Arkansas Administrative Code
Agency 005 - DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION
Division 28 - Division of Elementary and Secondary Education
Rule 005.28.24-007 - DESE Rule Governing the Right to Read Act
Universal Citation: AR Admin Rules 005.28.24-007
Current through Register Vol. 49, No. 9, September, 2024
1.00 REGULATORY 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, and
25-15-201 et
seq.
2.00 DEFINITIONS
2.01 "High quality
literacy screener" means an evidence-based literacy screener required as part
of the statewide student assessment system under Arkansas Code §
6-15-2907.
2.02 "Prescribed pathway" means approved
professional development that meets the criteria established by the
Division.
2.03 "Public school
district" includes traditional public schools, open-enrollment charter schools,
and district conversion charter schools.
2.04 "Science of reading" is the study of the
relationship between cognitive science and educational outcomes, also referred
to as scientific reading instruction.
2.05 "Structured literacy" is the approach by
which licensed personnel or dyslexia interventionists teach reading in an
explicit, systematic, cumulative, and diagnostic manner.
2.05.1 For purposes of these rules, a
"dyslexia interventionist" means the same as in the Rules Governing Dyslexia
Screenings and Interventions.
3.00 REQUIRED PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT IN SCIENTIFIC READING INSTRUCTION
3.01
A public school district, including an open-enrollment public charter school,
shall provide the following professional development in scientific reading
instruction:
3.01.1 Professional development
for one (1) of the prescribed pathways to obtaining a proficiency credential
for teachers with a:
3.01.1.1 Kindergarten
through sixth grade (K-6) license teaching:
3.01.1.1.a Math
3.01.1.1.b Science
3.01.1.1.c Social studies
3.01.1.1.d English language arts
3.01.1.2 Kindergarten through
twelfth grade (K-12) licensed:
3.01.1.2.a In
special education resource teaching English language arts; and
3.01.1.2.b As reading specialists.
3.01.2 For teachers
licensed at the elementary level in kindergarten through grade six (K-6)
teaching math, science, social studies, or English language arts, teachers with
a special education license in kindergarten through grade twelve (K-12), and
teachers licensed as reading specialists in kindergarten through grade twelve
(K-12), professional development for one (1) of the prescribed pathways to
obtaining a proficiency credential in knowledge and practices in scientific
reading instruction; and
3.01.3
Professional development for one (1) of the prescribed pathways to obtaining an
awareness credential for licensed teachers other than those listed in Section
3.01.1
3.02 A public
school district, including an open enrollment public charter school, shall
include a literacy plan in the annual school-level improvement plan that shall
include without limitation a curriculum program and a professional development
program that is:
3.02.1 Aligned with the
literacy needs of the district; and
3.02.2 Based on the science of
reading.
4.00 PROFICIENCY AND AWARENESS FOR EMPLOYMENT
4.01 By the beginning of the 2023-2024 school
year:
4.01.1 All teachers employed in any of
the following teaching positions shall demonstrate proficiency in knowledge and
practices of scientific reading instruction:
4.01.1.1 Elementary school teachers in
kindergarten through grade six (K-6) teaching math, science, social studies, or
English language arts;
4.01.1.2
Special education teachers in kindergarten through grade twelve (K-12) who
teach a special education course that directly relates to literacy;
4.01.1.3 Teachers of English Language
Learners in kindergarten through grade six (K-6); and
4.01.1.4 Reading specialists.
4.01.2 A teacher described in
Section 4.01.1 who has not demonstrated proficiency by the 2023-2024 school
year may be afforded an opportunity to demonstrate proficiency by being placed
in intensive support status for a period of time specified by the teacher's
evaluator in the professional growth plan for the teacher.
4.01.2.1 A teacher described in Section
4.01.1 who has not demonstrated proficiency but is: teaching under a
provisional license as a result of reciprocity with another state, teaching
under an alternative route program approved by the department, working under an
alternative licensure pathway, or moving grade levels meets the proficiency
requirement if the teacher has a proficiency plan within the Educator
Effectiveness Evaluation System.
