Current through Register Vol. 48, No. 9, September 27, 2024
I. Definitions
A. For purposes of this regulation,
"Instructional Material(s)" means materials used in a South Carolina K-12
public school classroom, made available in a public school library/media
center, or included on a public school's reading list, whether adopted and/or
purchased from the state-adopted instructional materials list, adopted and/or
purchased through a district instructional materials program, or otherwise
purchased, donated to the school, or made available to students through other
means, including but not limited to digital platforms. See S.C. Code Ann.
Section 59-19-10. The term "Instructional
Materials" as used herein includes any collection of books or materials
purchased, acquired, or kept on public school grounds by any teacher or other
public-school employee and made available to students, regardless of how or by
whom such materials are acquired or purchased.
B. For purposes of this regulation,
"Instructional Program" means the courses, activities, and programs that are
offered, supported, or sponsored by a South Carolina K-12 public school,
including but not limited to the sequence of courses or activities leading to a
degree, diploma, or completion of a grade level as defined and required by the
Code, Regulations, or the State Standards promulgated by the State Board of
Education ("State Board"). See Sections
59-1-50 and
59-18-100; State Board Regs.
R.43-231, R.43-232,
R.43-234.
C. For purposes of this
regulation, "Age and Developmentally Appropriate" means topics, messages,
materials, and teaching methods suitable to particular ages or age groups of
children and adolescents, based on developing cognitive, emotional, and
behavioral capacity typical for the age or age group. Instructional Material is
not "Age and Developmentally Appropriate" for any age or age group of children
if it includes descriptions or visual depictions of "sexual conduct," as that
term is defined by Section
16-15-305(C)(1).
II. Responsibility of District School Boards
for Instructional Materials; Transparency
A.
The selection, acquisition, use, curation, or removal of public-schools'
materials-including materials used in classroom instruction, stocked in the
schools' libraries, made available in media centers, used in school-controlled
extracurricular activities, or promoted as optional, supplemental Instructional
Material-constitutes government speech and involves the exercise of
governmental judgment by public officials and employees who are administering a
government program financed by public funds. The State Board of Education is
statutorily authorized to regulate the selection, acquisition, use, curation,
and removal of such materials, and public school district boards are
constitutionally permitted and statutorily required to implement such
regulations as they exercise their judgment and discretion when deciding what
textbooks, library books, and other materials are (and are not) Age and
Developmentally Appropriate, academically robust, and educationally suitable,
and most useful, enlightening, and interesting to their students.
B. Each district school board of trustees is
ultimately responsible for the selection or continued use of all Instructional
Materials. This responsibility includes both the selection of new or additional
Instructional Materials after the effective date of this Regulation ("New
Instructional Materials") and the retention and continued use of any
Instructional Materials that are present in or already in use by a district
("Existing Instructional Materials"). A district's board may, but is not
required to, prospectively review and asses its Existing Instructional
Materials for compliance with this regulation. Alternatively, a district's
board may review and assess its Existing Instructional Materials' compliance
with this regulation on a case-by-case basis if and when material is challenged
pursuant to the procedure set out in Section IV of this regulation.
C. Each district board shall maintain at all
times on its website a complete, current list or catalogue of all books and
other materials that are available to students through any of a district's
libraries or media centers. This list or catalogue shall be regularly updated
and prominently displayed om each districts' website to ensure that this
information is current, and readily accessible to students, their families, and
other interested parties.
D.
Separate from the list or catalogue required by the preceding paragraph, a
complete list of the Instructional Materials that are used in or available to a
student in any given class, course, or program that is offered, supported, or
sponsored by a public school, or that are otherwise made available by any
public school employee to a student on school premises, shall be provided upon
reasonable request by any parent or legal guardian of a student in the
district.
III. Criteria
for a District's Selection or Review of New or Existing Instructional Materials
A. Each district board is responsible for
ensuring that New and Existing Instructional Materials are educationally
suitable for use in the State's public schools, including by ensuring the
materials are Age and Developmentally Appropriate, as that term is defined
herein, for the students served, and are consistent with the State's defined
Instructional Program requirements.
