funded through the
  801  college-preparatory program. The state board shall coordinate
  802  the establishment of costs for college-preparatory courses, the
  803  establishment of statewide standards that define required levels
  804  of competence, acceptable rates of student progress, and the
  805  maximum amount of time to be allowed for completion of college
  806  preparatory instruction. College-preparatory instruction is part
  807  of an associate in arts degree program and may not be funded as
  808  an adult career education program.
  809         (d) Expenditures for college-preparatory and lifelong
  810  learning students shall be reported separately. Allocations for
  811  college-preparatory courses shall be based on proportional full
  812  time equivalent enrollment. Program review results shall be
  813  included in the determination of subsequent allocations. A
  814  student shall be funded to enroll in the same college
  815  preparatory class within a skill area only twice, after which
  816  time the student shall pay 100 percent of the full cost of
  817  instruction to support the continuous enrollment of that student
  818  in the same class; however, students who withdraw or fail a
  819  class due to extenuating circumstances may be granted an
  820  exception only once for each class, provided approval is granted
  821  according to policy established by the board of trustees. Each
  822  Florida College System institution shall have the authority to
  823  review and reduce payment for increased fees due to continued
  824  enrollment in a college-preparatory class on an individual basis
  825  contingent upon the student’s financial hardship, pursuant to
  826  definitions and fee levels established by the State Board of
  827  Education. College-preparatory and lifelong learning courses do
  828  not generate credit toward an associate or baccalaureate degree.
  829         (c)(e) A district school board or a Florida College System
  830  institution board of trustees may negotiate a contract with the
  831  regional workforce board for specialized services for
  832  participants in the welfare transition program, beyond what is
  833  routinely provided for the general public, to be funded by the
  834  regional workforce board.
  835         Section 9. Section 1006.735, Florida Statutes, is amended
  836  to read:
  837         1006.735 Complete Florida Degree Program Completion Pilot
  838  Project.—
  839         (1) The Complete Florida Degree Program Completion Pilot
  840  Project is established for the purpose of recruiting,
  841  recovering, and retaining the state’s adult learners and
  842  assisting them in completing an associate degree or a
  843  baccalaureate degree that is aligned to high-wage, high-skill
  844  workforce needs. As used in this section, the term “adult
  845  learner” means a student who has successfully completed college
  846  level coursework in multiple semesters but has left an
  847  institution in good standing before completing his or her
  848  degree. The program pilot project shall give priority to adult
  849  learners who are veterans or active duty members of the United
  850  States Armed Forces.
  851         (2) The Complete Florida Degree Program pilot project shall
  852  be implemented by the University of West Florida, acting as the
  853  lead institution, in coordination with; the University of South
  854  Florida; Florida State College System institutions, state
  855  universities, and private postsecondary institutions, as
  856  appropriate. The program must at Jacksonville; and St.
  857  Petersburg College and shall include the associate, applied
  858  baccalaureate, and baccalaureate degree programs that these
  859  institutions have selected. Other partnering public
  860  postsecondary education institutions shall provide areas of
  861  specialization or concentration.
  862         (3) For purposes of selecting the degree programs that will
  863  be given priority in the Complete Florida Degree Program pilot
  864  project, the institutions identified in subsection (2) shall
  865  partner with public and private job recruitment and placement
  866  agencies and use labor market data and projections to identify
  867  the specific workforce needs and targeted occupations of the
  868  state.
  869         (4) The Complete Florida Degree Program pilot project shall
  870  provide adult learners with a single point of access to
  871  information and links to innovative online and accelerated
  872  distance learning courses, student and library support services,
  873  and electronic resources that will guide the adult learner
  874  toward the successful completion of a postsecondary degree.
  875         (5) Beginning with the 2013-2014 2012-2013 academic year,
  876  the Complete Florida Degree Program pilot project shall be
  877  implemented and must:
  878         (a) Use the distance learning course catalog established
  879  pursuant to s. 1006.73 to communicate course availability to the
  880  adult learner.
  881         (b) Develop and implement an advising and student support
  882  system that includes the use of degree completion specialists,
  883  is based upon best practices and processes, and includes
  884  academic and career support services designed specifically for
  885  the adult learner. The program must identify proposed changes to
  886  the statewide computer-assisted student advising system
  887  established pursuant to s. 1006.73 to assist the adult learner
  888  in using the system.
  889         (c) Use the streamlined, automated, online admissions
  890  application process for transient students established pursuant
  891  to s. 1006.73. The Complete Florida Degree Program pilot project
  892  shall identify any additional admissions and registration
  893  policies and practices that could be further streamlined and
  894  automated for purposes of assisting the adult learner.