4.01.3 All other educators shall demonstrate
awareness in knowledge and practices of scientific reading
instruction.
4.02 All
teachers who begin employment in the 2023-2024 school year, and each following
school year, shall demonstrate proficiency or awareness in knowledge and
practices in scientific reading instruction as is applicable to their teaching
position by completing the prescribed proficiency or awareness in knowledge and
practices of the scientific reading instruction credential either:
4.02.1 As a condition of licensure;
or
4.02.2 Within one (1) year if
the teacher is:
4.02.2.1 Already licensed;
or
4.02.2.2 Employed under a waiver
from licensure.
4.02.3
The requirements under Sections 4.01 and 4.02 shall not apply to a teacher who:
4.02.3.1 Has already demonstrated proficiency
through an approved, prescribed pathway; and
4.02.3.2 Is adding an endorsement to his or
her teaching license.
4.03 Beginning in the 2023-2024 school year,
each public school district, including open-enrollment public charter schools,
must document each licensed teacher that has not demonstrated either
proficiency or awareness in compliance with Section 4.00 as part of
professional development reporting requirements in eFinance.
4.04 Any educator whose license expires on
December 31, 2023, or after, must have an awareness credential to renew his or
her license.
4.04.1 If the educator does not
have the required credential, the educator's license will not be
renewed.
4.05 Teachers
employed under a waiver or exception from licensure requirements are subject to
the requirements of these Rules.
4.06 Professional development and
determination measures to meet the proficiency or awareness requirement must be
approved by the division as a prescribed pathway, as set forth in Sections 5.00
and 6.00 below.
5.00 PRESCRIBED PATHWAYS FOR PROFICIENCY
5.01 All teachers employed in any of the
teaching positions in Section 4.01.1 shall demonstrate proficiency in knowledge
and practices of scientific reading instruction.
5.02 To demonstrate proficiency in knowledge
and practices of scientific reading instruction, teachers must complete a
prescribed pathway for proficiency.
5.02.1
Each pathway for proficiency shall have two phases:
5.02.1.1 Phase I outlines professional
learning that meets the knowledge and practices in scientific reading
instruction approved by the Division of Elementary and Secondary
Education.
5.02.1.2 Phase II
provides for the demonstration of knowledge and practices in scientific reading
instruction.
5.02.1.2.a To complete Phase II
for proficiency, an educator shall pass a stand-alone reading assessment
approved by the State Board of Education, be deemed proficient by a certified
assessor, or meet one of the other approved pathways.
5.02.1.2.b For purposes of Section
5.02.1.2.a, "certified assessor" means a licensed educator that has completed
Phase I of science of reading and science of reading assessor training, and
who, in the normal scope of his or her duties, is tasked with observing
teachers and required to conduct evaluations of personnel.
5.03 If a school
district wishes to use a pathway other than a pathway already approved by the
division, the district may submit a request for the division to review a
specific Independent Professional Development (IPD) provider.
5.03.1 A request under Section 5.00 must be
made by a district using the IPD Review Form on the division website.
5.03.1.1 The district is responsible for
submitting all necessary materials for consideration.
5.03.1.1 The request must be made by the
district and requests directly from a vendor will not be accepted.
5.03.2 A review under Section 5.00
is a review of the training program provided to teachers and is not a review of
the curriculum program.
5.03.3 If
an IPD training program is approved, it will be added to the list of approved
prescribed pathways for proficiency on the Division website.
6.00 PRESCRIBED PATHWAYS FOR AWARENESS
6.01 All
educators who are not required to obtain a proficiency credential under Section
5.00, shall demonstrate an awareness in the knowledge and practices in
scientific reading instruction by completing one of the prescribed pathways for
awareness.
6.02 All approved
prescribed pathways for awareness shall be listed on the Division of Elementary
and Secondary Education's website.