B. Upon the effective date of this
regulation, a district may select New Instructional Materials or allow Existing
Instructional Material to be provided to or remain available to students only
if the Instructional Material is (a) Age and Developmentally Appropriate, as
that term is defined herein, for students in each school based on grade and age
level; and (b) aligned with and supportive of the Instructional Program of the
school and district, including consistency with the then-current Profile of a
South Carolina Graduate. Any materials that do not satisfy both of the
foregoing requirements shall not be acquired, retained, or used by a public
school district in this State.
C.
When making decisions to select or retain specific Instructional Materials from
among those that satisfy the mandatory threshold criteria contained in section
III.B. above, each district board shall consider the following additional
criteria to determine the educational suitability of the material:
(1) The material's academic or educational
rigor;
(2) The material's
educational significance;
(3) The
material's validity, accuracy, objectivity, currency, and
appropriateness;
(4) The finite
availability of library shelf space and whether the space occupied by any
particular volume could be better filled by a different volume with greater
academic rigor, objectivity, or accuracy, literary or education merit, or
quality;
(5) The finite
availability of instructional time and whether the time occupied teaching or
learning any particular material could be better spent on material with greater
academic rigor, objectivity, or accuracy, literary or educational merit, or
quality.
D. In no event
shall a school district board's decision to remove Existing Instructional
Material or to reject the proposed addition of New Instructional Material be
based primarily on or motivated by the district board's disagreement with or
opposition to the viewpoints expressed therein.
E. A district board at all times remains
ultimately responsible for the obligations described in this section and for
ensuring compliance with the requirements of this regulation; however, a
district board may delegate to the district superintendent or his designee(s)
the task of (i) prospectively reviewing Existing Instructional Materials in the
first instance and removing any materials that do not satisfy the requirements
of this section, and (ii) reviewing potential New Instructional Material in the
first instance and when deemed prudent or when requested by the district board,
providing a report and recommendation to the district board regarding the
material's educational suitability and compliance with this regulation's
requirements.
IV. Public
Participation in a District's Review of Existing Instructional Material
Beginning August 1, 2024, a parent or legal guardian of any
student who attends a school within a school district and who has made a good
faith effort to address their concerns regarding non-compliance with this
regulation with school level or district level staff shall have the right to
file a complaint requesting that specifically identified Existing Instructional
Material be discontinued for any grade level or age group and/or removed by the
district board from all district schools and/or should be subject to a
requirement of parental consent for some or all grade levels or age groups
pursuant to the following procedures:
A. Complainant shall file a petition with the
district board, on a form promulgated by the State Department of Education
("SCDE") and provided by the SCDE to the district board, which the district
board shall make readily available on its website, and which is the sole form
that a district or district board may use for purposes of compliance with this
regulation. No Complainant shall file more than five petitions in any given
calendar month. On the form, the Complainant shall identify, with specificity,
those Existing Instructional Materials that the Complainant requests be removed
entirely from district schools, or the use of which Complainant requests should
be discontinued for any grade level or age group, or which should be subject to
a requirement of parental consent for some or all grade levels or age groups.
Complainant's petition shall affirm that Complainant has read or watched or
otherwise reviewed the challenged material and shall specify the reason(s) for
Complainant's request and why Complainant believes the identified materials
should be removed from district schools entirely or should be discontinued for
any grade level or age group or which should be subject to a requirement of
parental consent for some or all grade levels or age groups. Any complaint
filed pursuant to this section must be based solely on the criteria listed
above. Complainant shall further verify that the Complainant has made a good
faith effort to address their concerns regarding non-compliance with this
regulation with school level or district level staff.
