The Virginia Department of Education is organized into four divisions: Division of Budget, Finance, and Operations; Division of School Quality, Instruction, and Performance; Division of School Readiness; and the Department of Policy, Equity, and Communications.[3] Communication by the agency is handled through news releases and memoranda from the Superintendent of Public Instruction.
Educator licensure
Within the public schools in Virginia, teachers and school administrators must be licensed by the Department.[4]
Standards of learning
The state assesses student performance in the elementary school and secondary school grades by the Standards of Learning (SOL) test. Students are required to take them once they reach the third grade.[5] Virginia did not join the consortium of states to adopt the Common Core standards within the Commonwealth;[6] instead the Standards of Learning form the foundation for curriculum for all of Virginia's public schools.
Virginia provides Standards for certain subject areas that are not currently tested, including Technology, Computer Science, and World Languages.[7]
In response to the global COVID-19 pandemic, the Virginia Department of Education created a guidance document for Virginia's public school leaders focused on a return to learning for the Fall of 2020. In December, 2020, the Governor of Virginia recognized members of the Virginia Department of Education with his Honor Awards, for the agency's pandemic response with the Recover, Redesign, and Restart document.[9]
The American Rescue Plan Act of 2021 allocated $2.1 billion in pandemic relief money for Virginia public schools. Using $34 million of those funds, the Virginia Department of Education developed a grant program, "Onward and Upward: Supporting Literacy and Mathematics" awarding grants to public colleges and universities to develop resources and professional development programs for reading and mathematics teachers.[10]
References
^Home page. Virginia Department of Education. Retrieved on September 10, 2009.