2015 -- H 5697 SUBSTITUTE A | |
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LC001305/SUB A | |
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STATE OF RHODE ISLAND | |
IN GENERAL ASSEMBLY | |
JANUARY SESSION, A.D. 2015 | |
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A N A C T | |
RELATING TO EDUCATION -- INSTRUCTION FOR DEAF OR HARD-OF-HEARING | |
STUDENTS | |
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Introduced By: Representatives Handy, Jacquard, Naughton, Messier, and Williams | |
Date Introduced: February 26, 2015 | |
Referred To: House Health, Education & Welfare | |
It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows: | |
1 | SECTION 1. Section 16-25.2-3 of the General Laws in Chapter 16-25.2 entitled |
2 | "Instruction for Deaf or Hard of Hearing Students [See Title 16 Chapter 97 - The Rhode Island |
3 | Board of Education Act]" is hereby amended to read as follows: |
4 | 16-25.2-3. Assessment. – (a) The Rhode Island department of elementary and secondary |
5 | education shall ensure that appropriate language assessments and standardized norms are used for |
6 | the purpose of monitoring and tracking language benchmarks in both expressive and receptive |
7 | language acquisition and developmental stages towards American Sign Language (ASL) and |
8 | English literacy for all deaf and hard of hearing children. For purposes of these considerations, |
9 | language shall be considered the cognitive ability to learn and use systems of complex |
10 | communication, separate from modality employed to communicate. |
11 | (a) (b) Individuals involved in administering assessment tools to students who are deaf or |
12 | hard of hearing shall be proficient in the student’s primary communication mode, style, or |
13 | language as determined by a language assessment American Sign Language and English |
14 | consistent with the requirements of § 16-25.2- All assessments shall be delivered in the student’s |
15 | primary communication mode, style, or language as determined by a language assessment |
16 | American Sign Language and English consistent with the requirements of § 16-25.2-2, shall have |
17 | been validated for the specific purposes for which they are used, and shall be appropriately |
18 | normed. |
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1 | (c) Language benchmarks must provide data and annual tracking that informs as to the |
2 | individual child's receptive and expressive language and cognitive abilities comparative to the |
3 | child's linguistically age-appropriate peers who are not deaf or hard-of-hearing, using ASL and/or |
4 | English in order to be school-ready. |
5 | (d) Language benchmarks shall be chosen from existing standardized norms and shall be |
6 | selected by an advisory committee of the Rhode Island department of education as defined in |
7 | §16-25.2-3.1 (a) and (b), which would require that these benchmarks be used by a child's |
8 | individualized education program (IEP) or individual family service plan as regulated by the |
9 | department of human services (IFSP) team, to assess the progress of the child's language |
10 | development in both languages of American Sign Language and English. For purposes of this |
11 | section, English includes spoken English, written English, or English with the use of visual |
12 | supplements. |
13 | (e) All results shall be shared with parents. |
14 | (f) When the language assessment/benchmarks indicate that the child does not |
15 | demonstrate progress in age-appropriate expressive and receptive language skills, according to |
16 | the applicable benchmarks, the benchmarks shall be disseminated to the child’s IEP or IFSP team, |
17 | including parents and guardians of the deaf or hard-of-hearing child, along with materials and |
18 | training to ensure appropriate language growth remains a priority and continues to be monitored |
19 | annually in the child’s IEP or IFSP. |
20 | (g) The individualized education plan (IEP) or the individual family service plan (IFSP) |
21 | must include as much detail as possible to explain the lack of such skills and make specific |
22 | recommendations as to what strategies, services, and programs will be available to assist the |
23 | child in becoming linguistically ready for kindergarten and/or linguistically age-appropriate. |
24 | These recommendations shall be part of the child's ISFP/IEP file and all |
25 | recommendations shall be carefully considered by the child's IFSP/IEP team in developing the |
26 | child's educational plans. |
27 | (h) A qualified language expert in American Sign Language and other language experts, |
28 | as deemed appropriate for the language acquisition of the child, shall be part of the IFSP or IEP |
29 | team. |
30 | (i) The Rhode Island department of education with assistance of an advisory committee |
31 | as defined in §16-25.2-3.1 shall develop specific plans and regulations by January 31, 2017, to |
32 | fully implement this "language assessment" program. |
33 | 16-25.2-3.1. Implementation – (a) On or before January 1, 2016, the department shall |
34 | establish an advisory committee for purposes of soliciting input from experts on the selection of |
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1 | specific language benchmarks for children, ages of zero through twenty-one (0-21), who are deaf |
2 | or hard of hearing, reviewing and monitoring the use of existing language assessments of the deaf |