  895         (d) Use existing and, if necessary, develop new competency
  896  based instructional and evaluation tools to assess prior
  897  performance, experience, and education for the award of college
  898  credit in order to reduce the time required for adult learners
  899  to complete their degrees. The tools may include the use of the
  900  American Council on Education’s collaborative link between the
  901  United States Department of Defense and higher education through
  902  the review of military training and experiences for the award of
  903  equivalent college credit for members of the United States Armed
  904  Forces.
  905         (e) Develop and implement an evaluation process that
  906  collects, analyzes, and provides to the participating
  907  postsecondary education institutions, the chairs of the
  908  legislative appropriations committees, and the Executive Office
  909  of the Governor information on the effectiveness of the program
  910  pilot project and the attainment of its goals. Such a process
  911  must shall include a management information system that collects
  912  the appropriate student, programmatic, and fiscal data necessary
  913  to complete the evaluation of the program pilot project.
  914  Institutions involved in the program pilot project shall also
  915  collect job placement and employment data on the adult learners
  916  who have completed their degrees as a result of the program
  917  pilot project.
  918         (f) Develop and implement a statewide marketing campaign
  919  targeted toward recruiting adult learners, particularly veterans
  920  and active duty members of the United States Armed Forces, for
  921  enrollment in the degree programs offered through the program
  922  pilot project.
  923         (6) For purposes of the Complete Florida Degree Program
  924  pilot project, each institution’s current tuition and fee
  925  structure shall be used. However, all participating institutions
  926  shall collaboratively identify the applicable cost components
  927  involved in the development and delivery of distance learning
  928  courses, collect information on these cost components, and
  929  submit the information to the Florida Virtual Campus. The
  930  chancellors of the Florida College System. The chancellors and
  931  the State University System shall submit a report to the chairs
  932  of the legislative appropriations committees no later than
  933  December 31, 2014 2013, on the need for a differentiated tuition
  934  and fee structure for the development and delivery of distance
  935  learning courses.
  936         (7) The University of West Florida, in collaboration with
  937  its partners the University of South Florida, Florida State
  938  College at Jacksonville, and St. Petersburg College, shall
  939  submit to the chairs of the legislative appropriations
  940  committees no later than September 1, 2013 June 1, 2012, a
  941  detailed project plan that defines the major work activities,
  942  student eligibility criteria, timeline, and cost for
  943  implementing the Complete Florida Degree Program pilot project.
  944         (8) The University of West Florida, in collaboration with
  945  the University of South Florida, Florida State College at
  946  Jacksonville, and St. Petersburg College, shall develop and
  947  implement a transition plan that transfers the administration of
  948  the pilot project to the Florida Virtual Campus no later than
  949  June 30, 2013.
  950         Section 10. Subsection (3) of section 1007.23, Florida
  951  Statutes, is amended to read:
  952         1007.23 Statewide articulation agreement.—
  953         (3) To improve articulation and reduce excess credit hours,
  954  beginning with students initially entering a Florida College
  955  System institution in 2013-2014 and thereafter, the articulation
  956  agreement must require each student who is seeking an associate
  957  in arts degree to indicate a baccalaureate degree program
  958  offered by an institution of interest by the time the student
  959  earns 36 30 semester hours. The institution in which the student
  960  is enrolled shall inform the student of the prerequisites for
  961  the baccalaureate degree program offered by an institution of
  962  interest.
  963         Section 11. Subsections (3), (6), (7), (8), and (10) of
  964  section 1007.25, Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
  965         1007.25 General education courses; common prerequisites;
  966  other degree requirements.—
  967         (3) The chair of the State Board of Education and the chair
  968  of the Board of Governors, or their designees, shall jointly
  969  appoint faculty committees to identify statewide general
  970  education core course options. General education core course
  971  options must shall consist of a maximum of five courses within
  972  each of the subject areas of communication, mathematics, social
  973  sciences, humanities, and natural sciences. The core courses may
  974  be revised or the five-course cap within each subject area may
  975  be exceeded if approved by the State Board of Education and the
  976  Board of Governors, as recommended by the subject area faculty
  977  committee and approved by the Articulation Coordinating
  978  Committee, as necessary for a subject area. Each general
  979  education core course option must contain high-level academic
  980  and critical thinking skills and common competencies that
  981  students must demonstrate to successfully complete the course.
  982  Beginning with students initially entering a Florida College
  983  System institution or state university in 2015-2016 2014-2015
  984  and thereafter, each student must complete at least one
  985  identified core course in each subject area as part of the
  986  general education course requirements. All public postsecondary
  987  educational institutions shall offer and accept these courses as
  988  meeting general education core course requirements. The
  989  remaining general education course requirements shall be
  990  identified by each institution and reported to the department by
  991  their statewide course number. The general education core course
  992  options shall be adopted in rule by the State Board of Education
  993  and in regulation by the Board of Governors.
  994         (6) The universities and Florida College System
  995  institutions shall work with their respective school districts
  996  to ensure that high school curricula coordinate with the general
  997  education curricula and to prepare students for college-level
  998  work. General education curricula for associate in arts programs
  999  shall be identified by each institution and, beginning with
 1000  students initially entering a Florida College System institution
 1001  or state university in 2014-2015 and thereafter, shall include
 1002  36 30 semester hours in the subject areas of communication,
 1003  mathematics, social sciences, humanities, and natural sciences.
