Arkansas Administrative Code
Agency 005 - DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION
Division 28 - Division of Elementary and Secondary Education
Rule 005.28.23-006 - DESE Rules Governing Tutoring Grants
Universal Citation: AR Admin Rules 005.28.23-006
Current through Register Vol. 49, No. 9, September, 2024
1.00 AUTHORITY
1.01 The State Board of Education enacted
these rules pursuant to its authority as set forth in Ark. Code Ann.
§§
6-11-105,
6-17-402,
6-17-429,
6-16-1601 et seq. and
25-15-201 et
seq.
2.00 LITERACY TUTORING GRANTS
2.01 A literacy
tutoring grant is up to a maximum of five hundred dollars ($500) per eligible
student per school year, that may be used for any of the following purposes
designed to improve reading or literacy skills:
2.01.1 Online or in-person, tutoring services
from a list of providers approved by the Division of Elementary and Secondary
Education under section 2.05 of this section whose employees or contractors are
trained in the science of reading and hold:
2.01.1.1 Valid teaching certificates in
either elementary education or reading; or
2.01.1.2 Baccalaureate or graduate degrees in
education, English, or another subject area indicative of expertise in reading
and literacy.
2.01.2
Evidence-based digital literacy applications or software programs from a list
of division-approved programs that are in alignment with the science of
reading.
2.02 "Eligible
student" means any student enrolled in a public school or open-enrollment
public charter school in kindergarten through grade three (K-3) who:
2.02.1 Is determined by the division not to
meet the reading standard, as defined by the state board under section 2.02.1.1
or section 2.02.2;
2.02.1.1 For the 2023-2024
school year, the reading standard for the purpose of identifying student
eligibility for the literacy tutoring grant is defined as students achieving at
or below the lowest tenth percentile (10%) for kindergarten, at or below the
lowest fifteenth percentile (15%) for grade 1, and at or below the lowest
twentieth percentile (20%) for grade 2 based on the current school year
beginning-of-year literacy kindergarten through grade two (K-2) assessment
scores, 25th percentile based on prior school year end of year literacy
assessments for students in grade 3, and current students in grade 3 that were
not promoted.
2.02.2
Beginning in 2024-2025, is determined to be at risk for reading difficulties
according to results of cut scores determined by the state board on the
high-quality literacy screener required under the statewide student assessment
system; or
2.02.3 Has received a
good cause exemption for promotion to grade four (4).
2.03 Subject to available funding, priority
for literacy tutoring grants will be given to the following in descending order
of priority:
2.03.1 Students who were retained
the previous year;
2.03.2 Students
in the lowest fifteen percent (15%) of the reporting category in kindergarten
through grade three (K-3);
2.03.3
The remaining lowest quartile (25%) of grade 3;
2.03.4 The remaining lowest quartile (25%) of
grade 2;
2.03.5 The remaining lowest
quartile (25%) of grade 1;
2.03.6
The remaining lowest quartile (25%) of kindergarten.
2.04 The division shall provide for an online
application process that allows eligible students to register for and procure
literacy tutoring services.
2.04.1 The
division shall make payments to the service provider.
2.04.1.1 A third-party payment processing
vendor shall create and set up payment accounts for eligible
students.
2.04.1.2 Service
providers, or third-party vendors shall issue an itemized invoice to eligible
students for documentation of expense type, amount, and recipient.
2.04.1.3 Eligible students and families shall
verify and submit payment requests, identifying the service provider to receive
payment, the payment amount, and the expense type.
2.04.1.4 Eligible students shall include
invoices for review and documentation during payment submission process via the
third-party payment processing vendor.
2.04.1.5 The third-party payment processing
vendor shall remit payment to service providers for authorized expenditures,
unless an expenditure is not authorized by law, following review and approval
of expense request and documentation by the division.
2.04.2 The division shall maintain a waitlist
for students who are unable to receive literacy tutoring grants in the event
that more funding becomes available to support the program.
2.04.3 Subject to additional funding,
eligible students on the waitlist will be awarded literacy tutoring grants
according to the priority schedule under section 2.03 on a first-come,
first-served basis.
2.05
Providers of supplemental educational services may apply to be an approved
provider.
2.05.1 The division shall review and
evaluate provider applications based on the provider's:
2.05.1.1 Capacity to provide literacy
tutoring services to students in kindergarten through grade three
(K-3);
2.05.1.2 Tutor qualifications
as defined in section 2.01;
2.05.1.3
Alignment to the science of reading; and
2.05.1.4 Evidence of student outcomes and
data collection methods.
2.06 Approved providers shall be evaluated by
the division for initial and continued eligibility for payments to ensure the
effectiveness of a literacy tutoring grant program in improving eligible
students' reading abilities, using one or more of the following criteria:
2.06.1 Results from literacy assessment data
that demonstrates positive learning gains in literacy or reading results,
consisting of:
2.06.1.1 State-approved
literacy screeners or other assessments using data collected by the division;
or
2.06.1.2 An assessment used by
the tutoring provider that collects both baseline data and at least one
additional assessment following the baseline data collection.