3 | and hard of hearing, and establishing and maintaining a list of qualified language assessment |
4 | evaluators. |
5 | (b) The advisory committee shall consist of five (5) volunteers, all of whom shall be |
6 | within the field of education of the deaf and hard-of-hearing and/or within the field of first and |
7 | second language acquisition. The advisory committee shall include all of the following: |
8 | (1) One credentialed teacher of deaf and hard-of-hearing pupils whose expertise is in |
9 | curriculum and instruction in ASL and English. |
10 | (2) One credentialed teacher of deaf and hard-of-hearing pupils whose expertise is in |
11 | curriculum and instruction in spoken English, with or without visual supplements. |
12 | (3) One professional whose expertise is in child development of deaf and hard-of-hearing |
13 | using the dual languages of ASL and English. |
14 | (4) One professional whose expertise is in child development of the deaf and hard-of- |
15 | hearing using spoken English with or without the use of visual supplements. |
16 | (5) One professional whose expertise is in first and second language acquisition of deaf |
17 | and hard-of-hearing. |
18 | SECTION 2. Chapter 23-13 of the General Laws entitled "Maternal and Child Health |
19 | Services for Children with Special Health Care Needs" is hereby amended by adding thereto the |
20 | following section: |
21 | 23-13-27. Assessment for deaf and hard-of-hearing language development. – (a) The |
22 | Rhode Island department of human services with assistance of the Rhode Island department of |
23 | education’s advisory committee as defined in §16-25.2-3.1 shall develop language assessments to |
24 | monitor deaf and hard-of-hearing children's developmental language benchmarks in American |
25 | Sign Language (ASL) and English literacy and, if applicable, spoken English and visual |
26 | supplements. Language benchmarks must include data and tracking that provides information as |
27 | to the individual child's receptive and expressive language comparative to the child's age and |
28 | cognitive abilities using ASL and/or English in order to be school-ready. |
29 | (b) Language benchmarks shall be chosen from existing standardized norms and shall be |
30 | selected by an advisory committee of the Rhode Island department of education, which would |
31 | require that these benchmarks be used by a child's individual education plan (IEP) or individual |
32 | family services plan as regulated by the department of human services (IFSP) team, to assess the |
33 | progress of the child's language development in both languages of American Sign Language and |
34 | English. For purposes of this section, English includes spoken English, written English, or |
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1 | English with the use of visual supplements. |
2 | (c) All results shall be shared with parents. |
3 | (d) When the language assessment/benchmarks indicate that the child does not |
4 | demonstrate progress in age-appropriate expressive and receptive language skills, according to |
5 | the applicable benchmarks, the benchmarks shall be disseminated to the child's IEP or IFSP team, |
6 | including parents and guardians of the deaf or hard-of-hearing child, along with materials and |
7 | training to ensure appropriate language growth remains a priority and continues to be monitored |
8 | annually in the child's IEP or IFSP. |
9 | (e) The IEP or the IFSP must include as much detail as possible to explain the lack of |
10 | such skills and make specific recommendations as to what strategies, services, and programs will |
11 | be available to assist the child in becoming linguistically ready for kindergarten and/or |
12 | linguistically age-appropriate. |
13 | These recommendations shall be part of the child's ISFP/IEP file and all |
14 | recommendations shall be carefully considered by the child's IFSP/IEP team in developing the |
15 | child's educational plans. |
16 | (f) A qualified language expert in American Sign Language and other language experts, |
17 | as deemed appropriate for the language acquisition of the child, shall be part of the IFSP or IEP |
18 | team. |
19 | (g) The Rhode Island department of education with assistance of an advisory committee |
20 | shall develop specific plans and regulations by January 31, 2017, to fully implement this |
21 | "language assessment" program. |
22 | SECTION 3. This act shall take effect on July 1, 2017. |
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EXPLANATION | |
BY THE LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL | |
OF | |
A N A C T | |
RELATING TO EDUCATION -- INSTRUCTION FOR DEAF OR HARD-OF-HEARING | |
STUDENTS | |
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1 | This act would mandate that the department of education (ages 5-21) in conjunction with |
2 | the department of human services (ages 0-3) develop programs to assess and monitor |
3 | developmental language benchmarks for deaf and hard-of-hearing children and would require that |
4 | Individual Education Plans (IEP) and Individual Family Service Plans (IFSP) include clear |
5 | recommendations and plans to assist the child in becoming linguistically age-appropriate and/or |
6 | kindergarten ready. Language experts would be part of the IEP and IFSP teams. |
7 | This act would take effect on July 1, 2017. |
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