 1004         (7) An associate in arts degree may not shall require no
 1005  more than 60 semester hours of college credit and must,
 1006  beginning with students initially entering a Florida College
 1007  System institution or state university in 2014-2015 and
 1008  thereafter, include 36 30 semester hours of general education
 1009  coursework. Beginning with students initially entering a Florida
 1010  College System institution or state university in 2014-2015 and
 1011  thereafter, coursework for an associate in arts degree must
 1012  include and demonstration of competency in a foreign language
 1013  pursuant to s. 1007.262. Except for developmental education
 1014  provided college-preparatory coursework required pursuant to s.
 1015  1008.30, all required coursework counts shall count toward the
 1016  associate in arts degree or the baccalaureate degree.
 1017         (8) A baccalaureate degree program shall require no more
 1018  than 120 semester hours of college credit and, beginning with
 1019  students initially entering a Florida College System institution
 1020  or state university in 2014-2015 and thereafter, include 36 30
 1021  semester hours of general education coursework, unless prior
 1022  approval has been granted by the Board of Governors for
 1023  baccalaureate degree programs offered by state universities and
 1024  by the State Board of Education for baccalaureate degree
 1025  programs offered by Florida College System institutions.
 1026         (10) Students at state universities may request associate
 1027  in arts certificates if they have successfully completed the
 1028  minimum requirements for the degree of associate in arts (A.A.).
 1029  The university must grant the student an associate in arts
 1030  degree if the student has successfully completed minimum
 1031  requirements for college-level communication and computation
 1032  skills adopted by the State Board of Education and 60 academic
 1033  semester hours or the equivalent within a degree program area
 1034  and including 36, beginning with students initially entering a
 1035  Florida College System institution or state university in 2014
 1036  2015 and thereafter, include 30 semester hours in general
 1037  education courses in the subject areas of communication,
 1038  mathematics, social sciences, humanities, and natural sciences,
 1039  consistent with the general education requirements specified in
 1040  the articulation agreement pursuant to s. 1007.23.
 1041         Section 12. Section 1007.263, Florida Statutes, is amended
 1042  to read:
 1043         1007.263 Florida College System institutions; admissions of
 1044  students.—Each Florida College System institution board of
 1045  trustees may is authorized to adopt rules governing admissions
 1046  of students subject to this section and rules of the State Board
 1047  of Education. These rules must shall include the following:
 1048         (1) Admissions counseling must shall be provided to all
 1049  students entering college or career credit programs. Counseling
 1050  must use shall utilize tests to measure achievement of college
 1051  level communication and computation competencies by all students
 1052  entering college credit programs or tests to measure achievement
 1053  of basic skills for career education programs as prescribed in
 1054  s. 1004.91. Counseling includes providing developmental
 1055  education options for students whose assessment results,
 1056  determined under s. 1008.30, indicate that they need to improve
 1057  communication or computation skills that are essential to
 1058  perform college-level work.
 1059         (2) Admission to associate degree programs is subject to
 1060  minimum standards adopted by the State Board of Education and
 1061  requires shall require:
 1062         (a) A standard high school diploma, a high school
 1063  equivalency diploma as prescribed in s. 1003.435, previously
 1064  demonstrated competency in college credit postsecondary
 1065  coursework, or, in the case of a student who is home educated, a
 1066  signed affidavit submitted by the student’s parent or legal
 1067  guardian attesting that the student has completed a home
 1068  education program pursuant to the requirements of s. 1002.41.
 1069  Students who are enrolled in a dual enrollment or early
 1070  admission program pursuant to s. 1007.271 are exempt from this
 1071  requirement.
 1072         (b) A demonstrated level of achievement of college-level
 1073  communication and computation skills.
 1074         (c) Any other requirements established by the board of
 1075  trustees.
 1076         (3) Admission to other programs within the Florida College
 1077  System institution must shall include education requirements as
 1078  established by the board of trustees.
 1079         (4) A student who has been awarded a special diploma as
 1080  defined in s. 1003.438 or a certificate of completion as defined
 1081  in s. 1003.43(10) is eligible to enroll in certificate career
 1082  education programs.
 1083         (5) A student who has with a documented disability may be
 1084  eligible for reasonable substitutions, as prescribed in ss.
 1085  1007.264 and 1007.265.
 1086  
 1087  Each board of trustees shall establish policies that notify
 1088  students about developmental education options for improving
 1089  their communication or computation skills that are essential to
 1090  performing college-level work, including tutoring, extended time
 1091  in gateway courses, free online courses and place students into,
 1092  adult basic education, adult secondary education, or other
 1093  instructional programs that provide students with alternatives
 1094  to traditional college-preparatory instruction, including
 1095  private provider instruction. A student is prohibited from
 1096  enrolling in additional college-level courses until the student
 1097  scores above the cut-score on all sections of the common
 1098  placement test.
