2019 -- H 5426 | |
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LC001153 | |
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STATE OF RHODE ISLAND | |
IN GENERAL ASSEMBLY | |
JANUARY SESSION, A.D. 2019 | |
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A N A C T | |
RELATING TO EDUCATION - SCREENING AND EDUCATION OF CHILDREN WITH | |
DYSLEXIA AND RELATED DISORDERS | |
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Introduced By: Representative Robert J. Quattrocchi | |
Date Introduced: February 14, 2019 | |
Referred To: House Health, Education & Welfare | |
(by request) | |
It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows: | |
1 | SECTION 1. Title 16 of the General Laws entitled "EDUCATION" is hereby amended |
2 | by adding thereto the following chapter: |
3 | CHAPTER 67.2 |
4 | SCREENING AND EDUCATION OF CHILDREN WITH DYSLEXIA AND RELATED |
5 | DISORDERS |
6 | 16-67.2-1. Legislative findings. |
7 | (1) Dyslexia is a specific learning disability that is neurobiological in origin, |
8 | characterized by difficulties with accurate or fluent word recognition and by poor spelling and |
9 | decoding abilities that typically result from a deficient in the phonological component of |
10 | language, and often unexpected in relation to other cognitive abilities and the provision of |
11 | effective classroom instruction, with secondary consequences which include problems with |
12 | reading comprehension and reduced reading experience that can impede growth of vocabulary |
13 | and background knowledge. |
14 | (2) Twenty percent (20%) of school-aged children in the United States are dyslexic. |
15 | (3) Somewhere between twenty-five percent (25%) and forty percent (40%) of children |
16 | with dyslexia also have ADHD and conversely, approximately thirty-five percent (35%) of |
17 | children with ADHD also have dyslexia. |
18 | (4) Approximately eighty-percent (80%) of children placed in special education for |
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1 | learning disabilities are dyslexic. |
2 | (5) Dyslexia does not reflect an overall defect in language, but a localized weakness |
3 | within the phonologic module of the brain, where sounds of language are put together to form |
4 | words or break words down into sounds. |
5 | (6) Most children identified as having characteristics of dyslexia and related disorders can |
6 | be remediated successfully by explicit, systematic, multisensory instruction in phonics and |
7 | morphology. |
8 | (7) The cost of screening and treating dyslexia or a related disorder early is significantly |
9 | less than the cost of intensive remediation in the later school years for a child with dyslexia or a |
10 | related disorder. |
11 | (8) People with dyslexia are often more creative and have average to above average |
12 | intelligence. |
13 | (9) When intervention is delayed, it takes four (4) times as long to intervene in fourth |
14 | grade as it does in late kindergarten because of brain development and because of the increase in |
15 | content for students to learn as they grow older. |
16 | (10) Approximately eighty percent (80%) of prison populations are functionally illiterate. |
17 | (11) Approximately forty-eight percent (48%) of prison populations are dyslexic. |
18 | (12) The fee to cover the average cost of incarceration for federal inmates in fiscal year |
19 | 2015 was thirty-one thousand nine hundred seventy-seven dollars and sixty-five cents |
20 | ($31,977.65) or eighty-seven dollars and sixty-one cents ($87.61) per day. The average annual |
21 | cost to confine an inmate in a residential re-entry center for fiscal year 2015 was twenty-six |
22 | thousand eighty-two dollars and ninety cents ($26,082.90) or seventy-one dollars and forty-six |
23 | cents ($71.46) per day. |
24 | 16-67.2-2. Screening for dyslexia and related disorders. |
25 | (a) In addition to the provisions set forth in chapter 67 of this title, commencing in school |
26 | calendar year 2020-2021, all students in grades kindergarten through grade twelve (K-12) |
27 | including English for speakers of other languages students, enrolling in Rhode Island's public |
28 | schools, shall be screened using the Comprehensive Test of Phonological Processing (CTOPP) |
29 | for the identification of characteristics that are associated with risk factors for dyslexia, and the |
30 | related disorders of dyscalculia and dysgraphia, and yearly thereafter, to monitor progress. For |
31 | school calendar years after 2020-2021, all students entering kindergarten, and all students who |
32 | have not been tested must be tested. |
33 | (b) The screening of students shall be performed with fidelity and include without |
34 | limitation: |
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1 | (1) Phonological and phonemic awareness; |
2 | (2) Sound symbol recognition; |
3 | (3) Alphabet knowledge; |
4 | (4) Decoding skills; |
5 | (5) Rapid naming skills; |
6 | (6) Encoding skills; and |
7 | (7) Morphology, and/or structured word inquiry. |
