California Government Code § 65059.2

Government Code
Open in Lexace · Ask the AI about this section
(a) The California Education Learning Laboratory is hereby established as a program under the Office of Planning and Research. The purpose of the learning lab is to increase learning outcomes and to close equity and achievement gaps, using learning science and adaptive learning technologies in online or hybrid college-level lower division courses in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) and other disciplines. (b) (1) In administering the learning lab, the office shall issue calls for, evaluate, and annually award funds to, competitive grant proposals from intersegmental faculty teams that apply principles of learning science and adaptive learning technologies in online or hybrid course series in STEM and other disciplines, based on, but not limited to, all of the following criteria: (A) The potential for reducing achievement and equity gaps in the particular discipline that is the subject of the call for proposals. (B) The depth and breadth of expertise in the particular discipline and deployment of learning science or adaptive learning technologies across the proposal’s team members. (C) The prospects for increasing equity and accessibility in quality STEM education and other disciplines that show high initial failure or dropout rates, including scaling access to a newly developed or redesigned course or course series in the future. (D) The potential to incorporate real-time learning outcome data to improve the curriculum. (E) The potential to utilize a common technology platform to deliver the course or course series. (F) The representation of all three public higher education segments on the proposal’s faculty team. (G) The inclusion of career education and workforce pathways in the proposal. (H) Opportunities to leverage nonstate funding. (I) The quality of the concrete metrics and goals identified in the proposal. (2) The office shall monitor the progress of proposals awarded funds and evaluate them upon their completion. (3) (A) The office shall recruit an expert selection committee to score proposals and to recommend proposals to the office. (B) Members of the selection committee shall be deemed to not be interested in any contract, including any recommendation to award funds by the committee, formed pursuant to this section. (C) The selection committee shall comply with the Bagley-Keene Open Meeting Act (Article 9 (commencing with Section 11120) of Chapter 1 of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2), except during the deliberative process as it relates to scoring, reviewing, and ranking proposals and to making final recommendations to the office. (c) The office shall create, and post on a publicly available Internet Web site, guidelines for awarding funds pursuant to subdivision (b). The guidelines shall include, but are not limited to, all of the following: (1) A competitive, merit-based application process that allows faculty from public higher education institutions to submit proposals. For the first three years that proposals are accepted, the office shall select STEM disciplines from which to award proposals. The office may limit the number of submissions per higher education campus. (2) A comprehensive peer-reviewed proposal selection process. (3) Eligibility requirements, which shall include, but not be limited to, all of the following provisions: (A) At least two of the three public higher education segments must be represented by each proposal’s faculty team members. (B) All faculty team members must commit to teaching and evaluating the codeveloped or jointly redesigned curriculum during the grant period. (C) A proposal may include team members from private nonprofit institutions or nonfaculty, as appropriate. (4) Requirements regarding the use of awarded funds, including, but not limited to, a cap on indirect cost rates. (5) Requirements regarding the use and sharing of research data and findings. (6) Requirements for the protection of privacy and personal information. (d) (1) Beginning Ja

‹ Prev All California sections Next ›


Lexace provides legal information, not legal advice, and no attorney–client relationship is created. Statute text is provided for general information and may not reflect the most recent amendments; verify against the official state code.