7.00 PROGRAM EVALUATION AND APPROVAL
7.01 The Division of
Elementary and Secondary Education shall identify an approved list of
materials, resources, and curriculum programs for public school districts that
are supported by the science of reading and based on instruction that is
explicit, systematic, cumulative, and diagnostic, including without limitation:
7.01.1 Evidence-based reading intervention
programs;
7.01.2 Evidence-based
reading programs that are grounded in the science of reading; and
7.01.3 Dyslexia programs that are
evidence-based and:
7.01.3.1 Aligned to
structured literacy; or
7.01.3.2
Grounded in Orton-Gillingham methodology.
7.02 The approved list of materials,
resources, and curriculum program criteria is established by a committee of
educators or experts who have demonstrated proficiency in the knowledge and
practices of scientific reading instruction.
7.03 Any public school district, including an
open-enrollment public charter school, that purchases a curriculum program
shall choose a curriculum program from the division's approved list of
curriculum programs.
7.03.1 A public school
district that chooses to purchase a curriculum program that is not from the
division's approved list of curriculum programs shall submit the following
information to the division for approval:
7.03.1.1 The rationale for choosing the
alternative curriculum program;
7.03.1.2 Evidence-based research regarding
the alternative curriculum program; and
7.03.1.3 A signed letter from the
superintendent and school board president requesting approval of the
alternative curriculum program.
7.03.2 A public school district receiving
Level 3--coordinated support, Level 4--directed support, or Level 5--intensive
support for reading under Arkansas Code §
6-15-2913, may only select an
approved curriculum program from the list published pursuant to Section 7.06
and may not choose an alternative curriculum program under Section
7.06.1.
7.03.3 The division shall
publish the timeline for submission of requests for approval under Section
7.06.1 by Commissioner's Memo.
7.04 By the beginning of the 2023-2024 school
year, any public school district or open-enrollment public charter school that
is using a curriculum program that is not from the division's approved list
created under Section 7.00 shall notify all parents, legal guardians, and
persons standing in loco parentis to students in writing and on the public
school district's or open-enrollment public charter school's
website.
8.00 EDUCATOR PREPARATION PROGRAMS
8.01 The following shall have proficient
knowledge and skills to teach reading consistent with the best practices of
scientific reading instruction:
8.01.1 A
person who completes a state-approved educator preparation program leading to
Elementary (K-6) or Special Education (K-12) licensure; and
8.01.2 A person seeking Elementary (K-6) or
Special Education (K-12) licensure by reciprocity or by adding an
endorsement.
8.02 A
person who completes a state-approved educator preparation program leading to
licensure in an area other than those listed in Section 8.01 shall demonstrate
an awareness of the best practices of scientific reading instruction.
8.03 A provider of a state-approved educator
preparation program, graduate program, or alternative preparation program shall
include in its annual report to the Division of Elementary and Secondary
Education a description of the provider's program to prepare educators to teach
reading using scientific reading instruction.
8.04 The division shall audit each program
under Section 8.00 at least one (1) time every three (3) years to verify
compliance with this section.
9.00 VIOLATIONS OF THE RIGHT TO READ ACT
9.01 A public school district,
including an open-enrollment public charter school, that violates the Right to
Read Act, codified in Arkansas Code §
6-17-429, these Rules, or both,
shall be in violation of the Standards for Accreditation of Arkansas Public
Schools and School Districts and may be placed in probationary status by the
Division of Elementary and Secondary Education.
9.01.1 Compliance with these Rules shall be
monitored by desk monitoring, on-site monitoring, and monitoring of
eFinance.
9.02 A public
school district, including an open-enrollment public charter school, placed in
probationary status under Section 9.01 shall send written notification to the
parents of the students in the public school district of the reason for being
placed in probationary status.
9.03
A provider of a state-approved educator preparation program, graduate program,
or alternative preparation program that does not comply with the requirements
of the Right to Read Act, codified in Arkansas Code §
6-17-429, these Rules, or both, may
be subject to penalties up to and including having the provider's approval
status revoked.
