2012 -- H 7541

=======

LC01255

=======

STATE OF RHODE ISLAND

IN GENERAL ASSEMBLY

JANUARY SESSION, A.D. 2012

____________

A N A C T

RELATING TO HEALTH AND SAFETY -- DYSLEXIA DIAGNOSIS AND TREATMENT

     

     

     Introduced By: Representatives Naughton, Morrison, Keable, Baldelli-Hunt, and Walsh

     Date Introduced: February 15, 2012

     Referred To: House Health, Education & Welfare

It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows:

1-1

     SECTION 1. Title 23 of the General Laws entitled "HEALTH AND SAFETY" is hereby

1-2

amended by adding thereto the following chapter:

1-3

     CHAPTER 87

1-4

     THE RHODE ISLAND DYSLEXIA ACT

1-5

     23-87-1. Short title. – This chapter shall be known and may be cited as “The Rhode

1-6

Island Dyslexia Act.”

1-7

     23-87-2. Findings of fact. – The general assembly hereby finds and declares:

1-8

     (1) Dyslexia is a learning disability that is neurobiological in origin and characterized by

1-9

difficulties with accurate and fluent word recognition, poor spelling, and poor decoding abilities,

1-10

resulting in problems with reading comprehension and reduced reading experience that impede

1-11

the growth of vocabulary and background knowledge. Dyslexia is the most common cause of

1-12

reading, writing and spelling disabilities. According to the U.S. department of health and human

1-13

services, it is estimated that fifteen percent (15%) of American students may have dyslexia. This

1-14

translates to roughly twenty-one thousand (21,000) public school students in Rhode Island.

1-15

Students with dyslexia often exhibit weaknesses in underlying language skills involving

1-16

processing of speech sounds (phonological), print (orthographic), and in building brain pathways

1-17

that connect speech with print. Most students with dyslexia have limited awareness of the speech

1-18

sounds in spoken words and have difficulty segmenting words into individual phonemes. A

1-19

significant number of students in Rhode Island, including those with dyslexia, read below basic

1-20

reading levels and experience literacy challenges, which include difficulties with language

2-1

(spoken or written, including weaknesses in phoneme reading, phonics, vocabulary, fluency, or

2-2

comprehension), or difficulties with one or more of the basic neurobiological or psychological

2-3

processes involved in understanding or using language (spoken or written) that may manifest

2-4

itself in an imperfect ability to read, write or spell. Across the state and the nation, less than one-

2-5

third (1/3) of children with reading disabilities are receiving school services for their disability.

2-6

     (2) Treatment for Dyslexia. - Dyslexic students require an explicit approach to learning

2-7

language and specialized instruction to master the alphabetic code.

2-8

     Current research, much of it supported by the National Institute of Child Health and

2-9

Human Development (NICHD), has demonstrated the value of explicit, structured language

2-10

teaching for all students, especially those with dyslexia.

2-11

     While there are many programs and therapies available to address language-based

2-12

learning disabilities, not all have the level of duration, intensity, or methodologies that assure

2-13

desired results in a timely fashion. Overcoming most severe kinds of dyslexia may require many

2-14

years of specialized instruction. An improved awareness of and support for persons with dyslexia

2-15

and improved training of educators (including teachers, education administrators, education

2-16

officials, and other employees providing instruction, assessment, or special services for general,

2-17

compensatory, gifted, or special education) will help students, including those with dyslexia,

2-18

obtain the necessary instruction, support, skills, and resources to increase their success in school.

2-19

     23-87-3. Definitions. – As used in this chapter, the following terms are defined as

2-20

follows:

2-21

     (1) “Dyslexia” means a specific learning disability that is neurological in origin. It is

2-22

characterized by difficulties with accurate and/or fluent word recognition and by poor spelling

2-23

and decoding abilities. These difficulties typically result from a deficit in the phonological

2-24

component of language that is often unexpected in relation to other cognitive abilities and the

2-25

provision of typical classroom instruction. Secondary consequences may include problems in

2-26

reading comprehension and reduced reading experience that can impede the growth of vocabulary

2-27

and background knowledge.