B. Within 90 days after a complaint has been
received, a quorum of the district board must conduct a public meeting to
consider the complaint, and at that public meeting, vote to grant or deny, in
whole or in part, the relief requested by the Complainant. This public meeting
shall be held in accordance with the requirements of the South Carolina Freedom
of Information Act, and the Complainant and other interested parties must be
allowed to appear and present information in support of or in opposition to the
relief requested in the complaint. Reasonable and even-handed limitations
aligned with standing board policies on the number of other interested parties
presenting information and the length of said presentation shall be acceptable
in order to facilitate efficient meetings. A district board may, in its
discretion, and in advance of the meeting described in this subsection, refer
the complaint to a committee comprised of a least three district board members
and whose membership is limited to the district board's members, to conduct an
initial review of the complaint and the challenged material and to provide a
report and recommendation to the full district board to be considered and
either adopted or rejected by the district board at the public meeting required
by this subsection to be held within 90 days after the board receives the
complaint.
C. If the district board
finds that Existing Instructional Materials identified in a complaint do not
satisfy the requirements of this regulation, the district board shall remove
entirely or discontinue use of said materials for any grade level or age group
for which such use is inappropriate or unsuitable, or, shall make such
materials available to students only upon receipt of the consent of a student's
parent or legal guardian. The district board shall announce its decision in
that meeting and shall provide an explanation for its conclusion and
decision-either orally at the public meeting (if such meetings are recorded or
transcribed) or in writing made publicly available within 15 days
thereafter-specifically including an explanation of how the district board
applied and complied with the decisional criteria and requirements of this
regulation.
D. Any Complainant who
is aggrieved by a decision of the district board under this process may file a
written appeal to the State Board of Education (State Board) within 30 days
after the district board announces its decision in a public meeting. Upon
receipt of a written appeal, the State Board shall notify the district boards
in the State or shall otherwise make available to them information identifying
the materials at issue in any appeal(s) pending before the State Board. Any
district boards in which a challenge to the same material is also pending shall
stay their proceedings and abstain from further review or the rendering of a
decision to await the State Board's decision to appeal.
E. At or before the second regularly
scheduled meeting of the State Board after an appeal has been received pursuant
to subsection IV.D., a quorum of the State Board or, in the discretion of the
State Board, a committee comprised of at least five of the State Board's
members, must conduct a public meeting to consider the appeal. If such meeting
is conducted by a quorum of the State Board, the State Board shall, at that
public meeting, vote to grant or deny, in whole or in part, the relief
requested by the Complainant. If such meeting is conducted by a committee of
the State Board, the committee shall provide a report and recommendation to the
full State Board to be considered and either adopted or rejected by the State
Board at its next regularly scheduled meeting. The public meetings contemplated
in this subsection shall be held in accordance with the requirements of the
South Carolina Freedom of Information Act, and the Complainant and other
interested parties must be allowed to appear and present information in support
of or in opposition to the relief requested in the complaint. If the State
Board finds that Existing Instructional Materials identified in an appeal do
not satisfy the requirements of this regulation, the State Board shall instruct
the district board to remove entirely or discontinue use of said materials for
any grade level or age group for which such use is inappropriate or unsuitable,
or to make such materials available to a student only upon receipt of the
consent of the student's parent or legal guardian. The State Board shall, at
the time it communicates its decision to the district board, provide a written
explanation for its conclusion and decision that is publicly available and that
includes an explanation of how the State Board applied and complied with the
decisional criteria and requirements of this regulation.
F. In no event shall the State Board's
decision in a matter arising under subsection IV.D. and IV.E of this section be
based primarily on or motivated primarily by disagreement with or opposition to
the viewpoints expressed within the challenged material.
V. District's Selection of New Instructional
Materials
A. Any New Instructional Material
must be determined to comply with and satisfy the criteria set out in Section
III of this regulation prior to being made available to students in the
classroom, school library/media center, or reading list. Once available to
students, such materials will be deemed Existing Instructional Materials that
are subject to the challenge, review, and appeal process described in Section
IV of this regulation.
B. In no
event shall a decision in a matter arising under this Section be based
primarily on or motivated primarily by disagreement with or opposition to the
viewpoints expressed within the challenged material.
