Current through Reg. 50, No. 187; September 24, 2024
(1) Speech impairments are disorders of
speech sounds, fluency, or voice that interfere with communication, adversely
affect performance and/or functioning in the educational environment, and
result in the need for exceptional student education.
(a) Speech sound disorder. A speech sound
disorder is a phonological or articulation disorder that is evidenced by the
atypical production of speech sounds characterized by substitutions,
distortions, additions, or omissions that interfere with intelligibility. A
speech sound disorder is not primarily the result of factors related to
chronological age, gender, culture, ethnicity, or limited English proficiency.
1. Phonological disorder. A phonological
disorder is an impairment in the system of phonemes and phoneme patterns within
the context of spoken language.
2.
Articulation disorder. An articulation disorder is characterized by difficulty
in the articulation of speech sounds that may be due to a motoric or structural
problem.
(b) Fluency
disorder. A fluency disorder is characterized by deviations in continuity,
smoothness, rhythm, or effort in spoken communication. It may be accompanied by
excessive tension and secondary behaviors, such as struggle and avoidance. A
fluency disorder is not primarily the result of factors related to
chronological age, gender, culture, ethnicity, or limited English
proficiency.
(c) Voice disorder. A
voice disorder is characterized by the atypical production or absence of vocal
quality, pitch, loudness, resonance, or duration of phonation that is not
primarily the result of factors related to chronological age, gender, culture,
ethnicity, or limited English proficiency.
(2) General education procedures and
activities. Prior to referral for evaluation, the requirements in subsection
6A-6.0331(1),
F.A.C., related to general education procedures for kindergarten through grade
twelve students, or subsection
6A-6.0331(2),
F.A.C., related to procedures prior to initial evaluation for prekindergarten
children, must be met.
(3)
Procedures for the evaluation of a speech sound disorder. In addition to the
procedures identified in subsection
6A-6.0331(5),
F.A.C., the evaluation shall include all of the following:
(a) Information must be gathered from the
student's parent(s) or guardian(s) and teacher(s), and when appropriate, the
student, regarding the concerns and description of speech characteristics. This
may be completed through a variety of methods including interviews, checklists,
or questionnaires;
(b) Documented
and dated observation(s) of the student's speech characteristics must be
conducted by a speech-language pathologist to examine the student's speech
characteristics during connected speech or conversation. Observation(s)
conducted prior to obtaining consent for evaluation may be used to meet this
criterion;
(c) An examination of
the oral mechanism structure and function must be conducted; and,
(d) One or more standardized, norm-referenced
instruments designed to measure speech sound production must be administered to
determine the type and severity of the speech sound errors and whether the
errors are articulation (phonetic) or phonological (phonemic) in
nature.
(4) Procedures
for the evaluation of a fluency disorder. In addition to the procedures
identified in subsection
6A-6.0331(5),
F.A.C., the evaluation shall include all of the following:
(a) Information must be gathered from the
student's parent(s) or guardian(s) and teacher(s), and when appropriate, the
student, to address the areas identified in paragraph (4)(d) of this rule. This
may be completed through a variety of methods including interviews, checklists,
or questionnaires;
(b) A minimum of
two (2) documented and dated observations of the student's speech and secondary
behaviors must be conducted by a speech-language pathologist in more than one
setting, including the typical learning environment. For prekindergarten
children, the observations may occur in an environment or situation appropriate
for a child of that chronological age. Observations conducted prior to
obtaining consent for evaluation may be used to meet this criterion, if the
activities address the areas identified in paragraph (4)(d) of this
rule;
(c) An examination of the
oral mechanism structure and function must be conducted.
(d) An assessment of all of the following
areas:
1. Motor aspects of the speech
behaviors;
2. Student's attitude
regarding the speech behaviors;
3.
Social impact of the speech behaviors; and,
4. Educational impact of the speech
behaviors.
(e) A speech
sample of a minimum of 300-500 words must be collected and analyzed to
determine frequency, duration, and type of dysfluent speech behaviors. If the
speech-language pathologist is unable to obtain a speech sample of a minimum of
300-500 words, a smaller sample may be collected and analyzed. The evaluation
report must document the rationale for collection and analysis of a smaller
sample, the results obtained, and the basis for
recommendations.
(5)
Procedures for the evaluation of a voice disorder. In addition to the
procedures identified in subsection
6A-6.0331(5),
F.A.C., the evaluation shall include all of the following:
(a) Information must be gathered from the
student's parent(s) or guardian(s) and teacher(s), and when appropriate, the
student, regarding the concerns and description of voice characteristics. This
may be completed through a variety of methods including interviews, checklists,
or questionnaires;
(b) Documented
and dated observation(s) of the student's voice characteristics must be
conducted by a speech-language pathologist in one or more setting(s), which
must include the typical learning environment. For prekindergarten children,
the observation(s) may occur in an environment or situation appropriate for a
child of that chronological age. Observation(s) conducted prior to obtaining
consent for evaluation may be used to meet this criterion;
(c) An examination of the oral mechanism
structure and function must be conducted; and,
(d) A report of a medical examination of
laryngeal structure and function conducted by a physician licensed in Florida
in accordance with Chapter 458 or 459, F.S., unless a report of medical
examination from a physician licensed in another state is permitted in
accordance with paragraph
6A-6.0331(3)(e),
F.A.C. The physician's report must provide a description of the state of the
vocal mechanism and any medical implications for therapeutic
intervention.