 1099         Section 13. Subsections (2) and (14) of section 1007.271,
 1100  Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
 1101         1007.271 Dual enrollment programs.—
 1102         (2) For the purpose of this section, an eligible secondary
 1103  student is a student who is enrolled in a Florida public
 1104  secondary school or in a Florida private secondary school which
 1105  is in compliance with s. 1002.42(2) and provides a secondary
 1106  curriculum pursuant to s. 1003.428, s. 1003.429, or s. 1003.43.
 1107  Students who are eligible for dual enrollment pursuant to this
 1108  section may enroll in dual enrollment courses conducted during
 1109  school hours, after school hours, and during the summer term.
 1110  However, if the student is projected to graduate from high
 1111  school before the scheduled completion date of a postsecondary
 1112  course, the student may not register for that course through
 1113  dual enrollment. The student may apply to the postsecondary
 1114  institution and pay the required registration, tuition, and fees
 1115  if the student meets the postsecondary institution’s admissions
 1116  requirements under s. 1007.263. Instructional time for dual
 1117  enrollment may vary from 900 hours; however, the school district
 1118  may only report the student for a maximum of 1.0 FTE, as
 1119  provided in s. 1011.61(4). Any student enrolled as a dual
 1120  enrollment student is exempt from the payment of registration,
 1121  tuition, and laboratory fees. Vocational-preparatory
 1122  instruction, developmental education college-preparatory
 1123  instruction, and other forms of precollegiate instruction, as
 1124  well as physical education courses that focus on the physical
 1125  execution of a skill rather than the intellectual attributes of
 1126  the activity, are ineligible for inclusion in the dual
 1127  enrollment program. Recreation and leisure studies courses shall
 1128  be evaluated individually in the same manner as physical
 1129  education courses for potential inclusion in the program.
 1130         (14) The Department of Education shall approve any course
 1131  for inclusion in the dual enrollment program that is contained
 1132  within the statewide course numbering system. However,
 1133  developmental education college-preparatory and other forms of
 1134  precollegiate instruction, and physical education and other
 1135  courses that focus on the physical execution of a skill rather
 1136  than the intellectual attributes of the activity, may not be so
 1137  approved but must be evaluated individually for potential
 1138  inclusion in the dual enrollment program. This subsection may
 1139  not be construed to mean that an independent postsecondary
 1140  institution eligible for inclusion in a dual enrollment or early
 1141  admission program pursuant to s. 1011.62 must participate in the
 1142  statewide course numbering system developed pursuant to s.
 1143  1007.24 to participate in a dual enrollment program.
 1144         Section 14. Section 1008.02, Florida Statutes, is created
 1145  to read:
 1146         1008.02Definitions.—As used in this chapter, the term:
 1147         (1)“Accelerated course structure” means a course or strand
 1148  of study that accelerates the progress of students in
 1149  developmental education through self-paced attainment of
 1150  specific skills.
 1151         (2)“Corequisite education” means developmental education
 1152  that is deployed through a variety of classroom, online, or
 1153  blended instructional strategies and offered concurrently with
 1154  college credit instruction. The term includes, but is not
 1155  limited to:
 1156         (a)Compressed or modularized instruction or coaching that
 1157  supplements credit instruction.
 1158         (b)Embedded content in a modified or extended credit
 1159  bearing course intended to contextualize or accelerate credit
 1160  attainment.
 1161         (3)“Developmental education” means instruction through
 1162  which a high school graduate who applies for any college credit
 1163  program may attain the communication and computation skills
 1164  necessary to successfully complete college credit instruction.
 1165  Developmental education may not be offered as a noncredit course
 1166  for which a student pays tuition but must be offered corequisite
 1167  to a gateway course.
 1168         (4)“Gateway course” means the first course that provides
 1169  transferable, college-level credit allowing students to progress
 1170  in their program of study.
 1171         (5)“Mastery-based education” means customized, targeted
 1172  instruction that addresses specific skills gaps.
 1173         (6)“Meta-major” means a collection of programs of study or
 1174  academic discipline groupings that share common foundational
 1175  skills.
 1176         Section 15. Section 1008.30, Florida Statutes, is amended
 1177  to read:
 1178         1008.30 Common placement testing for public postsecondary
 1179  education.—
 1180         (1) The State Board of Education, in conjunction with the
 1181  Board of Governors, shall develop and implement a common
 1182  placement test for the purpose of assessing the basic
 1183  computation and communication skills of students who intend to
 1184  enter a degree program at any public postsecondary educational
 1185  institution. Alternative assessments that may be accepted in
 1186  lieu of the common placement test shall also be identified in
 1187  rule. Public postsecondary educational institutions shall
 1188  provide appropriate modifications of the test instruments or
 1189  test procedures for students with disabilities.
 1190         (2) By October 1, 2013, the State Board of Education in
 1191  conjunction with the Board of Governors shall approve a series
 1192  of meta-majors, academic pathways, and degree maps that identify
 1193  the gateway courses required for success in each meta-major.
