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For additional Information, contact the Communications Department at 515/281-5651.
Iowa's public education system includes local school districts serving students in pre-kindergarten through 12th grade; Area Education Agencies (AEAs) that provide support and assistance to the districts in a given region; community colleges that provide a wide range of coursework to students of all ages; and four-year colleges and universities.
The Iowa Department of Education and State Board of Education are
responsible for the local schools, AEAs, and community colleges , while
the Iowa Board of Regents is responsible for the public four-year colleges.
Local School Districts
Each local district in Iowa must offer a complete education in all grades from kindergarten through 12th
grade. All state residents are entitled to free public education up to
age 18, and state law requires that all youngsters between the ages of
6-16 attend school either in their assigned "resident" district,
through open enrollment to another district, or through
home-schooling (competent private instruction ).
Quick Facts About Iowa Public Schools: 2005-06
Districts:
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365 |
| School Buildings: |
1,514 |
| Students: |
483,482 |
Graduation Rate:
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90.7% (04-05)
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| Teachers: |
34,175 |
While local districts are governed by state and federal laws that set
broad parameters regarding coursework requirements, assessments, and
teacher qualifications, each has its own locally elected board of
directors that sets specific policy, defines academic requirements and
approves the local budget.
All districts must be accredited by the state Department of Education
in order to remain in operation. Accreditation reviews occur every five
years and seek to ensure the district is meeting all state and federal
requirements and maintains a quality education system for all students.
Curriculum requirements in Iowa Schools
Iowa has established state content standards for curriculum, and
each district is required to develop their own content standards that
incorporate the state standards.
All districts are required to "offer and teach" certain types and
numbers of courses, although each district administration selects its
own curriculum, textbooks, and other classroom materials. The "offer
and teach" requirements are outlined in Iowa Administrative Rule 281 Chapter 12 .
Generally, elementary grades 1-6 must teach language arts,
math, science, health, physical education, traffic safety, music and
visual arts.
Junior high grades 7-8 must teach language arts, social studies, math,
science, health, human growth and development, physical education,
music, visual art, family and consumer education, career education, and
technology education.
High school grades 9-12 must offer at a minimum six units of language
arts, five units of social studies, six units of math, five units of
science, one unit of health, one unit of physical education, three
units of ine arts, four units of foreign language, and 12 units of
vocational education.
Instruction must include the contributions and perspectives of persons
with disabilities, both men and women, and persons from diverse racial
and ethnic groups, and shall be designed to eliminate career and
employment stereotypes.
Graduation requirements
Currently the state does not designate a minimum number of courses
needed to graduate, but does require that students take US history and
Iowa government and physical education in order to graduate. Districts
are required to establish their own graduation requirements that
include the types of courses and number of credits.
Under state law passed in 2006, beginning with the graduating class of
2010 students must earn four credits in English language arts, three
credits in math, three credits in science, and three credits in social
studies to earn their high school diploma.
Teacher qualifications
All classroom teachers must be properly licensed and certified in their subject area. Licensure requirements are set by the Board of Educational Examiners .
Area Education Agencies (AEAs)
Iowa Area Education Agencies
are regional service agencies that provide school improvement services
for students, families, teachers, administrators and their communities.
Each AEA is governed by a locally elected Board of Directors of between
five and nine members, responsible for ensuring the AEA operates in the
best interests of the students in accordance with state law.
The AEAs work as educational partners with public and accredited
private schools. Agency staff members, school staff and families work
together to help all children reach their highest potential.
As intermediate agencies, AEAs offer the kinds of services that can be
most efficiently and economically provided on a regional or cooperative
basis among school districts. The Iowa system is widely regarded as one
of the foremost regional service systems in the country.
AEA programs and services fall into nine areas (below) that are defined
by state AEA accreditation standards. Specific programs are outlined in
each agency's Comprehensive Improvement Plan.
- School-Community Planning
- Professional Development
- Curriculum, Instruction and Assessment
- Diverse Learning Needs
- Multicultural, Gender-Fair
- Media
- School Technology
- Leadership
- Management
Community Colleges
Iowa has a statewide system of 15 community colleges
. These public, postsecondary, two-year institutions are organized as
comprehensive community colleges. Each college serves a multi-county
merged area that may vary in size from four to twelve counties; all of
Iowa's 99 counties are included in one of these merged areas.
Community colleges are governed by locally elected boards of directors
that consist of from five to nine members who are elected for terms of
three years. Each community college offers a comprehensive educational
program. All Iowans of postsecondary school age are eligible to attend
any of the community colleges. Community colleges also offer special
programs for students who attend local secondary schools.
Community colleges have an "open-door" admission policy that guarantees
Iowans an opportunity for educational assistance and career development
regardless of previous educational attainment. To implement this
policy, community colleges offer: assistance in developing skills
necessary for success in preparatory career and college parallel
programs; supplementary services to disabled and disadvantaged
students; and a variety of other support services designed to help
students succeed.
The state's community colleges have an "open-door" admission policy
that guarantees Iowans an opportunity for educational assistance and
career development regardless of previous educational attainment. Each
community college offers a comprehensive educational program in three
major areas of instruction:
- Adult education, including adult basic education programs
for adults who have less than an eighth grade education; high school
completion programs leading to adult high school diplomas and high
school equivalency diploma; supplementary career programs of vocational
and technical education; and continuing education programs.
- Preparatory
career programs of vocational and technical education, to provide
preparation for immediate employment in a wide variety of careers.
Those training programs ordinarily require full-time instruction of
four weeks to two years.
- College parallel coursework,
which provides arts and sciences courses that may be transferred to
other colleges and universities as the equivalent of the first two
years of a four-year baccalaureate program.
Community colleges also offer unique educational programs and
opportunities such as programs for incarcerated individuals in
correctional facilities; evaluation and assessment centers;
developmental education programs and services for underprepared
students; special programs for the disabled, including sheltered
workshops; customized training programs for business and industry;
incubation centers to assist the development of small businesses; and
the administration of service delivery areas for the Federal Job
Training Partnership Act (JTPA).
The Iowa Community College Council, established in law, assists the
State Board of Education with substantial issues directly related to
the community college system. The Council also prepares a five-year
statewide strategic plan at least once every five years for Iowa's
community colleges in consultation with a working group of
stakeholders.
Iowa DE History
The Department of Education was created by the 35th General Assembly in
1913 and was originally called the Department of Public Instruction.
The current name was adopted in 1986. In its early years, the
department was charged with working with the many small, isolated
school buildings to build a formal system of public education that
included organized districts with defined duties and boundaries, as
well as specific qualifications for teachers. While the state
department was established to provide oversight, local schools
maintained the authority to set many of the rules and requirements for
their own students. This system of "local responsibility" - based on
the belief that local residents have the greatest interest in assuring
their children's success - continues today.
As the state progressed over the decades with greater diversity in
business, industry and population, the public education system evolved
to reflect and encompass those changes. In the mid-1960s, a system of
15 public, two-year community colleges was established to provide more
students the opportunity for continued education and training beyond
high school.
In the mid-1970s, the system of Area Education Agencies (AEAs) was
developed to provide regional support for local schools and their
teachers. Originally, the AEAs and community colleges shared the same
service area boundaries. In recent years, however, several AEAs have
merged to provide greater efficiency in regions with declining
population.
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