8 | (c) If the screening shows a student is at risk, then said student shall receive immediate |
9 | intervention using the phonics-based method called Orton-Gillingham. |
10 | (d) The parent, or legal guardian of any student who is identified as having characteristics |
11 | that are associated with the risk factors for dyslexia, or related disorders of dyscalculia, or |
12 | dysgraphia shall be notified, and provided with all evaluation information and findings, in |
13 | addition to yearly evaluative results, based on individual written intervention and support plans |
14 | developed with the student's parents or legal guardian. |
15 | (e) A parent or legal guardian of any student who is identified as having characteristics |
16 | that are associated with risk factors for dyslexia, or the related disorders of dyscalculia, or |
17 | dysgraphia has the right to submit the results of an independent neuropsychological evaluation by |
18 | a licensed pediatric neuropsychologist highly trained in dyslexia, and/or the related disorders of |
19 | dyscalculia and dysgraphia, which recommendations shall be implemented by the school district. |
20 | (f) A parent, or legal guardian, who submits an independent evaluation shall assume all |
21 | fiscal responsibility for said independent evaluation, unless the parent, or guardian is receiving |
22 | state assistance, in which case the state of Rhode Island shall assume fiscal responsibility through |
23 | the parent, or legal guardian's state supported health insurance. |
24 | (g) Until such time that all kindergarten through grade eight (K-8) teachers have been |
25 | Orton-Gillingham certified, the school district must provide dyslexia therapy by individuals who |
26 | possess a level I certification in Orton-Gillingham. |
27 | 16-67.2-3. Teacher certification. |
28 | (a) A certification shall be defined as having completed the Orton-Gillingham Classroom |
29 | Educator Program as defined by the Academy of Orton-Gillingham Practitioners and Educators. |
30 | (b) No later than September 1, 2021, all kindergarten teachers must be certified. No later |
31 | than September 1, 2022, all first grade teachers must be certified. No later than September 1, |
32 | 2023, all second grade teachers must be certified. No later than September 1, 2024, all third grade |
33 | teachers must be certified. No later than September 1, 2025, all fourth grade teachers must be |
34 | certified. No later than September 1, 2026, all fifth grade teachers must be certified. No later than |
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1 | September 1, 2027, all sixth grade teachers must be certified. |
2 | (c) No later than September 1, 2021, any reading specialist, speech/language pathologist, |
3 | or any other person who will be addressing a child's literacy needs must be certified. |
4 | 16-67.2-4. Teacher professional development and training. |
5 | No later than September 1, 2021, each school district shall develop and make available a |
6 | program to ensure all teachers and school administrators have access to materials to support |
7 | professional awareness of best practices on: |
8 | (1) Recognition of the characteristics of dyslexia, related disorders, dyscalculia and |
9 | dysgraphia; and |
10 | (2) Evidence-based interventions and accommodations for dyslexia, related disorders, |
11 | dyscalculia and dysgraphia. |
12 | 16-67.2-5. Dyslexia professional awareness. |
13 | (a) No later than the 2020-2021 school year, the department of education shall ensure that |
14 | each teacher receives professional awareness on: |
15 | (1) The characteristics of dyslexia; and |
16 | (2) The evidence-based interventions and accommodations for dyslexia. |
17 | (b) Professional awareness shall be provided in conjunction with the Academy of Orton- |
18 | Gillingham Practitioners and Educators. |
19 | 16-67.2-6. Dyslexia resource guide. |
20 | No later than September 1, 2021, all school districts shall develop and publish on their |
21 | respective school website a reading support resource guide to be used by parents as a resource. |
22 | The school districts shall solicit the advice of the Academy of Orton-Gillingham Practitioners and |
23 | Educators in the development of the guide. |
24 | 16-67.2-7. Funding for professional development. |
25 | (a) In addition to the provisions set forth in ยง 16-67-4, each school district |
26 | board/committee shall provide funding for the professional development of their teachers in order |
27 | that their teachers can complete the Orton-Gillingham Classroom Educator Program and shall |
28 | direct expenditures from other funding sources to continuously strengthen the system in order to |
29 | increase student achievement and support instructional staff in enhancing rigor and relevance in |
30 | the classroom. |
31 | (b) A school district must coordinate its professional development program with a Rhode |
32 | Island college system institution or university, especially in preparing and educating personnel on |
33 | an on-going basis. |