 1194  Results from the common placement test, the alternative
 1195  assessments that may be used in lieu of the common placement
 1196  test, and achievements that may be considered by institutional
 1197  boards of trustees, as adopted by state board rule, shall be
 1198  used to diagnose a student’s readiness for his or her chosen
 1199  meta-major and to provide academic counseling to the student
 1200  concerning options for attaining the necessary skills through
 1201  developmental education while enrolled in credit courses.
 1202         (3)(2) The common placement testing program must shall
 1203  include at a minimum the following: the capacity to diagnose
 1204  basic competencies in the areas of English, reading, and
 1205  mathematics which are essential for success in meta-majors and
 1206  to provide to perform college-level work; prerequisite skills
 1207  that relate to progressively advanced instruction in
 1208  mathematics, such as algebra and geometry; prerequisite skills
 1209  that relate to progressively advanced instruction in language
 1210  arts, such as English composition and literature; and provision
 1211  of test information to students on the specific skills the
 1212  student needs to attain deficiencies.
 1213         (4)(3) The State Board of Education shall adopt rules that
 1214  require high schools to evaluate before the beginning of grade
 1215  12 the college readiness of each student who scores at Level 2
 1216  or Level 3 on the reading portion of the grade 10 FCAT Reading
 1217  or Level 2, Level 3, or Level 4 on the Algebra I mathematics
 1218  assessments under s. 1008.22 s. 1008.22(3)(c). High schools
 1219  shall perform this evaluation using results from the
 1220  corresponding component of the common placement test prescribed
 1221  in this section, or an alternative equivalent test identified by
 1222  the State Board of Education. The State Board of Education shall
 1223  identify in rule the assessments necessary to perform the
 1224  evaluations required by this subsection and shall work with the
 1225  school districts to administer the assessments. The State Board
 1226  of Education shall establish by rule the minimum test scores a
 1227  student must achieve to demonstrate readiness. Students who
 1228  demonstrate readiness by achieving the minimum test scores
 1229  established by the state board and enroll in a Florida College
 1230  System institution within 2 years of achieving such scores shall
 1231  not be required to retest or enroll in remediation when admitted
 1232  to any Florida College System institution. The high school shall
 1233  use the results of the test to advise the students of any
 1234  identified deficiencies and to provide 12th grade students, and
 1235  require them to complete, appropriate postsecondary preparatory
 1236  instruction prior to high school graduation. The curriculum
 1237  provided under this subsection shall be identified in rule by
 1238  the State Board of Education and encompass Florida’s
 1239  Postsecondary Readiness Competencies. Other elective courses may
 1240  not be substituted for the selected postsecondary reading,
 1241  mathematics, or writing preparatory course unless the elective
 1242  course covers the same competencies included in the
 1243  postsecondary reading, mathematics, or writing, or English
 1244  language arts preparatory course.
 1245         (5)(4)(a)The State Board of Education shall establish by
 1246  rule the test scores a student must achieve to demonstrate
 1247  readiness to perform college-level work. Students who
 1248  demonstrate readiness by achieving or exceeding the test scores
 1249  established by the state board and enroll in a Florida College
 1250  System institution within 2 years after achieving such scores
 1251  may not be required to retest or complete developmental
 1252  education when admitted to any Florida College System
 1253  institution. Students who have been identified as requiring
 1254  additional preparation pursuant to subsection (1) shall enroll
 1255  in college-preparatory or other adult education pursuant to s.
 1256  1004.93 in Florida College System institutions to develop needed
 1257  college-entry skills. The State Board of Education shall specify
 1258  by rule provisions for alternative remediation opportunities and
 1259  retesting policies. These students shall be permitted to take
 1260  courses within their degree program concurrently in other
 1261  curriculum areas for which they are qualified while enrolled in
 1262  college-preparatory instruction courses. A student enrolled in a
 1263  college-preparatory course may concurrently enroll only in
 1264  college credit courses that do not require the skills addressed
 1265  in the college-preparatory course. A degree-seeking student who
 1266  is required to complete a college-preparatory course must
 1267  successfully complete the required college-preparatory studies
 1268  by the time the student has accumulated 12 hours of lower
 1269  division college credit degree coursework; however, a student
 1270  may continue enrollment in degree-earning coursework provided
 1271  the student maintains enrollment in college-preparatory
 1272  coursework for each subsequent semester until college
 1273  preparatory coursework requirements are completed, and provided
 1274  the student demonstrates satisfactory performance in degree
 1275  earning coursework. A student who has accumulated 12 college
 1276  credit hours and has not yet demonstrated proficiency in the
 1277  basic competency areas of reading, writing, and mathematics must
 1278  be advised in writing of the requirements for associate degree
 1279  completion and state university admission, including information
 1280  about future financial aid eligibility and the potential costs
 1281  of accumulating excessive college credit as described in s.