2-28

     (2) “Scientifically-validated intervention” means: (i) A program or approach for the

2-29

treatment of individuals with reading disabilities or dyslexia that provides instruction in the skills

2-30

of reading, writing, and spelling through program content that includes:

2-31

     (A) Phoneme awareness;

2-32

     (B) Sound-symbol association;

2-33

     (C) Syllable types and division;

3-34

     (D) Morphology;

3-35

     (E) Syntax;

3-36

     (E) Semantics (Comprehension);

3-37

     (G) Spelling;

3-38

     (H) Fluency;

3-39

     (I) Written Expression;

3-40

     (J) Handwriting; and

3-41

     (ii) Follows principles of instruction that include:

3-42

     (A) Systematic and cumulative. - Language instruction requires that the organization of

3-43

material follows the logical order of the language in sufficient depth. The sequence must begin

3-44

with the easiest and most basic concepts and progress methodically to more difficult material.

3-45

Each concept must also be based on those already learned. Concepts taught must be

3-46

systematically reviewed to strengthen memory and ensure automaticity;

3-47

     (B) Direct Instruction - All concepts must be taught through explicit instruction with

3-48

continuous student-teacher interaction;

3-49

     (C) Diagnostic Teaching - The teacher must be adept at flexible, individualized teaching.

3-50

The teaching plan is based on careful and continuous assessment of the individual’s progress in

3-51

learning concepts and developing skills to automaticity. The content presented must be mastered

3-52

step by step in order for the student to progress;

3-53

     (D) Synthetic Instruction - Structured language approaches and progress include both

3-54

synthetic and analytic instruction, but relies most heavily on synthetic. Synthetic instruction

3-55

presents the parts of written language and then teaches how the parts work together to form a

3-56

whole. Analytic instruction presents the whole and teaches how this can broken down into its

3-57

component parts;

3-58

     (E) Comprehensive and inclusive instruction - All levels of language are addressed, often

3-59

in parallel, including sounds (phonemes), symbols (graphemes), advanced decoding concepts

3-60

(e.g. syllable types), meaningful word parts (morphemes), word and phrase meanings (semantics),

3-61

sentences (syntax), longer passages (discourse), the social uses of language (pragmatics); and

3-62

     (F) Considers a multisensory visual-auditory-kinesthetic-tactile (VAKT) instructional

3-63

approach.

3-64

     (3) “Duration” means treatment (intervention) that is intensive enough and continues long

3-65

enough to have a positive effect that will endure. This usually involves instruction that continues

3-66

for at least a year, and often longer depending upon individual needs.

3-67

     (4) “Knowledge and practice standards” means the minimum content knowledge and

3-68

experience levels required for teachers who support students with reading disabilities or dyslexia.

4-1

     (5) “Fidelity” means that intervention programming for students with reading disabilities

4-2

or dyslexia shall use appropriate approaches and materials to support skill mastery. Furthermore,

4-3

evidence of skill mastery shall be demonstrated through appropriate ongoing progress monitoring

4-4

and assessment across all components of reading.

4-5

     23-87-4. Legislative purpose and policy. – It shall be the goal and purpose of this

4-6

chapter to require Rhode Island schools to recognize dyslexia and treat the literacy challenges of

4-7

dyslexic students in a proactive manner; and to establish a working group to develop a

4-8

comprehensive plan to improve awareness of and strengthen support for persons with dyslexia.

4-9

     23-87-5. Implementation, recognition and treatment. – In developing personal literacy

4-10

plans (PLPs) tier 2 & 3 literacy intervention plans, and individualized education plans (IEPs),

4-11

local education agencies (LEAs) must expressly consider symptoms and diagnoses of dyslexia.

4-12

Instructional plans for students with reading disabilities and dyslexia must be compared of all

4-13

components of any specifically selected or designed scientifically-validated interventions and

4-14

these interventions must occur with sufficient fidelity and duration. LEAs must provide students

4-15

with reading disabilities or dyslexia with qualified individual in accordance with intervention

4-16

protocols or standards of practice generally acceptable amongst similarly practicing individuals

4-17

who have attained knowledge and practice standards necessary for remediating these reading

4-18

difficulties.

4-19

     SECTION 2. This act shall take effect upon passage.

     

=======

LC01255

=======

EXPLANATION

BY THE LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL

OF

A N A C T

RELATING TO HEALTH AND SAFETY -- DYSLEXIA DIAGNOSIS AND TREATMENT

***

5-1

     This act would enact the Rhode Island dyslexia act to establish policies and treatment for

5-2

students with dyslexia in Rhode Island schools.

5-3

     This act would take effect upon passage.

     

=======

LC01255

=======

H7541