9.04 A public
school district, including an open-enrollment public charter school, shall not
use a program of instruction for students in kindergarten through grade two
(K-2) that is based in any practice or intervention program that utilizes the
three-cueing system model of reading, visual memory as the primary basis for
teaching word recognition, or the three-cueing system model of reading based on
meaning, structure and syntax, and visual, also known as MSV.
9.05 Beginning with the 2023-2024 school
year, if the state board determines that a public school district, including an
open-enrollment public charter school, has violated Section 9.04, the state
board shall notify the public school district of its violation.
9.05.1 If a public school district, including
an open-enrollment public charter school, fails to remedy its violation under
Section 9.04 within sixty (60) days of notification of its failure to comply,
the state board shall direct the division to withhold a maximum of ten percent
(10%) of the monthly distribution of state foundation funding aid to the public
school district as provided under Arkansas Code §
6-20-2305(a)(1)(B).
9.05.2 Once the state board determines that a
public school has complied with Section 9.04, the division shall restore the
monthly distribution of state foundation funding aid to the public school
district to its original amount before the reduction was made under Section
9.05.01.
10.00 LITERACY COACHES
10.01 Each
kindergarten through grade three (K-3) teacher in a public school earning a "D"
or "F" rating under Arkansas Code §§
6-15-2105 or
6-15-2106 or State Board of
Education rules, or a low-performing public school based on results of the
public school's kindergarten through grade three (K-3) high quality literacy
screener shall have access to a literacy coach to support increased literacy
rates through coaching for teachers and administrators.
10.02 Subject to legislative appropriation,
the Division of Elementary and Secondary Education shall provide, train, and
assign literacy coaches to low-performing public schools based on results of
the public school's kindergarten through grade three (K-3) high quality
literacy screener.
10.03 A literacy
coach shall have without limitation:
10.03.1
Expertise in both pedagogy and the science of reading;
10.03.2 Evidence of success in coaching and
classroom instruction;
10.03.3 An
understanding of learning disabilities in reading; and
10.03.4 An understanding of the child find
mandate of the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act,
20 U.S.C. §
1400 et seq., as it existed on January 1,
2023.
10.04 A literacy
coach shall:
10.04.1 Leverage knowledge of
evidence-based instruction and practices aligned to the science of reading to
support teachers in maximizing student learning;
10.04.2 Engage in instructional coaching
cycles with teachers to build capacity for classroom instructional
practices;
10.04.3 Deliver
consistent and frequent job-embedded professional learning;
10.04.4 Design and facilitate relevant and
cohesive professional learning sessions to strengthen the implementation of
evidence-based instructional practices aligned to the science of reading with
teachers;
10.04.5 Assist teachers
in analyzing data to inform instructional adjustments;
10.04.6 Partner with teachers to integrate
professional learning into classroom practice;
10.04.7 Work with teachers to ensure
effective communication strategies and resource sharing with parents, legal
guardians, and persons standing in loco parentis to students;
10.04.8 Partner with a public school
principal or designated leader to connect school-wide literacy goals with
evidence-based instruction and practices aligned to the science of
reading;
10.04.9 Provide feedback
on teachers' evidence-based instruction and practices that may be used for
teacher evaluations;
10.04.10
Actively participate in professional learning experiences to deepen knowledge
and skills for coaching;
10.04.11
Be compensated on a competitive salary schedule;
10.04.12 Receive a yearly bonus of up to ten
thousand dollars ($10,000) if the overall school score, of the schools the
literacy coach is assigned to, demonstrates outstanding growth in student
performance as determined by the state's value-added model system, and meets
performance criteria set by the division; and
10.04.13 Meet performance criteria set by the
division that may include:
10.04.13.a
Surveys;
10.04.13.b Evaluation
tools; and
10.04.13.c Student
data.
11.00 LITERACY REQUIREMENTS UNDER THE RIGHT TO READ ACT
11.01 By no later
than October 1 of each year, or as soon as practicable if a student's reading
need is identified after October 1, each public school district and
open-enrollment public charter school shall notify the parent, legal guardian,
or person standing in loco parentis to a student regarding:
11.01.1 The student's eligibility to
participate in the literacy tutoring grant program under Section
11.00;
11.01.2 The process for
applying for the literacy tutoring grant program; and
11.01.3 Other information provided by the
Division of Elementary and Secondary Education.