2.06.1.3 A provider submitting their own
assessment for evaluation must provide to the division:
2.06.1.3.a The assessment used;
2.06.1.3.b A description of what the
assessment measures and how it aligns to the science of reading; and
2.06.1.3.c Aggregate performance
data.
2.06.1.4 The
division may request student-level data from providers as determined necessary
to evaluate program effectiveness;
2.06.2 Evidence of positive and statistically
significant learning gains in literacy that is conducted by a third-party
researcher; or
2.06.3 Evidence of
parent satisfaction with student literacy gains as a result of literacy
tutoring services as measured by a valid and reliable survey.
2.06.4 Approved providers must annually
submit to the division the information required under section
2.06.
2.07 A provider that
fails to provide the information required under section 2.06 or that is found
to be ineffective due to failure to demonstrate improvement in eligible
students' reading abilities for two (2) consecutive years shall be ineligible
to participate in the literacy tutoring grant program.
2.07.1 In addition to measuring
effectiveness, the division may audit approved providers to ensure that
eligible students who received literacy tutoring grants received the services
and materials for which grant funds were spent.
2.07.2 Providers will be removed from the
approved provider list immediately if the provider is found to be ineffective,
not in alignment with the provider approval rubric, or if evidence of fraud or
student harm is discovered.
2.07.3 A
provider removed from the approved list may re-apply to be on the approved
provider list for the following school year but must provide additional
evidence, aligned to evaluation criteria, to demonstrate that all requirements
are met.
2.08 On an annual
basis the division will collect and report to the state board on the following:
2.08.1 The number of students eligible for
literacy tutoring grants;
2.08.2 The
number of eligible students who applied for literacy tutoring grants;
2.08.3 The number of eligible students who
spent any amount of grant funding from the literacy tutoring grant;
2.08.4 The number of eligible students who
spent the full amount of grant funding from the literacy tutoring
grant;
2.08.5 The total amount of
grant funding available, the total amount awarded from the application process,
and the total amount expended;
2.08.6 The total amount of grant funding
expended on approved literacy tutoring providers, overall and by provider;
and
2.08.7 Student outcomes data
provided by approved literacy tutoring providers, by provider.
2.08.8 The report under section 2.08 shall
contain data under sections 2.08.1 through 2.08.4 for the overall program and
data organized by grade, by school and district, and by the priority order in
section 2.03.
3.00 HIGH IMPACT TUTORING GRANTS
3.01 "High-impact tutoring" means tutoring
that is aligned with tutoring quality standards, including without limitation
tutoring that is:
3.01.1 Data-driven with
student results, characteristics, and progress guiding decision
making.
3.01.2 Provided in groups of
four (4) or fewer students or one-on-one (1-1);
3.01.3 Provided:
3.01.3.1 For a minimum of three (3) times per
week, at least thirty (30) minutes a session; or
3.01.3.2 A comparable model that provides
direct tutoring based on specific skills needed;
3.01.4 Provided by a consistent tutor or
consistent set of tutors that sustain strong relationships with
students;
3.01.5 Implemented during
the school day; and
3.01.6
Supplemental to core academic instruction and not a replacement for such
instruction. Supplemental instruction may include small group instructional
time where students might otherwise be working
independently.
3.02 A
public school district or an open-enrollment public charter school may annually
apply for a high-impact tutoring grant to establish or expand a tutoring
program that meets the definition of high-impact tutoring in section 3.01 and
that drives strong outcomes for students.
3.03 The Division of Elementary and Secondary
Education shall establish a timeline for a public school district or
open-enrollment public charter school to apply for the program.
3.04 A public school district or
open-enrollment public charter school applying for funding under this section
must provide a detailed plan in its application for how its tutoring program
is, or will be with respect to a prospective program:
3.04.1 Data-driven with student results,
characteristics, and progress guiding decision making.
3.04.2 A program that uses assessments
throughout the school year to monitor student progress.
3.04.3 Provides tutoring in small groups of
four or fewer students, or one-on-one (1-1);
3.04.4 Uses a consistent tutor or a
consistent set of tutors to provide tutoring to eligible students throughout
the school year;
3.04.5 Provides
tutoring:
3.04.5.1 For a minimum of three
times per week, at least 30 minutes a session; or
3.04.5.2 A comparable model that provides
direct tutoring based on specific skills needed;
3.04.6 Implements tutoring during the school
day. The tutoring is related to core academic instruction and supplements not
supplants that core academic instruction; and
3.04.7 Uses trained tutors, as defined by the
approved provider, to provide the tutoring.
3.05 A public school district or
open-enrollment public charter school that receives an award under this section
must launch and deliver high-impact tutoring services in accordance with the
timeline established by the division.
3.06 The high-impact tutoring pilot program
will provide a maximum grant award determined annually by the division based on
available funding.