34 | 16-67.2-8. Department of education responsibilities. |
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1 | (a) The department of education shall disseminate, using web-based technology research |
2 | based best practice methods by which the state and district school boards/committees shall |
3 | evaluate and improve the professional development system. The best practices must include data |
4 | that indicate the progress of all students. The department shall report annually to the state board |
5 | of education and the general assembly any school district that, in the determination of the |
6 | department, has failed to provide an adequate professional development system. This report must |
7 | include the results of the department's investigation and of any intervention provided. |
8 | (b) The department shall also disseminate, using web-based technology, professional |
9 | development in the use of integrated digital instruction at schools that include middle grades. The |
10 | professional development must provide training and materials that districts can use to provide |
11 | instructional personnel with the necessary knowledge, skills, and strategies to effectively blend |
12 | digital instruction into subject-matter curricula. The professional development must emphasize |
13 | online learning and research techniques, reading instruction, the use of digital devices to |
14 | supplement the delivery of curricular content to students, and digital device management and |
15 | security. |
16 | (c) The department shall also establish a position within the department of education for a |
17 | reading specialist certified by Orton-Gillingham at a classroom educator level, as defined by the |
18 | Academy of Orton-Gillingham Practitioners and Educators, to assist school districts. |
19 | 16-67.2-9. Dyslexia and related disorder education in teacher preparation programs. |
20 | No later than the 2021-2022 school year, the department of education shall collaborate |
21 | with the commissioner of higher education to require that all teacher education programs offered |
22 | at state-supported institutions of higher education require: |
23 | (1) Dyslexia professional awareness of the characteristics of dyslexia; |
24 | (2) Evidence-based interventions and accommodations for dyslexia; and |
25 | (3) Completion of an Orton-Gillingham classroom educator program as defined by the |
26 | Academy of Orton-Gillingham Practitioners and Educators. |
27 | 16-67.2-10. Dyscalculia. |
28 | No later than September 1, 2021, any student identified as having dyslexia shall be |
29 | assumed to also have a diagnosis of dyscalculia and instructed in Singapore Math. |
30 | 16-67.2-11. Research committee. |
31 | (a) No later than January 1, 2020, the general assembly shall form a study commission |
32 | consisting of five (5) members appointed by the governor comprising of two (2) parents of a |
33 | dyslexic child, one being Attorney Joseph Maggiacomo III, one board member of Decoding |
34 | Dyslexia Rhode Island, one elementary school teacher, and one representative from the Rhode |
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1 | Island Federation of Teachers, to establish a plan for two (2) schools, to be located on the |
2 | University of Rhode Island and Rhode Island College campuses, which will be dedicated solely |
3 | to the instruction of dyslexic children. |
4 | (b) The study commission will be funded by the general assembly, and shall visit no less |
5 | than four (4) schools dedicated to the education of dyslexic children, to include, but not limited |
6 | to, The Landmark School, located in Prides Corner, Massachusetts, The Carroll School, located in |
7 | Waltham and Lincoln, Massachusetts, The Einstein School, located in Plano, Texas, and the |
8 | Schenck School, located in Atlanta, Georgia. |
9 | (c) The committee shall render a report to the general assembly prior to the |
10 | commencement of the 2021 legislative session. |
11 | SECTION 2. This act shall take effect upon passage. |
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LC001153 | |
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EXPLANATION | |
BY THE LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL | |
OF | |
A N A C T | |
RELATING TO EDUCATION - SCREENING AND EDUCATION OF CHILDREN WITH | |
DYSLEXIA AND RELATED DISORDERS | |
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1 | This act would require all elementary and secondary public schools to provide screening |
2 | for dyslexia and related disorders to their students and establish an appropriate plan for their |
3 | treatment and/or education commencing in the school year 2020-2021 and continuing and create |
4 | a study commission for two (2) schools to be located on the University of Rhode Island and |
5 | Rhode Island College campuses dedicated solely to the instruction of dyslexic children. |
6 | This act would take effect upon passage. |
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LC001153 | |
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