11.02 Beginning with the 2023-2024 school
year, public school districts and open enrollment public charter schools shall:
11.02.1 Notify all parents, legal guardians,
or persons standing in loco parentis to a student, in writing, in a
parent-friendly manner, of their student's reading progress each time the
student is assessed throughout the year using high quality literacy screener
results.
11.02.1.1 The written notification in
a parent-friendly manner required under this section may be in the language of
communication preferred by a parent, legal guardian, or person standing in loco
parentis to a student;
11.02.2 Develop an individual reading plan
for each student in kindergarten through grade three (K-3) who does not meet
the reading standard as:
11.02.2.1 Determined
by the State Board of Education; and
11.02.2.2 Measured by a high-quality literacy
screener or the state annual accountability assessment.
11.02.2.3 An individual reading plan shall
include:
11.02.3.1.a The student's specific,
diagnosed reading skill needs, including without limitation:
11.02.3.1.a.i Phonemic awareness;
11.02.3.1.a.ii Phonics decoding;
11.02.3.1.a.iii Text reading
fluency;
11.02.3.1.a.iv
Vocabulary-building strategies; and
11.02.3.1.a.v Self-regulated use of reading
comprehension strategies, as identified by high-quality literacy screener
data;
11.02.3.1.b The
goals and benchmarks for the student's growth;
11.02.3.1.c How the student's progress will
be monitored and evaluated;
11.02.3.1.d The type of additional
instructional services and interventions the student may receive;
11.02.3.1.e The intensive, evidence-based
literacy intervention program aligned to the science of reading the student's
teacher will use to address the areas of phonemic awareness, phonics, fluency,
vocabulary, and comprehension;
11.02.3.1.f The strategies the student's
parents, legal guardians, or persons standing in loco parentis to the student
are encouraged to use in assisting the student to achieve the student's reading
goal; and
11.02.3.1.g Any
additional services the student's teacher determines are available and
appropriate to accelerate the student's reading skill development;
11.02.3 Notify all
parents, legal guardians, or persons standing in loco parentis to a student in
writing of the content of their child's independent reading plan and progress
on the independent reading plan throughout the year; and
11.02.4 By the beginning of the 2024-2025
school year, report to the division the:
11.02.4.1 Types of interventions used;
and
11.02.4.2 Students receiving
each type of intervention.
11.03 By the beginning of the 2025-2026
school year, if a public school student has not met the third-grade reading
standard, as defined by the state board, or the student does not have a
good-cause exemption, as provided under this section, the student shall not be
promoted to grade four (4).
11.03.1 A student
in grade three (3) who does not meet the reading standard for promotion to
grade four (4) may be promoted by the school district for good cause.
11.03.1.1 A good-cause exemption for
promotion shall be limited to the following students:
11.03.1.1.a Limited English Proficiency
students who have had less than three (3) years of instruction in an English
language learner program.
11.03.1.1.b Students with a disability who
are not eligible for the alternate assessment and who have an individualized
education program or a 504 plan that reflects that the individual student:
11.03.1.1.b.i Has received an intensive,
evidence-based literacy intervention program aligned to the science of reading
for more than two (2) years; and
11.03.1.1.b.ii Still demonstrates a need in
reading proficiency or previously was retained in kindergarten, grade one (1),
grade two (2), or grade three (3);
11.03.1.1.c Students who:
11.03.1.1.c.i Have received an intensive,
evidence-based literacy intervention program aligned to the science of reading
for two (2) or more years;
11.03.1.1.c.ii Still demonstrate a need in
reading proficiency and who previously were retained in kindergarten, grade one
(1), grade two (2), or grade three (3);
11.03.1.1.c.iii Have received a special
education referral and a full comprehensive evaluation; and
11.03.1.1.c.iv Have not met exceptional
education criteria;
11.03.1.1.d Students who have already been
retained in kindergarten, grade one (1), grade two (2), or grade three (3) for
one (1) year;
11.03.1.1.e Students
who can demonstrate that they are successful and independent readers and can
perform at or above grade level.