 1282  1009.286. Before a student is considered to have met basic
 1283  computation and communication skills requirements, the student
 1284  must demonstrate successful mastery of the required
 1285  developmental education competencies as defined in State Board
 1286  of Education rule. Credit awarded for college-preparatory
 1287  instruction may not be counted toward fulfilling the number of
 1288  credits required for a degree.
 1289         (6)(b) A university board of trustees may contract with a
 1290  Florida College System institution board of trustees for the
 1291  Florida College System institution to provide developmental
 1292  education such instruction on the state university campus. Any
 1293  state university in which the percentage of incoming students
 1294  requiring developmental education college-preparatory
 1295  instruction equals or exceeds the average percentage of such
 1296  students for the Florida College System may offer such
 1297  developmental education college-preparatory instruction without
 1298  contracting with a Florida College System institution; however,
 1299  any state university offering college-preparatory instruction as
 1300  of January 1, 1996, may continue to provide such services.
 1301         (7)(a)(5)The State Board of Education shall adopt rules by
 1302  January 1, 2014, to implement developmental education. The rules
 1303  must include:
 1304         1.Student achievements that may be considered by
 1305  institutional boards, such as performance on college placement
 1306  tests, grade point averages, work history, military experience,
 1307  career interests, degree major declaration, or any combination
 1308  thereof.
 1309         2.Recommended options for students performing at levels
 1310  indicating adult education as an appropriate place for students
 1311  to develop needed college-entry academic skills.
 1312         3.Sufficient flexibility for local professional judgment
 1313  and determinations of appropriate student options for achieving
 1314  necessary skills.
 1315         4.Limits on credit course enrollment for students
 1316  indicating the need for preparatory assistance in two or more
 1317  content areas.
 1318         (b)Local policies and practices set by each Florida
 1319  College System institution board of trustees must outline the
 1320  student achievements considered by the institution for placement
 1321  determinations, identify instructional options available to
 1322  students, and describe student costs and financial aid
 1323  opportunities associated with each instructional option.
 1324  Instructional options must, at a minimum, provide for enrollment
 1325  of a student in a credit course either with or without
 1326  institutionally required corequisite education, mastery-based
 1327  instruction or accelerated pathways for developing skills, or
 1328  enrolling in adult education to attain needed skills, as chosen
 1329  by the student. Policies and practices must specify limits on
 1330  credit course enrollment for students indicating the need for
 1331  preparatory assistance, outline retesting requirements, and
 1332  identify options for students who choose to attain skills in
 1333  adult education when such instruction is not provided by the
 1334  Florida College System institution A student may not be enrolled
 1335  in a college credit mathematics or English course on a dual
 1336  enrollment basis unless the student has demonstrated adequate
 1337  precollegiate preparation on the section of the basic
 1338  computation and communication skills assessment required
 1339  pursuant to subsection (1) that is appropriate for successful
 1340  student participation in the course.
 1341         Section 16. Section 1008.322, Florida Statutes, is created
 1342  to read:
 1343         1008.322 Board of Governors oversight enforcement
 1344  authority.—
 1345         (1) The Board of Governors of the State University System
 1346  shall oversee the performance of state university boards of
 1347  trustees in the enforcement of laws, rules, and regulations.
 1348  State university boards of trustees shall be primarily
 1349  responsible for compliance with laws and Board of Governors’
 1350  rules and regulations.
 1351         (2)The Board of Governors’ constitutional authority to
 1352  operate, regulate, control, and be fully responsible for the
 1353  management of the State University System mandates that the
 1354  state universities comply with all requests by the Board of
 1355  Governors for information, data, and reports. State university
 1356  presidents are responsible for the accuracy of the information
 1357  and data reported to the Board of Governors.
 1358         (3)The Chancellor of the State University System may
 1359  investigate allegations of noncompliance with law or Board of
 1360  Governors’ rule or regulation and determine probable cause. The
 1361  chancellor shall report determinations of probable cause to the
 1362  Board of Governors, which may require the university board of
 1363  trustees to document compliance with law or Board of Governors’
 1364  rule or regulation.
 1365         (4)If the university board of trustees cannot
 1366  satisfactorily document compliance, the Board of Governors may
 1367  order compliance within a specified timeframe.
 1368         (5)If the Board of Governors determines that a state
 1369  university board of trustees is unwilling or unable to comply
 1370  with law or Board of Governors’ rule or regulation or an audit
 1371  recommendation within the specified time, the Board of
 1372  Governors, in addition to actions constitutionally authorized,
 1373  may initiate any of the following actions:
 1374         (a)Withhold the transfer of state funds, discretionary
 1375  grant funds, discretionary lottery funds, or any other funds
 1376  appropriated to the Board of Governors by the Legislature for
 1377  disbursement to the state university until the university
 1378  complies with the law or Board of Governors’ rule or regulation.
 1379         (b)Declare the state university ineligible for competitive
 1380  grants disbursed by the Board of Governors.
 1381         (c)Require monthly or periodic reporting on the situation
 1382  related to noncompliance until it is remedied.
