Fla. Stat. § 1007.34
(1) There is established a college reach-out program to increase the number of low-income educationally disadvantaged students in grades 6-12 who, upon high school graduation, are admitted to and successfully complete postsecondary education. Participants should be students who otherwise would be unlikely to seek admission to a community college, state university, or independent postsecondary institution without special support and recruitment efforts. The State Board of Education shall adopt rules that provide for the following:
(5) In selecting proposals for approval, the State Board of Education shall give preference to:
(7) A proposal must contain the following information:
(e) A description of the program activities that must support the following goals:
1. Motivate students to pursue a postsecondary education.
2. Enhance students' basic learning skills and performance.
3. Strengthen students' and parents' understanding of the benefits of postsecondary education.
4. Foster academic, personal, and career development through supplemental instruction.
(f) An evaluation component that provides for the collection, maintenance, retrieval, and analysis of the data required by this paragraph. The data must be used to assess the extent to which programs have accomplished specific objectives and achieved the goals of the college reach-out program. The Department of Education shall develop specifications and procedures for the collection and transmission of the data. The annual project evaluation component must contain:
1. The student identification number and social security number, if available; the name of the public school attended; gender; ethnicity; grade level; and grade point average of each participant at the time of entry into the program.
2. The grade point average, grade, and promotion status of each of the participants in the program at the end of the academic year and any suspension or expulsion of a participant, if applicable.
3. The number and percentage of high school participants who satisfactorily complete 2 sequential years of a foreign language and Level 2 and 3 mathematics and science courses.
4. The number and percentage of participants eligible for high school graduation who receive a standard high school diploma or a high school equivalency diploma, pursuant to s. 1003.435
5. The number and percentage of 12th grade participants who are accepted for enrollment and who enroll in a postsecondary educational institution.
6. The number of participants who receive scholarships, grant aid, and work-study awards.
7. The number and percentage of participants who enroll in a public postsecondary educational institution and who fail to achieve a passing score, as defined in State Board of Education rule, on college placement tests pursuant to s. 1008.30
8. The number and percentage of participants who enroll in a postsecondary educational institution and have a minimum cumulative 2.0 grade point average on a 4.0 scale by the end of the second semester.
9. The number of disabled students participating in the project and the nature of their disabilities.
(8) Proposals must be funded competitively in accordance with the following methodology:
(a) The funds appropriated must be distributed to projects on the basis of minimum standards that include:
1. A summer residency program of at least 1 week in duration.
2. A minimum number of hours of academic instructional and developmental activities, career counseling, and personal counseling.
(11) On or before November 1 of each year, postsecondary educational institutions participating in the program shall submit to the Department of Education an end-of-the-year report on the effectiveness of their participation in the program. The end-of-the-year report must include, without limitation:
History.--s. 364, ch. 2002-387.