VI. Statewide Effect of the State Board of
Education's Determination of the Educational Suitability or the Age or
Developmental Appropriateness of Specific Instructional Materials
A. A decision by the State Board sitting in
its capacity as an administrative appellate forum described in subsections
IV.D. and IV.E of this regulation regarding the educational suitability or the
Age or Developmental Appropriateness of a specific book or other Instructional
Material pursuant to the criteria and requirements of this regulation shall be
deemed conclusive and binding on all public schools, public school districts,
and district boards in this State until such time as the State Board alters or
revises its determination. At the time the State Board communicates such
decision to the district board from which the appeal arose, the State Board
shall also communicate its decision to each district board in the State. All
district boards shall promptly comply with the State Board's conclusion by, in
the case of Existing Instructional Material found unsuitable or age or
developmentally inappropriate, removing the material, and in the case of any
new instructional material found unsuitable or age or developmentally
inappropriate, by not acquiring, obtaining, or purchasing such material in the
future.
B. In addition, the State
Board may, but is not required to, of its own volition and on its own
initiative, make determinations regarding the educational suitability or the
Age or Developmental Appropriateness of specific Instructional Materials
pursuant to the criteria and requirements of this regulation. Such
determinations shall be communicated to every district board in the State and
shall be conclusive and binding on all public schools, public school districts,
and district boards in this State until such time as the State Board alters or
revises its determination.
C. A
district board that is in receipt of a complaint submitted pursuant to
subsection IV.A of this regulation may, by written request submitted to the
State Board's chairperson within 30 days after the district's receipt of the
complaint, request that the State Board accept jurisdiction over the complaint
and consider and decide it in the first instance. The decision of whether to
grant such a request is in the sole discretion of the State Board, and, if its
declines such a request, the complaint shall be reviewed and decided by the
district board pursuant to subsection IV.A, IV.B., and IV.C. of this
regulation.
D. The fact that the
State Board of Education has not opined on the educational suitability, or the
age or developmental appropriateness of a given book or other Instructional
Material does not give rise to any presumption that the material is or is not
educationally suitable or Age and Developmentally Appropriate.
VII. Enforcement
If, after investigation, the State Board determines that a
public school district, a district board, or a district employee has violated
or failed to comply with or apply the criteria and requirements described in
this regulation, the school district or the employee of the school district, as
applicable, will be subject to the following:
A. For a first violation or failure, the
State Board shall issue a written warning to the district board or to the
employee, as applicable.
B. For a
second or subsequent violation or failure, if the State Board determines that
the violation or failure was knowing or intentional or willful or recklessly
disregarded the district's or the employee's actual or constructive knowledge
of the criteria and requirements in this regulation, the district
Superintendent or the relevant employee or the district's board chairperson may
be subject to a hearing conducted by the State Board, and any response that the
Board, in its discretion, deems appropriate.
VIII. Preemption
A. This regulation shall, upon its effective
date, preempt, supersede, and replace any district, local or school policy or
practice to the extent such policy or program is inconsistent with this
regulation.
B. The requirements of
this regulation apply to and supplement the process by which local district
boards selects or approves of textbooks; however, nothing in this regulation is
intended to alter, diminish, or supersede the requirements and process for the
selection and procurement of textbooks under S.C. Code Ann. Section
59-31-550 and its implementing
regulations.
C. Nothing in this
regulation is intended to supersede the provisions of the South Carolina Code,
including South Carolina's Comprehensive Health Education Act (S.C. Code Ann.
Section 59-32-5
et.
seq.), Erin's Law (S.C. Code Ann. Section
59-32-20(B)),
Gavin's Law (S.C. Code Ann. Section
16-15-430), or any other law
relating to educating children about how to report sexual abuse.
D. Nothing in this regulation is intended to
alter or diminish parents' rights under the Constitution, other laws,
regulations, or policies to request that their child opt-out of participation
in or the use of specific books, lessons, or materials used in his or her
public school, even if those books, lessons, or materials are otherwise
permissible under the standard and processes established by this
regulation.