2016 -- H 7052 | |
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LC003432 | |
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STATE OF RHODE ISLAND | |
IN GENERAL ASSEMBLY | |
JANUARY SESSION, A.D. 2016 | |
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A N A C T | |
RELATING TO EDUCATION | |
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Introduced By: Representatives O'Brien, DeSimone, Costa, McKiernan, and Keable | |
Date Introduced: January 07, 2016 | |
Referred To: House Health, Education & Welfare | |
It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows: | |
1 | SECTION 1. Section 16-67-2 of the General Laws in Chapter 16-67 entitled "Rhode |
2 | Island Literacy and Dropout Prevention Act [See Title 16 Chapter 97 - The Rhode Island Board |
3 | of Education Act]" is hereby amended to read as follows: |
4 | 16-67-2. The literacy program. – (a) Activities under this section shall include strategies |
5 | to improve the performance of students in mathematics, reading and writing, and to specifically |
6 | address issues of dyslexia. Such activities must be founded on a scientific research base, as |
7 | described in the No Child Left Behind Act of 2001, title I, part B, § 1208 (20 U.S.C. § 6368). |
8 | Reading instruction to improve the reading skills of all students in the early grades (specifically |
9 | kindergarten (K) through to and including grade five (5)) shall be consistent with the board of |
10 | regents council on elementary and secondary education's reading policy. This legislation requires |
11 | that the following five (5) six (6) activities, which comprise the literacy program, be conducted: |
12 | (1) Screening for all children first entering school. All school districts that provide |
13 | elementary education are required to screen all children prior to, or upon, their first entry to |
14 | school to determine their level of educational readiness. All children are required to participate in |
15 | this screening. Screening shall address the child's educational development and shall be used to |
16 | determine whether he or she is educationally disadvantaged in terms of readiness for instruction |
17 | in the literacy skills of reading, writing, speaking, listening, or mathematics. |
18 | (2) Literacy focus in instruction in kindergarten through grade three (3) for all students. |
19 | All school districts that provide elementary education shall focus their kindergarten through grade |
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1 | three (3) instruction for all students on literacy: reading, writing, speaking, listening, and |
2 | mathematics. All instruction shall be geared to helping students achieve the outcomes in literacy |
3 | which have been specified by the commissioner of elementary and secondary education. School |
4 | districts are encouraged to consider reducing class size to no more than fifteen (15) students as |
5 | one means to achieving these outcomes. School districts will be held accountable for student |
6 | achievement of the literacy outcomes. |
7 | (3) (i) Supplementary literacy instruction for educationally disadvantaged students in |
8 | grades Kindergarten through twelve (12). |
9 | (ii) Supplementary literacy (reading, writing, speaking, listening, and mathematics) |
10 | instruction may be required for educationally disadvantaged students. The commissioner of |
11 | elementary and secondary education shall stipulate for each school district the specific cutoff |
12 | points and the grades for required service each year. Services must be provided first to students |
13 | who are most educationally disadvantaged. Services shall focus on instruction in reading, writing, |
14 | speaking, listening, and mathematics. Program emphasis shall be as follows: |
15 | (A) Intensive development in literacy. Kindergarten through grade three (3). |
16 | (B) Early intervention in literacy. Grades four (4) through six (6). |
17 | (C) Remediation in literacy. Grades seven (7) through eight (8). |
18 | (D) Intensive remediation in literacy. Grades nine (9) through twelve (12). |
19 | (iii) School districts will be held accountable for student achievement of the literacy |
20 | outcomes. |
21 | (4) Dropout prevention programs. Programs shall address the academic, social, or |
22 | personal needs of potential dropouts. Projects shall be selected at the discretion of the |
23 | commissioner of elementary and secondary education. |
24 | (5) State level program support. Activities shall provide for necessary planning and |
25 | administrative functions and for a broadly representative advisory council. |
26 | (6) Dyslexia-targeted assistance. The literacy program shall also include assistance to |
27 | students by providing strategies that formally address dyslexia, when appropriate. In addition, the |
28 | department of elementary and secondary education shall offer to school districts, at no cost to the |
29 | school district or to participants in the training, professional development services to enhance the |
30 | skills of elementary teachers in the use of evidence-based strategies to improve the literacy skills |
31 | of students with dyslexia. |
32 | (b) As used in this section, the term "dyslexia" means a specific and significant |
33 | impairment in the development of reading, including, but not limited to, phonemic awareness, |
34 | phonics, fluency, vocabulary and comprehension that is not solely accounted for by intellectual |
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1 | disability, sensory disability or impairment, or lack of appropriate instruction. |
2 | SECTION 2. This act shall take effect upon passage. |
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EXPLANATION | |
BY THE LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL | |
OF | |
A N A C T | |
RELATING TO EDUCATION | |
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1 | This act would add dyslexia-targeted assistance as a required aspect of the literacy |
2 | program for students at the elementary grade level. |
3 | This act would take effect upon passage. |
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