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HomeEducation CodeCh. 9Art. 5§ 54690 High School Partnership Academies

§ 54690 High School Partnership Academies

Education Code·California
AI Summary·Official Text·Key Terms·Related Statutes·References
AI SummaryVerified

§ 54690 High School Partnership Academies

Key Takeaways

  • •This law is about special programs in high schools called California Partnership Academies. They help kids who might drop out of school by mixing regular school work with job training.
  • •These programs teach skills in different jobs like computers, finance, or building things. They have won awards and help kids stay in school.
  • •The law wants more of these programs in schools and wants to let more kids join, even if they are not at risk of dropping out.
  • •Kids can join these programs if they have problems like bad grades, not coming to school a lot, or not liking regular school.

Example

A high school student named Alex is always late, gets bad grades, and doesn't like school. He is thinking about quitting school.

Alex can join a Partnership Academy where he can learn about computers or building things while still doing his regular school work. This might help him like school more and not drop out.

AI-generated — May contain errors. Not legal advice. Always verify source.

Official Source
View on CA.gov

§ 54690 High School Partnership Academies

(a) The Legislature hereby finds and declares that the partnership academies program has proven to be a highly effective state-school-private sector partnership, providing combined academic and occupational training to high school pupils who present a high risk of dropping out of school, and motivating those pupils to stay in school and graduate. Partnership academies are functioning in high schools across the state, with occupational education and skills development successfully offered in California’s 15 different industry sectors, including electronics, computer technology, finance, agribusiness, alternative energy, environmental design and construction, graphic arts and printing, international business, and space. Partnership academies have been honored with national awards for excellence, and the California partnership academies have been given high accolades in various textbooks and studies addressing career technical education or science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) programs. (b) The Legislature finds the partnership academies are in the forefront of school efforts to integrate academic and career technical education or STEM, and that they can be effective in providing an integrated learning program and high motivation toward pursuing skilled occupational fields to pupils at risk of dropping out of school and to pupils not motivated by the regular educational curriculum. Further, the Legislature finds the partnership academies can make a very positive contribution towards meeting the needs of the state for a highly skilled and educated workforce in the 21st century. (c) Therefore, the Legislature hereby states its intent to expand the number of partnership academies in this state’s high schools, hereafter to be known as California Partnership Academies; to broaden the availability of these learning experiences to interested pupils who do not meet the criteria of at-promise pupils; and to encourage the establishment of academies whose occupational fields address the needs of developing technologies. (d) For purposes of this article, “at-promise pupil” means a pupil enrolled in high school who is at risk of dropping out of school, as indicated by at least three of the following criteria: (1) Past record of irregular attendance. For purposes of this section, “irregular attendance” means absence from school 20 percent or more of the school year. (2) Past record of underachievement in which the pupil is at least one-third of a year behind the coursework for the respective grade level, or as demonstrated by credits achieved. (3) Past record of low motivation or a disinterest in the regular school program. (4) Disadvantaged economically. (5) Scoring below basic or far below basic in mathematics or English language arts on the standardized test administered pursuant to Article 4 (commencing with Section 60640) of Chapter 5 of Part 33. (6) Maintaining a grade point average of 2.2 or below, or the equivalent of a C minus. (e) Up to one-half of the pupils enrolled at a partnership academy may be pupils who do not meet the criteria of at-promise pupils. (f) The department may expend no more than 5 percent of the funds received to carry out this article on administrative expenses. (Amended by Stats. 2022, Ch. 114, Sec. 1. (AB 1923) Effective January 1, 2023.)

Last verified: January 23, 2026

Key Terms

partnershipeducationat-promise pupilsenvironmentalschoolcurriculumofferstudent

Related Statutes

  • § 54693 Partnership Academy Grant Eligibility
  • § 52376 High School Career Tech Funding
  • § 54692 School District Funding Match
  • § 79203 Calworks Curriculum Development Funding
  • § 79204 Calworks Student Support Services

References

  • Official text at leginfo.legislature.ca.gov
  • California Legislature. Education Code. Section 54690.
View Official Source