(6)
Criteria for eligibility. A student is eligible as a student with a speech
impairment in need of exceptional student education if the student meets the
following criteria for one or more of the following disorders as determined by
the procedures prescribed in this rule and subsection
6A-6.0331(6),
F.A.C.
(a) Speech sound disorder. A student
with a speech sound disorder is eligible for exceptional student education if
there is evidence, based on evaluation results, of a significant phonological
or articulation disorder that is characterized by the atypical production of
speech sound(s). The atypical production of speech sound(s) may be
characterized by substitutions, distortions, additions, or omissions.
Evaluation results must reveal all of the following:
1. The speech sound disorder must have a
significant impact on the student's intelligibility, although the student may
be intelligible to familiar listeners or within known contexts;
2. The student's phonetic or phonological
inventory must be significantly below that expected for his or her
chronological age or developmental level based on normative data;
3. The speech sound disorder must have an
adverse effect on the student's ability to perform and/or function in the
student's typical learning environment, thereby demonstrating the need for
exceptional student education; and,
4. The speech sound disorder is not primarily
the result of factors related to chronological age, gender, culture, ethnicity,
or limited English proficiency.
(b) Fluency disorder. A student with a
fluency disorder is eligible for exceptional student education if there is
evidence, based on evaluation results, of significant and persistent
interruptions in the rhythm or rate of speech. Evaluation results must reveal
all of the following:
1. The student must
exhibit significant and persistent dysfluent speech behaviors. The dysfluency
may include repetition of phrases, whole words, syllables and phonemes,
prolongations, blocks, and circumlocutions. Additionally, secondary behaviors,
such as struggle and avoidance, may be present;
2. The fluency disorder must have an adverse
effect on the student's ability to perform and/or function in the educational
environment, thereby demonstrating the need for exceptional student education;
and,
3. The dysfluency is not
primarily the result of factors related to chronological age, gender, culture,
ethnicity, or limited English proficiency.
(c) Voice disorder. A student with a voice
disorder is eligible for exceptional student education if there is evidence,
based on evaluation results, of significant and persistent atypical voice
characteristics. Evaluation results must reveal all of the following:
1. The student must exhibit significant and
persistent atypical production of quality, pitch, loudness, resonance, or
duration of phonation. The atypical voice characteristics may include
inappropriate range, inflection, loudness, excessive nasality, breathiness,
hoarseness, or harshness;
2. The
voice disorder does not refer to vocal disorders that are found to be the
direct result or symptom of a medical condition unless the disorder adversely
affects the student's ability to perform and/or function in the educational
environment and is amenable to improvement with therapeutic
intervention;
3. The voice disorder
must have an adverse effect on the student's ability to perform and/or function
in the educational environment, thereby demonstrating the need for exceptional
student education; and,
4. The
atypical voice characteristics are not primarily the result of factors related
to chronological age, gender, culture, ethnicity, or limited English
proficiency.
(7) Speech services.
(a) A group of qualified professionals
determining eligibility under requirements of this rule and subsection
6A-6.0331(6),
F.A.C., must include a speech-language pathologist.
(b) A speech-language pathologist shall be
involved in the development of the individual educational plan for students
eligible for speech services, whether as special education or as a related
service for an otherwise eligible student with a disability.
(c) Speech therapy services shall be provided
by a certified speech-language pathologist pursuant to Rule
6A-4.0176, F.A.C., or a licensed
speech-language pathologist pursuant to Chapter 468, Part I, F.S., or a
speech-language associate pursuant to Rule
6A-4.01761, F.A.C.
(d) Speech-language associate.
1. Speech therapy services provided by a
speech-language associate as specified in Rule
6A-4.01761, F.A.C., must be
under the direction of a certified or licensed speech-language pathologist with
a master's degree or higher in speech-language pathology. Services can be
provided for a period of three (3) years as described in Section
1012.44, F.S., in districts that
qualify for the sparsity supplement as described in section
1011.62(7),
F.S.
2. Districts shall submit a
plan to the Department of Education for approval before implementation of Rule
6A-4.01761, F.A.C. The
components of the plan must include a description of:
a. The model, specifying the type and amount
of direction including direct observation, support, training, and
instruction;
b. The rationale for
using this model;
c. The manner in
which the associate will be required to demonstrate competency;
d. The process for monitoring the quality of
services;
e. The process for
measuring student progress; and,
f.
The manner in which the speech-language associate will meet the requirements of
the annual district professional development plan for instructional
personnel.
Rulemaking Authority
1003.01,
1003.57,
1003.571 FS. Law Implemented
1003.01,
1003.57,
1003.571,
1012.44
FS.
New 7-1-77, Amended 7-13-83, Formerly 6A-6.3012, Amended
8-1-88, 9-17-01, 7-1-10.