11.03.1.1.e.i
A public school district and open enrollment public charter school may use
certain tools in reevaluating a student in accordance with state board rules,
which shall include without limitation subsequent student assessments or
alternative assessments; and
11.03.1.1.f Other students with necessary,
justifiable good-cause exemptions identified as appropriate by the state board,
in consultation with reading experts.
11.03.2 For each student who does not meet
the reading standard established by the state board by the end of third grade,
including students who are promoted with good-cause exemptions to the fourth
grade, during the subsequent summer and school year, the public school district
or open enrollment public charter school in which the student is enrolled
shall:
11.03.2.1 Provide at least ninety (90)
minutes of evidence-based literacy instruction aligned to the science of
reading during each school day;
11.03.2.2 Assign the student to a teacher
with a value-added model score in the top quartile statewide in English
language arts for the past three (3) years, or if the public school district or
open-enrollment public charter school is unable to identify a teacher with a
value-added model score in the top quartile statewide in English language arts
for the past three (3) years, assign the student to a teacher:
11.03.2.2.a With a highly-effective rating
according to the Teacher Excellence and Support System, §
6-17-2801 et seq., where possible;
or
11.03.2.2.b Deemed to be a
high-performing teacher as defined by a Master Professional Educator
designation;
11.03.2.3
Provide parents, legal guardians, or persons standing in loco parentis to
students with a "read-at-home" plan to support student early literacy growth.
11.03.2.3.a A "read-at-home" plan shall
include evidence-based science of reading strategies and tools that are aligned
to a student's individual reading plan for parents, legal guardians, or persons
standing in loco parentis to a student to use with their children;
11.03.2.4 Identify eligible
students for literacy tutoring grants under Section 11.00 and notify parents,
legal guardians, or persons standing in loco parentis to a student regarding
their child's eligibility;
11.03.2.5 Be given priority to receive a
literacy tutoring grant; and
11.03.2.6 Be given the option to participate
in additional intensive, evidence-based literacy intervention programs aligned
to the science of reading.
12.00 EDUCATION OMBUDSMAN
12.01 The Secretary of the Department of
Education shall hire an Education Ombudsman to assist the department in the
enforcement of these rules, including without limitation enforcing the
requirements for demonstrating proficiency, providing professional development,
and using a permitted program of instruction.
12.01.1 The secretary may designate
additional requirements related to public education, including without
limitation the enforcement of literacy requirements.
12.01.2 The secretary shall supervise the
Education Ombudsman and shall not delegate supervision to an employee of the
Division of Elementary and Secondary Education.
12.01.3 The minimum qualifications for the
Education Ombudsman shall include a master's degree in education or a related
field. An individual who served as a past public school district superintendent
or serves as a current public school district superintendent is not eligible to
serve as the Education Ombudsman under this section.
12.01.4 The Education Ombudsman may
communicate with a public school student, with permission from a parent, legal
guardian, or person standing in loco parentis of the public school student, a
parent, legal guardian, or person standing in loco parentis of a public school
student, and administration, faculty, and staff employed by a public school
district, including an open-enrollment public charter school.
12.01.5 The Education Ombudsman may review an
issue or concern related to the education of a public school student enrolled
in a public school, including an open-enrollment public charter
school.
12.01.6 The Education
Ombudsman may recommend training and resources to a public school or public
school district, including an open-enrollment public charter school.
12.01.7 The Education Ombudsman shall prepare
and submit an annual report to the state board concerning the work of the
Education Ombudsman and any recommendations related to the focus areas of the
Education Ombudsman.
12.01.7.1 The report
required under Section 12.01.7.1 shall be submitted every two (2) years to the
House Committee on Education and the Senate Committee on Education.
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