Virginia Regulatory Town Hall
Agency
Department of Education
 
Board
State Board of Education
 
Guidance Document Change: The Virginia Department of Education (VDOE) evaluates student credentials on an on-going basis against prescribed criteria for graduation requirements for the Standard Diploma 8VAC20-132-51(B) and verified credit(s) (8VAC20-132-110(C). The process for reviewing and validating student credentials for the purpose of awarding verified credit is based on the following criteria: (1) the test must be standardized and graded independently of the school or school division in which the test is given; (2) the test must be knowledge based; (3) the test must be administered on a statewide, multistate, or international basis, or administered as part of another state’s accountability assessment program; and (4) to be counted in a specific academic area, the test must measure content that incorporates or exceeds the Standards of Learning content in the course for which verified credit is given. Important to this process is ensuring that the credential is relevant and recognized in the workplace. The credential recommended for addition is the CAREER CONNECTIONS, Seal of Biliteracy. The credentials that are recommended for deletion as they have been discontinued by providers include the following: AGRICULTURAL EDUCATION, (i) Agricultural Biotechnology Assessment (NOCTI); (ii) Floriculture Assessment (NOCTI); (iii) Floriculture: Greenhouse Assessment (NOCTI); and (iv) Natural Resources Systems Assessment. BUSINESS AND INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY, (i) Banking and Related Services Assessment (NOCTI); (ii) IT Fundamentals Pro Examination (TestOut Corporation); (iii) Network Pro Certification Examination (TestOut Corporation); and (iv) PC Pro Certification Examination (TestOut Corporation). FAMILY AND CONSUMER SCIENCES, (i) Education and Training Assessment (NOCTI); (ii) Hospitality Management- Food and Beverage Assessment (NOCTI); (iii) Restaurant, Food and Beverage Services Assessment (NOCTI). HEALTH AND MEDICAL SCIENCES, (i) Diagnostic Services Assessment (NOCTI); (ii) Medical Assistant Certification (MAC) Examination (American Medical Certification Association (AMCA); (iii) Practical Nursing Assessment (NOCTI); (iv) Therapeutic Services Assessment (NOCTI). MARKETING, (i)Lodging Assessment (NOCTI). TECHNOLOGY AND ENGINEERING EDUCATION, (i) Mechanical Drafting and Design Assessment (NOCTI). TRADE AND INDUSTRIAL EDUCATION, (i) Automotive Technician- Advanced Assessment (NOCTI); (ii) CAD-CAM Assessment (NOCTI); (iii) Industrial Electricity Assessment (NOCTI); (iv) Protective Services Assessment (NOCTI); (v) Construction Masonry- Block Assessment (NOCTI); (vi) Emergency and Fire Management Services Assessment (NOCTI); (vii) Emergency Medical Services Assessment (NOCTI).
Previous Comment     Next Comment     Back to List of Comments
9/26/25  1:25 pm
Commenter: Hannah Huggins

Seal of Biliteracy
 

I am writing concerning the new Virginia Board posting of industry credentials that specify that the Seal of Biliteracy is "not eligible for 3E Readiness and CTE Federal and State Reimbursement". 
This is concerning since multilingualism is one of the skills that will get our children ahead in the workforce. We cannot expect our workforce to complete with other world powers if our workforce cannot adequately communicate with them. Additionally, if we look at our greatest competitors in the global market, such as China, India, and Mexico it is painfully obvious that these countries all have higher percentages of bilingual or multilingualism since their governments require or highly incentivize the ability to speak multiple language. Therefore, I do not understand why we seem to be intentionally hamstringing our students or at least not properly incentivizing them to learn a language so that we can create a more competitive and lucrative workforce. Multilingualism will be an asset to all students' careers and their career growth whether employed immediately, enrolling in a postsecondary school, or enlisting in the military.

I urge the board to remove this restriction to ensure the Seal of Biliteracy is recognizable both as an industry credential and as a reimbursable measure of 3E Readiness so that our kids can have a chance of competing in the global market. 

CommentID: 237390