 1383         (d)Report to the Legislature that the state university is
 1384  unwilling or unable to comply with law or Board of Governors’
 1385  rule or regulation and recommend action to be taken by the
 1386  Legislature.
 1387         (6) This section does not create a private cause of action
 1388  or create any rights for individuals or entities in addition to
 1389  those provided elsewhere in law, rule, or regulation.
 1390         Section 17. Subsection (2) of section 1008.37, Florida
 1391  Statutes, is amended to read:
 1392         1008.37 Postsecondary feedback of information to high
 1393  schools.—
 1394         (2) No later than November 30 of each year, the
 1395  Commissioner of Education shall report, by high school, to the
 1396  State Board of Education, the Board of Governors, and the
 1397  Legislature, no later than November 30 of each year, on the
 1398  number of prior-year prior year Florida high school graduates
 1399  who enrolled for the first time in public postsecondary
 1400  education in this state during the previous summer, fall, or
 1401  spring term. The report must include, indicating the number of
 1402  students whose scores on the common placement test that is
 1403  required under s. 1008.30, indicate indicated the need to attain
 1404  communication and computation skills through developmental
 1405  education options offered by a public postsecondary institution
 1406  or through for remediation through college-preparatory or
 1407  vocational-preparatory instruction pursuant to s. 1004.91 or s.
 1408  1008.30.
 1409         Section 18. Paragraph (a) of subsection (3) of section
 1410  1009.22, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 1411         1009.22 Workforce education postsecondary student fees.—
 1412         (3)(a) Except as otherwise provided by law, fees for
 1413  students who are nonresidents for tuition purposes must offset
 1414  the full cost of instruction. Residency of students shall be
 1415  determined as required in s. 1009.21. Fee-nonexempt students
 1416  enrolled in vocational-preparatory instruction shall be charged
 1417  fees equal to the fees charged for adult general education
 1418  programs. Each Florida College System institution that conducts
 1419  college-preparatory and vocational-preparatory instruction in
 1420  the same class section may charge a single fee for both types of
 1421  instruction.
 1422         Section 19. Subsection (1), paragraph (a) of subsection
 1423  (3), and subsection (10) of section 1009.23, Florida Statutes,
 1424  are amended to read:
 1425         1009.23 Florida College System institution student fees.—
 1426         (1) Unless otherwise provided, this section applies only to
 1427  fees charged for college credit instruction leading to an
 1428  associate in arts degree, an associate in applied science
 1429  degree, an associate in science degree, or a baccalaureate
 1430  degree authorized pursuant to s. 1007.33, for developmental
 1431  education noncollege credit college-preparatory courses defined
 1432  in s. 1004.02, and for educator preparation institute programs
 1433  defined in s. 1004.85.
 1434         (3)(a) Effective July 1, 2011, for advanced and
 1435  professional, postsecondary vocational, college preparatory, and
 1436  educator preparation institute programs, the standard tuition is
 1437  shall be $68.56 per credit hour for residents and nonresidents,
 1438  and the out-of-state fee is shall be $205.82 per credit hour.
 1439         (10) Each Florida College System institution board of
 1440  trustees is authorized to establish a separate fee for
 1441  technology, which may not exceed 5 percent of tuition per credit
 1442  hour or credit-hour equivalent for resident students and may not
 1443  exceed 5 percent of tuition and the out-of-state fee per credit
 1444  hour or credit-hour equivalent for nonresident students.
 1445  Revenues generated from the technology fee shall be used to
 1446  enhance instructional technology resources for students and
 1447  faculty. The technology fee may apply to both college credit and
 1448  college-preparatory instruction and shall not be included in any
 1449  award under the Florida Bright Futures Scholarship Program.
 1450  Fifty percent of technology fee revenues may be pledged by a
 1451  Florida College System institution board of trustees as a
 1452  dedicated revenue source for the repayment of debt, including
 1453  lease-purchase agreements, not to exceed the useful life of the
 1454  asset being financed. Revenues generated from the technology fee
 1455  may not be bonded.
 1456         Section 20. Subsection (11) is added to section 1009.26,
 1457  Florida Statutes, to read:
 1458         1009.26 Fee waivers.—
 1459         (11) A Florida College System institution that offers a
 1460  baccalaureate degree for state residents for which the cost of
 1461  tuition and specified fees does not exceed $10,000 for the
 1462  entire degree program may waive any portion or all of the
 1463  following fees for that degree: tuition, the activity and
 1464  service fee, the financial aid fee, the technology fee, the
 1465  capital improvement fee, and the distance-learning fee. The
 1466  Legislature encourages colleges to include at least one industry
 1467  certification from the Postsecondary Industry Certification
 1468  Funding List in a degree program for which such waivers are
 1469  granted.