3.07 A public
school district or open enrollment public charter school applying for a grant
award under this section must specify in its grant application criteria for
which students are eligible for its high-impact tutoring program and how those
students are selected.
3.07.1 The public
school district or open-enrollment public charter school must consider without
limitation the academic performance of student groups across grades and
subjects within a public school district or open-enrollment public charter
school and student assessment results, including standards-aligned or
nationally normed student assessment results, as part of its eligibility and
selection process.
3.08
The division shall post a list of each public school district or
open-enrollment public charter school that receives funding and each public
school district or open-enrollment public charter school's high-impact tutoring
program plan on its website.
3.09 A
public school district or open-enrollment public charter school receiving grant
funding under this rule must comply with all state and federal laws with
respect to the use of grant funds and may spend tutoring program funds on:
3.09.1 Contracting with vendors which provide
high-impact tutoring from a division-approved provider list;
3.09.2 Hiring or contracting for tutors or
providing stipends or other incentives to paraprofessionals, retired teachers,
community organizations to ensure maximum tutoring capacity;
3.09.3 Covering administrative expenses;
and
3.09.4 Covering costs associated
with tech-enabled tutoring solutions, such as licenses, software, and related
devices.
3.10 A public
school district or open-enrollment public charter school receiving grant
funding under this rule must provide a funding match to support the high-impact
tutoring program funding awarded by the division.
3.10.1 The division may allow an in-kind
match from the district or open-enrollment public charter school to meet the
requirement set forth in section 3.10.
3.11 A public school district or
open-enrollment public charter school receiving funds for a high-impact
tutoring program under this rule must implement the approved tutoring program
plan with fidelity ensuring that eligible students receive the specified dosage
of high-impact tutoring services.
3.11.1 A
public school district or open-enrollment public charter school that does not
implement its approved program with fidelity may be ineligible for future grant
funds.
3.12 A provider
that fails to submit information required under this rule or that is found to
be ineffective due to failure to demonstrate improvement in eligible students
for two (2) consecutive years shall be ineligible to participate in the
high-impact tutoring grant program.
3.13 A public school district or
open-enrollment public charter school that is found to be ineligible for grant
funds after receiving funds from the division shall return grant funds to the
division.
4.00 HIGH-IMPACT TUTORING PROVIDERS
4.01 The Division of Elementary and Secondary
Education shall maintain an approved list of high-impact tutoring providers
that participating districts and open-enrollment public charter schools may
use.
4.02 Criteria that may be
considered for providers include, but are not limited to:
4.02.1 Provider experience in providing
high-impact tutoring services;
4.02.2 Types of student performance data
collected;
4.02.3 Evidence of impact
on student outcomes;
4.02.4 Grade
levels and content areas served;
4.02.5 Tutor experience, training, and
content expertise;
4.02.6 Per
student costs;
4.02.7 Tutoring
models used whether those models are in-person, fully virtual, or a hybrid
model; and
4.02.8 Alignment to
high-impact tutoring as defined in section 3.01.
5.00 DATA COLLECTION AND REPORTING
5.01 A public school district
or open-enrollment public charter school receiving grant funding for the
high-impact tutoring pilot program under this rule must annually report the
following information to the Division of Elementary and Secondary Education
using the division's template:
5.01.1 The
number of unique students who participated in the high-impact tutoring program,
and related student metrics including tutoring subject, grade level,
attendance, dosage, prior performance on the state assessment, and demographic
information;
5.01.1.1 For purposes of this
section, "dosage" means the actual number of student-level sessions for
students identified to participate.
5.01.2 How the public school district or
open-enrollment public charter school maintained consistent access for
participating students to non-core academic instruction;
5.01.3 How program grant funding was used by
the public school district or open-enrollment public charter school and a
summary of other resources, if any, used to provide high-impact
tutoring;
5.01.4 The academic
achievement results or other criteria used to identify eligible students in the
high-impact tutoring program; and
5.01.5 The impact on student academic and
non-academic outcomes associated with the public school district or
open-enrollment public charter school's program including interim assessments
or other outcomes metrics; and
5.01.6 Any additional private, federal, or
local funds that the public school district or open-enrollment public charter
school used to support high-impact tutoring.
5.01.7 A public school district or
open-enrollment public charter school who chooses to use a provider from the
approved provider list must submit the information required by section 5.01
with respect to the provider.
5.02 The division will annually report the
following district-level data to the State Board of Education and the General
Assembly:
5.02.1 Data regarding participating
public school or open-enrollment public charter school students' access to
high-impact tutoring and program implementation, including by geography, grade
span, and subject. The data shall be based on program requirements, including
without limitation:
5.02.1.1 How data required
under this subdivision has changed over time;
5.02.1.2 The number of students who received
high-impact tutoring.
5.02.1.3 The
dosage and attendance of students who received high-impact tutoring in the
program; and
5.02.1.4 The number of
students eligible for high-impact tutoring;
5.02.2 Data on achievement and growth
outcomes from participating students; and
5.02.3 Program successes and
challenges.
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