 1470         Section 21. Section 1009.28, Florida Statutes, is repealed.
 1471         Section 22. Section 1009.285, Florida Statutes, is amended
 1472  to read:
 1473         1009.285 Fees for repeated enrollment in college-credit
 1474  courses.—A student enrolled in the same undergraduate college
 1475  credit course more than once, except for students enrolled in a
 1476  gateway course for an extended period of time under s. 1008.30,
 1477  must twice shall pay tuition at 100 percent of the full cost of
 1478  instruction, and may not be and shall not be included in
 1479  calculations of full-time equivalent enrollments for state
 1480  funding purposes. However, students who withdraw or fail a class
 1481  due to extenuating circumstances may be granted an exception
 1482  only once for each class if, provided that approval is granted
 1483  according to policy established by the Florida College System
 1484  institution board of trustees or the university board of
 1485  trustees. Each Florida College System institution and state
 1486  university may review and reduce fees paid by students due to
 1487  continued enrollment in a college-credit class on an individual
 1488  basis contingent upon the student’s financial hardship. For
 1489  purposes of this section, first-time enrollment in a class means
 1490  shall mean enrollment in a class beginning fall semester 1997,
 1491  and calculations of the full cost of instruction is shall be
 1492  based on the systemwide average of the prior year’s cost of
 1493  undergraduate programs for the Florida College System
 1494  institutions and the state universities. Boards of trustees may
 1495  make exceptions to this section for individualized study,
 1496  elective coursework, courses that are repeated as a requirement
 1497  of a major, and courses that are intended as continuing over
 1498  multiple semesters, excluding the repeat of coursework more than
 1499  once two times to increase grade point average or meet minimum
 1500  course grade requirements.
 1501         Section 23. Paragraph (g) of subsection (4) of section
 1502  1009.286, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 1503         1009.286 Additional student payment for hours exceeding
 1504  baccalaureate degree program completion requirements at state
 1505  universities.—
 1506         (4) For purposes of this section, credit hours earned under
 1507  the following circumstances are not calculated as hours required
 1508  to earn a baccalaureate degree:
 1509         (g) Remedial and English as a Second Language credit hours.
 1510         Section 24. Subsection (3) of section 1009.40, Florida
 1511  Statutes, is amended to read:
 1512         1009.40 General requirements for student eligibility for
 1513  state financial aid awards and tuition assistance grants.—
 1514         (3) Undergraduate students are eligible to receive
 1515  financial aid for a maximum of 8 semesters or 12 quarters.
 1516  However, undergraduate students participating in developmental
 1517  education and college-preparatory instruction, students
 1518  requiring additional time to complete the college-level
 1519  communication and computation skills testing programs, or
 1520  students enrolled in a 5-year undergraduate degree program are
 1521  eligible to receive financial aid for a maximum of 10 semesters
 1522  or 15 quarters.
 1523         Section 25. Subsection (10) of section 1009.53, Florida
 1524  Statutes, is amended to read:
 1525         1009.53 Florida Bright Futures Scholarship Program.—
 1526         (10) Funds from any scholarship within the Florida Bright
 1527  Futures Scholarship Program may not be used to pay for
 1528  developmental education remedial or college-preparatory
 1529  coursework.
 1530         Section 26. Subsection (7) of section 1009.531, Florida
 1531  Statutes, is repealed.
 1532         Section 27. Paragraph (b) of subsection (1) and subsection
 1533  (5) of section 1011.84, Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
 1534         1011.84 Procedure for determining state financial support
 1535  and annual apportionment of state funds to each Florida College
 1536  System institution district.—The procedure for determining state
 1537  financial support and the annual apportionment to each Florida
 1538  College System institution district authorized to operate a
 1539  Florida College System institution under the provisions of s.
 1540  1001.61 shall be as follows:
 1541         (1) DETERMINING THE AMOUNT TO BE INCLUDED IN THE FLORIDA
 1542  COLLEGE SYSTEM PROGRAM FUND FOR THE CURRENT OPERATING PROGRAM.—
 1543         (b) The allocation of funds for Florida College System
 1544  institutions is shall be based on advanced and professional
 1545  disciplines, developmental education college-preparatory
 1546  programs, and other programs for adults funded pursuant to s.
 1547  1011.80.
 1548         (5) REPORT OF DEVELOPMENTAL REMEDIAL EDUCATION.—Each
 1549  Florida College System institution board of trustees shall
 1550  report, as a separate item in its annual cost accounting system,
 1551  the volume and cost of developmental education options provided
 1552  to help students attain the communication and computation skills
 1553  that are essential for college-level work pursuant to s. 1008.30
 1554  remedial education activities as a separate item in its annual
 1555  cost accounting system.
 1556         Section 28. The Division of Law Revision and Information is
 1557  directed to prepare a reviser’s bill for the 2014 Regular
 1558  Session of the Legislature to change the terms “General
 1559  Educational Development test” or “GED test” to “high school
 1560  equivalency examination” and the terms “general education
 1561  diploma,” “graduate equivalency diploma,” or “GED” to “high
 1562  school equivalency diploma” wherever those terms appear in the
 1563  Florida Statutes.
 1564         Section 29. This act shall take effect July 1, 2013.